Exeter Times, 1908-04-23, Page 7•
ABSOLUTE •
SECURITYII
Cenulne
Carter's
Little Liven Pills.
Mut" Bear Signature or
!cc Fac-Slmne Wrapper Below.
Veer ass .J3 nags as wry
tie take We ataKaw
CARTERS FOROOHEADACHE.
TOA SILIOuSNEt3.
FOR TORPID LIVEN.
FOR CONSTIPATION.
PSD SALLOW SKIN.
rem roc COMPLEXION
l )hs! t!7 ►utile i+ri�r __
CURE S(CK HEADACHE.
OiL IN TILE FAR NORTH.
Keeps Oo,issu Tmrn Ground, but Its
Source Item to Find.
"17►e country that one passes front
Alhnbasca landing down Hi the Arctic
Red River is full of vegetation," says
writer in the Geographical Journal,
emel % III in in opinion one day be set-
tled. 111 all the mission gardens at the
different posts that 1 priced 1 saw wheat
and barley growing, potatoes, lettuce,
turnips, carrots. and every kind of ve-
getable that one grow in one's own
Burden at h.,rne.
"lite country is thickly limbered near
the brinks of Ihe river, and there arolcwv
place in which you do not find large
patches of prairie, You pass by a gleet
oterush of natural gas, and oil is
oozing out Inr miles= along the river
tank. An erarth movement has taken
place, resulting in a line of fault, which
14 marked for• more than one hundred
aniles along the baulk of the Athabasca
itce•r.
"Out of this nil hne ie'n geeing weds
net know for hots long, and no erne has
yet found the reservoir of oil which may
exist there. A German noble, the count
von Ilanl)ncrstin, has spent a great
e'enl of his own money and time in Iry-
1n: to find n reservoir, end I most sin-
cerely hope that he nifty be successful.
"Coal and asphalt oro 10 lie seen every
where, and there are great salt penins
rot far distant."
1 HE SIIItl\KAGE OF TIME.
`-D/eappointmenl of the Nan Who Went
Bark le His Boyhood Route.
"1 got n gmot shock last summer,'
said die man %alto has been immersed
i' bnlsinese in a distant city for thirty
yeare, "when I inade my first visit to
my boyhood horse.
"All my life since 1 eft the country
1 have looked back on those childhood
sierts with n great deal of reveiesice.
E.. 1 J Ihing onnneckd with those early
tir•Js komcd large in the mind.
"The river That flowed through my
ginndfulhcr's farm was something :nag-
),Iflc•enl, flu' house was a mansiort, the
mets grew lo extraordinary proportions,
111( garden was rrlighly roomy, the or -
:herd ens Ilse greatest ever, in fact
the whole .chemo of life tw'trs un a large,
K•r►le.
Now 1 was wont to boat' of tholes
scents to any of my friends who voted
consent to be tx•red. 'I'IKy couldn't
elsow me anything in the country line
Nit t was ready with a remark begin -
t
neer. 'Well. when t ens a bey,' and
ee sen through toast after boast.
"1 have rloppld all that now, for
when I went. back last summer 1 found
lint it was just an ordinary fer•nihoasc
011(1 the river WAS n tiny, lazy Ahearn,
and the orchard was small. and (here
WIsn t much eft et Ihe gn r 1( n. 1 wish
' been t gone beck et el'. 11 was much h
More conlforlatee
In
keep P
that t ,' 1c1
t
I
r
re
In the trend 111(1 luck afoot it
TILE SIN OF SELFISHNESS
It Is a ratal Barrier to Any Enlargement
of the Life.
"And it thou draw out thy b,oul to
toe hungry and satisfy the afflicted soul,
1)x'1 shall thy light rise 111 obscurity
and thy darkness Le as the neon day.
-Isaiah, tete., 10.
It tri the things that draw us out that
lel us up. The measure of any lite
lit the valent to which it goes out to
tte interests of other lives, the extent
1• w 1, ' h syulpalhy is cultivated end in-
t• .Les ut serveet u rendered where it
is most tweeted.
Tho difference between the wise and
the ignorant is in the range of the
knowledge, tho experience, ience, and life in-
terests which each Ls able to use. Tho
difference between Igo great hfe an.1
ie. little one is similar; the former
funds nothing foreign to him; the !alter
limiLs his ho.-i.'.Or, usually by Ii eig
wholly kr hirn.self,
1f you desire gienlne.ss only ter your
ow n sake, indeed, if you are thinking
.,t either greatness or of yourself you
never will Lind il. The lives that have
been flung away in sublime abandon,
diode that lutvo poured Ih<vusn'Ives out
in answer lo m
love's • '
e1Jx'ratite are those
That have found the full life.
Selfishness is the saddest sin, ilio
one. that scents to underly almost all
others. It blights with its first breath
rel! the heir flowering and rich fruitage
of any life that ya ids to it. 1t compels
u= to lose our legitimate prizes by
snatching greedily at all tho prizes; ft
insures pain by lending us to aeek
ONI.i' OUR OWN I'LEASURE.
Under how many guises comes this
form o1 soul suicide! One calls it cut -
tune, another ambition, another sell-
rc'pcet, yet often each dors but mean
that the life has only one end, its own
advantage, every action bol one rilo-
tiv'e, personal advantage, and consci-
cnee asks but one question, What do
1 make by this?
11 in every act, in every how• you
roc Thinking filet or only of yourself;
if you hate adopted the policy of air-
ing for "number one" as the guiding
principle m life, you may make money,
you even may make a reputation, but
there are mime other things you will
not make, some other things your
rel: ney cannot buy nor your reputation
secure. You will not make friendls; you
will not make Joy or lite or an endur-
InJj name,
se.
mM
MN
in Ill
cp+ ss •c
of life we loo
(ften think of it as wholly a matter of
business .'iii wdues.; we lock to find
stecess an 1 sari -faction by fallowing
closely the rules of bnsinees, by play -
mg the gale of life with 011 eye single
to our own glory and personal profit.
But in what way•is such a hfe, no mat-
te:' what its profit, may be, better titan
that of any galley slave chained to the
oar?
It is not the life that seeks only to
gather and rake in, it is Ihe life that ra-
diates, gives out, reaches its interests,
lhcughts and helpfulness to ever widen-
ing circles, that grows, that tincts life,
That knows its joys, that really is cul-
tured, devc:oped, educated.
'fh•s is the vital principle . I the (Inks -
bun religion, but we too oft.it havo ob-
scured it
\\'rrij Oct. SELF-SEEKING.
Hew often has religion meant simply
the passion to insuro the indivi(1ual's
soul against some dreaded punishment,
or to secure to Ilse individual some pe-
culiar' eese
or 'o'
"h'
1 c surest way
1 w
joy. Y
••, miss any such blessings Ls to seek
thee' for themselves and for ourselves
alone.
Ile who lets others into his fife en-
laegas thus his own. Ile who opens
tee doors of his heart to the needy. the
lonely, the sad, the mourning, finds
that as they bring in (heir sorlows and
Meet* tears fair (lowers of je•v •!m••ngup
about hint, the cheer ho give; th.-In be -
cion • in greater mcasite his on n, and
the love he glees away becomes his
cl.oicest possession.
The men who went about doing good,
who had no thought save for the needs
and cares of others, )s the one who,
above all others, round the full and
satisfying life. 110 who knew o well
the way of life called on no elan to
save his own soul, uttered no shrewd
precepts of self-preservation, but taught
by a life of self -giving the secret of full
living.
There is only ono way to discover
eheeler this philosophy is best or not,
try it for a while. Try thinking of the
heIplees, planning pleasures for dreary
lives, bearing some loads for weak raid
weary backs, being willing to leen your
teen life, and see whether he was not
right w•1)0 said, "Ile that loseth his life
shall land it."
iIENRY F. COPE.
THE S. S. LESSON
INTERNATIONAL LISSSON, APRII. 26.
bece(rn 1\'. lcsus Teachce Ilunlility.
Gulden Text, John 13. 34.
Tl ll LESSON
Illased 011 Ili(•
\erston.)
\t O11D eeltD)IES.
kxt of the Revised
King and Servant. -Aller spending
the subtitle, at lelhnny and at its close
attending un evening feast in his lien-
or. Jesus:, proceeded early next morn-
ing en IILs journey toward Jerusalem,
in oompnny whit his .disciples and other
festal pilgrims,. A ruiner had already
:cached the city that Ise was coating,
and tut eager, enthusiastic, multitude
hastened out along the highway to in'<'t
him. Now at lost their opporhmity to
make hits king teemed to have arrived.
And Jesus did 11(1 flee !trek' repel triter
enthusiastic
a
ac 1 it
cn but rn
lh0
rP Innn(
d
deliberately tbcrelcty to augment the dignity and
triumph et his entry into the cepitlt
city. IILs time has at hull fully ceme.
Ile /••t•)+the royal homage Winters,'
hint ly the populace, nor once forbids
ewe- . r y (f "l losni na to the Sen of
1)avr,l:' As king he enters the city,
and as king must Me hierarchy of the
nation at last accept or reject hire. In
tem. Ilu'1•efore, is the prophecy fulfilled:
"f► daughter of Jerusalem: behold, thy
letI1 e
lhunto thee; het_
peel,
end
giving salvation; lowly, and riding up•
n an iss. even upon the foal of an
n•s' 7.ech. 9 9). In chapters 13-17 of
Johns narrative ore recorded parling
word+, ed instruelion and counsel ad -
()messed by Jesus lee his disciples on the
ere c•1 his pnc•e•n. %Inc11 still remain -
(.1 to be eat(' le fleas me e, who in Il,(
near future wur to corny on in his
Mend the twee of eslrtbl shin1,• end
ht;ilding up his kingdom upon earth.
Ile must 0110054' the most important,
and Ihnt is that 111e attention and
thought c.1 his discipec be centered
(nee more neon himself. 6o
that in the nppronching beim of
firer Nom duaph-ointment. when the
lingering hole's el an earthly kingdom
were to le shalfcrel, they might still
elietese the memory of him, and cling
11.11 t y faith until Ilse dawn of East-
er. Jl nl41g '.v<,u)d bring f! n• •e and
gl ecus neeeage of hope. end a ,argot'
w ,' i. n el the Master's in.' - . n ulw,n
•
:trill. in a ii' !e•,5( n passage t 1..e
(\ample ( •. I(•atn, galls n tut.! :• rt sew•
Ih;11 1st• ..,old hate them 0111.. !. r. ac
tel ,nl•'091114,lt (;,:is . I tint' c• ret.;satin
whleb 1.;!.l)• .1 :r•.:,.'• :I.n t1N
e'te•nfs I1eie 1;,.4; /04 •I 1 t:itns<'If
Rs. "ihu 4, the kill, tl. ,It," and
a- "111e low tine' that lie calls Allen -
ten.
henries content. The subjecla of con.
v(•r:uttion ale few enough as 1,
Demo r.'on1 more prone to commit
etre i1e Than nn% other people. About
2'•6 Urines per million the yearly by sel-
f ue. w Bich Ls nearly treble the average
41 England.
MILBVRN'S
Are a rnnihinatlon or the scare ptiaclf.ta
the most ratu:ll.Is rrm.! al.ln rented es Tor a
&Atte eet'r sorderwof the I.irir. 4tomach al
'0 "40.
CURE
CONSTIPATION
• hurt . catarrh of th.Stornach, Dtzz1•
neon, Blotches and Temples.
tomise)). Weicr
[trash. tLiverComur plal t, sallowros
Muddy Complexion,
, CLEAN
COATED TONGUE
Sire, ten the breath And dear away a!1 waste
and l o.e.mens ,Mittel tnnn 11,.• .y sten,.
I'r"' 1 o a hotllr or S for SI •n AN denier'
T a T. )1tltaGstrr Cv., l4nllte4 Telwotog
VOL
1 ,,
verso 1. New le fere the keel el 111
a•••'.4 ---That Is, 14 fele Ilse I(gide' i
.. .111(11 day er Iume fs r the feat.
)crus krie wing Since. or 11(» lus. Le
knew.
11. •%.r,, rrnte--t'ntit which Hint
. •I• • :_ 1.ga,n'1 115• Life 4 n 11)4) part
. 1 lis. • is•)4 .. • h..d Teste., 1,'y teen
14111;,.,•,
11,. 'r 41 lot 1,;1,1 1. r. ,,
1
1. . . rie. m:h Lett ,n b.m. Tl,e
must 10 taken l(•geeter %% eh
Ilse phrase, That were in the merit]. ile-
ing in the world They were, nevcrlhe-
l•'es. no longer "of life world,' but
m..•mbers of Ike kingdom of heaven, of
which he, the:: Master, was Ring.
1h14) the end -Margin, "the utter-
most."
2. During supper -From John 13. 29.
and 18. 2s, II semens existent that the
fourth evangelist wishes specifically to
d stingui,h this supper from the regular
1'ae.4 ter feast, which on the day of
cruel
hxi(.n was still to be eaten. !Mat-
thew, Mark. and Luke, 1,ow.•ter, all
sneak of this meal, for which dere and
epeeinl preparotion had been made, as
lie regular Passover least. (compare
Mali, 26. 17-30; Mark 14. 12,26; Luke
22 7:30). Perhaps the key tela e1•re,'I
understanding of these apparently di-
vergent stntentenls is 111 be (mind in the
words of Jesus recorded by Luke: ''I
have dosirel to cat this passov<'r with
you before I suffer: for 1 say unto you,
i shall net eat 11. Intel it be fulfilled in
the kingdom of reel ' Luke 22, 15, tri)
- the regular 1'assnwer being 11,us anti
citadel by one day. since J4,us knew
Bud tin the morrow lie must suffer and
die
'fhe devil baling already put info the
heart of Jedas-This fact is (fere intro -
dined 1 •\plain the Auhccquent refer-
ence to the 1lelrav('r, 1l also serves ns
,. bac kJ,lound kir a further reference lo
amr Lord :s magnanimity and Mwe,
4,ur Lord's mngnanin)ity and love,
3. From God . . unto clod - Beth
phrases are enilhalic from (heir post•
lien in the sentence.
4. iticeth from the Supper- Refore the
Groat was completed. as is c'kmr from
'ekes 12, 25. end et; be!.' . 1'er•hnps
theele
n Y
►Prel einem;
the disciples
concerning which of !Nun should br
"accent:Mel M be gleales!" 1.ul.e 22.
24' prr'rnptcd Jews teT inters opt the
rousse of the meal in order tel bottle
krewer this question by hie example of
humble end hwn1linling Aerwiev.
Lnycth aside his gnr►nents-•The ko.ee
outer mantle, together with the girdle,
Loth of which would be in the .way in
pe rfonning an act of service Such ae
fellowed.
5. Began to wash the disciples feet--
Th11s performing for them the menial
service of a elev.,. 'there could be no
nlieundcretnndirlg the intender) mean•
ini• of 1),:'. t • 11 the pert of Jesus, in
t.%,iiL.,e
-1i cone..., ' `c 111 whichthe% I: ! . „r 1., 11 .•)tgag, 1'
I e • "' t • ' ` n•• n Peter - .\ppnrenlly
l)1 1• ;;r1;' .. w;.. .rvera) tf Ihe
t ((Ctrs hawing speedy subnliltetl le Ihe
act fit J..i1=.
fkl.•d lieu trash my f.. t'- 111 the• re:-
ginnl the pion Buns stars 1 t..g. Ili• r 111
sharp ccnlrnct. The remonstrance is
characteristic of Peter'• impulsive and
outspoken, though i••y111 and devout.
nature.
7, \\ heel 1 r1. fit. u knnw•esl not -Again
11x ps.rsona1 prone 'Inc are Pmphnli4. hi -
derating n cvsnlra•t. Peter's false hu-
mlltty had 14 ought w ilh it unconscious
pr''.IInplen. Jesus remind
los totem. ( hint that
c k as a dish 4e, of lits
y I \la ..ter s Llan. 19 te.0 incomplete 10 war.
rant his p1A,c;ng upon the Cons,cicncy
• r inconsistency of the ere -sent a^,1.
lieu shalt understand hereafter- Ti:. -
full signiflcance of the \taster's act and
example
later.PeterAa.s well astto the the olhere need-
(..' this leessn 4''f humility.
S.
S.: part .,th me -A word of go!erml
t'rarn:ng W Pcler, the Import of whlct
be is not slew tc grasp.
!►. Not ne fief only -Neter is as he
pul,ive now et the one direction as he
e;as pre'inus:y l)4 the edger, The subtle
1. +13 on Ihe tw.,r 1 "waste' w'hic'h Jests:-
ha/1 useed in a feeble' meaning, had
for Peter shed u dotal v1 light ,1Jn u
the dc•el:er significance of ..but h., \t•, -
lei was doing.
Il). Ile tial is bathed needelh not a••.'
1 trash tits krt--Je,i8 (s law ap•a61ug
n figurative language. The sense of
lis wordy seems to 1.e: "ile th:,t Ls sa-
e ady 64rrcn.lcred to Inc as Melt it
4:,.YJeth hill to guard against contar•1
:billion, and t<'llllrtatk ll 11'4.l1l 1► 1111.111,
that he remain as he is, clean (eery
whit',
And ye are clean -A remarkable ane
generous tribute to the heart -loyally of
les disciples.
I1.Knew hill) that should betray hire
- Knew elite keel of a ►ilii at heart
Judas, the unclean one, chit later :,e-
truyed him, w•115. Jesus had ((Memo)
Ute character of each of hie dlsl spies
.11441 r'eatize) what even al Ibis lune
wax going on in tho mind of the este
who should shortly hasten from 11i- pre -
fence to carry to its Colclusien tlie.lisse
1
lot
and ) 1 purpose of his heart.
12. Sat down again - -'reek, "reclined.•
Apparently the one es, had 110l mo'eJ
flan their places 441 'Ito table, to .hied:
Jt .IIS 110ts' W11111e'd.
Kl)utw' ye what 1 have .Ione It, vote -
'rine is pr.'eieius and Je•,rc flet -t make
eine Ilial the lesson lie leo attempted
t, leach has been understeud I,y (pee
one present.
13. c
Fors -
O 1 al - eS !
n .t .,..
J s was r \ r•
511 1 1.
lore more clearly eonscioue of his rank
and dignity than now. le sees tit lo
enlphasis,e that dignity to order that
there may be no misunderstanding his
set of humble service.
11. Ought to wash one another% feet
- Words rho deeper meaning of which
1', that disciples of Christ are in all hu-
thilily and utter self-abasement to seek
t.1 .serve one another. For the disciples,
in their 11111e and under the social con-
thlems under which they lived, rho ex-
he/latent might well have a more literal
meaning els.), hardly so, however, ter
eltrisliams to -day.
15. An example --Which lay not sr)
Much 111 the furor of the service as es
the spirit which bad prompted it. Jesus
taught both by precept and by personal
example, 0! Ila; tor•rner method his
parables are the most illustrious ex-
mel,les, of the latter this incident of
ei a•hIg the disciples' feel Ls perhaps
h:' test illustration, to the hands of
he Master 'Teacher of all ages twlI
'1(1I. els were eminently and perhaps
totally effective.
16. A .er'ant is not grealer than his
.crd-A solemn deelaratk)n which 1111:1
(ready been made to them before, at
ie beginning of their apostolic melee,
r<'eorde(1 in Malt. 10. 24. and paral-
•' passages.
One that is sent -Greek, "an apostle.•
The literal English equivalent is here
treed in ,plyco of 11x1 familiar Greek
word, twitch among its has come to be
used in a slightly different sense.
1T:. I know-Jesss desires t) have no
mom for doubt as to his prevision of
the betrayal, which itis eesentinl that
Ihe disciples .shall not regard, when 11
crews lo puss, ns a defeat of his plans.
Ilo that eaten' my bread -Or, "Ile flint
e:.eth his hr'.'a,1 with me' --a common
pledge of friendship,
BUCCANEF.Its' TREASI'RE.
Revealed by the flea on the Portuguese
Coast
Treasure -Trove socreted by Portuguese
buccaneers hi bygone days has been to
tented near the seaside village of ('ara-
delhn in i-enlarkoble manner. The '.11.
U g.' is being Monty ensiled away by Ihe
aclk,n of the sea and buildings have leen
uuderinint'.1 room Hine 10 lime,
A storm of mote Than usual sec. ' sly
swept the coast the other day, and a
pc•rtiol of the foreshore at lnra.l••11141
ens witched nwny. According to The
Sceolo, treasure of Various kinds was
thus exposed
1,(141'sl
n on. '
h d . I
i h0•
I ntcn,
who first heti• t e.I That it had been sent
to them nlira.•I.1••usiy.
There were ninny ollci<'nt gold rind
Silt el' douhln.,ii-. jewcited rlr,Cve'<, finger
1 mg• of quoin! antique pattern, ear -rings,
god and silver rned;tUtun,, portions of
silver censers, and other fragments of
church plate.
All the people in tele region hurried to
tto spot, armed .•11.11 peeks. and epndc s,
111(1 hnVi' settee been digging feverishly
r,
t treasure.
Some of IIN'
reln'
ht
c Weil
rev t
an!(rl with i r•
t further h t d(s(•nweriex. One
man secured gold (ohLe mined at LIMO,
All the mato inhnbitanl, have deserted
their work, and none 44 the flsher'men
has left port since elle first discovery was
matte.
'fhe Portuguese buccaneers oho her -
reel the Spanish Alain were in the habit
of I•:Irt ing Ilwlr booty along Ihe cnnsl,
And Ihe trenehree unearthed of Porn.
d. C•a unrlouhlevlly 14)11 a portion of one
of their hoards.
NEWS OF THE MiNES
1 tiu.E sLARRS 01' Ill RI' \ll.Gtl. ON
lits: a"Ito % I1l›.la11
.tlout Four Hundred \alive siker
finds (»I tlurltl'CnI Ititer Section
ul lames •1'o.t uship.
.,..:i • 3 \\. I,. 11 11414 ju..t rMurncd
: 1, .14 4, 1;•• \Iuntroit! River and
• 1-,•_ ; ..• tally and •'oo•,derable
see • `t n, tee new vamp vu aconin
al r. • r, t.ts,i-. A nett lin•I toe been
Mach• rel the \\ pliant:, statue very
(terse ll) elle Keeley rluin:. and raid to
be (outfit)* 115 F.. ,1 E. I, y lied. Nu-
In.'lY,tls repro. i.,:t. 1• , ,, eii,'tlh(Ied'.
regarding cit, , I. h 1. .1
I!,0 441 „:u:
1.y that !t• .. , ,-, f :t, .1 S►:.
for lie' h,. .,4 ,t m, •1. now ba,)
..1.• "CI (1113 , "1 '4' . ,1 I k)ba1t ^-
pendent of the 1;i. i • . The stat
mintier fu I!e 'woes. :elloud of
a:retial) ha. a cele u1Itsi owed• lie
At• un lain and staking ie now 1
d.;ue 10 the ..,uth of Boner \luuntain to
the nloulh of IhP Mstateeheeen River
'1'15' Making done to date has been
principnlly on Shepherd's timber lii
.4 !tete an abundance of line lint
loth pine and maple, is to he. fou
Gan Johileon has been living in t
district. l Its
cal)• -four years, 111(1 rune
general store, which is u great cone
i:•uce to prospectors, anal Motor
It1w• r posloflice is only' e,no and a I
smites from John'' -u:, '-t.•i.. 'lime i.
farming district 11(4lt at hand 1.u1 the
b r rilnry Is very rough and broken where
1L;.• mineral has been found, Benin's
farm has limn surveyed in towvn lots
and it is calculated that a healthy town
will spring up. From present indica-
11< els and on account of .'asy accessibility
lists new bell is Lound 4., be a busy
pias'•• during the summer; prrs(N'_tors
Item the upper (1i-Irict can land al the
mouth of the \b tilreal liver daily from
1Iaileybury, 111(1 parties canting front
Ile. south can slake an easy trip in froru
elaltawa three times a week.
N:Vfl\l; SI1.\Ell•FINDS
►tcrk will to resumed with an increased
fe tt e.
WILL Go ON DEVELOPING,
superintendent (:hartas (Wetted' cf
Urs t,reen-Meehan has been in New York
recently on business, and it is stated
that arrangements will be nitwit' to re-
bottle op•rulknls on Ilse properly at an
40:.sty dale. On the Iced Rock, Supei ln-
[endeml 'fh(m.on is keeping up the •!•
to lopmeul work w illi the usual for':.' e f
uloul 20 •Incur, 1111(1 6x1110 gvwat results
are expected to be reported al the led
Rock during the cooling sunl!)ier. Your
errr•espoudent has received advice from
Ila' ownols of Ih • Cobalt confect that
al i angemenls have been romplete(1 to
meal! !h.' compressor plant and to go
ahead twills 114e developnietil work of
rh. propel ty with an increased force,
The reset:, attained at this property to
.:.1t,• luive I e.•n 114041 501isfaetory and
siert,) Ilse p1. perry •houtd join the diel of reg.
lir e_ 11 'it' '!"1e., re nue irg the summer. The
1.ra,.- \.•:111 i „1 ill \1:11.• i.- still 014)50(1 clown,
i 1 .. pr, 1.414 lion- in lir e'1ty of coal and
), 1 " .,14 .•)- ..leeei,... 411e Vying Ittado to 1•e-
1,1'... •nose o1,. 1x114 41- ;:t an early dale red
.14l, I. fentinue din:rig the : umn,er. The
!:.the !Oleo. tt I,i. It adjoins
•aver !J ins 'fhe Red
t
It.• t.. ha, not leen lin operalIon since
xiug l;1•t Nowenlb•'r, but hos berm for sale.
It is staled on good tilhority Ilial Un -
les sn11e sales now !n Viet' materiel-
uit, ( bee the owners will nutke arrangements
Ilex • In operate theirproperty on their CI
account, On Ili( feed. of ('-halt week
red. 1+1s Leen cls.. ► ,Mt: n all winter.
'
hat rip r.
a ORE 11E1'is't:110N COMPANY.
ch -
1
1
r,al , The plant of the Ore Reduction Coul-
ee( petty on Ihe Nioissiug property is now
n i rv.rrtpl.4el and in operation, This
I''set eels tntiit by the cobalt conceit -
lee. :
'oncen-
1, .: -. Limited, and the plan is a dry
1.)• ee.. esselal• to a flour milling pro-
ce•e. A small amount. of ON is being
pun thmugh every day in an experimen-
tal way, and, while the work being
/tette is partly experimental, results
have Leen satisfactory, an it is hoped
by the middle of the month to have tho
plant running to its full capacity of 100
fens per day. 'rhe oro being run through
i, from the Kendall dump on the Nipis-
sirg
The new neaps are out of the Montreal
elver section of Jame, township, and
shote approximately 1.0 native silver
h
better slwwing Ihan wlh, made in Cole-
man lownshlp, at a similar stage of
dovelopnie+)l. A particularly good
slowing was made last year on the
west side of the river in the southeast
center of James township, where the
h:cky GOelfley Syndicale has six eery wa-
leable claims. A find made on one of
Leese claire. lest November has just been
11.0410 known. A meeting of the Lucky
Codfrey syndicate is being called at
on^e to nr•enge for the development of
the property and probably to take mita
cnrklad of ore, ...Well can t0 bagged from
the surface on the big new vein dis-
covered last Nowentber, and which Is
from six lo eight Inches in width of
olid metal, Sntaltit.r end nickelile and
n01iw.• aider. It is calculated That be..
fire the end of 19(3.4 There will be equally
as ;stony shipping mines Lt Janine town-
ship and surrounding distrusts as there
are in the township of Coleman at pre-
sent. This calculation is based upon
ar,live de.ektpnll'nt work being carried
on on the suite which show shippingc•ro
on the surface.
finds, which is cou'idered a Very 11141e
RECOGNIZE TIIE OLD ABITIBI.
The old Abitibi or SI. Denis proper-
- ly, in Lot 8, (gne_esskin 11, Lorraine
township, and fnrnlorly owned by Jo-
seph Fortier, of elonleal, has been sold
end reorganized a. the Rig Ftcsure
Mining (:ompnny, wilt a capitalization
of 62,000,000, ownisl and controlled by
capitalists in Riclninghant, ala, Jos,
epi Ileeley, nn experienced mining elan
(rent 14111140. and who had charge of the
properly under the former owners, is
now in charge. At a distance of 200
fret from Ihe main shalt, a nfrmw vel
li (I
r' eI '11 furtive
Ilell 1 r silver vac found on the
surface, n eorws.cut will be run f1Ytm the
the main shaft at the 150 -foot 'eve! to
lap 1111, trip, 4114(1 ft u lapel ,hipping
oro will Ice found. Superfntendenl
Leyson of the 'l'ot'nsile, shipped n car•
k:ad of 0I'n this week to Delore, and
left on Wednesday night to look eller
it. The main shaft Ls down 130 feet,
and n ennsidernble amount of develop.
tient work Ls being cnrriel on al Loth
keels, and ore is being blo:ked out.
LARGE VALUES IN SILVER,
BIII(1oc;l‹
IMP
BLOOD
MID
BITT(1
CUKES
Dyspepsia, Bolls, ' I•
Pimples,
Headaches, "
Constipation.
Loss of Appetito,
Salt Rheum,
Erysipelas,
Scrofula,
and all trouble'
arising from the
Stomach, Liver,
Bowels or Brood.
The undergeou red dew•ekopment work
on the lt;utger Ls proving the mine lo
be Very meltable. A considerable 0111•
aunt of lent and waive ether hos been
found in the leg 18 -inch vein Which for•
merly carried no w01uCS. The wall tuck
i, also showing good %alu n in peaces.
A 'says in 4'4c(se of 8,000 otlnee� 10 Ihe
tor. have Leen taken money.
Surfnec pl„'JH'cting tins Leen bloricd
n fhe lot 4.1.1 4,f the ilig fele vein of
ISP ((neeo(emI', new VM14 Iwo
• ' 14111ILth 0f cenlleste.\ and well -13111)(41'-
'11.114 carrying silver Volans, bas been
Auld in Iii. prospecting work, 411141 a
haft will be sunk on lir new vein. A
°Ilen•e of eoneentrateb from the mill
\irs. A. 1st .rgue.
of Itell)dult, (Int,
%%rats: •'1 believe t
%%•.old Ira%o been In
707 grave long ago
11.1,1 it not been for
'hada k Mood hit-
ters. 1 was run down
to such an extent
that 1 could s
earee-
Ir move about the
erouse. l was sl)1tiret
to serer,' ).co4,cl,es.
bu•kachce and d(rri.
nese': ray nrrettie
was `one and i was
unable to do my
housework. Aft et
teems two hntllra of
1) h. n. round en
health y motored.
1 war • eornm.Id
It t • ired sad
�►' then.
j n'ih I shipprl out tide week,
'1 41. • Mowll Ileee4•.e properly has been
t ,. ..
etre of a great deal of interest
i.0,•ntl) on nceo.1n1 el the new and rich
find at n dieltrnee of eked 40 feet liven
the original disc...Try, which shower a
vein 25 inches in .'idlh, end very rich
rn native sliver. in incl. large eines nt
4.4' 1)1(101 Vero tokell 4,111. fir opin-
dorht'en espr,'.(ed hy' 111:lay in 111.!
c::!np Ihnl Ile( ore ie IIIc ,,.•4s..1 ewer
ntintd in Ifte en)4.p. And trip
i- one of Ihe 1 • •I ! ;. '• 1. \n assay
• f -ter 10.Itel (,ml'• _ ••,•%• 1 I.. the Inn
%n t taken merely. :4..1 :4 re(rnrl.rl
l.nt n earloa,l of eq.,. •% i 1 sent out
(ila'i11g ilio 11(51 fiNe .I •tell It HI
eclipse 1111' ,111111nr-.'
1.0111 1110 ramp in s• 1. •
Ili.• kin arc conrenn .1
7 he i)ueh -sa prop. r h ..
re 1.'mnrt l0 owned 14)4,4 i phi.
41,1410 In New fork rap11;..,.t.. Ilnr•
;.! the 10x1 cenr "er(r0, lhnu'An,l feet
„t li(nthing eels .1(110. )(welting In all
steno thirty Veins. 'fin pmt• r.4'.
014.•,',1 down rel (0651111, nm.) 161: - -
6..0 .ill shortly to mn.1r far 111 rel,.
1•
.141 al e unt, 1.(s
Nle llIhkrglr ,ud
sir-•----•
3lis"1'ENCE SERMONS.
Wandering thoughts seldom find safe
harbor.
Every hews', doubt ripens into larger
faith.
The heart o1 all reform is the reform
el the heart.
Souls are not 1ifk'(1 up by preaching
(1.wn to them,
A frowning• brow often indicates a
shrinking head.
Too many sow sand and their pray
for strawberrIee.
Whet you are when no one is look-
ing is what you are.
There can be no moral musclo with-
out moral struggle.
If you world lead you must be %oi-
ling to bo lonesome al Icing.
There are too many churches Trying
to wits the poor by courting the rich.
The value of your religion depcvk)s
on how much of yeul•sell is invested
in it.
No num can win righlevoueneos who
will not take some risks on his reputa-
tion.
It doesn t take long to discover all
hinds of good in anything that has gold
in it
\\'hen a preacher ir:es to be a star
he is sure to shut out somebody's sun-
lighl.
The heart is beet nourished when we
are ministeeng to the needs of our
neigld)ors.
Ile who expects to die like a dog usu-
ally goes to his expectancy long be-
f=re he (lies.
'i'le hop a1 Iles world does not lie
1'1 the stall fed solids who are fatten-
ing on sermons.
It you would and gladness ynn must
piny like great game w illi eagerness
ane .
fn,rne. .
Seine folks are .carving bdermee they
stone know.' Ihe difference between die-
tetics and a dinner.
t
CALIC,tI'f ON 111E RUN,
The judge reslene\t intently to the
nine's ,tory. The num woos the plain-
tiff, and had charged his wife with
cruel and t r 1)l) e,'•
e
h .Iw
treatment. 'retntc ,
nl
Ile was a
small elan. and leis wife --well, it .•a,
f
a least ewideilt that the charge Jr.•le,l
on (1 basis of possibility.
After the plaintiff had flni lied hie
10.limony the ju;)ge decided to ask a
question.
1 toll.
"Mr, Fronde," Mrikl I,e "where did
yen meet your n ife, mho has treated
you this way?"
"\\'ell, judge," returned the men
eeineelinl meekly., "y(u see its this
way. 1 never did meet her. She jos!
kind of owertcok me."
Tari i.I:Chy' 1(EEL(3,
1'14e only %%heels of fortune you
Moe piny .0111 certainly,
And pin 5. ur hole's of pelt to
Are "4t144C:5 •.l :JIdu h')•,'
\L1bl: l,lt•laIC \\Y)ItK tip IT,
Chain . y--"I)....s her fattier object
(4 }cur ,.alliny•:''
Ilar( Id -"Ile ku.k• d :.11)y once."
'!}
"1"e...- said Mr. f'air. tt,th 111 -con
cen!ed peek, "my y•.1Il '-1 1(,y
1e.11t. '1111 ti remark, et linee-. Only'
re(fnlly he n'ke) use %hal it meant 1•i
'•
1111 apprentice. 1 iold hint that it
meant the lending of cine peranll le an.
enter 11 agreement, and that one per -
s • f- 11n.1 Hail lo leach the other
• ' : i • f his trade er pre:(• .•ion.
t4'• • l',er had 10 t'. • t'h At ! • rll't)
I: -.. ,- %e PP(1')0. :;''1 -I 1 . to
71;;;,.%,.
,;, , ue esu) 1
. ••\\' .4t .lid he se , esk,
• ' •'•• • 1 the ltldien e. "\\ hy, triter
f• tt 1:,1111414s the y•:.1I`g re's'ift i•.,{,••1
nt ire en.( said: 'Then 1 Amigo:,
% '4• e• l•pp}('f(,,trl 41 11194Mlt% aren't
e I. J0d?-'
THREE Trying Times in
A WOMAN'S LIFE
W11>FN
MILBURN'S HEART
AND NERVE PILLS
aro *40100 an al.olule necessity towards her
tonne health.
the first wt.en ,i,e is just budding from sal.
L. red it.to the (.I1 bloom of womanhood.
The socor•d period that constitutes a special
drain uu the system is during pregnancy.
The third and the one most liable to leave
heart and nerve troubles isduring ••changeof life!"
io all three periods llilburn's Heart and
Nerve HUs will prove of wonderful value to tide
over the time. lir.. James Kiss, Cornwall,
Ont., writes: "I was troubled very much with
heart trouble -the cause being to a great extent
due to" change of life. •' i have been taking your
Heart and Nerve Pills for some time, and mean
to continue doing so. as 1 can truthfully say
they are the best remedy 1 have ever used for
building up the system, You are at liberty to
use this statement for the benefit of other
sufferers,"
Price 60 teats per box or three boles for 51.23,
all dealers or 111e 1' Milburn Co., Limited
Torous Ont.
POINTED SKULLS,
Adntire(i by some Tribes, Who Secure
Then' m by ileal It(ndinfl.
The egg-shaped treads .f some of the
Iativee of etak•kuia, in the New Hebri-
des, were once thought to to naturally
conical. For flint reason sc:cntllic men
deci<fee• that the etalekulans were in
the lowest rung of the human ladder.
Later It was found that the conical
)!cads were prceluced as the Chinese
women distorted (heir feel, by hinging
them in infancy. The egg-shaped head
Ls .tel fashionable in \talekula, where
some extraordinary results are achiev-
ed.
"A conical head," says a writer in
the National Geographic elagazine. "re.
!reels from the forehead in such a
summer that one is amazed to know
the owner of this remarkable peuliic
preserves his or her proper sensrs..uch
:le they. are. 1 could not hear, ), ,w tete,
Ilial Ihe castorn was supposed tu af-
fect the intellect in any way.
'The conical ehapo is prod 11.•.I by
e in:ling stn ng sinner cord spirally
:l. sit 11►e heads of young babies and
Lgilts-ling the coils from time to time,
A piece of plaited mal is first put en
the head and the oord Ls coiled over
niLe, so as to give it a good purchase.
The crown of the head is left to dewc►-
o(. in the upward and hockw•nrd fash-
ion That is .o much admired.
One fears the poor babies suffer very
much from the process, The child 1
SAW w'11.5 fretful and crying and todked
as if it were constantly in pain; but
the mother, forgetting for the moment
lee fear of lite strange white woman,
stwevee it In me quite proudly, pointing
cut the cords with a smile.
"She lend a normally shaped head
herself and it seemed that she had suf-
fered by her patent's neglect of thio
important matter. for she ens married .
lea man who was of no particular ac-
0ount. A young girl who 1-11.4 standing
beside her had evidently had a more
careful 'nether, ler her head was al -
moa sugnrloaf shnpol, 1t is inte'r-
.:•t,ng to know that This well brought
up young woman had married a chief,•,
ALL THE SAME TO f1ER.
The mistresse looked dejectedly at the
latest domeetic, just over, and willing
to begin at only four dollars a week.
"What can you do?" she asked, eels
no hope in her heart.
"Annything at all, sur(';" was the en-
couraging response. The rnieteireo
ac
'la
e
t Mout 1 ►! u
t,
t th
e i
Y
elm
There
was
everything to be done,
"C/inial you (ill the lamps?" she ven-
tured.
"1 can 111411!" anal the lamp wvas seized
in n stent ensbl'n.v', 'Eben, with the
air of one 'vls.11ing above all else le
suit the px'.ssible oleins of a new fm•
ple)er, she paused and asked:
"And is it gas or ...ether you do 14
liking 11 filled wide
More Terrible
Than War!
More terrible than war, titmice or pee.
titan.* is that awful destroyer, that hyrlra-
headerl mon. t c r, Consumption, that
•nnaially sweeps sway mare of earth'. in-
habtta°to than any other single discs+,
known to the human race.
"!t is only a cold, a trifling eough," say
the careless, as the irritation upon the
delicate tnu.wua membrane carica them to
lr+'k
awe/ with an irritable tickling of the
throat. Whet) the irritation settles on the
nnl'oue surface of the throat, a cough is the
r,sult. '1'o prevent Bronchitis or Con -
gumption of the lungs, do not neglect a
cough howcrcr slight as tho Irritation
sF,r. * l.i q throughout the dcli ate lining of
11,e sensitive air 1' '*get .•5144 14418 to
fatal results. 11 on rho first apl•rarance of
a sough or cold ,you would take a few
close. of
Dr. Wood's
Norway
Pine Syrup
you would *ave yourself a great deal of
onneerasar�• au:Tering. 1)r. %Vorrt s Nor
way 1'm° Syrup contains all the life-giving
properties of the pine ttoe• of Norway', and
for Aethma, Croup, \Vh'siping Cough and
all Throat anti Lung affections it is a epees.
tl^.
Bo sure when you ask for I)r. \V.,nd'e
Norway fine Syrup to g•'t it. Don't, be
hnmha•,•ged into taking something else.
Price 26 cit
Mess Iron Johnston, Toledo, Ont.,
write+,: "1 have 1411'11 1)r. W,r„1's Nor.
way Pine Syrup for throat trouble* after
taking numernu, other remedies, and i
must say that nothing Dan tare rho place
lot it. 1 would not be without a t•ottle a�
k io the Imam".