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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1909-04-08, Page 3ARTE6 111 Wok CURE IIeada Le su1 reset a all the troubles fn.d- dent to a bilious state of the system. snob as I,lzzlnaas, 1i.ttsea Lrowafu,:ar• Liatre:.s after rating. Palo In tho Ellet ke. Whits their most ar4tu Liable suer,: so has leen showu Us ctalug SICK >R+'sdsehs jet Cartr.r'a Little ].aver Pills ars aruanj v./Ubaldo In Conanpatt,v., canoe still pre - tenting Ulla annoying rornr.la:nt,whilo t4.•y also correct alldu„r.brreeltheatouueh,atituulata tho ha• r and reg r:l.&to the bowai,t. rains II W ry only cured £C}ieth�yw. di i:..lihr.ctpd..lea.tothnsewhe suffer tram thea die -mating c„'..I.taiut; but fortu- nately ornhnately thelrW.ulu..ss docs notcod here,and those Who puce try them will Aad those little plila vaht- able,nsowally ware thatlhcv will not be ail- Una il- > todowithoutthem. 1'utafter ail sick head CHS Is the hone of so many lives that here le white wn,u..beour gr -at boast, Our111113coraItwhi:o ether:: do net. Carter's Little Liver Pills are very email and very easy to tike. Oen or twoills,natca dose. They aro atricily vegetable aro l do HA gripe or parpe, but by tLelrgentloactlon please alt who use them. res:Ita 1ts�t.:n e.;., pa small 111:3, Z°1/11 S,MALI. HENS L:11. 1.1RGE EGGS Great eneeess of Danish Breederm' i is one in which the religious or Methotle. often the monotony of life con (F - less t h five thousand original sumes the en spiritual note gathers into harmony K TTO FIND OUR THUS SALVES We Should Think of Our Responsibilities as Our Opportunities. Fur what is your life? It is even Man, like the vapor, will never a %aper, that appeareth' for a lit- do his best work except under pres- ale time and then vauisheth away. --James iv. 11. This is an apt metaphor with which to represent the brevity and evanescence of life, but, it dees not tell the whole story. The cloud whirl h the text speaks of as float- ing idly in the sky we have intpris- 1 in our machinery and ones cotll- pelled to do mighty things. This capacity of fleeting vapor fur :•n-',•1 to servants"; tees& are the stns- (lour, and left Peter knocking there orgy and work well represent, tee ees he used. They all emphasize' while she rushed ilio the tenter' I J ) t 1 havere rdazedhimself. eondition,l and knew } his that he STORED WITH TREASURES had really been released, by an angel sent from the Lord. And let us keep in iniad the fact that back of the angel was that prayer meeting. Where did Peter naturally turn 1 To the house of Mary, evidently a rendezvous for the Christians. The An lwmeusely Valuable ('ulirction apostle knocked at the door of the --Old Reeorde -- Indian gate, the outer dour of the entrance passage leading to the inner court. Relics. This was kept fastened, and just THROUGH THE ARCHIVES 1{t'ILI)ING, OTTAWA. sure. :1 !,look will babble until inside was a small room for the The Archive, building, whish it, :meets the dam, when it begins' tunic! who tended the door. The stands hard by the mint en Sussex t. turn the gristmill. Without a description, according to Tristram, street in Utres a is already stored sense of responsibility a mon w1I1 shows that it was a house of the with treasures (J greatest literary de•%elu) no force of character. and historical interest. The old ! better class. records, careless) top Life is most truly described in the Who answered the knock ? A J stored , the broad sense as u great opportunity. ; damsel named Itheda (meaning d' -:t c f the th et in block, or }►id That is the way Jesus looked at it, 'Rose). With youthful impetuosity, :.d: n away in the tower of of the East) Treasure hid in a field," " . real , she was so glad to hear the beloved i iiluIs ` k,(`�',rl ;d the incusclus valuallple Those persons who are interested et great pt ice, ''Talents intrust-! tones that she forgot to unbar the y 1 collection, arranged and indexed re money will find money at the rf3ho writes: "I thought I would write under a system so perfect that the Archives. It isn't mune • which tt and lot you know tato t,er.ti Quebec. The fences are there paper currency of long ago. It is kept under glass in the library, around the fields; the heights are there. the river. the fortifications, the wharves, the houses and all the public buildings of the historic city. Tiny guns peep out of the embra- sures, match -like bits of wood - miniature timbers lie upon the quays, stacks of cordwood stand along the front of the lower town. Von tee the old Chateau Fronten- ac. tite palace of that worthy gen- tleman, the Intendant Bigot, and yell see Lo Chien d'Or. It is Que- bec as pictured in those two books, curieusiy similar in materia!, the Le ('hien d'Or, by Kirby, and The Seats of the Mighty, by Gilbert Parker. MONEY UNDER GLASS. 1 PEOPLE SAID S1IE-(IAD CONSUMPTION Read how Mrs. 'f. 11. Ruck. Itracehridge, Out., was cured fatal ale° her little boy) by the use of OR. WOOD'S NORWAY PINE SYRUP capacity of the human spirits f..r the inspiration and service. This con- stitutes man's greatest endowment ELEMENT OF OPPOHT('N ITV. and is the life of every faculty and Life is, in short, the opportunity attui.tcnent• tc find our true self, and until we Scripture continually speaks of have done that we can never hope man as a "vessel" or utensil which to find the true teed. If a man depends for its usefulness and gain the whole world and lose him - worth upon the value of its con- pelf it profiteth nothing. For a tents. When noble ideals perish our life descends toward THE LEVEL OF THE BRUTE. I !archivist is able to ,lace his hand .111 drrn coral dealer would care to mere 1 through the use of your 1)r. Wood's meeting to tell the good news! urio:l a given document neap or ac'c'ept, but it was the everyda • Norwa Pine Syrup. A few rears ago 1\'! t disciples "! I J vLa It ed at, this answer to then prayers?... hts m!reele has been wrought by plain -looking probably, but service- not live through the fall.an1 had ttaudold o. Because they had not expected the, Ur. A. ' G. Doughty, Domtnien able enough in their day and gen- tors attending me and they were very much answer so soon, or in such a won- archivist. eration. Their associates in 1)r. alarmed about me. I was in be,f three derful manner. Some of them, per , , Dou hty's lass case are the ward montheand when i gut u t I could not walk haps, had been prayingwith little; OF AGE GONE' B1 . g g 1 per- haps, puns of the Indian and the letters so hod to go on my hands and knees for real faith. I)r. Doughty is adding constant- of the men 1':n ,ish and French three weeks, and inv limbs seemed of no Why were the < iscip es astonish-) engraving •nt a moment's notice.; tine -w'or'n Niagara bills mostly, ;tat 1�had lCunsummeiwntand wigs people V. The Open 1)nor, of Easter. I}' to his records. He has unty.:i who helpedhe Canadian fours± use to me, 1 gave up all hopes of ever "The angel left Peter, , hnvin - ac- P Jay °tang tetter when I happened to ace in dation. letters upon which the ink 11 li lt. Almanac that Dr. 1Voa1's Norway has faded Erten black to yellow. Pine Syrup was good for weak limes. I Not the author only, but the il- thought. 1 would try a bottle and by tho lustrator also. finds his raw materi- time 1 had used it 1 was a lot better, so got al on the shelves and in the files more and it made q complete cure. M little boywas also troubled with weak of the Archives. Pictures of one lungs and it cured hint. I keep it in the sort. or another, of most . f the men house all the time and would not be with - and places of note in Car,t.Gan his- out it. for anything." tory are to be found there. The Price 25 cents at all dealers. ilowaro of rvstem inaugurated by I)r. Doughty Imitations of Dr. Wood'e Norway !'ino Syrup. , Ask for it and insist on getting the original. Put up in a yellow wrappar and three pine trees the trade mark. man can actually and permanently g K possess nothing except himself. Is complished his appointment. B« a roan entitled to say "I live" situp 1 here was to be another time when just as vapor, bereft of its heat ly because he eats and sleeps and Peter would want the visit of sucl turns again to its original liquid farrlmi reticomplex. A The►]fian rstlnfe is a reed time messenger! Iwe also therewill walbe a nt it, farm comparatively without, value. ! Life and action carried cm in ac- ; Pipe gave forth music, but its de- when we shrill have to go out' fpm scendant, the great organ, gives the prison -house of mortality, and cordunre with true ideals will re-! forth melody. Tho complete life from the world itself." salt unfailingly in progress. '11.0 I ' 1' ' !largely upon the British War Of- t, fire, and has transformed torn and dust -covered map, of old Canada, t' found in the •cellars of Downing streeteetoto plans that to -day aro alinoseeas perfect as V. Ilea they first, left the ink -puts of the draughts- men -explorers of an age g•;ilc• by. . %Vithin the last five years Ur. Doughty has added to his store no t t ens u ann a. e • orgy which should is the moral, bringing them also into ( m 1 f Canada. 1f works In touch a way that add]tuIls alization of our ideals, I l volumes of original military- papers. Archnes. fn the search fur lns- Tae Archives collection is as tome data. the happenings of the Ono of the most scientific et- toward the re tempts yet made to get at; the lay- anti when we stand before the doors harnrotly with God, the source and in value of certain breeds of hens1. , Ifountain of fire. g t f largo opportunities We are oyer- l has just hero completed at Read- come with l ) t t f(.,u .end hesitation. ADAM MACDONALD REOCII. ing, England. The breeds experi- mented with in this year's trial - were five varieties of Leghorns, one TI -I E S S LESSON of the two most popular sorts in s S. the world. The following is the estimated profit and loss account: Value Profit Breed Ilatrhe,' of Y.dgs per bird Danish Brown s (1 s d Leghorns .. .. ..1907 12 9 7 9 Danish White Leghorns .. .. ..1907 12 1 7 1 Danish White Leghorns .. .. ..1000 11 8 0 8 American White Ledorns .. .. ..1900 11 10 6 10 Britt i (Exhibition) White Leghorns .1906 0 4 1 4 Introduction. -Between our last Two striking results emerge. It lesson and this from four to six itt found once again that the heat- years have elapsed. What occurred ier he bird the less the egg pro- during that time'1 The founding of duction. The British birds in this the great. Gentile church at Anti - case were more than a pound heav- (eh,11101 the calling thither of ier than any others. Of the first Barnabas from Jerusalem and Paul four varieties en the above list,! from Tarsus. The famine, and the ,*e lowest average for a pert Was j famine relief pent to Jerusalem '1•f2 eggs a year per bird, while the' from Antioch. 4 Why do we omit b pound English birds averaged those events for the present? In only 76 eggs each. 1 order to follow more closely the INTERNATION.11, LESSON, April 11. ,esson 11. Peter Delivered from Prison. Golden 'text, Psalm 31: 7. A yet• more strlking result comes: history of Peter. cutely this time. Ion their return to civilization, the out in the consideration of the w Clgllt of the eggs laid. The Dan, 1' Irsesa 1-3. 1s )hat,lt was that i time, not exey cutedas ,eter imprisoned, and. at once 1 Because it: discovered, ands of a near! the bone oose sre of ish brown pr 1..d yieight,ded nearly i when our lesson begins? The would have offended the Jews whonil this moose' was found the skeleton six times their b. dy weight in eggs; spring of A. 1). 41, while the br we,: tryieg to please, if he exe-, e a man. The story of the tragedy (mink the tette& mouths, and each &tents <lesc•r•ibed in chapter 11 were c'lted Peter durutg the Passover was plain. The unfortunate hun- egg was up to the standard weight (11 2 ounces. The British birds did occurring at Antioch. Who was (that is !:aster). Iter had mortally wounded the not any twice their own body weight. ruler then ? Herod Agrippa I., Peter in Prison. Remember the moose, and had been killed by the 1f. Prison and Prayer. --Verses; 4, 5. What is implied by t}.e clause, when he had appreleeidcd bent; That there had been some delay Travelled -1110 Miles in the Wilder - and difficulty in arresting Peter. uesv to firing Back Horns Where wa,.. Peter confined I In' o! a Moose. t•he famous prison In Her,.d's resi-I dente, the fortress or castle of An-. Indian gratitude bas probably Ionia. It was there that gene think' never been more sincerely proved Christ was arraigned bcfeie Pilate, than in an incident which recently and there Paul was taken when occurred to James Oliver Curwood, mobbed in Jerusalem. It, iminoch the novelist and writer of boys' IND' 111115 GRATEFUL has111ip<in his shelves four thousand are constantly being made to the vari(d almost as it is rich. °-Hero present day are not lost sight of. 111{:1'!' mu IIID F'01{ 1\'111'1'1: }1:1N you see under a glass case la ting filed and are l indexed fodrt the usrecords ee ru{ \4.110 SAVED HIS LIFE, silver box filled with little paper future generations. disks. On each scrap there is a picture and a story. and the con- tents of the little pillbox contain together a complete history of the seven year:;' war. There you see the real wampum and the quill seals of the aborigines, there the written reccrds of Canada's first settlers, the original document of the Company of One Hundred As- sociates. Hero is a .paper telling f a St. Malo venture t%veltt-five at•ely adjoined the temple, on the, books, who returned from the Hud-, Gears before Champlain's first voy- northwest. 'son Bay wilds a few weeks ago.: age. . How was Peter guarded 1 By' Mr. Curwood is the author of "The UNDER, QUEBEC BRIDGE. four quaternions (bands of four) Wolf Hunters," an exciting tale of e.f soldiers, each quaternion being the wild northland, in which the' (hi one of 1)r. Doughty's tables on guard through a three-hour author has spent so much of his re -es a grim relic of the early wars, watch. Two of the soldiers were time. it was while gathering ma- a cannon shot lately dug up !ruin chained to Peter's arms, one en serial for this story that he by the, its long resting place twenty feet either side; a third was outside, merest chance sated one of his Iu-' below the bed of the 't. Lawrence. the door, and the fourth in the pus- dian guides. Mukeki, from severe' It was found by: workmen exert - sage leading to the strong outer; injury --probably death. gating for the piers of the Quebec gate. 1!•.Ilbtless Herod knew howl r bridge. and wes presented- to the the apostles hid escaped from thea FOUND SKELETON• governrnent by the contractor, M. prison of the Sanhedrirn (:lets 5:1 A fel( weeks after this, when i'. Davis. . 1ti), and meant to keep Peter se- Curwood and his two Indians were The Archives building has he- roine the Mecca of the historians and the story -writer. 'i'he old books of the Archives library con- tain material for romances innum- erable, and, moreover. the atmos- phere is there. Public reading rooms are provided. PICTURES AND FLAGS, LA BRA DOR 1l0SgL'TOi;S. 'Terrible Pest to 'Travellers and Na- tives in the Northland. No account of travel in Labrador can be -complete without some men- tion of the terrible pest of mosqui - MOt MOUNTAINS T11.1'T SING. \Wind Itiot'•a 'Through Great Organ Pipes on Cliff. Singing and speaking stones gra- tify man's love of the marvellous and mysterious. Two precipitious cliffs in the Pyrenees are called the "snorers," from the , peculiar sounds which the south-west wind draws from them. The faces of these cliffs are marked by deep gul- lies which roughly resemble organ pipes open in front, and occasion - toes. These were always present ally the front is practically closed in immense swarms front the begin• by a stratum of air held motion- ning of our trip to the end, and less between the c:iff and the trees sometimes they made life almost which graze it elide the wind unbearable, writes a correspondent blows freely through tht• gullies, or in Forest and Stream. organ pips -.!line. Nothing could be heard but their On another 1,,-••1�'tain in the buzzing. Whenever we attempted Pyrenees cur:�.::i e!nit plain - to cat they were down our throats live sounds which re- •r,'ble those of and in our eyes and faces and in! a harp. and are k !ew;t locally as spite of our head nets a:ad fly dope; "the matins of th., damned." wo were always badly bitten. The The musical stones of ti. • Ori - natives seemed t.. mind then! al-' nueo interested Humboldt, 11nd are most as much as t.e did, their ren-! granite cliffs situated at the eon- edy being rancid sea oil. I am fluence of the Orem..., with the Rib satisfied that were one so unfortti theta, whie•h occasi.tally emit at nate as to be caught out at night: sunrise so.., ds which resent:de the without protection he would bo; tones of an organ. Tile er-;an either crazy or dead by morning. 1 tunes which are heard when t!to Our tents were provided with a ear is laid un the rock were can ed fine mesh bobbinet inner tent, but by the outrush of warm :sir through some would always find their way the narrow fissures which are par - inside or come up from the ground. tially obstructed by elastic layers At tunes our Tight so attracted of mica. and a third of the eggs were under grandson of Herod the Great, who fi(.e outdoor life of n fishernta.l Haat animal. Naturally the writer A valuable collection of pictures them we scent outside to see if it' A sand hank about sixty feet high murdered the innocents at Betide- Peter Ilad alwn s en o r ' wished to brie something of this were not raining, for the constant it. Hawaii r• duces a tone like that the '2 ounce standard. y j vel. his im-1 hum and nephew of Herod Antipas ctuous character that would nut' wilderness tragedy home with hitt and flags has recently been given P" The Danes have arrived at this p to the Archives by Lady Caron, tapping of the mosquitoes against of a teelo(leen when the hand is result simply and solely by breed- (son of ller•.O the Great), who brook restraint, and the prubabll I Thorremains of the hunter were widow of the ]ate -i*. Adolphe the canvas sounded so exactly like moved in a c'irc'le through the loose ing especially for this purpose. The murdered Joh.► the Baptist. It ity that he was the oldest of the a buried, but the old and rotting gnu Laron One of these flags is that rain that it was impossible to tell sand. It the ubaer%()r stands with ideal they have reached is the lit was his son, Herod Agrippa IL, be- apostles. Imprisonment is bitter! and the splendid horns of the moose t d ff of th c "Quebec 4filiti:�" of 1^,75. t !c i erence. • kith hands in the sand and slides 1rut'Icr 1s the flag of the 1st ('a- On many nights I had to give up down the baulk. the s1.nml ber•omes nr.<lian • Regiment, which went the observation of stars for lati- louder and louder until it resent - through the Red River Rebellion. pude and longitude because a crit- files thunder, and alarms horses On the walls of the itrchitcs elle could not be kept lit long tethered near by. Each grai'1 of building hang rare pictures of of enough to adjust the artificial hori sand is perforated by a narrow Canada. 'There is a sutured engrav- ing zoo. 11'e anfurtuna(eiy' had no canal, %chicle as a rule, is closed at • ing of Toronto in 1840, another of ('111'llaleJ' an(1 the nosquitoes one end. The sand is of volcanic Toronto Li 1951. bv! Rohner, a swarmed so thickly that without' origin. German. Thorn is a facture of this protection the flame was quick -1 - .p Quebec published within three 1.; smothered. There were but few l Months of the siege. The elan of ii ghte cool enough to afr..rd us any Queen Victor;a and Stores the battle „i the plain, (if Airr.„, r .lief ; we found that it required .'1;NTAIN Indy, engaged upon ( tie hen -which implies the small fore ahem Paid made his famous to any. Alan• it must have been; stere carried along. After toting feeder -and the trig egg. defense (Acts 20: 28). doubl>• grievous to him. And yet,; the antlers for 25 miles it was ren What was the history of Herod doubtless he rejoiced in this oppor-- lized that they were too great a •I•- Agrippa 1. 1 Ile was born B.C. 10 tunity to prove Isis loyalty to the burden to pack two hundred miles and educated in Rome. Amid a Lord whom he had denied. and consequently they were left rash and adventurous career, he behil]d. rose through the favor of the Em- peror Caligula. He helped to set the %%oak Claudius Caesar on the throne of Horne (A. D. 41), and in return was made king of all !'ales - tine, where he reigned only about below are veiled from sight by the three years before he Caine to a (Luke 18: 1-8) shows his apl.reval r; i!,); columns "f opalescent mist, horrible end, as related at the of imps'sioned. determined pray .'r. and ahoy() the 3aavfling abyss the close of this chapter. that will not let the an e l o wit!, the (gliintsropsi111(1 sparkles, w rung- What was the policy of this out a blessing ((;o0 32: 2,i). o Herod Three hundred feet below toward the Jews? He tried Christ's own example in C;ethst' tours nod boils the swirling tlac,<I, to de whatever pleased the Jews mune shows how inevitable are re - ns it emerges from the Hailing Pot, took )tains t. He o%(1'seryeed in tthn minutiae strongly resalem. He (pstirre when the heart is malting on down the zigzag gorge Istirred. Lctween tattering cliffs tif rock. el Jewish ceremonials. He hung; III. The Chains Fall and the uin thenarrow. fierce. and of unfathom which (nligulalhad geliven hinlie goldlnIle Aloe lonain Iron g wasate(I'cter its prison?OT Tilt able depth. One feels that Rho- was only part Jew, niel part Edo -!near the close of the Passover, desia is indeed thrice blessed to ratite, and greatly feared the people, when Herod would have brought WONDER OF THE WORLD. To realize fully the wondrous beauty of the Zambesi Falls, liho- de•sia, one must have time to lin- bar and watch the ever-changing • Frans. The depths of the chasm What is it. to `pray without ceasing" (1. 'fifes. b: 17)I 1Ve aro told 1 we are not, Hear that t l d f INDIAN (;()'I' HORNS. or our '•i come get Neem web nsnow much speaking (Matt. (i: 7); but fall," said the old Indian. whose that is simply a warning against life the author had saved. long prayers for show. Christ's Weeks and months passed, and parable of the importunate widow I ,t•:k in civilization Mr. Curwood f.l•got all about, the horns. One day recently hereceived untie& from the Detroit customs afllctais that n package was being held in bond. 11''eatigatinq, he found that they were the old horns. Milk .ki, the uncivilized savage, hail Rept his word. and had lratvelird a full four hundred miles in the wilderness to do a kind act for the u hite titan whom he Toyed. Ile sent no word, •tits the exception of four triches is nuc of the prongs, which was his, • i•r.sses. within her territories the w.ollld hate } Ei tam as they had hated hen forth. osl has ri uati We .d Wender of the World -Af-f 11r-r';d the (treat. At the feast of i Why ryas not Peter released ear-idedicated ' his stirring (book uto this I to r ]acles in A. 1). 41 }ie had rend lier by the angel 1 For the mole f I I f 1 II 1 Ilan '- "--- _ 10 the people the whole of 1)euter-'reason that often causes n delay in' t•. MANY DONT KNOW tears ether] he came to the words, ;our faith and slrengther • char - enemy. bursting into theatrical the answer to our prat, r, test CONSTI PATIO all 1 ll 0 l 11( . HEART AFFECTED •Thou nlicest nut set a stronger `deters by the endurnnce ,-f erne. - This Deer thee, who is nil shy brasher." peon. 'this waitrltg and the bearing More People Than are Aware of it Thereupon the 4'h.eeptiotts pope• u1 trouble, teach tis patience, ester Have Heart blsea4e. lace had cried, •.1)an't weep. :!grip- age• hopefulness, cheerfulness, it'd "11 examinations were made of (arty. era' yeti are 11111'l,rether.•• faith. What schoal has a. uob!rr Nle people would be surprised at the titan- The Blessings of Persecution. • curriculum? • e mesons walking niout !offering from iThe enrly church had many upper In what oat was Peter deli•••r t &i.e.t,e" i1unitics of realizing the bleseings ed f He wa• sleeping quietly. II'(.' etartliug statement was made Lta:,,1 persecution premised by ('hrist. I):lyi(1 .I's,t. ;t: :,) Alien Absal rn ata ''''''t unlut. "1411'1" ""11. a• 04)1111miThat is the last of the 13cautitldes, and all his foes pursued hire. • 1 .r a, tht.�wot&dt lieamply .. sai,lrathe tetert,1 a. if the climax of those heavenly re, he givoth his be loved sleep. ' er , tar 1 arnsute that the. bun,l•ero( pereore; p•tltoloxes; and 11 Is three tinea ' its their sleep" IPsa. 127 : 2). It t: -7,.g hearts must he very' as long ae any of the nth()as if rs, WAS in the last watch of the nigh:, f our 'etrd knew that it needed the It. twee a three a 'td six o'clock. t - -llundre(hof pcnplego ahnut theirdeily strongest emphasis. When men re- . Peter was not missed at till • e, w•.rk on the serge of death, and vet ,lo not ; preached them, reviled them, per- when the guards were c•hanse.l hn-.w it. it is only when the shit k comes that kills them that the au:susi,ecte.l mirk- , `c('II '4 them, drprit ed them of all Iter until sunrise (t. lel, when (!1• nese of the heart ie made apparent. - :;.' .':) earth, they were still to have guards were changed again. Ir' '•Itut undoubte(Ily heart weakness, not the ktnvdont of heaven, and great this -darkest hour which i4 1 -• disease, is more prevalent nowadays. I ii ;is to bo their reward tlinrc. 1.e'.: I` dawn'' an angel of the I. o shu11.1 think that the stress of living, tl- \\ it it '.411141 he that see 8r.1 • +•+ r • "!' , him (stood he hint1, • a wear and rush of modern besinees W , eve a let code with cart trouble, �• 1 s;t ret!+!;- •• � g,,. 'fhereitnoelruhttea that th;sisrorr•,t, t4•!'..,ts.Ilip in one another':. atilt, e `I:•'it 11'11,•! lase cell. Peter ii a• lost we would titr.n.gly a I.••e ar% . 4,, 1 The puriAcntio,I ,.f 4',8111••• ! u r,lt►dly That the liq'1; soli-, .Ig in any way ftom hear: tn,t.t:.• •. t -. The slrengthe. ing and I,ea:1 ,i'.•1 t- , mak.• hits. and the angel Irl a •rove nl ItitL9URh'S a•lk/l"T IRREGULARITY }:am, handed Pitt by General 1: temperature within a few degrees Townsend, is in the possession of the of actual freezing to subdue thein. Archi%i e. Thc maps which Dr. DoughtyI-_--'�- -- pro(•ure•l from tho 11'ar Office -int ti.111,01{ lilt(Il Gll'1' '11l'11'i. which work Lord pinto gave him valuable assistance -had been long French Sailor I'ir:d Brought ('lu neglected. The work of restoring R 3' - these maps is still in progress. The �rtnlhcwuutss to Paris. torn scraps are pirred together,' It is more than 100 years ago mounted and cleaned. and are then: (},at n French sailor living hear stored flat in fireproof steel draw -I Marseilles went up to Paris by dili- crs, and kept !} leek and key, geuce, guarding with the utmost BROCK'S $CA' LET COAT. ( are two precious little flower pots One of 1)r. Doughty's, prizes coil - plant. in which he had specimens of a si-ts of the scarlet &Nett, -worn by stm.tng' plant. His name was t to rre Illttncard, and on his arriv- eir Isaac Brock in his last yictori- • al in Paris, in Not ember, 1K09, he ons ligl:t at Queeneton Heights., t,htniiied an .in with the Em- press coat was ollainod front the Tupper family, and 'although well press Josephine, who was (Ievoted preserved, bears u'ilon It the eve to flo%ve rs, among other things. deuces of the struggle which dost Blancnrd bad frequently sailed to OF THE BOWELS the gallant general his life and (tuna and ,lapin, and there had Ra%ed the country [rota invasion. Any irregularity of the bowels is always dangerous, and should be at once attended to and cot mice]. MILBURN'S LAXA -LIVER PILLS w•.rk on the bowels gently and naturally without weakening the body, bat, on the contrary, toning it, and they will if per. several in relieve and cure the worst cases of constipation. Mrs. James King, Cornwall, Ont., writes: •• 1 was trouble" with sick headaches, con- st'pation and catarrh of the stomaeh. 1 mold get nothingtido me any gond until O, a i o , ' , rn's Laza Liver i 1'h. y did me more good than anything else 1 ever tried. 1 have n.► heaeleehee or con- ttipatien, and the catarrh .,f the stomach is entirely gone. I feel like a now woman thanks to Milburo s taxa -Liver Pill.. ...gel in all about half a dose', vials.'' • 'lice 23 emits a vial. 5 for f$1.00, at -all ,lealen or mailed direct by The T. Milburn Co.. Limited, Toronto, Oat been struck by the beauty of the Broc k's military sash is also there. flower which tt•as held in such high Away back in 1790 a man named esteem in the Far East. He had Du Berger began to build in rninin_ the greatest difficulty in getting his lure the city of Quebec. He toiled `prcitens out of Japan and 'n for months and probably years toe-; i'rineing them home safely in the fore he finally produced the old city '.I" + "tiling sess(•I. of those days ; and its surroundings in a model, but he I.ncc•eeded and managed to some 30 feet about. built t.. scale' grow the phut in his garden nt its every detail. This model stns' Aubngne. a suburb of Marseilles event out ••t Canada by Col. i3},' The chrysanthemum has he who began the city of Ottawa,' Tread oyer• most of Europe. :1':.) is held in almost as great e -1e 1.1 and was for a succession of decades. in the possession of the 13ritish: as it is in the Far Fast. where it military authorities. It stood in was known certainly ns long ago ns the rotunda of Iso Woolwich Ar -;the ninth century brier*. the Chi i-- h 1 1 h 1 ► 1! in (hrl t ff ! • •+ , tiresome radiating 11 ' [ g ' • al f \t 11 u f i P IIs. sena'. Dr. Doughty Raw it, made Ilan era. in Europe there arc mon; tip his mind to get it. and now Ise societies which it le del teed to th. has it. XIINL'TE EXACT\ESS. ANO NlinVt PILLS i t.of character. ( lit p•• tee. The kt.ow ird.t.• ^(irm.'ipits. per box ur:]lr,rrs for $1.25 , . a. *11 dealers or will he mailed dirt(t on ''"ming 11;tnr'p'► o1 t1,e,: n• rapt of price by I he T. Milburn Co., ('11r is l.. "1We!! dor!' " I., -tit (1 lorook,. Dot. I.i y cf blies a::i:ra;; ..'•'c es 1111, -1 • i'• .•r •.•t tile' side. of the 11; i''e 1., rd Hath 1)elitered .',: c. 1', • • - 11 -:9. \\'hat did Peter t;. r e• •- ,, w':'•:, the angel disap- i i , • 1 111:;:- st.d'tenly 1 He cam• ccalture of the chrysttnteeniam. hat prohnl.ly the growers will never t:- tsin the splendid 4 •.!'r' ;thee, d. • Du Berger perfected lois model tiignished the flow. r in 1'hi in :► d with minute exactness, even to the Japan. and h^r,' i.: I: •sheet '!1e stubble in the fields and the fur- gardeners would sore%'' k11, t • Jr. rows turned by the ploughs of the t1, do without it t1.•.%oda•• ! . • men who settled on the outskirts. utr don Globe. ,H some work for tier ma), ni%, was allowed to bring tier daughter, a chl;d, with her. The queen, taking al fancy to the IA: ie girl, entered mei-. softy Into the following cnnvereation: Child: "Where do you live when you are In town'" The queen: "I live at lluekingham Palace, my dear. Where do you live?' Chll1: "Oh' we live in the Pulliam road." (Short peume.) "Where do you get your things from? We always get ours from Harrod,' stores." Since their incorporation, the Kimberley diamond -mines have produced over twelve tons of dia- me,nds, the estimated value o) which is $500,000.003. 2 SKIN DISEASES These troublesome amictions aro canned wholly by Nal blood snit an unhealthy state of the system, and can bo easily -tired by the wonderful blood cleansing proper, ties of Burdock Blood Bitters Many remarkable rote's hare been mole by this remedy. and not only have the un- sightly skin disease, been remove', end a bright clear completion been prude( ed, but the motile sv*leen has seen ren„s•ated and invigorated iat the a.tme anon• Huse. SALT Cl1C1'M CURED. mss Jan O'Connor, P,nlinE ton wrier,:-" Por years I suffered with 5.11 Rheum. I tried a &nun different medi• r'n-s, but tnonl r11 t•'ets •n!% made it worse. 1 was rviviersi to try Iiv•d.e.k 151•.0.1 Itis• ter.. 1 ,•ot a 1., plc an•l I.; fore 1 t•!rt taken halt ,'..i:. (;ort 1 ..e.1.' see a,!LI ,;r• an 1 . s• . •i.n•r .on 1 11 ,.t 1 `Vie, :telt•lel 1 •••tin 1 al, ''.v roc •11 I.,r 3" (YYWIKIul medir'.i "