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Exeter Times, 1908-07-16, Page 3ABSOLUTE SECUR!TYI ce no Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Boar Signature, of See Fac..lattre Wrapper Below. Tarr small sad ab easy to take as augur. CARTE 'S riOR DIZZIN($ . s. !'TLE FOR DL:IGUilifts. V E R FOR TORPID LIVER. rl LL8. i'tttl CONSTIPATION. FIR SALLOW SKIN. FOR THE COMPLEXION 1 Trard:3y 1egerranat:..0° CURE SICK HEADACHE. Kr14111•Alei \\.fit MAI:BINE. Success of the I:xl►edi:lon Aglainsl Laklea Rebels. r\11 < flie I 1 towel on tie recent Indian frv,rrteer c'pediteon against the Zak 1':1./•ls emphasizes the brilliant suce t Lord Kitchener's n'•w army schei.. ich was thoroughly tested for 1 ret time in this campaign. The report shows that the eilicacy Lord Kite'he Hers reorganization melte). was dctnon,'rat •d m the ferowi ways:- Coe,t of the Zakka Khe•1 expedition w be the seamiest oil record, Amount of baggage taken smaller than ever Lefore. A very large force could have teen rn+.biliz+•d with secrecy and dospnteh. The expedition moved with such sw:ft- ness That tti4 ,.Deny did not have time t. c. nc mark' tribal levies. i:1:,any so demoralized That the ex- p.(' Lon withdrew without being hams,,- ,.! 1 y the usual sniping operations. Both R1.i field ail dhettd dur.• ter. n 1 s organ:ra- fiesns worke.l without a singe:e hitch. The effect produced by the decisive eneivcments of Major-General Wil ocks' f•►rce was one of astonishment from end to cnd of tho border. f RELIGION AND MORALITY No Man Can Line for Great Purposes Un!ess He Cherishes High Ideals, "Faith apart from works Ls dead."- Jerne. ii., 26. You will ,.fen hear some one say: "1 ant not a relig ous man at all. 1 am just a plain moral rnan, trying to do what Ls right with all others." 'there is &elle implied dist n' ton b •twcen no ltg,►;pu grid morally t'. hi h n ekes the av- erage person fee! Bent while there, can ie no doubt as to the value of the fat- ter to the world, ttie former is a opar- nip matte: and of doubtful u- fulness. It is safe to say that every person is either 11i0re religious or less rel.giouy than he imagnes himself to be. lie, who disclaims any religion, insisting; the only thong he is concerned afoul .s his dive to hS fellow man an,1 the good if se.cieiy as a whole, may be cherishing profoundly t•eligious ideals and follow - lag th_ to in a deeply religious spirt. On tt.e other (rand, these who seek to di -,credit what they call "empty moral- ity,' who tell us there Is no goad in any renin except the gcod that is forinnlly, sure.naturally conferred in the none of rt ;igion, have oily so much rclgiem as they may by foreo or by accident ex- p:ess in the morality they affect to de- spise. A man's religi•.us pie fe%ions are nc• guide to les moral character, but hs moral prod ce is a safe guic!e to IIIS IREI.I(;IOUs SINCERITY, is there any diff&relied' between the m- elees of religion and morality? Can enc le moral without the religious spir- ka it? What is religion but the inspbrntic;ri e. s of morality and n.ornlity but the vilal- e, iz,ng exprtess:oa of relig'on? he Monthly is the art of the right con- euct •-f life, especially in relat:on to Bone's of felt w beings. Tt:o moral elan sees be - Is fere hire standards and ideals of Iry-.ager. nta' p rsc,nat and social; his sense of duty is the obi gaeon to do certain things rind ill to roved ethers because these are for the geed or the ill of .that ideal Sof hers •nal r ghtnese and social go d ivh ch he cherishes. tielg on is the life of idea-ls, the life of goodness and truth and service be - thee Seer, to Lo the supreme! des ratite nitrite in life. it is the 1 to that cherishes the great thoughts of tho past, LORE IN LITTLE. Conrx'ited people cannot see their own defects. Ile des gat1er:ng ro moss, a rolling - stone g o s clown hill. .. It's bard - work paying for a thing 1vc Ve had the use oT. It's net until a akin lives to learn that .Le' leer y t.) 1: ve. !gime/nee may Le bliss, but bliss is ).ot always clue to ignorance. Many a man's belief in his superior wiseont maker a feed of trim. 1f a girl is pretty, her knowledge of the fact is apt to spoil the effect. Don't tell a rnan yeti are better titan lee is; prove to hien tint you ars•. The road to success is strew!' will the M:el• t n.'wt other men's failtn'c. lt-s quite easy to forgive an enemy W114.•11 he sip in a position to (1-, you a Inver. d flew ew of4t•n some people are forced fo stretch the truth to make Loth ends meet. 8 .'rni: men are anxious to earn money; while others are anxious merely to get it if y',u w-ou1 I get along. yeti must do well 'o -day; it's rio gtod wailing till to- ni riow. Only a woman can graciously permit a man to apologize for some injury she .has done hien. An Unscrupulous Druggist WIII Try and Sell You a Su sflfufe for DR. FOWLER'S EXTRACT OF WILD STRAWBERRY Why ? • Because " Dr. Fowler's” is the oldest and best known cure, having been on the market for 63 years, for DIARR1101A, DYSENTERY, COLiC, CtiCslrs, PAIN IN THE STOMACH, CHOLERA IKFANTt'M, C H OL t' RA 11fRitnee, St•gt'►,ER COMPLAINT, SEA Stef \Ess, AND ALL I' LUXIS Up blit 13ow1 Ls. When they offer to sell you a prepare. tion "wt- as g,..1(1" they hate n,.t rho ' V. n welfare of your heath at heart but that of their pocket. All honest ,lr 1Kgifts will tiro you what you ask for. Ask fur "Dr. Yowler's " and get she beat. I - r tl;e 1 Mrs. Thorne. Miller, A1latidale, Ont., ' t` writes:--" I suffered terribly with diary- + i'i en's and ankedd the druggist for something to cure it. He gave neo a small bottle of medicine of his own manufacture, hat 1 got Do relief from it. A friend advised me tp get Dr. Rowler': Ext. of Wild Straa'r.e•rry and I ww cured iter taking a few doses. Tho genuine i. L ,'(•its, anti mapsfae•, Lured by The T. Afilbwu Co., Limited. treroc' i, Oak nit high vision of character and civiliz- atioa that ►nen have dreamed, the sprri- tunt heritage of the ng• it is the life teat counts all thing, reit dross that it may w.n character and social cemplete- ncs�, When the man tvl:o avows the moral r;iu1 ,ays that he has no tu-e for relig- y n he is probably thinking of its form aire its hltniluro. He seeks the right 1:fe and he cannot see that songs and ceremonies, from which time and chang- inf conditions often have taken all e'en significance, have any value oz ho•Ipfulness to him. Often the difficulty comes, however, because we who seek the literal ends, the high aims of character and service, fb:4 to .see how deep :s c•tlr need of rho in-piratidm and light THAT RF,LIGION CAN GIVE. No man can live for great purpose; un- less he ccenes 10 sonre sense of the world cep spiritual values. In the fight for the full and free lite we nerd to know That we do not fig;tit ti?_ene, that we are but- part of a great and army that has been 'tr ug- gl'n:f up thr.•ugtn all the ages pest. Wo t.e, 1 ca'ch tt:e vis:on c,f the glorious n'rny ••f martyrs and to le 1the glow of sty. ngth that come.;,eigoni touch with Ih.. great souls of eVW nge. We mai' rend any kind of Weaning '.\e will into the ttords by which we at- tempt to describe the infln:le I e'ng. God may be a definite Perron or only an in- Ilcence or an ideal. But our morality 1:eerdLs the dynamc of that ideal, tho e. nee of the 1_ recut• spirit of ti utti that .rks through us all to the renliiatiop of our test thoughts and holed- for all. Let a man hon •:t y follow his moral Weals; let hien pay the price they will ctcrnnnd of him; let him invest hirns•lf in Their achievement, and he wil net need to worry afoul rel:g:on; he tyi'1 ci are to a sense, of the spiritual %allie_s of his service; he will find himself r part ' 1 the great company of those who have lived for the king; !oni of the good; he will know the power tInat works in 'es for the right. I1'I'NirY 1'. COPE THE S. S. LESSON IN I'1:itN:kilt/NAL LESSON, JULY 19. l,cssoti 1(1. Samuel Yarns Saul and the People. (:olden Text. 1. Sam. 12. 2L TILE I.ES-SON \VOlt1) STUDIES. (Cased on the text of the Revised! Weis:on.) Samuel's Lifework. -The last message e'f Sainnet as he relinquished his rule in Israel is one of great impressiveness and weight. His age and long. clear record commanded a respectful hearing, and his unique relation to Jelovah gave hi; words n peculiar solemnity. Other kaders hind brought their public lives to a close in this manner. Ile follow- ed In the rteps of Moses and of Joshua, oho on historic occasions gave their parting couneel and warning in the name of the Lord to the nssenibled peo- plu. A glance at the conditions of the lane when Samuel took tip his work serve; to show his importance as the f' rco which held together the old and the new, and safely bridged n most mo• mentons p eitod of transition. An or- winincr' of the people was needed. There was scarcely such a thing as nationnl life To Le sure, in tunes of dnngter the• tril es imtnedirtte•ly concerned joined to- gether, Lound by temporary corrimo interests, and keen! leaders frnrn tin to lime succeeded in maintaining kind of confederacy of the trines; b ibis was t cca-iunal marl far from con l,!ete.. Samuel in leis travels from pia to place as judge and by his \tide inti encu paved the way for the unity elf national life under the early kings. Th extension of territory was inilnerat;v All the bind from the Mediterranean 1 the desert and frotn Syria to the wild c mess Lelonged t., the twelve tribes i promise. but actually they did nr,t l o.- V1 Sd.L4S it. The splendid v;e'or:etc e•f Joshua di and his host had not la n follotve•ir up. nt and the division e.f iti land among; tr•' children of Isrnel t\ bile. settlings ti err in- v( ternal claims to it stilt left the molter cif 0,1 is conquest to the ?i"nglh and pow- of ere of each tribe. For the 1/iWt part In the reople were quite willing to make re trc ntie4 with the e.r:ginal possessors of an etre land. The Ammonites, \toabites, ac Amnlektles, and Philistines here still 1 in the country their ',ower varying with In the cohi fence of Israel's strength under ol. her different leaders. Many of the wall- ass ed t', vns and cities were still in the 1 hands of the (:nnaanites, and from sel ihese fes centres they made constant ro raid!: upon the neighboring crops and pie vineyards and exacted a emelt sort. of G tribute from the Hebrew s`ett'ers. In- pro deed, at this lime the Philistines, a yea great people dwelling in the rich. n►ari- ft limo !'lain and the fertile fe:Othills of sig \ t'estern Palestine, had reduced the 1 ne,ghioring Israelites to a c "million of 1 abject fear and e'bediene•e. and their as rs def aggression form the background 21 the history of this time. Samuel len th in per•'�on and as the "maker of adel s kings' brought deliverance to ppressed people. A elan of God i.• o died. The territorial and pnl►ti- d ,lienitis were far (run the meet eeety, since Jehovah's interests and tis, a of the nation are one. I will instruct you -The special work eft the preptiet is to be retained. 24, 25 --This is a resume of Samuel's whole argument. A balance of prone Lees and wtimingrs. TIIEY FI:IJ. TWO MILES. Thrliltrnlg Advent of Two Lady ita1 looniats. "al» to r.blo fall of two women para- chutiets from a height of niore titan two ntil.es was described by one of them Ic a ld)rtd1011 press represerltative a few ,fens ago, '110 women -Us, Daisy Sh:'pad .11-s Loulo May-wh+• made an teen Longton (Staff••rdshire), came al Fe!d Palm. four miles ft. ►n C tor, and Miss Shepard was r ori jure+!. 111 May escaped pone ut:h,rrt, and was able tee go Ir once, Miss Shepard is conf ie d e! Feld Farm suffering front an i to her spine, but she Is in h Sgh . end confident of a speedy re;O,ver "1 !ove ballooning," she said, J ani as much at Ironic• in the a n nm anywhere'. You see 1 was ail 11 tvt,s my exanp,onion, Miss May, was in tremble. "Her parnuh+nte refused to work w< \ter.• n:,t nl►!e to descend whte intended to at a :eight IA a few hut fest. We went tip and up until w leached a height of 11,00;) feet. I ae6cd through Iwo clouds, irnd Ma'Itr. unnad'rs worse, as the cI r'lsde the ntateral e.f the parachute "1 hw dly 1,1:ow what haepeuod remeenber \lass May Ji 1p.ng e► I nes. She must have leaped five thteeigh tiro air. Il was a very thing to do. but she did it •p!eiid tine then we began t n d; Bernd. "My- pneact uto was built to only one I.assenger', and bile weight made it delis end with ter rapidity. Mss May was on my k all the way, tend she was not imj much. "We were us'ng n n w apnte:ilus freeing the parachute, which w ,rte( right in the tests, but fn:le•d ire ac ;peri flee." The injury to Miss She p'ard's spin said to be serious, but not incurs ENGINEER'S WHITE LIE IN MERRY OLD ENGLAND Was A Total Wreck 111S IJItU•'ts IN '1111: BINK IRA til•:, tN1) EIS EFFECT. Ile Once Thought Mike Signalled a Clear Trak, but know (tele ler Non. •'Yes." said the tat cng neer, "heeneety i.; til• • best policy. though it sometimes Las the deferred dividend clause atttieh- nient. til and "Note', when 1 first went runnin' 1 wasn't agauist tellin' a little white lie. 0seee•n, \\'bite is .0 r down t Eo td 10 be the signal for a 1,1'"‘;`.. clear traek, but, my young friend. sy n- wherever you see a white lie starlit' you cticr+lgy In the face. just put that air brake in the cane at lilergency notch 'n' plug her. If you to bed run by many white ones t!ner'e's danger ahead, slrjr' "1 had a habit when I first got an en - P gine of beim a little careless, 'n' I ran "s by semaphore signals price e r twice. 1 • us 1 r' member ono time. atter I'd d:s:•overed my nl stak.� of signals, of just hittin' the righ'. Winter glees on the injector a sharp who ter rick with a hammer, brenkin' the water . and glass ar' Itllin' the cab with steam, n►ak- in it most impossible to see, but not let kited lin' en ugh of the vapor escape to scald you. e !tad "When called iron for an exploitation Wo of my not sto + n' ro the signal. that hail! that the walorgl 1 just oust, a -s busied 'n' 1 c',uldn't see till 1 put in a new giass. wet. That ser•wat Inc fn pretty g;aod sleaef • 1 once when I came within an ace of p ;gT- n my, gin' the caboose of a train ahead. I feet hada t swung the excuse rnnre'n once "sky Or twice before I came to be dubbed iY, carry \VATEI1 GLASS BILL extra try the buys en ,,Itie road. rible One dreadful snowy algid, as we lay nares ire the bunk shanty at the other end at tired the dtvn.sion awailin' our turn out, Char- ley Cobh got t:) tell:n' feJrtunes ti otn the for tern leaves in the b' ,tom of a cup from 1 nil which ho had been drinkin'. It got tial mound to Die. "'Well, Portly.' said Charley when he is is had gone !hr'diugh the formula, leen th ble, (10 I let from these lea leaves t in tip- ped off that (here's a big smashup c:►u1- in' your way. Can't you see the big biles of wreckage? Its clue semi. to, Kind of a tunny oblong, tubelike., objet Pen- oil 10 one side which plays un innporta►tl pant in it. 1 can't se or to gel the Mar- ,oe: waves of the wireless as to just what tro it means.' thus "'Ilu,nuh!' puts in Ira Lewis, 'yott re a hunt hunehcr. That's a wafer glass. t• That's to :1t s w ., what that Is. Rill never got into no- iroub'o yet that the water glass didn't Age' f'usl.' a'' "They all joined in the laugh that fol- g`s, 1:ewd*d Itis sally. '!'hen I sank back on 1r'S my hunk to lake a little needed rest, "All too soon the caller b -,y tame a( - OW 'ere 'n' in k'ss time than it lakes to tell or- it I was on my engine 'n' down in the tO yards hooked onto a fast fie:ght. ll cal euro was an otvr:sh n ghl, the w nd 'n' snow c'ultin' into ones face like so ninny n iit'i needles. en- "1 got 'dun away in good ,h;ipe 'n 5e- i:cpt 'ern gel n' pretty perk, although the 000 train puled hard. All the while 1 kept cw thinkin' uhoul Charley Cobh's teacup err' wireless of what lay in my petit. vitt "1 had the side cab window open :n in order to gaze out occasional:y to keep he a line on hereat was groin' on ahead. Just s is w', Weill aver the pitch of Millers h l! n co'd blast of air struck the water es glass 'n' she went snap like a piece of al clay p pestcrn, er- re I'l1.1,IV THE CAi; Il STEAM. 1- • e, "'Ill•; happenin' just like it was laid n out in the blueprint specli cali+�ns.' 1 1• said M my.elf, grabbin' for the throttle to .hut cert ;h, skarn. "But the valor escap:n' hymn the writer glass got so dense I could't see 'n it was 0 la]iv parb' ilia any flesh. 1 was unsuc- f cesoful also In lain' to locate the air brake handle. "!lore we here A.yin' down Millers , grade tinder full head of Meant, are un- g al'e to see anything at all. (hurley • (,obis certainly had the correct dope. tt 1 ever gvL safely out of That scrape I slefnnly promised myself to be pretty. careful in (Inc future about i'rnaptxa signals 'n' tell no Iles of nny color, in, n:ut'er wh:,1 hnppelud. "A h.:+vy 1;11.51 e)f win<1 se'o•ri:eed to blo�� the s' ' nen clear e►( titer eel) fur half a Ji SKYS(:13API:It. • COST J1l'(:Ii, ,trident Building Is Nueh More Ex site Than Formerly. Although the loss by the great which destroyed Chelsea, Mass., en ofticially put at $10,000.000. i f ri tdY li that 5 the cosi ofrebuilding buil d. n g $105.000.(300 at least. There is tug improbable about this. The es irere!y serte hent.h-rs•ze llo v (prelatic:dl rot, of modern buildin compared with those of a few ye c1P Single steel sky'crapers. such as n lire in all American cites .0-.st nerdy anywhere from 85,000,000 0.0 0.000, and occasionally a great d ore. The famous Park Row Ruilding; w York. for instance, which is iw five storeys high, is worth nearly $t ).000; while no less than $23.500. s a lrea'ty been expend. d en the n y-luso-stor • y Metropolitan Lifer fns c Office. which. when finished, t the fattest permanent structure %•dared. and more than twice t girt of S1. Paul's Cathedral, London fest building. \Viten the erection of single cdific elves the outlay of su�•h colors tom, it is hardly a matter for 'world ret that the re -erection of an (lilt . suddenly destroyed) by fire, cart kc. or otter cataclysmal catastroiih uld involve an expend lure that en y be counted in hundreds of rni s. hos, San Francisco as it ex's'o i 1 the eerthquako was valued at $600 1100, Tho earliest eetimales for r ding] called for an expenditures , 000.000.000. but it is n i v certain Iiia Ills huge slam wet b+' kirge'Y ex cd. Awl it would ho sur i risin e it not too. The rel:;t of reLuilditl ego, aft 'r• the lire of 1871, was S4 (N s n,000.0(x). And I hwr,e were no $25,000,- 00e skyscrapers 111 those days. d. ,\ NOT! IEll MONOPOLY. \1`ss De ''Dung-"Stel'a tells If a has an engagement for every nigt.t Lex! wee•k," \liss Dee Plasm -"1 don't think (lint is right e'en there neo so many girls that can't get engngeil at all." Nth was all butr lost. There is rd, \vr. great deflect. that Jehovah would le reduced b• to the rank of a Canaanite geed. It was le therefore, a momentous event when lv Samuel, n man of strong religious zeal, :t was raised up to be at once the prophet ba or God and the peeplcs ruler. fig d: Verse 2. \Vniketh before ---As a ruler. $1 '' he phrase suggests both publicity and 1n Leadership. Grnyheaded-A sympathetic appeal to Ni his age. This had been the poples excuse in asking fora king (1 Sam. 8. (L( 5) Samuel now turns it to his own ac- ha count. rift \ly youth -leis youth had been expect- al. ally noteworthy, '!'Ire early vision nJ t'e Stun. 3. 10) and call to the prophetic ( 1h ' office was known to all. Inc i 3. Witness against mcg --'etre figure left throughout is that of a court. Ire whe, has long been judge now pelts himself inv on trial at the bar of the people's opal- sen ion There is a note of challenge fn his ane words here. c ty Pefore Jehovah --Itis presence insures qr•a a decision' which shall be final and seri- bit', eus (connpnre verse 5). onl His anointed -The king. This term Lon later conies to mean the Messianic King, T and is applied to Christ; but here it fere means Saul, %thorn Samuel may have 000, just anointed before'all the people. tail itnrisom-Literally, "blood money." $, The money paid the next of kin of a even murdered man to purchase immunity reed from the usual vengeance. It here eve: means n !trite ncce�pted by the judge Chic amps 5. 12). '('tris is frequently pro- iLited 'Nuns. 35. 31; Deut. 16. 19). Drib- rg is the common vice of the East and lwnys has been. Every sort of Irani - ellen llen can be facilitated) by a "gift,,' limy of these presents are mentioned 1 the Old Testament as legitimate and ecessary (compare 1 Sara, lo, 27), but Ile (specially is said to blind the eyes that is, to Wks` a judge blind to the ght. "For a briLe (loth blind the ewes t the wise and pervert the words of he righteous' rt)eut. 16. 19). 6-13-i1erc 'Hews n surrey of Jeher- n It e c, ri O 0 n t ih s dealings with the people tenni the tys in Egypt till the present deliver - tee under Satrl. I4. Fear Jehovnh--Ilonnr him. '!'tee is •ry different from the fear or terra Jehovnh in Gen. 35. 5, nnel the "(bend Jehovah" in 1 form. 11. 7. As used the Old 'testament it nutans a moral sped and devotion which often rounds even to )(rye. 1t stimulates to lite obedience. 5. Agninst your fa:hers-:1s nnrrateeel verse 9. Defeat meant (''odls active position, as victory meant his direct 'stance. 0. Street still -Or, "present your - \'e:5" -still the figure of a trial, but w Jehovah is the Judge and the pco- are being tried. rent thing,* --A very great thing inthe Ple's eyes. as ram at this time of r is almost unheard .,f in Pnkstine, would c 1 ,Dues, Le taken as a divine n. 7. Wheat harvest -Miry and June. 8. Jehovah . Samuel -They 8;i3Oi1 one in popular thought. . Vain things-"Enlptin.>.'' 'i'hee 11 was used by the later prophets as tr:d aping idols (flab. 2. 18; fen. 41. 9), 22. 1'er his great name's anke--Je'he- vah.s honor and reputation was thought to it fit strike in his "peculiar people." trey represented to the world his power and wisdom. So throughout the early history of the Java prayers and re- rttrsts are cnder_4's1 by his "great name." anti his own honor is the motive, a ppePa led to. Ile cannot see his people in distress for that is a refection on hie ability, Since he Le responsible ter them 23. t ah --A :a+ n of patriotism would bo 11,, - serious dangers of the time. Itel►gi ate centaminaIMn had done much to de- grade !steel's worship. Jehovah's pre- eminenee was in the balance. The places made sncre-'d as the shrines of Canannito (leilks were approprtnted to 'he ti Ser e.f the newcomers, and many f 1 the religktue eustcen- ane! symbols of lsrne'I's neighbors were adopted by her, with the result that the purity of her That 1 1t,-o10.l sin against JehO- S11E 11A1) ONE. "Excure me. math:nl," said the ngent. "ittrl heave you a l;ii n inewer?" "Sure, 1 married one." replied the wo- man of the house, who was anxious 10 gel back to the wash tub. when a man !.'gins to make a fool 01 himself tlo is 11►t to work overtime. A Sinking, Hollow, " AII= Gone " Sensation at the Pit of the Stomach. "TtIAT IS DYSPEPSIA " A remedy which has rarely failed to givo prompt relief and effect permanent curses oven in sine most obstinate case., is BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS It acta by regulating and toning, the digestive organa, removing restiveness, and increasing the appetite, and re.toriog health and rigor to the a}'etern lifts. Aline Steevee, Springfield, N.S., writes:--" I have used E3urdo.•k Blood Bitters and find that few medicines can give each relief in stomach Troubles and I)yepeysis. I waa trv,!►!ed for years with I)ysp(epsia and could get no relief until I tried! 13. 13. 13. I took thr" ds bottles and became cureel, and now I can eat anything without it hurting me. I „ill re:vow: a It to all having Stomach Trouble, NEWS BY tltll. A130IT JOHN BULL AND 1115 PEOPLE. Occurrences in the Land That Supreme in the Commercial 11 Is reported hat exh•nstve aiurr works ane► disci t to !x• stared a :an, in tt.c llettn .-t1•t district. A husband dialled at l3radfoid c u its to his wife. rat.! that du: t y, lir, of rue.: r'.ed1 life he had l.v 51 Ird,trsiS. Mss Clara Clemens, dztugh:c Neel( Twain, recently made Ler 10 l: ndon as a singer at a coutievr at (11,,0: n's Italie l h• ltieieig of a barb r fur s' 11.1:g 1' Ili s.• he shay d r' c ,lis the fuel that be lir�i cot re louse .nn 1.' nd at was es- labl,-t:rl by 11 lean 1. r. it;ebbits paid ii.c uaacll so enormous - :y ill nuit►bcrs in the northern portion d.1 the Is.e of Marr that they constitute IL n:Onaco to agrt+ uttuio. I1,,cheste C4 tIft 1, by :11? casting vete ct tlno Mayor, les agreed 4o pay halt %% 41 s 10 (:tu',.oi nt e n workmen while Ina.urng with the Territorial Fire •. A po,tal ca -,h on delivery se•rvre° has just conic into forc;,, 1.etw'een Great l3ri- ta in and I:gy ,1. Tee amount to b col- `ec'rd is Miele' to $100 on ea 11 packet. It vel butlers' s' Inc::' at an unllnished hot's • at Lill • \\'ak••rlrtgSouth(nd, le- er•ntly exchanged a fusillade e 1 bricks, '+1 Ih course c•f tv1,ich four Wren were injured. \\'eee putting on his cassock f, r chur•c n semi e on Sunday, the Ile. T. Archer -Steel head, Vices:' of f.o ks,e•itt'i, S ugh Hants, fell dead in the v, s n y from h ar•t trouble. '1't:e fo!l..wing nnnour.cement has b: n iestc'd for wine time uuts,de the Wides- t/ n Oro ti Salt'nI1011 Army Barracks: "eau mu -t dein, to aur meeting to -night, drunk or .ubt r." S r Jo' n Geist has just t'n'ered his 74th year. i le is one of the few mere int i:ngl;tnt \t hi° Gan speak the \iaori t+engu Ile • nee edit, r a paper in that I;:n�•u.'; s, :n \ NV Zealand. The 11.-', . "1 h rnan \'erre Rayne, who has jl:-t +i:e i, will be sorely n1is,ed in (ixtor.i; al•.i all, at (:hist (:Inrrch where tie was for so long P o fen or re- s'dent member' of "Ilio huu-e," After lx ing; closed for tx n years, the Parish clen•ch of line 11e.rndon. I ssex, which dates back to 1420, has ben re- stored at a cast of $;►.( , and was re- opened e - opened reoentty ter public warship. 1' • 'r t.e c rn l house ll ) Se` P problem y n ' it South - wink, ,ulh- 1 _ wank, London, has reached such an acu'o stage that a proposal has been made that lite owners should be elm - p el!eed to pay halt rates oin all "emp- t es," Sir E. Grey stated in the House of ()minions that Inc was aware t'.ia' Brit- ish trade in Mc'rocco had suffered by recent disturbances Dew, but mde•quate .steps were being taken to restore or- der. 1: inion s greatest mesh flouts are Loin eight to nine in II a rnsrn:n' and t ab ,ut 6.30 in the evening, Between ...gilt and nine 161.000 persons enter the ty, between six and seven 175,000 leave. \Ir-. Waldorf Astor, tto son of Mr. William \\'aleforf Astor, presieled at a drawing-ro •111 mreling at Per:nnd-place • 1 Vie S rni-feet)tal P:edgo As-oc\ialion, and male a speech in favor of temper- a rice. \Vc nn' n in the Civil Servico may now he made Compnnions of the Imperial rial Service Order, and may also re •eive the Imperial Service Medal for meritorious sery c's 111 Greater 13rilain c'n Ih: same C •rdtilions as men. There Inns been a rush urx n the Braintree_ eorkhouee. The aPractien 1: Ike fare protfdle.l, ere(' to be greatly su- pir:or to that which the avcrag.'• work- inpinan in \lid-Fs�.,x can obtain. Every clay n meat dinner is served to the paupers. telgns 11rtt,m tGer- ng 22 dv in r •1 d let Mr. Darius Carr, Geary, 1\.13., writes s 1 heel "It is with the greatest of pleasure I write you a few linea to let you know icer the great blessing your Milburn',► Hurt ' and] Nerve Pills have been to ine.• I was a total wreck from heart failure and my wife advised ate to take your pills�.i After u.•iing two lx)xes I wag restored to; perfect health. I aun now 62 years old: and feel almost as well as I die! at 20.i15 Prices 50 cents per box or 3 for $1.25, at alt dealers, or mailed direct by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont, From Heart Failure In such canes the action os MILBURN'S HEART AND NERVE PILLS in quieting the heart, restoring its nor. mal beet and imparting tone to the nerve centres, is. beyond all question, marvel. lous. (li 1U.1.ln '1'lll)NI:1) Mtn .tI'D. 11e• 4b.illetl the Police to His Assistance in :111 rnudaciuuts burglary in %%lei h ei:+:vada wore untv:tt ugly itnnelicated teek pine° at Odessa, !tussle, rt few days ;1 go a_cond. In that I i ief 'pare de •(I attend I t:or I saw the five la 1 lights; :rt a calm, • the ro d lamps Amiens at nets like a sI ar•k- lin ruby ntxc. ''i3+ foie 1 coulklaced wink an eyelash nry- b,Mnrolive stuck her nesse right through ilial eel rirele, with n frig iffut crash. i was st 11 Ily:n through spa •c when I felt a potted n' 011 Ib a soles of my feet 'n' heard n gruff voice snyin': "'(".centre Portly, conte nut e f it. You're collect feet• your fast frong;ht run now.' "-!'here I'd fallen asleep 'n' dire timed all that about running away down 11i:ler s 11:11 w th n cah fell of dean). When 1 aw ke 1 was a!1 in a drlpp:n' sweat. "Now say, you can bet 1 kept a sharp lookout for things on that trip n' look the tip rim n tea cup 'n' dream b(kke. No moto breakin' water glasses for mine. i've always told the strict truth since, 'n' i've serer hat) any nitre lrvu- L!e either." iIAIR TELLS '1'AI.Is. 'Janda, feet, eyes, Angers -,nn havo leen teed 0S d<•'ine alders of character. Ind now it Is the turn of the hair. Dull i.laek hair is said to denote it jealous (Irsposit on and a tendency lo tre ecliery The, lighter the color of the heir, the more tens live is !'rte downer to crit:e sen, and the mere 'luick 10 fe el real c,r fan- cied injuries. The peps •s -or •+1 brown hair of a meet deep color and flan tex- ture iss usunity distinguished by good jtelgene.nt. poet reea5e)nieg fee, •t, and p Duly ',f ce'trtene n -sense$. Women wilh red hair, though re etnetinles toe impul- sive and oul.'poke:n. are, as a rata. truthful ant lienest, with fair common - ren -e. They tire '!.sunny the br eeiteet. stain:cat, and genl!.sl of lurort:rls. A w- man with straight and "unyielding" I.a r. pnrticulnrly it dark in cel ,r. Itis n fl nn ani higghly•prine•il,ledl nnture. Ste s determined. ;erhaps ' von a litre e,teelr)elde, but in the mein t':ttrenlely de• len.dablo. • .vt b'f•-.rc rluidnilrlt Ih' l:o'r'e seta 1 in the Al •xondenvski d:strict re- ef, yid rl le'e,►h,,nc uneis•ogle to .enol four. t'o'.ccb vel t, the h r• .u•o of the Govent • Gene1. Onrrl thdir nrriv.nl they Were met out- sdie the db 0r by a cnpfnirr of the gen- to informed •hair tint the arr. EI eel it ttnng r. -,us ,revo inti'rrnry ilad :0 14, effected, 01141 that they meet be pleiared for an artneed n'esietsnee. Ile then drove off with Ili.'rn In the heti d• e►f hr, iluehateb. n pr'e',s e'er. -,lis y.ung physic,inn. tt hich Ihany eat re 1 in tie 11Qi110 of file klw. Only the dodo: ;s m ether anti the ser vrunie were in ttrc, h"u-e, tire! th cap- tain asked the old lady to hand over nl, Iho nu,Ti y in her i"'`srdrS:on, inknrmwoul- 1ng, her nt the same lira ' tint she d 1 e arree!el in the snerr'nirlg. Ile then tadtere+l the p el,c men fo make n care- fin (arch for , \„ h �rnb. nery fount!, and !.Ix' cnpinlxnnhsn •,refer. d the to uer dctcctives bock tet their �I'ntion. 1+• Ihen tlre'v+' nuns, t eking With tliin o tIeen 4!Nrfl, Next to rning It was .Ii -c yr fl flirt te- tt•lte,le affair was ri frau I, Dred that the 1 ol••c•e had given a9eistrutce to a riew Capktin K'x•p:'nick, \\ (me THE "GOOD-i•:Natal l IIAi3IT, "1-110 rr is a habit, very ,nilly con• (ract•d1. wi, ch everyone• in t ue tress or (1h. mist. xh•eul+) ave►i•l. II i; th • "g!rr.x1- erougti►- habit. If you die I,trl!,t,rigt a !levee irndl use sent' entity t rni) r, jur.st tee OU,.e I( looks q1100 right + n the . ur- t;.ce, what can soy expel 1' 1\ hw, that totems►ely the weak point tt ill giver way, rind a &.stoke. may ,►('dire. $ ' trio cau- 1 e,•. s bell ter rl ake; sure • 1 11, na good r:;alerinf. o .t is w th e•\• ry Wei- of h n't 1e e nte•nt leeeeu,e a tiling is "gp-. d o n ugh.' Ito/fiend) •r Ihje ti me - i n : that, "What s Oh '1.)- fieb' +s tdorih e1 'ilig well." In "ti. -e• thy,: e( e'mtpel't on, the thing or the new V. !NO is "g -0d d trough" ii ',1 no use. The 'ors' 's Nine t o go dl f,r 711e4.r-n busl- eees r.er and bus.n(ss lrc sa ems, 1.11'1: or N1()()1t1s11 1.:1111.1). Never Enters Father's l'rdvenee Until (:filled. A 1-nnch lady, \I a.. \fathildo Zeys, bus recently ntly visit e1 \l rot•c and at t1:e present ne:mie it l'riri,,;uts tire deriving instruction and etiterta nment from her work, "Une Fr'itnra1sd-e nu ,\te;tr,c,' Cella *fieri in Moi'oco, she lei's us, aro brought up to stow the greatest re- spect and deference to their parents. A \lcorish child never tellers his father's l+t>esenee unless called, he kis: es his fits 'i.er's hand and sinrilaely greets any trends who may lie tree,. Only on tare occasions el:.tes he take his meals with les parents. As a rule, the child has but one dish, which is sent outside to hint after the parents' rneal. Altheug!► the d s Ipl:ne so.'ms severe, Moorish p:11e1,L. love their children dear,. iy and it is 0 pretty sight to see a swarthy Arab wit!' rugged features play- ing with his children fat ftx'nt c+f his house. The girls have a monotonous trine, sent at ttreir mothers s:de. At the age of live the fulher takes hit litt'o son to school. Ile carries with 15-1n a present to the Diaster, or "fokih." and some sweetmeats to cheer up the tit. (1. chap for the first few days. ,1t Vie End of the Reit week the parents give a nil • , signalize k P Jtt e t b " bey's entry to school, and all the small boys Milo fremils, who have a half holiday for the occasion, aro invited. KEEPING 1:(;(;S FRESH iN (:111\ 1. •t Traveller Tried the Process and Found It a Success. 'There is a way to beat the storage c+nnmissic•n in. rchant and ttte old hell herself, to have fresh eggs all the timo in feel,' says n recent traveller in China. "Phis rnelhxl may be as old as the Chh;eseseat least 1 learned it iii Chinn when I made a trip through the East more than a year ago, I happened to run into a friend at Shanghai while over !here, and when 1 left he prosonkel 11,e with what he Said were eggs. "Although they didn't look like eggs s at all -looked, iiiii' •el, more like elon- gated mud pies with a storm stuffed in tt e►n-I faithfully brqug;ht teem home, ii'.d at last genet! nal orre. "Sure enough, there was an egg in- skle, and when it tva: broken it pr,veil to be entirely fresh, although it may have been in that mud for a year or more. Well with that kni wl• dge of how (Inc (:hinnmen keep egg,►s fresh I salted n whole barrel of them t•) see how they would do under our rnud. "1 bought Them at Itre time of year when ll:ey we re cheap, not caring much whether they kept or not. but twilling to try the experiment. i buried then! under more Than a ('s4 and n hail ref earth and left Them ter :ever 11 tnenthg. "\Vhen winter came along and eg1g4 tv, n1 up to some enormous flgttr ' 1 just dug down into the earth and mad out that la. rel. OIs ned :o thi7 light of dray the eggs tooled ns if !ley had jir,t been laid. They Ins'ed. t o. as if the y had never been putt away in tete rat lh for ninny wixks,' IIF \\'AS 1'IIEi'AiI1:l). "Now. sir," sh:Iuted the c:oss exam. inee, "tell the court hew fur yeti were fr an the accused when he food the "7••h'rleon feet, seven and three-quar- ter :n:hes," answered the wines:. "Oh, come now," said the lawyer, "1t -,w can ytu tell 10 t!:e Loth :n _•f au lad til' "i knew some fool wouki ask me," re. pled the oilier, '.so 1 Treasure:l ff.' Had Weak Back Would Lie In Bed For Dayi And Wan Scarcely Able to Tare Liniments and Plasters Did No Good But DOAN'S KID- NEY PILLS Cured Mrs. Arch, Schnnr., Ill,,+ k J'o'int, N. R., writes: ---For y«4r. 1 was 1rt;'iblr11 with weak back. trf''sntimes 1 havo lair, in beset for days, being rr.ucel y abler ' turn my -- self, and I hay,' alto, Ir ••n a Freet sufierer while trying to Ierfd•rni my hutte.h„Iol duties. 1 lovi •l+,ctors atten'pne( me%ith- out. avail, and have tried linrtnent:i and pia•►tc,s but a itieinK atm to tic) me any v+d. I was ah.,i:t to give up in d1.psir when ►uv husband induced nie to try I)..an's Kidney fills, and after using two boxes I am n ►w well acol al lc to do m y work. I am poeitive Doa-t's Kidney !'ills aro all that you claim for them, and I wield ad view all kidney sufferers to give thein r. fair trial. Dean's Kidney Pills will cure all kinds Of Kidney Trouble+ hum Raokarhe to Bright's Disease, and the price is only 50 cents per box or 3 hopes for r11.2b, at all dealer.. or mailed direct on receig,t e,f price toy The Waal Kidney 1111 omtit°, Out.