HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1909-08-26, Page 3• CURE
Birk riealsrLe rind relieve all sho troubles Ina-
deut t<• s Lotions state of tho system. surds as
Diaz urea. Names, Drowsiness, Metre.* after
waling. fain in the tit lo. Ar.. while their moat
reauariat,le success Lae Leon ah.,wn w curing
SICK
lieadarhai yet. earter'e Little !.Iver Pltle are
equally valuableIn e'unallt•oll•.t., ctirlug au•t pro -
senting this riunoyingrontplsurt.wenlo thely alae
e `ecIan.!iw.tiler+uflh.rsi,..u.r••hntireala1eat.
liver and re,;uLeio 1ho lw.:r,:.l. i.. ....::•uy only
cured HAD .
£obethey wnntl healmorlt pricrles.tn thoaewho
•uffor from thb,iiatrea.+ing c. n.p!alut; but fortu-
nate* %irg(.lrtu:Ydlts`s indoio I here.en.i those
wit it *ythem:rlilandthoaoIttllepillsvalu-
•blota i any wor,that they will not bo w,t-
Ln3 todo without tLcrn. Hut ar:or alletcl bait
11
ACHE
le the bane or so tunny Uvea that horn le where
wem.lie our gr•:Sthusst, our pills mire ltwhile
Others doting.
Cartm'e Little Liver Ma are very small sod
very (way to take. Ono or two pill. male a dose.
They are strictly vrgetaJ.le awl do not gripe or
purge, but by tholr gentle action please all who
UPI them.
CASTES Y*DI: NS 00•, NEW TOIL
Mall Pl Lill Dasa Small Price,
REVOLI'TLON.IRY hlla'OitT.
Young liritone Must Co to School
Until Seventeen.
Mr. Runciman, British Minister
t f Education, has issued a revolu-
tionary report, which, if adopted,
will compel boy's and girls to go to
school until the age of seventeen
and will supply them with such situ-
ations as are unlikely to leave them
later stranded among the unem-
ployed. This report. is the work of
a oomIni.eee which includes Mr.
Dyke t ">d, Professor Sadler,
Mr. Shackleton, M.1'., and Mrs.
Sophie Bryant.
A feature of the report is the
care taken to avoid hardship where
young boys can help their fathers
in the fields and where girls can
help their Mother, at home. But
a blow is rtruck at the half-time AUGUST 29.
system for children earning wages.
The report of 237 pages covers
a vast field of investigation, especi- Lesson 1X•. Paul on Christian
ally showing the secrets of Ger-
man education, but the following LOU'. holden Text, I Cor.
are the essential recommendations: 1:3: 1.1:1•
More manual work in the schools
and domestic subjects for girls. 1. Love Completes All Virtues,
y Ll)opPerfect of half-time under thir-1 and Makes er feet All the Good
'wren and -as soon as possible under Thinga of Life. -Vs. 1-3. Eloquence,
uninspired by real love, not seek-
ing the highest good of the hearer,
is Inst sounding brass, or a tinkling
cymbal; mere noise witl.'ut har-
mony, without meaning, without
the soul of music. This is true oven
if we had the giftof tongues be-
stowed by the Holy Spirit. at
Pentecost, and could express in
every language with the utmost
eloquence, every rapt emotion,
every highest experience and
ecstay of the human heart. that.
"harp of a thousand strings" ; yea,
though 1 have the eloquence and
perfect language of the angels.
GOD OF SUNSHINE AND STORM
We Find Him in the Silent Brook, the
Drouth and the Parched Plain.
The brook dried up. -I. hinge, could say, "I thank Thee that I am
evil., 7. not as other men" ; then. behold,
Elijah brooded iu the silence and the brook dries, the druuth comes
solitude of the mountain by the and wo cry, "Lord, be merciful to
brook Cherith when the drouth fell, roe, a sinner."
but out of the disaster that threat- So out of stress and temptation
ened there came to him a new revo-
lution of God am.: a bre,.. der tueau-
iug of life.
It scenes that when (;ted has a new
faith, a new truth, a Pew purpose
te, reveal to man, he sends him for
a space into the isolation of tho
silent places. Elijah at the brook
Cherith, Moses on the plain of Mi-
dian, Christ in the wilderness, face
to face'
with I
!t t (,od withafar . with
n e, tit
their own souls came into and in-
spired knowledge of life's meaning
and mission.
Do we not find it so to -day 7 When
the sun shines nature blossoms, the
brook babbles and prosperity
smiles, faith is easy, life joyous,
Cod is good; but the brook dries,
there comes temptation, suffering,
struggle, disaster, and
GOD SEEMS TO FORS.AKE US,
wo are left to battle alone, doubt
and pessimism assault us, never
more, we think, will life be worth
while ; never More will God show
His face; then from the depths
there comes to us the nee• faith, the
new truth, the rew Manifestation of
Cod.
Perhaps we are beginning to feel
ourselves a peculiar people, a
special object of God's love; that
wo had,rcached a higher plane than
the common herd, were coaling in-
t.. the spirit of the Pharisee, who
and doubt there cones to us new
faith, new strength, now purpose.
God becomes the God of the sun-
shine and the storm, of the just and
the unjust, of the saintand the sin-
ner, and there comes to us a deep-
er sense of His fatherhood, a closer
sympathy with our fellows; the uui-
versal brothencs•od is emphasized.
In some way every one conies to
the "dried deice brc,c,k•
,.
THE "DROUTH"
may be a preparation for blessing,
success, vict )ry. Elijah went down
from tho mountain to the contest
with the priests of Baal. In the
solitude was revealed to him the
supremacy of the Cod that moves
it. the heart of nature, in the heart
of elan, over the gods trade of weed
and stone, worshipped by the hea-
then in the Main.
The brook Cherith may bring
doubt and suffering for a time, but,
its the and will lead to a sayer hop- although I had a cam) a few miles
piness, a truer vision of God -- a away. Months afterward i !earned
(.cel that works in the flood of the story of their fate. They
r passed h a villages, Ics, ier oiwboro poleon's accession and the Penin -
poverty -stricken may be independent as far as money
sular war. His wife, Maria Louisa matters go, it does not follow that
they found no one but women, et Naples, was in love with a brain-
r vulet, and the dried tbrook are but thothe big h rkraalseon ahead dowthey were n dless )young man named Manuel lost degroses ee..
femininity in the smal-
different ways He has of blessing,to the southwest. and so they Godo y, and she prevailed on She can be out in the world, z
leading, developing the individul tramped right into the deadly thorn Charles to make rats s Prime Min- wage earner, and still be as mod -
inter and Generalissimo of the
and the race. jungle, where the M'Chopi, rho est and womanly as though she had
I?en. Cloy Arthur th erarchers ekille l themr to the last and I,ynNapoleon, and ybyGaX'rc,mAes lofgprlin Lever
INTELLIGENhome
T AND CAPABLE.
cipalittes for himself, to allow the
WillLTE MAN IN AFRICA.
!SPAIN'S UNHAPPY TIMES
Lives of Men Who Recruit Negroes
for Rand Mines.
The labor agent in Africa is a
plan uho recruits natives for w 'irk
in the !nines. ()n the face of it the l
thing sounds prosaic e_:eugh, but
it is far from being so in actual'
fact, for the recruiting has to be
done in the remote native districts,
often hundreds of miles away fruln
any white settlement, and the
agent has literally to take his lite
in his hands.
Up to ten years ago many labor
agents, even in ltominally British
territories, were little more than
slave raiders, says a writer i11 The
London Daily News. I have met
them going out with a dozen armed
"police" whose business it was to
surprise )else a village after nightfall
( p g r gbtfnll
and capture all the likely -locking
sten. In the Portuguese colonies
the raids were carried out on an
oven larger scale by regular uni-
formed troops, though latterly the
ugly temper of the natives them-
selves has made the business a risky
one. I remember •cell an alarm
oil one of the big villages, when
within a couple of minutes there
were more titan a hundred sturdy Spain reached its great.es glory
savages, armed with long bows and aid power in the sixteenth century.
poisoned arrows, crouching in the The Hnpsbtii.gs ruled from 1510 to
jungle just beyond the huts wins- 1700, when the Bourbons succeeded
ing for the raiders. them. The throne was given to
On another occasion sumo Portu- Joseph Bs nap•trte in 1808, and the
geese native soldiers tried to ex- peninsular war kept the kingdom
rloit what was to them a new dis- ie a state of ferment (ruin that
trict. I saw then! going dotwn, but year till 1814.
never heard of them coming back,
REVOLUTIONS 11.11 1•: TORN
'1'111. ('Ot'N'I'ltl" ASL '.DLR.
Last Upheaval Resulted itt Restora-
tion of a• Monarchy
Spain has been second only to
France in the turl.ulence of its his-
tory sed the regularity with vhinh
wars and rovolutiuus have strip -
Fed it of its youth and its terri-
tories, and altered its form of gov-
ernment.
The last great upheaval was that
which remelted in three different
ferias of republic and a military
dictatorship in the stormy years
w hieh preceded the restoration in
1875 of the monarchy with alfon-
eu NII. as King.
The founding of the kingdom of
Asturias dotes back to the eighth
century; that of Navarro to the
ninth ; Castile attd Aragon were
founded respectively in 1033 and
1035. The two lest were united in
1492.
THE PENINSULAR WAIL.
Charles IV., a weak and ignor-
ant ruler, was responsible for Na -
springtime and d outh of ,umeer,
ir.evitably, unchangingly, eternally,
but beneficently along the way of
WORD FOR BUSINES GIRL.
t'APAi11 ), 1\'1'ta,L11.1 N'1' AN1)
SFS.F-R ES1't:l'•1'1 N G.
1be
Woman Wage Earner May be
as Modest as Her Stay -at -
Home Sister.
Most of those who do not come in
actual contact with the business
girl have the vague,t idea of what
she is really like.
In the first place, thoy look on
I'er as thoroughly undomesticated
and devoid of all womanly accom-
plishments.
In title they stake a great mis-
take, for there is no reason in the
world why the business girl should
not be a very capable housekeep-
er.
The girl who has the brains to
be intelligent in business affairs haqi
the brains
to he squall)' intelligent
in household affairs.
DON'T WANT IDLE LIFE.
The business girl is not always
driven to earn her own living
through necessity. It frequently
happens that she is one of a largo
family of girls and that her com-
mon sense tells her that she is
notch better off earning her living
than idling away her time at home.
If a girl is not married at twenty -
Fee she is usually tired of dances
and the tiresome round of social
life, and she is very glad to get into
some congenial lino of work.
The pride of being independent
is very sweet, and, though a girl
Jamieson.
THE,S S LESS{1N use them and may trust them un-
e e failingly
IV. The Immortal Throe. -Vs.
13. And now, in conclusion, abideth
faith, hope, charity.
Faith Abideth. Wo shall never
cease to trust in God, for our souls
can no more live in heaven than
they can here, without divine help
and influence which conte from
trusting his as Governor, Helper,
and Friend. Faith will only be
stronger, more complete, in heaven
than here.
Hope Abideth. For the more
we gain the larger our vision of
things to hope for. 'PIIe more we
gain our ideal, the more glorious
the ideal to be gained. And this
through eternal ages. \\re do not
cease growing, developing, by go-
ing to heaven.
Love the. Greatest of 1!I. But the
greatest of these is charity. Love.
(1) It is greatest, in its nature, nob-
lest, deepest•, happiest, most per-
vasive, most heavenly. (2) It brings
us closest to God, makes us par-
taker; of his nature, his childre•'I
and heirs. (;t) It is rite ono thing
without which faith and hope are
of little as nil. (1) It is the most.
powerful, exerts the widest. influ-
ence for goes!, is the strongest mo-
tive for the npbuiiding of character.
f:,i It. is universal. Every person,
of every degree, may have this
love. More then all other things
together it makes those that hnvo
it '• free and equal." (t►) \Vit h
faith and hope, love is eternal. The
lunger ono lives, the more love he
can have. It will expand and grow
forever and ever, in increasing
blessedness and glory.
IN7'I:RN_1'('IONA1. LESSON,
fourteen, except for boys at work
in agriculture and girls helping at
home.
Exemption from school under
rixteen only when the child is suit-
ably employed.
Registries (at. the cost of the
State) to help parents to find pro-
per work for children leaving
school.
l:cvi town and county to sup-
ply continuous classes up to tho
ago of seventeen.
Children to he compelled to go
to these classes and employers to
be compelled to give thein time
to do Si) and punished for employ-
ing children who do not go.
These classes to give practical
iuslruc•tiou in the trade s of the dis-
triet.
Physical training to be always
given.
The report says that 170.000 chil-
dren between twelve and fourteen
have left school entirely, white
late,. numbers are injured by wage-
earning occupations. Of the 2,-
000,000 between fourteen and sev-
enteen, only one in four receives
any education.
".1u increasing number of 'blind-
al:et' employments tempt buys and
girls by high wages, hitt give no
permanent employment."
On the other hand, eloquence is
one of the. most powerful instru-
ments of love in persuading sten
to repent, in nioving men toward
righteousness, in portraying the
blessedness of serving Christ. De-
spise not these gifts, lett transform
and give them power as the instru-
ments of love. Then they aro sweet
ns the music of the angel harpers
in heaven.
11. The Spectrum of Lose. The
Qualities Which are (•onlbined in
Perfect Lose. -Vs. 4-7. The abso-
lute importance of love, as an
essential part of all virttnes and ac-
tions, has been showu in the first
three verses.
Our next duty is to learn wit
love is. Like life, love cannot be
defined, but it can be described and
recognized by w hat it docs, by it,
fruits, by the expression of its
qualities. It is like life. The great
est scientists cannot tell what it is
in its essence, but only describe it
by qualities and results. Ail the
qualities together de not make life
or love.
`'Lowe is a compound thing,"
Paul tells us. it is like light. As
you have seen n man (if science
take a beam of light and pass it
through a crystal prism, as you
have seen it, come out on the ot her
side of the prism broken up into
its componeet colors -reel, and
+
I:.1('H ROY 11.1S FARM.
Sueccw+tel Experiment with Dellci-
4• -- at ent Children.
Mrs. Henry Dar''ns, 1 li, is di-
recting the school farms of New
York city, is making 311 1 xperiment
u• farming with a class of deficient
children. To each of fourteen boys
1 as been given a faros four by eight
feet.
"Few of these children can ei-
ther read or write," exp!ained Mrs.
Parsons. '•.Almost mune of then!
can do the supplest sums in arith-
tnotic. It looked i ather hopeless
when Miss ('rampton, my a.-iet-
ant. and I began the task.
"When it canto to planting I ex-
plained that the beans were to he
planted a span apart. the onions
two spans and so on. 1 showed
them thnt one span was just the
width of the rake. Like a flash ono
of the boys replied that they would
not need to use their hand.; in
pleasuring. as the onions would
have to bo planted two rakes apart.
This the other hoys understood and
acted accordingly.
"When the vegetables began to
grow: to enable the boys to r:;lti-
vate them most effectively I got
wooden meat skewers which I had
them grasp as though about to
urine With the point they stir-
red the soil shout the plants. and
io d"ing P many of them made the
1n,,tion as though about to write.
"It was very simple. and after a
Alilb.trn's 1_trs•I.iver 1,41, for r.n.,ti'm. 1' ' ' " t-' 1 ;in•t hate tittle all of thea! were using the
i .:t those skewers a• if they were pens,and
each farm was thoroughly tilled.
OF C'OUBSl: i'(' W.\S.
"'So you Isere deeply touched by
the poem young Mr. (]uffson wrote
to y ou I" said Maude.
"Wes," said Mayntie.
"Pitt it was not a g.x,d poen.''
1 don't care. It was just as
much trouble for him to write it
as if lie had been Shakespeare."
Contij3aUou
('on:
of in.lig s die food, irregular habits, blue, and yellow, and violet, and
the u.e o: sti•ntllants. spices and as. ,rang••. and all the colors of the
tnngcal ftod, and strong drt<t,r Pitt. ,
gatives, which destroy the tone of the
rainbow ---so Paul passes this thing,
stomach and the contractile of the lower leve, through the magnificent prism
bowel; therefore, when the liver is i ; of his inspired irate lect, and it
active, and failing to secrete bile m comes out on the. other side broken
tufficient quantity, constipation is Purr• op iltto its clemct,ts. And in these
to follow, and after tonctiraticn come
one can have piles, one of the most annoying trouhlea few Horn. no hese what one might
call the if
of love, the
anal) '-1-.(,f love
W. Lowe is Itnp(risitahlr. 1's.
tt-t.' Love, like Licht. shims on
however it ►nay I.r r• . cite.! fen
n to eatlseal by the eating
MILBURN'S IAXA•LIVER PILLS
eure all troubles arising from the liver.
Mies \lar•v Burgoyne, Kingarlear, >v.B ,
writes+: -"I have used Milburn's Inxa-
Liver Pills for constipation and have 1118y hate nt, I tt I••e a eeni ellies.
forme! them to bo an excellent remedy for nee stns Illi !. ;..•• ;�• .I 11 not to
the complaint." i,n ioflurn a el I. l.••1 (:od lewea
Mix§ Annie \lingo. Onslow, \.I: , ' earn, .41;! \I,•" 1.;:, 1 •(cute 4111(1
writers: _ •,\ friend advice(' n e to use
tion. I us' 1 tree and a halt l
ant e(rnnletrle egred." ,
Price '. rents per tial_ or .+ Inv 11.1, 1. I. , . 1
at rill elrI,'NI or 1:141!10,1 .lire+: 0.1 'WO'S t'nn Their school teacher i( folloeinA
p 1 s i••,i I"'% tet ibis 01). and wo Wiese in n short
of print : v rhe Milburn CO.. I.intited, 'n, 1 i:::; 1• „ .Irfv them.t r
i"orvnto, Out. v farn 1.;• r.1il•Ir(11 will learn to use
le 1 • 1• . .t .i d reset el1 ; ) 011 may (Illi. pens and Ile able to write."
man. It was a grim trick k to play,
but the old chief who told us the
story chuckled over it. To him it
vas evidently a hum•irous side.
A DISTRiSSiD SEAMAN.
A Stranded Indian's Pathetic Ef-
forts to Get Ilome.
The committee of the British
House of Con101ons which is to in-
quire into the question of distress-
ed Colonial and It than seamen will
have material to work upon of such
interest as seldom comes before a
parliamentary committee. "It is
not so very long ago that an ex-
traordinary case carte under our
observation,'' say; an ofl'►rita. "An
Indian found himself adrift in Loi-
dou, and for some reason or. other
lie could not get n ship that would
take him back to ledia.
"Ile loafed 'bout the East, End
of London, living on the el' rile of
compatriots until, tired of getting
I.ts living in this way, he ttartcd
t•ff to tramp through England. He
had no knowledge of the language
or of the country, but. by sono
F rcnch army to march through
Spain to invade England's ally,
Portugal. When it was too late
the Spanish people awoke to tho
situation, and the Peninsular war
ensued.
Charles abdicated a!, Napoleon's
request, and his son, Fernando,
was taken to France a prisoner. In
The girl who is inclined to be bold
and fast is in just as much danger
• if becoming so if sho stays at home
as when she is engaged in business.
In fact, there is even more chance
of her getting into these bad ha-
bits, as she has more time to get
into tnischief.
To my mind the average business
his absence a tarty of extremists girl is about the finest product of
met at Cadiz, and adopted a new this country.
constitution, which 1411R ultugether Si►o is an intelligent, capable,
different from anything the conn- self-respecting, womanly girl, and
try had had before. Fernando re- the men of the country should be
pudiated it when Ile came back front Proud of !tor. She goes about her
France in 1814, but a revolution' business in a modest, sensible way,
biro see things in another asking nothing but just recognition
light in 1812. el her services and respectful treat-
madeDrFEATI':D HIS SUBJECTS. ment from those with whom she
comes in daily contact.
The triumph of the revolutionists She is usually a good daughter,
was short -lis ed, however, for in and, owing to her generosity, many
1823 Fernando enlisted the help of little extra comforts creep into the
French arms. and administered a home.
beating to his own impetuous sub If any young man reads these
ject8. When he died in 1833 tie words let him remember that a good
enjoined upon I is wife and his in- daughter makes a good wife.
rant daughter Isabel to preserve I)o not for a moment think that
intact ail the regal prerogatives. I am decrying the home girl, for
Maria found this harder to do than I am not. I am merely telling some
to say, because the people %•horn facts about the business girl.
Ferments) had persecuted had ral- The girl obese plain duty it is
lied to Don Carlo;, who claimed to stay at home and help her mother
n!cans or other, ne reached Aber- the throne under the Salic law, and is earning her living just as much
deco, where he found a ship bound the Ql;een Regent found it difficult as the one who goes to business
for Jamaica. It was the only ship to Illsintain eel. position without every day. Ko.p that in mind, lit-
ho could get, and eventually he ar- their support. tie stay-at-home sister, and don't
rived at his destination and was Then fol low :el a long civil war, I e blue because you are not paid
discharged. :n which )tun ('altos' pretentious a salary every week. As long as
another ship,
"After months of Availing he got %ere diope1sed (if, but the despotic Your mother needs you, you are do-
- ing the very bust kind of work in
helping to lift the burden from her
everwoighted shoulders. -Beat rico
Fairfax, New York Evening Jour-
nal.
4.
MAULED IR1:\
PN'I'IIERS.
Girl's Fierce Straggle in a Seaside
Circus.
Horn to San Francisco, where Ito
hoped to connect with a Indian
ship. lle was successful to this
extent, that he secured n be rth to
Colombo. Here, again, he suited
until there came a tramp steamer
n ballast, bound for Calcutta, and
le got employment on board. Be-
ing a ship with a mixed crew, there
was no sprang (chief ',alive ofl'i"er)
ell board, and the ship had bevel at
sea three days before the unfur•
tuitate Indian discovered that at
the last moment the captain had
received orders to go to the Cape
for a cargo. 'l'he ship called at
Capetown, only to sail almost im-
mediately- for Aberdeen' After
:5 months' wnnderinr tho wretch -
td man found himself back again
111 the port from which ho had
sailed so hopefully more than a
year previously."
Troubled
With Backache
For Years.
Backache is the first sign of kidney
trouble and should never 1,e neglectc•1
Sooner or later the kidneys will become
affected and )ears of suffering follow.
errs. W. C. Doerr, 13 Brighton at.,
London a i'' . writes: ---" it tis with rleeh-
ure 1t: •e 1 • hank von for the plod your
l •u.en ., heiney i'111s have done roe.
Have been troubled with backache for
yaws, and nothing helped me until
friend brought me a box of i)oar,'s
Kidney Pills. T began to take them and
took four loxes. 1 am glad to Any flint
I am entirely cured, can de all n on
work and feel as good as 1 did ley
taken sick. 1 am positive noun's Kidner
fills are all you claim them to bo, and 1
advise all kidney sufferers to give them a
fair trial. You may use my name if you
wish." •
Ito.+n's Kidney Pills sre 50 cents per
r...:,r :t boxes for =1.26, at all dealers, er
.• r:• .i direct on rice!ot 01 price by tie
'1. i!. .. n • n.. i. 'its' . Toronto. One
11 'len e,rder' n e specify " Loan's.'
variance with the democratic views
et the parte which supported her
that Spain a as plunged into a
period e,f Iurhulence, pronuncia-
mentos and civil revolts which cul-
minated with Prim and Serrano's
seeee;sful revolution of 1868, and
the flight of Isabel to France.
AD01'TED NEW ('ONSTITUTION
Then followed the reriod delerih-
eo above, in which Spain tried a
variety of forms of government.
Alfonso XII., who was restored to
the throne at the end of it all, was
the only son of Isabel. A new mod-
erate constitution was adopted, and
still remains in use, fur the most
part. The years which have passed
since then have been comparative -
is tranquil. Alfonso XII. died at
the ago of 28, and his widow, Maria
( ristina of Austria, became regent
until her son, the present King,
reached his majority.
The threatened secession of Cuba
brought on the Spanish-American
war in Bei, and Spain lost all that
ens left of her ancient Western
Empire. To the natio', as a whole
this was desirable freedom from an
(Id burden, but the loss of the co-
lonial markets dislocated certain
manufacturing interests, especially
in Catalonia. This accounts for
the fact that the separatist tend-
cnry has always remained strong
nirong the Catalans.
ABOUT DRINKING WATER.
At least three pints of water
should be drunk daily by the aver.
ego adult, in addition to what is
',resent (50.00 per cent.) in tho
solid food. A lack of water to
flush the sewers of the body leads
to constipation, malassimilation
A girl animal tamer, "Mlle.
Alice," was attacked and badly
mauled by two panthers in the Ma-
rine Gardens at Portobello, the sea-
side resort near Edinburgh, Scot-
land.
She was taking the animals from
the cages to the arena for the per-
formance at the time. The panth-
ers were in a sullen humor, and
resented her efforts to eoax them
along the passage leading to the
arena. They hung back and sud-
denly sprang 011 her, bearing her
to the ground.
The large crowd present mere
horrified to hear screams coining
from the passage. The manager
rushed to the gut's rescue, firing
his rev ols'er, which errs leaded with
biank cartridges, while others, with
iron bars, after a fierce struggle.
thrust the infuriated animals off
their victim, who by this time had
swooned.
The girl was badly lacerated on
the chest, thigh and scalp, and was
covered with blood.
see
POLISH GIRLS ON FARMS.
They ere Taking the 1'I:tce ..t 'It•r,
an German Fields. all hope of getting better of heart trouble.
would (pearly choke, ad then my
Owing to the lack of fare) heeds heart wo'tl.l stop lent ing. 1 could not
in the agricultural legion in tee the
on my left side. and became es nervous
centre of Prussia farm owners there; „ :'1 eo a ni \tplhura'.va I r rt Rand ridder (n
Was Taken Very III with
DIARRHOEA.
WAS WEAK AND DISCOURAGED.
DR. FOWLER'S
EXTRACT OF
WILD STRAWBERRY
CURED HIM.
Mr. T. W. Robertson, Eltn Valley, Man.,
writes.- '• 1 was taken very ill with diarr-
hoea and tried ed ever+
th•
n
t1had ever
heatrd of, as being good for it, but, with-
out success mull I was finall • advised to
try Dr. Fowler's E;tract of Wild Straw-
berry. 1 was so weak and discouragotf
that 1 didn't expect to derive much bone •
fit fern it, but 1 ant happy to say, that,
After 1 had taken two doses I teas greatly
relieved, and a few uu,rt entirely cured
me. I shall always be pleased to recom-
mend your medicine to all sufferers and
1 consider myself fortunate to get such
a Inarelous relief after expecting to die."
We wish to warn the public against
being imposed on by unscrupulous
dealers who substitute the ao-callod
"Strawberry Compounder" for Dr. Fow•
ler's.
If you want to be on the safe side, ask
for 1)r. Fowler's Extntct of Wild Straw
berry and insist on getting what you ask
for.
The original is manufactured only by
The 1'. Milburn Co., Limited, 'Toronto
Ont. Price 35c.
employed for this purpose, says an
English paper.
They get on an average ono mark
(about 24 cents) a day and free bed
and board, which consists of a couch
in a roughly -built barrack and of
one substantial meal, whereas they
have to pay extra for the board
they consutre, of which they oat a
lot.
Most of them are also very fond
of liquor, and during their work
they drink a good deal of the cheap-
est stuff.
They usually leave their country
in the months of March or April.
There are certain agents who make
a business of engaging these girls
it the name of the big farm owners,
and as soon as a gang is complete
they are shipped to their destina-
tion. Tho Government, which owns
the railroads in Germany, allows
rl.ecial rates to such transports.
They usually 1 -ave Prussia in the
autumn to retn'rn to their native
country, where they spend the win-
ter and their savings. They are
much more intelligent than ordin-
ary farm workers, and nary of
then are handsome.
ORDER INr THE GALLERY.
A noted superintendent of tho
Sons of Temperance was talking at
an hotel about temperance orators.
"The temperance orator of to-
day," ho said, "is always sure of a
respectful hearing. In the past
it was not so. At the beginning
of the temperance movement drink-
ing sten Carle to our meetings for
no other purpose than to interrupt.
and confuse. The orator had to bo
very careful in his remarks. He
bad to look out lest he gave his
hearers an opening for sonic oppor-
tune but ribald interruption.
"I remember when they began
temperance work here. A series of
meetings was held in a large hall.
Tho audiences were always numer-
etts, but they interrupted horribly.
It. the end an ex -prize-fighter was
hired to sit every night in the ob-
streperous gallery and keep order
there.
"Well, ono night the orator con-
trasted the clean content of hone
lifo with the squalor of drunken-
ness. He spoke beautifully, and at
his clitnax he cried, in ringing, im-
passioned tones:-
" 'What do we want when we re-
turn from our daily toil 1 What du
we desire to case our burdens, to
gindden our hearts, to bring smile♦
t.. mor faces and song to our lips!"
"Here the orator paused for ef-
fect, and the conscientious prize-
fighter tiptoed hurriedly to the
front of the gallery, shook his ftn-
Fer at his unruly charges, and said,
ir, a threatening stage whisper: ---
"'Mind, the first feller among
le who says 'Boer 1' out he goes! '
Could Not 111 On His Lott Side
Heart Would Stop.
iTundreds of people go about their,
daily work on the verge of death, ani yet
do not know it. It is only when the
shock comes that the unsuapected weak -
nes.+ of the heart is apparent. There
only one cure. and that is
MILBURN'S HEART and NERVE PILLS
Try Then and Be Convinced.
Mr. I'a11l l'o'll, ('ll•caredia. CZue.,
writes ---"About live years ago I gave up
are now importing girls front lee . 1',114, n rl 1Mforethe flits 1o: was taken
land to do all the minor work int 1 w•a.`I nl•no't well. and tie ee.ond i,ex
lbs wheat• potato and beetroot' conpl••tee the ewe. 1 have ad•:r.ed
acheshulk, and many obscure field+ ream• oi,,ers to Iry the -is, snit thew item
aches and pains. Water is best These girls, the majority of when! all been eared of the sae tro!►!.h. 1
haver assess+ to pay for a 1 (a for anybo.ly
taken mostly' betw'eltl i1Mltly, M1 as eon.e freta the folio!! (tart of (:er they .l0yet rttr(•" •
runt unduly' to dilate the (lige+it n tunny, are very• et rung assd 11111 i t i \lilbune's Ife," end tient Pitts nrr
juices. A glass c f ice eater taken I:tr a,ed 4.0 the gr:ne Niue eery It.0 ; ;dM. per I,ox, nr :3 hoses•for $1.2&. nt t.a
a' a meal drives the bleed from the 1 refending. asst! ;leo I1ttend in 11 dcal0rl. or ma;10•I direct on rtrripl of
stomach and delay; • u at +.,eek 41- lune.! to th.i1 wit!I 3irl•.it,.rt f,ricn 'II The T. Milburn Co., Limited,
losses an hour. I sal than the male hands fit+ucrl� 1*mato, Oat.