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Exeter Times, 1909-03-18, Page 7P3OLUTi SECURITY. Ccnu:no Carter "For we are his workmanship." living a. full life i:r the present, Carter S --'_:ph., ii., 10. (w•hu are doing their share toward Almost all the lives that reach making conditions right here. Met- . . ' any measure of right self-cunsci- ter the one who is wrong in his dis- Litl+ Little Liver Pips, '•usness regard themselves as in a content than he who is content constant struggle between the with wrong. If life seems wrong things they fain would do. Seldom ! to you it is your duty to seek the it:deed does it happen that one •can • way of righting it. It is better to find his living in the things he loves make the mistake of thinking you of all ; hcppy are those who must mold your timess than to be, paper. may. The rest, however, are not 14ut dull clay to bo molded by your' "She appears to be usually dress - necessarily justified in regardi;►g times. , cd in a different colored skirt. and their unwelcome work as the foe i How then can we learn to live blouse, without cap, and e.ften GI their highest welfare. our lives so that, with ail this seem-, without a collar. In times of stress It is true that, • man lives aro ill i Ing conflict, they will be right 1 How she arranges a handkerchief upon adjusted. Poets are working in' can we reconcile all the opposing her head, and if cold wears a little brickyards and plowmen are trying necessities and arpiratious 2 May' scarlet coat, which is more sugges- to make poems for a living. \1.0, w:. find our way utto the meaning tivc to the English mind of the golf owe it to life and to our world not (, the necessity upon us to wear course than of housework. She is, Ic ss than to ourselves to discover Fo much of ourselves away in the however, usually a capable cook, our own aptitudes, to cultivate our greedy wheels of the world's great. and having dished up her dinner waits at table, too. BREAKFAST 11.30. BIIRPENS THAT 11AKE VS Could We Ever Dream of the Higher Tasks But for the Lower Duties ? Must Lear S,IC!!atus) of { Sea ra.-stciao W upper 3etow. ware r. se..:I end usf-� t:, tike a•: ►e,;az. JCAE1ERS• RR R_S.OACi!F. PHIS. I r FOR f'1ZZIkE . F :y E!LI0USRESS. F�ItT�R.tl1 R b' LIVER. IYER. FON Coli .TtPl,'TIGiI. FOR CMLO it tKIlt. FCR iUZ.t2MPLEXWOf1 testi .iaCYe...ctY •.V�•I �,t3 ■w •vet. Parte, Vetct:.Dle.�.raff- �- MEAL TIME IN SWEDEN 1101 RS FOR S}:RV•INt; THE31 IN THAT CO l' N'l'tt Y. Breakfast at 11.30, Einner at 4.30 or 5 -Schools Open Daily al b.30 or Earlier. "The Swedish maid is a very different person from the neatly dr ossed, capped and aproned maid so familiar at home. In Stockholm no costume in particular seems to be expected of the sertaut," writes the correspondent of an English best powers in the tasks for which Innchtne we are best suited. o have no Could we ever fit ourselves for ' ' right to drift; wo ought to summon l any greater work but by every power we have in order to THE FAITHFUL DOING se ttuu select a work that we can do andof that which seems so little? Aro ally taken about 11.30 and dinner CURL $ICK "7"tr7HF. fl ,sese "�� DEVOTION TO SCIENCE. "In Stockholm breakfast is usu- do well. I we not learning the greater by at 4.30 or 5. It requires a little Even then, with each man at the means of the less? And, beside, time for English people to accom- task he could do best, wo would can we be always quite sure which mediae themselves to these hours still have the conflict between the is the greater and which the less?, but there are consolations. Either Cocas Another Scientist the Loss things we must do and those we It may be that the plowman is ; coffee or porridge, or both, can be of Part of Ilia Hight Hand. would do. Perhaps you have heard really doing a finer work than the; obtained early in the morning, and it said that, in the good time coin- poet, for what is the real -measure Another scientist, harry V. in ever man will have to do onlyp the long, dark evenings after the s.G'ox, o[ London, Ln land, has aid g y of all our work? Is the chief ext 1 early dinner pass very pleasantly. g p the things he would most like to cativo of a railroad system neces-1 esany of the schools in Stockholm the h eam nt price with amps station for do. None would for long bo satis- 'sari!), doing that which is more begin work at 8.•,t) a.m., or even experys." fied with that arrangement. Eyen sublime than the work of some fa- 'earlier; hut there is a long break Mr. Cox, who is ones of the lead- the people who believe they were thc'r who, for the love of little ones, about 11 o'clock, when the chil- ing manufacturers of x-rays and horn te wear wings and play on hears the yoke of servitude( Nei- (. high -frequency coils and apparatus, • with premises in Gray's tun Road, has undergone an operation at his Home at Clapton for the dreaded . It would bo an easy matter to threaten to break us are the ones is difficult to prophesy. It may con- ! "x-ray" dermatitis, and lost the say to all who feel the rasp and that make us. Thar discipline of sist of beefhteak and onions or of larger portion of his right hand, grind of each day's dull tasks, who the dull task is the refining pot eggs and pancakes. Potatoes and including three !lagers. The thumb realize keenly the seeming conflict where the gold of lite itself is pro- sausage in some form or other are and the little finger were saved. between the duties that necessity duce.(. But for their grinding ne usually provided, and the beverage Some years ago Mr. Cox lost one lays on us and the high bidding of i cessities lives would all be only dull is always milk and sometimes tea of the fingers on his left hand, and i c.ur aspirations: Be content; life is pebbles; the jewels are discovered as well. In most households coffee lie has ytt to undergo another op- i short ; heaven awaits you ; time's 1 y the lapidary called sometimes is served between 1 and 2, and this eration. He has contracted the disparities will be adjusted in eter- duty and sometimes adversity. meal is often the occasion of a disease in the chin. I nity. That, leads people to take i Only as we see life in the light pleasant little gathering of intimate The operation was apparently time as a dose for the sake of else- I of these higher values does thefri harps would soon be sighing for LESS EXALTED DUTIES. titer the wage nor the work itselfi".�e. hungry, cneerrul is the measure, but the Worker. and expectant of breakfast. Often the burdens that seem to "As to the nature of the meal, it uccessful and ihoped t is that it nal health hereafter. I necessity kr the conflict between ends. 'will tura out as well as that in the' None of the problems of living are duty and desire appear and the PREAMBLE TO I)INNER. left hand, which has given no. solved by a mechanical content, by meaning of the toil and hardship •'13cttccen 2 and 4 in the after - trouble since. an assumed apathetic indifference become evident. Because man be noon is the usual time for formal * Like Mr. Hall Edwards, who has to the facts that fret us. An ab- longs to n nobler order which is lost both his hands and has been solutely certain present will not it the making he learns not simply calls, and people then return for awarded a pension from the civil be rightly lived until it is more to endure but to delight in the toils 4..30 or 5. The preamble to a Seed - list, Mr, Cox has /suffered from the than a probation for a problema-:of the present, to fight circum- , ish dinner is often rather confus- early ignorance respecting the tic future. Folks will endure all I stance, to show himself master of nig to the uninitiated.There is •l dangers of the then newly -discover- kinds of discomfort and even wronghis fate, and to find the life that usually a small table laid with cliff - strikes its roots so deep int:) eter-, erent kinds of cheese, savories, but- nity that neither parching drought, ter and hard bread. We all help nor rising flood affect is prosperity. ourselves, and eat either standing HENRY F. COPE. or walking about the room. This done, we return to the big table cd rays. Now -a -days operators are elabor ately safeguarded. Lead, being pra' tically impervious to the "x- rays," the experimentalists use spectacles containing glass with a lead alloy, gloves made of rubber mixed with lead. and similar masks for the face and shoulders. Mr. Cox, however, was one of the lirst manufacturers of "x-ray" apparatus in England. His work was the first to be brought into use (luring the Boer War, where it was of great value to the surgeons. IIe worked a great deal in conjunction with Mr. Hall-Eawalds. In testing the apparatus the hands, naturally, were the first to cn the bleak threshold when they know the door to warmth and cheer will soon be opened. The world needs those who are THE S. S. LESSON iNTERNA':ION.11, LESSON, MAR. 21. Review. Golden Text, Acts 8:1. Three eras arc considered in the lesson of the Quarter. be effected. When the disease first The First Era. The Two Great appeared on his left hand in the Powers producing Christianity, its foran of a kind of chap -which fruits and sureeSses (A.D. 30). often disappears if the "x-rays" are at once left alone -Mr. Cox disregarded it, and went on test- ing his work so that it might be sent out, to the war. The pain became so intense, how - of things he did on earth. N st ) C% VI', that, he had to undergo an among other things the kind of oj.ertition. In recent years Mr. miracles which he wrought through ('ox has been a martyr to almost the apostles. So the picture of the intelernble pain. first church in Acts 2 is the out- - - '[' shining is actual life of the tea h NECESSARY RELIEF. ings of ,(esus, the Beatitudes and ` George -Will your father permit Golden Rule. r you to take your piano away with Constantine's motto "In hoe sou when you marry ? signo vinces." "By this sign (of the Phyllis --He says he will insist on cross) thou shalt conquer," is true it._ __ of the chuleh in all ages. ' No church or body of men which DESERVES THE NAME. No the divinity and continued Askitt-Is your friend Yaakem a existence of Jesu., has ever been painless dentist 1 largely successful in spreading the Noitt-Yes. lie's so busy he gospel. or building up the religi- hasn't time to take pains with his ous life. I ietims. The Holy Spirit coming with new -: power and abundance. because the coming of the Son of (244(I has 'node the greatness of his work pus. sibin, is the ether force by which The Everliving Lender and f'avi- our Ascended to heaven, sitting on the right, hand of (3(x1, but also over present with his people, and th same id td doing among them the a a rillRaekae he is the primary .ruse of kidney trouble. When the bark *.•lies or becomes w(ek it is a warning that the kidneys are liable to become affected. (feed tho warning; chak the Raeka••ho and dispose of any chan.c, of Nutter trouble. If you dnn't. serious eomplication, aro • very apt to arise and the first thing you kn,•.v you will bare Dropsy, 1)i.+betr, nr itright s 1►:seas", the three most deadly f•.. a ,• 4 f:i+lw'y Troi,i' •. !r .1 t',1^1 P v,n' \:i hat. N. 8., was tr,,• ' i v I,•,`and ward Doan's K,.!, , 1' ' , ! , alit••: --" i (annet sat• t- ... , e • . ....• female 1 received after no ,i; th.,. • I oes of ih+an'. Kidney 1',1l.. 1 les. ttreattt 1roah:e.l with an aching pato ter,.. •he Antall of un• ba••k. 1 could not cleats which show what that change his oven or furnace is situate. and A) to work and my back was so weak 1 wa .. seen alp.) in tate character sobs; 1 have to sit eters Ii anus! l see) then turn that power into the for a f:'w days but wn,dd alvat•r.t:,ru. "f tile first ('hristian. Veen also mains, by which it is rarriecd ten, i was a.lvisrd to try Doan', l::.ineyp fill Ill their action tinder persecution. tarnty. or thirty miles to where a.•I I mt.mtsay theycompletclycar" %,c,,' Y. (lrnttth in number+.. Note the thorn is a demand for power. 1� COULD NOT CO TO WORK DACK WAS SO WEAN. and the real meal begins 4. Growth in extent of country "Well-to-do Swedes usually eon - reached by the gospel. tent themselves with two courses, Difficulties and How They Were either meat and a sweet or soup Overcome. State the obstacles in eaither a Fw•t•et, as the case may bo. the way of this progress, and how Different varict.iea of stewed fruit they were overcome --from with- out, from within. Name the vari- are more frequently served with ous incidents which illustrate and moat than with us, and I remember e::press both the aiflieulties and the a dish which consulted of bacon, way the early Christians overcame boiled paste and Frenen plums, evil with good. which seemed to one a strange The Third Era. The Expansion mixture at first. of tale Church (A D. 30-40). "At 9 o'clock tea is usually served The cau•ves of this expansion. with bread and butter, cheese and The places to which tho church cold meats. Of the tea it roust he .was extended. said tint it is quite harmless, but it is difficult to speak ei thusiasti- lhe progress of t',^ c'tare) t. catty about it.. It is not likely to State the main incidents of this keep awake even the lightest expansion. sleeper." ENl 1t(IV' FROM W.\STE HEAT The value of this expansion to Surplus Power Being Eeononlized hi England. :\ generating station which pro- duces 3,000 h.p. of electrical ener- gy entirely from waste hent has just boon started to work at Crook, County Durham, England. The total amount of power annu- ally wasted in the form of heat ire Great Britain is enormous. Apart from the waste iu factories. tho blast furnaces and coke ovens of the United Kingdon[ alone produce waste heat equivalent to nhotrt half a million horsepower. On the northeast coast alone. according le a recent paper read before the Ir••n and Steel institute, they emit we heat equal to 2011,0)0 horsenou, r night and day. 'Christianity has mask: its can- Of course all of the power pro quests. duces! in (IIiw way i•s not wa-tel His presenee was made manifest some is used in heating the h ; to the senses 'w that people would ur in raising steam for blowing 4.11 realize the fact and the nature of fines or tither purpose but there the power which trnnsfnrmed the is still a large surplus of power character v.f the people. and Ioul. availahle. The dit3ieults has been tiplied the number of the discipleA. to find a market for it. Relate the stories of the Aseea- On the northeast coast a sele- sion, the Promise, the Prayer • ti.,n has been found. The district Meeting. the Day of Pentecost. is covered hs a •,etwerk o1 ranine The Second I:ra. Th„ Horn_ belonging t' ;he great eleetriral ( burr(- at Jerusalem (A.D. h0-35 or power(1.Tliei it mainstlsupply clectere ric power to the railways, shipyard,, colleries, etc.. throughout tate dis- trict. This enables the waste heat owner tt'dispose of his power. All he has SK do is to convert it into electrics power on the spot where 2o). Note the (Isee th of the church in four (lire.'tien•. I. The transformation of charac- ter. seen in the npoetles, notably in Peter : and point out the inci- !`,: - .set cents per bot nr 3 b.,xe, f^t $1.2.1 at a!1 dealers or mailed direct or rece'pt of price by 'fl.e Wail Kidney Pill Cr , 1'.+rsato, Oat. e pres•ions which show this pro- n•' extra coal is burned to produce grecs. this waste heat the power is obvi- 3. Grc;nth in organieatior. (Eve nasty much cheaper than that, pro - the most marked instance. duccd in the ordinary way. THE BLARNEY STONE. Romance and Superstition ('luster Round 11. Among the old ea.tles of Ireland none is u.ore fatuous than Blarney, in County Cork. It is in the walls of this building that the Blarney stone is set, a stone that has given to English speech a name for what is otherwise sometimes known as IHS MAJESTY'S MAIL H011 KING }:1►11'.1R1)'S LETTER - BAG IS SORTED. .111 Correspondence Marked Priv- ate I. Sent to the King's 1'rit•- "tally.'' Tho castle itself dates ate_11•ritiug-roow. from the year 1146. It stands in a region which abounds in legend, tradition, and old-time belief in fairies. The anther of "Shamrock Land," Mr. 1'. F. Jones, visited the castle and its neighborhood a short dry by spec;al messenger from the tiine ago, and writes entertaining- ly on the subject. General Post Office, and special ar- rangements and Blaruey Castle obtained its pros- earing the letters for or sorting hisoi-ti n,esty, ent fame from a famous stone, still el s London Answers. in the wails, round which clusters ?, much of romance and superstition. 1 he first letter -bag is delivered Tradition says that after l'orntac at Buckingham I alaeo at 7 a.m., MacCarthy had built the castle h, which is at once taken in hand by chanced one day to save an old wv_ two clerks of the Household, and man from drowning, who, to show . the mail is divided into two classes her gratitude, offered Connate a -private and official, all letters golden tongue which should have not marked private being included in the latter class. They ere then sent up to bo dealt with by Lord Knollys and the as- sistant private secretaries. Each The daily letter -bag delivered to his Majesty contains, un an aver- age, close on five hundred letters. The Royal letter -bag is sent to Buckingham Palace seven times a tpowerfluent persuasiveness }of is -a tongue that could influence men and women, friends and foes, as he willed. To get this power, letter, as it is opened, is impressed however, Cormac must climb to the keep of the castle, let himself down with a rubber stamp bearing the in some difficult way, and kiss a Royal crown, and initialled by the certain steno in the walla situated secretary who opens it. The name e about five feet below the gallerybusanday, aess nd which of the writer, letter and the running round the tent. It is said to, is entered in the daily -letter that Ito followed the old woman's directions with great minuteness, book, and the entire correspond - kissed the stone, and at once ob- ence then sorted into two classes, tained all the persuasive eloquence termed home official and foreign which had been promised him. official. Letters which do not come on -such as Soon the story was told through under either a ecnlotte ellseeking the out Ireland. It went also to otherb, countries, and made Blarney one Kings patronage for various churi- table enterprises, letters from in- numerable "cranks," and others of a like character -arc sorted into a separate class, termed miscellane- ous correspondence. of the best-known castles in the world. Walk;ng round the top of the castle walls in the warm sunshine, I began to look for the noted stone, and nt last found it held in place by two iron bands suspended from the very top of the stone bat- tlements. A row of iron spikes has been placed on the top of the bat- tlements above the stone to pre- vent foolhardy adventurers from attempting to kiss the stone by be- ing let down over the walls by the heels, as teas tho custom nt one, time. Now the pilgrim to this shrine of eloquence must get down on his knees, or lie flat down on the stones, bend his belly at the waist and thrust his head and shoulders down about three feet through a square opening in the stones op- posite the cornice, and in this position turn his neck and kiss the stone from the under side. An at- tendant with good muscles must he at. hand to hold tho heoia of the one who attempts to kiss the stone, else by the law of gravitation he will toj'ple over and go through the hole to the graced, a hundred and twenty feet below. OJ!) CAUSES O}' FIRE. Will ('att•h hi the Mort Unaccount- able Way's. It scents almost a wonder that, the world is not burned up, when one realizes what strange circum stances may cause a disastrous fire. In one case, according to a twice a day to wherever the King An ideal too heavy becomes a drag well known insurance roan, the may be staying. This applies, how- peaceful crawling of an insect set ever, only to official correspond- instead of an inspiration. a building on fire. ( ence ; letters marked "Private" Tho man who does not have an Some cotton watsc had Leen used are despatched in a special baguphille fight is going down hill. f p The man who lies down on you J away.itmineral oil and. n Oros%d from the General Post Office direct never has any str.nding at all. '•I RlippOFe you are still with the through that all saturated w'BRtP, to his Majesty, 'there is one way Living men crnnot long be satis- same firm?" said the old school and then cane nut with some of 04,1 in which letters addressed to the tied with deed men's prayers. on - friend. oily hires adhering to its bods , ting are treated differently from all Being good is I.ot tnueh good nn- Su�►sec uoutly it ►rrnmbulatexl' other mail matter. They are al- less your goodness makes good. "Yea," answered the youth with 1 1 ways sent to the General Post The trouble with man uplifter, the patient expression of cuunten• round the building, coining at last Y d sure, to the gas jet to meet its fate. Tho Office in Lundin, and pass through is that they are only onlookers. no other didtribulirig centre. Nothing will "What's your position 1" cotton fibres, still adhering to its g help you into he vin "I'm nn employee." body, caught fire, and the unforhi-I When his Majesty is abroad, n like helping others out of their "But what is your uflieinl title?" ante insert dropped blazing to the. Ding's Messenger is sent once a hells. "I haven't any official title. It's floor, setting the place on fire. day wherever the King may be with Faith is something n good deal like this: When the manager wants Cotton waste was also partly re the mails delivered at Buckingham brighter and mightier than fear of sero thing done he tells the head sponsiblc for another curious fire. Palace. They are opened and sort- elle future. clerk, and the head clerk tells one This time an electric spark did the ed before being sent from the Pal- It's no use talking about having of his assistants, and the assistant; mischief, passing from belt to ace, and any letters on urgent that faith in God unless you keep faith tells me." -And conducting substance near it lets arc telegraphed with men. • 1nd what then?" and cummunicuting with the cot- At 'ahateter place the King may The pessimist usually thinks he is Well. 1 haven't anybody to tell, ' tun. I be staying, it is always connected a literary chnraeter I.ccause he I have to go and do it myself. ' Two instances may be cited of fire with the nearest telegraph-ofliee by weeps ink _ _ _ being caused by water. In the specially -laid wire, so thnt tele - 11AU GIVEN UI' :� e, first case a flood caused the water graphic despatches for his Majesty LIVER COMPLAINT �- to rise inside a factory until it are delivered practically the instant ALi. HOPE OF' reached a pile of iron filings. When they arereceived. Thep a lief office of t.,, liver is iLe r••cro- LIV•iN(;, they came into contact aith the No letter, (.1 course, written by tion of kilo, which is the natural regulator H.:1rt Trouble Cured by water they oxidized so rapidly that the King or Queen need I e stamped, the bowels.t they became intensely het, and at nor need nay letter written by a t:henover the livor becomes di ranged MILeURN'S HEART A1!0 I:CRs E PILLS last set litre to the ttoexlttork near rucmber of the (loyal Household on and (hr. bile ducts uio3,tr,l, live( complaint Mr,. Andrew Savor. (urs•t n s, \.n., them, and Fn the building'as de- , is produced, awl is man►foatal by the ,re. w -pt.,.: In it.e year of netts 1 ea", t: ken i their Ma)estle9 bLtsiness have a mimeo et o)nitipation, ppannt Under the right sewsand di,' not [:,ink I could hyo any stroted. ' stamp; but it is a strict rule that Rh►uldor, sallow Complexion, yellow era, length of time. My tenable was with intu'd iii the other ease the water from c I slim ev►atetl 4m ne and he:ul:rche, least - catarrh heart Boned r It 10 told me that nothing se: d members of the Household Inu,t y' B 1,o done for a ca•e like (nun the engincR <luring R fire found its burn, isenlue, er.tr,tumn::h, water brash, 1 continued do r,l stamp their private letters. h the ver) beat doctors but they could do me a ay into R shed containing quick- catarr of the stomach, etc. no goof. Fur seven weeks 1 could ha•dly lie. The heat caused by the cm.*•, the goo-. i had no t+ain, but w as so f lime. weAk nobody In the world can believe how ,lacking of the lithe set fire to Ow andten. 1 heel given up a!1 topes of tiring shed, and this to the other build- an4 had given wy ileie girl to my ,islet -ii law. Ings. One dsr a friend esme 10 lies me, and call- ((lass globes, which act IIS ICnses, `•(11.1 h 1:,.Ina ma by name. said. • I,I.rle, it 1 were you 1 wont,' try a dose of Wino? we iles.t and alien CRttae fire. and it has been --- Nerve 1',114 as they aro fined for heart, said that the convex glasses used I)itYerenl Ways in Grasping- Not troob'e,' My h nbar+d Rat rio a hnx, hut for two days 1 was not (re log any better. Ill pavement lights are dangerous, Enough Vigor, Say'+ Prof -"or. bet on the march ,:ay my ha.ban,l raid, ' f and should he ahand„tied ill favor believe thneo pills are doing )nu (teed.' 1 Recently a very learned professor was able to say 'Yea, 1 fee) a good deal of tight. click flat tops. better this morning.' 11e raid, . %hell, i will elaheraled hitt [lea's on the hand' One of the curious facts along, get you another but right away.' Itook ehakt•. He electrified his listeners twot�sap.d three dews anter the third fire Is Its contradictorineee. It one, and i was perfectly wra and have not i seems to be animated by a kind of by declaring that some people had been Nrk *Ince then. f bands like flippers-- there was no 1 win net, -r ba w-itbnnl them In m home I human obstinacy, or the cs'ttrari-1 1 i ,r and know. it I• h,4 not been for Mit- 3 ety of a malevolent spirit. Every vigor about the grasp. •art and Nerve fids, i would ant have Ikon alive DOR. lila(( has had the experience of he- There are nearly as many kinds l'rlce30cent•pert,ox. ing bothered t» set fire to a stove- of handshakes as there are kinds a boxes tortt.rs ful of kindling,, yet. left to itself, of man," said the pr..fcsser. The T. Milburn •. t.,mltht. Toronto. Sea fire will cateh in the m(t..t unac There in the hearty shake, the t 1 countable ways./ i two -Luger shake, and the thistle- / "PERSONAL" AND "PRIVATE." All these, together with the un- opened correspondence marked private, are then sent to the King's private writing -room before eleven o'clock, at which hour his Majesty, with Lord Knollys, usually goes through the letters. Letters of a purely personal character, from intimate friends, his Majesty replies to himself. Not Included in the regular mail delivery are the despatches daily sent to his Majesty from the Trees - DR. WOOD'S ,NORWAY PINE SYRUP Is A Remedy Without An Equal For COUGHS, COLDS, And All Affections Of The THROAT and LUNGS. Coughs and Oolds do not call for a minute recital of symptoms as they are known to everyone, but their dangers are not understood so well. All the most serious utfoctiuta of the throat, the lungs and the bronchial tubes, are, in the begin- ning, but coughs at.d colds. Tao much stress cannot be laid upon the admonition to all perona affected by the insidious earlier stages of throat and lung disease, as failure to take hold at once will cause many years of suffering, and in the end that terrible scourge of Consump- tion." Dr. Wood's Norway Fine Syrup is not Sold as a Cure for Consumption but for affections tributary to, and that result in, that disease. It combines all the lung hcaling virtues of the Norway pine tree with other absorbent, expectorant and soothing medicines of recognized worth and is absolutely harmless, prompt an,i safe. 181 great haus been the succus of this wonderful remedy, it is only natural that numerous persons have tried to imitate it. Will, he humbugged in•o taking anything but "Dr. Wools.' Put up in & yellow wrapper; three pine troos the trade mark; prioe 23 cents. t! down shake at the height of the shoulder. "There is the cold hand, and there is the hot Rant', the hand that is moist and clammy, the hand that is more like a flipper than an organ of prehension. There is the tender pressure, the vigorous squeeze, and the frigir extension, as if one were submitting to a pain- ful operation. "A true handshake is like a quarrel or a marriage. It takes two to make it. Two hands meet- ing in a sympathetic grasp, with jest enough pressure to sugglest' welcome without inflicting discom- fort -that is the real handshake. "A handshake is infinitely pre- ferable as a greeting to the pro- miscuous kissing one sometimes ury, Home, and Foreign Offices. sees. Apart altogether from tho These are enclosed in a square, red fact that specific disease may be leather case, wan u white enamel- led tablet, bearing the words, conveyed by the contact of the lips, too much kissing is always to he "From the Treasury" -or whatever •discouraged. The mothers who will the office may be -"to his Majesty never allow anybody to kiss their babies have taken a wise and sound decision." the King." Only the chief of the office it is sent from and the Ring's private secretary, into whose hands it is always personally delivered, can unlock the case. The mails that arrive at Bucking- ham Palace throughout the day are sorted and classified in the manner already described as they come in, but they are not dealt with or seen by the King until the following morning. unless they contain mat- ter of extreme urgency. BY KING'S MESSENGER. When the King is absent from London, the letters are sent in the usual manner to Buckingham Pal- ace from the General l'ost Office, and taken by special messenger SENTENCE SERMONS. Faith makes a fold; bigotry a fence. The double tninded are but half- witted. Peace is the power gained tlrouah pain. No pleasure comes from playing with life. No good is any good unles it is soon outgrown. You can usually tell a malt's size by, what he secs. Tho surest, swiftest way of being damned is to du nothing. Your imaginary wrongs cannot cover your real wrongdoing. Liver Oompl.lnt msy M• surer( by aroidin4the:0„r0 mm!iono, eaglets, k •ep- 1.-t4 the 1,►w..ls fr•!e, am' arnueind the .lug• b0311:THING ,1ROi•T Ii-VND-' Kish liver with that gland Iter regulator, LIVER COMPLAINT. '1r.t:nn.I'ttwn.••r 111.r ::- i, chit ..fit,,: "itsvinK aufforl with 1..••,r camp: out f rr years and tried all sorts of reInn.li.-n, I wait tdriscel t., try Milburn', luta Liter 1',Ils. must say, that after taking two vials of them, i feel (pit•► a nets to tn, and cau strongly recommend them to anyone." Prise 2; cents per vial or b for $1 O<), at all dealer, or misled direct kr t),.'f;en T. Milburn Gd., Littoted. Toronto, Ont.