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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1907-04-18, Page 7$I 's Srwt Tide sad Mims Bestrew PSYCHINE (PUOMOYaOSO wKttj) Used in 'Thousands of Homes In Canada THOSE WHO don't know what Psychine to and what it does are seting about it. THOSE WHO du kuow what Psychilie is and what it does are using it. They regard it as their best physician and friend. THOSE WHO use it are being quickly and permanently euro( of all forms of throat, cheat, lung and et omach troubles. It is a scientific prepares tion, destroying all disease germs in the blood and system. It is a wonderful tonic and sy-tem building rehntdy, and is a certain cure for COUGHS, LA GRIPPE. Colds, Pneumonia, Bronchitis, Catarrh, Weals Voice, Sleeplessness. Nervousness, Malaria, Anaemia, Bronchial Coughs, Chills and Fever, Difficult Breathing, General Weakness Female Troubles, Fickle Appetite, Hemorrhages, Night Sweats, Consumption, Catarrh of the Stomach. Alt these diseases are serious in them- selves, and if not promptly cured in the: early stages are the certain forerunners of Consumption in its most terrible forms. Psych(ne conquers and cures Consump- tion, but it iH touch easier and safer to prevent its development by using I'sy- thine. Ilere is a trample of thousands of voluntary and unsolicited statements from all over Canada: Dr. T. A. Slocum, Limited: (tentlemen,-1 feel It my dtity to advise you of rho remarkable one affected by your r..ychino and Ozomulslen, which hate come ardor ray personal observation. Three men. nett known to me. Albert Townsend. Hazel }Upson and John McKay, all of Shelburne County. were pro- nounced by the best medical men to have cotniumptlon. and to be insurable and beyond the reach of mone/0 old. They wed I'syehitoe and Ozomulsion and they are now In stood health. I feel it a duty 1 owe to suffering humanity to estate these (acts for the benefit of other sufferers from this terrible disease. Yours very truly. LEANDY.rt !fnKF.NZIR T p•, Goren Harbor. N.S. Psychine, pronounced Si -keen, is for ale at all up-to-date dealers. If your druggiet or general store cannot supply you, write I)r. T. A. Slocum, Limited, 179 King Street Weet, Toronto. WOMEN HAVE SM.t1.t. DftVNti. fleeter Examines 70,009 (arses and He- veals an Et -manly of Nature. Probably no one has made as exhaus- tive at study of the comparative sizes of Wiens and women's I.lains as Dr. Elapse of Berlin, who has taken the facial and skull measurements of 70,000 persons, including 45,000 school boys and girls. le his observations were included Ger- leans, Swedes, Danes, Dutch, Bohemi- ans and Swiss. Ile has written n report of his deduc- tion; for a Germain popular health pub- -, licalion ub--,lirtlion in which he gives the advant- age to nen and boys from every point of view. (toys have bigger brain capa- city than girls, he says.. -iii a degree which cannot be accounted for on the general ground of better physical de- velopment. In feet, he Ontlirnis con - elusions renchrd by other students that from the /Mill► year (o the close of school age girls on the avernge are het - ter nourished and developed than 1.0ys. 'Ike brains of well grown girls. how- ever, remain inferior in size to (hose of physically 1 act:ward boys. In the fill grown wolnnn the skull and ile brain ie main 011 a childish plane it develop - meld. The fact thnl schoolgirls often se('In lo reach Letter results Than boys, that their actual accompiisln11enls seem greater. he accounts for by the fact Thal they reach ninlu•ily, the degree of 11• rfielien of which they .are capable. a.oner than boys. Ilul flit' girl stops there, while the boy goes on for years de%elo1ii g and nc ulring and only reaches his full power of utilization t years later. \\'hen he (lues so. however, he has far surpnssed the level to which 'the girl attained. in oilier words, his 'neatest gro%lh as compared with the woman's fc not unlike the development 7r Ilell 1 1 of his physical strength. Ila. hose aids that. of course, his de- ductions apply only to normal or av er• r. a cases. 11e thinks the difference in ('�('. . s i. s e the sexes du to the incl Dud the principal duly of woman id motherhood. and nature cannot afford to whsle on her either physical or mental powers which are not essenllal:10 that function. Teacher : 'iotninv, bow for (10 ice- f.e1„. float . foo1y : "Till they Hell, ihM.n't it jttsl Seel)) as If the monthly rent day conies around quicker Than the weekly telt' dray :' LIVER COMPLAINT. The liver i. the Leanest gland in the bode; Its office is to tst,e from the 1,1oo.1 the properties which form i.,l.•. when 111. liver 1. torpid and Inflamed it e.ii.n••t furnish bite to the bowels, causing them to become hound and costive. The wympton. aro a feeling of fatness or weight in the right vide, and sh.,nting pain- in tho same region. pains between the shoulder.. yellowness of the skin and eve.. bowels i,regular. coated tongue. bat tate in the morning. rte. MILBURN'S R1� S LAXA-LIVE R PILLS pleasant and easy to take. do not gripe, ken or sicken. never fail in their effects, and are by far 'he safest and , uieke.t remedy (or all disease. or ,11.0r ler* of the liver ('rice 2.1 cent., or 5 bottles tar 51.00, all dealers or mailed din et on re••.•ipt of price by Tho T. Wilburn Co., Litn;ted, 'Toronto, (hat. THE CALL TO t 5. A caravan of Lshmaelits-All the Poland non of thuord war Carrcadui ou fly trader$e, whoane;et c•arwrteld their nnerch:ulJ:urep on cautels. Dud fur persue.,.( of mutual protection trate110.1 in large companies Iron one plies and from one tttull to another. spicery an You Must Sacrifice Superfluous Things to Attain duct of the deseriand highly prized 111 d balm and myrrh Pro - Things That Are Supreme. i:n e� , r t r ye in at the, serail g,att, or wide is the gate, and broad is the way. that leadetti to destruction, and many there be wh;ch go in thereat. Itecause strait is the gide, and narrow i; 1111 way. which leadeth unto life, mid reit there be that find il,- \lull. vii., 13- 1 f. 1f y„ u were trained in childhood in the sect of Ili • Pharisees it drtiude pic- ture • . Y wit 16.011 u to mind soon as these words are r.IsJ, the bread way of plea- sure leading with its facile descent to the pil; Ilse narrow path of pain and privation leading by perilous ascents to I the city of gold. 1 (low often has this invitation boon 1 urged to persuade us Ilial it vans worth %while to be miserable and mournful for Ilse brief lime of life in order to make ore of bliss unending he,.'after. how unwise were they who chose the broad Path of pleasure, forgetting the pit that yowne(1 al the end. flow different from all This was the thought of the gentle. happy mind That in these words called men lo their high- est and best. This i; not an invitation Ir. constrict the life until it may pass through the narrow portals of some creed or to empty it of all things genial or great. it is a call to men to pay THE !'RICE OF SUCCESS. The gate to the best always is narrow. There is only one line to the north star. tvhile !here are many away from 11. Over the gateway to the kingdom .1 knowledge, of power, of success, is writ- ten, "Strait k the gate; narrow the way.' !'his one thing i do," is the plan t f anything worthily done. The dilettante plucks flowers from teeny fields; genius cuts a furvev straight Through one. In the broad w'ly Ihc many meander; in the narrow way but few great souls march. What is true in business, in learning, is hound 14, be true in the business of character building, in the task of learning to live. Singleness of effort is the price of suc- cess here; concentration alone commands character. You cannot attain to the things that are suprem ? until you are willing to sscr•ifice the things that are superfluous. Ilighteiusness is found only by setting 11 first and tanking it the single aim. The broad path is the easy one. the way of least resislanc'; the dwarfs are there. '('lie call of Christ is for men to lire pur- poseful lives u loeek 1 to ccnbe drifting, s the high goal of character, to Luka the i ulh of toil and oar Il.price of per- fection. Often are tee tempted to give up uie strife, to lot don it the restraint, to yield to ease and indulgence; the price 51'01115 ton great, the goal too distant. In truth, 11 is ever at hand. not in some shining city. but in the fellowship of every kin• decd spirit, and in the fruits of charac- ter (hal grow along THE WAY OF SEL(' -DENIAL. !t is not a question of Ilii; way lending h, paradise and that to 811 1111,1111 pit; 11 is a matter of that earnest striving after things worthy, which of itself creole•s worth. while. the drifting in the way cf It ast 1(' istljyce cannot but result in weakness and in the loss of every good power. The price of power is the con- stant exertion of the power we have; the penally of slothful indulgence is the decay of all power. Here is the invitation of the narrow way, not to crowd the mind into some creed. not identification with some par- ticular sect. not the rejection of things genial. generous and human, but the delibeiate and steady selling of the life. will. faith and zeal. in the path to high :and worthy ends, in the way where men have run with such eagerness the! Ihc road still is like 8 marrow frail in- stead of it broad palet where they wan- der at case. Ilere walks one who lived for lite soul, who had no other aim than lo find life and to interne it, whose footsteps, tt:ough often they seem to wander to the side of every sorrowing, suffering one. stilt lead straight to the shilling end of the frill and fruitful life, who leads on now calling to all the sons of men to fellow him. HENRY F. COPE. THE S. S.E L SSON INTERN %TION 11. LESSON, .t1'1tI1. 21. Lesson 111. Joseph Sold by Ills Bro- thers. Golden Text : James 3. 16. THE LESSON \t'ORD SilJI)II',S, (lased on the let of lite Revised Ver- sion. Idolatry Among the Hebrew Patri- archs. -The early chapters of Genesis are clearly intended to show that there wHS 11 primitive huio'. •lvlge c[ Ike true God handed down through Noah to the doscen(lants of `hero. Of Ibis special knowledge Abraluun. a little Inter, be - conies the chosen custodian. and to his posterity the religion of Jehovah b. given as a rich heritage. 't'her'e are. however, scattered 1hrougli the narratives here and there indicaltnlu of the fact That the religion of the patriarchs hal a back- ground of idolatry. The command to AI:rithlun to leave kis kindred arid his father's house and to journey into a far country may have been intended Io iin- pl that the environment of Anrahan's early honln in Cr and in llnr:un was not fhvoralle 10 the knowledge and the wor- ship of the one and only 1Inc God. Thal the near relatives of .11,t•ahan who re- mained in Ilaron were not entirely weaned (non idolatry 14 made clear by the incident which occurred in Gilead, when lauhau overlook Jiwol. ant. am011g other things, demandeu of hint, "Where- fore hest Zhou stolen my gods," referring Io the lerrlphinn, or household idols, one of which Rachel had secretly brought with her from her father's house. Later still Jacob finds it necessary to distinctly ccnunau! his houseltohl and all that were with him"Pel away the foreign gods lint are among you ... and I will make 11n altar mil.) God who answered me in the day of my distress." Long years afterwards, when under Joshua the children of Israel roves ed their coveuaul with Jehovah at S11,1.0,111, inns, Jeshun addressed Iho people ul (hese works : "-Thus said Jehovah. Ilio God of Israel, your fathers dwell 1/1 011 (line be- yond the river, even 'I'erah. Ihc father of Abraham. end the (abet of \abor, rind they served ether gids. \nil I look your father Abraham from broom! the rete' 'Josh. 21. 2. 3). Thus it ie distinctly slated That 'Dealt, the father of Aka. It:nu.tta• lin idilnlir,,and the import of J..11un - words in los charge to Israel we/11.s to lap That (sal.. altered purpose 1 cnllingt Attrition) oul from :oolong his 1,Naled and relnll-es w115 to place him rah n more In'.omahie environment for 111.' 1.'.oI pma'n1 of kis religious life and in a place \%here the truth rornunulic:tted 1•t .prrial di\ i u.% ln1io11 might gn.W under NV0111tle r•a,J1l •ns. During! Iho period if the .111.g.•s we noel with a re•i'nl of idolatry ;n Israel. ail not un• lit idler Iho du'.vnklll et the kingdom, and rifler the lung exit.. with its bitter experiences and chastening influence, was the malign thoroughly purged of ile I Wondrous lend, macs. very finest narratives in ali literature The theme of the story, as Professor Driver points out, "is common alike in folk -lore, in the (Ira(1ml. and in history - tiro younger member of a family kept down by the envy of the elder members, and at last triumphing over theta. Every trait in the narrative is in aecor- (fnnce with nature; and the whole forma a vivid portraiture of the true develop Inent of human character." Hated him yet the more -The hatred and envy M the brothers was first. aroused by the favoritism which the father. Jacob, showed lowest Joseph ;n malting for him "a coal of ninny colors." 7. We were binding sheaves -One of many references to agricultural lifo in- dicating that the patriarchs were not altogether the wandering nomads and shepherd hilt they are sometimes pic- tured as being. \lade obeisance -In acknowledgment of superiority. The significance of the dream dill not escape Joseph's brothels. 9. Dreamed yet another dream -The second of the Iwo strecesslve boyish dreams of future greatness. To the Oriental, as indicated in several in- stances in the Old Testllntent, the double (dream indicated the certainly of the ful- fillment of the general import of the vision. 10. 'Thy nnolher-Irons lu•'r being thus mentioned here we must infer that Ita- rhel was rat (his time still alive, (hough reference to her death has already been made earlier in Ills narrative ;comp. (len. 35. ia). 11. Envied hien-Apparently because of a speed conviction and fear Ihnt the dretunls alight possibly some day come (1110. 16.. 11is brethren went, from the vicin• ;:y of Hebron in the Ji.(atl 5(11110 (verse 14)to feed their father's fleck in S Silo- el-m near Lux and Bethel, some thirty hilts away. The mountain plain on the 0841 of Shsehent supple,' '\eellenl pas- turage. ILVele oflllron ro - - . .1 beton 1 %allro• rtaming northwest to southeast in which Ilcbron, now the tildes! town 111 Pales- tine. and one of the most luteicml cites of the world, ties. The present mane of 1b,leron is el -Khalil. Egypt where they were used in purl medicinally, in part us incense, and 111 part in the process of entbahning. 2t. 28. Istunaeliles . . . %lldialutt:s TLrt.' sr•lutiull., are offered for the dill culty raLee•t1 by the mention here of tau 1d(rrent (topless 501111. have though the different names were intended 1 rattler loosely designate the same people Other commentators have suggested Ilia probably it '%as a 11115e(1 corneae). 0 traders to whom Joseph was sold, the being both IsIt uaehles and U;Il;aulae reser ''1 (. , Ili. 1 1 n ex daunt r 1 I m the Ilihl narrative tenet.. Much p)ahib;lil, Sider Its .irdiiig to (bat uaralnve u, s.0 not ha.e it in Geneets, Ishmael end \lidiai ale•• both sun, of :\nlahauh Then. Ile., V(11,111111S would themefure be closely rt' la!e•I and. in len; earlier generations a least, have ninny interests 111 common The ..pule biblical narrative, however makes Joseph a cousin of the men In whom he was ,old. Still another ex- planation rand (he one favored by a majority of Old 'Testament scholues to- day is that the occurrence of the two separate names is Due of many indica- tions pointing to the interweaving of two different accounts of the sante .'1'0111 (1'0111 which 1110 Genesis narrator drewIn- 1 rmaliuu, one of those accounts mn- te:ling the Istimaeliles as the prate', to wheeut Joseph was sold, :dud Ilse other mentioning the 3tidianiles. 'l'wenly pieces of silver -Ilei. Twenty shekels, two-thirds the price of an adult save, Into Egypt -Whither they were bound to dispose of their products. ---4 AN ALTEi1ED VILLAGE. 1 t•1' wandered Io the village, Tom, and equated 'neat' the tree \\'here keenly years 4r more ago we ;- 1 u AND NERVE PILLS ( are the very remedy that weak, nervous, re tired out, sl•'kly wollll'11 need to noires ,s them the blessings of good he:dth. e They give Hound, restful sleep, tone up , the nerves, strengthen the heart, and • snake rieh bloat. 1McDonald, v h .1r». C. Portage, ht Prairie, Man., writes: " I was - troubled with shortness of breath, !)alpi- . Cation of the heart and weak spells. 1 t got four boxes of Milburn's Heart and Nene Pills, and after taking thein 1 watt completely cured. WEAKtheir,that ,. TIREDfreahment (roto des They wake in the morn - WOMEN ing and feel tireder than when they went to bed. They have a dizzy senaetion in the head, the heart palpitates; they are irritable and nervous, weak and worn out, and the lightest household duties during the day seem to be a drag and a burden. , MILBURN'S HEART romped and played care -free, But things down there have changed, dear Tula; the town has had a boon. Es looking (nighty citified and spread- ing to make rant. They don't sit 'round on boxes down at Jacksons grocery store, :Mel whittle sticks aril( tell stale jokes and stories any more; And they have got a perk, dear Tom, which Boston can't surpass -- It's not like the old village green - signs any ICI:Ei' OFF THE GRASS! You recollect the schoolhouse, Tom, that stood upon the hill, Where in the winter you and I would coast with brother Bill? It's used now as an office for a real es- tate concern, And (here were no familiar spots '(here which 1 could (discern, The hill is subdivided, '('oar, broad streets have right of way O'er pasture lands where twenty year's ago we used (o play; And on tho steepest point, just where the land slopes toward the creak, A big sign reads O\\'\ YOUfl O\VN HOME! Small Payments Once a Week! The ch111ehy:ll•d. loo, 11115 changed. dear Tool. wherein is laid away The cold remains of 111118y of our youth- ful playmates gay. They've built a fence around 0, Tom, so persons can't climb o'er And chip away Thee monuments and headstones ntly 1111ir'e. Where once the weeds ran riot over eucbi :Iegleeled mound. Now only gmnssy cnrpetinge of richest green ala iitid; And al the gateway entrance, Toni, they constantly maintain A sign which reads NO DRG. ALLO\VED IN H1{Bl: E\I:El'I' ON (:11.\IN! The very strcete have rlumg;el. dear Teat; huge billboards rear their heads Ott vit. and lobs, which ,,ay. "510e1) in Unison's folding; Bkda." f`r "i'iuklc'l Purple fills Are Ile,(," cr ele "Drink Smith's (toot Beer" -- I tell yon bit .111 tillage, 'Pons looks so 1h 1lI I , u I ,liffereet every way I scarcely knew the place. Nor could 1 le'p the blinding tears from ray fur n - ni'10('-1.°1-..0-1. ao. I 11 nluy 1.s f. i 1li•• h.est, dear Ton -the villagers think se. But gee! it's differ. id than I( was some twenty c •,an, :1_•.! •-•E A. Ilrivatool. 17. Ik,lhal--The site (if the rimier)! 11E11:111 01' 1\" 1 11. e'Iy a mentioned so ' al in hn 1 . - G. 13• 15, ,i, identified lid vill III• modern Tell I --- Frenchman -Frenchman Orly • llh.ertalioi 11as t're. Ik)Ihan. a large green mound elunll fif- teen mile, north of SbI,chenl on 111.• edge of a broad plain where the pasturage must hove been Oven liner than i1 \•ns neuel'er tiheehenl. 19. '('his drealler--Ileo. "Ala -ler of dreams.. 20. (hie of the pit, Palestine alanuld8 in pits. or (ister'1s. 1-0.1 for Ili, sl,i10.5e r•1 grin,. To pre% eat Ilse I(in rapid eves• lu•rnlion of the water !Iva -aired up from Ilse winter rainy season. these 11,lermm ora often shaped like n I,011t', uari.,wer n; die top null mouth ih:1n al Ilse bol. torn. This lakes it easy In covet• Ihc opening: and no per.•on. however. im- pri•onsl within would lin aihie Io gel out without nssislan•e. 21. Benbcn-'Thc 11146..1 of Ilio Iwcl'e woos of Jacob, 22. \\'ildcrntss--•file word• "wilder. ie.sand "desert'' a6. used 111 1 h Itihle t 1101 detol(• 1111rt'en w(lsbes such it, 1110 tor'lt suggest In the mind of de- lender it our lime. bol Mundy ono imitated role of hold. often rich 111 tcr11ure 1111d furnishing nbsnldnnl pasturage Io Mocks. Thus in 1116. New '1'rslainenl are are 1(1Id That it was in a "desert pence that Jesus cumminb'd the Multitude to be seated 0.1 Ise Urns. in vompali05 nl fifties mid one hundreds. Ile evangelist being care- t": to odd 'Yoe there was much grass in the place." 23. The r.,al of many 0::1101•, '1 he mor•- gi111 rending in the Devised \ersi•'n for this phrase 111 verse 3 also, .• 1- "a long garment with : Ic••%es " the exael mcn11- iugf of Ilse phr:t.'e being uncertain. '401111--\\ ill rhapler 37 we bet: 1. . 1.1 di%i'ioI1 of Ili.. book of Cos • . - • . 1. deals nen,;'.t entirely a ith Ile. 1: •'• f Joseph. Jacob. indeed. is ntnlb•onot slid 111e etestls of h;'. closing years are narrated ni ...'i ie (engrth, but nal the %%Ins'.,• h0 0, t 1;gra,'- tensa the ilrsl 4' 111;. sMlirnl (Ind 1/(Mord n ssau,niiunle 1hr chief ullet•r•I of t!ce •l•ry eon t!,. rt , r.. 1 . a .,f J0:,..1,11_ 'line IN •!• 1• .' .111:W1. 1!. 1.11111 all 1.1',1 1. .#1. ' ,1.., Oar's, thal it d :ul , .1:ttny3 lank among IIM sued an Illusion. I'i. n formf. th1 - been I,ult;gin}' n. tt i 1 t:ullo1 - 4e size of ov, a11 I„111 .a 11. ,ay. 1110y are great. 1% ot,e - sontated when 1116. term ''naoumtei0"u, i• •slryelicd la (110111. The ton"r.l west,. 110 ntea-u'.'d were :.5!NI 1:::;1. ' •1 trades rl'e.1 In rI en1 i11::;11.aterag•e lura it was 13 sc'c• sail-. They w. re mol trey 1,6 411. only 01011 Su feel ui' use•liflirlh of 1001,' 51.811. Indeed(. hr !, of lite opinion (hat the gr. tuts',( 110ig111 ever srarl:,e1 by wanes !n open wide r 1, fifty bel. 811.1 he ae.- rl ural, for higher estimates by saying Ibal Ili. y b t e h, rteeftn•e been ibseeted fat the newt pine from Iho decks 4f rtI!ts. and the Jscl':peelI•,' effect resull- ing fmrn1 10.kingt rap nlongf Ih.atop,:. ):as nsisl(',I th,' eye 8r.d judgrnsent.o \\'len wares Leconte breakers, strik- ing ngntssi store obstacle. 'here is 1141 114111111 (hal greed uses•.,. of wale'. nye hurled to n height of 1110 h el and vol. gnus of spray are flung and hlewn s(il1 hig;t 6.r. \ • r . f. ty watts. 2 5111 feel long and -,: l,•' hi(•h ale ever 411 •pompe,.. h•' 1 I-. 1 ' y, r''y.' hnd tye8ilser. the oat. 1,111 ti•• , 11,1 1.. t:'il feel fe'•111 I., 1 I I .A111141,11 r rill I,•,I ;Mel h• sr lrn,hl exceeds 3:1 fir•1, Their &notion f, lug mer 0 to 14._!..4 If 0 wasn't for the rear ore, Isle r : h NVutJ have In sii 110 hi.' 4,•.%n rhos. Price 50 cents per box or three boxes for *1.23;, all dealers or the Tho T. M;1 - burn Co.. Limited, Toronto, Out. BIT OF IRISH BOYCOTTING JIJRI' HEEL SED TO CO\\l(T TIIE I'IIISOL IE1(S. Gathering of Six Hundred \1'aylui 1 Two Buys --Diller Hatred Against Faintly. At the Leitrim Assizes, toter.. Mr. Jus- tice Kenny, according to a despatch fr'utn the London Times, tho following eight persons were tried fur a etetutl time on :t charge o[ having been concerned in an illegal assembly at Uruinkecrin on July 7, 1906. The first jury disagreed. C.tItItIL•;U THE TIDINGS. \Ir. Powell, h.C., for the crown, said that shortly after midnight on July 7, 006, two boys named Brady, aeceni)an- ;cl by two polIcenaen, started for Moine- hair, twenty smiles away, to look for pro- visions. The father of the Brndys had become unpopular with his neighbors, and so strong was the feeling against 11)0 (tinily that, (hough there were la'oshops in the vicinity, it was not possible for them to gel. the necessaries of life (here. Shortly after the start was made for 1)runnlbair Ise party wet on the way, Il•nn, one of the accused, and Itis man Stilt the word round to the people to organize and assemble. '1.111: COUN'1'ItY Gl'. The Brody= gol some flour. lural, and other things and alerted for (heir 1•'lurn journey, still under the charge of the police. Probably ali(ull the same lime a groat gathering if residents about I)owra collecteel rued marched to Urunheerin ; ten e crowd gradually increased on the way 111Id when Ih'unlkeerim was reached the: numbers were about (W)0. In this crowd was three or fou' mounted nen, who seemed to direct the mo•ement4 of the party. On (heir arrival the Ih•odys were set upon by the crowd, and despite 11:•; energy of seven )1licemen, all their guods n ere destroyed. and it was with some dillicully. Ilial. the (goys were kept fount being seriously injured. N0'I'IIING DONE. The jury, after all absenco of an hour and a half, slated they could not agree. \Ir. Justice ICeiiny asked them to decide whether the prisoners were (1e'nmber, of the creed. The. jury 11nswercd "Yes" 31r. Justice Kenny asked whether They wero there for the purpose of interfering with the 1tradys. The jury said they ce•uld nil agree, and they stere dis- charged. and the prisoners were allowed ural till the July assizes. --'---+--------- \\' i i .1' \\' I \'!' I•: I I S. B;II \\'inlet's i. 411(1 of the navies who use (heir wit 10 save their strength. During :+ eo;tpitg; (rip in Iho ;\Laine tar M,d. 11+11 t%a, ca.;ly (tie laziest man in the party. finally, his exosprroliol ct,nlr:t•lc, teitl hien 11181 if he did 114,1 (:ill s. nu Ili lig besides t(1ie 11 0 x:,111(1 Imo( 111111 olf home. The neat horning Rill t�dr0ar(1 it rine and well ((1 up 1110 mountain. Two Zhou nl Dun t Inter the ' ► nen in ramp Sow 11i11 running down again :is brut ns he uld lic, and closIM• hind hili wascoa leaco•. The men was e ehed the -chase w ill loaded rn e s repll • . On retelling comp ((ill turned aryl shot the bear. \\Then the inlet could atop :augll- Ingl. one 4f Ihenl sa;d:--• "11111, what on Cnrlh possessed y011 k: run that di,limee, will' the hear so close. when )•111 11101 Ilzcve killaol 111111 (111 Ih6. hill :ural silted your br•0a1h'" hill s'Iil41 SLrewdly. "\VhtIs the 1.s(• 4f killing a Isar in the nutnntfins end lugrsing hint in when yon 'a► run hien to he asked. CUBES Dyspepsia, Bois; Pimples, Headaches, Constipation, Loss of Appetite, Salt Rheum, Erysipelas, Scrofula. and all troubles arising from the Stomach, Liver, Bowels o:' Blood. Mr.. A. h.rthapetle, of Inalldnlr, Ung 4'rllr.: • 1 belle%e t would hat .1 Leen In my grave long ata had 11 not b.•rn for Nor !trek Iniad lult- ler.. i was run doe n to seek nn ext. rat rh,it 1 6..m l st'arce• ly move About the house. 1 It•n.,ahject h, severs heaeserea, bv.kuolic.. and dint. n.•se; 111) n•n,etlle syn. g .no n•:.I 1 was 101.1111n 1 , do my hneu•wnrs. A/ter ea:'g In , 1,.,111s..f 11. 11. It. 1 1, m4 rrygr h't11h (a ;; 1 a.: ed. 1 acrid- ,e, ,,,:.m: nd 1t to .:1 1.: rest telt • tweta.ut wuuse. 11410111044011 The Home SOtIE DAINTY DISHES. (laked Bananas. - 'Puke quite ripe „' I uses naso wash them warm 6.r cut 1 in water, off the end-•, and arrange them on a hallow dish, and halo very slowly (ur 11,1 hour. If baked ((10 quickly 1116. juice' wi11 evaporole and leave the hunt taste- less and dry. Sero hot, willt a little el4'allt. 1f , naked , 1 l .1ketlf Pint of very :strong coffee, mix aillt it half a l( of I,vile,l null.u Ilu•ce plapilts lulu it, .,werl,'u,boamtthwpoouorr 11110 a grease,1 pie -(lisp. bliuke vers .sbw- ly set, scbu,1851 8lutuudti Durr, 11ed1,11 s.'rvtr bol1111er cor 0(11.1 l. 1.411111.1 pastry is Intl eeonnnli':cl and g(o1, if these quantities aro used : 'Cal' foul' ounces of rola Ir,ilel1 pcdatu passed through a sieve, mix 11 with four dunce. ,f nom., Iwo ounces and a half of 'lop- ping. 11 pinch of sail, and a lea,in1, 111111 of baking powder. This, when relied oil thin, is very peel for jam tarts, etc. Or: ago Flavoring. -Take 1110 peel of shall \landeruh oranges. or tett: very 11iin rind of any sweet orange, lee it dry thoroughly% then pound it to a powder In a mortar with loaf sugar. ('ass it 1hrnubh a sieve and place in an air -tight battle or tin. This i.. a &tickets flavor- ing for creams, cakes, and pudding?. Cream of Onion Soup. -Chop 1 pint while onions, cook in 2 tablespoons hul- ler and 1 cup each of water and tomato juice until tender. \lake 1 pint 111!11( sauce by creaming 2 tlble.)xu)ns e:re11 of Ilene and butler, and cooking with 2 cups of milk unlit ttir'kened. Press the ce.oked onions through a sieve and a,lf to the milk mance; season and simmer for 10 minutes. Japanese (toll -- \fake a rich baking powder biscuit dough and roll It out Melt in thickness. Chop cold beef and spread on the dough and put. Nils of butter and salt, pepper and a 5prinIJiug of flour on the meal ; roll up and hako in a wither quid: oven. Yorkshire Pudding.-Ile(It 3 eggs un- til very light and creamy. add 1 leaspo(111 salt and 1 pint milk and beat again. Put s.S cup of bread flour in a bowl and stir the egg mixture slowly into il, beat- ing all the time. Bake in hot buttered gent pans 15 minutes. Basle with drip- pings from roast beef. Royal Pudding. --Over six ounces of breademunlos pour one pint of boiling milk, cover till cold, told four ounces of ABSOLUTE SECURITY: Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills: Must Boar Signature or 3.. P.c-S1 11. Wrapper Bow. Trr Basad .ad as eaq to take, as sagas. FON NEARACME. FON LIMINESS. FON NIUDUSNE$*. FON TORPID LIVEN. FON CONSTIPATION. FON SALLOW SKIN. FON TOE COMPLEXION sr= I p�0 'az4tw vzexe. w.e...G CARTERS CURk, SICK HEADACHE. cd into n plate and lighted is a better way 4f sinfc;ng n (owl or chicken than the 011 -fashioned way of holding it over the t'.:sole of a lighttsf paper. The latter inetli 11 suokes the bird and spoils its glued appearance. COST OF BRITISH NAVY JOAN I(17d. (IAS SPENT £ 13:1,556,074 ON HIS WAIISIIIPS. Large Aiajorily of ?len-of-War Compara- tively Modern - Average Trice od Ships, The total (1r.;1 cost of (he ships which compose the British navy as it stauda tc.-day- amounts lo the substantial toed o! .£133,556.679. l'his fact comes In light in the annual caster sugar, two ounces of almond dockyard exleese accounts, published meat, a tablespoonful of brandy, a fete tecently. A birdseyo view of the navy drops of retail& essence, and four well- is included in the accounts, the cost el coach snip and the dale of (Is colnplelcun being given in (fetal,. A summary GI Iho luta) may bep set out as follows: - (lnullrlllmll ships-- Armored ... , . .£65,1111.678 I'rote,•ted 19,295,7011 Unprotected .... .. 14,:113.334 Nearly obsolete - Armored .... .... .... ..... 6,8.89.916 3.673,527 tio,v» \un-eolnbnlant ships „ 6.1413 �n:17 Obsolete vessels and for sale 4,liui!1,927 Training and gfuardsltips , 12.51,122 Of the total sum of just over X99, - 000,000 t19;(100,000 which has been spent on Iliose ships included in the combatant section, more limn .£7$,1100,000 has been stent within the past len years, and of this amount over Mir1,000,000 has been spent within the past five years, so that it brcolnes evident that the large majority of our slips are C01parnliyely modern Each year Inas seen an addition 10 the power of the, ships built and (Ilse to their cost. This is illustrated in 8n Inleresthlg way by the figures given in the t'eiurn. For many years the average Coit !nice of an nowise] battleship was be - beaten yolks of eggs. Buller and orna- ment a mould with candied peel, pour in the mixture and seam for.8n hour 81111 a (planer. 'l'unt out, and serve with any steel pudding sauce. Savory (:ablwge.-Wash It nice spring cabbage, lulil il in wafer with a pinch of sant and a little soda. \\'hen the 'ege- table yields to the pressure of the linger. take it out and squeeze dry, (hen put it 11110 a Glenn saucepan with a little but- ler, sept :and nutmeg rand 11 teaspoonful of grated cheese. Pour over ail a Itllle milk, and slew for ten minutes. Serle very hot wiih grated cheese. ilerring Pie. -Cut off the heads and tails of three herrings, and sprinkle n lithe sell, pepper. and ground Mace neer them. Grease 11 pie -disk, and lay Iho fish in il. Cover the fish v 110 chopped apple and onion (using the apple and the union raw). Scatter a teaspoonful of clopped parsley over :111, and put little pieces of butler on the lop, Add Iwo tablespoonfuls of fish liquor or water. (:cover with a nice crust, and ....•e one hou. Dervottsllirt Sponge. -Mix together n to ac•upful of line flour. dills caster sugar, adding a pinch of salt and a Ien•pe'01ful of baking powder. Break three eggs into the flour and sugar. and bent lite all is tween .C71Yt,($3) and •£R(111,(100. Now•i• Ihuringhly mixed. Pour inti n grensrsl days it is seldom that a battleship roses tin spread with oiled pelt r. and hake in 10•s than a nllllion, 'fake, for instau•.., n sharp oven for seven nninutes. Then tau twelve armored tessels completed 111 spread half the cake with lemon Burd 11+6. Yen!' 19115.6. The average price fur and hat( with apricot 10(11 awl roll. 1110 twelve was over £1,200,000. (b1 tho 1'Inr•n in n .•i0ve 1111 cold. Cul this in olive. Band, I11e seventeen armored %es• h Inh . t slices, , s ,dlt•r desiccated cocoa- sell c nsplcd in 1903-1 rose :111 nverago nut of 6.r, :aid .'. i re tiller hot ur cold, /'f only CZIO.(MYI encli. 1'he 111ree pum- a., con%enient, plcicd in IR!r,1.1(53) cost nn at Drage 01 only £7811.t»i each. • HINTS 1,0It THE: 11OMt • , .1 c . 1 , clean sink i' , 111es pout d lttn 1g nl• Ion Of boiling Sudo wider, heti t clear away all the grease. Dried I lnrieet Beans. - f4r bulling do not put in the sal( lilt the been, are nearly cordtwl, ituett%i,e 1111') are 11111 1.1 zl.lil and crack. Stewing; ►, Idle most econonneal 11i141e of cooking, as it IMO 0 h1'( 1 nae 1 the vegetables so neees my for the (laver Increase the hulk of the. stew. The boilhtgs of beef and salt (gni: 'like n very good pert nod lentil 5011)), 1f the salt Inr neutralized by the addition of some brown :'10111' 111:+1 retrofit. Beaty for footle•. ('ince the giblets, nee!:. heart, liver, el.., of Ihc bird In a snnceven with enough water to cover; Ica simmer until the goodness is'otl, then sl ruin, thicken w i10 (lour, end add a of sndl, \1‘)1.11111.`1111a .•ivory slew 15 made oral there ore hits of bread l0 dispose of, let 111, 0 meet ife Iry Ilse rich effects of sip. pets ill her slew. first site Should lake her Int'. 41 slate I'srnd and eel. (hent in pier. -. %%diel are final in clnrincd drip- plug ripplug :eel MMINNA incn (lie clety. Thr'•r atingle will the gravy, 1111'l sine n great in:llroteinenl to if. Try soaking halo- 1(1 be broiled 4, tried in mole, e- and feeder 1140r0 ('/014• Mgt. .1lseit :I Iallespoi►rlht of molasses b•, n cupful of water should Ire used, and the meal well dried before being put over the lire. A go(NI flus slain that g;nc. right 1111r, the wosl. and ie very durlable, is made of linseed oil rutsre.l with ground burn, molter. 11111 Itiorougllly into the (.duds with n 1lausel pad. and next dao poti.h wins 1., cow a\ :111.1 turpentine. 'I'o remote lea -stains. nm ply c111111 port. of yolk 4f egg and glycerine 1(1 the slain rind ala4a to dry . throw well in elefil r41111 1111•1*. I111.4 will Ire iOUltll ex• cellon! for an altcrn•wm cloth. which 1014.1 Ir' 1/1.111'11 1111 arr./11111i( IIS oteIfrnIV will (:Leah Singcing.'•-,t little alcohol pour. " T'S ONLYA COLD,' A TRIFLING COUCH" Thon'ands have maid Ilia when they 'taught cold.1. Thousands have neglected d to euro the cold. Thousand+ have filler) a (!•nlsumptiv:s grave through neglect. Never neglect a cough or colli. it r an have but one result. it leaves the throat °r Sags, or )x,th, elt,uted. Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup Is tho medie'inn you need. It ntrikrs a9 the very fou':•tat :n of all throat or lung complalrlt., relieving or curing Coughs. Coll., Ilronehitin, Aathmn, Croup, Sore Throat, and preventing Pneumonia and Cense nt to ion. it hes /total the teat for many %tiara, and is now more geuer.'lty used than ever. le contains all tho lung h'tt(l:.g virtue+ of the pine tree combined with Wild cherry Rtrk and other pectoral remedies. It stimulates tho weakened bronchial organs, (ably' irritation and au blues irnflammation, "Soothe nerd (seals the irritated (r.ita, loosens tho phlegm end mnrous, and atria natio° to mainly dislodge tin m)rbid nc- eumuLtti.'r►s. Don't be humbugged into aux:eptng an imitation of 1)r. %Vrx,d'a Nor. way Tette Syrup. it 14 put up in a yellow wrapper, three !rine trees the trade mark, and price 25 oto Mr..iu:ian J. i.eBlanc, Belle Cote, N 9. writes : "1 wan troubled with a bad coli anti a-r.•ero cough, which assumed such an attitude as to keep ole confined to my hanso. i trier) several remedies advertised but they were of no avail. As *butt resort I tried Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup nod ow bre Ne Cured els oomplet dy."