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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1909-02-04, Page 3ABSUIUIr SECUITY, 0.nu;ne L...._Parte r's tle Liver Pills. Must Sear Signature of See P.c-attune wrapper Below. 1Wartt e>aaU .ms as earl tc tales as sugar. •` POR NEAP/C11E4 RTERS n$ o ul�Kz.. P0A U U Nltt. IOD'MEM LIYER. b3OON$T$PATiCP. $ALLOW SKIN. J( 111I1 . .,• Ofll?Lt Ms(' ,yR CUR e f'••' t..e• E.-, - e NOTES AND COMMENTS Bills to tax bachelors have for fume time been a regular feature of the legislative year in some countries. Originally such bills were treated as hits of airy comedy de- signed to relieve the high serious- ness of the sessions. They were put on the list of "crank" bills and added temporarily to the gay- ety of the nation. To -day bachelor tax propositions are taken a little more seriously, though no one ex- pects them to be enacted into law ,.' --as yet. What the third phase may be is another story. !Midway Island, for shelter, and! tendon of wreaking vengeance up-T(A LION HUNTER'S STORY thus became instrumental in effect- on those at tehose hands they had i ing the rescue: of tense rnaruoned SUFFERI'D PERSE(•UTION. Japanese sailors, sat erg ;hent frust The finest Sight on Earth Is Held to Be a Good Fight. \, It may be recalled that Kaiser 'Rhein himself not many months " htly discussing the heavy -data he imperial finances and \ 11< f 4S,ity of additional taxes, •.tuaed that bachelors might be ' /' bjected to a fine or duty not only • izt, a means of increasing the rev- enues but as a preventive of undue ltivation of single blessedness- single�misery. True, the states- " man of the fatherland, when the time for action came. displayed weakness and Left the bachelors severely alone. But the august royal sanction of the idea has tend- ed to snake it respectable if not immediately practical, and doubt- less henceforth the crop of bachelor tax bills will he richer and finer. t►0 n And Benaiah, the son of Jehoida,I salient plan and you are tno good the sun of a taliant man of Kab-! a man to go down to destruction zeeig, who bad chine mighty deeds i before a giant vice. There is that * * * went down and slew a in you which is worth too much to lion in the midst of a pit in time man and God for failure now. I of snow. -II. Samuel xxiii. 20. believe in you and good teen will God believes in He wan x valiant man, and the believe in you and son of a valiant man and the grand- you ; you shall slay your lion, too! sou of a man who had done mighty A big city is not an easy place deeds. Tho valiant roan loves such for a man who has lions to kill. I ts a fight. This is the attraction of temptations are many. Its cosmo- the most violent forms of athletics. politonisin creates a certain atmos - It is the element of conflict which phere-an atmosphere always non - constitutes so much of the attrac- religious, often positively irrclig- tiveness of mountaineering. I never ious. It loves pleasure only too saw a mountain in my life which well. And countless hosts within I did not want to scale, and I un- this city are drunk with derstand perfectly how it was that A HIDEOUS LUST FOR GOLD. after some laments on the. limited opportunities for climbing in Eng- We are set here in this city for a land, a sporting paper announced purpose. We have -to witness the that there were three or four places power of the spirit of God over hu - in the lake country where a man man hearts, over evil passions, could comfortably break his neck. over sinister temptations, over the I was not in the least surprised to inducements and seductions of ma - be told that the hotels in those terial things, over all the facts and places made a fortune within the forces of sin. We have to keep a next twelve months. clear light shining in any dark It is the finest sight on earth- place • we have to keep the flag of the very finest sight on earth - a good fight. Only, mind you, it must be a good fight! FIGHT THE FIGHT OF FAITtI ; there is nothing like it. They wrong man greatly who say that he is to be seduced by ease. Difficul- ty, abnegation, martyrdom, death, are the allurements that act on the heart of man. Some of us find the very first conflict• of all hard enough -the fight with self. There is a passion which grips you, my bro- ther, with what seems a grip strong- er than death and hell, the pride of life, the desire of the eyes, the craving of the flesh --yon know its intensity. But 1 bid you fight ' You are a valiant roan and the son of a slow but certain death. Much of the regard accorded to Originally there were four men ltim by his foreign colleagues is due in the party, hut one died --a fato to the eouviction that they are all the others must have shared but indebted to him for the extraotdin• for the providential arrival of the ary maintenance of law and of or- Floren+•e. Ward. This tessel, ehich der at Constantinople during the 1'. carried supplies for the cable sta- last few mouths. He is likewise tion, noticed signals of distress from Lee Hermes bland. and a boat was put off. The crew discovered, en reach - 111111 I.IO\S 1111: SH07 IN •IIIE WIEDe OF 11111('1. believed to have been instrumental in averting war beteeeu Turkey and Bulgaria. resulting from the ,ir j• l• `,.loos, tele famous lattrr's declaration of independ-lion-killer, explains that while he •f h (. 'elou%, 1 amuu, I.iun•1►illor, talks et Rousetelt'- !Hunting 1:spudition. ing shore. three Japanese :sailors, once , and from her seizure o t e two of whom were suffering from! llutnelian branch of the ()tient Itis collected in London the camp scurvy, while the third was in a co1-1 Railroad, and it is understood that and other equipment for Mr. Roose- Iapsed condition and quite unable at the preseut moment he is devot- volt's hunting expedition and will to walk. They were taken on board iug his efforts to the prevention of go with hint to Mombasa, where the Florence Ward, and after re- any hostilities between the Otto- they arrive on April 2e. they will ceiving treatment related an roan Empire and Austria. not shoot together in East Africa astounding tale of their sufferings It is no exaggeration to assert and Uganda. un the island. They stated that for that Lowther holds the key to the."M►. Roosevelt's party. c•ouipris- three months they had been with- crisis now existing between Wiese -lug his son. Mr. ('unninghame (an out food, except fish and the flesh na and Stamboul in connection mitt, expert guide). and two American of sea birds. No fresh water was the Turkish boycott of tlustriau naturalist', said Mr. Selous,who obtained on the islet, and they imports, which is inflicting such in- was i i.ited at his home at \Worp- were compelled to drink crudely dis-p lesdon, England. '`will go one way. tilled sea water. They belonged to the Japanese schooner Kioso Marti, of Shinagawa, Tokio, which land- ed them on July 1. The vessel had departed a•few days later, leaving •� o t them one month's provisions s fo and intending to return later and take them off. She never came back, and it is thought that she was over- whelni d and lost in a hurricane. Soon after the departure of the Kioso Maru, a terriflrc storm burst calculable damage upon the trade and industry of the Dual Monarchy. righteousness and purity flying over the island ; huge seas carried here ; we have to maintaiu the vis- away the effects of the marooned ion of the ideal before us. It may sten, as well as their supplies. be an awkward place and a had day They subsisted on %hat remained for the idealist, for the visionary, as long as they could ; but eventu- for the puritan. But the place of ally one of the party succumbed valor is the place where you live as a result of exposure and impro- and work. "Now'' is the accepted per food, and the others were cri- tiene, the heroic time, the chivalric tieally ill when found. They are to time; and 1 will trust you to slay be sent to Honolulu. a lion in a pit on a snowy day. "Arrest your knaves and clas- tards" goes forth the old command. And to the question "Howl" our modern prohpet has his answer ready : "Make yourself an honest man;113RI7'iSil AM11.1SSA DOR PO\I'- then there will be one rascal less }atm, AT CONS'l'ANTiNOi'LE. in the world." Rev. Charles F. Aked, D. P. LOWTHER HOLDS f ilE KEY Already the dispatches tell of bills to distribute the proceeds of such taxation among the needy spinsters. of bills to require bache- lors to propose at least once a year provided there are eligible sub- jects to ''pop" to -of bills to es- tablish sante bureaus to find suit- ahle wives for willing but unfortu- nate bachelors, to give first aid to the timid, and so on. There is logic or consistency in some of these bold propositions. If bache- lors are to be lined, it is but fair to help ,uch as ate merely lacking in ash , r oppertntu ty. As for the eel end contumacious sped - yen only advise them to cir- c •, to Bernard Shaw literature almoig tee benighted ninkers rind relit eft thewould,he taxers to the ultra -insolent doctrine that in courtship and flirting woman is really the aggressor, mere man be- ing the unconscious victim of fem- inine subtlety and his own vanity rid obtuseness. from the modern ienpoint it would be utterly un- fair tee tax men whom no woman steul+l hate on any terms. HAD BACHACHE. Was Unable To Do House- work For Two Years THE S. S. LESSON INTERNATIONAL LESSON, FEB. 7. Lesson V'I. True and Bro- therhood. Golden Text, Proc. 12.22. Verse 32. The multitude of them that believed -- Now numbering many thousands in the city of Je- rusalem and its immediate vicinity. Of one heart -Having a common purpose in lite, and interested alike each in the other's welfare. Had all things common -A real, though entirely voluntary, commu- nity of goods. 35. Distribution was made - The administration of the one common fund was left to the apostles, and was no inconsiderable burden ad- ded to their many other responsi- bilities of leadership is so large a community of believers. 30. And Joseph -Having made a general statement concerning the disposition of lands and houses by those who believed, Luke proceeds to poi, t out certain notable indi- viduals who did not exempt them- selves from the general rule. Barnnbas-The same who later became the companion of Saint Paul on the letter's first mission- ary journey. He was a native of the island of Cyprus and a member of the tribe of Levi. 37. Jaid it at the apostles' feet - Turned tlw money over to them to be used for the best interests of the whole Christian community. 5. 1. But a certain man -- The following incident is cited by way of contrast with the general spirit which prevailed among the jeru- saletn believers, and for the sake of pointing out, nc the author does in the la't verse of our lesson, the influence of the sad incident on the entire Christian community. Ananies. with Sapphire---Mcn- tioned only here in the New Testa- ment narrative. of a sudden impulse, but. one pre- meditated in its every detail. Thou hast not lied unto men, but unto God -This earnest arraign- ment of the guilty mai implies that the attempt to deceive God was, in this case as always, an utter fail- ure. Men may deceive their fel- low -men; they cannot hide the truth from God. 5. Ananias hearing these words fell down -The words of Peter were both an arraignment and a condem- nation, implying impending judg- ment, the fulfillment of which was not long delayed. Gave up the ghost -The word :or "expired" here used is a technical term of rare lase and as medical 2. Kept hack part of the price -- The mord "part.- is left. to be sup- plied in the original. The context implies that the action of Ananias in thus withholding part of the money realized from the stile of his possession was secret and covered Women Suffer l'ntold Agony lip by an attempt at deception, his From Kidney '['rouble. wife also being a party to the ac- tion. e, t• r.{stn they think is is from so•culledt 3. Belt Peter said -The discern- (cmnle diecaee." '1!t k a Ices'• female 1 • ing apeetle was quick to discover Boot,!.," than thny think. ' hypocrisy of this man. \Women n:ffer from i,uliael+e, sleepless- the less. ne. °witless. i,rt•►bllity and a drag. i To lie to -Or, "to deeeiwe." gin`•downfeeling intheloins. t'odomen, The Hely Spirit --The manifest �[.1T100N1:11 F.111,ORS. sea aha) d-, not love ' female trouble. hen, bisme all your troiale to piescncc of the 1tit ire Spirit in the -_• tt tc7 `` fellowship of the Christian belicv- ' female of ticaA .' Spend Three Weary1Telilths on a Most the so•called "frmsle diwrden" ors made the crime of Ananias ex 1 Desert Island. e, a no more err lee. thou, "kidney disorder,'' sept ionally grief ons. ca,1 l.e «s.'. sr:I ,luickfy cured by 4. After it was xold, was it not. News of a thrilling adventure cif �h•..0 s'cclrie 1';Ils' tel thy power 1 --Peter's question Japanese sailors marooned in the �l • 1 . II wee &•Review Village, K.II„ surrender }'aeific was received recently at wt,trs: "i wee nuabto to do my house- unlike, It clear that the w+crk for two veers on account of back• of private possessions for the corn- Liverpool. s, he. 1 sired toot get upths•tetrs. natio.* Jaron good was entirely soluntary Stress of weather compelled the K,.It,ey t'als curet me pe:aanently after on the part of each individual. no Commercial Pacific Cable l'c•n, drrtnre failed to even tenets the p in. i form of compulsion being resorted pang's schooner Florence Ward to sen highly recommend thein to ell sufferers to deviate from her course. The ves- ir.un kidney trouble." pri, a 5A eta. per bas or 't hoses for $1.2.5 Conceived this thing in Om heart eel was sailing from Honolulu to at sil cle.%lere r mailed it ton reer+pl -- Deliberately thought out tbe• plan the cable station at Midway Island, ,.f l-: re by e Doan Kidney \'ill Cs., t,+ deceit e. it t ac 1)(1. tl,rrefore, but had to run for Lee Hermes is- 2e:onto, vat, a crime corninitt�d ceder the stress land, b0 wiles to the south -vast of FROM ERiN'S GREEN ISLE NEWS BY MA1I, 1.11Ot IItE• LANI'E SHORES. Happenings In the Emerald Isle of Interest to Irish - me u. The Cast lest r•ange estate. Co. Roscommon, was purchased by the ried for antelopes and giraffes ; congested districts hoard. these, with expanding bullets, will Damages ti at .£ 70 were awarded be used for liens; and for killing to HenryHeu►y Totten, Belfast. against elephants a heavy guts carrying a the corporation, fur street car in cordite -loaded cartridge will be juries. taken. A fierce gale on the County Down `Lions you either come across coast swept over Newcastle, drove accidentally, risking a shot at close In- a vessel ashore and caused serious quarters. or you go out on horse - damage to many buildings. back vert early in the morning on GrceThomas Smith, a postman of the a high plateau in the hope of catch - a service district, is retiring arial. ing a lion which has delayed too a service of 38 years, during which long in feeding and cannot get back he travelled upwards of 200,000 to cover. When you are overtaking miles. the beast he generally comes to a Has Won the Confidence of the' halt and faces you, growling. That. After supper the Englishman0 los aged 75 years, and his wife, died is the moment when you slip off 1 consciousness, and when he recov- Idr. \\'nr. McMillan will join me in striking out in another. No doubt, however. we may come into touch more titan once with the President's party. HOW LIONS ARE SHOT. -Nearly ion native bearers will carry the President's equipment. They will travel fur a week or ten days, making for some point where game is found ; there they will halt for a week, or oven a month at a time. In East Africa they should find plenty of giraffes, antelopes, buffaloes and lions. Elephants will he encountered more in Ugan- du. Small-bore rifles will be cur - A blind roan, Andrew Hamilton. Combines the potent healing virtues s,�f the Norway pine tree with other el ser - bent, oipectorwutand soothing nos?' • +,ea of recognized worth, and is abaol.:. iy harmless, prompt and sato for the C .0 a of COUGHS,COLD3, BRONCHITIS. HOARSENESS, CROUP, SOR!'! THROAT, PAIN or TIGHT- NESS in the CREST, and all throat and lung troubles. It is put up in a yellow wrapper, 3 pine trees the trade mark and the price 25 cents. COUGH. A HARD DRY Mr. J. L. Purdy, Millvale, N.S. writes: -"I have-14.=�tso:tblod with a hard, dry cough for nlong time, especi+ls�r ly st night, but after having used Dr. Woody Norway Pine Syrup, fora few weeks, I find my cough has left me. To any perec:n, suffering as I -lid, I can Ilea that this remedy is will worth atrial. lI would not ho without it In the house." .4 1118 SUPPER COST $1,600. Englishman k Robbed of that Sena in l'ari'. An unfortunate experience has befallen a London visitor to Paris, who Inas been robbed of 31,600. While in a restaurant in the Pia - Pigalle, some people, one an Ita an. entered into conversation v him, and the chance acquaint ship ended in the party haw• per together. Sultan. the Young Turks and the Populace. Sir Gerald Lowther, who during has receiv- edlast twelve months a ed Knighthood with the Star of the Order of St. Michael and St. George, besides being appointed to membership in the Privy Council and promoted from tho post of Minister Plenipotentiary at Tan- gier to that of Ambassador at Con- stantinople, with emoluments of nearly $50,000 a year, a metropo- litan palace and a suburban coun- ing notices for rent on several fa - try seat, both fully furnished and milics at Ballinaglera, ('o. Leitrim. equipped. and a steam yacht, all At Dublin, the jury disagreed in provided by the Government, is the trial of Matthew Purcell, for within a week of each other at your horse and shoot him. Some- j erect he found himself in a cab, Kyle's Brae, Coleraine, from heart times the lion will charge at you. which had stopped opposite his ho- tel. disease. If he cdoe.. you gallop out of the, tel. His new-found friends, how - Tin -re are now abort 100 persons waw and wait for another oppor- I ever, had vanished, and lie missed under bail in the County Galway ulnae If he charges while you are his purse containing $1,6.00, his district for participating in cattle oK your horse, and you fail to het drives. him as he cornea at you, it may be Mr. Carnegie has given $,000 for awkward. the training horse for orphan girls VICIOUS ELEPHANTS. opened at C'ulmore, Derry, through the exertions of the Duchess of Ab- "The party will find antelopes all tho Englishman in his vehicle, an ercorn. over the plains. Giraffes, which told the cabman to drive to his ho A crowd of I,50) people asscmb- feed on the boughs of the trees, will tel, which they named. The victi _ have to be tracked in the well- has placed the matter in the hand wooded localities. The party should of the police. watch and other personal jewelry. In his perplexity -he airs::; cabman, who could only say th, sonic well-dressed men had plac led to prevent an estate bailiff sery such one of the many little indica- now slated for still further honors. the murder of a r -year -o )os, .r - tions found in the book of Acts He arrived at Stamboul at un ex- Our Fox, who was found deat in supporting the inference that the ceedingl. eritical juncture, and has an alley. author of the book was a physician. played his cards so well that to- Lord Dunraven has given a gen- anion the tees which may make 0. Young -Or, younger. The em- day he is, admittedly the most in- erous donation towards the cost of a suddenotrees, a, you. Old female phasis on the age of those who car- fluential and successful of all the renovating the Adaro Methodist elephants are at you. Old e. rigid the body of Ananias to its foreign Ambassadors accredited to church, which will be re -opened free "Probably Mr. McMillan and of debt. myself will not. hunt for more than Kilrush Guardians are consider ing the advisability of sending the workhouse children to board out- side, and have them attend the schools in the town. During the year ending March last the number of men. women and i hildren in receipt tf poor lass re- lief was 219.'220. This is one-six- toentn of the entire poputation of Ireland. - The death occurred at Belfast recently of George Herbert Brewnei one of the best-known linen manu- facturers. a former high sheriff of County Dottie and a prominent yachtsman. while the foundations of a rest. The Wicklow fire brigade is now, house for the Irrigation Depart- sas s the \Wicklow People, thorough- ment were being dug. A number of 1y organized, and an np-to-date set graves were found containing skele- of appliances have been procured tons, with feet to the east. Round I•t,' the urban council at a cost of the head of each was a quantity of about t 1,000. pottery. On one of them is the Cop - Arthur• I'rotheroe. l t years of age. while delivering goods on a hand truck in Neath, was struck violently under the cerin by the truck handles swinging around. His neck was dislocated and death instantly followed. King Edward has awarded bronze medals for gallantry for saving life at sea to eighteen fishermen of Va- lenti*. Co. Kerry. Medals Lase also been given to stn coast guards - be able to learn from the natives __.1, the haunts of the elephant herds in the Uganda forests. When you POISON IN T1I1: ('0I'I'l'E. wound an elephant it will often make a savage rush at you. While The Climax to n Lover's t'u. tree you are shooting one of a herd, in Pari'. too, you may not notice another A wealthy young plan named Ba- yard, and a girl in poorer circum- stances, Mlle. Therese Gle'1' supped together ono night recent at a. restaurant in the Rue Fau- bourg Montmartre, Paris. Tho three months. The I'resident, sou- girl caused the room they engaged over, will prolong bis expedition to be filled with flowers. for nearly a year. One of his chief A quarrel had arisen owing to objects is to hand over to American the girl's discovery Chit she had a rnuseuins specimens of the animal; rival in her lover's affection. burial indicates re distinetion ob- served in the early Christian Church in the division of respon- sibilities and eurms of service by the Sublime Po HE Iy rte. POPULAR. To -day, for tl which positions of trust and re- the days of Sir sponsibility fell upon the older died some fifteen men. while the younger men were Great Ilritain i Failed upon to fill positions requir- Predominant f ing active manual service of a less Constantinople, responsible character. completely displ Buried him --immediately, or at Ambassador, Ba Bieberstein. Si 1e first time since \William White, who years ago or more, s once noire the ergaldpower SirGerhaving aced the German ron Marschall von r Gerald has man - least upon the sante day, accord- ing to the usual necessary custom in a semitropical climate. 7. 'Three (tours after -After the burial referred to in the preceding Beef ; is acclaimed by the populace verso. whenever he shows himself any - 8. Answered unto her -Respond - where in the street; is serenaded aged to acquire the confidence not only of t he Turkish Government, hut also of the leaders of the Young Turks, and even of the Sultan him- . ing to her look of inquiry with his direct question, ititendcd no doubt to give Sapphire r►n opportunity to confess her participation in her husband's conspiracy, and thus es- cape the fate which had befallen him. Yea, for so much -For so deliber- ate and overt a falsehood under the cireunistances there was no ex- cuse. 9. How is it that ye have agreed together l -Peter again emphasizes the fact that the guilt of both hus- band and wife lay primarily in the premeditated character of the crime which they had committed. 11. Great fear came upon the whole church -The effect of the sad incident upon the community both explains Luke's purpose in includ- ing the incident in his narrative, and at the same time suggests a reason and a justification for the severity of the punishment meted out to the offenders. In the light of what had transpired others who might possibly have been tempted to like duplicity were restrained from yielding to the temptation. r about three times a week. while, although the junior of the other Ambassadors in date of appoint- ment, is nevertheless treated by them as their dean. since all the metings of the Ambassadors for any cossetted diplomatic aet'on as- semble under his roof. It is to Sir Gerald's reetraining influence and to his advice that are ascribed the remarkable absence of bloodshed following the coup d'etat -bloodshed, which would certain- ly have occurred had the loung Turks carried out their original in - CURE FOR DYSPEPSIA As is well known, this 1ronblesnie com• plaint arisen from over eating, ti.' nee of ton much rich fool. neglected constipation, lack of exercise, had air, etc. The text should be thoroughly chewed, and never bolted or swallowed in haste. stimulants must be avoided and exercise taken 0 possible. A remedy which has rarely failed to gise prompt relief and effect permanent cures, even is the most obstinate oases, is BBL 000 B/TTERS It arta by teg.tlat.ngg and toning the di• gest ive organs, removing costiveness ,end in.: eevaing the appet i to and recto: iug health and vigor to tho system. Mr. Amos Saltier, l;old laver. 1'.S., writes: -" I was greatly trouble -1 with dysprpsia, and alter trying several dactore to n' effect 1 corntcrcea taking Rardc k hl• o l Bitter., aril 1 think it is :. a best pi'wticine thrr• is for t complaint." For bele a• sad Deialer. he shoots." ('HRiSTIANS 01' 'I'I1E NILE. Inter( %ting Relies Discovered In i•pt,r„• !:,)'jt. reconciliation had followed. waiter who served the meal ed that the two were of terms. No sound being room when the ti lute, esting discovery of East • closing of the res Christian remains has recently heed centered _an imide at Wad-el-Hadad on the Blue dead and t is yoitlg ran Nile, a few miles north of Senear, vestigation showed that Mlle. Glen- isson had put poison in her loser's coffee and afterwards committed suicide in a einsilar manner. tic processional cross and the same emblem is scratched inside the lips of the jars, where it is associated with two other Christian emblem. -the fish and the palm ',ramie On the neck of one of the jars is a ma- son's mark, and another of tho jars, which are of red ware, has a spout as well as a handle. A com- parison of the pottery with that found on Nubian sites between the first and second Cataracts makes men and two civilians for bravery it probable that it should be dated at Ballydat id (lead, in September in the seventh or eighth century last. A. D. Tho pottery has been sent - --�,- to the Khartoum Museum. At present ver} little is known of 1111511 .1 R1: 'I111111•1 V. the history of Christianity in these regions, and we trust look to cxem- Deposits to Joint Sleek Iltnka Pott- settle') to throw light upon it. A staotly Growing. quarter of an hour's walk from the Officinl statistics made up to the graves are two mounds called by end of June last show that the de• the natives Beyt-eh-Anak, "The t d cash balances in Irish House of Anak" (or pre-Mahotnme- ever) year since 1888, eith the et the site. (, an o ' ceptien of 1897, and in some years and monastery. Excavation would by large fignros. in 1888 the probably bring to light Early Chris - amount was .£30,310,000, in 1907 tion inscriptions. .1.:1‘c,067,000, and in 1908 £50,59(], PICTURESQUE RESIGNATION. GNATiON'. 000. tires hate Po to flees Saving 3 Batik fig- Boy (to tramp) --"Don't you get awful tired of doin' nothin'. n,is- 1t+''+ to X10.037,000 in i907; the to sal for 1905 is £10,000 less. but this it the only decrease in the twenty ycarc. There is now a total of £3S,210, - 00n of (iiraranteed Land steck. t;uaran'.eed 2~-'S per cent. stock (land purchase act. 1903), and War toe k, an w-hielc dividends are pay- able at the Bank of Ireland. posits an dao eo )l� which doubtless. mark joint •tock hanks have increased p I ) • f old C hrlsttan church ter i'' Tramp--' Terrible'. But I never complains. Everybody has their troubles!" You may guess what a to onus n is, but that's your limit. And it sometimes happeto that a man is married to his boss, A poor complexion worries a woman snore than a poor intellect. The organ of sight is more 1:i developed in birds than in any ant - mal. A kangaroo ca jnu,p from ti0 feet to 70 feet feet in height. The origin of the gambling device, the roulette -wheel, %as the pray- ing -wheel of Japan, which it close- esenthles. in length, and 14 WAS WEAK AND THIN ONLY WEIGNED 73 POUNDS. NOW WEIGHS 113 POUNDS. Had Heart Trouble and Short et Breath for Sex Year MILBURN'S I♦EART ANS IBERVE cured Mrs. K. E. Blight, ilu,itet She writes : •• i was great! • sir years, with my heart a breath. 1 void.] not walk elk, out resting four or five tunes distance. 1 got s„ weak an weighed seventy•three pounds at last to take some of Milburn Nerve Pills, and after taking e 1 {;slued in strength an/ weight, weigh one hundred and thirteen the nr st 1 ever weighed in niy life will and can work as well as ever and can heartily thank Milt ie t s Ilea Nerve Pills for it all. ' )1'ricn W1 cents per 1:,)I ori hose 11.1.1 at all dealers, or mailed direct receipt of yri a t v The T. Milburn Liin ted, Toronto, Qat.