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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1907-03-07, Page 3ABSOLW SECJiTV COI1uin O Carter's Wttle Liver Pills. Must Ikear Slp;nuturo of W-7-e-ezt-z? Soe Paces;Meta sweeper Below. Iter email sail aileeill7 Se take as seg ros SMACK, FOR DIVINES!. FOR BILIOUSNESS. FON TONPIO OVEN. ION CONSTIPATION. In SALLOW SKIN. FOR THE COMPLEXION 4 41411ettlattrangiiii 6.10111116.. .,.. CURE, SICK Mt: ar)aCHE. NICE OLD SEA DOG. The Bril(sh Navy's New the Nore. Admire) Sir Gerard Henry Unctet Noel 1s the new commander in chief at the Nore, the naval station nearest London. 1n limes past it has been the scene of ninny attempts to strike a blow at the capital, and the appointment of such a fine typo of the old sea dog to such a responsible post is an exceedingly popu- lar one. Admiral Noel Ls 62 years old. Like Nelson. he is the son of it country par - 5011 (gid was bolo in Nelson's own county, Norfolk. Ile had no pull to help Clint along,' In the navy. Ile had made his way by merit. While in command of the British squadron in Cretan enters in 1S98 he particularly distingiushed him- self. News reached hint of a \loslem rising in Megalo-Kaslrom, where, as a result of Turkish treachery, 100 British soldiers and 1.000 Christians lost their lives. Sir Gerard Noel acted with char- acteriaie %promptitude. Surrounding the Turkish flarracks by a forced night innN h, he presented an ullinutlunt to E(lhenl 1'asha, the 'Turkish leader. His terns were instant surrender or imme- diate attack. Edhem Pasha sent a mes- senger suggesting that they should talk thing. over. Tile answer lie look back was that the British guns would begin to speak in five minutes if the Turkish flag did not cone down. Before the five min - were up, the Ottoman soldiers were stacking their surrendered nuns. Seven- teen of the ringleaders were hanged in the market place of Candie to teach the Turks proper respect for the power of the \Widder of Windsor. For this exploit Sir Gerard received a knighthood. Hied it not been for the admiral's promptitude in the presence of danger on another occasion, a sad page in the his- tory of the BrittQh navy. which is set wide for the mournful story of the Vic- toria and the Camperdown disaster, would hove been sadder still. When the order was given which made a collision between these two ships inevitable, he was commanding the Nile, which was following close in the wake of the \'ie- lyrin, and Captain Brnckenbury was in charge of the Edinburgh. Had they enr- i.led out the older signaled the Edinburgh and the Nile would have shared tho fate of the Cai npeislown and the Victoria, but el the critical moment Sir Gerard altered he course of his ship and Cnptnln l3rack- enbury followed his lend. Like Nelson t)'fmr hint, both dis.ebeycd nn metier to Merl a second disaster. Commander at r'hippy : "1 "as nal 11t all up le Ihe nark last night ---Ivied i.r say something mgu eeable. but couldn't do it, somehow; e at last I bade thorn good-bye. Nor- ton : "Ah ! then you did manage lo say something ngreenble after alt 1' I WOMI3N ONLYKNEW _ - Thousands of women suffer untold miser - ilea every day with a'•hieg hacks that really have no business to ache. A woman's back wasn't nettle to ache. Under ordinary conditions it ought to be strong and ready So help her bear the burdens of life. It is hard to do houeewnrk with an acts. Ing book. Hoare of mviery at leisure or stwork. It , we e m t t cul r v knew the cause. Backache comets from sick kidneya, and what a lot of trouble sick kidneys cause in the world. SECRET Of iNi IDENL KINGDOM' Men Should Look to Themselves for Salvation. The kingdom of God is with you. - John .xv.i.. 21. • We are always tempted to n(ahe things instead 01 wailing for them to glow. We would force a boy into the character of a gran without waiting for tee development that will come natur- ally, and Ave would pluck the fruits 4.1 civiliz'dwn before we have planted the roots. The problems of civilization are vital not mechanical; they have 1n do eit't persona, with lives rather than with things er condi'ions. Yet we often ex - peel to solve all the problems without re ercnce to the people who cause then►. \Vc try to give the world perfect health by putting it into new clothes or by nuking fl walk in paths of our choosing. It lakes right nen to make a right world. We talk about giving sten an env.r::nutent that would improve them, forget ing that men make their own environment. 1f you put pigs into n palace you do not give them regal Manners; you only add to the number of pigsfics in existence. Conditions do not make character; character deter- mines conditions. - talc taught men to look to themselves for S Ilvahon, to mend their own ways awl eek the cleansing of their own h.':ci 1-, who have sought regenerations ►•i► her (hart reforms. heaven would not last an hour if the unclean untl bestial entered there. The reign of the pit 111.0111' lni,tst would not continue a tinnne11 if all selfishness and passion were taken from us. That kingdom winch Is righteousness, joy, and pence waits not for officers, courts. nsr urganiz.ations; it waits only for ci- tizens; it already has come wherever any than has set its ideals first in his heart. (low k,ng shall we go on will' regu- lations and restraints, making crutches and slily for the lame and the dwarf- ed (111(1 bars for the basely strong, and still tai-ing a race of weaklings to be oppre'4d, and heartless ones to op- press Item? The regulation and the restraint may be necessary, but THE REMEDY IS MORE -SO; it is our heaven -born duty to rare the rece. The noblest charity is that which ennobles character. GI !ager far than our problems of commerce or of civics are our problems of character. Life's first business is the learning how to live. Vain our vaunt - et wealth and progress if, amongst the palaces and warehouses laden with mercaandise, we stand us less than Wren and in our boasting of much goods hear the call that conies for tine soul we have ken t. Look within. Set things right there. Cleanse life at its source and the stream shall be clean. In your own life le ruled by the best within, live for the soul and not for the body; for the life, sot for the living. Labor not alone for clean houses but for clean hearts and the clean houses wilt at length take care 1 themselves. Everything that slakes one man bet- ter makes the world better. The race Is saved through the individual. The Idghest religious, patriotic, and human service we can render is to give the goal within dominance in ourselves, to make way for the growth of alt thal is goo,) in others, and to save them not by 1au4s nor by upliffings alone, but by leading to larger life, to that which is from above. The problem of the city --poverty, greed, oppression, vice --lies deeper then the law can reach, deeper than ordin- ances can go; it reaches to the springs 01 character. Oot of the heart of man conies the evil; in the heart must the good and true and the beautiful find their riss. Good laws do not snake good lives; wise codes do not create high character. \Ve cannot solve the prob- lem until we know HOW TO SAVE TiIE PEOPLE. We havo dreametj that it we would let all the good people have their own v. -ay they would draft a plan of living ty which we would reach the golden age at a bound. The golden nge waits for the renewed heart. There never yet was a code of morals or of Manners, Individual or collective, that had pow- er for a minute to dam the torrent af human passion. Men always have looked for sailors to drop from the sky, for great reform- ers to come and untangle the raveled skein of their affairs a1>rl set them, wil- ling or unwilling, in the paths of right- eousness. 13111 the only ones who have helped the world have been Inose who HENRY F. COPE. THE S. S. LESSON INTERN tTIONAI, LF;s ON, MAR. le. Lesson X. Issr.c a iowcr of Peace. Golden Texl : \tall 5. 9. THE LESSON WORD STI.JIES. Based on the text of the Revised Vcr- sinn. )tents Chronological. -- The Origin of Many Peoples.-Agnin we have skipped a number of important chapters in the rapid survey of the beginnings of the Ilebrew race to which the lessons for the present quarter and year are devoted. The eVenls connected with the destruc- tion of Sodom and Gomorrah recorded in Genesis 19 really belong with the preced- ing lessons. The closing verses of that chapter (Gen. 19. 30-38) record the descent of the Moabiles and Ammonites; from Lot. the nephew of Abrehnm. For some time after the destructed] of the cities of the plain, probably for the greater por- tion of the rest of his life, Abraham con- tinued to dwell in southern Palestine. returning again nn41 again to Rae imme- diate vicinity of Deleon. For a time he dwelt in Gerar, Ihe land of the Philis- tines, where he made: a covenant of friendship with Ahimelech, the king of Philistines. After the birth of keine the jealousy of Sarah. his mother, made necessary the expulsion of linger and het son Isti111ae1, who departed from the tent of Abraham. gting flmntcly into o the distant Southland, where t timmeel dwell in the: wilderness of Partin, near the border of Egypt. His mother, being herself Egyptian, c •s an E )inn took forIshmael ► 1n l a wife out of the land 411 Egypt. Not long after 11►.' departure of Hagar and Ish- mael• end the establishment of the cote- nant between Abraham and Aleuneleeh, the faith of the aged patriarch was put 1. its severest test in the command to offer ftp for a burnt nffering hi'; only son end heir, Isaac. IlawIDg endured the lest. Abraham receives again the divine nssuranec that his seed shall inherit the land in which he has been a sojourner, and that he himself shall bs ennie to nil nnitnns the type of superlative blessing eonip. chaps. 21 and 22). The conclud- ing lud- ing verses of chapter 22 again point nut the descent of various tribes from Nahor, the brother of .\hrallnml. Reference to he presence of Hittites inc nuI rn Prat- e -line, and the ne flint 01 the purchase 1 the cave of \lachpelah from them by \brahnnt for a burying place is found in -titmice 23. llrrs' also is recorded the death and burin) of Sarah. The henuli• ful story of the bc!rolhal of Isaac and Rebekah, in chapter 24, precedes the mention in chapter 25 of the incident of :\l rnhni's second marriage and Ihe des- cent of the \tidlaniles 111141 other tribes from him, and of the death of Abraham and his burin) by his Iwo 50415. Isaac and Ishmael. The narrative then proceeds to numerate the generations of lehmacl. hits giving the ancestry of still other riles closely relalvl to the Ilebrews. \%lIh the account of Ilse 1)11113 el hero) nJ Eau. and the selling of hie birth- ight by the elder son to his younger rothcr, chapter 25 closet. (:hnpter ars mm which our preseet lessen is faker). mains the only reference to Isn't,' in hick he to mentioned apart from hie Inhun to either Abrnhnm hie tether. or i.e sans, Jacob and Etre:. The general u:rpnse of the lWrralfle thus far is early In give Ihe �(encalogy of the e�entes and tribes(ut�Pateetine more or But they ann't help e ' t. If more work is t t on them than they earl at.rrnl it's not ' r► be wandered tb it they get mit of order. kache is pimply their cry for help. ( DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS eiblelp vets. They're helping sick, over. '' worked kidneys --all over the world - I making them strong, healthy and 'igon u.. 1 Mrs. P. Ryan, Iuuglaa,Ont., writes: "For n c, w M1 h over five months I was treuble•.i with lance book and was unable to ni.,ve wittiest help. I tried all kinds of plasters aryl liniments but they were no gee. At last. I beard t•ti of Duan's Krtlney fills and alter I lied used three.q'arters of the box say back was as strong and well as ever." Price E' Cents per box or three Loxes for nto,el I I . T Twist i One Tho Duro Kidney Pill P less .Mosel• related to the Hebrews, and In show the overruling purpose of Jeho- vah in the lives of Abraham and his immediate descendants. Verse 12. Isaac -- The Hebrew Hume means laughter. it is explained in Gen. 17. 19 as having been given by divine command because Ale -ahem had laughed at the thought of n child being born to hint in his advanced age. In that land --'fie land of the Philis- tines in the vicinity of Gerar. A htludr'edfold--Not necessarily to be interpreted lilerally, though the richest soil of Palestine often does produce wheat on an overage of eighty and bar- ley on an average of one hundred fold. The thought of the verse is that Isaac prospered exceedingly as it tiller of the soil. 13. Grew more and more --In power, b greatness. and wealth. 14. A great household -Consisting of t of the servants and attendants, as well , as the family. Isaac's household thus g' numbered several hundred perslms. 15. The Philistines had slopped -That s i; had filled up the wells, prompted by envy at the ;narked prosperity of the ai stwngers among them. It 16. Ahlmk'elt -- King el the Ph.les- 11 lines, probably the tin of the king by It the sane name w ill' w bun► Al,rnhnrn had mode a covenant of perpetual friend- ship and peace !romp. Gen. 21). 17. In the valley of Gerar--The word translated "valley" is to the Hebrew Nobel and signifies simply a water - et arse running between hills, which in the l'Uilty season 811(1 especially after heavy storms is filled by a rushing saran, bill .which in summer becomes a dry river -bed. The word has no exact English equivalent, but corresponds lo what the 111111% es of Palestine now call wady'. c.' y Int h ,e narrow river -beds wafer may be found even In the dry season at cempnratively short distance from the su face. 18. \Vhich they hind digged in the days of Abraham. his father - Comp. Germ. 21 31. 19. Springing wnier--ile. living. Ifni is. running water. 20. Esek- \leautin co K nlculio n 21. Silnit--\lensing enmity. 22. Rclobolh--\Icnning bread plate, or room. Jehovah hath 1118(1e room for us- The whole history hi 1, r n the f h .n Irrn c y rhe 1 r1 of i - n Iciest to the narrator only in so far ns it reveals the overruling guidance of Jeho- vah and his purpose for therm aid their dc,cce ' - nden 11s . 23. Iteersheba-:\ village on the north bank of the wady es-Seba in southern l'nlestine. The dwelling place slicers- siwely of Abraham. feriae, and Jacob. end Infer wished by I':l!inb on his way to 1144144.644404.11..11 TIi1f Honie 14.14-144•44.04.S.44.4.1+0411 S(.\It; t)-\I.cil• ill'lii:-. Sweet 11„11 fur Bread aid Butler.- Tuke one pound of baker's d ,ugh, gid knead into 11 one oul:c:; of butter, two ounces 01 sugar, and a beaten egg. Sake This into (a roll the size required for lucad end butter. Bake in n moderate oven. W,gelarion Itissoles.-Tnke any col vegetables, with plenty of cold putatnc CIe)p lite vegetables finely, mash th potatoes with butter. Season all wit pepper. salt. and a little terrapin vin gar. Form into halls, dip into egg an breudcrutnhs. uid fry In deep fut to gulden brown. Invalid's Cup Pudding. --'fake a tea cupful of breaderunlbs, pour over sull cient milk to corer, and, after soaking heat up ]vith a fork. Grease a breakfast cup with butter, add a lightly beaten eg 1., the 'hreadcrunllts, sweeten and llavo very slightly. four the mixture into Il' greased cup, and steam for twenty min ate;. 'turn out to serve. Potted Cheese. -'t ais is a very good way- of using up odd pieces of drie cheese. Grote the cheese down finely add sufficient butter to moisten lt, song made mustard, .all and pepper to taste Mix all into a stiff paste, if necessary using a little cream. This mixture oil keep good for several weeks, and is ex cellent as a savory spread on toast. Onion Sauce for Keeping. -Put into jai half a pint of the vinegar in whirl onions have been pickled. one ounce o cayenne pepper, one tablespoonful o soy, two of mushroom catsup, two 0 walnut pickle vinegar or walnut ketch up. Let tills stand for six days, shaking frequently, then add another half pint o vinegar; stand Il another week, strain and put in small bottles. Pickled (:auliflower.-Brcnl: the heads in pieces according to their natural divi- sions. After washing well boil in salted water for five minutes, drain off, throw into cold water, drain again thoroughly, rind when dry place in jars or bottles. Boil some while vinegar with a little sugar, cayenne, and spices to taste, strain, and pour scalding over the cauli- flowers. \Viten cold cork tightly and lie down tightly with blaueer. 'Teacakes aro always popular for tea, and they are so easily trade that they should be served far more often titan they are. Take one pound of fine flour, sift Into It two teaspoonfuls of baking- pcwder, half a teaspoonful of salt. a dessertspoonful of easter .sugar, and, if liked, half a teacupful of cleaned sul- tanas. Rub into this three ounces of dripping, or butter and lard mixed ; blend with a beaten egg and a little milk. (toll out to an incur thick, cut into fancy shapes, brush over with milk. and hake in it quick „wen. These cakes may be served either hot or cold, split open and buttered. While Soup.--Tnke a small knuckle of veal end about a quarter of n pound of lean ham. Put these into n saucepan and covcoverwith cold water. Add a hunch of sweet herbs and an onion stuck with cloves, together withwitha small piece of mace. Lel these shunter gently until the parts easily from the bones. Take the soup off the lire, strain, and leave it till cold. Remove all the fat and place the stock in n saucepan, and thicken it willt half an ounce of flour rubbed into half an OUrrre of butter. Slit* while i1e boils, then season to taste. I'our into tureen. and add n gill of cream, or tall a pint of hulk. Spice Cakes -Take !brei' -quartet:, of a ound of fk,ur, a heaped teaspoonful of uking-powder, a pinch of fait, a quar- e of a pound of caster sugar, and one easpoonful of mixed spice. Stir all to - ether info a basin and rub in lightly hive ounces of good beef dripping; Then dd a quarter of a pound of slotted ra- ins. Beat tip -an egg with u gill of milk, our this into a hole in the mixture and Ir we11, ridding more milk If necessary. eat thoroughly for a few minutes, put Ito a greased lin, and bake for one our and a half. The oven must be quick hen the cake is first put in, but it may cool somewhat lowerds the end of the 4me. d 5. e h e- d a 1- g r e d e a 1 lloreb. The 'rl.• ,:f the nncicnl village is marked by the ruins of Tull es -Seta, otter,* three ancient wrens are still 1(1 le* seen, tin of which furnish water for Arab lenieller(' even to -day. One of them* Iwo wells is still confidently pointed out 11;: the Artois ac the work of Ihrahnm, el -Khalil 'Abraham. the friend). 21. Por my servant Ahrehenes snke- Isene was clearly net so grent or pro►nl• nen) a personage as had Leen his father, :\I tc►ham. before him. Pitched his lent there - \lade it for the lime being his place of habitation. f. s.ie : "Oh. Timmy ! \l• new hal's deal is atntnst hunlnit ! \\ herr I squeeze het she begins to c•rs. and when I put her In het she closes her eyes Tem - my : "Huh ! She'll b, more human if she elo.e(1 her sacs when you walk the dant with her and begin to cry when y, i pot tier i., bad 1" DINTS FOil THE HO\IE. To Boil Cracked Eggs. -- Put a tea- spoonful of vinegar in the water. and hoverer badly cracked, the eggs will not boil cul. Dirty wicker choirs and tables are easily cleansed and made to look like new e scrubbed n l hila set Ibt 1 will salt ( y g mnn 1 wnler, and then set in the sun and Mr dry. '1'o Clean Discolored hands.-- A little borax or rock ammonia dissil•ed in the washing water will greatly hid you in gelling off the stains from your hands. Obstinate stains can be removed with a pliLeis of cat lerri (.n,n, I e r r a ut n J nJ c oneor the he Ilial r. - -\fix logclner• half a pint of lime juice, quarter of a pini 111 I'ns(•wnte►', 1w0 ounces of reclilied spirits and thirty drops of oil of lemon. Keep lightly ce,r krke d . Boiled pudding should be plunged at once into boiling water and slimed !set fest• not simmer. II is well to rente1n1N•r that boiled suet puddings . can hardly bee too long or loo fast. Welch the pot and add fresh boiling water as it is re- qult•cd. Nov peletil leather tools should el - ways be just slightly wattled before n lir.' before they are pal en. This softens the leather end prevetee it crnrking as will else rubbing will, salad oil after wen►•ing the First few linter. 1f brood, patent leather wears vet; well and Iuoke nice to the last. To Remove faint I'rxen Wuur Slope. - Make n strung solution of potash. lay it 011 11te steps and in a short lime the paint will be soft, turd can lee easily wush^d off with snap and water. For nares of paint on linoict'nt apply a Mlle motor spirit with a piece of Ilnniel and they will speedily disappear. To clean Phi -hello (:unciae.- Shake the enduing to be cleaned. ley them on a table. mrd brush 111ornughly. Spntlgo 11,, 411 at over wilts warns water and am- monia. 'then sl, lige Hie cUrininti oath (1,11(1 Wahl. !eking (air 114)1 In leave Ihr .:pnnge 100 wet. lemill hang mil the '•ullainc In .het. In This way tear Ilene- igc s ill rnsil3 1 e Made to last another two or three scars. Ray.'lings of woollen garments are the only threads that will slake a darn w t.i' It can be cuneealel perfectly. From tee roll of piers you have take tine that will give ravelings eight er len inches long. If the hole to be donned is very irregu- lar or )arse baste iglu as good shape es p: ssible with a fine thread, which May ho withdrawn after the work is com- pleted mire cosily than 0 coarse one could be. flow to Wash White Silk.-lfse nuke'• Warta water and nothing but pure white soap, and iron with just rt unrin iron. It is the yellow soup, loo hot water awl loo hot irons That make lite silk (tiro yellow. Flannels used as leaves in a needle- beolc is a mistake, sulphur is continue(' lo the preparation with which Ihe Ilatl- nel is treated and it rusts the sleet. The Ix'st way is to put leaves of linen 0r chamois in the needle -look and then the needles remain smooth and bright. \\'t►en soot or coal dust has been ;pilled on the floor, especially 011 a car- pel, it should be covered plentifully witb Co•uulen1. This 510)111(1 be swept up 1 cry carefully on a dustpan with n whisk broom. Keep adding cornmeal ant' sweeping as long as the dust sweeps up blackened. There are few housekeepers that fir( riot familiar with some of Ihe numerous uses of turpentine, and as its odor it clean and wholesome it has an adva1 liege over many remedies whose odors are offensive. IIOW '1'0 \V:\SII DISHES. Dish -washing, by the general consen- sus of opinion, would seem to be the most unimportant task in the whole realm of housework. An inexperienced girl, or a very young girl, may be con- sidered good in so tar at being able at least to wash the dishes, and sometimes she is allowed to wash them her own way without let or hindrance. Bit even about dishswashing there is a right way and several wrong ways. One of the latter consists in putting everything, from teacups and silverware to cooking utensils, through the same water, which grows more and more mixed as the process goes on, and then drying these sante dishes without pul- ling them Through hot rinsing water. Common sense should show Ute nece'as- sily of changing the washing water fre- quently, because it grows cold as well as dirty. Common sense should also indi- cate that a good hot rinsing water is e necessity lhal will free the dishes from soapiness. Without plenty Of hot water and plenty of clean towels, clean sweet dishes are an impossibility, and no one who has ever had experience with rough dishes need bo told of their disagreeable sug- gestiveness. - A bottle or pitcher that is to hold milk or water needs great care. You may boil every drop of your drinking water, and yet your trouble will count for nothing ll the water is stored in bottles that have net been properly washed. VERY NARROW ESCAPES WONDERFUL EXPEDIENCES IN RAIi.- \W'A1' .4l:I:IDE\"15. ,eery. Rare That More Than Rall the Passengers Are Killed In the Worst Accidents. When a heavy- express, rushing along at nenrl• a utile a minute, lenves the trails, charges another Irvin, or crashes through n bridge, the marvel is not that the dealt -roll should be heavy, but that nnone should escape mime. The Tay Oridge die -aster, 111 which Ole whole (rain plunged into the river, is almost the only railway nueident on record in which there were no survivors. 'lite catastrophe which occurred on Septernber 171h last, near Dover, in Oklahoma, slrongly resembled the Tay Bridge accident. A train plunged Through a trestle -bridge over the (:inlar- ron River, and the engine and Live coaches out of seven dropped Into the rain -swollen waters below. A. M. Leist, one of the very few survivors, hod a most extraordinary escape. Feeling the bridge collapsing, he sprang from the train, but almost os his feet touched the trestles the whole thing went to pieces. ile jumped as foe as he could, and landed clear of the wreckage in deep water. fart of one of the cars came drifting past, and he climbed on to it and Was tarried t► long wily down the fewer. Then the ear was swung in a rapid and l.cist was swept off. But he hnd managed to gel rid of his clothes, and, an eddy helping him, he succeeded in swimming ashore. One of the most dreadful bridge dis- asters on record was that which hap- pened at Ashtabula. In Ohio. nn Deeeni- l her 291h, 1876. Al eight In the evening a s 110043• train pulled by two engines was t e TWENTY-FIVE YEARS' SUCCESSFUL RECORD MONEY can buy advertising space, but it can't buy a quarter centuuryry'• suceess(al record of wonderful and xlmost miraculone cures of the most difficult and intricate cases of throat, lung and stomach trouble•. Bush to Peychine's record. Thousands of cases given up by leading doctors u hopelees and incurable have been quickly acid ia:- nianently cured by Psychlne. It is an infallible remedy for coughs, colds, bronchitis, pneumonia, consumption, indigestion. los of appetite and all wasting disease& "My son had a terrible cough and was wasted to a shadow. Doctors ltd be oould not lire. He used Ply. thine. lteuredhiru."-Mn J. Rang- er, Brockville. • Atter taking 1.00 worth of Psy- chine my lungs are well and Me la again worth living." -Mitt I. Bleb-' ants. Marrketta ('ore. N.& "My longs are now sound as a ben t after using Fryehine."-R. Robbin... Bridgeburg, (hit ehineaaved my lite."-A.WaI-e deo, 7 Cornwall at., Toronto. Psychlne Never Fails Psychine has no Substitute- AT AU. DEALERS. acs sad 11.00 A Hume 1 DR. T. A. SLOCUM, Limited. 179 King St. W.. Toronto something wes wrong, he pulled the valva wide open, and his engine jumped forward. Next Instant there was A TERRIFIC CI3ASI(. Glancing back, the driver saw the whole train, including the second engine tn- medlately velind his own, plunge into the ravine. - Ile tied his firemen were the only two on the ill-fated train who escaped un- hurt. The wreckage took lire, and eighty passengers were burnt to cinders. Ilad not the coupling between the first end second engines given way. the Ilrst engine must have been pulled back. As it was, it remained balanced on the very edge of the ravine. in December, five years ago, the Orient express, on its way front Ostend to Vienna, failed to pull up at Frankfort, and dashing into its sid- ing at great speed ploughed right through the platform into the waiting - room. Two gentlemen were sitting in the wailing -room when the whole front -slot came smashing inwards, ns the great weight of the locomotive forced it down. One sprang to the end of itte room and esenped. The other was buried under tons of stone. Twenty minutes tater, when the masses of masonry were lifted, they found. not the crushed and maimed body which they had expected, but a very much alive, if somewhat bruited, individual. The window -(ranee, hewed out bodily by the engine in its mad career, hail knocked the man down and fulling across him, had, in some extraordinary fashion, saved hint from being killed. A strange point about railway acci- dents Is the way in whish the ratan who b: all the laws 01 probability ought to Is, killed escapes, while another, whoso chance of getting off seems gond, is killed. Same few years ago a heavy gale blew part of the roof of the little wayside station of Pelhainville, in New York State, ON TO THE PER\i.\NEN7' WAY. The station lies on the inside of a curve in the line, and opposite the plat- form is a sleep slope. A freight train came round the curve less than a min- gle after the fall, but by the tirno the driver saw the obslruclion it was too tale to pull up. Phillips was the driver's name. Ile shouted to his fireman to jump, and the man did so. Next in slant the train crashed into the mass o rooting; the engine left the rails and dashed over the far bank, rolling over and over 10 the bottom. \Vhen help came Phillips wits picked dup ncIsttllllled, but without n )tone broken; Ihe'firennn had fallen on iris heed, and (hough the speed laid not been great, nor had any part of the wrcckige struck him. he had broken this neck and woe r During the great blizzard of March 15th. It(St . some railway employees had �. most extraordinary rsrnpe from decal. On That day the `eolcit exprose was ,urieed in snow near Killingworth and n now -plough w•es sent ham Newcastle Ihe rescue, propelled by four powerful ngincs. As the plough neared the train cn t l was 5l 01 off and 1•,rakes v e r n t . r put in. Ilul the rails were ley, and Iho plough went steadily onwards till it glided right under Ihe engine it 1:nd row to recur. The letter reit up the 1 ,'ritehruecrushedand 9the aere m house on top into nnlehwood. 11 look Iwo li. iii s to es11'ieale the tn11iaks, and ihe, it w•os tuml.l thnl 0111) 0uc', a friend of the chief engineer. had been hurl. All the other three were pr+ictically un- harnle'el, Tinlewaye in the Fnr \\'ret have fie. e g'lent accidents resulting agt msiert . On Die -ember 31st, fete n passenger irain stuck In a drift al hear Creek, 1n the Rockies. A snow•-ple.11gt► and a train- load if navvies were sent 10 dig it out. passing Monet Domileglon. where the line rens along the side of is sleep 11111. Iht. Ilrernnn 11 p .l w• grcnt nvnlnnchc swooke(erpimgudownnnusaponn thein. II^ shouted In the driver. who put on gleam. crossing a small iron leridgc near Ashto- hulo. when the driver of the first en- gine heard a crack. Suspicious 'that MILBURN'8 LAXA-LIVER PILLS are mild, sure and safe, and ono parte* regulator of the systtm. They gently unlock tho secretions, clear away all effete and waste matter from the system, and give tone and vitality to the whole intestinal tract, curing Constipa- tion, Bi -k Headache, Biliousness, Dyrpep- rla, Coate..) Tungne, Foul Breath, Jana. Moe, Hcartharu, aryl {Water Brash. \gra R. R. Og l'n, 1We,oilstrx:k, 11.1., write.* "My hesitate: :..1 rnvsclf have used Mil. burn's taxi -1.;%:•r Pills for a number of years. We think we cannot do without them. they are the only pills we .ver Price 24 cents or Ave bottles for $1.00. .t all dealers or direct co receipt of price. rhe 1', Milburn Ow, Limited, Termite, Oat. BUT IT WAS TOO LATE. A mass of snow and rock and trees, weighing thousands 61 Ions, struck Ihe Irvin, sweeping It off Ihe rolls. and bore C away dawn the mounlehi side. In the cal. of Ihe' engine was a third Hien. an ofheinl of the line. 1b', loo. saw. the at Manche cunning. but could do no- thing. when the *now struck the Unfit it crime In a swirl of wave through the wind .w on ono stile of the (nil. and rte. Wally carrier) the third rnnn and Il'e fireman clean through the epp.osite win. lite Irvin itself ‘• a.. t.tir,r(1 fifty fret deep. Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup Cores Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis„ Hoarseness, Croup, Asthma. Pain or Tightness in the Chest. Eto. It stops that tickling in the throat, V pleasant to take and soothing and heal- ing to the lungs. Mr. E. Bishop Brand, the well-known no n Calt ar,lener, - wTl 9; g LI I had a very severe attack of sore throat and tightness in the chest. Some times when I wanted to cough and could not I would almost choke to death. My wife Rot me a bottle of DR. WOOD'S NORWAY PINE SYRUP, and to my sur- prise I found speedy relief. I would not be without it if it coat 91.00 a bot- tle, ani I can recommend it to evsryoas bothered with a cough or cid. Price 25 Cwt& these two were picked up bruised and cut, but not badly injured, on lop of the snow, some 150 yard: below the sten(' of Ilse accident. Many well-known people have had very narrow escapes in railway acci- dents. The present Dowager Empress of Russia was once in n train which left the line owing to the spreading of the rails. pier \lajcsly's carriage rolled over and over to the bottom of n sleep em- bankment. yet the Empress was unhurt, and her youngest daughter. Olga, who was with her, shared her escape. The most recent sensation of the kind was upon the occasion of the Archbishop of Canterbury's visit to America. two years ago. On September Yard. 1901. Dr. Davidson, with hie stuff, was Irnvelling t : \Vashinglon' in Mr. Pierpont Morgan :s special. The train was running sixty miles an tour, when it collided with a Tight engine. Iia something nppro iehing. it miracle the Irvin was not derailed. The shock, of course, wee tremendous. Win- dows', (i*hM and mirrors were broken, but. wllh the exception n( a meld who had her fore rut. not one member of the Archhlehop's party was injured. t Cragg: "1 Was talking to your w if.` to- day." Stn "H did Il'r l h, , , Cragg : '\ 'hnt happen ?" Siegg : "That you were doing the talking 1' Man In Ilio Corner of the (:ar : "Wet morning, sir." Mali in the Other Corners v•rnssly) : "1''s ; Int you have omitle4 l., remark the stange fact That the rain; 1:, coming down instead of going up us usual." MILBURN'S Heart and Nerve Pills. 1. Are a apeelfle for ell distwes and erdees Griming from a ran -down condi. m�� Moem a t of neve system, *nob oa44ppPalpltaMon of the R.'art, Ferrous Preet tion. Nerernwwess. Steep1ees- et . Thet sr• *Dlseyleelq, BrainbeneSel Fos, to ironiess ttffr.ubls.t wwuhtslb s mea mal n- etertNenfrretnlar me,o Peke a Beate per hes, or ter MA.All dealers, or Tea T. Mlt.arne Co.. Liierrsn. Tore Ito, Oat. •