Loading...
Exeter Times, 1908-06-04, Page 3ABSULI ITE SECURITY, Cenulne darter's Little Liver Pills. Must Bear 8lanaturo of Sea Pac-Sereno wrapper Setae. Vers eseu and as easy to take as saysase p• FOR NEAOACNE1 CARTERS FOR OIIIINESte FOR BILIOUSNESS. FOR TORPID LIVER. FOR CONSTIPATION. RIR SALLOW SKIN. FOR TiiECOMPLEXION OSNVZf.i "Y.T Mn .w.u. t. CURE SICK HEADACHE. FOR IBEGINNEIIS IN BUSINESS. The key roto 10 success in business •s to learn without delay how your cm - )'oyer likes Ins work done, and then to , it in that way es fur as possible. ver obtrude your views ur idea unless they are asked for. 1f you are a short - bend -typist, and your employer makes a grammatical slip, correct it in your transer:pi:on, but don't point tt out. This fan case where silence is more than golden. No "head' likes to have his er- rors cone:led ter him by n young em- ployee. Pasiltons of trust rarely come to Ihoee who are content to wait for eeeneeh ng to Juin up." The man who iets tet is he who by constant effort prepares hmse'I for seimeth'ng better. Try to earn the goodwill of your etn- p'oyer. Strive to make yourse'f valuable m whatever situation you fill, even if but a temporary one. Tact is worth culti- vating. it softens the intercourse be- tween c'nployer and employee. If your first gposI:on is not to your liking, dont throw it up at once. It may to to your ucivanlago later on to we that fi nr. Maine as it reference. tit FILLING MANY WANTS. One of the most useful trees in th world is n species of pain, which grow ire Brazil. It might i afely be called vegetable out or:un, for It yields every !tong, from medicine to cattle -food Frau the -roots is obtained a very volt, chic (medicine which is much used to puree Ing lho blood in springtime, Its Umber takes n very high polish, and is engrrly sought atter by cabinct,nuakers ter fine work. The sap becomes wine negur, according to the treatment 1 •eceives. From the sap starch and sugar are alfo obtained. Tho fruit of the tree is given to cattle for food; the rout. ground to powder, makes o good substitute for coffee; and the pith be- comes bottle-'orks. Thus from Hill one bee nre obtained medicine, timber, wine, vineette starch, sugar, coffee, cattle - food itnd corks. It really deserves to he tailed a useful tree, c 5 n r 1 TOR or ENVELOPES. somewhat curious that such n Fire a cone iyance as the envelope should be a comparatively modern in• vcneon. As matter of fact it is jut luny diel years since a paper niannfnc- 1 !frighten. England, named Itrcwee invented envie°. es for letters to their present term. Even then it was some cons dcrable lime bef..re their use became at all general, not, in fact. nn - e1 somew;tere about the yenr 1850. Be- fore this date (ns many who are living now will remember) u IM1cr, vvrtl(en only on one side, ens (nickel in two. then in three. sealed with n wafer or re riling wax. and addressed un ono of the blank titles, • _ How Is Your Cold? Every piece you go yu:1 hoar the same question aake,l. 1)0 yet know that there is nothing rr dang r"tis as a neg;lereed cold T l)u yottiimew that s neglected cote will turn into Chrome Bronohitis, I'neumoaiwt disci eti•eg ('arerrh arid the most deadly of all, the ' \\' hies Plague," ConeumpI,tie n, Many a life }eatery would read different If, ten the first appearance of a cuuph, it had been remeJurl with Dr. Wood's Norway o Ine Syrup yrup wonderful cough and csiJ medicine e . n e ains all those very pine principles heel make tee tine wooer wp valuable in trestle eat of Len; affections. (.eieI with this are ‘Mild Cherry tho seething. healitig and ef- 'proierties uf other pectora ( tine barks. For Coughs, Colds, Broteehiti., Pain in rho Chest, Asthma, Croup, eVheiping S(lj't$h1 I#Jttt[settosj or any etfection of the 7hrcutt. or Lunge You will find a sure aura in i)r. Wood's Nerwa • r;no Syru Mrs, 4 H �y r31 t s;:, Rrnte4 r ' T ht ve u.,ecl !h. no(e's Nort(•ay Pine Syrup f v coughs and colds, anti hare e:tveys found it to give Instant relief. 1 ales reeornmene•ti It to ono of my ticidh• bee ane she was more that pleased with the merles." Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup 26 eta. per h,ttle at eel d'slers. rut up in yellow *Tapper, awl three pine trees the trete meek. Refuse 610.41itute!. There is only en) eiert ay Pipe byrup and the& we to THE DEMANDS OF AN IDEALBUSINESS ON THE BRINY The Man Gains the Crown Who Grasps at Every Shining Pebble By the Way. "Sell whalst:ever thou host and give to the poor and come lake up thy cross and follow lie." -Mark x., 21. Ideals are our treusures only so long us they aro also tracks ht which we trend. The visions o[ things greet and worthy art not given That we might have sonte- ti Ing beautiful to contemplate, they arc cells to serve, to endure, to toil, to bear tit rtlens and meet dillkultles. The dreams of greatness or of goodness that go no further than dreamt/1g leave es weaker, poorer, less titan if we had never sec 0 them. Ile who secs the freight arid dote not strive to attain it is Tess than he who seeing it net at all lives keened Itis lowlier vision. Our dreans nest determine deeds. l.ife were empty without its dreams; it aero emptier still if it were nothing but dreams. Yet how easy it is to be satisfied with aspiration; never to make the investment of endeavor, lo paint pictures of life r crowns, but never to be willing even to pay the price to gain any of Them. So many, imagine that they must be saints because they have thought so often of sc raphic joys. It takes a good deal more than looking at heaven to make TUE HEAVENLY LIFE. Now every sincere nen is asking the question, How may I realize the Went? Every sincere idealist Is seeking for means of practical expntu.kn of that which is visioned before hie. Ile is not nfrai(i of paying the price. He knows that 11 will bo high if the end is also high. There is an easy descent to (he things that are below; there Is no facile gu.de, no mentis of sliding up uncon- eteously to the higher levels. Every altninment meat* se much lass; every gain so much giving up. We have to learn to choose, to discriminate, to reject even many good things that we may gait, that which is best. None can gain all of everything; all may win alt of something it willing to lose other things. Riches are not n curse of themselves; tt:ey are n curse and n cause of the deep- est poverty when we choose them before some better things. The young num in the story must sell his possessions Le - cause they blond between him and the attainment of his Ideals. So long as they were the chief goal to him he could nark° no progress toward any greater glere Is the imperative demand of ever ideal, that it shall occupy first place. The things you set first fn your endeavors, in your affections are the things you will attain. No matter of what god Things you may dream, it is the things you r'ca l lye AT BOTTOM OF Al.l., desire that will ►,e yours. It may sur- prise Seine of Us to SCO the prizes w ilh r, hich( we shall at hast tie Lound, anti yet they always will bo those of oast• supreme the eositg. But the ideal demands more than the giv ing up of things that conflict; 1t dc- 11,unds service. expression through work, through activity. It is not enough to give up the things thut hinder; these things must be made to terve the lolly ends of the worthy ideal. Where un - vs. rthy affections have been cast out there must be no empty places; love still must be (here, but directed into new channels. If you would dbogrent you must do great things. You trust not sit down before any task simply because it is high. Duties are not to be admired; they are to b., done. 'Ile first price of achieving is attempting. Better the humblest effort le (10 soote greet thing limn the most highly developed picturing of the Ideal that salislies .Leel( with the picture alone. In it subtle way high idealism becomes the foe of worthy realities. 1[g5v easy It k to sutstitufo DREAMING ABOUT HEAVEN for any attempt to bring heaven to our everyday' lives. flow easy to praise tide love of God as a stiltstitttte for the prac- tice of the love of ratan. The religious life is the life that sees the high visions of life's IKassibilities, cherishes Utese visions and steadily, nt any cost, with this as the supremely worth while aim of living, seeks their realization, counts all things as worth- less compared to this, that fullness of lite may he found for one's self and made peesible for ail others. It's not the man who dreams the Ile, dreams of coming glory, but tete man who daily does all his little deers in the light of that glory who is doing most for Ills ,world and for his ideals. The great question is not whether you can talk poetry, but whether you are willing t, pay the price of the ideal lite. The world is full of people who wish it well; it needs more who will work for ds weal, to whom( its wwelfnre, the reali- zation of ifs highest good. Ls the supreme thing in life, that for which they are willing to sell all else and to take op any cross. Ry their deeds shall their ideals be known. HENRY F. COPE. THE S. S. LESSON INTGitNATION.t- I.ES' ON, JUNE 7. Lesson N. .Jeeus Appears to the Altos - 'lee. Golden Text, John 20. 28. THE LESSON WORD STUDIES. (Based on the text of tato Revised Version.) Items Chronological, -Mary Magda lune had hastened to tell the diacipks of whet hnd occurred nt the tomb, arc thew Jesus hnd appeared tanto her. Mat thew and Luke nh'ntein other women also to whore Jesus revealed himself be - k re the events which arc recorded in cur present lesson. These also. perhaps in company with Mary Magdalene, to whom Jesu,S appeared fust, made haste to report lo the disciples all that hnd happened. For two specific events Omar let! from John's nuriative at this point Avec are indebted to Matthew and Luke respectively. elnIthew earlier in his ac - (taint had ntentien4(1 Ile fear and flight of the guard. and new relates their sub sequcnl action in reporting till that hn.l hnpp:cncd to the chief priests and Jew. ish auth'rihess at Jerusalem. \Vhen (hese had nsseenbled and had taken tourist I they gave much money unto the soldiers. :eying. Say ye itis disciples prune Ly night and sto'e hem away thee we slept, An<1 i1 this conic to the goyet•- no1 s ears we will [ICr:made 11411. and ri<I you of enre. So they look the money. nisi did as they were taught; end this saying was sprend Itl,roail aiming th • Jews. and centlnueth Until this (hey' Male 2$. 12.15). It is lo leeee Hunt ee owe oar knowledge of the itp- px•arnnce of Jesus to the to o dtsciples on the road to Ermmnus. 1t Is a beau - story and one which shows how Jesus, even after his reeeurrccte n. 'n hie Irt_St ossocintton with his dis, :pies, patently and with highest pedagogical skill sought to tad then into n know•- Icdpe of the larger and huller truth e4 n- ccrn:ng himself and his m:aslnn. It was evening m•hen These Iwo disciples were at Inst permitted to recognize their corn- ('nni'n and guest, and ars filled with %vender and joy were they lint, as Luke records. "they ruse up (104 very hour, and f( (111(1 the eleven gathered to- gether. aid Utent thnl tem w ilh Ihern, And they rehearsed the things that happened 1n the may, an(1 how he WAS known of 1110111 in the breaking of the limed" !Luke 24. 33.3.5). 11 was while they were thus a.seemb!N behind Closed doors that Jesus himself appeared to them, ns reef:Nits! in our present les- sen. Luke links These events with the arrival of the two disciples from Eno welts with thew words: "And as Ihcy - • :sloe these things, he himself Meted in tee midst c•f them, and snith unto there, Peace ts: U1110 you" Il.uke 24. 36). in the midst --An expression refnirted t•v the American Revision with some lexicographical authority, though nt11 approved by many of the best writers of English. 22. Drente on thein -A symbolic ac - tun, signifying the imparting to them of his own spirit (compare levee 37. 5). Tho Italy Spirit -The article is want- ing in the original, signifying that lite )_rift was "not lint of the personal Holy Spirit, but rather an earnest of That gill; an effusion of the Spirit: 23. Whosoever sins ye -All those pres- ent, apostles and others alike, aro ad- dicssed. One apostle at least was ab- . sent, and others not inetnlers of the apostolic group wcro present; hence. I whatever the power conferred by Christ - el this time, all believers alike shared That power. 'There is no warrant in Scripture for limiting it to the clergy. Forgve , , , retain -The statement Fergie made must he interpreted in the Tight of other New Testament passages tearing on tete forgiveness of sins. &Viten so interpreted its undogrnatic• se ale L• clearly evident. The disciples are to entry to others I1►e glad titling - of forgiveness through faith in (?tris(. 11. is to he part of their work also to announce the terms of That forgiveness. 24. Thomas ... 1)idyrrrus-.The former r 1111,0 Is the t(cbrew' equivalent of the latter, which is the (;reek form, and which signifies "twin." The twelve --Now nein/Illy batt eleven. since Judas Iscariot had dropped out. His place, however, was Inter taken by Mnithins, who was chosen by lot, es recorded in Acts 1. 15-26, 25. Except t shall see ... nn.l put my finger . . . -Seeing mune lend suflleed 1. convince the others, Inde Thomas in- sists on the necessity of a still closer cxaninatien. to make sure that he with the rest shall not be the victim of some c:eticnl delusion I will not believe -Lite "in no wise The negative torn( used is the strongest passible in Greek. 26. An, r right days -Orr the next First day of the week. The express on is (1n( 1hn1 woe in common use and was equi valent to "a week Infer." Thnnms with them -Evidently their testimony to Thomas had not been en - limey without effect. Jesus cometh -In the same my.slerioiis and miraculous manner, and with the snnne greeting as on the pretious oc- casien. 27. Then aaith he to Thmnnc-Willi reference to the declaration of Thomas previously recorded. V. r.ee 19. The first tiny of the vveck- •., ,,, this lime fr•rvtnrd oh+0rved Ly t • .ns as a day of worship and t ut felk'wship in oomntcmornten 1' • reeurrettion of Jesus from the . • t rn (hal day. At first, however, J. wish ?abhath tits nut en thus tie- . :.11 d,nreg:,rrktt The crnielcte Luh• eeeit•en (1 the fernier tiny for the lat. ler entre about gradually. 215. My Lord and my Geel-The climax of faith in Jesus, which has teen the great theme of John's Gospel ihtt,ugh- /ul. The confession is addressed direct. ly to Christ. 29. Blessed ace they that have net even. and yet have believed-\t'nrvts tv hick convey the impression that frith w hich depends on the evidence of the tense's is, after all. Hol the highest kind et faith. Our spiritual intuilk,ns also are to be trusted. 30. Many other signs therefore dot Jesus•-ilelerr•ing to the whole public rninLetry of Jesus. not merely to the period succeeding his tesurreetiun. This verse and the next form lee na- turnl et -inclusion le the entire (Ktsrtel. w•h ch chapter 21 scents lo be added as an appendix or postscript. 31. That ye may believe that Jesus is the Christ --The avowed purpose of the entire Gospel narrative. BARBER'S SIIOI'ti AND Dl:\T1s T' uce:.tN LINERS. ON A %tell-hnuttn '1hreafriral Manager i, Acted) at \lurk on a Plan lc ('rcnlace 1'la) s. Within 0 year or two the pasisage mon- ey tt ill be the smallest part '. t lite arse t. u trip across Ihet ocean. *the 1 class passenger will rise, ring for steward, and order osauges or gr; L' oil to be bout in from the fruit Me Then, after his balk, Ire will shrill du e., the barber's slop for his shove, t invest in u new stick, or a patent shay brush, or one of the many trifles wit the barber et .ee•a raerice to• side to customers. Breakfast over, our passenger goes the,"stationer's and purchases the da paper printed aboard the ship, with the latest hfurconigruni news, and novel or_so to while away his spare tin !sinking his way towards the deck, retention may I.e drawn by the eke Cally lit and tnmutifully decorated e ()ow of the halt•rdasio-i s sere,. and will be tempted with the tae: :".1 in !rat' ling caps. lies, or socks. Then Ise kee hes appotntunent tt•dti the dentist. In the afternoon he finds his cigar -case is empty, so drops in at the tobacconist's and refills it with deice weeds. Diluter, of couree, is at the a la carte restaurant, it beautiful dining -room tilled end furnished like tliat of the lest Lon- don hotels. The game, poultry, fish, and fruit are as Iresh es they would be in London Itself, and the service In every tray as perfect. While he 1s enjoying his coffee a wafter conics wi(tt the thren(re plan to ask hint if he. wishes to book a Mall for the even - Inc performance. Ile pays his $2.50 and goes down to wateh the latest comee opera, and the evening Le finished with a pleasant little supper party in the some n.ngnillcent re taurant In which he dined. FIIIS"T NIGHTS IN MID -OCEAN. NEWS FROM THE MINESISOME FROST TRAGEDIES! LIVER COMPLAINT. SPRING AWAKENS COR LLT TO Ft'R- 'JIIt:1t 'Cele CI 11105y ishipmrnls Rt•ine Made Nat P. 601"0,11 open, iu Nnnlreal Wier District, The main :kilt eft at the Te r sk'im'ng down over -:,�) fee!, tit "1. , 1 leers u tat- is ttet on has 1 • • it cut and c et• usive un- "le.g..,und week ell( le melee token. ipv'Siek:ng will le continued to the 30 -:out 'p• heel. A shipment of Putty tons wits wen sent out to Copper Cliff evil Werk wh:clt ?IFtact vv til runt in the neigtiburtits d of 4.0")ing ounce- Meyer k, Uro ton. At the present time the greater portion of the under - his ger eu11.1 work is being C0Ii reel un al 111O 2t4 -foot level. On the Met and se: o:.d to !eve's upwards of a thousand fe:1 ail I' drifting and cress -cutting has leee dune 1•t date. and ore, is being sloped from a fur diffeient veins. A b r.o of sixty ►`' men is euip leyed and the work is Lcing his hustled along in the usual way. The epi' cettliagas \lice has (lrco cars of high 111- wade and cencenlrales ready few ship. 1"' need. On llx surface the compnny ft el- adding a considerable amount of new Ps euuipreenl, witch includes a gas pro- ducer power plant, with vvh:eh to operate 1113 Coneofltrukt plant, says a Gybed correspondent of the Globe. MAY START AGAIN. Honestly, this Is no fancy picture. The greater part of It is already realized in tilt latest of the huge floating hotels that rush across the ocean at nearly thirty miles an hour. The barbers shop, the (daily paper, the dentist, are already real- ities. The Amerika, the Lusitanio, and other great ships have (heir a In carte restaurants. That on the Amerika will seat 120 persons; while the new Cunard- ers have still lnrgei' accommodation. in- cidentally, tete Amerika made $95,000 pro- fit on her first trip. Even smaller vessels, like the emigrant Cymric, are fitted with such special con- vuniences as a kosher khlchen, where Jewish passengers are specially catered for. Some ships have gyrnnaeiums, oth- ers, like the Empress of Ireland, have playgrounds for children, where heaps of send, spade=, and buckets enable (he youngsters to pretend they are at the seaside. As for the theatre, Mr. Charles Froh- man IF actively at work en a plan to pmduce plays on the larger of the At- lantic liners, When a ship carries two Ilttmsand passengers there .surely need be no anxiety as to getting a gond nud- fence each evening. First nights in mid - ocean will be no novelty within a few yen rs. PEOPi.E WIIO LIVF. ON LINERS. Passengers at sea have eto much more klsure than when on land that good shops will offer an irresistible attraction, and are bound to yield large ielurns both le their keepers and to the shipping com- panies. An enterprising dentist has al- ready found profit in the leisure of his [aloe -passengers, and is now making his living travelling up and down be. hymn New York and Liverpool. Wiry should not. tailors do the same? They would find nein° of the trouble r: hich their fellows do on land in getting cislnnrcrs to curve and be tried on. Anil what a lot of worry it would reeve a pas- senger if he could get iris outfit for n shooting trip to the Far \Vest made on his way out. Toy shops, sweet shops, eLetnisle, and druggists --ell would do a rearing businese with two thousand cus- tomers cltrslered so close around then(. Already people have taken to living on linen ns others do in hotels ashore. A month or two ago there died aboard the Cunnrder Etruria a Mrs. Elizabeth Itohrbach, who had for years been n per- niaiwnt passenger aboard the vessel: there would he more of (twee permanent residents if shops were handy to nave Them the trouble of going esl►ere. Med as for curroeney, if battles are not eelnhlished ahonrd the new yrss01.`r, the h+ouhle of carrying large anile in cash can be avoided by the system originated by lite \\'hile Star of "cinch (Meeks," These* can be purchased for any amount from $10 to $.51t0. and are honored on presentation either aboard ship or ashore nt the companies' agencies. The con• ventenee of these cheques to en(ermons, and in the pnsl twelve menthe the sale of them has multiplied by slx.-Pearson's Weekly. WEAK How many women there are that get no re - TIRED freehment tram Bleep. They wake in the morn WOMENing and feel tireder than when they went to bed. They have a dizzy sensation in the head, the heart palpitates; they are irritable and nervous, weak and worn out, and the lighted household duties during the day seem to It a drag and a burden. MILBURN'S HEART AND NERVE PILLS are the vire remedy theft weak, nervous, tired nut, sickly women need to restore thew the blessings of geed health. They give sound, reshot sleep, tone up the nerve•, strengthen the heart, aid mske Nei blood. Mrs. C. McDonald, Port•tge It Prairie. Man., writes: " 1 was troubled frith ahorineee of breath, ealpi- taeinn of the hrsrt noel weak spells. I get four bocce of efil!eum's Heart awl Nerve Pill!, and after taking theta 1 was completely cured. David Carlyle of the Carlyle Construc- tion Company of Cleveland, Ohlo, was a vic;(or in camp la -t peek. A meeting of the directors of the company was held in Cleveland on Tuesduy for the pur- [ose of arranging to resume operatons at the twine at the earliest possible mo- ment. The properly !ins lien closed down since hist fall with the exception et the compressor plant, wh:cli has been kept in operation utpplying power 'or two drills to the iladg r M:ne, u con- tract which was arranged prior to the tune the mine wee ckese<1 down, 'the train shaft at the Rochester is down ninety bet, with about 100 feet of drift- ing at the 75-1, of level. The manage- ment are confident that geed shipping ore will be found. The main vein on the surface, which has been stripped up• wards of 200 feet, shows an average width of from five to fifteen inches of calcite. with nleolite, srnaltite, Co[alt bloom and native silver, AT THE HUDSON BAY ra force of over 40 men is etnpin yod and the force will be increased inter en. A carload of high-grade ore is being load. ed this week. At the Right of _ \Vey the force has been increased and the development work is be:ng rushed along in the main workings as well as the sinking of the new shaft elo'o to the Silver Queen Mine. . Last week a carload of 30 ton., of ore was sent out to Denver, Color- ado, from the Buffalo Mite. Tee Buffalo is working a force of near- ly 150 men, and Fent out another car of ore lint week. A force of over 50 men is employed at the. Foster F.xtensrve underground development work is being came., on with good results. Last week a carload of high-grade are, ag- gregating 35 tons, was shipped to New York. MR. YOUNG GETS CON'T'ROL. Cyril T. Young of tiaileybury has gel control of a lease on the Peterson Luke property, known as the Lucky Number Seven less'. ,Number Seven leae-e ad- jcins R. I., 404 on the Nipissing pro- perty. A force of men has tern put In work and the lessees believe they will eventually strike n number of the Nlpis- s.ng veins sit wing at that side of the lake. On the Tenet Nipissing Lease on 1'<terson Lake, Superintendent Madden continues to hustle Be. development work along, with splendid results, and a carload of ore will be sent out during the nest few days. Develepntent work is being pushed ahead rapidly with n rem* of about 75 men nt Cobalt Lake. A carload of high-grade ore is being ship - red the present week and another ate: fellow next week which will be two car luad,s for the month. Front present shies merles, a considernble amount of cash is being realized in excess of operating expenses. UI' MONTIRE.11. RIVER. With the opening of navigation on the Montreal !river this week hundreds e -f piospectors have deported, and arc preparing to leave for James town- ship this week. Charles Gifford, Man- ager of the Monsehorn el.n '. is repmiel to hnve ten tens of high-grade ere load- ed on stews at Elk l.iike ready 10 shit, vitt the Montreal River 10 Lolcnford. frons where it will be loaded on care and sent to the Nlelters in New York. etre Girt/ rd's property is the first k. make it 'ttipntent from the new belt. e company hies been incerporoted at Mt. Climens. etch, to hike over the control .:1 the Walls properly in Smythe town- ship. 'Iles property has several native silver showings, The Gales claim in James township has leen sold to a To- ledo syndicate. who will begin extnsivc operations on their properly during the coming summer, and also hope to make the Gates a shipping proposition before the end of the year. GOOD NEWS OF ELK LAKE. A cnrr4' ' onde nt al Elk Loki) writes: hc vvorlcn ollodcn perty. !'eb,ei pe. haveuustruckn(he' n 5.0l1,1 (hpro)lseut nt n depth of nirle(y-Revco feet. The vein is fourteen Itches in width and rich in native silver. This mine will make a rich shipment of ore. The company sunk it shat! depth Poi ty-e ve n Gel. and then Tet the contract It, .ink amine r fitly feet. 'The veil, dipped from The• Minn, making a etase:ul of thirteen fee' eieerenry to tench the vein. elin, rs and (Aleut on Iter \Ienlreal River section are jutelant 4v. r the good find being ntmt„ al this Saadi ,:e; Ih. NO rLAH. Ilnsl al d -'That's n fe(diet' linbil you wetrtetl hate of carrying your inurses in year hands when in lie elrt'el," \1 ifc-"tt'I)y It or 11ishnntl-"frrau.e n thi.•f could entity st,ith h Them nod get ne nye" \\ ife -"\('ell. if the beeennee of PVT t'r Med 41,41 re 0 them more in pal in e ir• purses than you give me le put et ,eine, the Wet would starve to death." Price 50 cents per hoc or three hn;es for 51.25, all Beeler, or the The T. mal- `t burn Co., Limited, Torvate, Oat, r CURIOUS A(:(c1DF:NTS CAUSED BY ICE AND SNOW, The Greatest I el;unillrs ul frost, Strange - 1y Eliuuth, Are '11t0,c Calved by Thal, 10 February, four years ago, there was a li'cirtc•ndous frost on the Continent. '1 le fistula, among other rivers, was c. ''red with ice of immense lhieknem, end w hen the thaw carne and the bottds of frost were loosened, the roaring river Le came choked with gigantic dams of ice. In Galicia, near Szcuezin, the floes grounded in a Shallow part of the stream reid instantly a vest harrier of ice begun (.o ielseulf; what behind it he ked riverrear swellc(1 t into n (nighty lake,choand, tearing over its brinks, inundated the Pal country For a width of nineteen mikes. A regiment of sappers (Waled with dy- namite arrived by special train but their efforts were of little use. Wilkin (wen• ty-four liners no (ewer than ten villages were under water, t(( families were druLcmt lass, and neatly sevcmy people were wncd. TO SEA ON AN It t•: FLOE. A dreadful disaster was UtMwhich hap- pened n ebupte wnters at \ \.em gen, on Ile Zo1uideriZee'sago 'Chug greait.t tallow- inland Kit of brackish water us- ually freezes every winter for a long dis- etnea out. One Jun►utry evening a num- bei of people were anmeing themselves skating off the village, some at a consid- erable distance from snore, when sudden - le a great floe, acres in extent, crocked away from the rest of the ice, and a ra- pidly widening lane of water divided a dozen sknlers from the shore. Some plunged in and swain back, but seven were carried out to sea on the floating ice. Those on shorn rushed for boats, but here the frost completed its deadly work. The boats were too tightly frozen into the sand of the beach to be moved, and by the lime thot one Masened it was dark, Next day (he uwiasn- happy skaters were found, frozen k' death. On the low, sandy shores of Lake Michigan stands the village of Sandpoint, n little place of wooden -built houses. which is -oddly enough -inhabited only in winter. lis people are fishermen who catch their prey by cutting holds in the ire when the lake freezes. One night in February, 1907. a tremendous gale arose, and before the sleeping initabitnnls of live of these little box -like dwellings knew what had happrnded, their horses which were built withoot foundations, wcrc blown on to tate ice, and event :aiding out at gleet speed across the frozen surface. One house dropped halo a stole, end its ful►nbitants were drowned, but the otbeis., fortunately, brought up safe ngainst the edge of a long cape, which runs out cres- cent -fashion almost opposite the village. This brings to mind nn (extraordinary accident which occurred at 'telluride, in re tort do, about three years ago. Some seventy miners were esteep in the shaft - house of the Liberty Bell mine, when the end of a glacier in the mountain above broke nwity. and. sliding down the. valley. struck the shaft -house and ceirrlyd i! nearly lint[ a mile. The rnnnzing thing is that the oeeupnnts wcro-not all killed. 'thirty escaped alive. These were busy digging out the dead when n second ke- elide occurred, and another pen of the poor fellows were crowd er 1 ,tried. SUNK BY FROZEN SPRAY. iI will always be remembered ns one of the strangest accidents caused l y frost that the liner, Germanic, was, in 1895, sunk nt her wharf lit New York. simply by the enormous weight of irozen sea water, which coaled her weather side. Ne. lives were lost on !tint occasion, al- though the financial ioss was heavy. A Srrnitlar disaster, which befell the small tramp steamer von in 11479. hnd a more 1u.gic event. Overwhelmed with masers of frozen spray, and with her engines dis- abled, she turned turtle in the North Al- lentle. and of her crew of seventeen only iwr lived to tell the tale, One of the meet mmazing tragedies of !nest occurred In Colorado on n February (icy, twelve years ago. The temperature was for (telow• Zero, but the air dry nnd� c:ear. and the sun shining with mmazing 1•rillinney. Five people, who were driv- ing together across the tract of forest reserve known as North Park, did nol rt ally feel the cold. Suddenly the distant mountains disnp• fanned in while mist. and the sun lost if, br•illinncy. Presently one of the wo- men put her hnnd up to her cheek, cry- ing rying out flint something hnd sting her .t breeze bcUan to blow. and the atr be- came charged with n mist of fine particles which glittered like diamond dust. They enw n settler, his face eoyered in a shawl, -ignnlling In them furiously. They drove 1, his h(utste, and he hurried deem in. Before morning all UK' pero drend- fnity ills and ole 5voninrfy nn ww'na (100(1. This fog is of fine tee particles, so in• tenscoli (b it Teeoh hu w•ilhouelyl mcllinit. 'fihey indrinrette jtustlyelcelngsl IIs 5 strange phenomenon the While Death.-fentnon's Weekly. i4 THE FI TUBE, "You should learn to live with nn eye 1 the hllere." "The future is whnl has hem strain- ing: any eyes for years," answered the uorrice-to king num. "I have stock in erten or eight undeveloped gold mines," Ireland PRODUCTIVE SIBERIA, Tlte,ugh the name of Sibcr;n is atilt pularly accepted as a synonym for an gal L, arctic and sterile, it is beee►oing arer every year that few regions of ,, earth ac more capable of producing e0)0050 forests of human food. 11 oI yY s, of tie ,t. I den't wont my hair twitched over forehead any tenger,' declared flat- . "I want n crack to It like father's," Dune you think, major" inquired the ing nine in the front :Yew. "that tie gs !twee hnllle-stogy rrulisticnllyee se. :relied." replied the gentleman r:•snid; "s', rentislirnily, in fart ter.: f like lighting ail the time I'm listening Win, The liter 1. the termer gland 1a to body; it. odce is to take !row the blood the erotwtiae welch forty bile. %'bea r::, Near is torpid and inflameed it cannot furntah Dile to the bowels. causing there to (»come twuud and costi.e. The symptuas are a feehug of fulness or aeon l u the right side, and ,huutiag paint to the oma region, pains between the shoulders. yelluwuess of the skin and eves. bowels irregular, coated longue. b.1 1111•1u the wonting. etc. MILBURN'S LAXA- LI vE R PILLS are pleasant and cloy to take, do not grlpp weaken or sicken, ucver fell iu their effects, and are l y far the eldest sod quickest remedy for all diseases or d:surJers of the neer. Price 25 cents, or 5 bottles for $1.00, all (leaked or trailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, One FROM ERIN'S GREEN ISLE NEWS Ill' Neel!. FROM IiRELAND'S SHORES. Happenings In the Emerald isle N Interest to Irish. mess John Clyne, aged 100 years, died res ccnt'y at Dromodmore, Co, Cavan. The death of Margaret Herrington, Coolbawn. Skibbercen, has just occurred at the age 61 102. The trite Mr. Robert Dixon Welker, 01 Wexford. wine merchant, left person- al estate valued at $60.410. At Oseestry. an aged widow nnmcd Annie Lloyd was found strangled to death. She had Lo. -n robbed of $150. Mr. Robe. Yoting. Holywood. son of Mr. Samuel Young. M. P., tins been ap- f.ointed u mag:st•ute for County town. Mr. Cnr•neg:e, II:e utilLatain, hall mode a grant for Ih: building of a Car- negie free library in Kilioglin, Co. Kerry. Tito lax re:•eipts for the purposes of local g,over•nniettt in irelund during the financial year amounted to $21.153!850. Drunago roughly estenalcd at $5.000 was caused by an oulLreok of fire et the Lagan Fern sh:ng Company's mills at Dromnto. Co. Down. IluriJreds oI tons of limber are sent each week to England from the neigh - b oritrwd of BaL'inrobc and Hollysnount, Comity Mayo. The que.st:en of procuring a fire ap- plionc-e for Itallybay, Co. Monaghan, has been dropdei owing to the large expen- diture it would involve. In County Derry, the Local Govern- ment Ikoard, wtotc sanctioning a loon e f ,16,0(10 fur the purpose, of carrying out the Shanlal'ow .coverage scheme. The tur•nr,ver last year of the Lima- vndy Co-operative Poultry Society. Lim- itcd, was over $40.0550, an increase of $6.775 on Hutt of the previous year. 'trinity College. Dublin, has acquired a hall nt ITS deuce for women, who aro tehnilled to rill teclures and 012101n de- grees on the slide terms as men. According to a doctors evidence, hov- els occupied by laborers in the Cnsltea- fian dtslriet, County Cavan, would not mike decent kenne's for dogs. Janes Dolan, his w:fe and child, were seriously injured at Holborn Hill, Coun- ty Cavan, by the explosion of a cart- ridge which the child had placed in tete 11rr, Four men were terribly burned in fin at the. military barracks. Mulligan, rind a private named Inglefie to eyed such injuries that he dial sub-etli:cntly. A farmer mimed Alex. Itoundl: e•, ing near King's Court. County Cavan, tire( out of the window nt some men attacking the house, and fatally shot his wife, who had rushed from the /Iowa*. Al Donnyhreek. n cllfage just outside Dublin. (here used to be held n frir which tecnnte proverbial for its disor- derly seance. '010 fair was put a step to in 1855, utter bt:ing Lek! for ever 500 yen ts, A bullet can'ir'ssly dropped in York street, • Belfast. ens exploded by too wheel of a dray. The missile went through tee window of a barber shop, grazed the head of a customer, and edged in the Lyall ufpoi;i:e, Mamma -"Now, Freddie, mind whnt 1 sny. 1 don'? want you to go over into the next garden ko play with MR Rinks bey; he's very rude." Freddy (heard a few moments uflerwurds culling over the wall) -"I say. Rinks. not says lent not to ge in your garden because you're rude; tut you conic into my garden -1 ain't nude." DYSPEPSIA AND STOMACH DISORDERS MAY BE QUICKLY AND PFRMA.YI::NTLY CURED BY BURDOCK BLOOD BITTE RS. lir. F. A. Labelle vet-!wakiis, writ.. u• 11 follows: "1 desue t, thank ecu far your won- derful ewe, Burdock mood I::,ter,. Three yew aro 1 lad s Tory mere atla-k of byspepeia. 1 tried 8,. of ihs hest doctors 1 could find hut they rou:,1 do me no pec.1. I was advised by a friend to try Itun:eck Blood Bittera and to my peat surprise. after taking two bottles. 1 was w perfectt, curd ibst 1 have not hada sign of 1)y pet Ile since. I cannot praise it ton highly to all r,ffmn 1st cry etptrience it is the beet 1 eras wed. Note. Int for me hke R.R.R. 'n't I a stile .tote for flurdnek Bi There It as _teas 'lust $$ good.'