Exeter Times, 1908-06-18, Page 3ABSOLUTE
SECURITYI
Genuine
Carter'$
IJtt1eiver Pills.
Aust Bear signature of
Age-e°2-gd".
Sere Pae -Siam° wrapper Below.
Veer eaten w se ease
Is tab es woman
TO. NEAOACNI4
FOR 01Il1NEtle
ren DILIOYSNESt.
FOR TORPID LIVEN.
FOR OO $TIPATION.
FOR SALLOW SKIN.
FOR THECOMP MIN
01112V MUM mos
tri t % i Taraia ass etakie
_ c CURL'__ - "AcHE.
ARTERS
CURES FOR iNSOMNI.A.
Mrs. Phlltu,inihrow Suggests One That
Alight ito in Some Cases.
own case," said Mr. Phligntln-
Iind that insomnia proceeds
in worry over nioney. My
e all right and 1 have a cast frost
I can eat anything and enjoy
ea general proposition lite looks
t(•tty day to me; but still 1 do occa-
6luna4 have nights when l can't sleep
w hen 1 ile awake worrying over how
an: going to make both ends meet.
"1 never deliberately consider tlnancial
quo,llons at night, but I do find that
curiplelely comfortable evening-frnan-
se,nlctimes-and this 'nay be atter n most
cite questions obtrude themselves upon
see after 1 have gone to bed.
"Tel slave off these ileiplensnnt ques-
tie;ns and enable myself to forget them
so that I could go to sleep 1 have tried
various familiar methods; 1 have got out
of bed and stood up to make myself
tired; 1 have recalled and dwell on plea-
sant joterneys; 1 have counted from one
cp to a million, mare or less! 1 have said
Pie nlphnbet backward over and over
again; 1 have tried ninny things, but do
you know what In my case i find most
efficacious? It is a story that 1 tell to
myself about how 1 nm going to become
comfortably rich, and thus free from all
financial troubles.
"It took me a considerable time to build
up this story in such shape That it just
.ailed me, so that it seemed natural, like
something that might have happened,
yore understand, and then i filled in the
amount that was canting to mc, ranking
that enough so that the Income from it
would be auMeient to provide for all or-
dinary wait* and as well for a few mod-
est Meiners, including a little travel -a
pleasant prospect lo dean upon. And
try the line I had Ili s story cornplefcty
Luill up 11 took m4 some lime to ell it
1.1 Myself, with Him snug giggle fortune
Bait was to save me from all financial
werry coming In at the end.
"And then when (hose stoney questions
used to pounce on fee after 1'd gone to
Liv1 and thiaateit to keep ine awake I'd
tai off aiiirtsli myself that story, as in
bulb 1 lave done ninny limes. And
r•. twenties 1'( have to tell it to myself
two or !limp times over in succession
1 . drive ewer the spectre and then again
.ft^e wetted do, that money coaling in at
the end of it seething me to sleep, and
then i have sornetlniCs sol even been
c+.rupetled 10 ell It all through once; 1
have fallen Asleep before i had finished
ft. before f got the money. so sure was
1 tont It was coming to me."
---4
Q1'ICKLI' ATTENDED TO.
"Rut 1 don't know you, modern," the
brink cashier said to the woman who had
er.'scntal n cheque.
!tut this woman. instead of saying
i:nughtily. "1 do net wish your ncqunln•
barn, sir!' merely replied with an en-
gaging smile:
"Oh. yes. 3011 do, I Think. tan the 'red -
beaded old virago' next door to you,
whose scoundrelly intoe Ilene' err A! -
mitre reaching through the fence and
picking your flowers, When you sheeted
to town Iles morning your wife said:
'Now. Ilenm v. if you a not n dinner fit
l' eat this evening you'll have to leave
me n little money. 1 can't keep this
he use nn plain water and len cents a
day-- •"
••item's your money. n ndnnt;' ecatd the
cashier. pushing it leo-nude her and
(*sighing loudly.
MILBURN'S
4 -LIVER
118
are mil 1. mire anti safe, and are a perfect
regulator or:‘,4 system.
They gi wee 'thick the secretions, clear
away all effete am! waste matter from the
system, and give too and vitality to the
wholo intestinal tract, curing Constipa-
tion, Sick Headache, Biliousness, i)yrpcp•
Ilia, Crated Tongue, Foul Breath, Jaun•
dice, Heartburn, mil Water Brash. Mrs.
11 g. Oa•ien, W'oo,istnek, Nett., writes:
r' My husband and myself !rave eve! Mil.
hucn'e taxa -!.icor ]'ills for a number of
Isere Wo think we cannot do without
them. Whey aro the only pills we ever
take'•
Price 23 cents or fire bottles for $1.00,
THE MOST DANGEROUS DEBT
We Are All Debtors, One to Another, and
None Can Live to HimselL
Otte
no
man anything,
o but to•c
;
enc another,"-ilemns tii„ 8.
Many a nein who prides himself on
paying his way and on being nut of
debt would be in absolute bankruptcy
if oompclkoJ to square his accounts
with hfe. lie may have pad ter all IN
east
Fr he has bought, but he has talk+.l
b. make any adequate return for the
goad that has conte freely to him.
I.ile is r►ruch the business of paying to
the present those debts which we owe
f i the }oast, of pulling into the universe
and back Into our hwnanfly at least n
part of that which wo have drawn for
our own curetting from these ro-ources.
Love ie= life's grea4slaw, because love
is the principle of self -giving ,n action.
We are all debtors one to another.
Ko mnn can avoid the indebtedness for
llr� sacrifices which men have trade be-
(• re him, which alone make possible Ins
1)•e -eat advantages. You may boast that
you owe no man anything, but what o'
yr ur fatori?her's lei! (or you, your mother's
(ley'
Our cred:tors strolch far back, a long
)hie beyond our ken. Some man tong
ago conceived a groat principle, the
enunc.ation rine defense of which cost
him his comfort, strength, and. at tenet
his life. At that cost ito purchased our
right to live in the freedom of that pran-
ciole.
\\'E CAIN. HIM A FIERO;
but we do not discharge our debts to
hien by the erection of monuments or
the writing of g)o;ms in his honor.
Ile who talks of himself as scif-tirade
thereby gives c'ldeglee of the ihcontplete•
mess of Imre process of his making, his
p iecee of self-understand•lig aro unde-
we :aped. A thousand lives gs) into the
marking of the least life. N:,ne (an live
to h2n'etf nor by his own resources. It
ie good to cultivate the spirit of inde-
pendence, but the fact of indebtedness
none cnn cseai.e.
What self-respecting man would be
content to eat at another's table, to be
clothed al another's expense, ani make
tie fort of r'ee.mpense7 Yet in what
manner docs ouch a course ditfrr from
ours if wo lives day by day with no ether
thought Ihan to get more and yet n►ore
out of life for oueclvee. Humanity is
our host. Even the bread we ,cit and
the clothes- we wear we never could
gain f..r ourselves unaided; the elf( els
of all mankind have been neu.ssnry to
their production.
Even for our toed, our clothes, not
to mention other and gtrater benefits,
w c never can pay with money. \Ve
may earn the lord, but who shall pay
the sewer c.f lung ago, the miller, the
nierhnn c, the thinker, the pioneer who
grave their lives to make our wheat
fields and turn there into bread?
Slicer busincse honesty with life will
fe.rce us to ask. How can 1 pay these
debtors? What return can 1 stake for all
That 1 have received?
TUE ANSWER IS SIMPLE.
that we should do for humanity what
humanity is doing for us. that since we
are recipients we shou'd bs givers, that
w: . hnutd be led by that law of love
that already has wrought for our bles-
sing.
If to lives of long ago we owe faith
at d frecdorn what goad things aro our
l.w„ passing on to prose who follow
to? If through the service of our tel-
!( w;; we are enriched to -day to what
roes n( are they enriched through our
.•t vi e? \Vo have received; lutvo we
g von?
There is no gain to the lite that is
all geeting. It loses itself. Such a hto
Ls a parasite, an abnormality and de-
formity in a world se here giving k Ile
law of living. No other l(c is quit., so
empty res !lint twhich thinks only of fil-
1 ng its 1f and elves of enrich:ng others.
(1 a can Iny as'di all sentiment here
and its, a plain bus ncss proposition.
We are debtors to our kllows, we owe
those of the past and those of the pre-
sent; what aro we but defaulters it,
knowing these things. we continue evad-
ing the payment of our debts, continue
with greed seeking only to gel and
never to give?
Such a course is Iho saddest kind 1.1
suerele. fielding to scif-love the mon
Ignores the claims of his fellows or hires
them under sophistry and, giving him -
eel( to gains is surprised to find lite so
barren, so disappointing. Defying life,
law of love he has lost the power of
laving. the sensibility of love, the prizo
of life itself, the power of living.
HENRY F. COPE.
THE S. S. LESSON
1\TERNs1TIO\ 1l. LESSON, JUNE 21.
Lesson XIII. ."gegen t►u«rterly itaim.
Golden 71•.x1, John 20, :Il.
QCFSTIONn FOR SENIOR SCi(OLARS.
%Vitt vhat•l•cauli(ul discourse did our
(wader's study begin? \Vhnt du we
know about our Lords friends in Beth-
any -about Mary? about Martha? about
Lazarus? How dock the miracle nought
upon Lazarus compare with other niter
acles of our f.orl? glow is the physicnl
act here Iie type of the sp ritual lesson?
What did the anointing of J(sus by
Mary really mean? \\-itat triumphal
event Occurred between Lessons 111 and
1\'.? How did Jesus teach humility in
Leeson 1\'.? Where and when were the
striate of Lessen V. spoken? Of Letson
\ I: Recount the lneidents of the be-
trayal and arrest of our lord as toki
ty the four evungetists. Ikcount the
hieldents of his condemnation and cru -
r Illxion. [low many appearances of
cur Lord after his resurrection from Inc
dead aro recorded in the Gospels?
Ql'f.S'tIOYS rOn i\TER\t:IIIATE:
SC.1 I01.A RS.
(.ween 1. -Jesus the Good Shepherd.-
\\ hat IN the girl verso of the twenty.
third Psalm? In Ilia lesson what dries
d 111 1.nrel tall himself Hew dere he
describe his sheep? Whose voice do hie
sheep reeegmze? What other kinds of
.heplrenis dozes the \Inger allude to?
What is the lino) proof of lite Good
SIeph^rd'. devotion?
Leeson II. -The Iiaicing of Lim/true.-
What noted fnniily lit ed in Bethany?
\\ heti, wns this town? Why did J(stls
watt several days before starting to
Bethany after he heard that Lazarus
was sick? What olid the sisters say to
him
when lie arrived? What is the
shorlei verse in the Bible? Why did Le
veep? \\ hat divine I:ower dal Jesus
sht. w in ibis chapter?
1. -s et 111. -Jesus :\neinled nl Beth-
«• • w1 herr eni this feast given? What
1. ' 1 guests stere there? What dirt
eel do? \\ hat did Mary do? Who
test? Why? What pr(4•e dict
I'.• wl • er testae? What did tie say
e t .rnr?
IV !esus Teaches Humility.-
\\
'event lake la r
What
tit.. Hong- i- )1 said I1);rt Jcsuc knelt'
pet at Iltis juncture? What me of ser -
v1 di.1 he perform? \\1►a1 tive:s the
h •'ne tench us?
Lessen V.-- Our Heavenly Horne. --
Wilt) whnt verse dors This lessen agree?
What tun' does to Master give ter
heart troubles? What has he I rewired
t. r his followers? (11 w hat dte-s he give
eseurnnce in this lesson? Whitt great
gill eves he promise?
Lesson \'1. --The %fission of the Indy
�pirtt.--R} v.lint name is the i1eti
Spirit called titre? What other terms
hap unto understand the meaning -1
Thal w •rd? 11f what does he convince
Rhe world.' 'Why was it teller for the
d s ipI.'s that issue shoukl go away and
1, awe thein? What it the great sin. etc-
(..rdeigs I(1 thi• Ctlnpte r?
L. gem V11.-- Jesu. Re•lrnyed end De-
nietl,-\\'lug plotted to destroy lM' %la. -
ter? \\ ho l trny'cd Jews into their
fortes? In w hat place. del the letraval
.rt.Ai what time? What prompted
I s to d,) this thine? nl,,r^
h l\ t►en fells -twit,
• afar off? Wei denied loin? Hew
tie tunes' What melee+ led him to,
at all dialers or direct on receipt of preen ,g
The T. Milburn Cu,.Limited, Toronto,
1• ,
Ont.
uw
14- this net? What differences do you
sec between the sin of Judas and that
f Peter?
Lesson V111.-Jesus's Death and Rtrri-
ai.-\Vhat Jewish ofileials sat in judg-
ment on the Saviour? On what grounds
use he condemned? Who gave final
sentence that tie should die? What title
was written over his cross? What two
rich men buried hurt? For ww horn did
he die?
Lesson 1X. -Jesus Risen Prom the
Dred. -On %lint day of the week was
J( sus crucified? On what day did he
rise from the dead? What effect did his
death hnvc upon hie disciples? Vha
were Inst al the cross and first at the
tomb? Who first received n metrsago
that Jr:.us was risen? Did the disciples
believe the testimony of the women?
What three_truthis does the resurrection
of Christ ►Hike clear and sure to us?
I.c'sse)n X. -Jesus Appears to the
AI oslles.-When was this first revola-
lion of Christ made to lice apnetles?
Ilnw
many of them were there? Where
was Judas? Where was 'fheinas? Why
dill not Thomas lelieve the testimony
of his fellow -disciples? Did they east
him out of their company for his un-
belief? What hnppened n work later?
Wee Thornes present? When he ren-
lized that tr actually saw his Master
(give ngnln, what did he say? Of whnt
nccoint Is to us that a mon like
'I'hnrnas was a disciple of Christ?
Lesson XL --The Risen Christ by the
Sea of Galilee. -Where did the third
manifestation of the risen Christ to his
(iloriptes occur? Why was Ihisiegion
beloved by them all? In what plight
dud he find seven of his disciples? what
treed he pred;arcd for them? Of ;hal
was the draught of fishes a pledge rind
sign? What died he say to S 1111,n l'cer?
What was the aploste's limn) relay? How
,r:any Times tied he denied his I.ord?
thew• ninny times des be now ncknow.
ledge him? What is the Golden Text of
the Review `undne?
-4
PAn tma: roll QV % hyt.
Free Play in Sale of Patent eledirinc in
Eu Aland.
Great Britain Is time happy hunting
gooiest of the medical quack, if one can
!whet e n member of the Chemists' Asso-
c.blio)n of London. le Is quoted in Der-
rick's British Report ns Saying ihnl two
yen"t ago Ihr annual sate of I'r prlelnry
medicines in (trent Britain amounted to
c
. d
{ .ODI
0.
In the).00
failed `Ines and in most Etta
(preen rouniritw some legisiotkm either
exists or has been attempted to limit er t: 1
stop the Irnfli^ In secret remedies. in get r
England. niseluk free piny i., given to
!l
It has been found expedient for the
safety of Iho public to regulate the Ante
n' gs)isons, but patent medicines, cur-
kusly cnongh, were exempt from the man
pro%ts(ons of the inw, n privilege which
they flaky together w; ilh legnlly gaall•
fled prnc(itionens. G110
In mole! mutilate 111e dealing in medt- To
tenni drugs rind chemienls is reserved yeti
only to 'wrestles qualified by training. jest
Medi. s anti exAntinnik)n--that is, t0 bare
phnr•rnaciac, In England. by it rllr'irme h'. B
neeincerstatnling of the functions of n lien,
phatrllncisl, he Is recognized Sy law age.
merely as a "pidgin seller," and nny one dols
elle) pie rtes may supply the public with
mcvlirines the Identify e.r purify er ileac.
r.lwlntie 3nit1C of twhich he may be ate
selutelr ignorant. And 1 y' the simple de -
ire (.1 parking them eta n medicine and
keeping the weal"11k.n sieve! he to nbie
1'. means i1 ndyerti.cemenl. in snhstfufe
ein►s, if k•r compctefrand qualified ser-
vice.
ASLEEP FOR THREE YEARS
I:MINF.NT SpECI.\r,11;7'ti AIti: CO1f-
PL :IEI.I' NONPLUSSED.
(.lac nl l:rvrnan (►Hirt.•. Pu,Iles DOC
tors - Remains nre in !Pi -
len Ilealth.
Professor Ett'enburg, the eminent
special in eelvvus diseases, sPeakton
al a meeting of the German Physiolo-
g.cal Association here, du cribxd tho
care of a Goverrun, nt official, named
Arnheim. who has Leen steeping con-
timt:ousty snce June 10, 1904 -Shut is ,
three years and seven months.
Professor Julc t)sr b attributes
Arn-
hrirn's strange condition to on ,cede nt
which happened before he tell asleep.
when he struck the back of his head
le a fall. Ainheirn's medical attend-
ant al that time was tinab'e t, discov-
er any injury to the brain. but ten day.,
after the accident he fell asleep, and
tins been sleeping cc.ntlmiousiy ever
Z+1nre. Professor Eulenburg gave the
following descripton of the I atent:-
FEEDS AUTOMATICALLY.
"ito is lying on hes back 1» best, the
head being slightly Inclined 1) tee r ighI
bile. The forehead Is ;wrinkled, as
Ih •ugh the sleeper were disturbei by
tad dream;. The limbs can Le freely
moved. The skin has lost its sensitive-
n^cs, and deep needle pricks de not pro-
duce 1he slightest effect. Other incis-
ien3 in the flesh, painful for normal
beings, have no effect on the s,ceper;
deafen -ng noises made ck•s: Io his car-;
fill to rouse hint; and a dazzling light
turned on his eyes is likew:se i►ieffec-
tucl. ArnheJr is fed regularly. Ile
clews the food placed In his mouth
seewly, and swallows instincLvely,
LIKE WAX FiGURE.
"During the whole 43 months Ara -
helm has newer one opened his eyes;
1:a: never spoken a syllable, and never
betrayed the least sign of consclotiasness,
Sometimes Arnheim s wite, whit fends
tom incessantly with patient care, re-
moves hire from the bed; clothes him.
and places hitn in an armchair. 1n
th:s position he presents a surprising
appearance.
"This ghastly pale pian, sitting with
closed eyes. has something uncanny
about turn. The sleeper then rent's ir-
resistibly those wax figures placed in
natural positions in waxwork shows to
deceive naive vis'tors into the b.liet that
they are real human beings.'
Professor Eulenburg considers a sue -
den awakening to be possible. Many
medical experts have visitej Arnheim,
and have watched the sle'per for leng-
thy per:ods, without coming to any de-
finite conclusion as to tho cause of his
long sleep.
TOIICIIFD IIY VACATION FE\'Eit.
Mr. Glimmerton Defines the Difference
ReI;;ecn Two Familiar Words.
"1 haven't )coked 11 up in the Wilton-
nry." said Mr. Gllmmerlon, "but i
should say that the difference between
tired and weary was something like•
this: A man IA tral when he has work-
ed herd, rend weary when hes tired of
work.
"And ft's a feeling of weariness that
dines over me now. 1 fc_•1 good, first
ra'o; and 1 sleep well and eni well; life
1 .oks pleasant to mo; but i don't feel
a Lit like sawing wood!. 1n fact the
tyro I pilo Is repellant if not downright
repulsive tt me. What I want to do.
In be perfeetry frank \t•ith you, is le
turn my tack on the woedpik and gel
out and loat.
'Not idly, you understand. i don't
want to go to sleep; about what I'd like
1., do is go so►newhere far from the
woodpile and Ile down where 1 could
hear liar winds sigh and see the clouds
ge by and dream. The woods beckon
me, and likewise the lakes and streams
rind the senehore, and nature smitee
over ell; and I want to go away from
hire, and that's what I cell long weary.
"1 au{pose itis the summer vacation
mero.o that has got in my blood; rt al-
e ars lifted% me Mot way, nail 11n v I'm
gos:tcvely downright woniy, though for-
tunately not log tireel to utak; and so
it's back In the woodpile (ewe more for
me. to be content with reading Rte et -
el ntl►re and the timestabl's 1111 it's time
fel• me to go."
-4..�-
TO Tl:Ll. THE AGI; or i n'r11.
Ilndilm
May Wein° Mcrrei 01 Ape From
Old Mistime I:ar•ih.
11. J. Wulf, a iUritisit scentist .1
h gh standing, in the course of rt lee.
lure al tee Itoyal institution. Coulton,
Friel iho11, Ihankr to recent invest,galk)rrs
of indiuut, it sewn twoml•1 be grew-ib!e to
estimate the exact no of the earth.
Ac d,.l ng Ibe hypothesis That helium
i.; Conelanlly produced, nt n definite
slots! leen 'indium, Mr. Sirup proposed
a
quota Wive ..v.1 !nation 0t Ito indium
one lite tedium present in var.one min-
erals, os
n
n►rr+rt. )
a
, s ( determining +
f c mirring, Ifteir
relative ngee. Proceeding eon similar
Ines. when once the rale at which ra-
dium is irreafonusvl slionld have been
rife.
.t i
(
.L
tt I rt 'n t
st 1 I ►;
c < a 'o
cr lu
1 n ill n (ri -
Rt
lite l c woulst solve the problem of the
age of the cattle
bate," seed Mr. :hall, "leen (ble
ind That the age of flints piesenl
teak, les only 4,(c -thirtieth of IM'
!lie min et that is (rings mine.!
to Cornwall. If is ter be heeped that in
this way it will to px.easihe to forret nn
evert eetirnate ut elle dale on which •
first nppenrxd upon the earth."
\V nht'R:1Ril IN 1'Ol'll Cr., , wit.
"1
cultivate the tory tinsel rhlrbar•b,
do not need any garden at all, Intl
n corner of a cellar, nal an old
•1 nr deep box. Bore it de 7. •r) heirs
n ares 4,f your barrel for vent • ,.
and a few in the brllne) (or d:
Then place in it a !our . ,
alntit Iwo inches dee., and ,
watt nrdinnry gnrsen real. N. w
your roots side by ads. and c••v••r
with Another Inger of •nrlh.l
r them oe-cnemently. And keep the ! b
( the nn :eel covert d with a piece I u
rpot. ft is Irl:e that rhubarb can 1
tight very cheaply. but that grown
e way descrtlnel will to far nicer
This
plant
Its
\Yn:c
lel.
df en
be In
tel th
Shan
FROM BONNIE SCOTLAND !NEWS FROM THE MINES
NOUN OP INTEREST FROM iIER
BANKS AND BRAES.
W hat is Going On In the Highlands
and Lowlands of Auld
tecona,
Dundee d o (ellee have bo
L their wages
cons derably increased.
The new Corn Market at Gorge is
estiulated to cost $50,000.
Cr•uden troy, Ate rdeenshire, has a
chicken e 3111 taw • b aks a• d Mos eyes.
Alla twill nue' n new Public school
which este w?1
I held 800 pupils, at a oast
o' $:20,000.
No fewer then eight op the Denier/1i-
line time) factories are only ti arising
fur days 0 wee.
Thin" is it probability of the 8colch
railway companies raising the price of
return ti••ket (rues,
1t has been resolved to wkk'n Craig-
L•ou-o read and Ilse hrid;;e over the
suburlein ra'lwi:y in F.d:nl.urgh.
Th betty of a man 1111(114(1 \1cGilp,
enhpi:.y 'd at Otter Fer y, was found ly-
ing tel the bench at Benfield, near Ard-
rishaig, recently.
One of the three large swans on
Neitsland Loch strayed the other day
and was killed Through flying against
an electric wire at Clyde bridge.
Mr. John Gladstone, afterwards Sir
Jelin Gladstone, Bart. of Fasque, the
g. eat Pr•estliers father, \vas horn in
Leith, and cArr:ed on business for years
in it.
The family of XII'. Cee ergo Christie.
:\►b:oath, who was faulty injured by
a gas explosion on ills stnvet. has ro-
c ivied $5,500 in cmngensation tram the
Town.council.
The other day, on the eve of sailing
.c join her husband in .Arnerice, Mrs.
Sarah McCulloch coin/flitted su'oi,lo ny
cutting her throat in her father's horst
,►1 Seevcnston.
Quart-rmashe'.sergl, Falser, Banff,
Its been ,steed to form one of n teen)
of Br.tsh marksmen to lake part in eer-
thin contest% at the forthcoming Olym-
pic games in Londe n.
A new building sctume of an ember
ate nntuuo Is o:t f:ot in tle►•w'ek. Platy
have been prepared by a local firm • '
architects and have Leen lodged with
:he san!tnry authorito=.
The coal expert from Leith since the
M'g'nning of the new year company
unfavorably watt that in tho same reeled
of 1907. 'itue falling off amounts Lit
something like 40,000 loris.
Fears entertained regarding the pos
sib:e dem)I:t:on of the old tlnhes•.front-
(i house In 11)e Canongate, I•.d:nt.ur•gh.
built. In 1570 by the Marquis of Hunt-
ley, have for Ilse g.r.'sent been dispelled.
Four huge Danish hounds wwcro deco-
rated with placnrds in the Kincardine-
shire election and paraded one of the
d stricts. The four wi to on ento side in
politics, and there was therefore no dog
fight.
1'h^ 501h anniversary of their wed-
ding was celebrates! recently by ex-
finilie and Mr-. Orr, et Janeville, Irvine.
\fr. 0:r is a native of Irvine, and start-
ed bile:Ives there over 50 scars ago as
a grain merchant.
An int resting do:~umenL has f(emel
a resting place in Dumfries, being the
original orders nest ins'ructons for dis-
banding the Dumfries Yeunurry.. The
order is dated March 21, 1800, and Is
esunteteigrlexl by George iii.
A pr; eased to add to the attractions
of Berwick by establishing public switn-
ndng bathe has been made, anti the
numbers cif Rerww:ek Amateur Sw•itm-
ruing Assco'olion have deeded to peti-
tion 1he sanitary authority t0 11105.41 in
the !natter.
WARNED 12Y HIS \V111SKERS.
Of what use are n cat's whiskers? Art
they merely to trite puss n handsotrre.
marital apl.caraalce, or have flay a oss-
t:net use? The latter is the cnse. 'flee
are organs of touch, each one being
c eneesled with the nerves of tlus•lip The
slightest ' ontact of these w•hiskcis with
nny object is, therefore, felt by the ani-
mal, al:hough the hairs themselves are
Insensible. When a lion is stealing
though the jung'e his tvttiskers warn
hila of any obstacle which may relaid
his progress, or of any bush winch
11. gig rustle it he touched it in pass-
ing. So his whiskers. in conjunction
eel* h s pndd••d feel, enable Klin to move
Through tin) thickest growth with a dead-
ly silence.
Rt'`'IA S N1;1 WATERWAY.
Russia is ca'n'em')lnling the construe -
ben oI a huge new wnlet•tw•ny ncross
Sibt r;a, nearly parallel with the course
c? the 'Trans-.Siherinn Railway. It es
ptopo-dol to conn •el live great Siberian
rivers, lite Tobnl, lishdnt, Irlish, Oh and
Yeniesset, and other leas important
ate nuts, by comae or light railways
ern 1 with n view of this the ltu'sinrt
Government has ordered extensive sur-
veys to bo Irtk+ n.
•
SUFFERING WOMEN
who find life a burden, ern haze he :h and
Itron;rth restored 1p• the u." ..f
Milburn's
Heart and Nerve
Pips.
The present generation of worsen And girls
hate more than their share of misery. With
some it is nervousness Anil palpitation, with
others weak, ditty and fainting spells. while with
others there is a general collapse of the system.
llilburn's Heart aid Nerve fills tone up the
nerves. strengthen the heart and make it beat
strong and regular, create new red blood core
'weal's. and impart that rease cif buoyancy to
the spirits that is the result of renewed mental
and physical t igor.
Mee. D. O. Mori/hue, Dent(,, Ont.. writes:
' 1'nr over A tear 1 Ass troubled with nervous-
ness and heart mitt le 1 tirci.:c,l to give Mil -
urn's iteart and Nerve gills a trial, aced after
sing five boxes 1 found 1 was completely cured.
always redwmmend them to my 1r:ends."
Price sit cents per box or three 1 ores fit 111.25.
1 deniers or The /. nature Co.. Limited
eroato, Oat. •
any you could 1 OSStbly buy. ( T
IIIE MINER RU I1GS OF THE LoWilt
1.olot11N,
111e NPIn Rel( Is Arco'r,rtle, But a New
Tutt nate is Needed tar
the District.
Accordh)g to reliable information
furnished by prospectors, there are up-
wards of (.00 claims staked at Silver Cen-
tre 10 date, and about 300 prospectors an
the ground. i). Beattie Nesbitt and part-
ners, who have recently acquired the
Keeley claim at a cost of $300,000, are
most optimistic, claiming that they have
in the Keeley one of the great treasure
vaults of the north, wrhieh they will be-
gin to open at once. The Keeley vein is
n splendid showing; of cobalt, snhaltito
and wire silver, with black sulphides
coaling In as depth is attained. The vein,
width is opened up a distance of 80 feel,
stows an average width of close to a
foot. A small test pit is down in one
place over 20 feet, and the veln still looks
good at that depth. No attempt at syie
!emetic mining has been made on the
property, but Dr. Beattie Nesbitt informed
your correspondent that a force of 30
men would be at work In a week's babe
sinking tit, retain shaft to n depth of 75
feel, where extensive underground work
will be cruelest on, and by the time (he
winter roads are available a compressor
plant will be installed, when it is hoped
le make the mine a big shipper, says n
Globe correspondent.
BELIEVES iN Ti1E NEW CAMP.
Mark Harris of Buffalo is one of the
big operators in this new district, with
tee properties formally owned by Shone.
adjoining the Keeley on the north, and
the 1tuilcybury Silver Alining Company
on the wet, also the Logan property, 11.
P. 24, whish adjoins the Ilnileybury Sil-
ver Mining Company, and the Logan pro -
2(
perly, 70ito nrh owvs
cingm, On tle Montrealtheot
Rivofer Mther. Jllarrisey
has two claims, Captain A. G. Terrill of
the Soo is in charge, and at present is
working a force of eight men, to be in-
creased later on. Mr. Harris is very op-
timistic, and having profited by his ex-
perience in the (;nbnit camp thinks vert
highly of lower Lorrain, in the Cobalt
camp Mr. Harris has recently acquired
centre! of the Sitter Heels properly
which adJolns the Hudson Ray. and a
only 1,320 feet from the Ruffolo mine
also four properties on the Montreal Bile
er In Coleman Township, close to the
Edition mine, where development work
is being carried on,
HARD WORK FOR PROSPECTOR.
As regards accessibility this new bell
is very fortunale, but there Is plenty of
hard work ahead for the prospector.
ifewever, In view of the large number oI
men employed there, good results will
Le obtained this summer, and next Wint-
er should see nt least one or two shippers.
.\ new tow•nsttc i3 perhaps the greatest
need of this new district at present, with
good hotel accommodations, stores, etc..
so that prospectors and their friends on
arriving cnn procure their supplies and
tet good acconlmadntion, All (hinge con-
slder(rl, the location on the southwest
bay at 60 is the best adapted and by fru
the most popular amongst the prospect -
on: for townsile. Messrs. Maloney
Bros. have made a wharf which well be
extended further into deep neater during
the next few days. The company in
charge of this lownsite have decided to
cob It Lorrain City, which has been sur-
veyed, and a considerable number of tots
have ,trendy been sold. Mr. L. J. Ben-
net, who Is in charge, 'will begin the
erection of n good hotel during the next
tea days. 'Iwo or three general store
will be built in the near future, and every-
thing points In success to Lorrain City.
which Is favored so much by location.
'sing considered the centre of the new
district.
BUYERS FOR GOOD PROPERTIES.
The, rush up the Montreal diver from
Latchford continues, and every boat car-
ries a full load of passengers and freight.
At Pork Rapids n narrow gamgo rail-
eny has been built and n beinrdwvalk for
the passengers. Small Carrs are being
used for transferring at '..e portage.
which help handle Ile Inrge amount e,1
freight going up the rawer. At Elk lake
n dock 100 feet long is being built. whlrh
(tarnishes n landing place for the steam-
er:: with their cnrgo of freight and pas-
sengers. Development work In the dif-
ferent sections of Iltis Inrge area of min-
ernlfzcd territory is being rushed along
in very salt.factery manner, There is
ne shortnge of peel buyers far mcrilor-
icus ptopertles, 11 Inrge number of which
r,rr chnnging hands from week to week.
Although several elites have been put
ihrough at rensonnbly high Aintree, pros.
pectors are In ninny cases (wronging for
operating mum:lnfes to pug up the money
to develop their claims, and the fnct that
their confidence is being displayed in Ibis
way 1s the best recommendation the
country can posibly have,
AT THE MOOSE IIOI1N MINE,
('hnrte< (.diterd he Moose H
1.urhe. elite in (8111!)of tlufv week, sheornd
t
h Ihpresent
rnr
a
summer's work
...mimeos'. he was confident 11)01 devet-
.ement weak would hate reached a
: • .et where regular shipments and (rec-
• .f a conrenlrnf(1r plant would be
1' ,1••d the Ale>nsIlorn 11)11)4.
1 '1 the art Cghalt campc increased forces
• r. the order of the day. Increased ship.
x.40(5 every week speak for thernachrs
• nd the people of the camp nee sn Balis.
•.1 on nceuunt of en ninny molly rich
.1 ikes hnving been made (tont rneelee do
• "nth for the Incl maple of yenrs v,unr.
foul$ (1511 of the ortlinnry nnrsl l e enema•
11,41 le excite 1114,10 1! u a p:is';fng In-
toes(.
i ill:\r •iii::
ter rk
t►, stage dine. C(.- Isnderground
1, fain;! •t vied on n1 present, hilt
:t Inrge fore., .: men 5'. di 1.e kept ).1:.y
trenching en the surfnt•e during the sum.
nr,r. east newt winter e>.Irn-iwe uAtnder•r
gr,nmst w .nk will h, rnrrievl nn. Ih
NI, Kinb y-1). ern g111 the lo,n11 is !wing
cleaned up olid leaned off. Daring the
R P r , r
llnllll r ill (rl r
Is.
I ,
111
n n
1
fol le) the
v,uth of Cnbn11 flake t1 ill Io' Ihemn�gthly
tr n^h.r( and ret'keeled (1n Iho sur(nre.
In the mrnnti: ,' the undergrulnd work
%vet be kept up ns usual and the company
Don't Neglect
a Cough or CoId
IT CAN HAVE BUT ONE
8E•:SILT. 1T LEAVES
THE THROAT or LUNGS,
OH BOTH, AFFECTED.
DR. WOOD'S NORWAY PINE
SYRUP IS THE MEDICINE
.YOU NEED. .
It ie without an equal as a remedy for
Coughs, Colds, Bronchitic, Fore Threat,
Pain in the Cheat, Asthma, \Vlu,,.ping
Cough, Quinsy and AU affeotious of tee
Throat and longs.
A single dose of Dr. Wood's Norway
Pine Syrup will atop the cough, soothe the
throat, and it the cough or cold has be.
come settled on the lungs, tho healing
properties of the Norway Pine Tree will
proclaim its great virtue by promptly
eradicating the bad effects, and a persist-
ent use of tho remedy cannot fall to bring
about a oomplcte cure.
Do not
be lunuiuggod into buying so.
called Norway Pine Syrups, but be sure
and insist on having Dr. W'ood's. It is
put up iu a yellow wrapper, three pine
trees the trade mark, and price 23 eta,
•tuts. henry Seabrook, Hepworth, Ont.,
writes: "I have used 1)r. Wood's Norway
Pine Syrup in our family for the past three
years and I consider it the best remedy
known for the euro of colds, It has cured
aft my children and myself."
will proceed during the summer ;w,th the
,'rection of a stamp mill rind concentrator
several times the size of the present con-
eentraling plant. Reasonably thigh ship-
ments have been made recently from the
property, but mostly low grade.
DEN1%1•:15 OF TiiE. ROCK.
llorlkeys Are Protected by Martial Law
at Gibraltar.
A recent periodical gives a picture of
'Major," tate chief of the highly prized
nd carefully protected tribe of Barbary
.y.es which inhabit the Itock of Gibraltar.
'Better kill the governor himself than
Uajor" is a saying of the fortress, There
are only about twenty lett of this band
of monkeys, whielt in some mysterious
manner came over from Africa many
years ago and claimed citizenship in Eur -
)pe. They are protected by martial law,
and any addition by birth to their num-
is carefully chronicled and announced
.t: the local paper.
The apes change their place of resi-
fence from the highest peaks of the rock
:r' lower and more sheltered portions,
end back again, according to the state
.f the weather. '$'hey show their sense
.f humor by throwing stones at the sole -
but they are often not seen for
weeks al a time. save In 11►e early morn-
ing. One visitor to Gibraltar did not
get a glimpse of Them nt all, do "A Stink
over in spnin," published in 1871, Mrs.
Ramsay says:
"We did not see the monkeys. 11 we
went up in the morning they' kept hidden
until noon. If we went in the nfernonn
every monkey had taken its walk enrly
in the day. Once we were gold that a
Inrge ape had just been silting on the
gun we were leaning against, One of
roar friends saw ,even large oars and
two belies. 'the 'lathers put the little
:,ries dowt•n and made them jump about."
A few years ago, on account of the
diminishing numbers of these nnintnls,
some apes were procured from Barbary
and turned loose upon the Nock. Itul
resident monkeys instantly killed them
ell. Although so fierce to intruder, of
their own kind, they never nttnck human
I eing,ts, and are greatly beloved and es -
Ir med.
QUITE IIONI:ST
Q ,
A gentleman went into it fancy store to
guy something. :Is it was early, the
sIerekeeper hail to go upstairs to get his
cash -box In order 10 procure 6(0110
cl,nnge.
ltetore doing so lie went into the lillle
rc,om next to the stip p. nn.l wvhIspeeitl to
his little son. "Winch the gentleman that
bC (14,1'1 steal anything,"
Then. bringing the boy cul, sal him on
Ihr counr,
As soon
kns the storekeeper returned,
I1..• child sang cul, "Pa, ho didn't Meal
anything; 1 welched him."
Pure iron In the presence of pure oxy
gen does not rust.
The Fact:rtal. the Royal Palma at Made
rid. is .o Inrge that it would lake four
days to go ewer It.
Turns Bad Blood into
Rich Red Blood.
No other remedy possesses such
perfect cleantiinl;, healing and puri.
fying properties.
Externally, heals Sores, Ulcers,
Abscesses, and all Eruptions,
Internally, restc•res the Stomach,
i.iver, Bowels and Blood to healthy
action. If your appetite is poor,
your energy gone, your ambition
IoFt, if. 11.13. will restore you to the
full enj.)yrlcnt of happy vigcroue
life.