HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1897-6-17, Page 3t i
healthful and irregular inquisitiveness
ESE FRUIT PIC f�INC>r ahas rushea nds into rum. ousaucls and tens of thous
>; a just,tasted Eve s d the fruit.She
a.L tri -
was
HOW HER CURIOSITY RUINED THE ons to find out how it tasted, and that
HUMAN RACE. oiirioslty blasted her and blasted all na-
tions. So there are clergymen in this
day, inspired by unhealthful inqu]sitive-
Rev. Dr. Talmage Preaches a Picturesque ness, wlio have tried to look through the
Sermon ou the catutnity in Paradise—
that
of God's mysteries—.mysteries
that were barred and bolted from all hu-
Eating Pratt That Does Not Belong to man inspection—and they have wrenched
Us -Fatal Charms, their whole moral nature out of joint, by
trying to pluck fruit from branches be-
New York, June 19,-A new interpre- gond their reach, or•.have Dome out on
tation of the calamity in paradise is limbs of the tree from which they have.
given by Dr. Talmage in this sermon,, tumbled intoruins without remedy. A
which is laden with practical lessons. thousand trees of religious knowledge
The text is Genesis iii, 0, "Anti when from which we may eat and get advent -
the woman saw that the tree was good ago, but from certain trees of mystery
for food and that it was pleasant to the how many have plucked their ruin l Elea
eyes, and a tree to be desired to make tion, free agency, trinity, resurrection—
one wise, she took of the fruit thereof, in the discussion of these subjects hu n-
anil did eat, and give also unto her hus- dreiis and thousands of people ruin the
band with her, and he did eat," soul. There are men who actually have
Is is the first Saturday afternoon in the been kept out of the kingdom of heaven
world's existence. Ever since sunrise because they could not understand who
Adana has been watching the brilliant Melohisedeo was not!
fia,geantry of wings and scales and clouds.
In his arab lesson ip zoology and orni-
thology and ichthyology lid has noticed
that the robins tly the air in twos and
that the fish swim the water in twos and
that the lions walk the fields in twos and
in the warm redolence of that Saturday
afternoon he falls off into slumber, and
as if by allegory to teach all ages that
the greatest of earthly blessings is sound
sleep, this paradisaical somnolence ends
with the discovery on the part of Aclam
of a corresponding intelligence just land-
ed on a new planet. Of the mother of all
the living I speak—Eve, the first, the
fairest and the best.
A Beautiful Garden.
9 n
Bike Dead Sea bruit.
Oh, how many have been destroyed by
an unhealthful inquisitiveness! It is seen
in all direotions. There are those who
stand with the eye stare and mouth gape
of curiosity. They are the first to hear a
falsehood, build it another story high
and two wings to it. About other
people's apparel, about other people's
business, about other people's financial
condition, about other pdople's affairs,
they are overanxious. Every nice piece
of gossip stops at their door, and they
fatten and luxuriate in the endless round
of the great world of tittle tattle. They
invite and sumptuously entertain at their
house Colonel Twaddle and Squire Chit
-
I make me a garden. I inlay the paths ohat and Governor Smalltalk. Whoever
with mountain moss, and I border them 4th an .innuendo, whoever hath a scan -
with pearls from Ceylon and dianiondsiiznq1, whoever hath a valuable secret, let
from Golconda. Here and there are fours benefit come and sacrifice it to this goddess
tains tossing in the sunlight and pone sarsapilutter. Thousands of Adams and
that ripple under the paddling of t from,sa donothingbut eat fruit hat doess
swans. I gather' me lilies from ; 1. belong them, qt
Amazon and orange groves from tine known as mathematicians failing in
tropics and tamarinds from Goyaz. There this computation of moral algebra -good.
are woodbine and honeysuckle climbing sense plus good breeding, minus ouri-
over the wall and starred spaniels osity, equals minding your own affairs!
sprawling themselves on the grass. I in- Then, how many young men through
vice amid those trees the larks, and the curiosity go through the whole realm of
brown thrushes, and the robins, and all French novels to see whether they are
the brightest birds of heaven, and they really as bad as moralists have pro -
stir the air with infinite chirpand parol. nounoed them. They come near the verge
And yet the place is a desert filled with of the precipice just to look off. They
r and d aso r wantto see how far it reallyis down
darkness as t Bath o m a ed with the e
residence of the woman of the text, the but they lose their balance hile they
subject of my story. Never since have look and fall into remediless ruin, or,
such skies looked down through such catching themselves, clamber up, bleed -
leaves into such waters! Never has river ing and ghastly, on the rock, gibbering
wave had such curve and sheen and bank with cures or groaning in ffeotual ,pray -
as adorned the Piece], the Havilah, the er. By all means encourage healthful in-
Gihon, and the Hiddekel, even the peb- quisitiveness; by all means discourage
bias being bdclliwn and onyx stones! ill regulated curiosity.
What fruits, with no ouroulio to sting This subject also impresses me with
the rind! Wliat fiowers, with no slug to the fact that fruits that are sweet to the
gnaw the root! What atmosphere, with taste may afterward produce great agony.
no frost to chill and with no heat to Forbidden fruit for Eve was so pleasant
consume! Bright cnlors tangled in the she invited her husband also to take of
grass. Perfume in the air. Music in the it. But her banishment from paradise
sky. Great scones of gladness and love and 6,000 years of sorrow and wretched -
and joy, ness and war and woe paid for that lux -
Right there under a bower of leaf and nzy. Sin may be very sweet lit the start,
vino and shrub occurred the first mar and it may induce great wretchedness
riago. Adam took the hand of this im- afterward. The cup of sin is sparkling at
maculate daughter of God and pro- the top,but there is death at the bottom.
nouneed the ceremony when he said, Intoxication has great exhilaration for
"Bonn of my bone and flesh of my flesh." awhile, and it fillips the blood, .and it
A forbidden tree stood in the midst of makes a man see five stars where others
that exquisite park. Eve sauntering out can see only one star, and it makes the
one day alone, looks up at the tree and poor man rich, and turns cheeks which
r
r sees the healthful fruit and wonders if it Bre white red as roses. But what about
is sweet and wonders if it is sour and the dreams that come after, when he
standing there says: "I think I will just seems falling from great heights or is
put my hand upon the fruit. It will do prostrated by other fancied disasters and
no damage to the tree. 1 will not take the perspiration stands on the forehead—
he:.fruit to eat, but I will just take it the night dew of everlasting darkness—
clown to e suyitinc -it. ", She examined the and he is ground under the horrible hoof
fruit. She said, "I deficit think_. there of nightmares„ shrjel`ln g,.w,itlk:,lips that
can be any harm in my just breaking the °' crackle with all consuming torture? "tza-
rina of it," She put the fruit to her Joico, 0 young man, in thy youth, and
teeth, she tasted, she allowed Adam also lot thy heart cheer thee in the clays of
to taste the fruit, the door of the worldthy youth! But know thou that for all
opened, and themonster sin entered. Let these things God will bring thee into
the heavens gather blackness,' and the judgment 1" Sweet at the start, horrible
into that hall of revelry,
wind sigh on the bosom of the hillsand at the lass. Go h y,
m
s and.blas-
and desert,andearth,and skywhere ungodly mirth staggers cavern, aa
,ci" y ga
join in one long, deep, hall rending phemes. Listen -to the senseless gabble.
howl, "The world is lost?" See the last trace of intelligence dashed
Beasts that before were harmless and out from faces made in God's own
full of play put forth claw and sting and image. "Aha, aha!" says the bolstering
teeth and tusk. Birds whet their beak inebriate. "This is joy for you. Fill. high
for prey. Clouds troop in the sky. Sharp your cups, my boys. I drink to my wife's
thorns shoot up through the soft grass; misery, and my children's rags, and my
blasting on the leaves. A11 the chords of God's defiance." And he knows not that
that great harmony are snapped. Upon a fiend stirs the goblet in his hand and
the brightesthtest home ihis world ever saw that adders
uncoil from
the dregss and
our first
parents turned their backs and thrust their forked tongues hissing
led forth on a path of sorrow the broken- through the froth on the rim. The Phil-
hearted myriads of a. ruined race. istines jeered and laughed and shouted
Ruin in curiosity. at Samson. ..Oh, they wanted him to
Do you not see in the first place the make sport for them, and he made
danger of a poorly regulated inquisitive- sport for them ! How bright and gay was
ness? She wanted to know how the fruit the soene'for a little while! After awhile
tasted. She found out, but 6,000 years the giant puts one hand against this pi1-
r hand against that a-
lar and the oche
have deplored that unhealthful curiosity, a g P
Healthful euriosity has done a great deal lar and bows himself, and 8,000 merry -
for letters, for art, for science and for, makers are mashed like grapes in a wine
religion. It has gone down into the press. Sin rapturous at the start, awful
depths of the earth with the geologist tit the last..•
and seen tho first chapter of Genesis A Staggering Blow.
' written in the book of nature, illustrated
•
with engraving on rock, and it stood
with the antiquarian while he blew the
trumpet of resurrection over buried Her-
culaneum and Pompeii, until from their
sepulcher there came up shaft and terrace
and amphitheater. Healthful curiosity has
enlarged the telescopic vision of the as-
trononier until worlds hidden in the dis-
tant heavens have trooped forth and have-
. joined the choir praising the Lord. Pla-
net weighed against planet and wildest
comet lassooed with repiendent law.
Healtbtul. curiosity bas gone down and
found the tracks of the eternal God in
the polypi and the starfish under,the sea
and the majesty of the great Jehovah en-
camped under the gorgeous curtains of
the dahliat It bas studied the spots On
the sun, ab:d the- larva in a beech leaf,
and the light under a firefly's' wing, and
the terrible eye glance of a condor pitch-
ing:from Chimborazo. It has studied
the myriads of animalcule° that make
up the phosphorescence in a ship's wake,
-.,.alnd the mighty maze of suns and spheres
and constellations and galaxies that
blaze on in the march of God, Healthfuul
curiosity has stood by the inventor until
forces that were hidden for ages came to
wheels, and lovers and shafts and shut-
tles—forces that fly the air, or swim the
sea, or cleave the mountain until the
earth jars and roars acidrings and
crackles and booms with strange mechan-
ism, and ships with nostrils of hot
steam and yokes of fire draw the conti-
nents together:
I say nothing against healthful curl-
osity. ' May it have other Leyden jars,
,aand other electrio batteries, and other
voitaio piles, and other magnifying
glasses, with whichto storm the barred
castles of the natural world until it ss hall'
surrender its last secret. We thank God
for the geological curiosity of Professor
Hitchcock, and the mechanical curiosity
of Liebig, and the zoological curiosity
of:Cuvier, and the inventive. curiosity of
Edison, bnt we must admit that an -
That one Edenio transgression did not
seem to be much, but it struck a blow
which to this day makes the earth stag-
ger. To find out the consequences of that
one sin you would • have to compel the
world to throw open all its prison doors
and display the crime, and throw ` open
all its hospitals and display the disease,
and throw open all the insane asylums
and show the wretchedness, and open all
the sepulchers and show the dead, and
open all the doors of the lost world and
show the damned. That one Edenic
transgression stretched chords of misery
across the heart of the world and struck.
them with dolorous wailing, and it has
seated the plagues upon the air and the
shipwrecks upon the tempest, and fasten-
ed, like a leech, famine to the heart of
the sick and dying nations. Beautiful at
the start, horrible at the last. Oh, how
many have experienced it!
Are there Here those who are votaries
of pleasure? Let me warn you, my
brother. Your pleasure boat is far from
shore, and your summer day is ending
roughly, for the winds and the waves are
loud voiced, and the overcoming clouds
are all awrithe and agleam with terror.
You aro past the Narrows, and- almost
outside the .Hook, and if the Atlantic
take thee, frail mortal, thou shalt never
get to shore again. Put back, row swift-
ly, swifter, swifter! Jesus from the shore
casteth a rope. Clasp it quiokly,now or
never. Oh, aro there not some of you
who aro freighting all your loves and
joys and hopes upon a vessel which shall
never reach the port of heaven? Thou
nearest the breakers. One heave upon the
rocks. Oh, what an awful crash was
that! Another lunge may crush thee be-
neath the spars or grind thy bones to
powder amid the torn 'timbers: Over-
board for your life, overboard! Trust not
that loose plank nor attempt the wave,
but quickly clasp the feet of Jesus walk-
ing, on thewatery pavement, shouting
until he hear thee, "Lordsave me or I
perish!" sin aeautifui at the start—oh,
how sack how distressful, at the. last!
Tile ground over which it loads you is
hollow. Tho fruit it offers to your taste
is poison. The promise it makes to you
is a lie. Over that ungodly banquet the
keen sword of Goa's judgment .hange,
and there are ominous handwritings on
the walls.
Observe also in this subject how repel-
ling sin is when appended to great at-
tractiveness. Since Eve's death there has
been no such perfection"of womanhood.
You oauid not suggest an attractiveness
to the body or suggest any refinement to
the manner. You could add no graceful-
ness to the gait, no luster to the eye, no
sweetness to the voice." A perfect God
made her a perfectwoman, to be the
companion of a peeled man in a perfeot
home, and her entire nature -vibrated in
accord with the beauty and song of para-
dise. But she rebelled against God's gov-
ernment, and with the same hand with
which she plucked the fruit alio launched
upon the world the crime, the wars, the
tumults that have set the universe
a -wailing-
fatal charms.
A terrible offset to all her attractive-
ness. We are not surprised when we ilnd
men and women naturally vulgar going
into transgression. We expect that people
who live in the ditch shall have the man-
ners of the ditch, but how shocking.
when we find sin appended. to superior
education and to the refinements of so-
cial life! The accomplishments of Mary,
queen of §"opts, make her patronage of
Darnley, the protligato,: the more appal-
ling.
ppalling. The genius of Catherine II of Rus-
sia only sets forth in more powerful con-
trast here unappeasable ambition. The
translations from the Greek and the
Latin byElizaoeth and r` wonderful
he .w er
qualification for a queen make the more.
disgusting her capriciousness of affection.
and her hotness of temper. The great-
ness of Byron's mind makes the more
'alarming Byron's sensuality.
• Let no one think that refinement of
manner or exquisiteness of taste or su-
periority of education can in any wise
apologize for ill temper, for an oppressive
spirit, for unkindness, for any kind of
sin. Disobedience Godward and trans-
gression manward can give no excuse.
Accomplishment heaven high is no apol-
ogy for vice hell deep.
My subject also impresses me with the
regal influence of woman. When I see
Eve with this powerful influence over
Adam and over the generations that have
followed, it suggests to me the great
power all women have for good or for
evil. I have no sympathy, nor have you,
with the hollow flatteries showered upon
woman fromtheplatform and the
stage.
They moan nothing, they are accepted as
nothing. Woman's nobility consists in
the exercise of a Christian influence, and
when I sec this powerful influence of Eve
upon her husband and upon the whole
human race I make up my mind that the
frail arm of woman can strike a blow
which will resound through all eternity
down among the dungeous or up among
the thrones.
Woman and Home.
Of course I am not speaking of repres-
entative women -of Eve, who ruined the
race by one fruit picking; of Jael, who
drove a spike through the head of Sisera,
the warrior; of Esther, who overcame
royalty; of Abigail, who stopped a host
by her own beautiful prowess; of Mary,
who nursed the world's Saviour; of
Grandmother Lois, immortalized in her
grandson Timothy; of Charlotte Corday,
who drove the dagger through the heart
of the assassin of her lover, or of Marie
Antoinette, who by one look from the
balcony of her castle quieted a mob, her
own scaffold the throne of forgiveness
and womanly courage. I speak not of
these extraordinary persons, but of those
who, unambitious for political power, as
wives and mothers and sisters and
daughters attend to the thousand sweet
offices of ]tome.
When at last we come to calculate the
forces that decided the destiny of nations,
it will be found that the mightiest and
grandest influence came from home.
where the wife cheered up despondency
and fatigue and sorrow by her own sym-
pathy, and the mother trained her child
for heaven, starting the little feet on the
path to the celestial city, and the sisters
by their gentleness refined the manners
of the brother, and the daughters were
diligent in their kindness to the aged,
throwing wreaths of blessing on the
road that leads father
motheranddown
the steep of years. God bless our homes!
And may the home on earth be the
vestibule of our home in heaven, in
which place may we all meet—father,
.mother, son, daughter, brother, sister,
grandfather and grandmother and grand-
child, and the entire group of precious
ones of whom we insist say in the words
of transporting rti
iao ng Charles 'Wesley—
One family, we dwell in. him;
Our ohuroh above, beueath.
Though now divided by the stream—
The narrow stream of death—
One army of the living God,
To his command We bow.
Part of the host have crossed the flood,
And part are crossing now.
A Husband Wanted.
The queen regent of Spain has a mar-
riagealale daughter on her hands. Mer-
cedes, princess of rho Asturias, is now
017, and propositions for her hand 'have
been already considered`.at the Spanish
court. For six months before the birth of
the king Miercedes, who was named for
the first wife of her father, was a daisy
queen of Spain., But little Alphonso XIII
appeared onthe scene, and she was given
a back seat. It is but a sorry outlook for
the two girls who wore born to Queen
Christina before this little son. Mercedes,
being the older., should marry first, but
she is not pretty, and, ` Spain being in, a
terrible financial condition, the chances
for a speedy alliance for her are slim.
Tho second daughter is sweet 16 and
quite an attractive little person. The
Princess of the Asturias rides a bioycle
and tries to have as good a time as she
can under the, circumstances, but matters
are niigbty onaartin'for the royal. family.
and it would not be the strangest thing.
in the world if seine day they peckedup
and went to Paris for a long stay.—Bos-
ton Herald.
A. Clever Spinster Luncheon.
Some wise damsels who burn the mid-
night oil gave a "Spinster Luncheon."
Daisies, their petals clipped into a ruffled
cap with big thio bow and features of
all nationalities marked on their yellow
disks, peeped from every , corner of the
room, and nodded to the guests over a
big brown jug full of daisies in the cen-
ter of the table. The sensible inenu, be-
ginning with clam bouillon, and continu-
ing on through toasted brown bread and
minced beef, fruit salad, frozen custard.
lady fingers and coffee, was eaten amid
much merriment,—Ladies' Home Jour
nal.
Mr�xu vxvNgn ia7a+.tmu,
d TllANi ffl11ERJNG.
A CLERGYNA.N WRITES ON IIEHAI l'
OF GRATEFUL PEOPLE.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills Restoi•r,d Their
HCallh:, and They 1Vish. Other Sufferers
to Know It—A Letter That Will Tiring
Hone l0 Many -1 o'Other Medicine Gots.
Such 'voluntary fraise.
Tho following letter, written by the
Rev, Win. Lawton, Miethodistmini4tor at
Riohibucto, N,B„ atrests' in the strong-
est manner the merits of Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills, and a perusal of it will sug-
gest why this great medicine is so popu-
lar in thousand of homes throughout the
Dominion --it cures when other inedi-
oleos fail.
Richibucto, N.B., April 20th, 1897.
Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.
Dear Sirs. --T am glad to furnish you
the following voluntarily given testi-
monial, with the fullest permission to
give the names and place, They do this
as a thank -offering to God and your
medicine, Mrs. Wm. Warman, of Miolus
River, (near here) says her • sen Alden
was sickly from birth. Ile could hardly
ever retain food, and his parents had but
little hopes that he would live long and
the doctors who attended him were .of
the same epiniion. Till seven Tears of age
he continued in that condition. Then the
usa of Dr, Willitizns' Pink Pii1a was
begun, and under themhe re"covered and
is how a strong, healthy boy. Mr. War-
man, the boy'ss fatter, alsoadds his testi-
monial
i-
monial to the great value of Pink Pills,
saying: "I suffered for years with a bad
back, until I used Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills and they curet! me." Miss Annie
Warman adds this evidence with enthu-
siasm and freedom. "I was • weak and
sickly, and did not know the blessing of
good health till I took Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills. I used eight boxes and have
since enjoyed the best of health. In foot
I ata never sick now."
Here you have three members of a
family restored to health by the use of
your medicine, and you would almost
covet their good health and genial ways
largely resulting from such health. They
wish you to freely use these facts to help
othersufferers,am 1 their
and I able as
pastor to certify to the facts above stated.
Sincerely yours,
WM. LAWSON,
Methodist Minister.
The Bright Side of Things.
The habit of looking on the bright side
of things is a good one, and is worth a
great deal to each one who cultivates it,
Certainly one should not cultivate the
habit of looking on the dark side, especi-
ally wheh he must draw on his forebod-
ings, and apprehensions for a victim of
that dark side, and thus see not only
what does not exist, but what may never
exist. God promises grace for each time
o1 need, but not for each time of worry
and anxiety. He promises to be with His
people when they pass through the fire,
but he does not promise to extinguish
the fire before it bas been lighted. He
says that when His people pass through
the waters they shall not overflow them,
and we ought t0 ho satisfied with that.
If we trust in God, the disasters we
dread most will never come, or, if they
do, He will change the disaster into
benediction.
A Very Busy Official. ,
The busiest consul in the world is the
British consul at New York. Tho Brit-
ish shipping at New York aggregates
about 4,000,000 tons annually, and from
35,000 to 80,000 seamen are paid off and
shipped each year, involving the handling
of about 29,000,000 for seamen's wages.
The second busiest consul in the world
is the British consul at Constantinople,
which involves three times the work of
heconsul-generalsr
t of all the oche coun-
tries in the United States, and three
times the busiest of all other consuls at
New York combined.
Yon need not cough all night and dis-
turb your friends ; there is no occasion for
you running the risk of contracting in-
flammation of the lungs or consumption,
while you can get Bickle's
A
uti-Con-
sumPtine Syrup.This medicine ine cures
coughs, colds, inflammation of the lungs
and all throat and chest troubles. It pro-
motes a free and easy expectoration, which
immediately relieves the throat and lungs
from viscid phlegm.
The natives of Gibraltar and also the
Moors across the strait have a tradition
h re on the rock
that somewhere h
a c there e exists
a cavern whence a subterranean passage
leads under the straits to the mountains
on the other side. The existence of this
passage, they say, • is" known to the
monkeys, whoregularly use it in passing
from one continent to the other.
Cause for Lament.
Varick—I'm as sick as a dog.
Hudson—What's the trouble?
"My wife made me a present of a box
of cigars for my birthday."
"And you smoked them like a fool?"
"No; gave them to a rival, and I've
just found that her brother sent them to
her from Cuba."
The Coughing and wheezing of persons
troubled] with bronchitis or the asthma
is excessively harassing to themselves
andannoying to others. Dr. Thomas'
Eclectric 011 obviates all this entirely,
safely and speedily, and is a benign
remedy ior lameness, sores, injuries, piles,
kidney and spinal troubles.
Warned in Time.
Hotel Proprietor (at Long Branch)—.
You'd better make that long-haired actor
pay in advance.
Clerk—Why, he brought some baggage'
with him. •
Proprietor—I don't . care. lie just asked
me where thefire-escapes were located.
Give Holloway's Corn Cure a trial. It
removed ten corns from one pair of feet
without any pain. What it has done once
it will do again.
In Humanity's Interest.
"The introduction of the bicycle into
warfare will require an amendment. to
the law of nations."
"In what way?"
"Make it a crime against civilized soci-
ety toshoot holes in the pneumatic tires."
Pleasant as syrup; nothing equals it as
a worm medicine ; the name is Mother
Graves' Worm Exterminator. The great-
est worm destroyer of the age.
There are only about 1,000 Germans in
the whole of 'Mexico.
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•moi► illitik a► i� *►°3333
; 07%•‘.
,saa•I•'?R' NEW BARAES 9 -7„,..,f, fe
STRONGEST WHEEL MADE.
f Agents Wart d.' t
1 �
Write for Catalogue and Tercm,ms Immediately to
CCY
.g. \'/
'i 1
/.1.sole sol cuts 1;
41 allWOOOST CK ONT,
i t .1l
Mr. T. J. Humes, Columbus, Ohio,
writes : "I have been afflicted for some
time with Kidney and Liver Complaint,
and find Par Parmelee's s Pills the
best madi-
cine for these diseases. 'These Pills do
not cause pain or griping, and should be
used when a cathartic is required. They
are Gelatine Coated, and rolled in the
Flour of Licorice to preserve there purity,
and give them a pleasant agreeable taste.
Just the Opposite.
Mrs. Gabbleton—I understand that
your husband cannot meet his creditors.
Mrs. Fales—On the contrary, he says
he can't help meeting them at every
turn. That is the reason he goes out so
seldom.
That Breach Again.
Jack—Why dict yeti refuse his invita-
tion for a cruise on his yacht?
Mack—Sll-hl I'zn told he steers with
i '05 wheel,
No family living in a bilious, country
•honld be without Parmelee's Vegetable
Pills. A few doses taken now and then
will keep the Liver active, cleanse the
stomach and bowels from all bilious mat-
ter, and prevent Ague. Mr. J. L. Prize,
Sh0a1s, Martin Co.. Ind., writes: "I have
tried a box of Parmelee's Pills and and
them the best medicine for Fever and
Ague I have ever used."
After Escape..
Visitor (at museuum)—And you actual-
sy think the savages intended to kill
you?
Tattooed Man—Yes, but it was only
after T had escaped that I discovered
their designs upon me.
Catarrh Cannot be Cured
With LOCAL APPLICATIONS, AS they cannot
each the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a
11,0(1 or constitutional disease, and in order to
c u.ra it you must take internal remedies, H
Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and a!ts
direct]v on the blood and nmceus sutrfaces.
Wall's (latent cure is not n giiaekinedieine°. It
wass
prescribed Ly one of the best physicians in
this coitutry for years, and is a regular pre-
scription.
re-
scr x on. s
lit Yt is composed of the best tiiulc
}mown,
itn combined with the Leat blood purifiers,
,ldtinniir directly on the mucous surfaces. The
perfect cimbination of the two rddent
is
wliat produces such wonderful results 10 curing
atiurh. Send for testimonials, free.
1'. J. CHIENEY & 00„ Props., Toledo, 0.
Sold by druggists, price 750.
A Sex Difference.
Cobwigger—What happened when you
proposed s u her e and herd asked father's
consent?
Mierit—She said: "Oh, this is so'sud-
den !" while he remarked: "iliy boy, I've
b:en expecting this for two years."
0 Wyoutccan aeCha Nickel
sPellaen_:;
a few articles for he at lee.
each. State your father's ac-
• cupatlon, and we will mail the
goods. No money required.
Manufacturers' Agency C i.,
Toronto.
This notice will not appear again.
Splendid Equipment and Good Solid Work
—Have placed the -
OF TORONTO,
A 1 the ton. It has more teachers, more stu-
dents, and assists many more young men and
wemen into good positions than any other Cau-
1 .Wan Business School. Get particulars. Enter
any time. Write W 11. SHAW, Principal.
Yonge and Gerrard Streets, Tor
"tanto.
"TNE V!CTOR'"
ELECTRIC MOTOR,
****
1-2 Morse Power - - $ 50
1 Horse Power ■ - 65
2 Horse Power - 75
3 Horse Power 110
t Horse Power - 140
Write for Cash Discounts,
51)051all prices 011 larger sizes. Every
Electric Motor is guaranteed.
****
TORONTOTYPE -FOUNDRYt Ltd,
44 Bay Street, Toronto,.
eafee
Doctors Recommend
IALADA"
CEYLON TEA
Lead Packets Only, 25e, 40e. 50o & 60o.
x. Wrinkles
Can be Removd and
,
and Youthful in ap-
pearance by using
the Skin made Soft olb
Peach Bloom
Skin Food*
To Purify the Blood, Tone
up the System and give new
Life and Vigor nothing equals
Perfect
Health -pills.
50 ots. each at Drag sages or sent
prepaid on receipt .74 price.
CROWN MEDICIIE Co.,. TORONTO.
eeasetteeseeesee
TELEGRAPH
TELEPHONE
TIGER
Are the brands of
our celebrated sul-
phur matches.
If you want the best,
ask for thele.
The E. B. Eddy Co., ld,
Hun ! Montreal I Toronto,
I
i
44,44444,4044.0-04.0.4404
44404.4
4.
o We Always have on hand •
• •a Iarge stock of
�• . •
•D •
HAND!
•
•
•MATERIAL t
• •
• in Type, Presses,••
• Paper Cutters, •
•
• Stands, Cases,
♦Im osis Stones ♦
♦ posing •t♦
•
: and is fact almost anything used in +
♦ the printing office. taken in ex-
• change for new material. You can •
always find a BARGAIN. ••
♦ Write to 2
Toronto Me FoRitI
•
♦ 44 Bay Street,
TORONTO, CANT. ♦
i..••••••••••••••••••••••4
11'51, to spend a winter is to attend the Northern Bust-
e s
College,'Owen Sound, Ont, All who would Mt.ife should prepare for it. Send f r Ann.
T. N. U.
. rgs1t