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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1909-07-08, Page 7ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Genuine Carter's the Liver Pills. Must Sear Signature of bee Fac-Simtk Wr.pper Below. Tees • .&U anus a• • iy 141 take as.agar.. FOR HEADACHE. FOR DIZZINESS. FOR RIUOUSNESS. Fa: LIVEN. FOR CCHSTIPATION. FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR THECOMPLEXIOM arta, 0111.77,. 1 CURE SICK HEADACHE. ABOUT WOMEN WORKERS 11 HO HAVE SUCCEEDED IN THE WORLD OF BUSINESS tltorney, Mine -Owner and Railroad Builder are Some Lines Followed. In Chicago, Miss Florence H. king is earning her $10,000 a year as a patent attorney, having won, against the most brilliant male members of the bar, cases which gave her an imposing reputation professionally. Fifteen years ago she was an Iowa farmer's house servant at $1.25 per week and her "keep." In Boston, and, as her interests call her, swain in Alaska, is Miss Frances tz, a young and now very went y mine owner of the Golde hir Creek territory. She made , l -draining contract for eighteen nths with a minis com- pany B co pany in order to get into the Klon- dike at the company's expense, agreeing to turn over all she earned fun that period to the company as retaipense for her cost to it. ''''KEPT HER CONTRACT. She kept her contract, then se- cured employment as deputy to the recorder at Nome, managed to sup- port herself, and worked every spare hour familiarizing herself with the details of all claims. She became the greatest claim expert in the -regi 'n, and by investment of er earnings in scone few extremely valuable claims is now very rich. She proved herself exceptional among the men of that rough re- gion. but she is far from exception- al among the women who are carry- ieg on large enterprises elsewhere in the United States. Mrs. S. A. Kidder, in Grass Valley, Cal., was elected president of her husband's pet railroad, the Nevada County Narrow flange, upon his death, when it developed that the road was worn out and desperately in debt. She has rescued that railroad and made it now a highly successful company. while she owns 72 per cent. of the stock. IS RAILROAD BUILDER. Over in Texas Mrs. S. C. Hooker (pecan•. as railroad builder. having clone t' grading fur the Kansas City.. .xis and Orient read, while in Ne exicu Mr.. L. W. Freeman Elect'. .ights. Miniature ia;ura, in in charge of a mining company operating a big cropped amine. As for the 307,704 "agricultural proprietors" discovered by tho census. not a few of them, like Mrs. Helen M. King, are in Texas, own- ers cf thousands of acres and run- e;ng meshes that make the mouths of niche Texans water in futile ro pidity. OPPORTUNITIES OF MAN As the Image of God Man Is Fitted for Divine Fellowship. And God said, let us make man in our image after our likeness.— Genesis i. 26. There are two theories of the ori- gin of man. One would bring hint up from the earth beneath, plac- ing his genealogy with the worms. The other, the biblical, brings him down from above. According to Genesis, man was made in the Divine "likeness." What aro the marks of this "im- age of God?" First, the gift of reason. God is a rational, thinking spirit. And, in distinction from the lower crew• tures, He Inas stamped upon us this likeness of Himself. God has graven His mathematical thoughts upon atoms and crystals and snowflakes and on stars and worlds, and we can read these thoughts and admire the wondrous picture He has painted in the vast gallery of nature be- cause we have a faculty of reason akin to His own. THE "IMAGE OF GOD," again, consists in freedom. God is free. He knows no law but His sovereign will. He does what He chooses to do. Nature is under the grip of law. Necessity holds it with unbending hand. The animals obey their inevitable instincts. But God has clothed man with this divine prerogative of free will. He is a sovereign. "His mind to Him a kingdom is." To Him pertains the power of choice. He i$ the architect of his own soul. He is the fashioner of his own destiny. In the exercise of this perilous power he can raise himself to the angels or degrade himself below the brutes. The "image of God" further ap• pears in man's moral nature. As power characterizes the Pagan dei- ties, so righteousness and goodness characterize Jehovah. The seat of man's likeness to this divine quality is in conscience. To be pure in heart, to shun injustice and wro g, to cherish noble and unselfish ideals, to do good to fellow men, this likens one most of all to Cud, his maker. This uuque truth should imbue man with a sense of his greatness It should impel hien to self respect. To stoop to the low a..id moan is to do violence to his high nature and to commit sacrilege against God, whose image he wears. Only good and noble ends are worthy of hien. Man's thoughts can reach up and God's thoughts can come down and meet, because our natures are akin. Hence we can have secret speech with God. PRAYER IS JUSTIFIED. The whispers of our souls are the voices of a sea that beats on the shore of life, but of asea that stretches away to shores where is set the throne of God. \\'e taught respect for our fellow man. In every one, no matter how fallen, we should see vestiges of this divine lineage. Hence, too, issues a sure hope of immortality. The supreme characteristic of God is that "He liveth forever.„ We are made in His image; we cannot die. We have the inbreathing of an in- destructible life. Let no one then mar this "image of God” but preserve its pristine beauty and remember that Ho who mado us in His likeness made us for Himself to serve not perishing, but the noblest ends of being. JUNIUS B. ItEMENSNYDER. THE S. S. LESSON INTERNATIONAL LESSON, JULY 11. Lesson 11. Paul's Second Mission- ary Journey --(Continued.) Golden 'Text, Acts 16: 31. I. The Story of the Frenzied Girl. Her Mental and Physical Trouble. —Vs. 10-18. The missionaries fre- quently went from Lydia's house within the city to the place of pray- er beyond the walls by the river side, where they could instruct the new converts, and gain others who were willing to come to the meet- ing. . On several occasions they met in the streets a . . . damsel possess- ed with a spirit of divination. Lit- erally, a Python -spirit, the Python being in the Greek mythology the serpent which guarded Delphi, the fatuous oracle on Mount Parnassus. This girl gave forth strange utter- ances and hysterical cries in her frenzied condition, which her mast- ers interpreted as they wished. II. The Missionaries Thrust. Into Prison; Their Faith ; Their Deliver- ance.—Vs. 19-20. The masters, having lost their source of gain, like the makers of silver shrines in Ephesus, stirred up a mob in the city and dragged Paul and Silas before the magistrates, who, in such a colony as Philippi, were "rich merchants, landowners, pro- prietors of the mines, elected by their fellow citizens." The accusation did nut give the real reason for their arrest. The charge presented was that of throw- ing t he city into confusion and anarchy by trying to convert the Roman to a new religion. Hoose tol- erated all religions, but neadc it criminal to make converts from the national religion. 1I1. The C'on%ersion of the Jailer. f)eliveranec from Sin and Death. Through the Faith of the ,railer. - Vs. 27-34. The keeper . . . would have killed himself, beeause by Ro- • HEADACHE• man law he was responsible fur the safety of the prisoners, and he would avoid by suicide the disgrace of an execution. 28. Paul cried . . . we are all here. Tints tint ing the jailer's life. for there was no longer a reason iiiitne to restore tone to the for his committing suicide. iablish the appetite, pro. 29. Called for a light. The Greek scion and invigorate the entire is plural, lights, torches or lamps. Fell down before Paul and Silas. Ile must have known something about these men. and their power over the slave girl. 30. Brought them out, of the inner prison, into the open court, or in- +!' to his corn house 1Vhat was the jailer's motif r it r.vkit c, \l hat WOMEN AS LAW AGENTS must 1 (10 to b.• at cd 1 $n•ed from that ' The ,ea, -tion "cannot :1 bill has been intrh ducal in the refer to nn% fear . f punishment British parliament to allow women Mn J. Priest. Mrpd.n. (int. writer - from the nnagi'lr•tr- for he had t, practice as law agents in Scot - "I we. tmuble.l with headache for eeventl now u= scrim, f r eri•oners land The question came up about year" and tried almost everything watb- decided r srslte, notal a friend ad.iwl me to were all oaf e v, -ns con- fate years age. and was ley Burdock Blood Bitters I poet two scions of hat • .-ng toward against women in t he profession. bottles. but before I had Iin,thrd MIS 1 God. and tot .t:.:. .•.a !le hod l.•d Since that time the Scotch naiver- vss completely rurrd 1 ran net-er say an iniperfe••t r od sinful life Suc1• titles have thrown the doors ..f their ileo mesh for 11 It R" den and terrible e::hilali ., r of law schools open to women. and Tor sal. at all dealer, Hareife,t ::rid (;.•(1 !,"wet JIM ni•ally awoken a now srteral women trained as law by The '1'. 11.11eirn l b , 1 r,,:t( 1, selfr•�r i S:ri. Th' }.:ties' ' motlte 'acts are waiting for perrnirsion to Oreneo, Ont. ' 1t ,11 :1 t.•1!K'1,:.°.cal••? rf ?lit. .•t dot: pinr•ticP their pl'ViCaalnO. In all eases of headache the first thing to do is to unload the bowels and thus relieve the alllirted organs or the over - full blptxl vessels of the brain; and at the oyster mote body. r BLOOD will rr„nve the rause of the trouble and restore the system to healthy action and buoyant vigor. ger, of need, and of the goodness produced in Paul and Silas by their religion. Each one of these is a right feeling. The fear of conse- quences is not a leading motive in the Christian life, but it is often a motive with a sinner leading him to become a Christian. A man that refuses to consider the conse- quences of what he is doing is sim- ply a blind foul. The danger was not of harm from the Roman gov- ernment, but from his sinful life. The motives that lend to a better life are usually manifold. IV. The Missionaries Released and Sent on Their Way.—Vs. 35-40. The next morning the magistrates, learning what had taken place, sent officers to quickly release Paul and Silas, as the easiest way to save trouble. Professor Ramsay thinks that an old account is correct which adds that the magistrates were afraid of another riot. They would induce the weaker party to submit to injustice, and withdraw. 37. Hut Paul knew a better way, and stood upon his rights, quite as as touch for the good of the young church as for himself. They have beaten us openly uncendemned, without trial, and legal decision that they were guilty according to Homan law. There are four dis- tinct allegations in Paul's reply, "beaten," "punliely," "uncon- de►nned," and "being humans." Being Romans, and exetnpt from stripes and torture. Let them come themselves and fetch us out. As openly ns they arrested us for criminals, let them declare our in- nocence. Let the nob know that the whole power of Home was against those who injured these men. If Paul and Silas went away secretly, a stain would have been dishonor I ft on !hoer reputations, upon the gospel they preached. and other cities would have dared to ill-treat. their. 38. They feared, when they heard, etc. They were liable to a prosecution such as Cicero institut- ed against Verres. The crime was regarded es treason, and those who committed it were liable to degra- dation from office, confiscation of property, and perhaps death. 39, 40. As the result, the magis- trates npolegized, and requested them to leave the city, which they did with dignity. and for the peace and gond of the infant I'hilippian church. For if they had remained, there might arise useless opposi- tion ; while by leaving Luke with the church (as we learn from the change of pronouns "we" to "they" ), there was a peaceful but large growth of the Christian com- munity. From n comparison with what follows it appears that Timo- thy went with Paul and Silas. $0.00.0 l$(! !eaten with cream. It is delicious for its combinations of Ilavurs. Orange or each Cake.—Two small cupfuls flour, ono -quarter teaspoon- ful of salt, two teaspoonfuls of bak- ing powder. Mix all together; then drop in a piece of butter size of egg ; add milk enough to make dough to roll out ; bake, split open, spread and butter, and then with the fruit chopped fine and sweeten- ed. ('over top with meringue made of whites of two eggs and two tablespoonfuls of sugar. Serve with soft custard made with yolks of two eggs, four tablespoonfuls of sugar, one-half tablespoonful of flour, two cupfuls of milk ; flavor ; cook in double boiler. Homy ECONOMY MEAT DISHES. Pepper I'ot.—Place one pound of fresh tripe and two calf's feet in a soup put. four in three quarts cold water, add two medium carrots, two white turnips, two medium sized onions, one sound red pep- per ; tie in a bunch one leek, two brunches of parsley, one sprig thyme, one bay leaf, one sprig of sweet marjoram, one clove ; add this bouquet to the soup, with two tea- spoonfuls of salt, half a teaspoon- ful of pepper. Cover pot and let slowly boil one hour and a half. Lift nut the tripe, calf's feet, and bunch of herbs. Remove meat from calf's feet, cut in small squares; also the tripe, the carrots, turnips, pepper, and onions. Remove fat from surface of seep, add above articles to the pot; add also two modium peeled potatoes, cut in small pieces, half a gill of white wine. Boil thirty minutes, pour the soup into a tureen, and serve. Irish Stew.—Buy three pounds of busing beef. Cut ui small pieces and with this three whole onions. Place in cooking vessel with two quarts of water. When meat is ten- der and onions well broken, add twelve or fifteen small potatoes, a piece of butter as large as a wal- nut, salt, and pepper. This is a substantial and economical lunch for hungry school children, and, in my estimation, better than salads and fancy pastry. Round Steak with Dumplings.— Pound steak well, pour boiling wat- er over and scald thoroughly. Drain, cut in pieces, roll in flour, season with salt and pepper, fry in butter until brown, then cover with hot water and cook slowly until tender. Keep well covered and replenish water if it boils away. At meal time take cup of flour, heaping teaspoonful of baking pow- der, teaspoonful of salt, mix, add enough cold water to make batter that will just drop from moistened spoon. Use teaspoon and put dumpling on each piece of meat, add water if necessary, cover close- ly seven minutes. Take up with dumpling on meat, pour the gravy over all and serve at once. Liver !.oaf. --Chop three large onions fine, soak some bread and crackers together, or all bread, two eggs, two pounds of beef liver, ground, and one pound of salt pork, ground ; salt, pepper, and a little cayenne pepper. Mix all together, and if too stiff put in some flour. Don't make too stiff or too soft. 'fake a sleep bread tin and grease it well with lard and a little flour on both sides and bottom ; put in the ineat and put a little flour on top. Bake about two hours. SHORTCAKE. Fancy Shortcake. — Pineapple, banana, and strawberry short take: For the cake part take two small cupfuls of sugar, one tablespoonful of butter and cream it; then add the yolks of three ggs, one at a time, the grated rind of one lemon, then one and one-fourth cupfuls of milk, a little at a time, then two and one-fourth cupfuls of flour with two teaspoonfuls of baking powder sifted in ; last add the beaten whites of two eggs, reserve ths other one for filling, now bake in three layers. Filling : Beat. the white of ono egg stiff. then take about one cup- ful of strawberries and mash diem. add to beaten egg. then enough powdered sugar to make quite stiff, about to resemble ice cream ; spread on the first layer, then cover er w' th diced pineapple, then on top of it again filling, then put on your second layer, cover with filling, and slice on a layer of bananas, then cover with filling, and pelt on your third layer, cover it with fill• ing, put on your strawberries and cover them with filling; then for just n few moments set the cake in a hot oven to harden the filling, and the cake when cool should be Suffered More Than Tongue Can Tell From Liver Trouble. A lacy. slow or torpid liver is a terrible affliction, as its influence permeates the whole system, causing Bitiousnese, Heart- burn, Water Brash, Langour• Coated Tongue, Siek Headache, Yellow Eves, Hallow Complexion, ete. 1t holds Lack the bile, which is required to move the bowels and lets it t into the Hood SMALL ..ARES. Molasses Cookies.—One cupful molasses, one cupful sugar, one- half cupful cold water, one egg, two teaspoonfuls of ginger, two tea- spoonfuls of cinnamon, one table- spoonful of salt, one cupful lard, three teaspoonfuls soda, two and a half to three and a half cupfuls flour. Mix the first seven ingredi- ents, melt the lard, and cool slight- ly; then add to the first mixture the soda, which has been dissolved in hot water, and then the flour. Beat the dough thoroughly and then drop by spoonfuls into greased pans and bake in a moderate oven ten ?o fifteen minutes. The dough should be stiff enough so that when dropped from a spoon the mixture will keep its shape. Almond Cookies.—One pound powdered sugar, one pound chop- ped almonds, four whites of eggs; drop on waxed paper and bake twenty minutes. Serve with prune whip: One pint whipped cream, one pint minced prunes. Appricot Cake.—One-fourth cake chocolate (grated), one-half cupful of milk, yolk of one egg. Cook all this together until thick, and let it cool ; then stir in one table- spoonful of melted butter, one cup- ful of sugar, one-half cupful of milk; one tablespoonful of vanilla, one and a half cupfuls of flour, and one scant teaspoosltul of baking soda; put the soda in the flour. Filling—Cook dried apricots, sweet- en to taste; when cool spread be- tween layers and on top. Beat the white of the egg to a stiff froth, add two tablespoonfuls of sugar, and stir until smooth. Spread on top of the apricots. Plain Cookies.—One' cupful of sugar, one-half cup of butter, three eggs, four cupfuls of flour, two tea- spoonfuls of baking powder, one teasponful of almond eschaet. SEWING BOOM. To Protect Fingers.—To protect fingers from the needle in making buttonholes cover the first finger with white court plaster when sew- ing black goods and black plaster when sewing on white goods. Sewing Hooka and Eyes.—Try this quick way of putting hooks and eyes on a waist. Sew the eyes on the left front the desired distance apart with the loops out far enough to make hooking easy-; then baste the right front carefully over the left, lapping as much as may be desired ; turn the ..asst just. as it is wrong side out, put a hook in every eye, and sew them in posi- tion. 'I'o mark the place for but- tons pin the buttonholed edge of the garment in place, then with a needleful of thread begin at one end and take a single stitch in every buttonhole, carrying the thread to the opposite end. ('nt the thread half way between the button- holes. lift off the cloth, and there will be n bit of thread where each button should be sewed. When Sewing on Buttons.-- Make the required number of buttonholes on both front and back of waist. Take a piece of tape the length of waist,and Few shirt on same num- ber m ber of buttons as there are button holes. Button thin on to one side of waist and then waist can be fast- ened in usual way. Same can he done with cuffs. One set of but- tons will do for several waists, and the ironing is made easier. Never Use Old Lining.—Never I150 an old lining, washed or un- washed. The following rules can be safely adopted : For every skirt buy four yards of English cambric the color of the dress, two yards of Silesia for the waist, one yard of canvas, dress braid, and other find- ings. LAUNDRY. Hint for Ironing.—\Chow ironing, hate a cake of soap handy, and if the iron does not run smoothly, rttb it slightly on the soap. l'wt a piece of soaps the size of a small walnut to a quart of starch a hen you make it ; c.s'k thoroughly an,l it will not stick. Blanket 51 retcher. --Purr drying and stretching blankets, if plan is insteeoj, thos causing 'onstipatinn. followed out new blankets will Milburn's Taxa -Liver Pine will rev- nrvrr shrink and old once that have late the flow of bile to act properly neonshrunk can be made several inches the bowels, and will tone, renovate and I larger. Hate a (rani.' made like n purify the liver. Mrs. J. C. 1%eetl•erg lace curtain frame. except longer Swan River, Man.. writes:--" I sufferer; and wider, say eighteen fret long for years, more than tongue can tell, r and fifteen feet for end phrens. A from liver trou!tM. I tried several kinds ))I• ver to support the crater is im- of meibein•, but could rt no relief until 1 got. tblhnrn'a Lasa -Liver fills. 1 con- portant. to keep blanket from sag. Kneet►icei tau highly for what they cinK in r soler. The frnmr is mndr• l IVO done for rile." exactly like a cnrtaiu �tretchrr, ex Mill.urn's 1 •spa T.iver Pills err ::.•. Feld larger will' long slots nl (lo - per vial, or S for 31.011. at all dealers, tier. wite screw to slip. There or ,nailed direct on receipt of �•rire 1.Y rnil be i''.•rl for curtains us blankets The T. Milburn ('v.. Limited, :ionto, ,.ilhrt. Vat. I T.. Keep frons Hot. ---Place a heavy and deep skillet over the irons and be surprised !sow much hotter tho irons uill get and re- tain the heal longer. '1'o Remove Mildew. --To remove mildew, rub common yellow soap) on the damaged article and then sift some starch on that. Hub well and put out in the sunshine. IN CASE OF ACCIDENTS ('-IBE WOULD PREVENT DEATHS 111 DROWNING. A Little Common Sense Counts Big—What to Do When l'ou Fall Overboard. There are chronicled every sum- mer a long list of fatal accidents which plunge thousands into mourn- ing, and the pity of it is that a lit- tle knowledge of watermanship and or -.nary care might have prevent- ed most of Lieu). To ignorance or carelessness in entering and leaving a boat or while in it ; to venturing in open water unprepared, and to neglect of the rudimentary prin- ciples of w•ater:nanship can be trac- ed half the recorded fatalities. No one should take out rowing persons who do not know how to swim without first ascertaining that the boat is safe and seaworthy and provided with the necessary para- phernalia for eventualities. It is when one least expects it that ac- cidents uccur, writes L. LeB Hand- ley in Recreation, and the only way to avoid thein is to be prepared at all times. A stout bowline, enough life -preserves to go round, an anch- or, something to bail with and an extra pair of oars should be carried on principle. You may not need them ninety-nine times out of a hundred, but on that hundredth time they may mean life or death. IN GETTING INTO A BOAT one should try to step light into the bottom over the keel, or if this is too great a reach, on to the seat and then down. Stepping on the gunwale has been responsible for numberless eapsizings and it is a good idea when inexperienced people are embarking to take hold of the boat and steady it. Enter if possible where ,,ou intend to sit and in such a manner that you will not have to turn afterwards. The weight should be distributed as evenly as possible, in a small boat, with slight preference to the stern. If the bow is buried the least head -swell will flood the boat and if the stern is took deep a fol- lowing sea may swamp it. In mak- ing a landing one should approach at an angle, shipping the inward oar a few yards away and rounding up by backing with the outward one. It is dangerous to stretch out over the gunwale to reach for float or pier. In landing the person in the how should be first, taking the bowline with him and steadying the boat for the others. I will not insult the intelligence of the reader by advising against rocking the boat or indulging in like idiotic skylarking. One rust be decidedly lacking in gray matter to choose such pastimes. '!'here are certain rules about one's behav- ior in a s►nall craft, however, which should be kept CONSTANTLY IN MIND. For instance, saould it lie necessary for two people to change placers they should keep well over the keel until ready to pass each other and then standing face to face move to either side simultaneously that the boat may not lose its balance. Also, whether in picking up anything. from the water or in helping a swimmer it is advisable to use the stern and not the side. When a boat is capsized do not try to climb into it again. It will sustain you easily if you just lean on it, as will any fair-sized piece of wreckage like an oar, a spar, or a hoard, but ,attempt to climb over them and they will steely sink with you. And speaking about this, when you are being helped or toyed do not hang onto your rescu- er or boat with hent arms. as this draws the body tip and offers i'reat real Royal Princesses of Russia ar• resistance. Outst►etehed arms will styled Grand Duchesses. They ar• incrcnsr your chances of getting craughters and sisters of the ('•car. ashore. Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Colic and Cramps Nearly every one hi troubled with bowel complaint during the summer months. But, do they know what to do to cure it. Thousands do, many don't. WE CAN TELL YOU! DR. FOWLER'S Extract of Wild Strawberry WILL DO IT ! It has been on the market t'4 years, and is universally used in thousands of families. There are many imitations of this sterling remedy, so du not be led into taking something ''just as good which some unscrupulous druggist tries to talk you into taking. Dr. Fowler's is the original. There are nono just as good. It cures Summer Complaint, Cholera Morbus, Cholera In- fantum, Seasickness and all Bowel Com- plaints. Price 35 cents. Manufactured only by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Oat. KING EDWARD'S H.1TS. Felt of His Own Designing—heavy headgear of the '60's. The King, besides setting the fashion in the wearing of hats, is an inventor of headgear. In an en- tertaining little book called "Hints c.n Hats," written in 1865 by Henry Molton, the royal batter of tho period, assisted by George Augus- tus Sala, a felt hat is described and illustrated which was designed by the King, then Prince of Wales, as an improvement on the round - crowned hats then in vogue. In shape it very notch resembles the soft felts of the present day, but was covered with plaid of tho same color as the shooting suit it was to accompany. A t this time the majority of hats were made very heavy and strong. The Earl of Harrington, for in- stance, whose life had once been saved through his wearing a parti- cularly hard hat in the hunting field, used to test the quality of his hats by standing on them and re- jected any .that could not bear his weight without a dent. He was peculiarly sensitive about their color, and his eccentricity led him to adapt his taste in tnat parti- cular to the object he had in view. When walking in his garden, says Mr. Melton, he would wear a sago green flat, so as not to frighten the birds'—London Daily News. PA'S REBUKE FAILED. A stern father had decided that lie must administer a severe lecture to his six-year-old son Harry. The boy had been naughty, but it was with some reluctance that tho par- ent undertook a scolding. He spoke judiciously, but severe- ly ; he recounted the lad's misdeeds and duly explained the whys and wherefores of his solemn rebuke, his wife the while sitting by, dull impressed. Finally, when the father ceased f< r breath, the lad, his face hewn-- ing with admiration, turned to hie mother and said, "Ma, isn't pa in- teresting?" 'S 'S : \ TITLES. RUSSIA'S TY .1 L.fP ITLI'. . In Russia the term m "princess . does not mean very much, for the simple reason that there aro su many of then!, that It is never a royal title. All the female deseen Giants of a Prince of a eertain rank are Princesses, and the result i, that many Princesses are as poor tend of as little account as any ill - teed princess of fairy tales The LONi)ON'S RAILWAY TUBES How huge is the cost of under. ground railways is shown in a com- parison of the total cost of all the tube railway systems of London t.ith the total snit of the railway system of Ireland. The latter in - Palpitation of the Heart. One o` the first danger signals that an- nounce something wronpjwith the heart is the rrregelar beat or violent throb. Often there is only a fluttering sensation, or an "all gone '.inking feeling; or again, theme may be a most violent !eating, with fluehiuge of the skin and violable pulsa- tions of the arteries. The person may es • eludes :1.3113 miles ..f road and its arrienr" a su.othering aeruation. gasp for total cost was R":,.:,00.000. The breath and terl as though shout to the.. railwrtc tubes of London, which ag. In rich CAVA Inc 'eosin of Milh•Irns ►e iter eighty-one •one ,Ind a hill obits., heart stet Nerve fills in quieting the R R ghear:, restoring It.; normal beat and ins• have cost about .I37,:,0).00O. parting tone to the nerve centres, is, 1.eyond all q'tes' i„n. marvellous. give s'uh prompt rel,'f that no one noc.t suffer. Mrs. Arthur Nissen, 1f r;bank. Ont., writes:-=' Just a few lams to let you know what 11ilb•1►n.s heart awl Nerve )'ills have done for me. i have been troubled wi•'a weakiiiete and palpitation of the he:o, tto AJ have severe choking spells an 1 o tit scarely he down at all. 1 t r, . ,nano re netbes but got none to ra ,- my cute like vo,tr pills did. 1 r,•i •e-ornrn•nd thee) highly to all with he:a r: or nerve trouble. i'r.re. 50 cents per hos. or 3 boxes inc II.' 1. at all dealer+. alt folded direct orf rore.ot of price, by I he 1 Milb.r'a ('o., Lirn,tel, Tomato, Vat. 11'.1S stir: S.1ll(':1STIC 1 1,0 3-011 think that Miss Kidder vans haring fun with me :" nsked I'barlet . ' Well. old chap. gite me the de- tnii'. nils :Arthur's respon,P. • Von ace, I hurl my hell terrier villi neo. And i said to hr r, 'The! dug knew•, no- much At 1 •io..In•i she said, '1tnu•t yen think 10 shill ings ens to.., much to pay for fits !'