Exeter Times, 1909-03-11, Page 3CURE
fit Y rreadacireand relic Testi the troubles Inc{.
dent to a bilious state of the ayar.ew. such .a
Doziness, Nausea, Drowafuw. Distress after
• g. Yalu In the Bide% ac. While their Inuit
-,rkable success Lw ben shown to outing
SICK
I►mtachq yet litter's Little Liver Pills are
equally valuable In (oostl:,at ion. cnnng and pre-
arntu,a lb isannoy Ing complaint wail 1, the) also
corre••talidlwenlersoftboat•.ntacb.stimulate the
liver and regulate the bowtls. Even 1r they only
ourvd
HEAD
Aohethgwould bealinnetprlc leas to those who
mutter from tblsdistre,ulug e., u,platut; but fortu-
nately their goodness duce 'intend bere,and those
Who ones try them will !Ind thea, little pills valu-
able Insonnyways thotthey will not bo wit -
Lai todowithout the tn. But after ell sick head
ACHE
Iith. %n� of so many live. that here 1. where
we male our great boast. Our pills cure It while
Others do not.
Carter's Little Liver Pills are very small and
very easy to take. One or two pills makes dose.
They are strictly vegetable and do not gripe or
purge, but by their gentle action please aw who
eel them.
CISTLS YtDI:I112 CO., H.W ?OIL
fall Pelt Small Da Small Print
SENTENCE SERMONS.
Growing is in inverse
to blowing.
A good day's work is
prayer for rest.
He who fears to make foes fails
to make friends.
The best way to be loyal to the
past is to leave it.
For the work of heaven you need
the bread of heaven.
True friendship is always richest
in days of greatest need.
It's no use wasting blows on the
man who is afraid of being hurt.
You get mush instead of men
when you offer thein only soft
places.
It's no use sighing for a chance
to lead if you dare not go alone.
Out of deep sorrows como high
powers to comfort, and strengthen.
Idleness makes the hours wear-
ily 12ng and the days woefully
elm,
Tho ark of a heavenly blessing
is tha it ignores our earthly
bq� daries.
t can never know any deep joy
who can laugh at the sorrows of
another.
The man who is liberal in his
faith is not always the same in his
proportion
the best
lances,
, Sometimes we need tides of grief
-to carry us over the bars of our
dull content.
The only way to get all the hap-
piness in life is to give for the hap-
piness of all.
The man who Ilnngs his head
against hard facts feels his bumps
and calls them faith.
NOTICE FROM CALLERS.
In Persia, among the aristocracy,
visitors send notice an hour or two
before calling, and give a day's no-
tice if the visit is of great import-
ance. A visitor is met by servants
before he reaches the house, and
other consideration is shown to him,
according to relative rank. Tho
left, and not the right, is there con-
sidered tho position of honor.
- Attorney (for defence)—"Now,
what time was it when you were
attacked V' Complainant — "I
do now ; ask your client, — he
• watch ,,,
PLE SAID StiE HAD
NSUMPTION
n
Was In Red for Three Months. ' ECTCD
Read bene• firs. T. 11. Da k, ikae•chr:nl,;o, as the reason fur his action that his , I need at the lertl•ard end so that E •
,t., was cnreel (and also lit lin tie h.,ti , h w•
NOTES AND COMMENTS
No revelations in regard to the
Russian war of terrors, it was
thought, could surprise the world
after the events of the last few
years. But the disclosures in the
duma with reference to police par-
ticipation iu terrorist plots, coupled
with government communications
admitting some of the charges and
in turn accusing former heads of
the secret service 6f active sym-
pathy and alliance with revolution-
aries, have created a sensation even
r m.,ng the keen observers of Rus-
sian affairs.
There appears to bo little doubt
that the chief of the "fighting"
!terrorist organization in Russia has
RELIGION AND THEOOGY
We All Agree That Love Is Better Than Hatc,
That Right Is Better Than Wrong.
"Who shall abide in thy taber-
nacle!. He that walketh upright."
—Ps. xv., 1, 2,
It is easy to exalt opinions to
undue importance, especially if the
opinions are our own, and invari-
ably if they are formed with a
splendid disregard of all other
opinions. There is a fatal facility
about thinking the same things un -
purposes. That is the only path-
way into larger understanding of
the laws of our universe. The
mechanic who obese the elementary
laws of physics is a better scien-
GERMAN SPIES AT WORICWORK FOR UNEMPLOYED
TWO THOUSAND OF THEM ARE
IN ENGLAND.
Kaiser's War Office Has a Large
' Army Picking up Military
Secrets.
ENG 1..1ND II.tts LITTLE TO
LEARN IN GERMANY.
Labor Exchanges Help to Mitigate
Evil -.ire Not Complete
Success.
Major Alfred J. Reed the other A report of an enquiry into the
night supplemented to a curses- methods adopted in Germany for
pondent of a London newspaper at dealing with unemployment has
tist than he who blindly subscribes Auchterarder the statemnts regard- been presented to the British Labor
to all the theories of our universe. ing the presene:e of German spies party by Mr. George N. Barnes,
Theology properly is just our at,- in England and Scotland which he ! M.P. 'the enquiry had special re -
tempt to read -something of the laws made at a Unionist tweeting in fercaco to insurance and labor ex -
r re c t •a e
g g t Is ore, Scotland, recently.
changes. The commissioners found
that there was little to learn„ even
in Germay, as regards the practical
you from internal disturbances and divulge my source of information," application of insurance to unem-
regrets to indorse the theories of he said, "but I may tell you that I plop-neut. The matter has not yet
modern dietetics; neither will your have in my possession certain con been taken up by the Imperial au-
thorities, excepting 111 so far as
age, collection and tabulation of
statistics bearing upon it, may be
described. But it was found that
there was a very considerable in-
terest being taken in the question,
and that three of the five towns
visited had schemes in operation.
that reign in the higher a •t c of l' • •tl 1
til opinion runs automatically and our life. Its value depends on our 1 regret that for obvious reasons
begins to rule us. Then we set up use of the laws. It will not keep I ant not at present permitted to
such autoinatic judgments as stand-
ards for others and as objects of
worship for all.
This is not the kind of thinking
been a government spy. This dis- t
that makes the world. This is not tions of modern and ancient theo-'cntlal correspondence, official and
covert' was made at a congress of the kind of thinkingthat deter-' logyotherwise, which proves beyond
save you from conflict with they doubt the activity of spies in Lon
the terrorists in Paris, and the ac- mines character. The deep laws of the life of the spirit,
cused, who was present at the first thoughts of the heart shape the ac -I All thinking don, in our eastern counties and
P gisturthcpurpusoof•
sessions, deemed it prudent to dis-
appear afterward. The govern-
ment organs claim that this strange
character was useful to his employ-
ers, inasmuch as he prevented the
success of some plots and protect-
ed the emperor and the premier.
But this is a poor defense if it is
true that he organized several
successful assassinations, including
those of Plehvo and Sergius, and
for years guided the terrorist move-
ment.
The constitutionalists assert that
some of the reactionaries in the
government have used the terror-
ists to get rid of rivals, as well as
to discredit the reform regime and
justify martial law, wholesale ex-
ecutions and savage reprisals. That
provocative agents have been em-
ployed to instigate minor political
crimes, and that the massacres of
1906 were ordered by officials are
notorious facts, but that the highest
members of the government should
have encouraged and subsidized
spies acting as energetic terrorists
is amazing. The duma may well
ask what cleim Russia has to a
place among civilized peoples and
what confidence any honest Russian
constitutionalist can have in the
government and the bureaucracy.
"Strong -handed reform" has been
the "liberal" premier's watchword.
He has defended executions at the
rate of four or five a day on the
score of necessity. Pacification was
his first duty, and to terrorists no
mercy could be shown. But what
becomes of this policy if many of
the terrorists crimes can be traced
to police and secret service insti-
gation? And if some of the high
rolice officials revolted against
such horrors and helped the revolu-
tionary movement will not that bo
regarded as natural? Was there
ever an instance of confusion worse
confounded more glaring than that
prevented by Russia to -day 1
4.
SOME Si'I'I LF1'L
Three of Them Against Women, One
Concerned ►a Mann.
RILLS.
Quite a number of wills have been
proved recently which have con-
tained strange bequests, evidently
prompted by spite. Strangely
enough, most of these vindictive
wills are directed against women.
A St. Louis citizen left a thousand
dollars to a certain party on the
ground that he "never forgot a
favor." Ten years age, it appears,
the legatee ran away with the tes-
tator's wife'
Another will was proved of n man
who left his wife one farthing, and
directed that it should be sent ter
her by post in an unstamped en-
velope. His will was made two
years before his death, and he gave
tions of the individual and dictate living. It must come to the test in, certain districts of Scotland .
the actions of mankind. But this of its product in Theta, if published, would, 1
feel certain,
prejudiced and blind automatic ut-
terance of opinion is often the type CAUSE A GREAT SENSATION.
of thinking that dominates theo- It is worth while tui remember this
logy'. when narrow views are insisted on The methods, organization and de -
It is a disappointing experiment by small men, and others seek to portment of the German secret
to ask, What ought I to do in or- emphas zo their outlandish opinions agents operating among us are at
(ler to find the way of the religious by their eccentric and often un- last exposed, and before long I
life and service? and to receive the savory living. think wee may expect certain umaz-
answer that you must believe this Tho poorest kind of a religion in ing revelations.
statement or that definition or this world is the one that can be' "The fixed agents, who are
opinion. Almost any worth while
man would rather be damned for
intellectual honesty than saved by
theological hypocrisy.
LABOlt EXCHANGES. ....
Of public labor exchanges there
aro in Germany about 900, and the
number is increasing. As to their
utility, the report of the commis-
sioners states, there are, of course,
differences of opinion. There are
embalmed in a theological mummy French, Belgian and Swiss, as well those who regard them as the first
case, dried up dust, labeled and as German subjects in various and indispensable step to the
laid away, awesome with antiquity' walks of life, and of both sexes, aro further dealing with the problem of
but utterly helpless. The life has known only by number at the cen• unemployment, inasmuch as there -
ETERNAL REALITIES. died out of any faith when it can tral bureau in Berlin, their names by the actual condition of the labor
be thus cased up and catalogued.' only being known to the travelling market may' be ascertained. There
If you examine the formulas and A vital belief always defies precise agent directing operations in their are those who regard labor ex -
particular district. . changes as in themselves providing
of which your character and des- pigeon -holing. "The work of these secreta rets, a remedy for unemployment lac -
tiny are both supposed to rest you As soon as the heretics all die in gby P
will be surprised to find how little a church the church dies. The here-' ed,w•ho are marvelously well organiz- ing labor where it is wanted, and
they have to do with the deep and tics are those who leave yester- las has taken a newh turnr within theowhore it could not otherwiese have
eternal realities of life. Theology day's forms for to day's facts. The last tee months, the seriousness of been placed,
concerns itself principally with only dangerous heresies are these: which will be was once confined
to I FINDING THEM WORK.
matters about which we never can When we love and lie and refuse Hitherto- it mainly confined to The report for August of Sir
have precise information, where the truth, or when pride persuades defences, military and naval sec-The
Oppenhoimet, Counsul-
uncertainty is most certain to bo us to be singular in error rather rets, food supplies and communica' General at Frankfort, showed that
discovered, and often with those than to be lost in the larger com-`tions necessary to be destroyed. At f in thirteen towns workers were
matters which, if they were set- pany who sec the truth. ( the present moment, however, found for more than 10,000 vacan-
tled absolutely, 'would lose all in- If you are perplexed over opin- there is great activity among them cies, and in eight smaller towns
terest to us. ions in matters of religion turn in the preparation of plans of the vacancies were filled in numbers
People were happy in their en- from the uncertainties to the cer-' water supplies of our large cities, ranging from 5,000 to 10,000. In
joyinent of this fair world long be- tainties. We can all agree that and of how reservoirs may be des- Berlin 107,398 vacancies had been
fore the invention of the nebular it is better to live up than to dio troyed and the supply of water cut filled out of a population of 2,040, -
hypothesis. They managed to stay down ; that it is bettor to lift tip from the morse densely populated 222, in Frankfort-on-Mnitrl ,00t`ti
on the ground long before the dis- than to tear down. If we will areas. out of a population of 988,•413, and
covery of the law of gravitation. gradually build such a form and in Dusseldorf 27,301 out of a popu-
No man would bo condemned to certain platform for our i 1,500 IN SCOTLAND.
I practice; laden of 253,099. The figures in -
be chained to the earth for fear of we will cense to look for stability!"In the industrial centres of dicate that the exchanges are large -
falling off because he refused to in clouds of theory, and will find Scotland alone - there are nt this ' ly used, and that they have won
believe that law. truth through life, right doctrines moment no fewer that 1,503 per- the confidence of both employer and
The great thing to do is to accept through duty. I sons, male and female, in the em -
the facts as they are for working HENRY F. COPE. I ploy of the German general staff. workman. Their usefulness is in -
It is now known that the whole of creased by the system of co-ordina-
TILE S. S. LESSON
INTERNATIONAL LESSON,
MAR. 14.
Lennon XI. Aeneas and Dorcas.
Golden Text, Acts
9: ga.
Verse 31. The story of the con-
version of Paul is passed over at
this time, to be taken up in the
next quarter, when we begin the
second division of the Acts, the
work of St. Panl. To dwell on that
great event here would interrupt
the course of the history, and is
especially fitting in connection with
the beginning of his career.
32. Peter passed throughout all
quarters.—Peter's first home mis-
sionary work was in connection
with John in Samaria (Acts 8).
They both returned to Jerusalem
preacLing in the villages of Sa-
maria on the way. Now we find
Peter again on a gospel tour
throughout Palestine, preaching
the gospel, and healing the sick,
as his credentials, and as illustrat-
ing the spirit and nature of the
Gospels; visiting and encouraging
and teaching the new churches
formed by the persecuted Christi-
ans, and keeping there in touch
w•'i•h the apostolic church in Jeru-
salem.
33. Ae _as—Very nearly the same
name as Virgil's hero of Troy.
Eight years --Showing that the
cure was miraculous. Sick of the
palsy—Palsy is n cant rection of the
tion which obtaiits to some of the
work through his disciple Peter al the defences of Scotland have been German provinces, for by this
miracle of restoration such as he secretly investigated during the means they assist in the mobility
himself had wrought during Ilia last two years, and reported on to of labor.
earthly life. Peter went, and like Perlin. The investigation of the commis -
his Master at Capern:u m, (40) put "The number of Germans regu- sioncrs led them to the following
them all forth. Then he kneeled larly collecting information in
down and prayed. Then, with as- England, more especially on the
surance of an nnew•er, he, turning oast and south coast, is computed
. . . to the body, said, Tabitha,' to be over 5,000."
arise. .
41. Gave her his hand, to help
her up after she was alive. Jesus
took Jairus's daughter's hand be-
fore she was restored.
MAORIS iN PARLIAMENT.
Present-day Native Members are
College -bred Men.
In the New Zeeland parliament
there are four native or Maori re-
presentatives. The old-time Maori
TO DESTROY EXPLOSIVES. members were a rather rough, on-
- . ly partially civilized lot, alio bad
Powder May be Thrown in Water, gone through the wars with the
but Dynamite Never. British and whose only conception
The best way to destroy ordinary of parliament was a piece in which
griev-
black gunpowder is to throw it in- to ventilate thier personal to a stream under conditions that ances in prodigiously long orations.
prevent any harm coming to hu -
are
present-day Maori members
man beings or aninlnls through the are college -bred, highly civilized,
dissolving of the saltpetre. If no' well-dressed legislators. Once in
suitable strea:n is availa!►lo the the olden time a famous fighting
gunpowder may be stirred with chief took his seat, and there was
water in tubs, or the dry gunpow-I itnmedintcly a general exodus of
der may he poured nut on tho white M.P.'s from his vicinity.
ground in a long thin line and ig With a sublime contempt for Euro-
nited with a fug • at one end. peen conventions, he had come into
To destroy dynamite cartridges the house with the tail of as ancient
and odoriferous shark protruding
carefully removed, the bare cart- from his pocket.
ridges laid in a row with their ends
in contact and the first cartridge
ignited with n fuse without. a cap.
Even with these precautions n
simultaneous explosion of the en-
tire leers may occur, so that it is
the paper wrappings should he
wise to retire to a Fafe distance.
The row of cartridges should ..e
laid parallel with the wind anti i -
O
th yi wife had celled him an "old pig',ord paralysis' Jthe flame will be driven away from More People Than are Aware 01 11
the use of ,
and other ran cs. 31. Jesus Christ --That is the Nies_ the mass. Ilavo Heart Disease.
DR. WOOD'S NORWAY PINE SYRUP I The other day a man died and sink• Peter guards against being Frozen cfy•namite should be hand- "If examinations were made of every.
Bwrites: "1 thought 1 would write' left his property to his daughter on Rof the healing. I led with special cess, as its cone� lI y
g 1 thou ht the coarct ont+,•pco t o would he surprised at the mini-
sink
von know the lrr•n.tit I have re- condition that she paid to n certain ile draws Inen not to himself, but bustiun is peculiarly liable to as-
sume
berot(rtnrsonswalking about sulTering(roto
o 1 through the use of your its. Wood's I person the sum of 7 cents for the t" the Saviour, and shows that sutne nn expioslve character. �, heart tliaeaw• "
way fine Syrup. A few ))Cars ago 1
purchase of a hem ern cord or 1181- I Jesus is still tieing the same kinds small quantity of (dvnatTtite. may h I'hi+startling statement was mode by a
ri„,
Pe, wldly troublttl with my IunRs I.nc.plo 1 I hail Consumption and that 1 would
Lot live through the fall. I hal tw, , doc-
tors attending me and they were vert much
alarmed about. me. 1 was ht !KA. three
months and w hen i got up I c .,ihl not w alk,
sa, had to go on my hands and knees for
three week., and my limbs seemed of no
ase to me. I gave up all hopes of ever
getting better when I happened to are in popular railway line whe died re- Jerusalem, having at. present eight
B 13.13. Almanac that 1)r. Wood's NorwayI Gently left an estate value( I thousand
Pine Syrup was good for weak lungs. t for 9n 1 I inhabitants. A certain
thought 1 would try a bottle and by the probate nt, !?l,SMS. itt his will he disciple named Tnhitha—Phis in
time 1 hail used it 1 was a lot better, so •„t made some unkind remerks agninat Syriac, the common language of the
more and it mode a complete cnrc. It' a certain person, of whore he states 1 region, means splendor, beauty.
little boy was also troubled with weak that "My estate would have been j Called Dorcas (Gazelle), which in
(ung, ant it cured him. I keep it in the considerably larger if it had not
house all the i and
As soon es a girl gets old enough
to know better she quits wearing
pins along her waist line.
MANY DON'T KNOW
HEART AFF
ter for the use of the dear wife of
that person, expt)•ssing the hope
that she would 'make use of the
sante without delay
There is at least one ease, how-
ever, in which a man is concerned.
One of the uniformed officials e.f
e de.etor at a recent inriuest. ” 1 should not
of work he slid when he was living destroyed by •thrott•ing it in 'Very like to Pay that heart diems,, is as re.nunon
on earth. So the true preacher or; sinall hits into an open fire. or the as this would imply," said the crpert,
teacher always draws attention Cartridges may be exploded one by "hitt I am Pure that the number of welters
not to himself, hitt to his Lord. ( one in the open air with fuses and going about with weak hearts must be very
Ca s.
largo."
30. There was at Joppa —Thr P 1 "Hundreds of peeping() adopt their dai,y
modern Jaffa., nine or ten n Iles 1)t' namitr shoul(1 never he thrown work on the ♦ergo of death, and yet (lo nos
north of l,yddn, the seaport of into seater, as the nitro-glycerine know it. It is only when the shock comers
w•hiett it contains retnnins un(lis-' that kills them that the unP„Ppected week•
solved nntl capable of dein mis-' nests of the he.trt is mads, Ppparent."
the East was a favorite type •tf
a time a, I t mulct nen, be w,tb• been for n,,- association with Ibis
out it for anything" beauty.
Pri. a 'IS ("PHIS at all dealers. ltnwarr of Perambulating human vinegar cruet 37-43. The disciples at Joppa
Imitations of lir. Woods Norway Pine and the cleverest known legal slay- tear -':a3 of Peter's preeence at
Syrup. Ask fir it and insist en getting light robber." These asseeinttnnst
I, d(d•t, sent for him to come with -
tin o!gnu!. Put up in it yellow wrapper he estimated M have coat hi
and three pow trees the trade nark.
conclusions:
FINDING OF COMMISSION...
(1) That notwithstanding protec-
tive tariffs there exists in Germany
a large amount of unemployment,
though in the places visited tho
actual numbers of the unemployed
and the degree of poverty experi-
enced appeared to have been pre-
vented from reaching the same acute
stage as obtains in towns of sim-
ilar size in Great Britain, owing to
the following, among, other, rea-
suns:
(a) The co-ordination and system-
atic management of public labor
exchanges, which admits employers
and workmen more easily to ascer-
tain the actual condition of the
labor market, and tends to lessen
the number of loose unemployed.
(b) Tho desire of municipal au-
thorities and many employers to But, between seven and eight
minimize unemployment by regular- o'clock, when it was very nearly
izing their requirements. dark, Genaro, who had suffered
(c) The greater facilities possess- much from the heat of the day and
ed by the German municipalities to the heavy nature of the ground. fell
cope with unemployment in their down senseless, and was envied Off
respective areas, owing to their to the weighing house. The owners
freedom from the restriction impos- of Loto and Old Ireland, not wish-
ed by centralized authority. ing to kill their horses, immedi-
(2) That inasmuch as the German stela agreed tet divide the stakes.
schemes of insurance for unem- These horses (old and famous
ployment are only in the experimen- steeplechasers) had d"no twenty
tal stage, and having regard to leagues and three-quarters in five
their obvious limitations, they can- hours and a half. Genaro, in tno
not he recommended for adoption same time ran nearly twenty-three
in Great Britain with much con-
fidence.
r
CONSTIPATION
IRREGULA''JTY
OF THE BOWELS
Any irregularity of the bowels is always
dangerous, and should be at nuc* attrudt:.t
to and corrected.
MILBURN's
LAXA - LIVER PILLS
work on the bowels gently and naturally
without weakenin,l the body, but, on the
contrary, tuning it, and they will if per.
severed in relieve and cure the worst caeca
of constipation.
Mrs. Jamas King, Cornwall, Ont., writes:
"I was troublotl with sick heaelaches, con-
stipation and catarrh of the stomach. I
could get nothing to do the any Rood until
I got a vial of .lilburn's Laza-Liver Pills.
They did me more good than anything else
I ever tried. I have no headaches or con-
stipation, and the catarrh of the stomach
1s entirely one. I feel like a new woman,
thanks to'Milburn's Laza-Liver Pills. 1
media all about half a dozen vials."
Price 28 cents a vial, 5 for $1.00, at all
dealers or mai!eet direct by The 1'. Milburn
Co., Limited, Toronto, Out.
HORSE AND MAN RACE
TRIAL. THAT TOOK PLACE ON
THE PARIS COURSE.
Horses Outdid Foot Runner, Who
Ila i Till Ile Dropped.
Exhausted.
Some interest was created in the
sporting world in 1855 by the an-
nouncement that a Spaniard named
Genaro, a noted runner, had wag-
ered two thousand francs that he
would run against any number of
horses an the racecourse of Long -
champs, Paris, which is 2,296 yards
round, the horses to trot or gallop,
but not to walk, and Genaro not
to walk either, the winner being
the horse or man who should go
round the course the greatest
number of times. The affair canto
off on September 9, and thirteen
horses were entered, named There -
sine, Tom, Pacha, 'Taurus, Old Ire-
land, Jenny Stene, Penman, Miss
Grinaway, Loto and Nubblcr. Gen -
aro, who was thirty-three years of
age, and of a vigorous and wiry
frome, but of the thirteen horses
only ten were taken to the post—
Theresine. Tom, and Jenny Stane
being withdrawn.
TWO HORSES STAYED.
The signal having been given, the
horses and Genaro started. In the
third round Nobbler and Miss Grin -
:testy were put out of the race for
having fallen into a walk; for the
sante reason Penman was beaten
in the fifth round, Schavengcr in
the seventh, Paella in the thir-
teenth, Coquette in the fourteenth,
Taurus and Sultane in the twenty-
third. There now remained but
two horses running, Leto and Old
Ireland; but these ha' galloped
away at a most unnecessary pace,
and had made forty turns, while
poor Genaro was only in his twenty-
third. Still, there was a chance
for the pedestrian, for those two
horses, which were much distress-
ed, could not have continued to
run much longer, and had they
given up the confect, Genaro would
have been allowed by the terms of
the race to go on at as slow a jug
trot as he pleased, till he had made
up the distance that they had
gained upon him.
MAN GAVE U1'.
HOT T.\Ldp.
Nugget—I hear she rejected you,
I'll bet you felt foolish about that
time.
Lovett—Yes, i guess I felt just
Jig foolish at that time as you look
all the time.
.-_.p
Guest.—"Now comes this dead
fly- in my soup 1" Waiter—":n fact,
sir, 1 have no positive idea. how
the poor thing came by its death.
Perhaps it had not taken any feed
for a long time, elashe,l upon the
g soap, ate too much "f it, and eon -
chief. Other explosives which can-! "But undoubt"dpi);
dly heart weakness, not a stomach
an inllain'eation of the
thin nitro-glycerine should be riiaeaee, i+ more prevalent ne,wadays. 1 toma. h t hat leou.-ht . n dea'h. The
ahou.d think that the *tree, of living, the I fly must have haul a weak c•,ltstl
treated in the same tray as dy-na weer and rush of modern business life,' lotion. fur when 1 serled up the
mite. I have a lot to do with heart trouble." I (loup it was dancing merrily on the
Ammonium nitrate ext•le•ise There isnod,uh: but that this iscr•rre(t, 1 surface. Perhaps—and the idea
mny be thrown in small fragments and we world etroyi iv aeivisc any one
res
enGe
su e d its l
R nn P e f only into an open fire, or if they do note R to any wayy �mm heart trouble to at this rnu•
into
nitro-geemay he de- trya a"'ree of MILBURN'S HEART 'tient it (' ideavorecl to swallow
AND NERVI PILL$ too la rge a piece of vegetable ; t his,
etre 'c d by means of wn r tea or 3 Maes for 1.:.r, g
y ter. Ex- Prier. L"' I ^' remaining fast in his thryrat, caus-
plosive caps should he exploded at all dealers or will be m+,led direst irtg a choking in the wilelpipe.
These are the only reasons i an
give for the death of that insect."i
nt co.1- oat delay, apparently with some, sin lye wtth pieces reeve, t of sire ht'• The T. Millen] Coe
sidcrably over 412,00,1. B P of fuse.—$cienti- P P
ho;:e teat the unseen Master would' fic American. Limited. Toronto. Out,•
turns, or about twelve leagues.
SKIN DISEASES
These troublesome atllie.ions are etnscd
wholly by bad blood and an unhealthy
state of the system, and ran be easily r tired
b), tho wouelerful blo,1 cleansing proper.
(toe of
Burdock
Blood
Bitters
Many remark.tble, cares have been mule
by this remedy, and not only have the un-
sightly skin 1114,..14.01 been removed, and a
bright clear complexion been produced,
but the entire system has been renovated
and invigorated at the wino sa tie time.
SALT 1(;IIEU11 CORED.
Mrs John O'Connor, Burlington. N 9.,
writes:—" )..r years 1 suffered with Salt
Rheum. i tried a ,toren different medi•
clow,, but most of them only made it worse.
i was advised to try Burdock 1110..1 I;it•
tere. 1 got a bottle and hero:e 1 had taken
half a dtr:/'n dor. it 1 could see a, hanpe Pe•
Cont:uu •d its nee and now 1 un • e•,,pletc'.y
curry!. 1 e.nn .5 511 tva O1.1....:1 for your
7vn .udul matlreiva.'