Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutExter Times, 1910-06-30, Page 71 }ABS"iUTE SECURITYI Cenulne Carter's O" Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of Sas Fac-Slmrlo Wrapper Mow. Hints for Busy Housekeepers. Recipes and Other Valuable Information et Parilcutar Interest to Women Folks. TOMATOES. Spiced Ton►utoes.-One 1luart of twtiatues, one onion chopped fine, a red pepper, a teaspoonful of salt, tet, teaspoonfuls of sugar, a cupful of vinegar, and a teaspoonful of mixed spices, cloves, cinnamon, lied allspice. Boil the tomutees and um vinegar together for two hours, then add the onions and the other things and boil for another hour. This is a good relish for cold meats t f any kind. vee assail mad as awry Cream of Tomato Soup.-Crea m gtake asaecar. of tomato soup is made quickly and easily it made by the following ce- CARTERS f ON i1u0ACNE. min): Put two saucepans on the FOR DIZZINESS. fire. In one put two and one-half FOR BILIOUSNESS. ceps of milk and scald it. In the FOR TORPID LIVER. ether put two tablespoons ef but - FOR CONSTIPATION. ter When it is melted add three FOR SALLOW $KIN. tablespoons of flour and stir till FOR TIIEtOMPLUION smooth and bubbles. Then add the t�s,pys, II os,«�....�..,,_•���'^;�� milk and stir till thickens. Then M Oeabt>'�•✓"""'�b" pour into this one 10 cent can of to - CURE Sr,'tC e'^anaCHB. mato soup which has been heated. Do not dilute the can of soup but — — - -� use full strength. Heat and serve. A RESCUE VESSEL. This makes a delicious, cheap and easily prepared soup. Escalloped Tomatoes. -Put in a brume jar one quart can of tome - tees, four tablespoonfuls of well mashed rice, four teaspoonfuls of sugar, one green pepper sliced Pile, silt. Stir and add small piec- e, of butter. Bakerather slowly Channel by the Calais -Dover mail; for one hour. Stir occasionally so steamer, calls attention to the fact' the rice will not settle at the bot - that Germany alone of all nations : torn. posses -(•s a vessel capable of deal Fried Tomatoes on Toast. -nip ing with such accidents. Although' slices of ripe tomato pancake bat - Germany has only eight completed ter • fn• untit d I I FEEf Germany Provides for :Accidents to Submarines. The French navy's lack of ade- quate means to rescue the sub- merged Pluviose, which was run down the other day in the English ► o en er and trema ; underwater boats, competed with (,lace each fritter on a slice of warm Great Britain's 63, France's 56, buttered toast and sprinkle with Russia's 30 and 18 of the United salt and pepper. States, Teutonic thoroughness has Abased Beef in Tomato Sauce. - already provided a rescue ship. Make any favorite tomato sauce and She is named the Vulkan and was when hot add one cup Of beef or leunched at Kiel in 1907. Tho yes my left over cooked meat whish sei, which has a length of 230 feet. has been put through food chup- consists of two separate Bull'. per. Cook ul, once and send to These are fitted with engines, which !isle garnished with parsley sprigs. give a speed of twelve knots. At either end the separate hulls) -- are connected by a deck, so that, CANNING. viewed Front forward or aft the ship! Gooseberries. --To can gooseber- plesents the structure of u tunnel. ries to be nice and whole canned A large space sufficient to allow I they should be cleaned carefully, the largest German submarine yet then put as many quarts as desir- d signed to pass through, is left ed into a vessel. Have ready a ket- this lint cotton is much better than clear between the two hulls, and tie of boiling water, pour it over thread ; moisten the finger tips and ever this are erected two steel gir-,the• berries, leave until they turn rcpt the cotton, size and length -hrielgos, with two others con-' white, which is only a few moments. o anted, and put in place and work sting them. i Skim the berries out and over it. No shrinking required, as hese brides are fitted with a' put into most thread does. g the jars. Have more boiling water werful electric crane. capable of un i pour over them in the jars un- - lifting a weight of 500 tons, and til berries are covered. Seal im- HOUSEHOLD HINTS. when a submarine has thus been rudiately. They are thoroughly it can be rested upon mow-; cooked sten opened and will irnnn '\ sprig of parsley eaten niter on - raised atle girders which can be placed be- To Can lihnbarb.----Wash care ti - i„ns or leeks prevent i the u(frnsi}'c I tc•:tth which •s su ,innuvin t•' ki to work it with. Bake in a loaf about one hour. This is delicious served hot or cold, served with to- nutto sauce. This beef loaf is far superior to tho ono with eggs ed- ited. ('LEANING. ('arvod Furniture. --To clean deeply carved furniture use a soft, !THE S. S. LESSON INTERNATION.II. LESSON, JULY 3. 1.0000 1. Pictures of the Kingdom, Matt. 13. 31.3, 44.52. Golden Text, Rom. 14. 17. Verse 31. Mustard seed -A pro- verbial eutblent of an exceedingly small quantity. Not the timber tree, but the black mustard, a gar• den herb, sown annually, is refer- red to. 32. Less than all seeds ---Not, of 45. A merchant seeking -Ile re- paesents the ratan who devotes his life to tho diligent quest of truth. Goodly pearls -There is a cer- ium beauty and lustre to other re- ligions, but they have no absolute value; and if a ratan is in deadly cru nest to find the best, he will not ,fol, with them. Captain Gardiner Gives .Account of 46. Found one pearl of great price -The end of all life is to find Fortunes to be Won froom for oneself this gem of solitary Neptune. sr.lendur. What was the price? All tl.at he had. Was it too high 1 It iv no less for any of us. Life eter- nal is a jewel of such transcend- ent rarity, that nothing elan will match it except the unwithholding renunciation of a human lacing. 47. A not -The seine, or drag- net, which is often worked by fast - r cilium -sized sponge. Squeeze as c •urse, literally so ; rather by po, ening one end to the shore and dry as possible out of tepid water pear estimation, since in ordinary c+.rrying the other end out to sea and go over the carving. It will gndening no smaller seed was ever in a wide circle and afterward take up all the dust. Rub dry sowed. "Small as a mustard bringing it to the starting point, with a soft cloth and you will be seed” was a common Jewish say- thus unclosing all the fish of every delighted with the result. ing. in which was exorcised the kind, as in the world are men of TREASURE IN WRECKS 1.1..1 N '1'O R Ell .t 1 N $20,1100,000 FROM '1'111; 01'E.tN. Previous to the opening of the Suez Canal in 1870 all British transports and East Indiauteu made the voyage to and from the East by way of the Cape of Good Hope. Many were wrecked. Most of these wrecks lie close to the shore, and all attempts to salve their contents were, until quite re- cently, attended by great and in most cases insuperable difficulties, owing to the inefficiency of diving anu salving apparatus and the practical impossibility of removing Carpets and Rugs. -Eight ounces pectic license often found in the every type and condition. EYntil the `he sand with which most vessels of salsuclu, four uunoos powdered proverb. final disposition of all, the good submerged for some years aro coy cred. borax, one-half pint of alcohol, one When it is grown -The 'mitres- und of white soap, five gallons ofsalt is not u f rapid development, nt rale water. Dissolve soap in ono but of the contrast between the in- gellon water by boiling, put in tub, significant origin and the mature then add soda and borax, mix, product. The Christian believer then add remaining four gallons can afford to wait until the seed is water, stir, and then put in also- grown. L•oi. Let stand an hour or two be- Greater than the herbs --It tow - It re using. Use with hair brush, ers above the pulse, parsley. and scrub place about a yard square at taint ("ten feet high, drawn up a time. Take sponge. dipping in amongst brushes, and not thicker oicar water, squeezing out as dry than whip cord" ; "as tall as the as possible, and wipe surface of car- horse and his rider"). so that, to pet or rug. Don't walk on the car - let or rug while wet. THE SEWING ROOM. all intents, it has the appearance of a tree. The birds . . . come and lodge -- An Old Testament expression for \\'hcu sewing with silk thread ai_ the spread of a great kingdom, giv- eauys use a new machine needle, as ing .4. shelter to many application 31. o6f a blunt one causes the silk to draw Dan. r 9e8). The application of c r pucker. the parable is self-evident. From Curtain Hint. --In making sash a period of precarious life amidst persecutions and toils, the kingdom curtains of swiss, hem both sides the width of the selvage; one turn of heaven has as become gradually enlarged world - is enough. The • will wear longer, 'tv sway till it hos become a g 3 g vide protector of the poor and op- i••on easier, and look a hundred per l.,essed, and a power that can no cent. better than with the selvage 1. ager be neglected in any of the edge. c,uncils of men. During the nine - Kitchen Aprons. -Take as ninny teenth century the number of the widths and lengths as desired of ca- adherents of Christianity increased lieu or gingham. sew together and mere than in all the preceding cen- hem both ends. Draw a tape teries of the Christian era. through one end to do around the 33 Leaven - The fermented waist ; either end can be used to de ugh, lightens it. Scientists have diaw tape through. When washed discovered that this effect is pro - take out the tape and von have tweed by tiny living organisms flat work to iron. Aprons made spread thio igh the leaven in large Cris way are made quicker than the numbers. Inasmuch as leaven gives apron with band and strings, and a disagreeable taste and odor to !sundered in half the time. the broad, yeast is now much more Padding Embroidery Work. -For (•c rnmonly used. Three measures --No significance attaches to the number. The scab eat the recognized unit of rnea- st rement especially in the case of dry substances. It was equal tc about one peck and a half. Till it was all leavened -This t•ok place by the influence of the leaven, first upon the particles near v ).ere it was hid, then, through to( se. upon all the rest. Such ncath it. ' Ise cut in small pieces, fill jars that .t sr people. g _ is the persuasive influence of The tself hip i the is rnore or Withtwee a have Lein maimed (to avoid crack floating wrkshop.Milk Wray be kept from scorching tine Christianity upon the life of tie, of those directly concerned in ing). Then pour boiling water. if the pan in which it is to be cook- !rankled. Beginning with Christ, ever it until the rhubarb is well ;ed is rinsed in cold water before the it Inas spread through the apostles, the navigation ..t the ship all those c<•vere(I. Seal immediately. # then through the early church, gra- on board are skilled engineers and milk is poured in. a number of divers are carried, so Red Beets.quarterCook beets, after To clean glass globes soak them d"ally working to transform the tones (if large, them, after in warm water and soda, add n few entire mass. The meal is the whole as soon as the veat operations ssel arrives n be rtontthe' ced bung cooked): have vinegar sea in ps of ammonia to the water, and c"ii�plex life of men, art, commerce, soiled with salt, pepper, a httrr' wash them with t sell soaked Ilan• letters, rolig'on. The Christian scene of an accident. NO TIRADE FOR HIM. "When you are grown up," queried the visitor, 'will you bo a doctor, like your father?" "Oh, dear me no! Why, I couldn't even kill a rabbit." re- plied the boy with great frank- ness. sugar, boiling hot, ready, and when re!. Rinse in clean cold water, dry disciple mut bring to bear upon beets are put in these the force of into the jars, pour:with w ta hratne spape linen, and Ito) I ing faith and hive, and ( the.r.penetrate hot vinegar over the. St that they are well covered before!flinger (nark stains on doors and them with his ideals sealing, but seal immediately, De-1ciunboard% vanish as though by en- 44. A treasure hidden in the field liciuus wncn opened. c'oanlment when lightly rubbed In the East it was net unusual with a piece of flannel dipped in for men to conceal their wealth in UNUSUAL I(1:('IPI?S. kt fossae oil. in order to take the way. because of the uncertain neay the disagreeable odor of the tet,ure of property. Often, because Subst!tite for Meat.-i'ut n can e;l, rub the door down with a of the vicissitudes of life, the of peas with a cupful of milk into cline flannel wrung out in hot wealth would remain unclaimed in The kev to success doesn't look a pan. Let it scald, not boil: them vetter. its hiding place. nr thing like a night key. ucld a tablespoonful of butter, salt To improve the color of the hands A roan found-- His corning by - and pepper to taste. arid then acid 1 red, try the following mixture: si:cer accident upon the treasure, .r can of shrimps. The entire cost Take equal parts of rosewater. Ie- without seeking at all. is true to is about 30 cents, and it makes a ti on juice and glccerine. Mix li:e. Many n ratan finds himself meal for several persons. Serve t Mese thoroughly and bottle. Rub' suddenly confronted with a noble, %u,t with toasted bread, crackers, or the hands liberally every night with, tiuth, in the Bible or out of it. and croutons. Add more milk if more this preparation. It should be is obliged to tnkc an attitude to- einvv i. desired. l, si•nken before use. ! acrd it. either of receptivity or of Tightness ace:,-: the O;i,est Sharp liver and Bacon. --A new way of ; Few people know how to bong rt fusel. i.rcparing liver and bacon is to: sheets properly upon the line. Selleth allTheman who is keen Pain, and a Utlt softy Ie Breathing. a scald the liver, peel off all outside ! Shake then( well while, stili wet, enuugli to r0cognize the unrivaled Secretion of Thick Ynlegn,, at first white, skin, place in a baking pan. lay! anu hang there with the hens to- v-orth of salvation will experience strips of bacon over each, slice, and either and the hear -edge pinned to only joy in paying the necessary belie in quite a hot over. The be- tete line. This prevents whipping pi ice. The test of sinecrity, in ev- -.,rt bastes the meat and it is the corners and lessens the wear oryone who comes face to face with !,t•cet, tender and jury. rind itand tear, while the shut will need the truth, is simply whether he is e.so dews away with span( ring the les.) pulling into shape for the iron- I willing to give all he has and is in et( ve. ink• order to make it his own. And Mexican Eggs. -Take three sweet The hest means of enconrnging solely, that which alone fully satis- grcen peppers, split lengthwise and' truthfulness in children is through fes tie longings of the human remove the cure and seeds. Fry, !netted sympathy, which tenches the heart, And fills up the whole men- sery thin slices of ham and place, child uncomplainingly to accept •lite of being, wen—units the sur - each piece on a slice of toast. On; rnt.ther's wishes as law. To win render eif all those things which do each slice of tarn pill a piece of pep-, tai• trust a mother's correction i r., t, and never can, satisfy. is r, and put a poached egg en top' sh( u1(1 never outrun her love. if a; itu.et!' that field -it is easy to of both. f child ()nee feels that the clay has :tele fo, list questions in the inter- g.vnr h_v with a lessening of the n•othr'r's love, the influence of the (nether for gond is dangerously weakened. Undue harshness is ono of those irreparable errors we are sure to regret. 411.•w £3roacflitts. THE Sii iii'_':.. a but Tater of a greenish a yellowish color corning from tIi- bion. his! tel:e3 when coughing, especially the ':rs: thing in the morning. IBronchiti• is g. uertlly the result of e cold caused by exposure to wet and inclement wrath(- and when neglected will become chron:, . • Chronic Bronchus' is one of the most neral causes of Consumption. Cure the symptom.. of Bronchitis by the use Dr. 11v.d's Norway fine Syrup +4-44 ++++ Miss Martha Pour. ♦ et. Little Paboe, Breachies + Que., writes. "laud Curet. ♦ spring 1 tees %cry• ♦ poorly, hada hart ♦ + ♦ 1 +4+ cough, rick bend - a c he, could not sleep, an•I v.zs tired all the lime. I con- sulted tr.n doctors, and both told me bad bronchitis, and advised me to give up teaching. 1 tried almost everything Lot none of the medicines gave me any relief. One of my triendr advised are to try Or. Wood's Norway I'ine Syrup. I had scarcely taken the first bottle wl.en 1 began to get better and when i had taken the fourth bottle 1 felt as well ns e'er. niy cough had left rnr and i could sleep aril." Dr. Wood's . the original fine Syrup. It is put uj, u, a . e1tow wrapper, three pins tr.s the' trade ninrk, and (lir price • jb oent�.•rg Thier ar mnm tatinnr ni "Dr. Wood's- so he sure yc.0 receitr the genuine when you ask lot it. Manufacture{ only by'fhe T. Mlt:turn Ps,, Limited, Toruutu, eke, M EATS. Boasting Meats.- 'I',tke a gallon crock, put in any kind of meat. sen- c.,n VIithout water, reser with a lis!; if the roa-t i- too large take another gallon crock and put on top. This is especially good for chicken; makes it tender. Beef Lief. To two pounds of t( unO steak n:ld to slices of bacon and grind. Soak shout ono half leaf stale bread in hot water. Drain ester off bread nod 11(111 to meat mith one small, er LATE KING'S Lt'( KY NI'MI11;8 King Edward's lucky number was nit.e. Both bis parents were born in 1'(19, he was born on the 91h, his t►u.rriage took place it, the year '6:1, which numbers added flip one as large an de- to the other stake nine ; his reign •;red. onion ru• fine. Add plenty c( minenced in 1901, he war to have of salt nn(1 pepper. A little sage leen erre nee! on the 27th, which cad also be put in if desired. Work ft),urrs added together make nice. all the above until smooth. A po• and he ens netoally crowned on the tato masher is as good as anything yth of August. end bad freely mingle. Thoend of the 49 . ' h world -As in the case of the tares, the angels are the agents of judgment. 52. Every scribe -By his use of parabolic teaching Jesus has shown how the disciples may become tea- chers and give apt instruction in the things of the kingdom. Like a householder, who takes out of his chest old things and new, so they are to present to rnen not only the old truth in the old way but both cid and new in a new way, like their Master presenting all truth through the vehicle of commonplace facts and experiences of life and nature. ENGLAND 1N EGiI'T. itevenue 20 Times as Great as When British Control Regan. 1Vhen England assumed sole con - tic! in 1882 Egypt was still bank- rupt, with a public debt of more than 8500,000,000 and an income in- sufficient to pay tho interest and l • 6 e nme Good Hope has granted licenses to! sounds its warning through the tewe r. Every lock throughout the room has been improved and made more complicated, so that various keys have to be used in the opening. The iron lined doors have been streng- thened and additional electric lights have' been installed. A scheme for constructing a trap in the stone flooring of the jewel ream, through which the regalia lied precious stones could if neces- sary be lowered into the dungeon beneath the Wakefield tower, was found to be impracticable owing to the condition of the underground cell itself. This dungeon is beneath the level of the river and is very damp. Nothing has been housed in it since the Middle Ages, when prisoners languished in the tower. BETTER DIVING APPARATUS. 1/tiring the last few years, how- ever, groat strides have been made Troubled With Constipation For Years. Any irregularity of the bowels is al- ways dangerous to your health and should he correc:cd at once for if this is not done constipation and all sorts of diseases are liable to attack you. Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills curd Con. stipation and all Stomach, Liver and Bowel complaints. Mr. Henry Pearce, 49 Standish Ave.. Owen Sound, Ont., writes:-" Having been troubled for years with constipation, and trying various so-called remedies which did me no good whatever, I was persuaded to try Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills. I have found them most bene- ficial; they are, indeed, s splendid pill, and I can heartily recommend them to all those who suffer from constipation." •Price 25 cents $ vial or 5 for 11.00 at all dealers, or sent direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited. Toronto. Oat. which the company desires to cont- inence business with, is needed'to in perfecting diving apparatus, and collect untold treasure from the it is now practicable to work at a depths of Father Neptune's realm. much greater depth than was here- tofore possible. At the samo time CROWN JEWELS PROTECTED. the introduction of the powerful Iriiproventents Is the Strong Roos in Tower of London. The alterations in the strong room in the Wakefield tower of the Tower of London aro nearly com- plete, and when the jewel room is reopened, visitors will find a great change in the structure and inter- nal fitting. A fresh stone flooring has been laid and a new steel grid has been built to enclose the plate glass showcase containing the re - The bars of this grid are of tem- Wpc-red steel, placed closer together 821,O, in locating thirty-two of j than the bare of the old case. A t! em. Of these ho has actually! hidden electric alarm of the latest surveyed sixteen and recovered typo has been connected with the surface property from four of them. new grid, so that if a bar b e Tho government of the Cape of rvrenche(I •even sli htly a on centrifugal pumps now available renders it possible to remove largo euantities of sand in a very short time. An experienced mariner, Captain Gardiner, is to superintend the op- erations on the wrecks. Evidently Hey are plentiful down south, for it is stated that after an exhaus- tive search in the archives of Cape Colony the captain selected no fewer than 137 of the more valu- able and accessible wrecks and succeeded during the course of sev- en years, a an expenditure dittore of carry on the not r n work these. vessels, subject to a The public revenue in 1882 royalty of 15 per cent. of the value amounted to $4,500,000 ; in 1907 to of property recovered. $•1,500,000, more than $10,000,000 In his report Captain Gardiner says: i,t excess of the expenditures. On Jnnuary 1, 1908, the sum of $45,- 000,000 was in the general reserve WRECKS WORTH MILLIONS. fund and the public debt was re- "Although I have been able to (luted in 1909 by $1,600,000; it now ascertain the whereabouts and is $179,000,000. values of thirty-two wrecks, exhi- The cities and towns were with- biting assets representing a sum out any drainage or sewerage, says c•tceeding 830,000,000, I should The World To -Day. Only within mention that 1 ani in a position to tea years even Cairo itself, with a 1: tate other wrecks, many of which death rato of forty-six per one oder to the recovcrer prizes whose thousand, has undertaken any such worth should figure at hundred of public work. In the country every thousands of pounds sterling. canal was polluted and stagnant "I will not enter upon a detailed nuts of fifth were near every vil- statement concerning the thirty - lege. tyro wrecks to which I refer, but The annual pilgrimages to Mee- will confine myself to making men - .a were likewise the means of intro- tion of four. Boeing many diseases. Cholera and "No. 1 Wreck -It is recorded and • l ' of frequent b report from the MCSI(' AND ('RIME. occurrence, and their ravages car- captain of this ship to directors of -_ ries. off thousands and thousands of the East India Company that her french Socialist .ldvoeates Inslruc• the population. cargo embraced, among other tion fn the stets. Little by little the various dal- things, 720 bars of gold, 1,900 bars) culties of the situation have been of silver, nine boxes of precious Marcel Sembat, a French Social- of and solved by the adminis• stones and specie, the reputed ag-. ist Deputy, is developing the thesis tuition, until now Egypt may be gregate value of which is calculat_ that society ought to make use of considered a reasonably healthy c(i to exceed 85,000,000. The assets music, which, the poet. says, has country. Of course vast sums of abode' be recovered with great fa- charms to soothe the savage breast, money have been required to ef- cility and with less difficulty than fcr the prevention of crime through feet such a result.f'om must of the other submerged its influence upon human character At first enormous difficulty was cresols. 111 process of formation. et countered by the English in mak- "She lies in from three and n halt "I firmly believe," lie declares, ing changes in the system of taxa- to four and a half fathoms of water. "that instruction in art. and in t.on. because the people. so long The hull is intact and thus her con- music particularly, would turn aceustomcd to the betrayal of their tents aro easily available. Modern ir,any young persons, especially it'terests, thought the plans pro- centrifugal pumps would extract those of the laboring class, from the poi ed were simply for the purpose the whole of the sand contained est! way that )rads to the wine - of int .casing their burdens. I.ittle within her in from ono to two slop and too often to prison. by little, however they learned that months. 'rhe total "ost of salvage "The alternative of ~litre or another ern had opened, mast final- sl,t uld not exceed 8:15.000. le their suspicions were calmed. "No 2 Wreck --This vessel is in a They Then began to work with re good salving position. Her con- newcd energy. and now, secure in torts, according to evidence of a the fruits of their labor, they are (,oro ighly reliable nature, were re t merely improving their own valued at 81,000.000. 1 estimate cc nditinns, but are building up the that the greater part of the specie reputation of their country. cc uld be recovered in six months at a maximum cost of $35,000. MIGHT WIN $3,300,000. 1' THE WAY TO GO. "He was driven to his grave!" "Sure he was. Did you expect hien to walk there?" Had W eak Back. Would Often Lie in Bed For Days, Scarcely Able To Torn Herself. Mrs. Arch. Sehnarr, Blare Point. N.11., writes:- -" Par years 1 was troubled with weak back. Oftentimes 1 have lain in bed for days, being scarcely able to turn p, et 111• n of rt parable. Here, for myself, and 1 have also been n great example, one may ask : "('nn one sufferer while trying to perform my pr rclua-e membership in the henv- 11 et.lkingdom: Was it right for the nine to hide the treasure before go- ing to buy the field " No parable is to be interpreted to the rem'tt- est detail. Certainly, salvation is eel a ceminercinl commodity, and if the man's conduct seems like household duties. 1 sad doctors attend- ing mo without avail and tried liniments and plasters, but nothing seemed to do me any gnarl. 1 was about to give up in d,esp.ur when my husband induced the to try 1)osn's Kidney Pills, and after wing two boxes 1 am now well and able to do my work. 1 am positive Doan's Kidney Pills are all that you claim for them. and would advise all kidney suffitrrs to give shrewd practice, it is only on the then a fair trial." frit:ges of the story. The essential ROAN'S KiDNE:Y i'Ii,IA; ares purely thing is, that he was eager to net vegetable medicine. realising quick. per- towand that treasure ns any man ntaneut relief, w•ithu,it any alter ill rffrcls, I, •c8ted and surveye.I, as I Faye ought In act in the presence of A tnediciuo that will 1Kidney a ruse It'.ck- twv It a others. iicaicdes thwa• cix- s0nr and ell farina 01 Kidney and Kidder t great '.piritual opportunity lin joy'- l)iw er. ., t( 01 wrecks. the contents i.f whit+ felly parted with what was of small Pnce, ri0 «nt.• per her. or 3 fpr :1..5, 1 have a,eertnined. sixteen further neeeli 11 in or(Ier to become owner at all dealers or The T Milburn Co., I.itn- wrecks remain, all ..1 vhii-h 1 have of what cnniparatively way of in- iced, Tnrnntu. tent. l.,r„ted, but. not. yet purveyed. 1W "No. 3 reck---The worth of the contents o1 this vessel represents a value of more than S:{,500,000 in specie. She lies in twelve fathoms of water, on an 000811 bed cover- ed by kelp. I run certain that with .t few expert divers and good, up - t • date plant, the greater portion c•uld be recovered at a cost of )360, - (loo in a period of six months, as there is no sand te. extract from the ship. "No. 4 Wreck --This vessel is in a similar position to the one stated above. She is in five tnthonet of writer and is filled with send. From the investigation of authorized re- cords i have ascertained she was ce►rying X1,000,000 in specie when lest ; her bell and Fye other nr- tieles, easily accessible, were recov- et(d. She ttotild have to he worked in a similar way to No. 1. I esti- mate that in ordinary weather the exl,onse of rec•o'rry would b0 tinder *:,•10,000. The time occupied in this operation should not be over six r,u.ntbus. "The above four wrecks I have vice is presented at a certain ago Lr fore each of us. Temptation to crime is chiefly the desire to pos- scrs the means of pleasing the op- posite sex. The cultivation of meals or other arts will produce le- gitimate opportunities for the healthful association of young men nr,o young women and will afford the needed relief front daily toil, while giving to it a zest which is now lacking, once will tend to arrest the rapid growth of that class which i, the fruit, cf a disensed and un- rntrrally restricted civilization — the Apaches." Could Not Sleep In' The Dark. ? Dootor Saidcart and Nerves Wore Responsible. There is many a man Led woman toss- ing night after night upon a sleepless bed. Their eyes do not close in the sweet and refreshing repose that comes to those whose heart and nerves are right. Soma eonstitutional disturbance, worry or disease has so debiiitgted and irntated the nervous system, that it cannot be quieted. Mrs. Calvin Stark, RossmoreOnt., writes --" About two years sgo if began to be troubled with • smothering sensa- tion at night, when 1 would lie down. 1 got so bad 1 could not steep 1a the dark, and would bare to sit up and rub my limbs, they would become ce numb. My d,v'tnr st,id my heart and nerves were responsible. I saw Milburn's Ileart and Nerve yells advertised and got a box to try them. 1 took three boxes and cam now lie down and sleep without the light burning and ran rest well 1 can recom- mend them hij4hly to all nervous and run ,town women.' Price 50 cents per boa et 3 for $1.2A at all ,le,alen. of 1 ailed d':eet on receipt of pare, by the T Milburn Co., Limited. finite account. la ordering speedy 'Doaas." 1 Thus, only a matter of $399,000,+ Toronto. Qat