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Exeter Times, 1912-11-21, Page 711 Skti. Giseases ARE OCGASIONED EY AD EL OD. No one limn expect to be free from some form or other of skiu trouble unless the blood is kept le good shape. The bleed can easily be purified and the eltin diet te mired by the use of Burdock Blood Bittera, that old and widele known blood .mediciae. It has been ort the market for over 35 years tad its reputation is unrivalled, Mrs. Lillie Mitchell, Guelph, One, •writete—lel was troubled with eczema,. My body was covered with awful itching Ike eruptions. Althoagh I tried many 'eifferent remedies I could get nothing to reire me relief. Finally I got a bottle of 'Burdock Blood Bitters, which completely eured Spinach Recipes. SPirlach is a vegetable of an agreeable taste, light and whole- some, Mauy people give up eating it becauee, they eay, it is "so grit- ty." Se it is tiniest) it is properly washed; bet with °are every bit of grit an bet removed. Before washing totice if it is quite young er if the stalks and mid Jibs look coarse a,nd etringy, If they do they must be etripped off .ani only the leafy part used. A.11 yel- lbw leaves meet be removed. Next it should be thrown into a largo paa of clean old or lekowainu water; use eufficient wa,ter to Peat the leaves well, a,nd teee swin them round and round wish a weeds Manufectured only by The T. Milburn i en epeen. Co., LiMitect, Toronto, Oat. ' • PRINCESS t'OLONELS, About Fifty of Them in Europe, • lettU1 of Royal Birth. Th militant suffragettee have uot, o ar,• condacted their aggres- sive actics under •the leadership of • wom belonging to the Profession of gins. Should the ladies who are ajjleady military become also mili- ant, there would certainly be some interesting campaigns, although we would learn of them eiely through our war oorresponelents in. Europe, Women a,rmy officers are not yet known in this country. • In Europe, most of the monarchi- cal countries have them; for, oddly ertough, it is conservative royalty which grants its womenfolk commis- • sions in the roost unferainine of pro- • fessioes; although the princesses bearing them are never expected to fight, are by no means merely emp- ty compliments, carrying the right to wear a jaunty reliform-habit and a toy saber, • More theta' one :piens ceee colonel car, lead her reetenent ;creditably, on perede, at least; and some of there hehre acquired a. res epectable amount of military science, both literary and practical. The -warlike German Emperor— he who has dogmatically declared that the proper ephere of woman's interests is "children, church and ,kitteheri"—is inoonsistent enough to m'have appointed severa,1 royal ladies to .00lonelcies, and, still more, to take the app•ointraents quite seri- ously, and expeet them to do so. The German erown princess, the .pesetty end popular Cecilia, who is oftma adventurous disposition, and extreraely fond of outdoor life eves overjoyed when he made her colonel of the Second Silesian Dragoons, and never misses an opportunity of leading het* men mounted upon a spirited blaek oharger, her blende head topped by the regimental hat and huge black nlume. Her mother is also a oolonel of dragoons; so is another of the Emperor's daugh- ters-in-law ; his Wife, the Empress Augusta Victoria, •commands two regiinents; his two sisters each one The Crown Prineees Sophia of 'Greece, colonel—of a regiitient of Ruesian, grena,dier guards, is oft,en consulted by the King, as an ac. • knowledged expert on army organi- •zati.o . Queen Mary of England is eolonel • of the Fifth Prussian Hussars, a erack regiment that acts as lier es - cert when she visits •thb German oo•art ; but she knows, little about inilitary matters. • In all, there are about fifty wo- men oolonele, all of royal birth. The latest to receive her commis- sion is the Russian Grand Dechess Tatieria, to whom was given as a •birelicley.present, only aehort time • ago, the colonelcy of the Four- teenth Lancers. She is only fifteen, and eupersedee in the honor of be- ing the youngest girl colonel in the world her sister Olga, colonel of the • Elizabethgrad Hussars, one of the roost famous fighting regiments in the Tsar's dominions. She—"It a way getting married is like using the telephone," He— so She. ---"One doesn't al- ways get the party, one watts." SIMMERED FROM Catarrh of the Stomach For Thirty Years. Catarrh of thtomach is generally taused from some interferenee with the edict), of the liver, and is a malady' that effects the whole body. • i Some eymptoms are burning pain in ihe stomach, constant vomiting, abnor- thel thirst, inceseant reaching, etc. On e first signs of any of thaw symptoms ilbura's Laxa-Liver Pills should be taken. They are a specific for all dis- orders ariting from wrong action of the liver, , Mr. Miehael Miller, Efierslie, Alta., writes e•—"I take plealure in writing eta) concerning the great vales:1 have reeeived be using Milburn 's Laxa-Liver Pills, fat 'catarrh ce the stomaehn with ivied) X have beee a sufferer for thirty years, 1 used four Theo and they completely cured me." ' Price, 25 eeets a vial, 5 nets for $1.00, et all dealte or mailed direct oo reetept of price by The T, Milburn Ca, Limited, 'Recta*. Out Next raise them from the water with your •hand or a draiter ; re- peat this process three timos. (lace time in clean water. If washed in this way no grit will be left,. Stewed epinach is much nicer than boiled. The'ilavor is better, and when it is young there is not the least noed to rub it through a sieve, ae 14 me receipts direct; in fact, very many people infinitely prefer it merely chopped. To Stew Spinach.—Two pouials of spinach, two heaping tableepoen- fuls of butter, ono tablespemalul of flour, a pineh of salt and sugar ane oupful of milk or stock and the yolk af one egg. Wash and prepa,re the spinach as already directed; next blanch it by cooking it for six min- • utes in' plenty of boiling alted water, then drain it through a col- ander and throw it into some cold water to cool it. Now drasu it th or • oughly, pressing out ad moistre possible, and chop it finely. Melt the butter in a saucepan, stir in the flour smoothly and add the salt, and sugar. Stir this oyez' the fire for a few minutes, then add tee spiaach, then add the milk *or stock and stir over the fire until the, spin ach is almost dry. Beat up tee yolk Of an egg., add one tablespoon- ful of milk or cream to it, then stir it lute) the spinach. Make it thor- oeghly hot and serve in a hot dish. Spinach with Eggs. -- Spinach • with'scranabled eggs is a vegetarian dish and excellent for lunch or sup- per. Stewed spinach (as in preced- ing recipe); three ar more eggs, cam heaping tablespoonful of butter, salt and pepper, to tablespoonfuls of milk. Arrange the spinach in a neat border on a hot dish. Beat up the eggs until- slightly frothy, add the railk and a dust of salt a,nd pepper, Heat the butter in a small saucepan, pour in the egg mixture and stir it with a wooden epoon. over a slow fire until it becomes a •soft, creamy mass, then heap it up quickly in the eentre of the spinach border. Poached Eggs with Spinach. — Poached egg with •spinach is an- other light, wholesome and appetiz- ing lunch or supper dish. Stewed spinach, one poached egg for each person, neat round of fried or toasted bread. Cut the bread ra- ther thicker than • you would for ordinary toast. Toast or fry it very carefully. Coat each piece thickly with some of the spinach Mixture, which should be vere hot, smooth it evenly over and place a neatly poached egg on each. Serve very hot. • Spinach Souffles.—This is a very dainty method of serving spinach as an ordinary vegetable. If you have not time to make the mixture into small souffles, make just one largei one, either in a souffle case or in & •fireproof dish.. One pound of stewed spinach, -three eggs, two tablespoonfuls of cream, seasoning of pepper, a dist of sugar, a fe* browned breadcrumbs and one tablespoonful ef butter. Prepare the spinach exagly as directed in stewed spinach, but rub it through a sieve before using. Separate the yolks and whites of the eggs, add the beaten yolks, cream, sugar and pepper to the spinach. Whisk the whites to a stiff froth and stir them lightly into the mixture. Put the mixture into small paper or china caaes, after first greasing them Sprinkie a few browned crumbs on the top of each, pet a few small Piecee of butter on the top, and bake theta in a moderate •oven for about a quarter of an hour. Serve them hot. Slit:trice of Spinach. ---Chop two -pounds of cooked spinach, throw it into hob butter, add eelt and pep- per to taste .and one tablespoonful of floeri let this 'cook for six or seven minutes, then take it off the fere and add three well -beaten eggs. Mix them with the epitaele and spoonful by spoonful drop them in- to a saucepan Containing a milt:l- ent qtantity of melted better to fry them. Turn the subries from bne side to the other and let them cook for three or 'four minutes; strain and serve them with a good white eauce, Spinach with Butter.—Take two pounds of freshly picked epinech, wash it well in two or three Mild 'waters, thee drain it thoroughly and put it into a elean saucepan with four heaping tablespoon of better and two tablespoonfuls of flour thee have been eooked to- gether but not discolored, eover the This map shows the course of the Royal George anti the point on the river,i ten miles east of Quebec, where she ran aground. The ship had been heldi opposite Grosse Island for quarantine inspection, and was anxious to reach' Ouebeo in time for the passengers to pass the immigration officials. saucepan and let the epinach cook in this way till drawn down to a creamy consistency, which will take about 20 minute, then rub it through a fine sieve, and then re- turn it again to the saucepan, add to it three tablespeonfuls of cream, reboil, add a dust of white pepper and a very little salt, dish up and garnish it round with, little crou- tons of fried bread or little pieces of puff paste that are baked a pret- ty -golden color, .and serve. Croustades of Spinach. — Out some bread into the shape of hearts and slit them all around, then fry them in hot butter; arrange the hearts in the form of a rosette; next cut a round of 'bread, which slit in the same way, and place it in the center over the points of the hearts; fry them till tb.ey are a golden brown, then cut out the in- terior, take out all the crumbs and fill the space left with cooked spin- ach, • . • Hougeliold Hints. Soup should always be simmered, not boiled. • Allow nearly three hours for roasting a ten -pound turkey. To crisp eelery, let it he in inc water two hours before serving. • Sponge black goods thoroughly with alcohol to take away a dusty mok. •' Keep a calendar with pencil at- • tached, in the kitchen for house- • keeping accounts. Never leave canned food in the tins after opening. • Reinove im- mediately. Instead of Italieof better, cubes with fluted edges are a pleasant change. • Don't put simple milk puddings in a very hot oven, or the milk will curdle. • Unless a turkey is very young, it should be steamed tar an hour be- fore roasting. • Fat for frying should be boiling before the article • tos be fried is dropped into it: When chestnuts are in season, they are a delicious addition (boiled) to a simple salad. •. One of the economies of a well- run kitchen is a biscuit and dough- nut cutter combined. • Pour olive oil •into the bottle if you open a large bottle of olives— it will preserve the flavor. • Never leave the furnice ashes uncovered after sifting. Sprinkle with water and leave tightly cov- ered. When• boiling vegetables, never let them stop 'honing until they are done, or they will be soggy and heavy. Never expose an opal to heat, or it will crack. Clean it with cold water, softened with a tiny pinch of soda. • Put a rose geraniem leaf on top of eewly made jelly before sealing it, if you would •have a delicious flavor. When a light evening gown is stained with freit juice, the siraplest thing is 150 send it to a good cleaner. For peach stains, wet the stain, spread it with cream of tartar and place in the eun. Then wash as usual. In making buttonholes in stuff that ravels easily mark the button- holes and stitch around it 'before cutting. ' To retrieve stains from a 'vinegar crust fill with grated raw potato and Iet stand. Than • rinse with rlear water, Dress in Siam. • In Siam •both men and women wear 0:0.“fientmg,." wheel' is de- scribed as aviede of silk. sit .cottoo cloth waited round the 7hip., the eta& being rolled up, peetil be- tween the lege and hitched up be - hied le suet) a way' as to give the appearance o e pair lf loose kniek- etbookers. For waist coverings, the women wear jackets and • blouses' and the men wear•ceets. • DOT VEILS ENRICH OCULISTS. Closely Woven Network Also Is • Cause of Eye Troubles. "Every dot in a woman's veil is worth a sovereign to the oculist," an old English member of the pro- fession declares, "and there is no doubt that the modern veil, with its intricate figuring and bold designs, is far more harmful than the old; time veil, which was either plain or adorned with small spots. "A closely, woven network offers a considerable barrier to evapora- tion and the surrounding of the skin of the face with material which hinders the proper ventilation of the eyes and skiu prodnoes a certain amount of trouble. Thus all condi- tioas of eczema, er skin irritation which women oomplain of are due to the heated oondition of the eye brought about by the veil. "Associated with the watering there is redness of the eyes and a curious over -sensitiveness to light. Again a veil which is twisted tight- ly under the ehin. compresses the veins of the face, and this intensi- fies any tendency to skin irritation, and ma,y account by impeding the circulation for woman's chief dread in life—a red nese. "Always in the autumn on, ocu- list gets a certain number of cases, principally of young people, who find that they oarmot read or write in a dim light. That is due to the exha,usting of the eye with -too moth light, Young people nee only go about without head covering, but they read on the beech for long per- iods in full sunlight, with the result that, they get what is known as ac- quired night bliudness," e_neenst___ T11{111811 SOLDIERS' TITLES. Ilasld-Bazonks Are Auxiliaries -- Redifs Second Reserves. • "Nizarns," "Itedifs" and "Muss tafiz" filled the telegrams during the mobilization of the Turkish army. Now that fighting has be- gun in the high mountain valleys south of Phillippopolis the messages have beetle to stihalc of "Bashi- Baz.oulcs." Bashi-Bazoaks are irregular Turkish auxiliaries. The Pamela", or Moslem mountaineers of Bulger race, who are new offering a stern resistence to the Bulgarian invad- ers, are correctly described as Bashi-Bo,zouks. So are the Alban- ian tribesmen now fighting for the Sultan, • • The regular -army consists of Ni - ams, Refills and iiilustafiz, A Ni- zain is a young Ottoman who is serving his terra of military service. When a Nizam has finished his time in the active array he passes into the Ihtiateor firg reserve, and then into the Redif, or tsecond reserve, The Redifs form the main part of the Turkish army in time of war. Finally when the soldiers of the Redif have reached the age of 38 years they become mustafiz, a sort of general militia, to be called upon only in times of grave emergency, An Ottoman is liable to service up to the age of O. The mysterious word ordu, so commonly ueed in the war news, simply means army eorps. Peck—You will never get the dog to mind you, my deah, Mrs. Peck will with patienee, You were just et troubletome yourself at fil.3te' N1.1—"I think I should like to marry an imaginative men." Belle —"Well, what ether kind of a man can you expect to marry—if he hos a chances to see you in &flight 1" 'Do you really believe, doctor, that your old medicines „really keep anybody alive V' asked the skeptic, "Surely," • returned the doctor. "My prescriptions have kept three druggists and their familiee alive in this town for twenty years." NEWS FROM SUNSET COAST Willie ••••••••••••• TIIE WESTERN ARE DOING. PEOPLE Progress of the Great West Told, • In a Few Pointed • Paragraphs, Wood is $3 a cord itt Chileiweek. Princeton coal is being sok]. in Vancouver. The city limits of Port Alberni are to be enlarged. F. W. • Hart will build a large block in Prince Rupert. • On Saturdays the stores in Ender- by close et 9.30 pan. The Marchioness of Donegal is touring British Columbia. this month. A stege line is now' in operation between 'Princeton and Voigt's camp. The Dominion Government will build wharves at Revelstoke and Oomaplix. In Vernon twenty years ago blue grouse could be lolled -with a gar- den rake. Land has been secured up the Skeena, River for the settlement of 6,000 Russians. Sunday chicken dinners and a singing school have been establish- ed in Queinel. The Grand Jury at Nelson, B.C., paiated out the need of a modern jail in that city. In the Ohilliwack Valley this sea- son some ranchers have raised two crops of ra.spberries, The railway contractors have nearly 1,000 white men working in the vicinity of Alberni. There is a shortage of railway laborers on the G.T.R. between Tete Jaune Cache and Fraser Lake. There are 50 boxes in the post - office at South Feet George, and 50 more will be added this winter. eel Cattle are running at large in Armstrong, thereby decreasing the value of mechanicad lawn mowers. By dipping a pail into the Skeena River J. L. Christie recently ceught a four -pound rainbow trout. The Dominion Government has thirteen parties making hydrogra- phic surveys of the rivers of Bri- tish Columbia, During a thunderstorm at Van- couver, electricity in the air fired off the eine p.m. gun two hours too soon. • • Live eats are worth $5 each Tete Jaime Cache country. Rail- way contractors need them for the killing of bush rats: This winter two flour mills will be built in the Peace River country, one at the Crossing, and the other at Grand Prairie. Frank Nichols and Richard Mil- lett brought to Roseland for their dairy, 11 jersey cattle. The herd was bought et Creston and cost $1,000. In South Fort George, James Nelson was given six months in jail for running a poker game. One of the pucka ef cards used in the joint contained seven aces. The Canadian Northern Railway has put up about $75,000 for yard and statism sites in Armstrong, and the main. line will go through that town, with a braneh from Enderby. On the construction of the C.N.R. •Railway betweet Cowinhan and Port Alberni, nearly 2,000 men are working. The 0011trutors home bought 300.000 feet of lumber to put up construction eemps, The Frondeg ranch et Cobble E II on Vancouver 'Wend, has beet sold to an eaet'ern farmer for $125,- 000, The revolt will be stocked with Jersey rattle, and hothouses oover- inn eight acres will be ereoted. The produee of the ranch will be sioeveyecl it Victoria by an auto ttsrck Fyank Kibbee • was Severtly wounded by a bear about 20 milet from Barkerville. The bear was running away with the trap that he had been eaeight in and thereat" on Kibbee, Freak Connors, his part - nee, killed the bear with a revolver shot and pulled Kibbee from under the bear. Connors had to drag Trb- hee forty miles he fore help cold be mired. INTERNATIONAL LESSON, NOVEMBER 24. Lesso VJIL—Tke Transilesuratio ark 9, 2-13, Golden text, Luke $5. Verse e, After eixedays—So an both Mark and Matthew ; Luke, however says about eight days," ivhich is obviously intended to be ft less precise statement, as the word "about" indicates. Peter, and Janne, and John The selected group of disciples, ionizing an inner circle within the larger company, and selected on severe,' other occasions to be the exclusive companwee of Jesus at crucial moments in his ministry. A high mountain—Luke uses the definite article "the," while in 2 Peter a 18 the scene (if the trans- figuration is refetred to as "the holy mount." For the place cern- pare introductory paragraph above, ,Transfigured — Literally, meta- lelilloQrrPellia°etaecrily alsiteLruakl eLek)sell°Owf tinhge word, has it, altered. Jesus him- self refers to what happened as vision (Matt, 17. 9), However we may explain the event, it was clear- ly a revelation of reality and no mere mockery of the senses. 3. Glistering — An exceptional 'word, net occurring again in the New Testament, though used else- where in describing the flashing of burnished braes or gold. As no fuller on earth ean whiten them—The fuller'art seems to have consisted in "washing the ma- terial with some preparation of lye, beating or rubbing it, and ex- posing it to the rays of the sun," The oka,ning and bleaching involv- ed in this process achieved exeep- Urinal results in the whitening of the cloth, as remains of ancient Egyptian linen testify. 4. Elijah with Moses—Usually re- garded as representing the two great stages of Old Testament re- velation, prophecy and legislation. Itt reality, however, Moses was as much of a prophet as Elijah, while Elijah was constantly insisting up- on the requirements of Jehovah's law. Talking with Jesus—Concerning his impending decease at Jerusa- lem (compare Luke 9. 31). 5. Peter answereth—All three synoptists epresent Peter as the spokesman of the apostolic group. His action under the cireurastatiees in wholly in keeping with his eager, ardent,. and impulsive nature. Rabbi—A eustomary title by which a pupil addressed his teacher. Three tabernacles—Or, *booths. These an the slopes of Mouat Her.. moe could easily be made from branches of trees. Peter is wholly unselfish and forgetful of the needs of botla himself and his two com- panions, thinking only of the Mas- ter and his distinguished visitants. 6. Knew not what to answer— The overwhelming impression of the vision seemed to demand some word in response. Its marvelous nature, however, was eonducive to awe and fear rather than to sober reflective thought. 7. There came a cloud—Peter's well -meant but only half coherent proposal is not answered, except in the progress of events incident to the divine manifestation as a whole; of this the overshadowing cloud and the voice out of the cloud were a part. Hear ye him—Not Moses and the prophets, but Jesus, is hereafter to be their guide and authority. 8. They saw no one any mare, save Jesus only—The actual depar- ture el Moses and Elijah it was not given the disciples to witness. 9. As they were coining down— According to Luken apparently an the morning hallowing the trans- figuration., Save when—The time of the re- surrection is left indefinite and con- tingent. 10. Kept the saying --Obeyed his command to tell no man, though among themselves the strange words of Jesus concerning his resur- rection from the dead, togeiher with the event itself, was a matter of frequent conversation and guess 11. And they asked him --A fur- ther difficulty presents itself to their thinking. According to the teaching of the scribes, the advent of the Messiah was to be preceded by the reappearance oe Elijah; but here was an appearance of Elijah after the Messinh'e advent; con- cerning whiela Jesus had charged them to say nothing. 12. Elijah indeed ometh first — Jesus interpreted this prophecy as having been fulfilled in the life and work of John the Baptist, who cense and taught in the spirit of the Old Te stamen t prophet. Restoreth all things—In the sense of inaugurating a great moral re- form movement for the religious betterment and renovation of Israel. Suffer many things and he set at nought—The humiliation of being despised and rejected by those whem he tame to reeleeen was the severest pert of the Master's suf- fering, la. They have oleo done unto him ..The three diseiplee utiderstood that Sesue meant to identify Elijah Howev MAY TWIN I T DRONCHITIS should never neglect a cold, hoot ever slight. If you do not treat it ia tiro it will, ia all poesibility, develop bite brow:144 pneumonia, asthma, or some other aerious thrOat Or lung trouble. On the first, sip of a. eold or coagh it is mineable to cure it at once, and not let it ren eel for an indennite period. For this purpose there is nothine to ewe/ Dr. Wood's Novelly Pine Syrup, a remedy that has been ueiversally used for the past 'two:ay-Ave years,. You do not experiment when you get it. Mae. Louis ealorida Penetanguiehene, Ont., writes: --"When raY little boy wee two years old he caught a cold whicti turned into bronchitis. I tried every.. thing to dare him, even. to doetor's medie eine, but it did him no good. One day I was advised to give Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup a trial, and before he had half e. bottle used, he was cured. I would ed - vise all mothers to tilt, as pod results will follow. My houie is never without See that you get "Dr. Wood's," as there are numerous imitations, It le put up in a yellow wrapper, 3 pine trees the trade mark; the price, 25 and 50 cents. Manufactured only by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. with John, Matthew's account clearly pointing out the faet that he did. (Matt. 17, 13.) Ste it is written of hire—What is recorded in the Old Testament re- garding Ahab's and Jezebel's treat- ment of Elijah (1 Kings 19) was ty- pical of Herod's and Herodia.s's treatment of John. NO ROYA.L ROAD IN FOG. Torches Preeeded Edward VII. Tramping Home One Night. Reeently the King had the exper- ience of driving home from the thea- tre with torchbearers tramping in front, The incident recalls the most curious sight in a pretty Tar- ie,d London life wrote a London correspondent. Groping down St. James Street early one foggy night about the middle of King Edward's reign, I was surprised by a great glare of torches, and there emerged silently frem the fog a number of men, like footmen, bearing torches and be - bind them a group of gentlemen in cloaks surrounding some one walk- ing heavily in the middle, and an- other body of torchbearers brought up the rear. The personage in the middle was revealed by the torches as King Edward, and the party moved slow- ly- and silently dewn the street along the Mall to Buckingham Pal- ace. The King had been dining with Mrs. George Keppel in Port- man Square. It was a curious sight to see and made one think of the London of Charles 11, Two 'Views. Mrs. A.—Doea your husband be- lieve in corporal punishment in the household' Mrs, B.—Only to a eertain point, He's always whipping the children but he thinks the dust should be got out of the carpet by moral su- asion. "It was simply a question of vera- eity between us," said the oldest inhabitant. "He said I was a liar, and I said he was one." "Humph I" rejoined the village postmaster. "That's the first time,I ever heard either ef you telling the truth" Teacher—Why did you put that pin in my chair Bad Boy—Boo- hoo How did you know I put it there'? Teacher—Because you were the only bey in the room who was hard at work studying when I sat on it. ie Vth ea k earl. Was Ail Run Down. Many people are unaware of having anything wrong with their heart till some excitement, overwork or worry causes them suddenly to feel faiut or dizzy, and have an alegone sinking sensation. On the first sign of any weakness of the heart or nerves, you should not wait until your ease become') so desperate Quit it is going to take years to cure you, but avail yourself of a prompt and perfect, cure by using Milburrds Heart and hTerve Pills. Mr. 'Thome A. Stevenson, Harris, Seek, writes:—"I was troubled with lr wea'heart, and was ail run down for a long while. 1 was almost in despair of ever gettiug well again, until a friend recommended rile to try Milburn's Beate and Nerve Pills, After the first box, 1 was much better, and three boxes mired ma I am new, as vsell as ever, and will highly rercanmond there to any one else troubled with a weak heart." The price of lelilburn's Heart and Nerve Pills is 50 oats per box, or 3 boxes for $1.25. • Far sale at all deaiers or mailed direet Oen, re, oeiPt_nf price br the T. Milburn Cog Lanuted, i:orente,O. 4