Exeter Times, 1908-09-10, Page 7ABSULUIrsit7
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CIIRt: Sir. < u_ , rsecHE.`
QUEEN REMEMBERS DENMARK
ween Alexandra of England, is
devoted to Denmark and ev-
erything connected with it, and
_ ap us of this the following story
: Her Mejcsty was one tIay
telling with one of her most inti-
mate friends and she complimented
her on her cook. "I'm glad you
liked the dinner," said her hostess.
"My cook is a Danz." Hearing that
one of her own countrywomen pre-
sided over her friend's kitchen, the
Queen insisted on seeing t•he woman
and speaking to her. The astonish-
ment and pleasure of the cook at
bring presented to her Majesty
may he imagined and also how ex-
ceedingly delighted she was when
the Queen spoke to her in her own
language and talked to her about
her native village, which her Ma-
jesty fortunately happened to know
very well.
DANGER FROM SPRINGS.
In the summer, when so many
thousands drink from tempting
springs in the woods and on the
hillsides, des
a warning recently given
1•,,' Mons. E. A. Martel, the cele-
brated French explorer of caverns,
should not be unnoticed. Contrary
to a widely prevalent opinion,
Monsieur hlnrtel says that springs
of apparently pure water are, in
many cases. merely the outflow of
surface -stripers which have disap-
peared through fissures, carrying
with them pollution from the soil,
and not purified in their passage
through the rocks. He thinks that
even chalk is not an effectual filter
for surface -water passing through Lesson Yt. David Made King
it.
Over Jadah and Israel.
SAVED FROM FEAR TO FAITIi
Fear of What Might Be Only Hinders, Faith in
What May Be Sublimely helps.
"Who by the power of God are orence for the good that seems to
guarded through faith unto a sal- 1 e the final goal of all.
%atiun ready to be revealed in the Superstition) retreating before sci-
last time." -1. Peter, i. v. enco, fear has given place to a con -
If a than steps up to you un the ception of a world ordered by in -
street, takes you by the buttonhole finite love and wo have come to
and inquires: "Are you saved I'f) ask a new question : After all, is
t•ctween surprise and resentments there anything in all the universe
you hardly know what answer to. to fear? Dues nut. •ever' ux i
'lye 1 ' '
b um. Yet, 11 it be true as we l y open ng
are still told,page of nature's great book dis-
that without some dose linvarying law works ig out
definite, marked experience called
"Salvation," wo are u11 in immin- Purposes of immeasurable level
ent peril, the wonder is that the, The great question for us all is
question is not asked inure often. fiom hordes ofwhave been rescued
fl om hordes of savage, hidden de -
There doubtless aro many to mons or snatched from imminent
whom the question has thrilling imm- hell ; the question is not whether
port, They live in a worl(1 of fear, we are ready to die because we
for they are only partly delivered' have bargained for heaven ; the
from n that state of savagery in w +i
re
the whole universe was epled with! saved fromreat the old ion is �life lof fear.er we of
demons, tf,
a with i s '
Irl •
is e
P reel, utlig- , dread, of cowardly sinking through
rant., and malicious. They walk in the world into the full life of faith,
trembling dread of devils that us- into the life in harmony with God's
sail in dark places, of yawning hells universe.
waiting to ingulf them. SALVATION IS A PROCF.SS
If this world is so ordered as to and not a place; it is a life and not
of peso our good, if the universe is a legal arrangement. It is continu-
c•ur foe, we do indeed need to be
saved, to be delivered from it. But
it is strange that those who sing
most loudly of the goodness of God
should also insitmt so strongly on
the diabolical character of the
world he has created and ordered.
It is not long since •we were prac-
tically all in a bondage of fear.
Even little children were made to
dread their beds lest they should
die, before morning and find them-
selves unprepared in the presence(
t f an offended diet.., while strong
acts, was done before Jehovah,
with biro as witness.
4, 3. A brief note sununnrizim,,• patient endeavor, captured one of
all of David's public life. It anti- these fish, was so overcome with
cipates his capture of Jerusslrnt, La's y lit(: Si 1►pOg};p TO YOS. what he considered plaintive ap-
establishment of the United King- F :'als for liberty, that he tossed it
cicm with its capital there, and the SESY MANY VIRTUES. overboard again.—Pearson's Week-
establishment
of rule which are narrated 1)'-
'n the chapter:; following.
VARIOUS USES OF FI`N•ed scientist who had, after much
QUICKLY '1'11 I: DOCTORS 1)If:.
Report of the 'tritest' Registrar.
Geueral.
If you would enjoy a lone life
any religious denodnina;ion), or
toiling that a gardener, a game-
keeper, a farmer ter a railway en-
gine driver, says the London Daily
Chronicle.
These, according to Dr. John
Tatham's report to the Registrer-
Geueral on the mortality in certain
occupations during the three years
from 1900, are the calling which of-
fer the best prospect of longevity.
At the other
r end
of
the scale C C
uttmc
the
general laborer, the tin ruiner,
the hawkem• and the hotel servant,
and shout midway are the physici-
an. the undertaker and the tobac-
conist.
As compar :d with lawyers Dr.
Tatham records, medical men die
more rapidly at every sta a of life
you should become a minister (uf
Salt -Water Fishermen Say a Red
Herring Will Cure Rhea.
mati`_en.
The one fish medicine of which
ir:odern science thoroughly approves
is cute Ii1er oil, and this, though in
far less uauset.us loris than forin-
et ly, is swallowed in tons every
year.
In old days a much wider use was
made of fish as cures for various
evils, and some of these practices
have survived to the present day.
Some little time ago a hoy died of
epilepsy in a North Wales parish.
The doctor, called in too late, in-
quired if the deceased had been
4t -
OLDEST TRADE IN ENGI..t;ND.
Iugjistry el Flint-Knapping for Old
I'aahiuued Gun -Lucks.
At Breeden, in ,Suffolk, there
still survives an industry nearly as
cid as creation itself—Ute industry
of }tint-knul,pitig ; that is, tlie chip-
ping of 'limits for old-fashioned gun -
leeks and tinder -boxes. The me-
thod employed to -day is precisely diItt acts by regulating toning the
the saute as timat which our neolithic'sg t g eostiv restoring
ancestors twist have used to pre- health
h and vigor
r to aple tilt, and restoring
pare their 'lint r :•row -heads nd I,uaith aa•d vit;ur the system.
knives. Mrs. Alioo t`taeves, Springfield, N,S.,
Eighty thousand prepared (lints, writer:—"I lute used litmr(i...-k I31„o
are turned out eveey week by the Igivao uehnreliumtlill its11fnw' n,adiciues oa-t
dozen or so flint-knappers who still: I t Troubles and
given any medicine. "Oh, yes," ply their ancient craft at Brandon. )ysaa. I was troch.e.l for years with
was " r Dyspepsia
t}
tosa
ad rwu (
nswt i
cr �et o �"
u
e c,ttu ►its8 1 •f r
It tt•foi_eamu
The n.I
me +.... n n
method
of
working
rk'
in
drowned g -
e r
tI
A Sinking, Nolloa•, " Ail•
Done " Sensation at the
Pit of the Stomach.
"THAT IS DYSPEPSIA "
A remedy which has rarely tailed to
give prompt relief and •ff,,ct pormtuent
cures oven •u the most obsoases cases, it
BURDOCK
BLOOD
BITTERS
t►ou
t
d
d . .
n new milk, and
gave that to the boy."
Eels are supposed to possess all
kinds of virtues. In the dark ages
of medicine a powder made of eels'
liter was considered an absolute
specific for deafness, and was also
g ff employed in cases of ague or fever.
A decoction of ous; it may be that it never will i while as compared with the clergy I 1 y Dutch peasants 'asaa t Iremedyl for
be completed, for it is the leading their mortality is enormously in ex- falling hair.
of a life out into tits fullness, into cess. Tuberculosis, phthisis and dis- But the most valuable part of th
harmony with its universe, into en -leases of the respirators' re
derstanding of all its relationships, organs are, eel, according to popular ldf rsti.
P , the only causes of death that aro i tion, is its skin. Many an old fern: -
into etlieciency in all its service• substantial) • i•
11'e need to think perhaps nut 80 men than toy males in the o medical
much of what we may be saved aggregate.ula
from as of what we are Saeid to- Diseases of the nerves and circula-
f om, toward the highest saved
we tory systems contribute the largest
g living share to the mortality of medical
know, toward full and perfect her- men, due, -no doubt, to their anxi-
mony with all being, here and eV- coy and arduous occupation.
erywhere, human and divine. Only A ei n of the times is iven in the
h faith in a won! g given
Ca ra
A BELT OF EEL SKIN
as a preventive against rheumatism
and some believe that a garter made
of the skin of this snake -like fish
worn next to the human skin is a
men carried around the tormenting ! y d ordered for
preventive, not only agauist rheu-
question, good, only by faith in the re Particulars relating to commercial °tA•
isne but also against sprains or
life in which we move and have our travelers. They fall victims to 111-i Bandar injuries.
AM I SAFE IF I SHOULD DIG? being can one come into such full- t
coholism •in greater proportion than, Another cue for rheumatism,
do all occupied and retired males' f•hier finds favor with salt water were
Something within us has always r:ess of life. ! fishermen, is a red mostplentiful
herring. The
turned against those conceptions of Men ace saved by faith, by faith!'alite fremdiner while disease is mor-1
more , , g gplentiful of
augod before whom we must cower,in what. re s may De, by confidence herrin beim the for use in tinder -boxes.
of a universe contrived to damn usin the right, good, orderly working,
than double that standard. But al'
the sea fish, a number ofem super Many flint-knnthers earn about
' 1 gg; the mortality from alcoholism. stitions have attached themselves .C" a week. In the heyday of the
and of man as a lost being, ship_ of the world for the best, by simple i to it. For luck through' craft the earnings were much r , -
w'recked on the tides of eternity, trust in the great love of the infi- I gout, liver disease, accident and the ensu t cat
who might be snatched from hisliving on the work- suicide was considerably less in the uerrin one must be sure W cat er and there ars old men in Bran-
wrecked
rite Father, by 1 IuSt o•u l
cheer( it he would but acknowledge rig axiom that goodness and truth I period than in 1t;t30-82 t3 New lest s Day don who will tell you of the days
his intellectual
Fishermen
when the flint-knappers used to pa-
rade the town on a Saturday night
with five -pound notes pinned to
their caps.
There is one very serious danger
in the flint-knappers's trade. It
owes :
Huge blocks of the black , became cured, and now Nein oat anything
flint are split into "quarters" with; itrto all hathout it ving 5wniseh Trouble. me. I will �raen
a heavy hammer; each quarter is
flaked into small, sharp pieces; and' -- — -- -
finally each slake is t ' WHAT IS SUNSHINE?
}mapped into double -backed squares
with a peculiar sharp -edged strik-
er. This is done with the rapidity
of a steam -hammer. A single work-
er can turn out as many as '2,000
flints in a day.
A little gold amidst the grey—
That's sunshine;
A little brightness on the way—.
That's sunshine;
A little spreading of the blue,
nst of the flints are exported A little widening of the view,
to South Africa and West Africa,A little heaven breaking through—•
fol use of trappers and dusky war- That's sunshine.
riors who have no more modern
firearms thanA little
the flint -lock musk -looking for the sight--
ets of a hundred years ago. That's sunshine e
But in former days the British A little patience through the night—
Government was the chief customer That's sunshine;
of the Brandon flint-knappers, who A little bowing of the will,
supplied the whole British Army A little resting on the hill,
with gun -flints. And even now the A little standing very still—
Government occasionally finds a That's sunshine.
use for these flints; for during the
last Boer War 16,000 flintsA little smiling through the tears ---
supplied to the troops at the front That's sunshine •
A little faith behind the fears—
That's sunshine;
A little folding of the hand,
A little yielding of demand,
A little grace to understand --
That's sunshine.
subjugation to cer-
tain philosophical views of histori-
cal data. -
As man has come to under•st/Ind
the 'universe better, as he has learn-
. ri on
and kindness—the things that are n t. to previous supplement it was, r+rnen believe that each shoal
lest—are the things that are mighty
remarked that there was no other is headed by a king herring, which
g g Y occtt atiop in which the ravages of +' more than double as large as any
and dominant. I)g of its followers. They belie.... 'heti
We need to be saved from our- cancer approached that among
selves, from our fearful, abased,
chimney sweeps. It is still note -
e) to subdue nature and harnessworthy that although the mortality
God libeling selves into our better,
her powers to his purposes, along; higher, aspiring, God loving selves
from that disease
ease h
as fa
llen byeittgrowing wonder at this world+by the faith in the goodness of (loth Inear)s one-fourth part, chimneyhascomc increasing( confidencem sweeps are stillbJcet to the high -
41
n the 1m•nth:t?;rs hc 'nd all lae
the beneficent ordering of all in the high possibilities of ourselves ('¢I fatality from this disease, al -
things; fear has given place to rev- and the good purposes of all men. I though aniong Severn( other oceupa-
eI-epee, reverence fur low and rev -1 HENRY F. COPE, tions, such as servants in London i pof a storm.
brewers, furriers general laburcrs ! 1V1
when one of the "kings" comes up
in the net, it should be thrown
overboard; otherwise, the next
day's fishing will be a failure.
Herrings, in common with sever-
al other kinds of fish, are credited
with the power of knowing, twenty-
four hours in advance, of the ap-
ioachorm. When they
rank tl f
-- — --- and seamen, the mortality docs not, ' the sur ace, feeding furiously,
THE S S LESSON •
f ower which David had been rang- fill far short of 'lint of chimney t then a gale, may shortly be expect-
• sweeps. It is a subject which as ed. The idea •is that the fish are
INTERNATIONAL LESSON,
SEPT. 13.
"Talk about animals having no
intelligence!" exclaimed an asser-
tive mendeydy•• of a club. "My dog
Rower cannot. speak, I admit, but
he has as much sense as I have."
"Very likely," admitted a listen-
er, '`but that doesn't prove that
the animal is intelligent!"
Bagley—"All of Mrs. Howe's
children call her the 'neater.' Isn't
it nice to see such nffec•tion ?" Bai-
1, y ---"That isn't affection. She
succeeded in marrying off six
daughters in six years, rind they
roll her the `neater' because they
think she has fairly carried the I
Golden Text, Sam. 5. 10.
Verse 1. After this—That is, after
the death of Said and his son's.
This removed the danger to David's
person and also left vacant the
throne. There was no reason fur
remaining longer in exile.
David inquired of Jehovah—By
means of the mysterious "Ephod"
which Ahiathar the priest had
brought with hila when he joined
David's hand in the wilderness (I
Sant. 23. 6). The hphod nifty have
been similar to the Jriii aril Thum- the part of Dav 1 1 a most
mini, or sacred lot which was east sagacious, political act of concilia-
ter an expression of the divine will tion.
Kindness—Respect.
Abigail—Tho story is exquisitely Dr. Tatham points out, deserves
told in 1 Sam. 25. further attention.
3. Every man with his household; For the first. time in these returns
—David avoided any appearance of the question of the mortality among
n warlike purpose. He and his;
women workers is dealt with ex-
nmcn went up as peaceable colon- hanstive•
ly, though it is a matter
laying up •a reserve of food to sus-
tain them during the time that the
surface waters in which they feed
arc lashed and
DISTURBED BY THE WIND.
full of difficulty. For instance, the Pilchards, near relatives of the
fists with their families. herring, but only found in lar
t. They anointed es. kingcase of n domestic servant, the; shoals upon the Cornish coasts and
—daughter of a bricklayer who has `,.s far North as the Start, can, so
Samuels private anointing an returned home I
earlier time did not interfere with { lided, is given. Iheoisetheneefor-!a- ' the fishermen say, be charmed by
this formal public ceremony ; it was' ward regarded as unoccupied, and ! gissey
(here is a story 18 Mem--
returned
if ev e
probably not known by any but in the event of death will he re is_ that, in the year ]'340, one
David himself and members of his g of the pilchard boats belonging to
own faros(... 'tied as a bricklayer's daughter 1I
House of Judah—David's own
"house" or tribe. Saul came from
the rival tribe of Benjamin adjoin-
ing on the north
PUZZLING THE JUDGE.
If legal phrases are sometimes
puzzling to the untutored mired
1n many eases. tends to produce certain colloquial expressions may
consumption. The knapper inhales mind.
equally puzzling to the legal
minute particles of flint. which cut mind.
into the tissues of the lungs. At an examination before a fam-
tn s. Bu
t
n
the work is well paid, and so long cos judge, a witness exclnin)ed, '•I
as there is any demand for gin was up to him
flints there will
"Whatto him, said his lordship.
11 hat du you mean by being up to
him 1"
"?\lens, my lord? Why, I mesa
I was down upon him."
"Up to him and down upon him,"
said his lordship. "What does this
fellow mean 1„
"Why. I mean, my lord, t!:at as
deep as he thought himself, I stog-
ged him."
1Vhon his lordship still i;Hsi:,ted
that he did not understand :what
was meant, the witness exclaimed :
"Law, what a flat you rust be!"
"If he had only said 'nn to hits,' "
said the judge later, "I should have
tumbled to him."
:slimes be men wil-
ling to fake un knapning, in spite
of the almost inevitable penalty.
SENTENCE SERMONS.
Self-mastery is half of all mor-
ality.
Life without difficulties is but
death.
It takes a tender heart to do the
really hard things.
The
desired haven is not reached
by sailing before the wind.
Many are willing to be soundly -
pious
so long as piety is all sound.
No man has said Amen to his
rc mention beim trade of her r ' o}"' Purse had singers of the players until he gets busy answer-
er.. 111ethodat choir aboard, and one int( them•
vroom occupation. 1 evening, when fish were scarce the He who never said r_ harsh word
In the case of a married woman! crew began to practise. Soon, tel of any one failed in his duty to
this cause would appear to operate chards were seen leaping all round every one.
the boat, and, of ail the sixty boatel i The problems of any day are the
in time bay, this and its nearest! indications of the keenness of its
conscience.
Bad tines often come as n result
of too much living fur good times
only.
The men of Jai►esh-tilead—For an; e'en more strongly, the deceased
account of this exploit Seo last woman being described simply as a
week's lesson (t Sam. exploit
\see)l wife or widow, with mention of her
5. David sent. messengers—A husband's occupation, but without
sin-
cere expression of appreciation on mention of her own.
u and also It is rather curious that actors,
acid s dependence. upon Jehovah
ie seen in his waiting for his ap-
An Unscrupulous Druggist proval before Ile takes the first step
toward the kingship.
WIII Try and Sell You a Sub Shall 1 go up l --Froin the hill l in reality they are in the very
country, directly smith of Judah, heart of ' ish-bosheth's rival king.-
where he had been living. dont with its capital the nearby
stitute forHebron—A place "twenty-two town of Manbanaim (2 Sam. 2. 8)
miles south of Jerusalem and t wen- 7. Let your bands be strong and
ty miles north of Ilecrshrba,'' h. Se ..pliant—This is the invokingDR• FOW+ ER'S which (vas admirably suited to I,e of a blrssing suitable to warlike
+. R S the capital of .indah. it was corn- times' Strength and valor were n
EXTRACT OF randingly situated on the highest mmmt'st desired gift from 'Jehovah.
level of the Judean ridge, and from t The words of David inmply, toothat
the earliest times had been a ren- he hopes for their support. ,
WILD STRAWBERRY ter of historic and religious inter- 1. Then—After seven and a half
est. The patriarchs from Abram on years of successful rale at Hebron.
Why lived and some of them died there, Came --David did not force his
before Israel entered the land the authority en the other tribes but
1
(.'anaanites revered it as a shrine, waited till they sought him.
it becanme one of the cities of re- All the tribes of Israel—By their
Because " Dr. Fowler's" is the fuge. and being on one of the trunk
oldest and best known cure, having roads „f Palestine it was always a representatives the elders (verse
been on the market for 63e, years, I thriving market city. From now on' Th bone and thy flesh—a1 cour-
for DtARRItcFA, nrket\TRNI', ('ear j it fitttres largely in the fortunes nfi tensa introduction to their address.
Cetera the Hebrew kingdom. As verse 3' IlyaIly true. too; the men of Israel
C Amps, PAIN INins STOMACH, shows, Hebron was a district as later refer to David's tribe as "our
SRA INFAXrt'W, C rt 0 s RA well as a city. The word "city" 1 re(hren the mon of Judah" (2
usually meant the town with its. Sam. 19. 41).
iioRitrs, SUMMER (U�trLAiSt, Sia i
Slr►:Nt s, ANI. ALL FLUXES OF 4Ns 2. His two wives—Thr two whets
outlying country, 2. it was thou --A compliment to
'
lauWBh I I:e tiok to himself dutint his years '(rein new chieftain vwhich served n !
(.f exile. 13cfor,' this he had rear_ double purpose. it settled any i
When they offer to sell you a prepare. tied ile.Michel, Sail's daughter, but misgivings as to their loyalty to;
tion '• just as g,.e; 'they baro not theRaul ; even when he was their king;
Welfare of your health at heart but that of had been deprived of her by the they had served under Davi
their pocket. All honest druggist' will king's command. She is returned d as
rive you what you a,k for. Ask for "pt, to him later(2 fiam. 3. 13). For bmf general.
lowl•r's"and of the best. Leddrat out and hrnughtesf. in—
B a more complete list of the w'vea A terra for military leadership.
i Mrs. Thornes ..tiller, Allendale, (hmt., David had nt Hebron sec 2 fiam. Shepherd of my people—This is
Rotes:—" 1 snRercd anile(y with diary •2.5•. Some of these represented
Inca and asked the druggist for umethi political alliances. These p„ g fir first use of "shepherd" in A
n� !a a- figurative sense in the Bible. [t
to cure it. He gave tar a smJl bottle of m4�g tendencies later caused David
inedi;ineof his ownma:mho-lure, i,ut !got ref his sons much trouble and auf-
no relief from it. .1 friend m!v,se.l me to feting.
jot Ur. F'aIer'a Fait. of Wild Sti.msterry
Anil I was erred aft.r taking a few (foal. Jezrerlitess ('nrntelite—Not
emetine is E,, ,-cote, slid m.uinfae.
t ,y The T. i'l,ibar., Go., I.esmit d,
vrvut 1, Opt.
0. I also will requite you—A quiet
assumption that his rule extends
far enough to include their cit
authors and journalists have no
place in these tables, even in the
index. Even numerically they must
be almost ns important amt, say,
costermongers, wignmakrrsand
chimney sweeps, who are all includ-
ed.
It's sometimes easier to catch on
than it is to let go.
neighbors were the only ones to get
a haul of fish.
Of all the different kinds of fish-
ing. there is none more dangerous
than long lining for cod on the ices Cynicismis the etrnphy that comes
and fog -ridden franks of Newfound-ift•om refusing to realize our ownland. Nearly all the old-timers I ideals.
curry for luck a bone found in the The needy can better afford to
bead of the cod. This magic honemiss your gifts than you can afford
which is supposed to preserve its to tinlaa the giving.
owner's life, is about three-quarters It is hard to see in what way
of an inch long, narrow, and pure an imputed righteousness is better
white in color. than a borrowed reputation.
Another charm which used to be, if the man who boasts of always
saying what he thinks were honest
lie would say mighty little.
There's a lot of difference be-
tween serving one of these little
cries and kowtowing to one of our
great (rims.
Ile who only prays '•'Give us our
daily bread—with some butter,
too," dors not pray at all and he
dies of hunger.
No man is of n1uch use in this
world until he has found something
1e ! more attractive than his personal
North end of the Island of New) happie"ss.
Providence arc poisonous; while; It is a good deal easier to shut
the flesh of similar fish taken else.; reit the sights of time world's needy
where is perfectly wholesome. 1 than it is to evade your answera-
You would never get n colored' bility for them.
man to touch the flesh mf the bar- l Some think they must be in the
reroute, a kind of huge salt -water; beaten way to heaven heeause they
pike, conunon in time Gulf of .'lfexi•'seen' to be so successful in heating
co. He believes that the result + their wry there.
world be that his hair and nails! it makes a lot of difference whe-
ther you think of religion as a sys-
tem of medicine or as the simple
life .,f full moral health.
rni a lung time the stories that It has Always been evident that
ort avail, and have tried hnimrnts and fish could utter audible sounds were' it was easier to talk about saving
plasters tett nothing seem to de the any I looked upon by science as purety I souls than it was to serve for the
Boort. 1 was ah„nt to give up in dopa r '
y induce(' ms to tri tabular. Investigation has proved solvation of society.
"I hrven't got, any case," said, and, perhaps, still is. a favorite
the client, but I have ne°ney."
"How much ?" aske.! the lawyer.
"Ten thousand dollars "
+ "Phew ! You )ave the hest
among the fishermen of North Scot-
land and Norway is the dried eye
was the of a codfish.
telly.
"Pl I Some fish are said to he poison -
case I ever heard of. I'll see that nus, and this is, perhaps, not en -
you never go to prison with thee: tirely superstition. There is, for in-
terne" said the lawyer, cheerfully.. stance. little. doubt about the in -
And he didn't ; he went there! jurions effects of the flesh of
"broke."
- ------ THE YELLOW -BILLED SPRAT.
Had Weak Back
T7•ell Lie Ia Bed For Day And Oar
Scarcely Able to Tara
Liniments and Plasters Did
No Good Bet DOAN'S KID-
NEY PILLS Cured
Mrs. Arch, Sehnert, Black Point, N.1't,
writes:—For years I was troubled with
weak buck. Oftentimes I have Iain in ted
for days, hieing scsrnely able t" tura my. w sold til) off. Yet bar raeotmta
self, and 1 have also been a great sufferer
meat, though coarse, is not pat'ticua
while trying toad l prtrforan my household lady unwholesome.•
in the Bahamas there is a curious
belief that all fish caught amt t)
when m husband '
Ik,an's Kidney Pille, and after osis two ' y
ilow•rver, that certain fish inn pro.
boxes I am now well and able to fin my duce quite losl(t sounds. The lung
work. I am positive bean's Kidney lilla fish of Australia, a :'rant. trek- "lie's not what you would coll
are all that you claim for them, amt 1 (,rite, whirl) sometimes reaches a strictly handsome." said the ma-
becamewnntd art.i.. all kidney sufferers to give
fairial. lc ngth of eight feet, has a((lacer- jor, heearnine through his glasses on
very common with the inter them a r t
prophets. there may be a delicate I 'crting hnhit of leaving the water en utterly hideous baby ns he lav
Allusion to David's shepherd duties I oen's Ki,i,ay 1'm11s will curt all kinds end crawling over the ninrshrt h's tlueng in his tnmthrr's arms. "but
at a lad. of Tadnec '[eouhte imom it k h ! k' 1 it's the kind of face that crows on
yeti." "`it's not the kind of fa 'c
that ever grew on you," was the
indignant and oneapecterl reply of
the maternal bei'tq: "you'd be bet -
t( t looking if it had!"
fc•.aw the famous valley of Jezrecl' 3. Made a emenant -With mute- u ac o to . tna nip; n cud harking of t it xn
Brit. per
inseam", aro the risco is oil tNl off ti+,,
sit•! Mount Carmel to the north, al duties and rights. Called "the dealers, or mailed direct on ,tett 1 small fish '.wired o Trn
cent* per box or 3 ',owes or 81.33 at ail coast—the "hormnlon"—mnkrs the
lee from two small tnssna. Jezteel manner of the kingdom" (1 Sam. price. by Tisa 1>.oa Kidney PillrCo., moat extraordinary aver. groaning when
and Carmel in the southern country 10, 25). This, like David's other Toronto, �r milled mit of the w atcr. It i. „n
record that a certain tender -heart -
WHERE Tiff?Y AIIRIVEi).
"Finnigan and Moriarty got info
an argument the other night," re-
marked O'Flaherty. "Iudecd'''
said Murphy, "and what d_d they
arrive at ?" "Oh, well, shore Fin-
nigan arrived nt the hospitaf and
.Moriarty at the police station:"
EXCEPT FOit. CASH.
Little Willie—"Say, pa, when two
nations are at war, what is meant
by the strict neutrality of another
nation 1"
I'a—"it means. my son, that the
other nation will not supply arms
and Minnnition to either of the
contestants—except for cash."
ABSOLUTELY NECESSA R Y.
"What prompted you to rob this
man's tit 1" asked the judge of the
prisoner.
"My family physician, sir," wee
the reply ; "he told me it was ab-
solutely necessary that I ghoul.'
have a little change."
Was Weak and Nun Down
WOULD VERY OFTEN
FAINT AWAY
Mrs. .1. iI. Armstrong, Port Elmslcy,
Out., tells of her experience with
MILBURII'S
BEAR? AND NERVE
PILLS.
She write., : " (t is a it h gret:, rdn 1
tell how your Ih•art and N, rut fills
beneittt•d moi.
osis very .v, ak and nun do:•: o. bad
hrndacbes nearly evrry dz.).- and t, ry
often would front nwny, iu fart, my
doctor avid that sometime I would never
Colne out of the, Lint. It was through
one of your travclling� agents that 1 was
induced to try Milt,uru's Heart end
Nene flits 1111(1 after taking three Ix,x(w
1 non glad to relate it has Leen a number
of years sinrr d hada fainting spell and
110
scams•ly ever have a headache. Too
mrmch cermet t.' said in (,raise of Mil -
burn's Heart. and Nerve l'1!I., for in mo
they tutu. effected 11 perfect cure."
Trier' 50 eras per box or 3 boxes fot •
$1.25, at nil dealers, or The T. Milburn
Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont,
•