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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1906-11-15, Page 7ABSOLUTh SECURITY. Centring, Carter's tle Liver Pills. at Sear Signature of G/ i Wrapper Beloit. awl assess, "Car* FN NEAUCN&. FIR DIIIINESl. FOR IIUOUSMEtta FOR TORPID UVEA FiN CONSTIPATION. FOR SALLOW SKIN. - FOR THE COMPLEXION oter•la YVa/aY. a.n.a I >�y v Yesetase<e. CURE SICK( Ni= at)ACHE. MILBURN'S LAXA-LIVER PILLS are mild, sure and safe, and are a perfect► regulator of the system. They gently unlock the secretions, clear away all effete and waste matter from the a system, and givetone and vitality to the 37 whole intestinal tract, curing Conetipa• tion, Sick Headache, Biliousness, Dyspep- sia, Coated Tongue, Foul Breath, Jana. dioe. Heartburn, and Water Brash. Mrs. B. R Ogden, Woodstock, N.B., writes: "My husband and myself have used Mil - burn's Laza-Liver Pills for a number of years. We thin we cannot do without theta. they are the only pills we ever take." Price 25 oenta or eve bottles for $1.00, at all dealers or direct on receipt of price. The T. Milburn Ca, Limited, Toronto, Out. E(;Yi?:S LANfHOLDERS. There ore an t'riorntnus numfer of small landholders in Egypt, 5,0u .(1('11 acres beingy'ullivatcd by : ver 1,(60.%11 landowners, of tvho►n G,•P►) are Coro• p£un;,,.tiwning, on an averrtv, a 111110 acres. Nine hunelrt.I nn 1 k rty hold under fire act •s each, r r ecru, of the hole ciltivitNt w bile 12,000 sten of means live .., dings above fifty acres, their lutn( being over 2.250,000 acres. or Al par cent. of the whole; propriet-.'s of to. tweet' five and twenty acres hiving t:1 per cent. • Dr. Wood's No rwe.y Pi Syrup Cures Oeughs, Oetds, Hoarseness, Orem Pain or TIgh Che It stops that remit to log to t re the , AstMM •as In 1i Eto. klieg in tls and aoothief gs. Mr. E. I n Galt gardesfr. ad a ery severe attack throat and tightness in the times when I wanted to coal not I would almost eheke to y wife got me a bottle of DIDI WOOD' NORWAY PINS SYRUP,end`°,111Yo +ter- prf e I found speedy relief. would not he without it if it cost 01 00 a bot- tle, and I can recommend it everyoe bothered with a (sough or e•I• Price p, Cent& U eal- and, i: - sore Some 1 could tit. M MILBURN'S Heart and Nene Pills. 1 Are • ', eetae tar all .1Uee... wad .- orAeM suing from a inn rro,.n n ,11 tion of the hem.; 41P nr•r,, . n iaa Pelpllattnn •f th. n.,trtt h:irun. Prr+slrwtlon, Nerrmur.e... es s. Feint and nosy 5 wilt, nr•trn Vat. rt.,. They ort e.p,.r•isfh l.en.1 -1.1 to wotnea *rouble, with Irregular mere. sturat!on, nts per NIT, er s for 11.:3. Alt • Mere, or Mrr.sr-nv ('o., I.t'wran. T"ron,o, Out. THE BREAD OF LIFE Many People With Shelves and Larders Filled Are Yet Pitiably Poor. !clan shallnotlive , bread alone, spa i 1 Y ell( by es cry word that proct•edeth out of the Mouth of Gud.-Matt. iv., 4. IICIe are lives that have bread in abundance and yet are ....tarred; with barns and warehouses tilled, will) shelves and larders laden they aro empty and hungry. No man meet envy them; their feverish. restless whirl is but the search ter u satisfaelion never to be found in things. Called rich in u word wet tere re. others are more truly, pitiably poor, hi.viug all. yet lucking because they have neglected the things within. The abundance of bread Is the cause of ninny a man's deeper hunger. (laving known nothing of the discipline that develops life's hidden sources of satis- faction, nothing of 1he struggle in which deep calls unto deep and the true life finds itself. Ile spends his days seeking lo satisfy Ids soul with furniture, with houses and lands, with yachts and mer- chandise, seeking to feed his heart en things, 9 process of less promise and reason than feeding a snapping turtle on thoughts. If tho heart he empty the life cannot be filled. The flow must cease at the faucet if the fountains go dry. The prime, the elemental ecessillesofour being} are for the life rather than the body, its house. But, alas, how often nut of the marble edifice Issues theenla is oor p emaciated inmate, how out of the life having many things comes that which amounts to no- thing. THE ESSENTIAL THINGS. ore not often those which most readily strike our blunt senses. We see the shell (fret. '1'o the undeveloped mind the material is all there is. But t looking deeper into life there comes an awaken. ing to the fact and the significance of the spiritual, the feeling that the rea- son, the emotions, the joys and pains that have nothing to do with things, the ties that knit one to the infinite, all constitute the permanent elements of life Because roan is a spirit his life never can consist wholly in things; he must come into his heritage of the soul wealth of alt the age.s; he ►nest reach out, though often as in the dark. until voices, the is coo c across the void theres sages end the sneers, the prophets and the peels speaking the language of the soul. In thew he linds his food nor can his deeper hunger be assuaged un- lit it thus is fed. Itec:use man is n spirit and gradual- ly is coining into the dominant spirit life in which things shall count fur less and thought and character cur more, lie seeks after hie own kind. The deeps of life have their relationships. The spied of man cries out after the father 0• spirits. Icy whatever nave men have called the most high they ever have sought after hint the eternal who would be one with them in soul, in ►.1l that is essential and abiding in being. Every religion, every philosophy, every endeavor after character and truth •s but the cry of humanity for word with God. hearing his word on any lip the heart of man ANSWERS MTI( JOY. The words of eternal truth have been the: food of the great in all ages. Faint- ing in the fight lite message from the unseen, the echo of everlasting verities has revived their spirits; they have fought the Tight that despise_ things and seeks truth. Who would not exchange n mess et i t from a fa- ther's c pottage for the b P ther's lips? Who to so dead he no long- e- finds more satisfaction in truth and love and beauty than in fond or furni- ture? still >wCSOfoolish w twee? And why art. !'. seek 10 satisfy ourselves with things that perish, while down 10 the least blade of creation earth is laden with un - fading and '1 s God is everywhere, tc ►o r every open heart may hear his voice? 1f we might but learn this lesson, we people of the laden hand and the emp- ty heart, that since life is more than digestion and mon more than beast cr machine, since determining all is the spiritual world, they only aro wise who set first Things first, who use the gar- nered and the n the \ erience r e e.I Wer d P c the en- riching 1t o ' s of the rose' opportunities P riching of the soul, who listen among all the voices of time for the words that proceed from the lips of him who in= babiteth eternity. THE S. S. LESSON INTERNATIONAL LESSON, NOV. IS. Lesson VII. Jesus Before faiaphas. Golden Test: Isa. 53.3. TIIE LESSON WORD STUDIES. Note. -The text of the Revised Version is used as a basis for these Word Studies. Annas and Caiaphas.-Annas, the son of Seth, was high priest of the Jews from A. D. 6 or 7 to A. D. 15. Even after being deprived of his (nigh -priestly office by the Roman authorities ito still retained in a large treasure tath lite power and the dignity of his furtner station among the Jesse. Five sons and one son -ht -low (Calephas) succeeded hint in turn in to office of'high priest. The family of Annie: belonged to the old Sudduccai aristocrat' -W and derived its immense wealth, in part at least, front a monopoly whiyt the family held on the sale of u,Y lands of articles neces- sary in seeetection with the sacrifices offered ;,t the temple. It was the sots of rt„nas W11,4111 Jesus accused of nlak- g- his Father's house n "den of thieves" and it was the vnssal snle5men of tits high -priestly family whom Jesus had driven from the courts of the (temple. So strong teas the influence of eimas 10 the Sanhedrin that even dur- ing the incuulbency of his sons and at -in -lav in oAIce he remained the real power in Jewish religious affairs. n was for this reason that "the band and the chief cnptnins, and the officers of the Jews," who had seized Jesus and bound hint. "le,l Iain to Annas first" ns John is careful to point out (Jelin IS. 11. 13). in John, also ns well as in Acts, .lutes is given the title "high pries!„" though in the nnrrnlive of John at host it is evident t het the narrator was fully aware of the relation between Annas and (.ainphas and alio of the fact that the latter was the actual incumbent of the office. Cuiaphas, Ino, was n man of strong though wicked diameter. It was he who. pr•ofeesing Io fear that the popular dernrnstratInn in fnvor of Jesus con - fleeted with the Iritintphn1 entry aid (Otter events would bring upon lite city the displeasure of the Milian authori- ties. counseled the Jews that it werl bolter "Istat nnn.man should die for the people and That the whale nation perish not" (John 11. 50): thus. n4' the even• gelist pointe out, becoming uncun- seiously n prieitl)• prophet of the nione- nienl. It voile Cniaphns who took the leading part 01 Ihn first informal meet- ing n( the SiInlualrIn mentioned in the test of our to -day's lesson. Verse 57. le the verses immediately ers•.'iliug this fine. \In1111ms. records the incident of Peters dressing his sword and culling off the ear of the high ',,ie>;1's eerwnnl. which inci•lent is also ret•nrded by the Otter evangelists. See- ing mat their \lacier had been betrayed and was to toy IrI1 away 0 prisoner "all the dkelple: left Hint rind fled' (Mott. N. 56). \lurk records the incident 0f the Young man who lin(' followed Jesus rind who. being seized by those who look teens prisoner. barely escaped. his :thing hoeing been torn heli him in • t•rfort In hold hint. 11at Mg bound t' prisoner serene'ly the soldiers look 11141 to the Jewish nuthorites under immediate iii ' t('mn They were . \t..t!hew• n11ilea the examination h'•u,-' of (:aiaphas-The words, the house of. do not occur in the Greek where the reading is simply to Cala- plias. The scribes and the elders -Members of the Sanhedrin who had been hastily, summoned to an informal meeting shortly after midnight. Matthew is careful to mention the more formal ses- sion of the Sanhedrin which occurred in the morning: "Note when morning was cone, all the chief priests and the elders of the people took counsel against Jesus to put him to death." 58. Court of the high priest --A court in the high -priestly palace. From lho Garden of Gethsemane Jesus had been taken first to Annas; thence after a brief examination, recorded in John 18. 19-23. to Cniaphns in another part of the same bedding. (fere some members of the HERE Altl: A FI:\\' ExTlt:\CTS Sanhedrin had hastily gand which show the nature of the hardships the first informal trial off Jesus s took place at night (Coop. mark 14. 52-0 ; encountered on the journey: -"We have Luke 22. 54, 63.65). Early In the morning only laity pounds of deer meat, Iwo n second and more formal trial was death sentence. !knee, while the San- hedrin members aeseintiled considered their prieoner "worthy of death," U was ,.tilt necessary for thein to bring some termed charge against hire before the Roman uulhorities, tu).1 secure front 1hetu a conviction and death sentence. 67. Ilulfet-To slrike with clenched \\111► the palms of their hands -'flee meaning of lee phrase in the original is not clear. The marginal reading of lite Revised Version is with rods. Gtl. ► } ht.v utun u� thou Christ - The is - The dtnand of these nun reveals the coarse, popular idea of prophecy, ac- cording to which it is a meaningless ex- hibition of miraculous power. PERILS OFTHE FAR NORTH EXTIt%CTS FItO%I '::11: DI.\RV OF CONS T.%ULE SELLER. A Record of hardship and Endurance by a Member of the Norlltsest Mounted Police. The qualities of the men who com- pose the Royal Northwest Mounted Police have often been demonstrated, but rarely have fidelity, devotion to duly, fearlessness, unselfishness, and indomitable determination been mani- fested in greater degree Than was dis- played, last winter _'n a journey made by Constable Seller, amounting in all to about t .MJn 1 rtes.'l o 7 t trip made in company oL Interpreter Ford and an Eskimo named 'l'upealock. it was undertakeno f r the purpose of locating the whereabouts of a Scottish ship, Int Ernest William, and ascertaining he liability to the customs duly for sup Pclies imported. Constable Scll probably receives pay to the amount o akout a dollar and a half a day, but without a murmur, he entered upon an successfully accomplished a journey at tended by 0 r Seller and GREAT HARDSHIPS, and which many un explorer would have been proud of relating. The recital of Seller's trip is contained In a diary, which hos just been received at the Mounted Police Department. Nothing more re rnodesl or unaffected n [ ff cd tit n his ac- count of t he long journeyand 11o diffi- culties i -culties met with and surmounted could be Imagined. (:mutable Seller, with his two com- panions and n dog team of ten, left Fullerton, on the west const of ilud- son's Bay, on February 2Ist last. They returned on April 1911,, having been ex- posed for two months to the rigors of an Arctic winter. The only casualty was a frost-bitten leg of one, dog that was le behind fl b hni t et Lyon's Inlet. On the wary to their destination and hack in- tenseli cold woollier was encountered, and many blizzards. At night snow houses would be built for shelter, called by the Eskimos "igloos." Ilerds of deer were seen, and several were shot for food. For a couple of days, however, both men and does were on short ra- tions. Had it not been for falling in with a pnrly of natives they would at one time have been in desperate straits. For a great part of Tho journey the food had to be eaten frozen. because the alco- hol and wood gave out. pounds of pemmican, and six pounds of held by the Sanhedrin (Comp. Luke 22. boiled meal for ourselves and rite ten 64341; mall, 27. 1; mark 15. 1). Later, dogs, so we roust find natives. Very probably between five and seven o'clnek cold day. 1 had bulb any feet badly in the morning; occurred the trial be - state -wet My footgear is in a very bad fore Pilate witch consisted of two state -wet and worn out. We were parts, In the intermission between compelled to break up some barrels to which Jesus was seat by Pilule 10 cook food, as we had been subsisting on herod ((:Dnp. Lul:e 2a. 1 :'•'�; Mall. 27. frozen !teat for the last three dais." 11-31; Mark 15. 1.20; John lit. 28-19, 16). 1erril►le snuwstornt. Impossible to go G0. Afterward cane two -The number required to convict a prisoner of a crime. 61. The temple -Or. Snnctnnry. Build it in three days -The actual words of Jesus referred to are found in John 2. 19. "Dt+slroy this temple, rind in three days 1 will raise it up,." it. ;4` o be noted that while Jesus refert,nl to s death and resurrection after. three day In Tho worths quoted, y� from his use of the words In cnnueclion tt'ilh Ili, cleansing of the tenpin, and in answer to a challenge of the Jews to show them o sign establishing his authority, it was easy tee place upon the words of Jesus the mistaken Interpretation which the Jews gave to them. If indeed i1 was possible for those who heard hint to understand his words in any other sense, 02. Answcrrlh Zhou nothing(' -A goes. lion of desperation. We note that the renege made by the two witnesses and referred to in the preceding verse wen, not pushed against Jesus by the Jew,. 63. 1 adjure ghee by the living God- Cainphas, despairing of finding any cltnrge of serious import against lho prisoner, abruptly challenges hien on the real point at issue between himself and the Jewish nuthorilles, namely, els elessinnle claims. His chnllengo is put into the form of this solemn demand, Tell us w9tethe' thrill art the Christ, the Son of God. This challenge to definitely declare himself wilt) regnrd In hie Mes- sianic claims Jesus answered unflinch- ingly and with full knowledge of went the consequent -es of n definite and public declaration of his divinity !would be to himself. GI. henceforth ye shall see the Son of Mon sillit►g at the right hnnd of Power -.\s if Jesus had said, "1 nn) indeed the Christ. the Son of the living God, and henceforth ye shall see him whom ye hove known as n 'Son of Man' exalted te the dignity of the Son of God," 65. Rent his gagmen's -Al custom required of the (nigh price,. before whom n prisoner had been convicted of bias. phenly. The nct Was Intended as nn outward sign of sorrow, in This case of pinus horror. Ile hath spoken blasphemy- I'or r,ne who rejected the claims of Jesus no other verdict was presible In view of the declaration which the prisoner had just made. bei. he is worthy of death -Under the Bunten rule the Jewish authorities' were nut perntitt(d to pronounce or execute out looking for nnlives. Our dogs are getting hungry, as they have had no - Thing for three days. \Ve cannot possi- bly give them anything out of what small supply we have for ourselves. My feel are very sure, the result of frost burns." "Bad storm, bid not nearly so Lad as yesterday. 1 sent Ford end 'rtipeulock out to look for natives. They returned of 5 p.m., bringing us information tbnl cheered us quite n little. The ship they Iyn►i►ed was at 'Melachuoeeluck,' the Ate/ where ghosts chose woolen. They grouted some meal, for the dogs, and said the natives, who belonged to the !1ilu:lck tribe, would cone in the morn- ine with as much pleat as they could s11Y.re." reStill storming. Finished up nil our mens for breakfast. About noel the natives cane in, bringing nbout 400 pounds of nu'nt. which 1 purchnsed from Ihen. it tuns ,i" iameatW (nand 11 rather hlgh rly all allsebyl itself., buet hunger is n weal saucy." In due courrse Thy party reached the vessel for which they were searching, and received a HEARTY SCOTTISH WELCOME: from her commatel'r, (egitain Murray. who filled them out with stores for the return journey. • hero is the last item in Constable Seller's diary: - "April 1911,. Rroke carp nl sunrise (about 4 limn.) and made the detach. aunt about 2.30 p.01. Sony few miles from barracks 1 noticed the flag nt hal(- mast, which told me plainly Ito)! what 1 feared had cense In pass. On arrival my thoughts were cnnllrmed on hear. Ing that Staf(.Sergennl (layne hod pnssed nwny the night before. We were Just in lime to attend the, funeral." The report of Constable Seller con- tains much valuable Information nbout the country traversed and the native: met with. Ile mentions a rumor cur- rent nntong the natives that in the win. ter of 1905 a white man belonging I., a ship wintering in the Archie was kilted by the Nettlick tripe. The '.while Wren re- taliated by killing three Eskimos and their dog. Constable Seller believes some such thing may have happened in Connection with the Norwegian sloop Gjoa. A man can make tnistnkes for more ,easily than Ile can snake good. Ocensionnlly a mon rises from noth- tnb 10 sonielhtug worse, i4' The Home •. 4444-14-160.04+144 15044 S Sl•:LEt'1'EI) Itl:eai'i:s. !rot Iwo ounce.: n1 butter r and one ounce of (lour. Melt the butter In a frying pan. Add the !lour, stirring it till of a brown color. Add a: touch boiling sealer les will make the thickness tet cream, and season with pepper and sail. Grated Apple Pius. -Grate enough sour cooking apples to fill a pie lin; afoul a pint of pulp for an ordinary size lin. Add three rce ounces of sugar, two eggs and a little cinnamon or nutmeg. 1f a meringue is wanted for the lop save out the whiles. It will be lighter and more like u soutlle with the whites left in. '1') Cure Beef for Drying. -1'o every 31 tbs. beef allow I teaspoon saltpetre 1 pint fine salt mixed with molasses tut tit the color of brown sugar; rub Ih pieces of treat s•itlt the mixture ant it.t slick to it all that will pack in bar- rel or cask and lot stand' 48 hours Make pickle, pour on and let stand 4 hours. Take out and !tang in suitable place to dry. Fur kidney shape, lake four or flv sheep's kidneys, half pound lean meat three ounces of suet, teacupful of oat- meal and salt to taste, one egg, half a antr of brownpepper, mustard I {,navy, pep foto ► and salt. Skin and chop the kidneys finely with the lean beef and three ounc- essuet. '1'h oatmeal a Then In �ji smuil u -- minced onion, with pepper, mus - tare, � tart, and salt to taste. Beat the egg and stir into the mixture, then place allSin1 , Steam 1 a well buttered moat. a i for two hours, turn out and serve with a good brown gravy poured round, French Mutons. -Sift togelher a quart . t (lour and n teaspoonful of salt. Bub Into the sifted flour two tablespoonfuls of butter, and odd gradually to this the and a halt cups of milk and three beaten eggs. Lost of all whip in a half yeast - cake that has been dissolved in a gill of warns water. Beat hard, and set in a warns room for six or eight hours, cr until light. half fill greased muffin -tins with , r tit 1 elle rrise r snear the range to t 1 >, for r holt an hour, then bake in a quick oven. Serve at once. Split Pea Soup.--Sook the dried split peas over night, then drain, pour over !item Iwo quarts of hot water, and bring e 1 •8 e slimly to a boil. Set at the side of the range where They will simmer gently until soft, Ihen ruli through a colander and velum with the liquid to the sauce- pan. firing to a boil. and stir in a table- spoonful of flour rubbed into a table- spoonful of butter. Season with a few drops of onion juice, and with salt and while pepper. Stir until smooth and thick, and serve with a handful of crou- tons, or tried bread dice, on the surface of the soup. Sausage and ltice Rissoles. -Cook four ounces of rice in some well -flavored stuck lilt very soft. Then drain it well, and leave till quite .cold. (Note: weak stock-i.e., that from n second boiling - will do. but it must be well flavored.) Take half a pouted of very fresh pork sausages. Free them from their skins. Adel them to the rice. Mix well, adding a little more seasoning and a little finely -- minced onion If thought required. '(lien spread out upon a dish to the depth of nn Inch. Leave in the larder till next morning, or the last thing at night, if more convenient. Shape into rotund balls about the size of small tangerines. When required dip in egg and breadcrumbs, and fry in boiling fat, from which the Hite smoke is rising, to n light golden- trow•n hue. Take out, drain, serve. The yolk of an egg is at improvement to (hese. as it helps to bind them, Roast Haunch of Venison. -Take a haunch of Twelve pounds and trim off the cutin hone and the end of the knuck- le; wrap it In buttered paper close round the haunch to prevent the fat (min burning; set It before a bright fire and resat it three flows. basting it frequent- ly to prevent the paper from burning off, then remove the paper, baste the hr,unch with butter. put it nearer the hit until it is a light brown; ennlinue to baste, dredge It lightly with (lour, and when it is well frothed and browned all arlone. Send the haunt to treblever wraitthis n gravy nude front the trimmings of Ike venison and seasoned w•i'h snit and pepper. Serve with red currant Jelly. tirtuli,odee,f•knllvenison chopnedrfinel. t one p chopped or put through n mincing machine, prix tvitlt uDonnonnshed po- laln, ttowor tablrspeeoongulssofilofly trentd crumbs rood seasoning chopped herbs, shallot out parsley, pepper and salt; blend the mixture with the yolks of three eggs .and rine nnnee of butter, and stir over the fire until it forms a paste. Own turn It out ,it n plate to gel cold. Form In- lu crnqucRe shapes, dip ini sensoned bnl- ler. nn'l fry do doyp int until n e with c• tor. tlraln on pnper, and sort' with rich venison gravy, flavored with red currant jelly. CABE OF ItitU' lEs, Good brushes are expensive, but they pay to buy provided They ore properly cared fur. After tooth and nail brushes have been used they should nlwars be pineetl in such a position that all water will drain from them. 1Iult ehold brushes n!so last much tenger if properly cared for, and newer meowed to rest nn the bristles. Long handled and short renes alike chnidd be hung up nr propped up on a shelf. Tho best clenning prepnrnllon for l.rllshtts Is a solution ninth; by dis=nly- ing one pound of washing 50,111 in n quart of writer. This: talnuld be :stirred over the fire until dissolved. and used in 11t'' proportion of one tablespoonful In it quart of water. A little snap stimuli] be used for the eol1 hair brushes, end Cold water a ed fur rinsing. 1)ry In the open n+r. To clean paint brushes soak in tur- pentine and use spirits Of toile In re- rno•e all truces of varnish. HOUSEHOLD iHINTS. Casters on all pieces of furniture should 1 �- • be oiled h',ih, at the roller and on the t;p which Ills into the socket. 1t is sur- prising with whet ease h.'n%Y Olives 01 furniture may be inured If este follows this simple plats. If there is any fear that a lied not usu- ally slept In is damp. put a bright look- ieg•glas; tetween the .e1,. el: and cover it Up. In a [etc minute; rxanrine it. It its surface is dimmed (here is carte for unea,I11. eel for Scales -Should any of your plants be affected with scales, try paint- ing the scales with cusum t il. 11v will a few creeks will permanently rid the hill !tient and if applied once n wet: fee plants of the pest. For the tiny while worms in the soli. dig a little powdered crunphur gum into lite soil white they abide and they will soon die. Before a hot heater bag is put away it ought to be slightly inthtt sl, says a careful housekeeper. Otherwise the sides may adhere to each other and in pulling Ihen► apart the bag will almost certainly be ruined. In case the precaution has been neglected and the parts have ad- hered some hal water with a few drops of atnntonia should be put into the bag and, after a fete minutes, a thin, dull - edged piece of wood may be inserted carefully between the two pieces of rubber. BUILDING PRINCE IRUPIRT. The G. T. P. Terminal City is Beginning to Take Form. Prince Rupert, the newest Transcon- tinental Railway terminus on the Paci- fic coast, already has a population of several hundred and expects within 1 n s tree m nth In bo hotted by electri- city. A big English company ultimately will light the town. hitt for the present the current for illuminating purposes will bo furnished from the sawmill plant of the British Culu►ubia Tie and Lum- ber Company, which has been erected at Pince Rupert t P p o carry out several Im- portant contracts with the Grand Trunk Pacific. Mr. Russell, who for some time was confidential agent for the railway company on the coast, has been ap- pointed postmaster and custotns collec- tor at the neve terminal. The lownsile, which a few months ago was covered with timber, Is being cleared, and alto- gether Prince Rupert, the new city, bears an appearance just like Vancouver when the C.P.R. arrived there in 1886. Thomas Dunn, formerly of \'ancouver, but who has now joined a big firm which is starting al Prince Ituperl, said in an interview: - "Engineer Pillsbury of the Grand Trunk Pacific has seventy men at work laying out the townsiie, and already the first street, which is 100 feet wide and starts at the whorl, is being planked. The clearing of 300 acres of the town - site will be commenced right away. Lumber for the construction of the houses which the railway company will build at Prince Rupert had commenced to arrive before 1 left for the south. "J. Moore, locating engineer of the Grand Trunk Pacille, is engaged sur- veying the route the line will take on Kasen island. There are five survey parties on the island also. Dominion lly'tlrographic Engineer Dodge is mak- ing surveys of the towbar and contig- uousuous waters_ Ile will remain (here all winter. The harbor of Prince Rupert is one of its greatest attractions. 11 is absolutely Landlocked and there is ample expanse of water to accommodate the shipping of the Pacific. Prince Rupert itself has a water frontage about twelve miles long." NEW N.tV'' FOR SPAIN. Seventy Millions to be Spent in Next Slx fears. Spain is making rapid progress with the rebuilding of her navy. The expen- diture of about S70.000.O00, nulhorized by the Cortes last year, is being laid out 10 over a construction programme of six years. It comprises eight 14.000 -Ion battleships, nine cruisers and several smaller vessels. Huff the ships )oust he built in Spanish yards. and besides the construction now under way, a cont• plele reorganization and equipment of fire arsenals. docks and yards at Ferrol, Cadiz and Carlhagena has been under - King Alfonso is an active parti- san of the navy and gives every en• couragement to that branch of the Government. Among vessels novo building aro the Lmpera,lor Carlos V., a protected cruiser of 10,000 Ions; three belled cruisers' and the protected cruiser Heine Regents. A contract which has just been signed in London for electrical power door: for the Iteina Regenta. now nearing completion at Ferrol, shows CURED HER OF PNE Newmarket Motherets Praises of the Great sumption Preventattvt " My son Laurence was to with Pnsunionia, ' says Mra. A. of Newi arket, Ont. •' Two d tended him. lie lay tor almost liko a dead chit became so swollen, his hea w over to the right side. Altogether we paid $140 to tate doctors, and time be was getting worse. commenced the Dr. - Slocum t The effect was wonderful. W difference in two days. Our boy strong and well." Here is a positive proof that will cure Pneumonia. But why to Pneumonia comes. it always star a Cold. Cure the Cold and the Cr never develop into Pneumonia. e Pneumonia into Consumption. T sure way to clear out Cold, root and I and to build up the body so that tb won't come back is to use PSYC (P 50c. P Larger ewe SI OR. T. A. 8L0 that Spain intends" n make h• warships as up to date as possi According to the latest inform Spaini hasin commission three s , class battleships, four armored cr thirty-Ihrea second and thin cruisers, nine seagoing gunbuate. river gunboats. five destroyers, 11 torpedo boats and twenty-nine ► laneous vessels, WOULD YOU DARE SAY ee "How are you, my dear7" as fashionable visitor, addressing ess' little daughter. "Very well, thee* you," was 11 ply. "Now, my dear," Eontinucd the boner, patronizingly, 'you shout( me how I am." "1 don't want to know," the chi' swered simply and honestly. IF WOME ONLYKNTh Thousands of women unfitun les ever with actin baos t a 9 day J< have no business to ache. A woma wasn't made to ache. Under r conditions it ought to be strong an to help her bear the burdens of FS It is hard to do housework with an Ing back. Hours of misery at leieui at work. It women only knew the co Backache comes from sick kidtieye, what a lot of trot ate sick kidneys t the world. But they can't hot put on them than the to be wandered that • JJackaohe is simply the D 0 KI PI will helpou. Theye worked kidneys-a1�� . snaking them strong, heiA bins. P. Ryan, Douglas, (' over fire months I was t back and was unable help. I triod all kin liniments but they we heard tell of Doan's l' after I had utw.d three - my back was aileron, an Price 51 :emu' per hoz or $1.25, all dealers or The I. Co., Toronto, Ont. BLOOD DISEA Guaranteed Cured or No Pay. a►-- If youever had any constitutional, aequir hereditary blood disease, you are never sat the virus or poison has been removed fro system. You may have had aome disease ago, but now and then some symptom ala Sonic poison still lurks in your system, afford to run the risk of more aeriou appearing; as the poison mutt mercuryor mineral drugs they may ruin the systen ecce in the treatment of us to prescribe specific r tively entre all !keel dist actor, leaving no bad cttcctilon New Method Treatment wiltpurify a h blood, heat np all ulcers, etea: the u. in, rem• lx,ne pains, fallen out hair will grow In, and swollen glands will return to a normal condition, and the patient will feel and look like a different person. All cases we accept for treatment are guaranteed a complete cure or no charge. Roeder if in doubt as to your condition, you can consult us PIMA OF CHARGE. Remember the 01.1 adage, "a stitch in time save+nine..f Beware of incompetent doctors wile have no reputation or reliability, Drs, K. & K. have been established over 27 years. You pan pay after cure. we CURE Nervous Debility, V,trlcoeete, Strleture Blood Dtae ret isess•s. Kidney end Braider complaints. Consultation Free. to call, write for Quiltloa Litt for Home'Ireattnent, DRS. KEN N EDY.& 148 SHELBY ST., DETROIT (Mice )tears t to a, m, to 3 p. (>t, Aeeeays, 10 to f2es