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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1909-07-29, Page 3CART(I S ITTLE IVER PILLS. It Sick nm..rsrhe rod .ethers all the trouble. Inel• dent to 1 bGhms ■tetoof the system. such a1 Dluine:., Nausea, Prowaincas, Nelms.' otter eating, 1••IJ In tho kid., ko. while their must teasarkabl4auncus La.: L.en shown to ct.rthg SICK7 pl Headache. et e'artei a Little Liver PILL are equally cdnal,lofu<So„stll.atI f,ctangandgre- ♦ en11 th ug ,:at,noyf n •eom •iot.whl1 6011E othey also correct all Ilsordure..f lfeatoetach,atlmula 111) 11rrr end rrduLte Coo 6,rcis. blues It t"oy only cured Ache they would 1.3 alnuoe t rrlc•lesa to those whet Suffer from this 4.43 -easing complait; but Volta. Lately t bete goodness does note's." hero,url those Mho once try them x111 and thea, little pills rah'. _ sblefusoteeny ways that they will not be wit. lthag to du without flu to. But after all sick head IIACHE ...bane of so tin,-It,-oa that b,•re1swhs-e ♦e make oar unit boast. Our lull etei1while - • &driers do hot. Carter's Little Livor Pills aro very small and Mary easy to take. Ono or two palls husks a dose. They ars ■triotly r•egalabin end .+o n.,t gripe or • parse. but by their geutlo action ',tease all who UN them. CalTiaJitl•.INZ CO., 1 t7 T.33. :41rifill N Small Dost Small !rice, rig, N(1 LIONS AS EtIRA \D BOIS Wild Beasts Perform Various Do- mestic Duties. The gucsts•at the recent wedding Id the daughter of Lord John San- ger were treated to the somewhat noel sight of menagerie animals w'brking as domestic ones upon their owner's farm. . Thus, an elephant was being t used for ploughing, a pair of cam- els supplied the power for a chaff- uttin ,, lune, and so on. Thlues credit to the show - ma enuity, of course; never- ' the the experiment has been car to even greater lengths -Tlhe - ere, notably at Tring Park, Herts;: England, where the Hon. Lionel Walter Rothschild, son and heir of Lord Rothschild, has trained all sorts: of wild beasts t•, perform various domestic duties. But the man above all others who has really made a life study of the subject, from every point of view, Frank Bostock, popularly "the animal king." ''',44e—fiolds the view that horse, ', so-called "wife be will edingiy s med, ' espcc uiulergone th etter suited for •• of man than ' ones. The r example, turally ex - The first- .. points out, at least two thou - raining, yet, it still sided, step by step al - bit and bridle, ants. carrels, and drome- - 1 on the c ntrary, are guid- test cntitely by the voice s much the same with tigers, opards, end panthers. They and every word you say to You have only to tell theta thing, and they do it. ^► -ne a lion that he has trained 1 and carry at the word of and this from consider - stances, and away from its ,td, of cour.e, quite apart s ordinary performances. as the first to break to har- eem of zebras, animals once to be absolutely. untam- And he utilizes the services lnkey to nurse a six-year-old ►who takes its rides abroad snail cart drawn by an emu. s o .Fr'IENi►LY SUGGESTION. An old conn in n Scotch village ad a big eight-day clock which eecded repair, so he took it on his ack t„ carry it to the watchmak- T's. :1s he went along the village treet an acquaintance met hisn, lanced et hire and passed on. fter he had gone about fifty yards way his friend c•allcal out to him, i Back went the old man tele, to where the other "Jian," said his friend, 1(1 it not be far handier if yo d a watch 1" ntthon Censtipation is caused by the eating of indigestible foul. irregular habits, the use of stimulants, slices and ate tringent food, and strong drastic pur- ti'.e. which destroy the torte of the mach and the contractile of the lower therefore, when the liver is in - failing to secrete I•ile in shute. constipation is sure d alter constipation come he most annoying troubles 'S LAXA LI': cg PILLS nobles arising froth the liver, it has been inferred that Fite was nry Burgoyne. i:ing-,!car, N.B , of bight, ,heist rank. I otter rdu- rit:•::—• 1 have used ylilburn's taxa- eated and o1 t,ior( marked nl,ilits ,aver fills for constipation and have than her hu•1,nr.(I. But it i trnrthy and there to be an excellent remedy for complaint." of net', t int 1:-t'1 :ire ; he. • • mer iNiss Annie Mingo, Onslow, N.11., ti!sncd toe -relies 't„ s a- t'• • 1 ot-i rase:—''A friend advised me to too vers r;;'+t shy abesn's Lara -Liver Pills for eonsti;sa. (,,,,y ' ,•tel` it t :• , ire . 1 used three and a half wtr+ls til , .i, ln ; l., ,, , , 1r y THE SOURCE OF ALL SOLACE At Every Tick of the Timepiece We Can Address Ourselves to Him. What have I in heaven, and be- sides thee what do I desire on earth. —Psalms lxxiii. 25. This a cr front the Ytortured heart of David—a cry frorn one in need to a friend indeed. Poor, in very truth, is he who calls no than friend, but poorer he who i.; no man's friend. This would be a bleak world ith- out affection, and hence the master has established, as a primal source of all solace, a fountain of love springing up perennially in Himself. The fairest and most fragrant Hower of that love is inseparable from friendship. The friends we have tried and not found wanting 3 r the friends we trust, and where the trial of friendship has been long- est our trust is greatest, an 1 so old friends are best. OUR TRUEST FRIEND. One there is who outdates and outclases all other friends. Ile knows us and He understands, and, above all, IIs is willing and power- ful to help us. He alone possesses the fullest equipment of a friend. Ho knew us in the eternities. He shapes events so as to make us fit into the marvelous scheme of His universe. He cared for us since nor coming into all the bewilderment of this creation. We have walked erect or bent, and often have we stumbled and many times have we fallen. Yet whether upright or prostrate the touch of the strong hand of His friendship has been up- on us, even when in insensate mo - merits we have struggled to fling it tiff. At all tithes, sick or ill, waking or sleeping, sad or joyous, His love holds us like the clasp of a mother. Others have, never has He shut u door against us. He was no mere life-saver stirred by feeling or by thirst for fame or by hope of re- ward. He was all He was to us not because He had pity on us, but be- cause he loved and wanted us. He is walking by our side ever. He meets us at the turn of every road. Whether our feet are in the narrow path and we need courage, or whether we are fighting with swine for their husks, it is always OUR BLESSED PRIVILEGE to appeal to this Friend to keep to uncontaminated or to bring us back from our wandering under the root of the Father. Such friendship teaches us out own worth. 1f He values us st highly, if He thinks so much of us. to what heights of manhood and wo- manhood may we not climb. Ifoe pitiful to be surrounded by such ar atmosphere of love and not to live of its vitality. What fools wo are to starve amid such plenty. If w( realized all this we would not leave this Friend until we had failed with every one else, but our prayer to Him for help would be as out breathing and would discover be- yond doubt that old friends are best, and that of all old friends He. the ancient of days, is verily oldest and best. REV. P. A. HALPIN. THE S. S. LESSON INTERNATIONAL LESSON, AUG. 1. Lesson V. Close of St. Paul's Mis- sionary Journey. Golden Text, John 16: 33. I. Corinth, the Vanity Fair of the Roman Empire. Corinth, the cen- ter of government, commerce, and business, as Athens was of learning, literature, and art, was situated on the isthmus which joins the two great divisions of Greece. Tho city has been called "The Star of Hellas," "The Eye of Greece," "The Bridge of the Sea," "Tho Gate of the Peloponnesus," "The Vanity Fair of the Roman Empire." It had an almost ideal situation for commerce. It attracted strang- ers from all over the world on ac- count of its delightful climate ; the Isthmian games to which contests Paul refers twice in his letters to the Corinthians (1 Cor. 9: 24 ; 2 Cor. 2: 1.1-16); and its position as the center of government, where riches could be gained by dishonesty and oppression ; and the seat of unre- strained sensual pleasure, and of every kind of licentiousness and ex- eese. Vice and profligacy here held high revels, with a shamelessness consecrated by the rites of their false gods. II. Paul's Labors Among the Corinthian Jews.—Vs. 2-6. I. His Opportunity. This great city with its worldliness, and absorption in pleasure, its vigorous and varied life, its infinite needs, gave Paul a great opportunity. It is just the kind of place which attracts minis- ters and missionaries. And yet the difficulties were so immense, the ob- stacles so insurmountable that it its no wonder that Paul came to thein feeling his "weakness, and in fear and in much trembling" (1 ('or. 2: 3), and needed the vision of cheer (v. 9). 2. His Four Friends. Paul had a strong, social nature, and felt the value of friends. He could say "l am wealthy in my friends," and he obeyed the precept. "Grapple thein to thy soul with honks of steel." 2. He found a certain Jew. Paul always began ►►ith the Jeeie as the best possible opening for his work. Named Aquila, a tentmaker. A man of some wealth, born in Pontus, but doing business in Rome, till lately he had been driven from Italy by the decree of Claudius Cesar, early in A.D. 52, banishing the Jews, and had carried his business to Corinth. With his wife Priscilla. As Aquila is called a Jew, bot Tris• cilia is not, it has Leen inferred that she was a Gentile. As she is usual- ly, by Paul, mentioned first in speaking of the husband :eel wife. completely roast." . rices 25 (stars per vial. or 5 for 51.00 L :'s ?,ca or m.► led direst on reel -ea The um Co., t • 1• •.:- . ..t u4 1.:.. ..... 7' :;ytt t o of c n s c 1 u ` true yoke fellows, and both are mentioned as instructing the elo quent Apollos in toe gospel truths. Paul while in Corinth was thi. guest of. this family (v.3). 5. In addition to these friends. Silas and Timotheus came fron- Macedonia. They had been left at Berea, when Paul was compelled tc leave (Acts 17: 13-15). Timothy had been sentto Thessalonica (1 Thes. 3: 6), and from Philippians 4: It we judge that ho had visited Philippi also. Pant's friendly heart was cheered by their presence. Timothy also brought him glad tid- ings of the faith and love of these churches and of their longing to see him, so that he was comforted con- cerning them in all his distress and affliction through their faith. The Philippians also sent him aid, which, like Joseph's wagons to Jacob, brought proof of the abund- ant harvest of faith and love in the Philippian church. The Circumstances in which Paul Worked. 1. He earned his own liv- ing by working at his trade. It was Jewish law that every boy be taught some kind of trade for his support. III. Paul's Work Among the C'orinthian Gentiles.—Vs. 7-22. Paul's preaching place was in the (souse of a man named (v. 7) Jestus, one that worshipped God, a Gentile believer in the one true Gcd, but not a Jew, whose h..use joined hard to the synagogue. Here would be a perpetual invitation to the Jews, while at the same time the Gentiles would feel welcome to go there. Paul Encouraged. 9. Then spake the Lord (Jesus) to Paul in the night by a vision, as at other crises of his life (Acts 16: 9; 22: 17 ; 27: 23). As we have seen this was one of the most trying crises of Paul's life. Sick in body, striving against the bitterest organized opposition, looking in the face of difficulties like black mountains in a dark night, Paul needed a fresh. clear. undoubted revelation of God's will and God's presence. Compare the vision:: which the apostle John saw when in the midst di persecutions which could be re- presented only by great earth- quakes, the sun darkened, the moon turned into blood, the stars falling from heaven, death and hell and fanzine. the star wormwood, the stroke of the bottomless pit, till men sought death awl could net find it, and desired to die, but death fled from them. Then how the vi- sions of the martyrs w ith crowns, and white robes. singing songs of redemption. "Blessing nnr) glory and wisdom and thanksgiving and honor and prover and plight he onto nur God forever and ever" ; and vi- sions of the redeemed earth, the perfect success of the cause Inc which they gave their lives, gave courage and hope and assurance. They do the same for us to -day. ONE; OF MIi.LIONS. Many Young Men Are Dead Weights in Business. It is a cumrnunplace that the real ly valuable ru,ut, in business or any- thing else, is the roan who has ideas, or inlaginat;ons. M r. Lorin F. De- land, ►►ritirg in the Atlantic Month- ly, tells of a young roan who went to him for advice us to some way of getting an increase of salary. He was even debatii g whether he had not better give up his situation and trust to luck to fund something better. "I urged him at once against such a course," says the writer, "and told hien to look fur something better while ho was hold- ing his present situation. I said to him: " 'Mills, the important thing he you in this matter is to ascertain whether you are paid all that you are worth; and that settled, wl ether you can make yourself worth any more. But first of all, let us see if you .can make yourself worth any more, whether you are paid for it, or not. if you can, you had better stick, and look for your raise at the first fair opportunity.' .ie agreed, and 1 went ahead with my plan. "First, I told him for thirty days to put his mind on ono thing: To levise sorne method whereby his house could sell at least ono huh• dyed dollars' worth more of goods. It must bo a practicable plan, and should be presented as any inter- asted employe would present such a :natter to his superior. "Thirty days passed, and Mill: same to me again. With all hit thinking, he had found no method iy which the business of the firm .ould be extended even one hundred dollars a year. "I then put him to work on hie second month's labor : To discover any method by which the firm could transact its present volume of busi- ness with greater economy, so that, by improved methods, there should he effected a saving of at least fifty dollars a year. "At the end of the time lie came back to me with his report. He had seen able to discover no new ,nethod wherebv the firm could economize. He had, however, dis- eovered ono thing, namely, that he would not, need to o ahead for an- other thirty days with our experi- ment, for -he had about made up his ►Hind that lie would continue where he was. " 'My boy,' I said to him, 'just realize for a moment where you stand. You are .tot able, though you have worked three years in this House, to increase the volume of the business one hundred dollars a year, nor can you point out a way to save that. amount. IV; warning is lie low ! Attrac., as little atter tion to yourself as you can. Don't let the proprietors or the manager Pickled Cherries.—Seven pounds remember that you have been three of cherries, four pounds of sugar, )•ears in their employ, if you can one pint of vinegar, one ounce help it. whole cinnainen, half an ounce of " 'You are an absolutely unpile cloves. Cook all together slowly dnetive man. I don't mean that 'half an hour. Cool reed put in jar - you are a bit inferior to thousands for use. of other young man who are in the . Mice with Water Cross.—Boil stores and wholesale houses of this tender 'one-oup(ul of rice in salter' city ; but you, like them, are simply water, drain audltt !team -for ;f.t-t:. sitting upon tf.s head of ono of the minutes. Meantime, wash, dry. bright Hien in the counting -room. and break tett bunches of water - He has to solve all these problems. cress. Fry until crisp in a table You and fifty others in your estate spoonful of butter. Arrange wit: lishment are just sitting on the tor rice in a deep dish in alternate of his lead, like so many dead layers, ►► ith rice at top and bottom. weights. If the business prospers, Scatter grated cheese over the last you expect n raise of salary, when layer. it is his bead -work that has gained Stuffed Beets.—Slip the skin of: every inch of progress. He has to boiled hest . Scoop out the inside. curry yon all.' leaving cup. Mush fine some bode( "Tho young man went off. redder lima beans, mix with mnyonnaie4 and wiser than he came. For five dressing and chopped celery, and years thereafter. in which I wns fill the beets Setve ice cold 01. able to follow his course, he held lettuce or grape leaves. the same place and at the same Egg Plant Scallop.- Reheat som< salary." cold cookie] eggplant in the oven Butter a baking dish, stew with al ternato layers of grated cheese. eggplant., and salt and pepper t, taste. Pour over all a cupful of riel, sweet milk. Bake covered. 'I'Isis i a good dish. Chops.—To two parts of shredded codfish add ono part of Ihot sea coned mashed potatoes. Bind fist and potnto with beaten egg. When cool mold into forth cf chops. !user piece of macaroni for chop hone Dip in beaten egg, then in bread crumbs, Fry to a golden brown in deep fat. tit!!l�ii�Ogf1* Ilicately tinted fairies and have the ; retain their c•.olor, make a lar panful of thin flour starch. 11 he sufficiently cool, take one-half the starch to wash the garment it rubbing carefully by hand, an (►hen all the soil has been remove( rinse in the clean portion of starcl and hang in the shade to dr' Stenciled curtains aro nicel laundered in this ray, whiell woul fade if washed iu the usual way o sent to be dry cleaned. To Remove Iron Rusts—Wet the spots of iron rust with water, then cover them thickly with cream of tartar. Moll up the garment so that• the cream of tartar will re- main on the slots and place it in a vessel with cold water and hi-ing to the boiling point. The spots will have disappeared. This method is quick and effecuta.. Starch That Will Nut Stick.—Dis- solve starch in lukewarm water, add enough boiling water to make it clear, stirring briskly while you pour in the boiling water ; add one teaspoonful borax and shave in about one tablespoonful of paraffin, then bring to a boil for five or ten minutes.. - To Mend Lace Curtains.— A fine way to mend lace curtains is to re :novo the feeder on your sewing machine and, placing torn part o the curtain under the foot of the machine, swing back and forth until hole is filled. By removing feeder the goods will not draw and will make a strong twisted thread that cannot be distinguished from the curtain itself. Tie Home MEATS. Ham Darioles.—Chop fine enough cold haat to fill a cup, one-quarter cupful of sifted bread crumbs, the yolks of two hard boiled eggs pass- ed through a sieve, two tablespoon- fuls of melted butter, one-quarter teaspoonful each of salt and paprika, two beaten eggs, and one- half cupful of milk. Bake the above mixture in patty pans, mix- ture to be three-quarters of an inch thick in the pans. Cook on several folds of paper and surrounded with boiling water until firm in center. 17ninold on rounds of toast and set a poached egg on top. This will be found delicious and is something new ; it may be used us a course at ,l luncheon party or principal course at a home luncheon. Delicious Veal.—Take a veal steak from the round bone, cut off all the fat and cut out the bone. Cut into pieces the desired size, then dip first in crumbs, then egg, crumbs again, and then into the egg again. Fry in an iron spider all a light brown, cover and turn a low flame for about ten minutes; then pour in enough milk to cover the meat and place in the oven for )ne hour. The milk will all be ab- sorbed by 'the meat and the meat will be so tender only a fork will be needed in cutting it. Season bread crumbs before breading any meat. Smothered Chicken.—When the chicken is dressed ready for cook- ing, split it down the back and place flatly in a covered pan, dredge with salt, pepper, and flour, and spread meta softened butter. Have -Inlayenoughwater in the pan to produce steam. When closely cov- ered it soon becomes tender. Then remove cover and brown. Serve with rich cream gravy. The best way to cook a spring chicken—far superior to frying. Meat Souffle.—One cupful of cold meat chopped fine, ono cupful of sweet milk, one large tablespoonful of flour, one small tablespoonful of butter, two eggs, seasoning tt taste. Scald and milk, thickened with the flour and butter; stir in the beaten yolks; pour this while hot over the *neat, stirring; set aside to cool. Then stir in lightly the beaten whites and bake in n quick oven Merl,Merl,minutes. Scree hot. SEASONABLI; UECIPES. Was Taken Very III with DIARRHOEA. VMS WEAK AND DISCGURACED. DR. FOWL `R'S EXTRACT OF WILD STRAWBERRY CURED I"llM. Could Not Lia On His Left Side of 1, cl f TWO PICKLE RECIPES. Largo Cucumber Pickles.—Large cucumber pickles.can bo put up for table use by salting, peel them, slice them a quarter of an inch thick, pack them in wooden kegs, with plenty of salt sprinkled among them. Allow them to remain in salt twenty-four hours; then drain them, put them in glass jars, er earthen jars, with more salt, and close them airtight. When they are wanted for the table soak them in plenty of cold water, until they are perfectly freshened, then :frees them like fresh cucumbers. Green corn, string beans, and asparagus may be preserved in this way ; cauliflower and lima beans, also. Spanish Pickles. --Two large heads large pickles, chopped fine; and one old one-half dozen large onions, four green peppers, all chopped fine and separate; salt overnight in sparate jars; in the morning mix all together, phut in a cloth, and press perfectly dry ; put on the stove to cook in a porcelain kettle .v-ith vinegar enough to cover, dilute inegar, put in a small cupful of :agar, 5 cents' worth of tumeric, 10 cents' worth of white mustard, three tablespoonfuls of ground mus- '.ard, 5 cents' worth of celery seed. These pickles nre not hard to make ind are excellent, for this season )f the year. HOUSEHOLD PESTS. To Banish Rats. --Chloride of into is infallible ; it• should be put tete `.1.- -.tholes and spread about .vherever they are l;!:ply to appear. Sparrow Hint.—To keep s,arrows from roosting on your porch take (8 old paint brush and sonie tar tad late in the afternoon paint the op of the pillars and the birds will lot come back. .int Exterminator.—Purchase eats' worth of tartar emetic from •our druggist. To one teaspoonful .1 powd-r add ane -third teaspoon - 'till of sugar and moisten with a tit- le water. Put it on shelf or any )lace where ants nre found. A :'cw• will cat it and leave and will lot return. Powder will dry, hut •an be moistened again and left in ;place until ants entirely disappear. •.)ne day is sufficient. 1' 1.111, Wi7H ONI,V TWO ('I:i.f,S. !'use Smallest Prison in the World is That of Sark. Sark, the loveliest of tho Channel tslauds, possesses a quaint old pri- -en of two cells, more as a matter ,f form than of necessity, for seri- :us crime is almost unknown in the -land, which has no paid police. ,r t le. It ist some years ply an tsin o thed e Ip prison THE LAUNDRY. ::ns called into requisition, says the Braided Linen Dresses.—Fin two -trend, and on the last occasion hath towels, one upon the other. 'he bolt was found to be so rt►sty smoothly over the ironing board that it had to be broken before the Uo not sprinkle, but put the skirt door could bo opercd. The prison- Do on the board wrongside out ''r was then put in, left a!1 night Mr. T. W. i- s' rrtaon, ll wi h flan., Pa ith the door open and made no Wet a yard of cheesecloth, wring writes: -" I e -as taken very ill with diarr- hoea, and tried everything I had ever it tightly, and, putting it over the On another occasion a young Eng heard of, as being good for it. but, c ith- goods, iron from hem to hand un 'fish servant who had stolen some out success until 1 Was finall • advised to til 'thoroughly dry, using heavy :.lollies was sentenced to three days try Ur. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strew- irons. In this way- you will avoid berry. 1 was so weakand discournged "rocks" in the skirt• and (lust from imprisonment. risuntnent. "'The prospect se that 1 d;dn't expect to derive much bene- terrified Inc that the authorities fit from it but i am happy to say, that, rho floors upon vet goods. t(.ok pity on Iter loneliness and con• after 1 had taken two doses 1 was greatly Laundry hags. --A handy Inundry : idcrately left the cell open. The relieved, and a few more entirely cured hag is made ns follows: From little maid sat in the doorway and A WHALED PRODIGAL. mo. I shall always be pleased to recom- denim, ticking, or heavy nnbleach efts consoled by kindhearted Sark mend roar medicine to all sufferers and cd muslin cut a pi.oe 20x39 inches "Who's that n bulletin' clown I conadcr myself fortunate to rut another get suchA :omen, who came to keep her (•ern• t nTi�ler in the hrano•h 7" a marvelous relief after expecting iodic." piece 22x30 inches. finny. ` This latter piece is the front And A ,till more curious incident is "That's .the 1'redignl son. Tho Wo wish to warn the pit!t lie against is slightly wider to make a pouch. told of a man wise was eenvit'ted el man's a-whalin' thunder out being imposed on by unscrupulous II•e back is longer than the front. r „' him fel tannin' away." dealers giro substitute the so-ccelled c e neglecting his wife and children. "$tra,.be►ry (o.npounds" for Dr. I -os► - I"' extra length fnllitlg over the lie v; is ,,rdere(1 to betake �imaelf lora. red, terming n Rap. The bottom is ; , the trisnn and there wait for ii von want to ? e nn the sire side. ari'c huttoncd t+ gether so that the the arrival of the constabhi. This for IV I'or ict'. E.tt.•:-t '.Viii etr-.- '''''''les may fall out when the hut- he did tilting outside until the bre tin l iu. s,ssun t.:,1:, .::,i: ••.,u %;t ,ns ere unfastened, instead of door w . opened to tet him in. for. . ,p to n curtain rod, which may In , { ,.r �,,� ►. 1 cd on the Leel: rf the clofet ; :,, with merles n gart'ulmts , 1•, ' 1i . I'*,.': s t , . ,r her mnncy rout) 1 egins L lots.- , . NEVEII 1'R1l•;I► IT. 1':•tie'nec'--.1nck's wcl;v rte; f.inlo- dat ing. 1 r.t•ver n kohl him 1) t!n e ••i-og that he t!i fn r i, 7i 11 1, 1 ,.. c r 'rr-ked tow for you 1 Heart Would stop. Ifum!rc.is of people go about their, daily work on the verge of death, andet do not know it. It is only when the shock conies that the unsuspected weak - u(•.,4 of the heart is apparent. There is only tine euro. and that is MiLBURN'S HEART and NERVE PILLS Try Then and Be Convinced. Mr. Paul Pout!, Cascapedit►, Que., writes:—"About five years ago 1 gave tq all hopeof getting1etter of heart t roitb le I would nearly choke, and then my heart would stop beating. 1 could not lie on my left side, and becatne o nervous and weak 1 could not work. A friend told mo to try Milburn's lieart and Nerve Pills, and before the first box was taken I was almost well, and the second box completed the cure. I have advised many others to try them, and they have all been cured of the same trouble. I have offered to pay for a box for anybody they do not cure.' Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are 50e. per box, or 3 boxes for 11.25, at all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Out. THE ISLAND OF WIDOWS AARLUD ISLAND, OFF Till. COAST OF NORWAY. Distressing Circumstances lltot Brought About This State of Affairs. Off the coast of Norway is a small island called Aarlud, which for nearly two years boasted the pecu- liar distinction of being peopled ex. elusively by widows. The circutn stances under which this state of affairs was brought about are un less curious than distressing. Oae spring in the early "nineties" a man arrived on the island from Itaugesund, on the mainland, with his wife and family, to participate in the egg gathering. While testing Isis ropes on a cliff, preparatory to commencing his search, he happen- ed to make a false step forward over the cliff. He was instantly killed. MARK OF SYMPATHY. As there had not been a death en the island since eleven years be- fore, when a boy was killed by a boulder from the same cliff, fall- ing on him, the occurrence natural - 1y cast a gloom over the small com- munity established there. This consisted of some thirty fishermen with their families. As a mark of sympathy and respect, all the men determined to attend the funeral cf the unfortunate, which was to take place at the cemetery at Haugesund on the mainland. Dur- ing the proceedings at the burial - ground a tremendous gale arose, and when the men returned to their smack the storm was at its Height. SMACK GOES DOWN. After carefully considering tho situation, the thirty fishermen de- termined to sail for Aarlud, and, having taken advantage of the op- portunity to replenish their house- hold supplies, the boat was rather heavily laden. Tho progress through the angry sea was most anxiously watcliea ! C the people on she mainland, who, when the Lost had gone the distance of .`boobs anile and a half from tho coast, saw that the vessel was in great dis- tress. Efforts were at once made to go to its assistance; but the heavy sea beat back every boat that was launched. A few moments af- terwards the unfortunate smack plunged forward into the trough of the foaming waves and forever dis- appeared from mortal view. Every Inc of its thirty occupants was drowned, and on the follow ing morning their bodies were found along the beach. News of the dis- aster was as speedily as possible conveyed to the island. Every wife in the place had by the dreadful event been made a widow, and out f thirty as many as twenty-eight were left with• ut any means of sup- port. Don't boast because you have never been in jail. Possibly tho -)fficers of the law were not on to their job. With Backache For Years. Backache is thn first ti .,tt of kidney trouble and should never be neglected. Sooner or later the kidneys will Leconte affected anti years of suffering follow. 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