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Exeter Times, 1909-02-18, Page 7ABSOLUTE $ECURITYI CenuIne Carter's ittie Liver Pills. !Tory small awl ac cas3• to take ;s 1114:1:. Must Boar'3lanaturo at See Fnc-Slmilo Wrapper P.clowr r, fci9 N=�lit1ca.. c,�►IRTE r� MR Ei1Zli'.1.3. r3R BiL!t'65!NESS. nil TORPID LIVER. FCR Ct:N8TtPAiIQFf. FOP, SALLOW Vi.111. _ern THCCC::i; LEXIC!! ITT/, I VEP 11-)I 7 Y.3. re _Price eej Purely Tette nle.� �• 4KrL'LC1 Arun ,u,i [)e ,:.•:. c. GEItMAN1"S IRON DISCIPLINE. - Sentry Refused to Rescue Drown- ing Man. An extraordinary example of Ger- man military discipline which oc- curred near Bronikowen is attract- ing public attention and has given rise to a discusion as to whether or not it would be desirable to all ns, soldiers doing sentry duty liberty of action in cases where human life is endangered, says the London Standard. A wealthy land owner of Broni- kowen, Herr Arthur Kriede, was skating on Sensburg Lake when the ice broke and he fell through into the water. Close at hand a soldier was doing sentry duty and Kriede shouted to the soldier for help and begged him to render assistance. Military regulations, however, pro- hibit a soldier doing sentry duty from leaving his post under any nstances. is particular soldier could der assistance to Krede leaving his post and there - ringing military regulations, he remained where he was and watched Kriede drown before his eyes. There were several long poles lying near the spot, and the oldies need only have walked to he brink of the lake and held one of the poles to the drowning man in order to effect This rescue. S.11'EiI PATIENT, LOST EYE. Act of Heroism Which French President Recognized. An unassuming act of self-sacri- fice on the part of a young French medical student, U. Louis hazy, has just secured for him the Cross of the Legion of honor. M. Bazy, wino is a son of a well- known French surgeon, was assist- ing his chief in a Paris hospital. PREVALENCE OF SACRIFICE • f 1'1. whom! 37). 61. Ye sti"'neeked and uncircum- cised in heart and car. -The speak- er breaks abruptly his historical summary, and addresses himself Must Be Without a Blemish, and It directly the nation's leaders, to whom he is speaking. His pas- sionate outburst of denunciation and the severity of his arraignment meat of the members of the San - deemed by Him who gave His life hedrin, before whom he was er- as a sacrifice for sinners, we should raigne-d as an accused man, could present our bodies, a living sucri- have but one outcome, that of five, holy, acceptable unto God. bringing upon himself the severer That is a reasonable service. What judgment prompted by the anger clots that mean 1 It weans that which the outraged pride and dig - what God has given us we should nity of his hearers dictated. give back to Him sanwtifttel. This 52. The Righteous One -Refer - applies also to our body, which ring to Jesus as the Christ. 33. A young man named Saul - The first 'petition of the future apostle to the Gentiles. 8. 1. And Saul was consenting onto his death -This is an hulled - Go hapdnr ibcd unto ops a verse A1�1ED AT BRITISH RLUEIFROM ERIN'S GREEN ISLE 'lust Be Holy. 1 beseech you, therefore, breth- ren, by the mercies of God, that ye present your bodies a. living sacrifice, holy, acceptable, unto God, which is your reasonable ser- vice, -Hem. xii., 1. There is much talk now -a -days of reasonable service. The regu- lar church service is often dispised and sneeringly referred to as the must unreasonable by men who claim that "the great donie of na- ture" is a much more worthy place for the adoration of the Almighty than even - the most dignified of God and ye are not your own. ant point in the author's narrative, church building, and that the only For ye are bought with a price, in view of the future part that reasonable serviee is to cut loose 'therefore glorify God in your. haul is to play in the early devel- from all creeds, from all revela- body." tion, from everything that. is su- pernatural and to devote all time HOW OFTEN DO WE FORGET. and energy to the things that be. Is that rational 1 St. Paul, preaching to the Greeks at Athens, in England, has just been received says likewise: "God That made this the fundamental principles of hu- • The story of Saul's persecution of world dwelleth not in temples made man hearth! No wonder that theinterruptedin London. It is a counterblast to the church. which is with hands, neither is worshiped ,.,,,til is so weak while it dwells in at the close of t.liis verse, is tun- King Edward's friendly message of with mans hands, as though He a body which is more like a tomb flatted in the following chapter. needed anything. But he has Dian like a living temple! A sacri- fice must be without blemish, and of what a reasonable service is; he if the presenting of our body shall SENTENCE SERMONS. calls it: "To present our bodies, a :be acceptable unto the Lord, it living sacrifice." The universal must be a living sacrifice. And it prevalence of sacrifice in ancient must be holy. 1Vhile the heathen Living for bread is one way of times shows how deeply it wasideal of -the Greeks was beauty, losing the bread of life. rooted in humanity. Everywhere he Christian ideal is holiness. Rocks in our way are just heaven we encounter the idea that God "Ye shall be holy, for I am holy !" saying, "Climb up higher " wants a sacrifice, for sacrifice is Many strive after the heathen Our habits are either our great - service and service is sacrifice, and ideal. They care more to look est helps or our saddest hindrances. as the greatest offering appears good than to be good and are ever You may ROW your sins in the blood and life ready and ever bugs, to correct na dark but they come to harvest in sh •und be a living sacrifice. St. Paul writes to the Corinthi- ans: "Know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost, which is in you, which you have opntent of the church which he re- cords. Except the apostles --These sees How careless do wo often treat to have remained temporarily, at our bodies and how neglectful are least., in Jerusalem. we sometimes in regard even to! 3. Satil laid waste the church.- P:1.111'II7.i:T Altl: REDISTRIBUTED THROUGHOUT INDIA. One Refers to king Ed ear(' as a "Tyrant" Printed in Europe. One of the most s•evious pheno- mena in the agitation against Brit- ish rule with which the Viceregal Government of India has to con- tend is the distribution broadcast among the natives of seditious pam- phlets. It is no secret that the sub- versive movement is fostered and encouraged by highly intelligent and often well connected Indians who aro studying at English uni- versities or are for other reasons staying in England. Quantities of seditious Leaflets printed in Europe are shipped to Bombay and Calcutta, whence th•.-y are clandestinely distributed throughout. the interior. A copy of one particularly violent anti En- glish pamphlet, obviously printed A DIFFERENT IDEA Character is caught, not taught. NEWS BY MAIf. FROM illi:• LAND'S SHORES. Happenings in the Emerald Isle of luterest to hash - men. Gambling is said to be on the in- crease among the women of Ire- land. Negotiations are almost complete for the sale to the tenants of the whole town of Donegal. A farm of 9! acres, with a small cottage, in the urbau district of Newcastle, Co. Down, -was sold by auction at $400 an acre. It was decided at u representative meeting in Killarney to take steps to revive the local races, and to hold a fixture during the coming year. At Belfast Harbor Board on the 5th inst., it was announced that last year 2,532,077 tons of shipping had arrived in that port, beating all records by `20, 790 tons. In the urban district of Naas the_o have been thirteen claims for old age pensions, out of whielt ten have been passed at the maximum last November to the princes and sum of $1.x,5 weekly. people of India. Carlow County Council support the demand of the Gaelic League A TYPICAL PAMPHLET. that the Irish language, both oral The pamphlet, entitled "Two anti written, be made an essential Histori. Document.,," rcfefs to the subject for matriculation. Kin,; throughout as "the tyrant" and begins. "The tyrant has issued a new ed- ition of the proclamaiton of 1853, which was styled by fools 't1' Two thousand one hundred and eighty-two claims have been allowed in Meath, to date, in connection with the old age pensions. There are still 200 claims outstanding. Magna Charta of India ' When After 42 years' service, Mr. W. J. Nifes- gaillA the so-called Queen's proclamation Quinn, late of the Belfast Postal FROM BONNIE SCOTLAND was first published, in 1853, our Telegraph Department, was pre- ture. 1t is astonishing what theydaylig ht. patriotic ancestors were still carry- seated recently with the Kings tui Now it is certainly unreasonable g g trial • medal for lou to believe that God could be pleas- are willing to sacrifice, to suffer in It's always easy to see through ing on that glorious revolutionary p g and faithful \01'T.S or INTEREST FIt011 Di.a ,ed with burnt offerings t r that a order to gain this end. How much the disguise that other's blessings struggle for the liberty of Hindus- service. enneetion with the land strug- tan. They issued a counter pro- g BANES AND liit:lES. Nothing clears up remote di �- clumation to warn Indians against gles in Tipperary, disturbances have eupnea better than doing immedi- . the danger of submitting to the taken plata in rhurles and police ate duties Feringhi (English) rule through de- are posted outside the houses of DR. WOOD'S NORWAY PINE SYRUP Is A Remedy Without An Equal For COUGHS, COLDS, And MI Affections Of The THROAT and LUNGS. Coughs and Ooldt do nut call for a minute recital of symptoms as they are known to everyone, but their dangers are not understood w well. All tho moat serious affections of the throat, the lungs and the bronchial tubes, are, in the begin. ning, but coughs and colds. Too much stress cannot be lai,i upon the admonition to all persons affected by the insieliuus earlier stages of throat and lung disease, as failure to take hold at once will cause niar•.y years of suffering, and in the end that terrible scourge .,1 "Consump- tion." Dr. Wood's Norway Plrte Syrup Ls not Sold as a Cure for Consumption but for affections tributary to, end that result -in, that disease. It contbines all the lung healing virtues of the Norway pine tree with other absorbent, expectorant and soothing medicines of recognized worth and is absolutely harmless, prompt ancI safe. So great has been the success of this wonderful remedy, it is on.y natural that numerous persons hate tried to imitate it. Don't be humbugged into taking anything but "Dr. Woods.' Pnt up in a yellow wrapper; three pine treas the trade mark; prion 25 cents. MINIMA bloody sacrifice of a human being .good could e the same if they was necessary to appease Him. gy in And yet it is true God is looking striving after holiness! for a sacrifice.. Having been re- ERNST A. TAPPERT. THE S. S. LESSON INTERNATIONAT, LESSON, FEB. 21. Lesson V111. Stephen the First Christian Martyr. Golden 'rext,Ac's 7: 59. Verse 1. In these days -Referring in general to the time of the a"cut-s mentioned in the preceding lesson. Their widows were neglected in the daily ministration -This simple statement throws an interesting sidelight on the practical working out of the principle of community of goods, according to which the Christian society at Jerusalem was at this time administered (compare lesson for February 7). Tho hardened conscience is cher lusions and false hopes. The tyr- • one trampled down by many cone was more even than simply the promises. Hatton. himself usually despairs of the uni- SANGUINARY WISH QUOTED. .Appeared unto our father Abra- verse' Then the paper quotes at length haul . . . in Mesopotamia - Long You cannot do much good for es made try the replies t wo before the law was given by Moses, men if you seek to do good only Pprominent and in a foreign land, did God ap- to e good' the leaders of the rebellion to Queen pear unto Abraham, which fact The cleaning up of r•ocietVictoria's proclamation half a cen- tli.y usual- tory ago, one of thele being the alone was sucien't to prove that ly has to start where charity is the essence of Israel's religion as said to begin. a covenant relation of individual Mon are to be judged by where persons and peoples with God an- they are going rather than by todated the Mosaic dispensation. whence they came. The latter, far from being the sum He falls into pride's pit, who total or cofh himself of Gap's re- passes by on the other side when - was of himself to his people, ever he sees one who 1 fallen. was but one of meet• elements and stages in the development of the true religion toward its final ful- fillment in the messianic age. 4. When his father was dead - This is contrary to the statement of Genesis 11. 26 - 12. 4, where Abraham is said to have removed into Canaan during Torah's life - 2. Forsake the word ut God and time. The statement was made by lat- serve tables -Neglect the duty of Stephen is in traditionharmony with the preaching and teaching for menu- et Jewish current in his al service which others could ren- time, which sought to shield the der as well, patriarch if Israel from the ap- pearance of impiety which his ac - ori in, ficin whi h it is inferre<{ tion in leaving his aged father was During an operation a quantity of origin: ant has repeated his falsehood - let us repeat our ancestors' pro - God of the Hebrew patriarchs and 'rhe man who put:, all his faith in plietic warning!" that Stephen was of Grecian de_ thought 'to mthly. virulent matter suddenly escaped ent, if not, himself a direct. prose- 6. Four hundred years -A state- 's from a wound into 11I. Bazy's eye. lyre Nothing is known concern- 'tent in round numbers intended The only hope of saving his sight ing him apart from the narrative to cover the whole time of Israel's was for the eve to be immediately in this portion of Acts. sojourn 'ein ►Egypt. And Philip -The Evangelist who 1 utriarehs moved with later labored in Samaria, and Gill jealousy -The first of a series of later in ('tesnrei. It, was he who references which Stephen makes was instrumental in lending the to the failure of man on his part Ethiopian eunuch to a faith in to keep th:, terms of the origins) Jesus as the Christ. covenant with God. Man's failure, Prochorua, and ;tiicanor, and Ti_ however, is not permitted to de- mon, and I'arntcnas, and Nicolaus feat God's eternal purpose, which a proselyte of Antio('h-Nothing finds its first partial fulfillment in treated, but this would have neces- sitated leasing the operation table and abandoning the operation, with probably fatal consequences to the patient. Tho young roan without a moment's hestitation told his chief to proceed with the operation, and he did not disinfect his eye until the work as over and the patient !w (lass later it was found ho eye was infected, and after eoliths of great, suffering it w . found necessary to remove it. President Fallieres, hearing of the incident, immediately decided that young M. )lazy should be de- corated. The Pres..uent said he de- sired to show that the wound re- ceived by the doctor attending thee poor was no iess glorious than the injury sustained by the soldier on the field of battle. LIVER COMPLAINT It's not the awos hasuaci do hint erland) concludes. "Blessed be the Bellaghy, ('o. Derry, is to be sold. duty when a United India raises up Long ago it was known as "Bishop's that worry the great Father of us the flag of l,iherty from the dust Folly," or the Palace, and owned all ; it's the ill we do aves. of 1857 and plants it triumphantly its erection to the munificent ideas When you take the rats ts ofhusi- on the top of the Himalayas to the of the Earl of Bristol, who was ness worry to the church it's not honor (t man and the gk:ry of made Bishop of Derry in 1758. strange they leave you nothing but God " At a recent meeting of the Bawn- chaff. boy (Co. Cavan) 01(1 Age Pension No matter how eloquent you may Sub -committee the most notable be talking to your Father in application received was that of an heaven, it will not balance a sour old woman named McGahern who disposition to your family here. GAVE SKIN '1'0 IIELi' WI I.h:1V• wns stated to be considerably over 100 years of age. She was granted ILife of a Factory Girl Saved by. the full pension of $1.23 a week. Wealthy Woven. • .>F -- unpopular persons day and night. The police have been frequently t;toned. A conscientious objector to vac- cination named Francis Irvine, has been sent to prison at Enniskillen for not allowing vaccination of two of his children. He would not yield, and said his conscience would not let him. The tenants of the Castlehamil- notorious Bahadur Khan, elle was ton estate met at the office, Castle - hanged in 1800 for the murder of hamilton, fos the purpose of making many English women and children, arrangements to buy out their hold - and whose last words were : "I tugs. All agreed to the terms with have killed a thousand more." a few exceptions and signed. Tho pamphlet, which is signed by A notable building, Ballyscullion "Bands Mataram" (Hail the Moth- House, situated about a mile from RETURN OF VEGETATION The interesting phenomenon of the return of vegetation to the slopes of Mont Pelee, whose terrible erup- tion in 1902 destroyed the city of St. Pierre and laid waste the greater part of Mant.inique, can now be ob- served. Wherever w.itercourses 'I'!te Misses Zoufalj, l'rehal and Karl, three young Bohemian girls rroPIA 01" SUFi'RAGi•:'t"rES. of good family. underwent an op - oration at Prague, Austria, from Welsh Village 11'here Woman's philanthropic motives. Sway Is Paramount. A young woman namd Fritsch, There is a small village in Wales which is the Utopia of the Suffra- gettes and which figures largely in their arguments at the present. time. It is Llnngwm, a little oyster town on an estuary of the great harbor of Milford Havoc. When you speak of Llangwn you mean the Llangw•m woman. it is and the trampling of horses and employed in a Prague factory, re - cattle have broken up the lava Gently had the misfortune to be completely scalped, owing to her crust, plants are reappearing. In hair being caught in a machine. some districts, where only a layer To save her life it, vyns necessary of hot ashes was deposited, the to transplant fresh skin from en- trees and shrubs retained their tin- other person to her head. Her un- derground life, and now the growthother advertised a reward of of the roots is breaking tip the crust Joseph, the 1 ery person against and forming it into humus. The further is known concerning these whom the jealousy of the patriarchs new vegetation which is gradunlly men who shared with Stephen and was directed. and in whom Ste- creeping back up the Mountain Philip the office of deacon (literally plien seer's to see a forerunner of comprises the castor-oil plant, the "servant") in the Jerusalem Jesus ('hrist. indigo plant., the sensitive plant church. 1 , 7. The number of the disciples 16. They were carried Over unto guinea -grass, silver fetus and other multiplied in Jerusalem exceed- Shec'hem--The remains of Jacob plants. ingly-It was some time before this and his suns, namely which state- that the membership of the church meet again is not in accord with Isabel-"1'Il never have another had exceeded five thousand. that of Genesis (compare (:en. 49. 8. Wonders and signs --Probably Cjtt i 50. 13). The field actually pur- mirrcles of healing.chased by Abraham was that. con - 9. The libertines -That is, taining the cave of Maehpr'lah in "freedme'1." thought. t have bees, bHebron (Maitre), which Abraham descendant. of Jews carried cap- the tit of F.phrou the 1fits, a while Live to Rome by Pompey (B, C. (i3) the tomb in Shechem was, accord - and subsequently released and per - The ing ru Gen. 33,y 19, and Josh. `21. DAD GIVEN UI' - chief oNi, a of rho livor is ten score. 32. urchased b - Jacob. The sig- :\LI. HOPE 01' •r•�; •';, Iden of bile, o Eich is the natural regulator mitted to return to Jerusalem nilicance of Stephen's reference to of ti:, bowels. where they formed a Peparate con ve, • the burial place of Jacob is not, ► LIVING. 1t1'h'ncver the liver k•comes derangr.d, gregation or synagogue. however, affected by this disereli- Heart Trouble sad th•i hiltsduetsclogged. liver complaint 11. Suborned men -Induced them Curedby is produced, and is maiiifc+ted hy the pre- to swe''tr falsely. ancy b^twee n the narrative at. this MILBURN'S HEART AND NERVE PILLS ^wcsallow ct:mtplexio,, pain nt,ler le es, st 14. We have heard him say -it is point is, the idt i,hc statement in Genet yellow, important tint Iroint being that ty•ct,atod tongue met hoadiehe, heart. finite possible that gums •slate- lacus Ives hurled within the bora- )'stet lice, soar aturna,h,water brash, Ment similar t , the ore attributed r rs "f tlt•e Land "f Promise, and .arrh of the stomach, etc. to Stephen was aetnally made I,y that a cert:.iii sacredness nil: .I Liver Co'mpa aIm'son;tem,l my li:-euro! y ,him, though in the hands of his itself t•i hi. burial place. toped P• ,enemies it wag givers a different inti tho Erode trel. air 1 s..uring the slug• form arul meaning than the one in- 17. •\� the time of the a glnrc gree liver with that grand li,er regulator, tended. drew nigh -The tinge of t he premise to 7. 1. :fro the a esus fulfillment of Gell's premise to things cei The ,\l rahann, fur which (led had bccn ,question of the high priest refer - ,rod to the accusations of the false witnesses tibiae mentioned, and ,was addressed to S4, phen. Ste- phen's answer was an address, the eubstancte of w•hielt ie given in this chapter, verses 2-;,:t inclusive.. His reply is a formal defense against the charges of irreverence toward the temples and its worship. and toward t he Old Testament religious S - "tem. 115age+, stud institution' in U,,,I•'t chore)) deliverer, Stephen general. t•re•se•• home upon his hearers, by 2. The God of #lory---To Ste- irnptientiun .accusing then' of siim- phen .feh,evalt, the (,od of Israel, lar failure to reeognize that great- tsp.') to any person who would pro- she who goesnut oyster fishing. It vide the necessary supply, and no fewer than 600 persons offered sishshorte howmheso, puqunaisnkitlrty , felt lint and dressed in themselves at the hosp'tal fur the reel shawl 1111(1 with a donkey purpose. The doctors chose a pour pannier, goes about the countryside widow, who required the money fur selling fish and oysters, and it is the education of lu r children. sue who holds the purse and dresses The three young women mention- the family. ed beard of the case, and informed Sheholds her st:perior position by the doctors that they would earl) physical force. She is a snatch for photograph taken. ' Dorothy Riva some of their own skin for a college oarsman in points, n. "Why not., dear' I" Isabel --"Oh, if nothing on condition that the wi- waterman in strength, and any fish- a reduction in time and piece rates it looks like Inc I don't like it, and d^"' should receive the 8100. Their ermnn around the coasts of four na-for acceptance of the masters' Is understood to shots, a majority like it." if it flatters me my friends don''c offer was accepted, and the three had pieces of skin (ruin the Poles thins in undannte(lness in a high seal terms. --- of their feet removed and grafted or in net handling. Mentally the is' on the factory girl's head. The op- quite up to the times. ----___-_-_--- ----- - -- What is Going on in (llo Highlands and Lowlands of Auld Scotia. The close of the year found the Ayrshire lace curtain trade de- pressed. The total number of pensioners in Ayr is 332. There were 381 ap- plicants. It is estimated that the grants of old pensions in Glasgow will amount to $5,000 per week. The deaths registered in Edin- burgh last year numbered 4,690, giving a death rate of 13.37 per 1,000. In ten years the depositors' balances in the Edinburgh Savings Bank have increased by over a mil- lion pounds. James Gillespie, Motherwell, was found lying strangled to death through falling_ asleep with a tight collar on. There are only 23 old age pen- sioners at Prestonpans, which is a very small percentage. of the popu- lation. There are 3,328 matriculated stu- dents (including 595 women) at the. University of Edinburgh this sea - Bell. The teachers in the board schools of Glasgow have contributed $580 to the city unemployed fund, which now exceeds $IS0,e.00. The number who are qualified for old age pension in Hamilton is con- siderably below the average of a town of 37,000 inhabitants. At Aberdeen upwards of 2,400 pension claims were admitted, and the great majority of the pension- ers drew their first payment on Jan. 2. Last year the Friendly Societies of Scotland increased in member- ship by neer half a million. The average contribution amounted to $2 per member. At Peebles a mural tablet to the memory of the late Mr. Patrick C. Leckie has been placed in Leckie Memorial Church by his son, Mr. James Leckie, London. Tile ballot of the 1'lde engineers on the proposal of the masters for LIVER COMPLAINT. r. (leo Fawcett, Hamilton, Ont.,wiites: "Itevntg sufenvl with R,yes ,tit Isint for years an,f tried all sort• of remedies, 1 was advised to try Mtlburn's laza 1 leer Iilb, I most say, that after tskmg t t.. vials of thorn, I feel quite a new man, Anel can strongly recommend than t,• anyone." Prie.• 2.S cent• per vial ,v .5 for =1,00, at 511 ,(,sire or mail.d dire.t ht the The T. Linitted Torostc, trt. preparing in unexpected was. 20. .\t which sP:Icon Moses vans horn --Another tit tfling point in Israel's Itist,•ry. 21-40. These verses tell of the way in wlii, II God prepared and guided the Noire deliverer of his people in spite of the he,tility of foes and the ungratefulness of his own people. This last point, that is, Israel's failure to recognize Mrs. A•ulrew S,. '', Orae..en'•, writs.: in tiro year est 11105 I wa• taken sick and did not think 1 could live „uv length of time. Aly trouble was with n, heart and a o;.!e told mo that nothing c'u'd MOO ho dnnn for a se like mine. 1 CONM,ited tho ter - best doctors but they could do me no gond. For 'oven weeks 1 could hardly eros the fluor. 1 had no pain, bat was .a weak nobody in the world can bcliere how 1 felt. 1 had riven up ail hopes of lit mrt and hall gaen toy lithe girl to my sister •iu- 1aw. one then friend cme ato see me, and rail- ing ma hy name, Raid. • i.h, ie, if t ware 30u 1 wnuhl try a dose of Miiburn's lleart und Norge 1',:1. as Cher aro Rood for beast trnnb'e.' My hu:hand gut rr,e s box. but for two days i was not feeling .n better, but on the 'mirth day my hushan,l ,a!!.'i bil.eve th„•o pills are dnirg you goed.' 1 was. able to ray ' Yrs, 1 trrl a good deal b^tt•: shot motr,ira.' fie raid. •1rw .11,1,11 `et /no another has right away.:1 took fwn Lex.. and three dote* nut of ebe third one. a�,d 1 mss prrtectly well and hare not been 'irk .ince then. 1 will siever be without them to my home for that knows it It had rot 5.•en for horn's fleart and Nero, Pill.. 1 nentd not hate been alive u'w. • Price 5oceuts per box. t boxes tor$1.2S, rte T. Milburn ('n, Limited. Toro:::.,, Ont. e.•ration was completely successful. ' angwm women were the first to womeno have llban shed the rt beer COULD NOT GO TO �VOHY saloon and there are many Llang rm woven awaiting old age pensions. In politics these women are Lib - To spill tiie salt is unlucky. orals. 'Their lives are severe and Ilaekarhe i+ the pra:arc , a.;se of kidney COMMON SUPi:RST;TIONS, BACK WAS SD WEAK. To sit down thirteen to table is Spartan. 'their religion 1a of the ttuubie. When if'',luck a•h,-,orbecotnrs same hrecd as that of Cromwell's weak it is a warn Fut the kid a- seven years of misfortune. The Llangwm roan is somewhere A picture falling from the walls in the back ground. He is a (lo - is an omen Of a death in the family- mcstic animal. He has not even a Seeing the new moon for the first claim to his own name. He is time through glees should be avoid- "Mary Palmer's man" or "Bessie ed. Llewcllin's son." There is no exas- Friday is an unlucky day for a 1 peratingly offhand talk of the "mis- I journey or to commence any under- stip or toe wife,'' ns among the taking. Englishmen of the Paine position Crossed knives indicate an iniraiti- !in life. 'the lot of a i.Iangwin man ent quarrel. I is not altogether happy, though he A black cat brings lock to a is a well domesticated animal. house, Peacock's feathers are nelc:cky ornaments. Walking under n ladder invites -Who was Ireland's gre,ttert. misfortune. benefactor i'' Clothing unconsciously telt on in. '•('olumbue " side out is a good omen. "\t'hy, what did I:e do for ire - Helping to salt is helping to sor- lanel 1" row. "Discovered Awl Ica" unpick\ ,•• ,neys ars liable to become afT ctc 1. Heed the warn:14; c!:s,!, the lla'k'arhe awl dispose of any chances of further trouble. Break a looking glass portends IN HISTORY. If yon don't, serious complications are very apt to arise anti the first thing you know you will have Ih.,pty, Diabetes or Ilrip;ht'e 1'isca's^-, the th:ee most deadly Virus of Kidney Trouble. Mr. ,Yam -s Iii, v,t, Ari. hat, N.S., was troubled with his 11.3•:k and used ih an's Kidney Pills, hs writes: -" I cannot say too much about, the Ivrnt"t I received afte; nsi•tg three boxes of I►„an'e Kidney Pills. I was greatly troll:sled with an aching pain act- en the small of try hank. I ennui not go to work and my hoick was an weak I woull have to sit down. It w.-,uld go away for a few days but would always return. 1 mss advised to t:y beans Koine,. Pills anal i must ivy they completely cured Inc." P.:ro LS ecnt' per lox or 3 bt'xea for 31.23 at s1 dealer. or mailed direct on rete et of pricy by ''to D- an Kidney rill T •runt°,