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Exeter Times, 1904-4-14, Page 3N THE GLAD SPRINGTIME Like the Birds, We Should 13ecorne Gods Singing Disciples. 4 KE'tlercU acvordleg to Act of the oar- u7ne74 le-Cit141:14suirreel" air rousil? by Win. Batty, of 'Toronto, et tee •Department a ogriceiture. °tome,: A despatch trom Los Angeles, Cal., 'revs; Rev. Frank De Witt Talmage lireaehed from the following text: 'Solomon's Song ii,, 12, "The time -of the singing of the birds is come." "Do you know what neekes the isnow-lionks disappear to the spring- time?" asked a man of poetic temp- orament. "Why, es,” 1 answereth is due to the heat 01 the sun being so much stronger Dow than it is in January. It is doe to the fact -that, contact tho earth i$ being warmed at the sun's fireside, oven as one side of a piece of bread is toasted by being exposed to the kitchen stove's heat while the other side or that piece of breed remains unscorched." "Oh, no," answered my poetie Mead, "The snow disappears not on account of the sun's rays; but beeeeree the flames glowing among the foathers of the red hreasted robins bave meiteO them. thee(' yon not noticed, o.s a rule, the enewflakes never entire'," disappeer uotil those harbingers of the slimmer flowers have stomped them out of exietence? LTKE TUE SONO num, First, like the soeg bird. God bids lig sing because he has given to us musical throats with which to sing. ,.As the brown thrush or the redbird or the nightingale is able to lift his voice ie treble, or faestaeia or lullaby or eantraa or serenade, Cod, by ants- tomieol. construction of the throat, has made it possiblo for us to sound forth musical notes in his mime. He has not disconnected our windpipes from the great bellows of the lungs. 137e has not had us born with polsied tongue. or with deaf ears, But as Gad has placed in the larynx of every flinging bird's throat o thin mem- brane, so he 'has stretched over the veil of almost every human behres windpipe o fibrous, elastic tissue whielt will Vibrate as we attempt to sing or speak. Wo ought, ono and all, to be grateful thot God has giv- e% to vs anetomitally a musical throat with which we can eing his praises. Thank Clod to -day for the power of the speaking throat. We aro all ready to acknowledge our indebtedness to him for the blessings tho eyeif you are not, then read thet wouderful story written by tho most famous a living English matters. Tho book opens With a do- eeription of a -noted wor Artist who is growing blind. Frenziedly ho works at his last erawaS, then the h clerk cloud of total otiseuration falls epon hini. Ills friends hove him ono •her one for the Egyntian war, Ile sits in his room alone, an object of pity, until at last, crazed by barrel., he starts for the front and is there mercifully shot by an Arab's bullet. Sight! Oh. yes, with every glorious sunriso, with every architecture of frost upon wiodow pane, with every rnasterrilece of autumn foliage, with every wall: over country hill • or through city street, We are all ready to say: "Thank God for two eyes! Thank Coe for the windows of the rownn OF THE HUMAN VOICE. Not only for visual, but for audi- tory organs are we also thankful. the soundleg board of one of our ear- drums is in any way deadened we guard tho other ear more carefully than wo do our jewel boxes or our securities, which we place in the saf- ete vaults. We never let our well ear become ovorheated by stove or regis- ter. We never in a railroad train /et the draft blow mien it through open- ed windows, At the least sign of dis- turbance then away we rush to -the specialist to have it treated and car- ed for by the best of aurists. Ah, yes, we all appreciate the blessings of the ear. But how many of us ap- preciate the blessings oi the voice? How many of us have in tho past thanked Ged that we ce,n sing his praises as tho birds can change every tree branch into a choir loft in the temple of the woods? How many of us are ready to thank God for this wonderful instrument ot 'human voice, which can laugh out our joys and sob out our sorrows and make inert know the thoughts that are lodging for awhile under the dollies of our fore- hands and the loves that aro billing root cooing in the silent, retreats of Dor hearts? GOD BIDS US SING. Like the song birds, God bids us sing because he has given to us an open heavers in which to sing. It, ie one thing to have a voice with which to sing, but it is just as essential to have a soitoble place in which you can sing, It is one thing te Lave a mosicel throat like the song thrush, in which all the siren spirits of the hills and valleys can find inelodious expression. but it is another thing to have the beoutiful Voice of the yellew tipped eariarY hushed into perpetual silence by beteg deiniciled n e, dark room or in o dwageon. If a singing bird were compelled to lwe in a ground mole's turasel, or to work like the motile with their 11101411s wrapped up with woolen garments, he would be as dunib as they, Thank Gocl, then, for your roileicel threat sod far your opportenitle4 for esiog it, David Glasgow Parragut, ono of the most resplendent charac- ters in naval history, was born July 6, 1801. With the exception of an engagement in which he participated as a mere boy at thirteeu, Varragut never smeller' gunpowder in actual battle until he was sixty-one years of age. For nearly fifty long years he walkecl the ship's decie M tinieS of peace, lfad be beers retired at, siNty years of age from the service. Ameri- can history would have had one ot as brigliteet lights snuffed out be - it had any opportunity to shine. John Milton, in 'some respectS,Is the greatest name in English Mesa - tore. Yet old, blind and neglected by hie people, he bad to write for prosperity because the men of his own times and generation would not. listen to his poetic song, Edmund Burke, one of the greatest of the English statesmen of his time, most, of his lite was Oractically a states- man without an ()free, or, if in office, one who held a, very subordinitto place. $o little was lm honored by his parliamentary colleagues that it was once said, "No mon could empty the house of commons so quickly as when Ftimund Burke arose to Speak." CHOOSE A :MIGHTY Timm. What is true of palating and sculp- ture is also truo ofanusie. Beethoven and Wagner and Meodelssolut and Handel did not employ their genius in a street ditty. Thoy trained their ears to caech the voices ot the winds which an only be heard upon the heights of Mount Olympus, Thoy called their oratories bythe mighty names of "The Messiah,, "The De- luge,'' "The Prodigal Son," '`The Light of the Wo eld," S a mso n," "Saul," "Esther," "Joshua" "Eli- jah" and. 'Paul," • OI eph thah," reel in Egypt," "rho Creation," "The 'Woman of Samaria," So our singing birds in their oratorios have glorious themes to thg about. Their sang is the resurrection. Thoy sing of the burstingseeds and the in- cense of swinging flowers. They sing of the winter which 18 gone and tho harvests which are to come. They sing of the sheep which are mrowing the wool that the little c'cleildren may hove warm clothing to defy the December blasts and of the sap giving life to the trees that the great logs may be rolled into the old fashioned fireplaces around which the families can gather about. its glow and learn the lessons of love. They sing of the open har- bors and tho king's ships going to Toeshish to come baelc laden with gold, and silvor and ivories anti the wealth of foreign climes. They sing of our earth's resurrection, which Is emblematic of a heavenly glory. Oln nor frit:et:1e, like the. song birds in the springtime, will you not choose a mighty theme to inspire and -uplift your life's music? CHORUS OE' THE WOODS. Again, God bids us, like the song birds, sing because he does not 0X - poet us to be soloists, but to toho an essential part in a great life's chorus, he true.beauty of the song birO's Singing is that be car- rtea part and not a whole day's solitary musical recitation. Like tbo piccolo, or the elaidnot, his voice may be Shrill, or like the flute, soft and sweet, or like the bass viol, loud and deoP; but whether soft or loud, his voice has a port, an essen- tial part., in the chorus of tile woods TNTERnTA'TIONA.T. LESSOR, the upper chamber, to await the ;deceit them, but it is probable that coming of the Holy Ghost. They lin the the glory one shall know another i i are more willing to go into e by- without any introductioo, and we ways and hedges and cerry the goo- may see o new meaning in the words, pel to the blind, the deaf, the omen snail 1 mow even as also 1 dumb, the crippled and the poor, if am known" (1, cor, .xiii,, 12), ig they go forth as Christ sent bie dis- the atoning sacrifice of Christ Wa.S tO Oh, my brother and sister., in God's great chorus of redemptiou, Ion you important a theme, how ran anything else be more inlportant to Vs? not sing shiinvgiidaontlesintsoPils.eingyoauleson?eigh,4Trirt: 1..)t'el.., overcome t-)ty, wthd'.1--' he IStS7.:. In Ohrist'e riaute. Sine' as the song ' 1. ... —1, arid not enowine Nora, to say, s 15 oiogo sing. oing. as the psalmist' gested that they ma se taeonnat. cs bids us sing. "Lot everything that bath breath praise the Lord," Sing!' Sing! Triumphantly avid. everlasting - chiles, two by two, and not alone. Moses ad Elijah and COrist seettli and worethero, nod so we, too, would fain abide at some conference or convootion or in some happy frame ly sing. Sing, fur the time of the of mind crit Some mounter:1 top of singing of all Christians as Well as spiritual. experience. Dot the leiog- of birds him come. dom is not yet, and there are many on the lower levee of the world, op- pressed by the devil, and iew even among. the disciples soem able to THT. s s 1E0 or bring relief became, there is So Little 4, L.,' ourocr and fasting (Nero. 29), so lit. tie whole heartednees for God, se hittie 'value .P9 emingly at t gibed to the precious blood, wbiele alone can cleaner, from all eio, As Peter spoke, a cloud overshadow. ed tiono, and v. voice from tho cloud 1los xriy be)OVed on, 18 The lesson seems to fellow ira- whom. I am well, pleased; hear •yet media-tely upon the last in the re- iliins" (Matt. xvii. Z. This is still If you would know how esseotiol sweetness of the woods nest go with Text of the AL7ss101:1,171: the bird's voices are for the musical*Inric in -on me sonic day up among the forest covered bine, As we tramp on and the twigs snap under our feet and our voices are tossed in echo from tree to treo the birds scurry away gule.r order of events oral, like the Cod's word to each of us, and there r sileotly bine behind their cortain last is recorded both by nfattbew is no way by which we ean ntear, of leaves. They net a good deal ne arid Luke. The first NreM' of this Ing to God except through fefinS- do the village children when cite- chaPter should certainly be included !Christ, nod no other way by which people aro riding through the court- in our lesson, AS it is tno toy to the we Can lla.V0 fellowellip with Clod try. They run into the house or lesson, and the transfiguration is the Nihon we hear the words of Christ barn and keep very quiet. But if unfolding end fulfillment of His sahh' we hear the words of God the Path - yeti pay to attention to those child- big ill Unit "r5e* 71.1(* /11Vt, that er, for the Vether told Hint whet ren they will begin to Peek out of each of the evangelints vecvrwi lite 4o say (John Nil., 45, xlr. 10h, 'the windows or behind the ',need transfigurotion Immediately after end oten we have earfor „ipso house, and then they will gradually that Paying coricerning the Kingdom chriet we \Au certainly how nowt come out and WUtell You as you chis. of "4 is S415eielit eNiaelle"liat tor any who dishonor Mtn or Ills Openr down the road. ;Oath is the they so understood it. Peter also, word. And now hero in a great word way the feothered musicians of the speaking of this event, <mile it "the for Qur hNirts. 4/Thoy bam no man power and coming of our Lord Jeetis mere oaeo Jesus only with thero.. forest oct, When you first enter the woods and call to them to sing Christ" (1.I. Pet. 1, le, 1.8), leelves.- It reminds us of other hthuety1iwyillotkiqleiPe 8cisos5vinleloitt. 1.thetlIfetiogt1;avoei rwalTegn7e(IIItebresea,;%elcrto-WelliQwith Ilimfe :alrarld18bsolleciln“Tttte's, e: .7,1.114e50L(rld, * ilebold the Lord." "The •vi fib bird thseuvone were orivile 1.3. Golden Tex , tOrne, giant Oak and pretend you are daughter, and afterward, in Ills :maw, astecti cl mane sow e ngOny e g will then begin their scerniogly end- ed on this .0eell.si011 to 1-c. eyewit- less chortle, First there will he a noises of His majesty. Why these twitter, then no answering call, then three instead of the others cord why a duet, then e third voice will break John should come nearer than in and metre tho trio. Then off in James or Peter we may not perhaps the distance a woodpecker will heat know1 but we do know that few time, like the drumstick tapping ap- seem, wiling; to be Me choice ones, on the sheeeskin. Then a, groat His Nonarites, altb( in ro- wel/a et narmony, like Model's Idemption, it seems to he for -wit "halleluiah Chorus," will roll over you. Then sudden silence. Again the =sic will start, and a now con- cert will he masterfully rendered, each bird's voice not numh in itself, .s. of the t wood's choru but eech an essential p INSPIRAnnION. It Is wonderful to realize how quickly a musiesil .conduotor knows ohm any of his musicions are not doing as they ought to do, toree I.ord ellen bo MI -1g over all tis' 'earth; in that day there shall bo ono ILord. and Ifni name one" (Ise. .11, 1.7, 22; iii., 1; Zech. xiv., 9). Wo may anticipate in our doily lif and xperienee the Itingdont 'when holl lie all in nil, but it must be by finding in Christ now our all in all awl by seeing no ono but Jes- us only (I. Cor. ono. 28: Col. la.. II). If they had simply believed his word, they need not 'woe questioned what Ilo 'meant by IIis rishig from tho dead, for had they not just looted upon a representa.tive of those who 11(1 rise frran the ()lad and also soever will," The old. qinooton , stonds, "Who, then, is willing ?" (I. Chron, xxix, Luke says that he went up into momttain to pray, and as Ile prayed the lesbian of his countenance waS altered. and His raisneut was White and .glistering, Our , lesson says "shining, exceeding whits as snow." and Matthew ears. white as the light" and that his face did shine as tho sun. Somewhat thus He peered to Daniel loog before Ile read of a great ore,hostra of hone came in the flesh and soapy years gderethd.esr. o1' nguill'stihnad st; amiteser ascension to Jobe, in rat, (Dan. x. 6; Rev. 1. tee. Tile, doing his . the sounds' rose miracle was not so much that He 4" tellIik 1°Ic°s InueY wetel.S• was thua transfigtired, but rather ODA such glory could thus be veiled those thirty-three years in. mortol body. What an inspiration to loot forward to the time ether' these toward the. silent malt and said, bodies in which we now live shall be pTrit4oci titlittlYplot1;.onpaorevoaun heosts;u'ItOtell inunortal, .theorruptible, faShioned like uote His glorious body; when Play." So, in the great Musical the righteens shall Mane forth as chorus for the salvetion of the • the sun . the kingdom of their world, God -bids us each to t,ing mid Pother, ! (Phil. iii, 21; Matt. xiii, take our part, as eath- bird of tho 43.) The transfigure t ion took woods has his singing part. Sing ! place on reisigh mountain apart by Sing ! To -day in Christ's Immo `sing, .themselves, and so we must have om• seasons apart with lIon in prayer if WO WOUld see and know anything of Nis glory. Our Lord always lived in the reali- ties of the unstion. God the Fother, the holy angels, the redeemed from the earth wore all more real to Him than the people and things which our natural .eyes see, and now here are two men, 1110vos and ;Elijah, who had been absent troth the earth at least 1,415) and 8111) ;:eats t esportive. ly, and they aro alive and web and talking with Jesus of that most im- portant : of all eveitts up to that sioging Christ's songs, will inspire time, "His decrease which Be should other men and women to sing them. accomplish at Jerusalem" (Luke ix, Mon and women pray better and of- Mh Although the disciples w°ra tener if they pray together. : They honv3." With sleep, they kept awake love God mare and are More willing and Sall, Ws glory aod the two Men that stood with Itino We are not told hoer they recognised MOsw:; and Elijah Mir , if the Lord Jesus intro - the piccolo playor thought he woula stop and see. if the leader would 1111184* No sooner did be stop than the, leader notated, his baton as the song birds lit tha springtime. Sieg your part in the "Song al Moses and. the Lamb." Lilco the einging birds, Wo should not only sing because eve have an essential part in God's great chorus, but hecaUse eoch song bird inspires other song Weds to sing. A little canary in a room alone may not care to warble. Mot it is different when two or three birdcages am hanging in windows through -which the sun is shining. Then one bird's note will inspire the other birds. One bird's song will make tho other birds sing. So Men and women, to make sacrifices for the Master, if they love and servo him in groups, as the little company gathered in ot hose who shall be changed with- out dying? May Wt.* 5f.T Jesus only arid simply believe ide every word, go O woe get tip with t bed withoat one. Clean Ivory. --When ivory all viand over the iirei while 6tor- ,k O el a bel. Fog 10/11E 9 Rileyc8lipennoo, faorjrd ti(),2tOtill‘rlighonton4. 9 tor tho llousaceoper, 9 0441601.r0000741a5+PPAOP4r•I'SVG0 -DOMESTIC IlECI.M.S. horseradish rather thin. Dry in the powdered IIorseradish,.--Slice the it end store ire: a bottle for uso. If a rte r oven till thormighly dry, then pound the horeeradish is thoroughly dried T it will keep a long while. Little Adiver For a Stareh Volish.---:e a good ick. $olutfors with gum arable. Add toblespoonful of this to the hot starch. If celd starch is required, dissolve a tablespoonful of gum in one pint of water, and use it when cold for mixing the starch, Per Leinoo lions. --Tote one pound dour, two tablespoonfuls of bak- ing powder, six ounces of butter and lard, toe grated rind arid juice of no herioo. and six ounces of' caster %War. Hub the butter into the flour, add the otSer ingredients. Mix int() small bons, and bake in a onick 01 eft for a quarter of aohour. Vor _Nein Bough Creke.—Get tw ovuods of bread or roll dough from baker; keep it wrapped up Our - its transit, as cold would make _IT. Put the dough into a ann knead, itito it four ounce itter or good clarified dripping maces of sugar, a gill of worm end flavor the wirolo with car. s, spice, or Currants as pre- . Put the dough iato a Doo- ollto •an in a WW1= place to then bake in a moderate oven out and servo on a Sieve. k. and ICidney Pudding:4,Mo ed basin witli eica light suet list; t two pounds of shin et eel or enisteek into thick, oquare ' the shin and white 1 eloele::k!euallsipxoonf 1, sliorlslat.onf nildeplItehre, of a pound of beef are quantity flour. Dip each of Ineat intP this, put as light - 7 as poosiblo in the basin, .fill op with water. Cover with suet. crust alter wetting the edges. Tie ovor with a floured eloth, and boil fo ft hours. rather turn the puddin aut hole on a or send it ta tzzble with a serviette folded round he basin. Oyster rattles.—Fit `line Small patty Imns w goed paste. ettoop a little round in 11 !middle and 1./at:0 in a shorn ove l'1llasth o. doren tarooystera. move the beards and not the =SC part, and lay in cold notter to keep their color. Meit ono ounce and a half of butter and fry a ebopped. 7, shallot, add a small totispoonful of lark tIlone. ditto curry powder, and ligttor front Om oysters. Cayenne and ;lemon juice to taSte. When this. is I• 1 ' • i:t;e:Il :I :e::1)11. Yaieti:1011 al 5:itivn iNfif1:1 irIllvela tl‘iL;‘• le:* ,,t, :‘ .:).1:i rant III ttll Ill', 1 ):117:11:1 m 4-1:: SUsi Int. l'i btlintfeilirca;:etek:rratrsilQ:eta:ICtigl:t41111111:t01ttp°;r110'iMaCe: tiolulli-lt:10t1:11.1t gt iiilltIne. With, 1 his treatment it will in e. 1 middle of tho patty. scrape out the (sIziolitt Z1114431° blie"btuilincInl!rt'aluiti%ifullnlitlivnigtiet. !ts,1(:(1,t oPy4sTe'ralilndixtlluire.tbc' eP4tuvtit:.o.11 wtilithe tirilnie.o titer oontain ng e ( et lime, and letting it stny short To Remove 011 and Greitee from Carpets.—Wium oil is spilled on a carpet, put plenty of white dour an the spots as (plichlY as possible in order to prevent thorn (corn soreed- ing. lf the oil is near a seam, but. does not quite rorieh it, rip the seam, in order to stop it. Put flour on floor under tho oil pont, 'rho ooxt day take up all tile flour from the enrpet and floor with a dust -pan and a very Aire earpet-brush. null pet on fresn flour, using; plenty of it. It will not be necessary to do it a third time. To tako out grease spots, rub them with a piece of white flantel dipped in spirits of tur- pentine; and, if thoy again. become visible, rub the spots on both eidee of the carpet when it is taken up and shaken. If there are all or grease spots on the floor, they should be covered with thick paper before the carpet is again hid down. Scouring not entirely remove them. LEVIATI-1- AN fl&H11t4-6 1�T' loiteBAMOtLJ14 e!tc uriED CA;05a AVOW* OF THE OCEAN. -t; SEAR Pon. 0.3 SlekRcrt "GIT •'Atgri-buRED eik • TowE.R Pon. W5tC11 COFFICERS ,AR sea se Tioeteceioustee. • AcTioin z noR,Ort tlivAtIOtti TOWnoft, nnoto toisiett MT TORFEDOCS coonr.rno..Arto FIRED 42.P I.E4t) ron.ARMOUg. BELT .Y•••Noi er-t tiaHTlai PfeeeelLYA i,/140.4Cht.P1Z-t?j tee p_kpon Acja.oht Wit1611414==031=2,4=0[026.- 41,,,Not,ti AFTER EAR BETTE!, O'n*Ork it.i,N Azrolt, (34F, WO Rit IN 6 00,1 ..„,, 44ititiipifflsft sp. iA..S rpr WAtEjapove , ow.,te-R-Ltvi a :6F ..4 RelouR aeL • F 0 RE •13,-ARBE.11:7,e. In FOR iT:it60td ,•:,notttiltill 1)1, A cectional ToininnnO ntliP Aft troAAin 'PROPn. 3 innortioto BME,R6pEzP ToOenCto WAWA " Pee inte t • e w of the interior of the Japancao Oat • „etc- • ifteeittlaitithottettod,t battleship Hatseee, showier; the working of the ship and the disp0sition af the men during an _engagemene.—Irtom the London Dafiy Mail. op And.' servo.. . IGood Pea, :Soup—Soak half ri. plat of .split peas in soft looter for twen- ty-four hours, and then drain, Put „ on in three pints or wotor, and boll f, for two hours. Remove all scum. !have ready, Prepnred ond cut into ;small pieces, the following vegeta- Ones : .Two large onioos, one :carrot, ktono turnip, ono small head of celery, eys') sprigs of parsleo; add these to 1 he soup with a teaspoonfnl of salt, 'half a teaspoonful of sugar, a quer- 4eer of a teaspoonful of pepper, and 7080 ounce fif butter or beef dripping. Boil- till the peas Ore (pate tender, !stirring occasionally: this Will pro- bably he in about three hours. Press all the soap, and its various ingre clients through a sieve, return to the sauce -pais and sdir till it boils up thoroughly. Hand- powdered dry mint and fried croutons of bread with, this soup, or if Hired substitute grated ' ParmeSita cheese for . the zuint, rsErm mN-rs. Sufferers frora Asthma and Won, - dais shotati tak o teaspoonful of this remedy - three times a day, or one dose at 'night will greatly re- Wireezing and irritation : One tablespoonful of ipeciscuanha, wine, two tablespoonfuls of honey, two tablespoonfuls of lemon juice, First melt the honey, then add the other ingredients. Sufferers - 'from Chilblains should try this remedy : Get some potatoes with the jackets on, boil them with- out Oooling, and bathe the •OhilblaIns with the water, as hot as it Can bo borne, night and morning,and they will soon ho cured. There is aP, Parcutly great value in the skin of the potato. STRONG AND VIGOROUS. Every Organ of tho Body Toned tip and invigorated by 11 r signatu See FS mite Wrepoer Be „ "tres7 seas= teas as telis7 to rake so sugar. FOR REAUSars CARTERS FOR Dingus. 1111130$RESts TORri0 LIVEN! IF411 1194STIPATIM Oft IALOW VON' Foa ricomnuicx liZADA HE, TROOP 004 LINIKENT rOR Sinitt.t, Cuts, 'CV:Q=4s, 1.11c.ers. Open r Bruimr Stiff Joints, 13itcs and Stings of 51 Cougtz, Co14s, Contracted Cords,. RIetstrtatiwn, Neuralgia, Btonclaitis, Croup, Sore Throat, Quiruzy,, WhoofInz laugh anci alt Painful Swalices. RGE 730TTI4E. Z3o4. Burdock Blood Bitters holds a Fatima =rivallen by any other blood, medicine as a cure for DYSPEPSIA:, BILIOUSNESS, CONSTIPATION, READACIIE, SALT WIXOM, SCROFULA, HEARTBURN, SOUR STOMACH, DIZZINESS, DROPSY, RHEUMATISM, BOILS, PIMPLES, RINGWORM, or any disease arising from a disordered state of the Stomach, Liver, Bowels or Blood. When you require a good blood medicine got. BURDOCIE BLOOD BITTERS. Mr. P. W. Mayers, Kiev St. E., Berlin, , Ont, says: "I suffered for Ave years , with 9alpitation, shortness of breath, sleeplessness and pain in the heart, but dim box of Milburn7s Heart and Nerve PillS completely renewed all these dis- tressing symptoms, I have not suffered since taking them, and now sleep well and feel strong and vigorous." Milburn's fieart and Nerve Pills curs all diseases arising from weak heart, worn out nerve tissue*0 wonmt bison. Lame ack for Four Months. Was Unable to Turn in Bed Without Help. Plasters and Liniments No Good. rills was the experience of Mr. Bentanaltil Stewart, Zionvilbe, N.E. TWO-THIRDS OF A DOX or Kidney CURED He tells of his experience in Ole follow. Prig words; ''F'or four months I was troubled .with a lame back and all this time was un. able to turn in bed without help. I tried plas1 ors and runt -nen t of all kinis but will) no effect. At laq I was induced to try Doan's Kidney Pills, and by the time I had used two-thirds of a box iry, back was at well and as strong as ever and has kepf so ever since." Baeleeteke, Frequent Thirst, Scanty, Gloudy,Thie or Highly Colored Urine, Pufnrig under the Eyes, Swelling Oi the Feet and Ankles, are all syinptoInt Of kidney trouble that Dnan's Kidney Pills will cure. Price 50 cts, per box Or 3 for $x.5, jesters/ or Teri DOAN KIDNEY PILL C