Exeter Times, 1908-07-09, Page 3CARTERS
Fig
CURE
Mick IIeadarhe and redoes all tho troubles Ines -
dent to a bilious state of the ayetetn. such am
Dizziness, Nausea, nrowaiueaa. 1,Istre..s after
eating, Palo fu the Bide, tc. While their west
recast -tattoo success ham been shown to custug
SICK
Reattach., yet Carter's Little Liver rills are
equally valuable In Conetlp.at ern. curing and pro-
venttrig this so coy logcowp!aiut.wb,le they also
correct all die.,rb.rs. f 1 boatotnac loaner plata the
Leer and rekulolu the bowels. Even U they only
cttrael
HEAD
lebethey would be almost prIceleas to those whO
suffer front thladietreesingc. inplaiut; bat
their goo Ineesdo.s not end here.and those
Who oucetry them will andes
the little pit le vale -
Whirl tu so inany ways that they will not be wtl-
Jiugtoduwithuutthem. nut after all alckbeat
ACHE
llethe bane ot PO many lire.' that here 1. where
Ire rnski our great boast. Our pills cure itwhits
others do not.
Carter's Little Liver Pills are very small and
very eaay to take. Otto or two,ills make* done.
They are strictly vegetable and do tint gripe of
purge. but by their geutlo action please all who
LW them.
Callffi um:nu z co., taw TOIL
hall Pyr Sorin Dam Small Price.
A DAC(J:11 11 11 11 t (HISTORY.
__
ilk...
Biirke's (real Speech Against
an Alliance With Prance.
n interesting and, at one time, much -
'else '- of relic has rue. nily come into the
rocs .-yon of lord Burnham. 1t is the
ei a: n of Edmund Butke's remelts
"...tiger scene'• in the House of Com-
rburLS. Ilislory hos credited the great
nrattr with having treated Parliament
lc a carefully worked-up dramatic crisis
lel this speech, but Jnr. Mucknigeht, in
lets "Life and 'Times of Edmund Burke,'
declare: that the scene wens impromptu.
The affair took place at the discussion
et tee alien bill.
Oil the wtl7 to the (louse of Commons
that day Burke called at the foreign of-
iee, and was shown by the under-secre-
tary of stale it dngger which had been
sent as a pattern to a manufactory at
ternlingham with an order for some
thousands. Tt:e country itt the time was
full of angry and disaffected societies,
and such a proceeding as a large oroer
of offensive weapons looked very suspi-
cious. Buike asked for the dagger, and
kook it with hint to lite house.
Fox s)oko again -4 the bilt. stating his
sympathies with the French Republicans.
Burkes speech fotk,wet. At first all he
said was grave, argumentative and rea-
sonable. Coming to the question of the
bill itself, he grow excited, and declared
it woos necessary to keep murderers and
atheists from British shores. Already
schemes of - bloodshed were prevalent.
Lnrge eiders for daggers had been sent
kr It rill ngham. lire the !louse looked
asci n'stieti. Pulling out the dagger,
Burke held it up before the audience,
Ili •n threw it vehemently on the floor.
Pelneng i it, he exclaimed, "This is
'what yon aro to grin from an alliance
milli France! Such are the doggers pre-
pared for you. Wherever such principles
are introduced. such practices follow."
A scornful tittering camp from the
Hepar. Burke checked it with a vehe-
ment protestation.
"Let us keep French principles from
our heads and Fiench daggers from our
hearts!' were hts finishing wer+ds.
The Hot: was worked up to a great
excitement. Even the contemptuous
words which proceeded from one of its
members, "bile gentleman has brought
hi, knife; ire Ls his fork?" tailed to
&poll the effect of the spceeh. The op-
pnnenL9 dared not speak, and the bill
pawed.
It L• sad That the under-secretary
picker) up the dagger and carried it
h .me. Now. fitter more than n century,
it comes into public notice again.
Most of the fun n man has is In the
Wee; alien rather than in the renlrza-
1.eii.
CURES
Dysentery, Diarrhoea, Cramps,
Colo , Paine in tiro Stomach,
Cho;dOt. Cholera Morbus, Chol-
era nfantutn, Sea Sickness,
Summer Complaint, and all
Flumes of the dowels.
tt zee on the market tor co years.
Its ctsIre marvelous. It acts Inke 1
alarm. Kellet 1s Almost Instantaneous.
4k your dragent for It. Take uo other.
Substitutes are Dangerous.
The weenier' fa manufactured by Tii, T.
]Ilrute ns. ('o. LrttrTan. Toronto. Ont.
I'rI.' 33 ceuts.
COUPLE OF DOSES CURED.
Mrs. W. .1. 11'ils..n, Teasier, Sark., tells
of her experience in the following wools: --
"I wish to tell you of the good I have
found in I)r. Fowler's Extract of Wild
Strawberry. last summer my little girl,
aged two years, was taken ill with sum.
Ater Complaint. and as my mother always
kept Dr. Fowkrs in the hotun when I
was a child, I seemed to follow her exam.
plc •e I always here it •let. i et once
gave it to Dv ■by as directed and she was
at ooce relieved, and after • couple. of
degas wen tikes was oompletelyr curd,"
ALL A MATTER OF HABIT
You Never Will Be Any Better Than You
Believe You May Be.
"Blessed is the man that walketh not
in the counsel of the ungodly, nor stalid-
eth in the way of sinners, nor sitteth .r.
tee seat of the scornful."-I'sabn 1., 1.
Wo spend a good deal of time do-
ne towing bad habits and warning the
y.•uth against them while, somehow, we
have lost sight of the fact that there
is just as much help in fi good habit
as there is hindrance and harm in a bad
one. Ilabtts may to allies pot as truly
aca wo find them to Le enern:es.
There are those wh) aro Habitually
v.c.ous; why shou'd there not be nese
who are hubdually virtuous? It is as
easy to learn to do rigtlt and to have
the doing of right become second nature
as It is to learn to do wrong. It is just
es easy both morally and physically to
acquire the habit of walking upright as
to acquire that of walking with a slouch.
Onoo we were taught that we were
+.!l naturally altogether depraved, that
roan was born in this world with a bent
to evil, that the clean life and the up-
ward tending life really were abnormal.
\\lv ever first invented that doc'r:ne
must have a terrible lot of inequity which
ho was trying to account for with a
theory.
Every man's chance of holiness is al
least as good as his chance of health.
Make up your mind that you were barn
to be sickly, elle victim of predatory dis-
ease. and you
NEVER WILL BE DISAPPOINTED;
you will have all the aches and pains
that the most ambitious drug store al-
manac could covet to catalogue.
Make up your.mind that Providence
has cast you into the universe doomed
k. depravity, branded as a fallen being,
a lost, undone, miserable sinner, and
you have at least hand:capped yourself
Ly the aderei) not suctt a view in any
attempts to defeat Providence and to be
Letter than you were destined to be.
Health of any kind is a matter of ha-
t't lent we never will acquire right
hula-. unless we believe in their possi-
bility, unless we have faith in man as
a being to whom goodness is no less
attainable than baseness.
There are two ways of doing things,
Ile intermittent and the habitual, the
difficult and the easy. If you were to
speak only once a year the act would
involve as much difficulty as score p+o•
;le have, for example. in think ng. The
r:u'.ly of the exercise determines its die
iliculty.
1f the life of goodness and truth
means to yo 1 the doing, with special
separate effort, of a long se: ies of sep-
arate acts, then it certainly is a path
c f great toil that opens before you. May
it not rather mean the steady doing of
the right in all things until the deter-
mination and the doing of the right
scam 10 ruga r., no special consideration
and lento,' in each case?
HABITS ARE LIFE TItAcieS;
they lead either up or down. Habit is
character in actk,n working without
conscious reflection. The laws of habit
aipply to the good as well as to the evil,
to the higher life tts well as to the low-
er. If it is possible habitually to bre attic
correctly, eat sensibly, and speak cor-
rectly, why should it not also be pos-
sible hab tually to choose the ,:get and
dr the best?
It we hod to stop and measure -every!
breath, csunl every vowel, reason over.
(eery step, one day's living would be
enough to blight tho life. So in the
higher sphere of morals, living is a
weary busin(ss if you stilt have to in-
dividualize and argue out alt your ac-
tions.
Daily living is the gymnasium of the
soul where moral inu-cies aro trained
to habits of implicit, apparently me-
chanical obedience le the impulse of high
ideals, right motives, and noble stand -
!East. Thu was equivalent to a lepudia-
ben of S.wl's sovereignty.
Held les peace --"Was as though he
flee been deaf." Saul ..bowed a line re-
n. rve, but their act was nut lost upon
hen.
f
Qua:\ .tlkX.t\DIteee Del'.
Hoe Britain's Best Itetotcd elands Iler
'I cue.
Her JL.jesty Quoit Alexandra never
so ther,ughly enjoys her •.fe as she
docs when leading, so far as may be,
Ire life of a private lady tit Smelting -
Lam, her favorite home.
Always an earl
riser,
Queen Alex-
andra
-
andra is up and about soon after seven
oclock. After a cup of ten cr choco-
late -taw latter, as a rule --her Majesty
laves lief room, and commences her
dilly round. No matter what lite stale
el the weather may be, she at once pro-
ceeds untot doors, and has brisk w•aUc
Ilreakfast at Sandringham is partaken
of when thero are no guo:ls straying in
the house, in a small, cheerful room
overlooking the gardens, to which
French windows leas.
After breakfast her Majesty makes her
way to her boudoir, which stands en Lho
first floor, in the centre of her private
suite. ilere she transacts all her busi-
ness; and the umotnt she is called upon
to gel through day by day is surpris-
, ing. When her Majesty arrives in her
zoom the letters have already been ar-
ranged in neat piles by the lion. Char-
Irtle Knollys, who has been h^r Royal
utisttles's greatest and nest intimate
friend for many years.
l.unchron is usually taken about two
o'clock. Twoer three afternoons a week
her Majesty visits the tenantry on the
estate, by whom site is literally wor-
shipped.
Upon her return here for her cup of
lea -'or Queen Alexandra is an ardent
devotee of the "five o'clock"-sho will
spend some time with her private sec-
retary, the iion. Sidney Greville, dis-
cussing various mailers of business,
signing ktters, etc.; while it is about
this hour that her Majesty receives any
ether members of her Ilousehold who
may be on duty at Sandringham. This
is the time ef day that Queen Alexandra
enjoys best of arl, and when she writes
most of her letters 'o her intimate
friends.
Her Majesty spends a considerable
amount of tme arranging and etas ty-
ing her immense collection of photo-
graphs that s!:e has taken from time to
time, and of which she now possesses
several thousands. Of the albums con-
taining these photographs, the meal in-
tereAng is the one that contains snap-
shots of the various members of the
Royal Family. Among these are photo-
graphs of Queen Victoria temporarily
t:e'd up'' in her donkey -chaise through
the animal refusing to budge an inch;
tie Prince of Wales floundering in n sal -
men -stream, info which an incautious
slep has plunged him while flshing; and
the King leading young Prince Edward
of \Volts across the park by the ear as
a punishment for some boyish prank of
which his Royal grandfather did not ap-
prove.
Dinner at Sandringham is something
o! a movable f..as!. Rarely, however, is
it served b fore nine o'c:o:k. As a gen-
eral rule, when there are no guests pre-
sent. their Mejeslies are joined by the
!aides and gentlemen In attendance.
Mus c in the drawing -room follows, with
a bridge••table for the special entertain-
ment of the King.
Like most other members of the Hoyal
Family, Queen Alexandra is an excel-
lent musician, and plays the piano with
very consel ral,le skill. Her Majesty
retires for the night comparatively
early; and to this. together with her
early rising and her partiality for a
frit diet, is due much of her exceed-
ingly good !leal'h.
ards. Ilere power is acquired to alert
a'i temptations, to overcome er-flicullies,
te to master of life itself.
ile has a good education who has ac-
quired the beet habits of doing and of
thinking. ile is learning I fe's great
kss,ns, finding the fullness of an edu-
csfon, to taker each day comes with
its opportunities of training the SOUI,
through tasks and troubles, to the ha-
ti(c of tl a higher life, to self-mastery,
end to efficiency in service for our tel -
lows.
HENRY F. COPP.
THE S. S. LESSON
1\'That\.1'170\ U. I.L-.- )s. Jl PI.V 12.
Lesson 11. Saul Chosen King. Golden
Text, 2 Sarn. 23. a.
TiIE LESSON WORD STUDIES.
(Based on the text of the Revised
Version).
The narrative of Chapter 8 is taken
us) at Chapter 10, verse 17. After receiv-
ing lite request for a king, and con-
sulting the will of Jehovah, Samuel
coils a popular assembly and formally
chooser their ruler. But there Is an in-
tervening pa. age of much interest,
which also tells of the choice of Saul
by Samuel. Kish, Ibo father of Saul,
sends his son and a servant to look ft r
sone asses which have been last. After
ll:ree days' fruitless search they find
Themselves near n city where there is a
"ver" named Samuel who posessess
pi.wrrs of divination. Saul consults him
and is welcomed by him with great en-
thusinsril and treated as a guest of hon-
or. Before Samuel sends him on his
way ho tells him that God has chosen
hint to eleliver his reople and to be their
kirg. and, finally, as Jet►ovah's servant
he anoints Saul with oil and consecrates
him to the office of king. There are to
he three signs In conflr•lnation of Sarno-
el:s act. The: a all lake place ns pre-
dicted, and Saul goes Lack home to re-
main at his accustomed work till occa-
sion offers to assume public place and
duties as Israel's king. It has leen
Itxiught That this record of the private
and informal sensation of Saul is the
cemple•nnent of the account of Ws public,
fe.rnial one a little later. and th s is pos-
sible. But what would scent to be a
simple explanation, and one which lakes
into account the obvious differences in
feeling concerning Samuel's imf:ortnnce,
her willingn(rs to give Ieroel a king.
and the nielho.s of civ,osing Saul. is
that the writer inlerpeckd here a part
of the narrative from another and older
account. The linking together of parts
of Iwo ehnins r.f narratives in such a
manner quit(' Ota in with the custemnry
dullest of the Ilrl.rew historian. Some
of the richest gems of the Old Testa.
went are preserved with their telling in
Pee way.
Verse 17. The people -Not the elders
alone, but nit the lwe, e. This was
probably the "crmgrrr. eon of !steel'
which WAS conipesel of ail the nutk's of
twenly years and upward. One ct its
functions was to approve ns king the
• ne whom Jehovnh had chosen icorn-
i.are 2 Sam. 5. 1; 1 Chem. 29. 22).
lento Jehovnh-At this lime political
and religious interrsls were one; (here
WAS no distinction between duties to ('10
':.tv•n anal obligaems to Jehovnh. 'the
n ,t:onal nseenibly most be under his
• .:tion.
\Lapah-There were six or seven pine-
• f the name in different parts of the
. • entry. These were commanding sites
adlp,,ning the various sacred places
Wherever there was n snnclnnry, or
where line ark was stationed. would be
a religious centre. and the people
gathering for worship and sacrifice
weuW meet in assmmbty and mike their
ts.mpact with Jehovah. The place thus
used. which woukl naturally Le ane of
elevation, would come to be called Mix-
) ah. or "Wntch tower." The nnmc may
:,Iso tune tern tree:tele to the tbcughl
I. f Jeheoteh ns the Tiever of his people.
'1 tic Mispah in question was in Sonja -
min, probably near Samuels home at
Ramah, and not far from the site of
Jerttsalc►n, Its location was central,
and the sacred memories associate)
with (I Sam. 7. 5. ff.) made it n most
solemn and fitting place of assembly
for this occasion,
18. Thus with Jehovah -The usual in-
troduction to a prophetic message. IL
gave the speaker his commission and
carrkd much weight.
19. Rejected your G d -Samuel has ex-
ercised power only as agent of Jehovah
and in his rejectkin hes Master has real-
ly been sea aside. The theory of gov-
ernment in Israel was simple. Jehovah
wns ruler with special obligations to
protect and lead to victory his "peculi-
ar' people; they, in turn, owed hen all
the allegiance and obedience which an
earthly monarch had a right to expect.
A king would in sense supplant him.
Himself-Emphotie. Jehovah would
Fein continue to deal directly with his
people. Ile alone is responsible (or
their welfare.
By your tribes and by your thousands
-the division of the people according
lo the patrinrchal inelhod Into "tribes,"
"families," and "anthers' houses' repre-
sented the earlier period, and this Int-
er gave way to the nwncrical and geo-
graphical division into thousands, hun-
dreds, and fifties. The two methods,
however, were not entirely distinct in
time but overlapped, as is seen in this
verse.
20. Wns token -By lot, Jehovah's will
ens nscertained by means of the leered
choice, Urim find Thunman). This
crude melho(1 of interpreting Gods de-
sires and purposes is often referred to
in Israels history and must have been
!n frequent use. especially in earlier
lures. It sons the only form of divina-
tion which was sanctioned. and its 011i-
0ymenl was restricted inti guarded so
he to protect its religious value in the
thought of the people.
21. Matrites-Nothing is known of this
Fiorito, ns the name is nowhere else
mentioned.
22. Is tau re fel a man to come hither?
-Or. "Is the man yet to come hither '
And Jehovah answered -This could be
no:omeletted by a series of questions
t(•quirtng a sirnpie efflrnlalive or nega
I've answer which would be given by
the tot.
Ilid--Either from modesty or f(ar.
24. The re is none like him -Physical
pre-eminence counted much in the po.
pulnl•ily of early lenders and even In
tl.eir choice as rulers. This was lire
case with many of the Judges, and with
Sm.ul, and David.
Long live the king -This cry of popu-
lar allegiance ens custienary at the bo-
gir.ning of n kings reign, and al all
other hones of importance.
25. The manner of the kingdom -That
.s. the constitution. Compare note in
Word Shalt. -s for July 5. Samuel wrote
it in it lr,c.k for prt'eervntion and laid
it up at the snnctunry, perhaps in the
ark deelf with the 'fables of the Law
lcfure Jehovnh.
To Ili, house -Vol "to hes city." as
thre elders who had conte as representa-
t les were dismissed, but each to his
own home.
26. Gibenh-The word means "a hall.'
A city. in Benjamin which is nsseciated
with a munler of tragic events in the
Ohl Testament. Here foul had his
hindquarters and his first attack on the
Philistines, told in 1 Sam. 13, was made
horn this place.
The Lest --Or, as the mnrgin rends.
Nile men of valor" as oppe sed to these
nt(ntk.n(•tl in the next verse.
f:.
resea n evcrthless fells ee_ \\ h se
churlish trhnvior forms a contrast to
that if the valiant men just mentie.ned.
Re -eight him ne present --The costo.
mary real of almost all relations In the
--
AN UNEXPECTED 1 NEXPEC77:D J01•B\EV.
An Explorer's .tatenture on the Coast
of Greenland.
in 1898 Capt. Ott, Sverdrup went up
:smith Sound in his old ship, the Frain,
et an endeavor to sail round the north
tenet of Greenland front west Io east.
Mr. W. J. Strong, In "hound About the
Neill' Pole," queles remle of the explor-
er's • dvenlure. Bonn lit own story. One
f ilex is the !tumult and capture of a
bier. which they discovered en it little
plateau high up on a mountain crag.
The tittle kedge was reached by a bridge
not mere than a good yard in width.
11:s majesty was not visible. to Schel
until he came within a few feet of him,
hut Then it was not long before a shot
was I:card. The bear sank together, and
in it tcw seconds afterwards all the dogs
had Ihr non Themselves up:,n it.
They lugged and pulled at the bear's
cent, tearing tufts of linir out of i1. and
Le fore we knew what they were doing.
had dragged the beefy to the edge of
the plateau, where it shot out over the
pr'.cipi'0.
The dogs skod amaze 1. gnz.ng down
In to the depths where the bear zea
felling ew.flly through the air. but not
Roane. fer on it were Iwo dogs which had
ceing eo fast to its hair that they now
sleet plante•I head to head, and bit
Ih(mseives sill taster to it in or'er to
keo;, thele bahtnee.
1 wa bienlhLs. .as i watched Ills un-
expected journey through Ile nil'. The
Lair's b my dashed violently against the
nick, Runic] n s•dnersnult out frrrn the
mountain wall, and felt still farther un-
Irt utter falling it height of altogether
ill least a hundred feet. it reached the
slopes by the river. and was shot by the
irat.etus right serous the 1-0/11' lee and
a go`.,d tray up the other side.
And the doge When fee bear dnsem
epees' the mountain they sprang up
like rubber balls. described a large
curve, and with steeled legs continuer)
Ire journey on their own account. (M-
eng with a k•ud thud on to the hardly
picked snow at the bottom of the eat.
icy. Bill they were un their kgs in a
moment, and set off as fast as they could
go
tl►-
It s trs(''es to cry over spilt ni 1:,; rel
a few Moues it would have aimed, any-
way.
nyway. -
"1 ho; a thing: nre more pcametul in
the cheer IMIn fi rn►erly," ,all the pes-
t •r. "Vie. sir," reeled the organist;
' t's per'ecl'y clam now." "I'm glad y,
teear it. How was peace secure+)?'
"t v. r) bo•ly excepting myself resigned.
PERSON U. PtI1 Glt %PltS.
Interesting Gossip About Some of the
e orld's Prominent People.
Dr. Rot.- i 1 Atkinson, late Piutessor cif
S; 1) knit and of tate Itotnnncc languages
in Tern ty College, Dublin was one of
Wheel's most brilliant and verSatilc
sch .tars. Some years ago ho set him-
self to acquire nearly all tate modern
IanguagerI of Europe and many of the
(.L:cure dialects of the Eusl, and his
kit n !edge w•ae such thut he was credits
ed
with the mastery of ov. r fifty
tongues. 11 s coalfields ns to tit z ature
were many find %alis 1, white among
• thee ludicnlions of his versatility his
friends recall the fact that long before
re
the art of j u j Iso was known in Great
Britain Dr. Atkinson had mastered it
t'Ui in theory and in practice.
Sir William Arrol is one of the most
remarkable sten who have hailed from
1:orth of the 'Tweed. Sir William. who
is
the head of Il►e firm of engineers
which built the Tay, Forth, and Tower
hedges, is not only see -made, but self-
t•iught. From the null Ire drifted into
a blacksmith's forge, then into a ship-
building yard. and ultimately, at twenty -
eve soars of age, into a large engineer-
ing firm in Glasgow. Ile sued £85
-from his weekly wages, purchased an
erg ne for $18 and a baler for £25. and
w-.t!i this equipment laid the foundation
to his ultimate great carter.
TIke ,cerement of Sr Gorge Luck,
K.C.B., from the position of Lieutenant
of 11w Tower of London calls to mind
the fare that it was the wife of this dis-
tinguished soldier -by the way, he is
recognized as one of the forenx:st cav-
alry leaders of the day -who was main-
ly responsible for lllo introduction of
chain shouldei.straps into Iho Artily.
Once when Sir George was ab rut to
start on a campaign Lady Luck, with
true wifely solicitude, sewed some strips
e t chain under the cloth between the
collar and the shoulder of his tunic, as
a prote tion against ch'tnce sabre cuts.
Th s ingenious device answered so well
teat it has since ben oflicially adopted
foe all ranks).
In these days of democracy and un-
conventionality it is, perhaps, not very
su•pr:sing to learn that the Duke Fred-
erick of Schleswig-Holstein, holding to
the belief that every girl should be able
to earn her own living in case of emer-
gency, has caused his daughters to be
trained in various occupat on s. Prin-
cess Victoria Adelaids, who married the
Duke of Saxe-Cobourg-Gotha, holds the
diploma of the Royal School of Cookery
in Berlin; Princess Alexamire Victoria
es a skilled painter of miniatures; Prin-
cess Helena is a qualified hospital nurse;
Princess Adelaide has a certificate for
kindergarten leaching; and Princess
Caroline Matilda is an expert typist and
writer of shorthand.
A devoted son of the Church of Eng-
land has just died in the person of the
Pete Francis Paynter, who had been
rector of Stoke-next-Guadford for thirty -
peer years. Although he owned consid-
erable property in the vicinity of Regent
Street and Picadilly, London, and his
insonle was reputed to be bAhveen £70,-
000 and £80.000 yearly, Mr. Paynter per-
formed the dut`es of lits parsh himself,
and travelled all over the world in the
cruse of mission work. Furthermore, he
nolonly established a college in India
and supported a number of missionaries
ill his own expense, but tie also built
three churches, many missions, and
founded a coffee tavern In furtherance
of the temperance crusade in which he
was keenly interested.
The Finnish Parliament can boast of
the distinction of posscsing a member
who was formerly a domestic servant.
Iter name is \tuna Sillanpan, and she is
now in her forty-second year. This Indy
was for many years n servant, and ih
1898 she established the Servant Girls'
Association. for which she started a
paprr, editing it herself. She has fre-
quently
raquently brought cases of ill-treatment or
disputes between servan's and Mis-
tresses before the Courts, and has in-
vnrinbly ben successful. She is quite
self-educatel, but is said to be extremely
clever, ckar-headed, and attractive in
manner. She stood as n Sscialist cnn-
d!dnk' for the Wet of 1907.( and was
(hieiclet.
tcd, largely. It mny be euppesed, by
the servant -girls of her electoral dis-
FRUIT AND SUGAR FOR iIORSES.
Grain is not the only f•• sol on which
the hone lhr.ves. In Erypt the Khe-
dives
ho-dives test (,nee are fed largely nn cur-
rants, and these fruit feed animals aro
reeled for their endurance and speed.
F gs, during the fig harvest. form the
1 od of the horses of Smyrna; they turn
to it from oats or hay. The green laps
n( the sugar cane are fed to the horses
of the West Indies, and for hong weeks,
in many parts of Connate windfall ap-
ples form the horse's only food. In
I'ilsinan'a leaches and in Arabia dates
!eke lh, place of the usual hay and oats,
cern and bran.
Biliousness,
Liver Complaint
If your tongue ie coatewd, your eyes yel-
low, your complexion sallow; if you have
sick headaches, variable appetite, poor
circulation, a pain under tho rightshould-
er, or alternate costiveness and di•rrhera,
floating specks lueforo the eyes,
Your Liver Is Not In Order
All the troubles and disease" which come
in the train of :1 dis.,rderea liver, such as
Jaundice, Chronic Constipation, Catarrh
of the Stomach, heartburn, Water itrash,
etc., may be quickly and eawly cured by
MILBURN'S LAXA-LIVER PILLS
Mr. 8. Gingerieh, Zurich, Ont, writes: -
1 hal suffered for yyears with liver .•om.
plaint,
and although 1 tried many mewli
cines 1 eoukt not get rid of it. fleeing
Milhurn's IaxieLivcr Pals alvertised
decided to try them, and after using them
four months l was ooenpktely cured .
25 cents a vial or 5 for 11.00, at all
dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of
price by The T. Milburn Co., Ltd.,
Tomato, Oat.
NEWS FROM THE MINES
NATIVE. SILVER S.1111 1:1‘ ON 'HIE
I'It.tOLI-I I: I'ILOI'I:If1 Y.
Ore on the Huutreal inter .t Ituniorrd
Looe) Price for the Otisbe
Clault.
Great active), prevails in the new
(1 sttkt n( S: ulh Lorrain, ultheugh grout
d:lliculty will be expertcncerl for bone
lime uv
antt, the road being
ia con
ellen that would not warrant the shl,,•
ping of any grant artium of tnachtnery
k, Leg;lt active mining operations. liow-
ever, actual mining operations aro in
full progre.s on Ute Kotky property.
and the rich silver values still continue,
says a Globecorrespondent.
Y
A new discovery has recently been
made on what is known as the Fra -
delle claim south of Lor•ra n in Vie un-
survey'cd terra ,ry. This 1 cation is
known as 11. 11. 11 on tate Wrap and is
one of the most pro;sing in lhls new
silver belt. At presentmth 1.110cru Ilya
inert at work on the poverty, and last
week while working on a surface oet-
clooWtg native silver was struck in
good7nyeig quantile•<. The vein aver -
egos throe inches in width ant is im-
prov ng with depth. 'rt.e • w•ners of this
property, have refused several good of-
fers for the claim and are very optunls-
ti: of making it a shopping propos ton
as soon as ina"tlinery can be installed.
The claim udjoins the Ma den property,
which iws recently been formed into it
jowl stock company.
NEW FiNDS IN MO\TIIEAI. RIVER.
Development week Is being pushed
tepidly in the Montreal River section,
and al►nst every day brings to light
some new find. At Maple Mountain, on
the \\'h:te pro;:crty, Manager Foster
has a oons'deritble amount of rich ore
bagged, alt of which has been taken
trent the surface, and will shortly begin
opernt ons in the way of sinking. 11 is
expectoi that a shipment ef ere will be
made from this properly withn a short
time. At the Moose Horn property the
management have els) consde:able ore
bagged ready for shipment, which no
doubt will Le sent to tho smelter shortly.
it is rumored that a fancy price has
been offered for the OLLsse claim in Silver
Like district, but no deist's have as yet
teen made known. This property is con-
s:d•rod ono of the best in that vicinity
and should develop Into a slipping pro-
position within a very shirt time. On
lb ((olden property, in Tudhope, a rich
find has been made at the 90 -foot level,
and a largo amount of shipping ore is
v.sible nt ibis depth. The Montreal
River section has shown up wonderfully
during the past six m ont1Ls and no doubt
wan become one M the great silver cen-
tres of the country.
THERE ARE SOME GOOD RESULTS.
Although small mention has been
made of the Larder Lake secti n within
the past few months, still active mining
operations aro seedily going on on
some of the properties with geed results.
On the Big Pete property, which ad-
joins Iteddick's, a (kienlond dell will
st.ortly bo installed and thorough tests
will to made. Superintendent M. K.
Farah has a ging of men at work and
lt:e development work is Leing pushed
ahead rapidly. On the Dr. Roddick pro-
perty a throe stain!) Fling mill is in
over/dem, and turning out small bricks.
7'his mill will be increased to Twenty
stamp and is expected to be in opera ion
this summer. Manager Ogilv'e is work-
ing a force of 20 men and has sunk one
shall 40 feet and has also run a tunnel
40 feet into the face of the rock. This
property continues to improve and 's
o,nsidered one of the best in that sec-
tion. The management of the Harris -
'Unwell closed down their property a
kw was ago, owing to the scarcity of
fuel. On the properly are installed a
machine d: i 1. hyo 30 h.p. boilers and a
l0 stamp mill. Immediately a good
su)ply of fuel is obtained. orerat:ons
will again be resumed with greater ac-
tivity. The 8d -ton bettor has not ns yet
Leen instdlkd, owing to the- difficulty
in bringing It in over the bad roads,
I tit it is the intention of the company
In Insttrh th s better at the earliest mo -
men. In the rock wh ch has been quer-
r eel out, tiro gold in many pieces is via-
lete Io the ranked eye, and the manage-
ment of the company are very <p1.r`stio
over Lho results so far arta net. .
NINE 01'11E11 VEINS DN•LOVERED.
In the Cobalt sirup on the Badger
mine, Mnnrlgetr Smith is working n
eine of 30 ,nen and all w:,rk is being
concentrated on the No. 9 shaft. This
shdo5, t and ibo
sunkift tois thenow 200 (441wn leve12llet, when trwiflinllg
will to commenced. On the 100 -level
extensive drieing has already Len done,
On rho Beaver, a 1 rem et 20 :nen is
employed. No. 1 shaft is down about
115 fi et and w all be stink to Ili_. 200 -lint
level, when drfting w.11 to commenced
to cakh the 'I'emiskaming vein. At the
ii .f•ot level, 620 feel of crosscutting has
tern run east and west. and n!Iogether
n ne vns have hers0' y . ' r1'
e••rk illeithis mine iso beiding pUshelredap•114)
d y and with good results.
'I'hloe months ago a dividend of 3
pit. cent. was do (Tired ley the ditector
Ti melon) ng mine, AL tie rr•gu•
t;:r rnenlhly meeting held Inst Suturdny
in Cobalt the dlrcr t rs de Inv. d nn.,thcr
3 per sail. dividend, AI the mine
ab out sixty men tire employed. The
train shaft is down 260 feel. and most
of the work is being concentrated 10 the
2(d, -foot level. A new soot -dumping 'k'p
hoe just recently b en put in o(eratl..n.
which is the first of its kind in the
camp. At the 'fernisk-am"ne g,e'er mitt
surprises are no new Ii t: •. It n'. r
est:ng fin1.Ili ;nt
in n wintoesdewokitely bt loIcw• rte1 list -'o1•. .1 Ta1rvel
the poll-Ilurinlan d abaft • f rant on
was en•'ounlered underlying the alder
Keewatin, and still more important is
Ili• feet tint tate puri• renal silver
t•atip•s )haven leen t••und to continuo In
Iles lower fornintion.
A PRA! SILVER F.ND,
Al the V:pcling moot 2(10 men ere
employed. and work is progressing rap-
r.11y. A large vein. hill of decotnposeel
matter tech le silver, was a :truck on let
fel., 400 ..1 tb• Nippis ing pre-.perty, in
the no:lh end .,f the kern, (i.ee tr, the
(:hnnet.rs-Farland prolerty, and also n
small vein slr,w.ng cobalt blooru and
•
SUFFERED FROM HEART
and NERVE TROUBLES FOR
the LAST TEN YEARS,
If there are nerve derangement of any
kitti, it ab bound to produce all the
various phenomena of heart deraugee
went. In
MILBURN'S
HEART AND NERVI
PILLS
ie combined treatment thzt will cure alL
forms of nervous disorders, as well tan/
act upon the heart itself.
Nile. John Riley, Douro, Ont., writes:
"I have leen a great sufferer front
heart and nerve troubles for the [[ast
ten yeah. After trying many rernedie
and doctoring for two yeas withouji
the least benefit, i decided to give Mile
burn's Heart and Nerve Pills a triol,
I ani thankful to say that, after using
nine boxes I ani entirely cured and would
recommend them to all sufferers."
Price 50 cents per box or 3 boxes for
$1.26, at all dealers, or mailed direct
on receipt of price by The T. eliliurra'
Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.
ctdcte. The Nipissing is sinking at pro-
sent three shnf's in what Is known fie
practically the townsite of Cobalt.
At the 1 •wnsite the usual force of men
it; employed. Recently a vein was struck
carrying rich leaf silver in the wall rock
in tate open cut south of the Buffalo
boarding-h•.use. In the shaft close to
No. 12 shrllt on the Buffalo a nese head
el smaltittt has leen struck at the ion -
(sot level. The main portion • f the
work at the townsite is being done in
these two shafts.
At the Buffalo a consderable amount
of construction is going on. New build-
ings for sampling and additions to the
cyanide plant aro being erected, also a
new storelicuse ani office. About 125
Wren are employed, and greet activity
prevails. The company are apparently
risking preparations to treat a. very;
large tonnage of low-grade ore.
The Af::Kelley-Darragh are apparently
following the example of the Coningaa
by (reeling a large headgear over their
old No. 1 shift. A good revenue should
be derived from the dumps at the Mo-
Kinsey -Darragh, which have increased
ra(;idly since the new management have
taken h.,ld, and one can plainly sic na-
tive silver lying about on the diHnIse.
The usual force are employed, and ship-
ments are being made regularly. Tho
McKinl: y -Darragh are also interested in
urrsurveyed Lorrain, owning en comms
teat new tell, on which it Is clamed
they have a small force of neon at work.
SENTENCE SERMONS.
Fretting fritters away I 1e's force.
Nothing is more deceptive than love
of self.
Being made of pully does not make
(80 pttcnt,
'there can Le no virtue in the life
without value.
An hone-: doul.t is always a d -or to
sem., higher truth.
The trend and purro.-e of your whole
life. That is your eraser.
The length of life ier.nfter may dc -
pend on its breadth new.
They wIto know their Father never aro
fa; from their fatherland.
It's not much u -e for an empty 1.fe to
worry tib ,tit its imme•rtelity.
It wet take more than studies in mud
to improve our manners.
1I will lake more limn 'alk and tears
le tear down sin's hitt!. 111 res.
If you would have p ace ‘t -shin you
tnust t h ws rwut.
Our hungertoconten1',rwitinmortarulity .tlmay be
the best eviden.es that we shall inherit
it.
The hyprcr:le is nlvays more sucess-
tul wah himself than with any cane else.
Many a man Thinks h' is fighting sin
when he is only (laying his neighbor's
feib'ee.
There's a world of difference Letween
attention to details and absorpl.on in
111N-111. Moiern cynicism may be but the full
acceptance of the doctrine of total de-
pravily.
Il makes all the difference whether
money is .re's motive or only a part of
i1s mechanism.
11 often lakes more seintleness to bear
a tcw nto•quil•xs than to stand a bu:si-
J)48' pon`c.
A great deal el defense of old doctr nes
IA but c'alging the duly of Renting
through the new ones.
Ther err t o :nnny who say Ile y hate
given od their h(•ur's but who fear the
devil must have given them their brains,
INFORMATION WANTED.
Little Willie -"Say. ).a, I want to ask
y, u someth ng,'
ha- "\\'• :!. lint i? it, my son?''
c a n s man ke e p
his word aft. V 1.' :t?''
Was Troubled With tiffs
Back for Over Twenty-
five Years
Got Him Every Kind of Medicine, teat
DOAN'S KIDNEY
PiLLS
FINALLY CCKEI) IIIM
Mrs. 11. A. Pippsr, Feaeerton,
writs: -f ran certainly reeommcnd your
Defier'. Kidney fills. My huyhaml but
been troubled with his Lack for over twen-
tyfive years. I got hien every knee ,.1
medicine I could think of, but they dn1
him no good. A friend advised him teget
some of 1)oan's Kidney Pills, so he got
two boxes and they cured him completely..
Ile feels like • now man, se, he says, aril
will never be without • box of I)usw'e
Kidney Pills in the homes.
The price of Do•n's KidneyPills is 50
°ante per box or 3 boxes for 1.25, at all
dealers, or will be mailed direct on receip.
of .r to bby The Dues Kidney Pill (:w,