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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1899-12-14, Page 7i UfiDriulyr CDIDIT ...-,°111"swteLlp oinat°t:rr inftr v,ateh,arl.:ecr peeawcee f .y,fthbeeirns)!etwtheeer„ NtvITLTilid re:t take A tuatlifilki 31.11111 with everybody. Insomnia is getting shovel and bury t he old Quarrel at fa be One of the most prevalent of least six feet deep. "Let not the sun disorders. How few peoele retire go clown upou your wrath." ae 10 o'clock at eight and sleep But," you saY, "1 have mere than clear througb to 6 in the morniug I 1 eau bear; too mach is put upon To relieve this disorder all narcoeics me, nad I em. not te blame if I mu enel $edativee end morphine and eliloe ACenewhat revengeled and unrelente re.1 end. bromide of potassium mot ing." Then I think of the little cocaine and intoxieaute are used, child at the moving a some goods but nothing is more important than frout a s ore. efather was p t Th Ut- a quiet spirit, if we woold win Solu- tin sortie rolls of goods on, the nolence. flow is a man going to child's erre. package after pairkage. sleep when he is in mind pursuing ancl some one strati, "'That child is an enemy '.x With \Oat uereous beina overlocaled, and so much ought twitch be will ptart out of a dreamhet be Put -anon ilea.' when the That .new plan of cornering his foe and responded. "Vather knows how will keep bion wide awake utile the muell 1 cen Merry," ond God, our clock strikes 11, 12, 1, 2. I give Pettier, will not allow too urach Ore - you ari unfailing prescription for wakefulness : Spend the evening hours rehearsing your wrongs and the best way of avenging them. Hold • 11...et Not the Sun Co Down Upon Yoko Wrath." FORGIVENE$S OF OUR ENEMIES, pa. neaseatee Itecoronvereat neat of the leockarlite and Lose es the $our in lettenui rtiotottag the lerorbirs, itforeux..*. Washington, Dee. 10.—In this dis- course Dr. Talmage placates the worldes revetteas and recommends more of the saccharine and less of the our in human dispositions ; n covention of friends on this sub, outrage t oo man ° y.. Y our Iieavet,;. ; 3 D uieklv'without eCorching.•• text. Bphesiees eel, the jot in Four parlor or oilice at 8 or 1 Fath 'er kil°ws lNv z°mach Yaa cujk whaesn oite-arly, one, lint a pieee Of but 0 o'clock. Close the evenino ;HOLISEREEPEll WELL TRIED RECIPES, Petite these recipes.in a feral) teak each weekagoder proper lieediege and ie ibtoiDlig You will 1.4.1ve 4 Meet 001414010 Qeela Beek% OSL lc kg Pick and draw them,. .wash ant well in'two or three waters, addinga littl.e. . soda.to the last but one to sweeten. it, . ..if there is any doubt as to its being fresh, Dry it well 'with a clean cloth, • and M1 the Creel Med body' wit li a stuMug the same .as "Dressing lihiwie." Lay it in n dripping-pai!. position en hie children, To the day put a pint of hot water and a small of eternity it will he ionuti you had 7/,'..te of butter in, the eltriPPluel-Pah, not one annoyance too many; not aad to it a, small teaspoonful a pep - one exasperation to erianYI not Oho per; baste fre 'gently, and let it by caery. 1 ilun go down upon our wrath w-riting a bitter letter expreesing The 1 pracEice of grace I admit. is ter the size of a large eggto the 'wat- t ,.,,.. ., y." e. What a pillow, embroidered of oll e -aur sentiments. 'rake from the desk the °test ilifilcull �f all graves t° 1 er 1° the ran; wIlen it 313e1t% baste colors, bath the dying day ! The 1 or pigeonhole the papers in the case I practice, and at the start you maY with it, dredge a little timer, baste cradle of cloudfrorn vadat the sun to refresh your mind with yotu• i make a ceinPlete failure, but rheeP ea again, mid let it huish; half an hetir risen is beautiful enough, but ie is nemy's meanness. retell ae eaezet i in the attempt to Practice it ;."1411/1:eS". win roast a full-grown chicken, if the surpassed by the inany colored mau- and wait. for the veiningat of the clay, 1 lettin in wilieli evening it peare wrote ten plee's before he Aro le right. When derne. take it up ae. and it svill come before sleep comes, reached "liantiat" tunt 17 plaYs he- lithin buried. your sleep will be Worried elutes- fore he method "alerebant et 'Venig ce" g stewed the necks, gizzards, Sunset among 'the mountainal jf cence, and, if You Mire the proem- and 29 plays before he reached "Mac- /eters and hearts in a very little wat- . almost takes one's breath away to reeall be scene. The long shadows stratcbing, over the plain maim the glary of the departing light on the tiptop craga and struck aslant through the foliage the more conspi- sigma. Seffron and gola, hiurple and crinueen eonmeingled. All the castles of cloua in conflagration. Burning MOICOWS on the sky. Ilenging gar- dens of roses at their deepest blush. Banners of vapor, red as if from corneae, in the battle of the eie- moots The hunter mon the Adi • g r- ,Ondeeks and the StViSS Villager. Among the Alps know what is Ouneet among tile mountnins. After otorm at sea the rolling grandeur Into which the sun goes down to 'bathe at nightfall le something to make weird and splendid dream out of for a lifetime. Alexander Smith In his poem compares the sunset- to "the barren beach of WI." but this wonderful spectacle of nature mekes nee think of the burnished wall of htlenT011. Paul in prison. writing my test, remembers some of the gorge- ous sunsets among the mountains of Alta Minor and how he had often seen (hi' towers (if Damascus blaee th the close of the oriental days, and he hashes out that Inemory in the text when he says, "lat not the sun go down upon .our wrath." Sublime. all sures;ive 111101 for people then and people now ! For- giveness before sundown ! Ile wbo never fie-ls the throb of indignation Is imbecile. lie who can walk amoug the injustiees of the world inflicted upon himself and others 'without flush of Otago or flesh of eye, or agitation of nittnro, iS either in sympathy. with n rime; or semi - idiotic. 'When Anturies. the higli priest, ordered the constables of the court -room. to smite Pala on the mouth, Paul fired up and add. "Clod relaeas the grip w loch the bOtlY has emu smite the..., thou .4,1:lilted mall?" on the soul, and most people Pnter the Sentence imuretliateay la•ftme the next world through. the slutelews. my text, Peed commends the of this world. Ephesiane, "lic ye angry' and ein Shall we then leap over the rosatto not." It all depends on what 'eon bank of sunset into the favorite are read at and how long the feel- ing lasts whether auger is right or wrong. Life is full of esperation.s. Saul after Davie, nateroth aftt‘r Gideon, It'orab after aloss, the Pea- frpains after Augustus. tbe Pharisees atter Christ, and every one has had leis pursuers, anti "ae. are swindled or belied or misrepresented or person( ea eer in some W5y. wrouged, mid the danger is that healthful indignation shall become baleful spite and that. our feelings settle down into a pro- longed outpouring of temper dis- pleasing to God and ruinous to our- selves, and hence the important in- eunc.tion of the text, "Let not the run go down upon your wrath." Why that limitation to one's anger? Why that ported of flaming !vapor set to punctuate a flaming dis- position ? 'abet has the sunset got Ito do -with' one's resentful emotions? Was it a haphazard sentiment writ- ten by 'Paul without special Aimee ? No, No; I think of five rea- sons why we sb.ould not let the sun set before our temper. First, because 12 hours is long enough to be cross about any wrong Inflicted upon us. Nothing is so ex- bauseing to 'physical health or men- tal faculty as a. protracted indul- • gence of ill -humour. It racks the ner- vous system. rt hurts the digestion. 1 heats the blood in brain. and heart il the whole liody is first over - h ted and then depressed. Besides at, it sours the disposition, turns -One aside froxn his legitimate work, expends energies that ought to be better employed and does us more ha.rra than it does our antagonist. Paul gives up a good„ wide allow- ance, of tirne for legitimate denuncia- tion, from 6 o'clock to 6 o'cloca,blet, says, "Stop there !'' Watch the des- cending teeb of day, and when it reaches the, horizon take a reef in your disposition. Unloose. your, col- lar and cool off. Change the stibject to something delightfully pleasant. Unroll your tight fist and shake hands with some one. Batik up the fires at the curfew bell. Drive the lherearowling dog of enmity back to itS .‘ kennel. The hours of this morning will pass by, and the 'afternoon! will arrive, and the sun will. begin to set, and, I beg you, on its brazing imarth throw all your feuds, invec- tives and setirese tion to he fiat on your back, a, frigh tad nightmare. Many a man and Merry 11. Woble.11 Is having the heeith bode'. as well as the nealth of soul eaten away by a. malevolent spirit. I have in. time of religious awakening had persons night after night come into the in- quiry room and get no peace of soul. After awhile I been) bluntly asited them, 'Is there not some one against whom you have e, hatred that you are not willing to give up?" After a little confusion they beve slightLY vbispered. "Yes." Then bave eeid, "Vett Will never find peace with God as long as you retain that vi- rulence.". A boy in Sparta. having Stole a fax kept hire under his coat and, though the fox was gnawing his v.itals. be ' eubmit ted to it rather then expose bis misdeal. Many a man with a smilleg fats. lias muter his jacket an animosity that le meow- ing away the strength of hie body. and the integrity of his soul. Bet- ter get rid of that hidden fox as soon as possible. There are hundreds (10ilit'Stie. circles where that which test is needed is the spirit ot for- giveness. Brothers apart and s18 - tors apart and parents and children apart. 801.0111011 SayS lung:her of- f"n(1d is harder ta ae Won than a, strong city. Are there not enoueh sacred memories of your eitildhooti to bring you together? Again, we ought not to allow the sun to set before forgiveness lakes plata, because 'tau ittiglit not live to see another day. end uhnt jf wo should be uslierai into the presence of our Maker with a grusige upon our soul? The majorif y of people depert this life in the night. Between 11 hawk pan. and n o'clock AAA. there is something in the atmosphere winch Aye, you will no a postpone till sundown forgiveness of enemies if you can realize that then behavior toward you may he put into the aahalogue of the "all things" that • "work together for geed to those that love God." I have had multi- tudes of friends, but have found in .tny own experience that God so ar- ranged it th4 the greatest opportu- nities of usefulness that have been opened before mo were opened by enemies. So you may harness your antagonists ;to your best interests and compel them to draw you on to better work and higher character. Suppose, instead of waiting until 82 tninutes after ' 4 this evening, when the am will set, you transact this glorious work of forgiveness at mere- slian. _ Again, we Ought not to let the sun hunting' ground tif disease and death, carrying our ettimosities with us? Who would want to martini. his God, against whom we hive all done meaner things than ithyborly has ever done against us, earre Jug old grudges? How NVO eXpi,e1. his forgiveness for the greeter \Oen we are not willing to forgive others for the leSe? Napoleon was encouraged to undettalce the crossing of the Alps because Charlemagne had previously crossed than. And all this rugged path of forgiveness bears the bleed- ing footsteps of him who conquered through suffering, and we ought to be willing to follow. On the night of our departure from this life into the next our one plea will have to be offered in the presence of him who has said, "Xf you forgive not men their trepasses, neither will your Heavenly Father forgive your tres- passes." . Hardly anything affects me so much in the uncovering of Pompeii as the account of the soldier who, after the city had. for many centuries been covered with the ashes and scoriae of Vesu.vius, was found stan.ding in his place on guard, hand on spear and helmeE on head. Others fled at the awful submergement, but the ax- piorer, 1,700 years later, found the body of that brave fellow in right position. And it will be a grand thing if, when our last moment comes, we are found in right position towards God, on guard and unaf- frighted by the descending ashes from the mountain of death. I do not suppose that I am any more of a coward than most people, but I de- clare to you that I would not dare to sleep to -night if Ithere Were any being on easth with whom I would not gladly shake hands, lese during the night hours my spirit dismissed to other realms, I should, because ol. my unforgivitg spirit, be denied di- vine forgiveness. "But," says some woman, "there is a horrid greature that has so in- jured me that rather than make up with her I wciuld die first." Well, sister, you may take your choice, for one or the other it will be—your complete pardon of her or God's eternal banisbmen't of you. "But," says some man, "that fellow who cheated me out of those goods or damaged nay business credit or start- ed that lie about inc an the news- papers by tie perfidy broke up my d.oenestie happiness, forgive him cannot, forgive him I will not." Well, brother, take your ch.oice. You will never be at peace with God till you are 'at peace with Man. . reel- ing as you now do, you would not get SO, near the harbor of heaven as to see the lightship. Better leave that man with the God who said, "Vengeance is mine, I will repay," You may ' say, "I will male him sweat for that yet; I will make him squirm; mean to puraue him to the death," but you are clarnaging Self more than you damage him, and you are making heaven for your soul an inipossibility. If he will not be reconciled to you, be reconciled to , him. In .tive or six hours it Will be sundown, Who dahlias Will theme: beth," and gradually yeti will come ea strain et and mix At hot with the from the easier graces to the most grant'. that as dropped frOM the fewhe ditrieuit• ilesides that 'it 15 u" ;id which must be first skimmed, niutter of Per$'11a1 Iletennirultiee " I Thiclnox it with a littleas browned the leYhig .324° tid to it the liven, heerte and mia,hty arm of God, who will help gi°zItrzairtais coped. _ is to do anything we ought to do. d snail or put the member that in all pereonel con- giblete in the pan with the chicken troversies the one 3east to lalaine and let them roast. end the fewls wUt have to take the nrst SteP t to Pie teble witu the gravy in a beet. pacification if it is ever eiTected. So creamy mine altnati ahhempeu blame taice the Mat step tOWardS re- thethe 01 anY tart Salle% onelhation. The eine 41K2Stin tha wrong will never take it. Oh, it, makes -one feel splendid to be able by God's help to practice un-, HIM ted forgiveness. It improves one's body and soul. My brother, it will make you measure three or four more inches around the chest and improve your respiration so that you can take a deeper and 'auger breath, It improves the countenance by shattering the gloom and makes you somewhat like tend liiinselt, Ile is omnipotent, and we. i•annot copy that. Ile Is independent of all the universe, and we eannot copy that. Ile is creative, 5)1(1 we cannot eopy that. Ile is onmaireerent. and we Anna copy that. But he lorgives with a broad $weep all faults, and all neglects, and all insults, and all wrongdoings, and in that we may copy him with mighty success. Go harness that sublime action of your soul to the sunset—the hour when the gate of heaven opens to let the day pass into the eternieles, and some of the glories eseape this May through the brief opening. Agaiu, we shOuld not let the sun go down on our wrath, het:Mese It iS Of littIe importance what, the world says of you or does to you \viten you have the affluent; God of the sunset s your provider and tlefender. Peo- ple talk as though it Nvero a fixed spec -little of nature and &ways the sante. But no one ever saw two sunsets alike, and if the world hes existed 6,000 years there have been &tout 2,100,000 punsets, each nf them as distinct from all the other pictures in the gallery. of he sky as Titian's "Last Supper," RubeoS' "Pe- SCOnt From tge Cross, Raphael "Transfiguration" and Michael eta gelo's "Last Judgment" are distinet from each other. If that God of such infinite resources that. he can put on the wall of the sky each evening more than the Louvre and Luger:a- bourg galleries all In one is ray God and your God, our provider and pro- tector, whoa is the use of our worry- ing about any human antagonistn? If we are misinterpreted, the God of the marry colored sunset can put Me right color on our action. If all the garniture of the western heavens at eventide is but the -upholstery of one of the windows of our future home, What small business for us to be chasing enemies! Let not this Sab- bath sun go dows upon your -wrath. Mohammed said, The sword is the key of heaven and hell." But, my hearers, in the last day we will find just the opposite to that to be true, and that the sword never unlocks heaven, and that he who heals wounds is greater than be who makes them, and that on the same ring are two keys—God's forgiveness of 'US and our forgiveness of enemies—and these two keys unlock paradise. And now I wish for all of you a beautiful. sunset to your earthly ex- istence. With some of you it has been a long day of trouble, and with others of you it will be far from calm. When the sun rose at 6 o'clock, it was the moreing of youth, and a fair day was prophesied, but by the time the noonda,y or middle life had come, and the clock of your earthly existence had struck 12, cloud racks gathered, and tempest bellowed in the track of tempest. But as the evening' of old age approaches, I pray God the skies may brighten and the clouds be piled up into pil- lars as of celestial temples to which you go, or tnove as with mounted cohorts come to take you licane. And as you sink out of sight below the horizon, may there be a radiance of Christian example lingering long af- ter you are gone, and on the heavens be written in letters of sapphire and on the -waters in letters of, opal and on the hills in letters of emerald, "Thy sun shall no more go down, neither shall thy moon withdraw it- self, fbr the Lord shall .be thine everlasting light, and the days of thy mourning shall be ended. ' So shall the sunset of earth beware, the sunrise of heaven. bit the one of you that is least to Charlotte Valeta (Very Fine). Whip ono quart of rich cream to A sti/ froth and drain well o5 a dna sieve. To one scant pint of milk add six eggs beaten very lihlit make very sweet; flavor with vanilla or lemon. Cook over a hot fire till. it is a thick custard. Soak OW tell ounce of gel- atine in. a very littlo warm water end warm over hot water. Nilen the cus- tard is very cold beat in lightly the gelatine and the whipped cream. Linn the bottom. of .your mold with battered paper, the side -with sponge cake or Judy -Angers fastened together with the white of an egg. FU1 with the cream, put in a cold place, or in munter, on ice. To turn out, dm the mold for a =meat in Lot water. In draining the whipped cream, aIl that drops through can be re -whipped. Be Found it. "Did you ever know your husband to find anything whoo you told lithe to look for it ?". said Mrs. Dimpleton to Mrs. Withorby. "Never but once," said Me. Wi herby. "But I don't consider it was a fair trial." do tell me.a "I -told him to look in one of my pockets in my wardrobe for a smell- ing bottle that was wrapped up in a $100 bill papa had given me for my birthday, and he found it in three nainutee.''-1.41e. Chemleals for the household. iS 5. cheap and harmless chemical that should be always kept in the house. A few drops may be added to the water and used for wash- ing 'woodwork, paint and carpets, also for warling dishes and glass. It is excellent for cleaning children's hair, and is a disinfectant. Borax is an- other chemical that should be in every household. This softens the -water, -cleanses the teeth and. sweet- ens the breath. Salicylic ttoid is n powerful disinfectant, and is perf.... ly harmless and cheap. Permangan- ate of potash is another excellent dis- infectant. Dissolve two ounces in s g 'atm of waterand. place setae itiea*a- cers in the sick room. It is also ex- cellent for flushing sinlrq and drains. trriect Oysters. Take large oysters from their own liquor into a thiek folded napkin to dry them; then make hot an acmce earh of butter and. lard. 15 a. thick - bottomed. frying pan. Season the oys- ters with pepper and salt, then dip melt ono into egg and cracker crumbs reeled fine, tuitil it will take up no more. Place them in the hot grease and fry them a delicate brown, turn- ing them on both sides by sliding a broad bladed 311111e under them. Serve them crisp and hot. Some prefer to roll oysters izt corn meal and others use flour, but they are much more crisp with egg and cracker crumbs. AGE Y OF LIFE A Torouto Girl's Terrible Experience in the Shadow of Death. Dried Beef. Take the best of beef, or that part which will be the most lean and ten- der. The tender part of the round is a very good piece. Por every twenty' pounds of beef nse one pint of salt, OM teaspoonful of saltpetre, and a quarter of a pound of brown sugar. Mix them well together, and rub the beef well with one third of the mix- ture for three successive days,. Let it lie in the liquor it Anakes for six days, then hang up to dry. A large crook or jar is a good vessel tcf prepare the Meat al before drying it. To Take Ink Out of Linen. Dip the ink spot in pure melted tal- low, then wash out the tallow and the -ink will conA.e with it. This is said t� be pirfailing. Milk will remove ink from limo or °clewed muslin, where acid will be ruinous, by soak- ing the goods until the spot is very faint and then rubbing and rinsing in cold water. aura Sheehan, 93 Armstrong Avenue, ties a Hair. breadth Escape—A Modern Miracle—Thrilling Narrative of the Young Girl Fully Corroborated. (Froin Tile Toronto News, Oct. 21.1 we read every (ley of nerrow eeeapeir from detail, but few persons, if. indeed, there are any, have bad tilo terrifele; ex. PerieneeefPTettY, Indus:aloes little Inure Sheeban of this city. who hes actually been in the awful preseuve or Death, who has felt the grip ot Ills ley baud, mad who yet Ines to tell it. Not 00, It is safe to sae, will the pretty, blue- d meld Vogt% that awful streggle vvitle tile grim laine of %errors', and yeers heuee, 111100 tree site, a 8(i(') .113114 greed d'ilde, among her sturdy Venetian greetberielren, she will tell them, and with natal ifreath they Willi 1111011 ft., the story of the tee:ale. of her girlhood's doe, of how sire battled with and. by tbe %lately eseistanee of a irce friend, overeame the Grua lane( a Teem is rejeleing 14 day In dm snug little Me at No. 0:1 arinstromenvestee, wbera L:nrs lives 'with Iter parent,: and her tethers and sisters. JObla Sheehan. her father. IS an emplese of the Verna- actiarea Company, I,aura. though only ln yeare of age, le )ler mother's right liana cheerful, irelustrious and ambitious. Vrevi- OlIS to the event that Maas an epoch In her ilia she was in the enmloy et Mrs. Ward. 081 Datuditts-otreet, letrning malting. A reporter ealled yesterday to got her story, and mus kindly received by Mrs. Sheehan, by whom the details were gl:en. Laura endorsing ter words'. Cleaning Oil Cloths. A dimgy oil -cloth maybe brightened by washing it with clear water with a little borax dissolved in it ; wipe it with a flannel cloth thret you have dipped into milk and thene wring as dry as possible. Nor Dandruff. Take glycerine four minces, tincture of cantharides five ounces, bay rum four. oonces, Water two ounces. Mix and apply once a clay, rubbing well down the sealP. Plate Glass and lifirroril. A Soft cloth wet in alcohol Is excel- lent to wipe off plate glen and mir. rore, and prevents their bectliming frosty in .winter. "Ota the day Laura 'neared. to Paradale tied back I reit 111 myself. I rematual bed for two weees, and during this period Laura waited lovingly open me, :red eared for ber three little brothers and sisfere as well AN 4We; the tarter:etre. lier inaproye- ment lea been rapid, unlearn and ermine. ons. She nes not ceased using those won. eerie] pills mei ins geared the Inn and perfect use of her limbs, and Is gathering strengtb and sleeps sounaly—twelie hours every MOO She Is no iouger deathly pale ne thin, as you see, but tile calor lute re- turned to her etteeks, and see is gaining MAI every doy. She will soon be her own self again--thanim to DII.ARNOLD'S RNG, LISII TOXIN PILLS. 'which have pesltI9e- 11 her Itte—laave brought her hack trent the very brit* of tile grave. and dis- pelled the dara sOedow Of death atat bung over our aome. They are tile weeder et Ike ege. I did not Sena it pesahle thee Amy methane could do wiant they true done for ben 1 (lou't believe there is auy cheer medicine In the wor'l bitt DR. ARNOLD'S UNGLISII TOXIN ."1.Lie that amid lave mired tier, for we Suet was Mrs. ,Wrrelian's account of Laura's illness end recovery. It was cor- roborated by tier husband, and by Lonna herself. Rut reporters Are sheatierd indielduala The one to whom laure's stovy watt re- leted thought It wag over drawn. and he received to test It for Ilimself. Aecoralug- ly he says: "I vatted several of Mr. Sloe - ban's neabbors awl questioned them. Their all bad the venno story to tell. I.apra had been brought borne from the hospital. to ele, Apparently. Several doctors were eaglet to attend her, and tbey veal pronottneett ber ease bonelese. Ilove•ne of ellgerent ninde of meekenee were lace, hart none 4111 nnv good. Finalle DR. ARNOLD'S ENGLISII TOXIN PILLS were used when It looked aft If 1,foira bad only a few days to live. Prom -flint Moe Ate beenn tO mend, nnd 83 crowing' eirmieer eve*" day. Till. ARNOLD'S EN(1LISII 'CONIN PILLS cored her when every other enrthic Means hail failed. No ..other rtriliehne but DR. ARNOLD'S r.Notagit ToXiN contti have saved Laura Sheehan. 'Determined to fttrthor Invectigote this, ease, witieb, if gonvine, matted a nett era in metileal progress. null trim. *without doubt. a modern miraele. I went to St. Michael's 13e,pltal Informoron. There the merman show that Laura Sheehan was atlmitted as a pntient on Mar 24, ism,. Iler case IC119 reeolleeted well by phy.. Wiens and sisters. It was the most seri- ous one of the Icind that has ever come rmier their notice. The patient's con- dition during ter stay In the hospitat wart es cleseribed by her mother, wile aline sue took her borne. • "From the linaatel I went to Mr. Ware's drecemating eetablishment. at :NT nmulas.strert. Mrs. Ward has on exten- sire businers. and eould. therefore, sparo me little time. She fully' 03r1012011 to,] the' story AS It had been told her. She 'Lam, or Lola. OR called her, was with me till tire day before she was triken stele, and went to the Insoltal. I notleed for ROMP time previous that she was not well. She beenine won- wenle owl nervous—so merit 90, indeed. hint Clie had not nerves ennech to hold ti pioee of cloth In her hand. Freqiiently I wrinid ninke her Ile anwn and rest. I really dill not believe that her nervous system eneld ever be re- stored to ite proper condition. When I heard tbat she Was poraIyzed 1 gave her up as lost for a eertainty. In miring her —eren if it hnd been only partinily. Instr.:1d of so thoroughly nnd porfeetly—m. Alt- N'OLD'S ENOLISTI TOXIN rtrzs hare aceomplished a wonder.' "There iris one other person from whom I rould obtain informntion regarding this wonderfnl case. and thnt was the druggist from whom Mrs. Sheehan hooght the nUIs thnt saved her dtrughter's life" writes the reporter. "T found thnt they had been marehased at Glipin's braneh store. corner of Bloor and Bathurst -streets, and there I went. Mr. Moyer. the manager, knew of Miss Sheehnn's ense. 'Airs. Sheehan. be snia, norelinsed n hoc of' DR, ARNOLD'S ENGLISII TOXIN PILLS there some limp awl. A couple of days Inter she coneelted him recardine the effect of the medieine. She informed him filet already there had been n most Astonishing imnroyement in leinra's condition, and asked his advire re- enrcling the pills. 'I mid to her: "If ther hnve effeeted sneh good recoug ng rrn, ine they hove alrendy, STTPR To TTIEIVI." I tinve sold ninny boxes of those nills, and every person who hns pnrchnsed them from me hos given them the very highest praise.' "This eompleted the ehaln of proof—a chain without n Miele went: link: 1)114 hnre coneluded fent DR. ARNIOLD'R END:- LTSPE TOXIN PILLS me title entitled to stnnd beside the nnti-toxin beat/lent for diPtherla. and Pasteur's intornIntioa for, the cure or prevention of hydrophobia. with this Advantage. thnt.wherens comparnitvely few people need treatment for hydrenhnbia. EVERY PERSON neees TR. ARNOLD'S ENGLISH To:Cite PILLS." Sneh are the dettille of Immix Sher-- hnn's c7111e-5 (1110 .cefthent a parnilel in the history of misfi8:11 selenee. She wns pronounced inenrable—giren no to die 117 covern1 Troll-knnwn phreiehine: hospital trentment hnd not the lertst effect: she WIN aneralllote nn d powerless; shl; felled In fiesh till she None nettling but "ode ere bone'," SITE w As nyTvo: Ter DR. ARN- OLD'S ENGLISIT TOXIN PTIZS cured Iler. One point that every rom1 etre eve17 mother. every father who reqds the Parti- eninrs of this most estraordionry Paean(' from death shorld clearly onderstnno and nrnfit by Is this: That nIthnnet Laura Sheehan yens yonnce and appnrentiv robost strong, yigorons and In the best of benith. vortlii attend social gaieties. -etc.. yet the germs of dleense were entitle sway her vitni powers. snonine her stventeth. uniler- mining her henIth. Milne her Mond with moron (toxin') snd serelv bringine abort her final eollapee. for whieb there seemee to be Tin eftliae. We nre n11 lieble to eollanse nt "env moment. lust !IR Laura Stiel,ben ena. The germ of dispose mar be enting our lives nway now, though we mar look and feel to be quite etrone nod IrP11. kr, Ann whe 411' DR. .ARNOLP'S ,v-vorW To -KIN PTT,LS wire thiq vonng 1r1 life? 'whY ceen14 the doctors not seve her? Why -onld Tint the other nee !Pin ee • she repel eree• bees simalv bereveqe Tee AnNOLT,'S ieNe'LTSTI TOXIN PMI'S 10111r4Tho enrme nf the diertse flint offiteted her and Mo. qtrnve(9 the a -vixens) (tnxinl these eertna . - f&ass LAMA SheIDDITIAN. "Laura bets aliveys been a viral favor- ite," sold Mrs. Stream, "and among her friends end neetraintentes no petty wee complete without her. Site made many friends nnaong her weriemtites mai neigh- bers'and tens nmeh sought after, Tu fact. sbe tried her strength too severely, anti It ore way. Shortly before the Queen's Birthday, this yearalte complaluce of being ont of sorts. We did not tbinir there was nnytnine aerate wrong with her. but on the 24th of May hunt 1 went with her to St. Allehaers Dospital for advice. "When the doctors had extunined her, however, they told me she was in it very serious condition—dangerously ill, In fact— and advised me to leave ber in their care. I did so. and she was put to bed. and placed under treatment. A aay or two later X went to see bee and was amazed and terrified at the ehenee that had taken place. She lay absolutely peeeebies% and inenpable of moving any portion a her body. She seemed to me to be -completely onralyzed. The doctors appeared' not to know what was wrong with her, bnt said she was very 111. She 'tried to speak to me, but amid not. 7 was nearly distracted. Day after day I visited her. but Instead of Improving, / found that she was growing worse every day. &ter reinninthe there for some weeks and finding that she was gradually sinking. I* determined tEnt, if she wan g dng to die, she should site at home. and had her removed from the hnepl- tat. 1nmlirnuly "eonyinced thnt if she had remained there much longer she would have eome home in her coffin. I asked the doc- tors if they could not tell Inc what was the matter with my girl. but they could not. All their skill, all the care, attention and kindliness of the sisters and nurses, had billed to help her. "Well, -we brought her home and gave her every care. Old and reliable home remedies were used: we bought medicines of nearly every kind, but still she grew worse. She failed to a skeleton almostand 1717 unable to more hand or foot. as help - 7184 speechless as a new-born baFe. Even her digestive organs were paralyzed and she could not swallow her food. We had to cut it Into smnll pieces and foree It down her throat. We ealled In doetor after doctor, hot none of them could help her; none gave es the, least hope ot her re- cnvery. They all staid she was 'incurable,' "At Inst we, ton, gave up hope. We had tried every menne we knew of to re- store her to hearth. Everything had failed and there seemed to be nothing to do but emit for the end. whleh we nil thmieht wets very near. Tt was hard to watch her slow- ly hiding nway—she wlio 'MS .onee 50 bright and strong and lumpy—but we were powerless to help her: and all we cordd do wns to wrtteh her as she day hY dav grew thinner rind thinner. with her terrible Pain. "One clay a friend entne to see Lnuraand enuld not realize thnt tbe poorbelnless. voiceless form wile n11 tbnt wits left of the (mop bright, healthy. robust , Before /caving' thie friend nsleetl toe tried mt. ARIS,OLD'S P,NGLISTI TOXIN PILLS. I said: 'No, they are the only medicine we have nnt tater in the dnv. tn sheer desperation1 bought n box of these pills nnd begen &hie them to the poor girl, aecordinct to the dIrectloest. A few dries efterweele I wee amazed and delight- ed to hear 7.4mrn call me. 8130 had 74, covered her' speech. Then she ovoid tell me how she had sniffered: how she hnd Menai the doctors diecussing her rime at her bedside In the bosultal. ntul spenkine of the hopeleesnese of it. Soon her appe- tite cnme beeleitnd strength followed. 7n e few days she • 'MRS able to wall: across the room, and two weeks after she hail tnken the first one of DR. ARNOLD'S ENGLISII TOXIN PILLS. she walked to Pnrkdale and hark. 11 distance of four Intim eiThe improvement was marvelons, Our neighbors could not believe that Mitre wns eo nearly well roratn. They 'had the :Volt:nee of titer own eyes for It, how- Icliende 70ellaktledetilree Ibleevr,blood. No her M e "