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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1900-3-22, Page 7MIPY TIIE 1)1L.11\1A, Such is the Advice GiVeri •by Rev, Dr. Talmage. IF CORRECT, DO NOT SUPPRESS IT The stage. When Pariiietil Will Draw ts Itself 3111lio its of People NV o 'lave liceu Dr See DI* Drama Mera %%all Oitelf Or Twice, or Never at All. Waehing ton, . March 18. --.-At a time When the whole country le in cons troversy as never before concerning the theatre,. and some plays are be- .ing arrested by the police," and oth- ers are beat- patronized by Chris- tian people, 'thee sermon of Dr. Tal- mage is of much interest. The text is 1 Corinthians vii„ 31, "They that use thi$ world as not abusing it." ' My reason for preaching , this dis- course ie that 1 have -been kindly in - intern by two of the leading news- papers of the country to inspect and report , on two of the popular plays of the day -to go some weeks ago to Chicagoand see the drama "Quo • Vadis" and c,riticiee it with respect to its moral effect and to go to New York and see the drama "Ben -Wm" and write my opinion of it for pub- lic Use. Instead of doing that I pro- pose 'in a sermon to discuss what we shall do with the dramatic ele- Merit which God has implanted in • many of our natures, net in 10 or , 100 or 1,000, but in the majority of the human race. Some • people ' speak Of the clratim as though it were something built up outside of - ourselves by .the Congreyes• and the Goldsmiths and the Shakespea,res and the Sheridan.s of liter ture and that then we attune our tastes. to correspond With human inventions. Not at all. The'. drama is an echo from the feeling which G-od has im- planted in our immortal souls. It is seen first in the , domestic circle among the children , 3 or 4 years of age playing with their dolls and their cradles and their carts, seen ten years after in the playhouses of wood, ten years after in , the parlor charades, after that in the . elabor- ate impersonations in the academies of music. • 'Shall we suppress it? You can as easily suppress' its Creator. You may direct it, you may educate it, you may purify : it, youtmay harness it to , multipotent usefulness,' and that It is Your duty to do. Just as • we cultivate . ,the taste for the beauti- ful and the sublime by, bird haunted glen and roistering stream and cat- aracts let, down in uproar over the messed rocks, ' and the . day lifting its banner of victory in the , east, and then setting everything on fire as it retreats through, the gates of the vveet, and the Austerlitz and. the , Waterloo 'of ,an August, thunderstorm' blazing 'their batteries into a sultry afternoori, and the round, glittering tear of a world wet on the cheek of the night --as in this way we culti- vate our taste for the beautiful .ancl sublime, so in every lawful way we are to cultivate the dramatic element in our nature, by every staccato pas- -,ge in literature, by antithesis and s • nthesis, by every tragic passage in human life. • • Now, I ten you not only that God has implanted this dramatic element in our natures,, but: I have to .tell you in the Scriptures he cultitlates it, he appeals to it, . he develops it. . I do not care where you open the I3ible, your eye will fall upon a drama. Her it is in the book of Judges, the fir tree, the vine, the olive . tree, the bramble -they all make ,speeches. Then at, the close of the scene there is a coronation, and • the bramble is proclaimed ' king, That is a political drama. Here it •is in the book of Job: ,Enter phaz, , Bildad, Zophay, Elihu and Job. :The opening act of the drama, all - darlmees; the (nosing act of the • drama, all .• sunshine. - Magnifieent draina is the book of Yob! Here it is in Solomon' Song: Th.e region, an oriental . region vine- yards, pomegranates, mountain , , of • myrrh; flock of sheep,, garden of • spices, a wooing, a bride, a bridge- • . groom, dialogue 'after • dialogue -in- tense, gorgeous, all suggesti-ve drama is the book of Solomon's Song. Here It is in the book of Luke:* Costly man- sion in the night! All the window bright with illumination!. The floor a -quake with the dance. . Returned son in costly garments which do not • very well fit him perhaps, for they Were not made for him, but ,he must ewiftly leave Off his, old garb and prepare for this .extemporized levee! Pouting son' at the bacle door, too mad to go in, because they are mak- ing such a fuss! Tears of sympathy ruiiiiting down the old mante. cheek at t is 's tory ..of his son's wanderings and , suffering .and tears of joy at his me- , turn! When you heard Mtiedock •re- • cite "The Prodigal Son" in 000 of • his readings, you did not know whe- • ther to soh or shout. Revivals of • religion have Started juet under the' 'reading of 'that soul revolutionizing drama 'of ' 'The Prodigal Son. , II,ere it is in the 'book of Revela- tionat Crystalline sett, pearly gate, river, aineelays tilt° capstone, • VellWowering, cosonets ,. one vial . poured out inctirnacling the Waters, cavalry- men of heaveit gallOpi Lig on, • white horses, natioes in doxology, halle- iluin,hs to the right of them, halielu-' Jabs to the left of theta. As the 'Bible (niche with the dransa of the eiret Pared Ise, • so it "eloses 1)11 Lit the drama, of the eeconcl paradise. Mind ;Yoe, 'when I say drama I do not, mean myth or fable, for my the- ology is of the oldest typo --- 500 years old, thousands of years Old, ae old as the Bible... When I ;meek of the draftee at the beginning and close of the Bible, I do 1101 Mean An all 'gory, but. I mean. the. .1 ritth so etated that in ego iming and i11 start- ling effect it is a God given, etiorld resounding, heaven echoing drairra• . Now, if God, implanted tide drama- ' tic.clam t, in our natures, end 1 he has .001i:ion Led and de vel (Tod it :in the •Serie/el see, I demand thee you ecattnize it. ' J30cauee the drama has again and hi (11 again beets degraded and employed of pu ),OV (letit.a. ta-,,Lt.ve purtmees is no met:met the &area, any more ,Lir••.[C aecureed he iL sem beeli tedetia again and luto 'the sa Went/lien wassails o 000 years, Will you refuse to throne music ,011 the church organ beceetse the art hae been tranifiled agait, and again under the feet of the laSeiVi011s dance?. Fifty essays about the sorrows of the poor could not affect me as a Iittle dratna of accident and suf- fering 1 saw one slippery morneng in the streets of :Philadelphia. Just ahead of me was a lad, weetched in apparel, his limb amputated at the knee; freen the palter of the boy's cheek, the 01111)11(0 Lon not •icing be- fore, Ele had a package of broken eo o d ueder his arm -food he had begged, 1 suppose, at the doors. As he passed on over the slippery pave - ill 0 11 tiou sly and carefully, I steadied him until his crutch slipped and fell. • I helped tains up as Well as could., gathered up the fragments of the package as well as I could,' put them under one arm and the crutch under, the other arm. But when I saw the blood run down his pale cheelc I burst into tears. Fifty essays about the sufferings of the poor could, not :touch one like that little drama of accident and suffer- ing, Oh, we want in all our different departments of usefulness more of the dramatic clement and less of the didactic, The tendency in -this, day is to drone religion, to whine reli- gion, to Mont religion, to sepulchar- ize religion, when 'we ought to pre- sent it in animated and spectacular manner. Let me 'say to all young rninisters of the gospel: If you have this dramatic element in your nature, use it for God ,and heaven. If you will go home and look over the his- tory oI the •church, you will find that those Men have brought; more souls to Christ who have been dra- natic. Rowland Hill, dramatic; "'homes Chalmers, dramatic; Thomas Guthrie, dramatic; John Knox, dra- matic; Robert McCheyne, dramo- » Christmas Evans, dramatic ; George Whitefield, dramatic; Robert -fall, dramatic; Robert South, dra- satic; Bourdaloue, dramatic; :Ilene - on, dramatic; John Mason, Arama- ic. When you get . into the minis- ' ry, if you attempt to cultivate that lenient and try to wield it for God, ou will meet with migh rebuff nd caricature, and ecclesiastical ounsel well take your case in charge, iad they will try to put you down. Tat the God who, starts you, Will help ou through., and great :will be the ternal :rewards for the assiduous ad the plucky. Rev. Dr. Bellows of New York many ears ago, in a very brilliant but nich criticised sermon, took the po- tion that the theatre •might be re- ova,ted and made auxiliary to the lurch. Many Christian people are the sante opinion. I: do not agree ith them. I have no 'idea that sac - se is in this direction. What I ave said heretofore on this •subject,, t far as I remember, is my 'senti- ent now. But to -day I take a step 1; advance- of my former theory. iristianity is going to take full ssession of this world and control s s maxims, its laws, its literature, s science and its amusements. Shut p t from the realm of Christianity s ything, and you give it up to sin s d death. •e If Christianity is mighty enough 'to o anage everything but the amuse- ents of ,the leerier, then it is a very s fective Christianity. Is it capable keeping account esti the fears of the f °red and incompetent to xna,ke re- e rd of its srniles? Is it good to 101- s v the funeral, but dumb at the t orld's piny? Can it control all the fo her elements of our nature but the le etnatic element'? My idea of Christ- w site- is that it can and will con- ni et everything. In the good time b elate, which the world calls the ni lden age and the poet the elysian. co a end the Christian the millennium, et have positive announcement that amusements of the world age to m under Christian • sway. ''Holinese be 11 be upon the bells of the hor- be , YOU pieteee with other . institution, q1i1.11,11E'l otinontilleveplsebtafourniimovie tohnilsy zie,:e;0(linstlintent-1 utiLlSe atid good women in the ordinarY again social sense of goodness. just 118 f 00011 00 platform of the spectecus lar is fully and fairly establiehed many a geniue who hitherto has sup- pressed the dramatic element in his , nature because he could not find the realm in which to exercise it will step over on the platform, and giants ' of the drama, their name known the world over, WhCi have been 'toiling for the elevation of the ch.anen will step over on that platfOr111----Sileil 100 - men as Charlotte Cushman of the past, such nett Joseph Jefferson of the preserit. • , The platform of that new institu- tion, of that expurgated drama, oc- cupied only by these purest of' men and women, will. drew to itself mil- lions of people 'who have never been to seat the drama, more then once or • twice in their 11 \'08, or 31(1001. Saw it at all. That iastitutiosi will combine the best music, the best architecture, the best genius six nights the week on the side of intelligence and good morals .- Do you tell me this plan is chimeri- cal? I answer, it only requires Ane man Some -Where between heee and San Francisco or between Bangor ancl Galveston to see it and appreciate it --one man of large- individual means and great heart; and with $100,0,00 he could do more good than all • the Lenoxes and the Lawrences and the Peabodys ever accomplished. He would settle for all /lateens and for all times the stupendous question of amusement which for centuries Lae been under ,angry and vituperative discussion and which is no ;Jeerer be- ing settled to -day, by all appear- ances, than it was at the start.. I would go to such an institution, such a spectacular. I should go 'once - O week the rest of my life and take . my family with me, and the raaiosity of the families of the earth would go to such an institution. I expect • the time will come when I can, without bringing upon myself criticism, with- out being an inconsistent, Christian, When I, a minister of the good old Presbyterian church, »will be -a,ble 10 go to amine new institution like this, the spectacular, and see "Hamlet" and •` 'King Lear" and the "Merchant of Venice'' and the ' 'Hunch bade' and "Joshua Whitcomb." Meanevhile matey of us will have this dramatic elemen t unmet and unregalecl. We want this institution independ- ent of the church arid independent of theatre, The church tries to com- promise this matter, and in Loamy churches _there are dramatic exhibi- tions. Sometimes thee- call them charades. sometimes they call thein •magic lantern exhibitions--entertein- meets for which you pa,y 50 cents, . the 50 cents to go for the support of some charitable ins Litution. An ex- temporized , stage is put up in the church or in the leeture, 1'00111, and there you go and see David and the giant, and Joseph sold into Egypt and little Samuel aevoke, the chief difference between the exhibition in he church and the exhibition in the heatres being that the exhibition in he theatre is 'more skillful. Now let , us have a new institution, vith expurgated drama and with the urrounding-s ••I have spoken of-a»i nstitution which we can» tvithout so- histry and without self- deception ' upport and patronize -an institution o uncompromisingly good that an attend it without any shocle to ur religious sensibilities, though th 01 in de of 10 co loe 117 ot che ino cru col go n,g we the be she ses." 503'S one prophet. There are tens of ihoesagds o Christian homes where the sons an daugh ters are be1d. back from Alva nettle entertainment for reasons whit: some of you would say are good ren sons and others woulcl sem are poo reasons, but still held back. But o the esta,blision en t of such an institu tion they would feel the arrest o their anxieties and tvould say ori th establisbnient of this new institution -which. I have called the spectacular "Thank God, this is what We hav all been waiting for." , Now, as I believe thett I make Stag gestion of an institution -which wiser men will develop, T want to giv some cheracteristics of 'this iiew in stitution, this snecteculain if it is to 130 a grand social and moral suc- cess. In tbe first place, its entertain- ments must' be comeercesed within an hour and three-ouarters. What kills 'Sermons, prayers and leetures end en- tertainments of all .sorts is prolixity. Al: a reaSonable hour every night every curtain •of .peblic entertainment ough t to • drop, every church service ought to cense, the instruments of Orch es {Mae OULtht to be 1.1118t1'11ng. What comes 111000 than. this comes too late, • On the platform: of this mew insti- l-mt./00 , ee to. fella r, -under the 00,00 of the very hest men and wo- men in the cone:nen/ ty there shall be n oth g w len es ti ed the • W 0111d be' un- fit- for a parlor. Any ,atti tures, anse look, .any NV0Vel that would °trend you seated et yoer men fireside in yone fam II3r circle ev I he prohibited from the!: platform. I3y "we n t law 0 orn 1T1 e :ems e 00 of le oral i c1008 that Wh 1(.11 iS no fit to be seen or heard by five people bectmse to be seen or honed ny 1,000 people? On the platform of that specte.culer Ji gee ecenes of the dim me will be • as cheek; es eves ever a leetere Ede tvard i'lverett or it seen, hy Ili: :Robertson, On • the pie Merin shalt come only sn eh men and women es 70)1 WolAtr welcome to :veer Sonies, On ha I, plet form there' ela, 11 la no .ertn.;1:5-Tr, nn itenme no ,,, 110 foe of gore1 1)11)1' 11. sneeennee 01' 1011 1- vamparrau.....firay a,bbath before we sat at the hol acrament. The amusements of life are beauti id and they are valuable, but the annot pay you for the loss of you oul. • I could not tell your charac er, 1 could not tell your prospect r this world .or the next by the par calor church you a,ttencl, but if yot ill tell me where you were las ght and where ;you were tne night efere and where eou have been the gh ts of the last 0100111, I think 1 uld guess where you will spend ernity. As to the drama of your life and ine, it will' soon end. There will no encore to bring us back. At the ginning of that drama of life stood a cradle, at the end of it, will stand f a grave. ',Pim first act, welceMe. The cl last act, faretvell. The intermediate - acts, hatiquet and battle, processions h bridal and funeral, songs and - laughter and g•roallS. ✓ It was not original with Shakes - 11 peare When he said, "All the world's - a stage and all the men and women merely ple.yere." He get it from St. O Paul, who 15 centuries before that had written, "We are made a spec- , tact° unto the world and to angels e and to men." ,v A spectacle in a coliseum fighting- with wild beasts in - an amphitheatre, the galleries full, looking down; .Efere, •we destroy a Q lion. Here we grapple with .a gladi- - ator. When we fall, devils shout. When we rise, angels sing. • A spec- tacle before gallery above gallery, gallery above' gallery. Gallery of our departed kindred looking' down to see if we are faithful a,nd worthy of our Chrietien anCeetey, hoping, for our victory, remelting to throw ' us a gar/and, glorified 'Children and par- ents, with cheer. on chee0. urging us on. Galleey of angehe looking down ---cherubic, seraphim • archangelie- clapping their whigs ,ae. every advant- age we gain. , Gallery of , the King Zt• 031i :which there wolves 0 scarred hand and from whieh there domes a, sympathetic voice seeing, "I3e thou faithful unto • death', and will, give thee a crowe of ' Steele: rfhe lest cloy. Stage: ' The rocking earth.. Enter: Dukes, lords, king's, beggars!, cloevue, No sword. No tinsel. No crown, For foot- lights: The kindling flaisies of a world, POr orcheetres The trump- ets tnat wake the dead, Per ap- plause: The clapping floOds 01 the eett. Por cartnen: The hettvene roll- ed together as a Scroll. F'Or tragedy: ``Thc •Doo 01 of the Pro cilgo le. ' For the last Secue 01 the fifth iect; !The tramp or 11p t cross etage, tame as ee piAth 1, 01,11018 to the left. Then the bell of the las t thunder will ring, and the curie irt will drop! 'e et1 r Y 11E I le T_I-0T1./ p L-11) anadas Greatest Seed Iiouse" SEED OATS THAT WILL MAKE THEFARM PAY NEW IMPROVED d 1..IGI)woPP OA THE HEAVIEST CROPPER KNOWN• Yielded 100 bush. 20 lbs. per acre at Brandon Experimental Farm in 1899. /3 The /mprOved "Ligowo" Oat is a large, plump, white variety, with a branching head and stiff straw, a vigorous grower, very prolific, and exceedingly early. It has been grown and tested at all the Experimental Farms, and has given as &result of four years' trial an average crop of 64 BUSH., 6 LBS. PER ACRE. With such favorable results as above reported by the Dominion Experimental Farms, we were induced to procure a supply of seed stock from the ori- gmal source in France, and now offer for the first time the Improved Ligowo Oats grown from imported stock. Price per lb., 25c. ; 5 lbs. for $1 (post-paid); je bush., S1.25; bush, $2.00; 6 bush. lots and over, 61.90 per bush.; bags, 20c. each extra. NEW "SENSATION" OAT Very large Grain, Best Quality, Strong Straw It Is !impossible to over-estimate the good qualities of this New White Branching Oat. It hos been grown in this vicinity the past year with extraordinary result& The grain is of good size, the hulls are thin, and tho kernel is the largest In proportion to the eine of the oat we have yet Oeen, =kin It the best variety grown foi feeding and milling purposes. The Sensation stools out well, and the straw is very strong, and does not lodge, even when others with a less weight of head go down. It is a very vigorous grower, quite noticeably so when seen growing beside other varieties. It is bound to take a leading place, and will, no doubt, become a very popular variety. Price per lb., 15c.; 4 lbsi, 50c. (post-paid); bush., $1; 5 bush. lots, 95c. per bush.; 10 bush, lots and over, 90c, per bush.; bags, 20c. each extra. HOVE " RAE 1 T This splendid oat has already proved itself to be entitled to rank among the very first and best varieties. It is a heavy growing strong stratved variety, and is of such vigorous constitu- eon as to be almost proof against rust and other diseases. The grain is large, white, thin hulled, and in every respect first-class. Price per bush., 75c.; 6 bush, lots and over, 70c. per bush.; 10 bush. lots and over, 65c.; bags, 20c. each extra. •SELZ' ir r, LACK, TA IA " AT It is extremely hardy, grows with vigor and rapidity, stands well, and adapts itself to almost any son. Grain very black, large and plump. Our seed is,grown from nnported stock. Price per bush., 70c.; 5 bush. lots, 65c. per bush.; 10 bush. lots and over, 60c. per bush.; bags, 20c. =eh extra. STOCKS of these neve and improved oats are limited; order early and avoid disappointment. The bushel prices are for shipment front Toronto. You can get Steele Briggs' Famous Garden and Flower Seeds from your Resident ralorchant, or send for them direct. THE BEST SEEDS THAT GROW. A Handsome illustrated 112 Page Catalogue Free, send for one to -day. ele, tigs 0 , 1.4 e) „tee ✓ A Petrolea Lady Vanquishes a Stubborn and Persistent. • Enemy. t is" e115,01: eg I el 1.01» 1111)11 00 ,5n 1'1'10l('111' 1 niore bi fi • ell taste. in ers , f!ti rin • n0.,(1 r. ' d00;1; flunk she "loo1‹s very h'gi 5,0 Insigy a, Meek," 11111,i11:18 spa, Recommended by Physiehtes„ gee sale 0110130fc.mmi him at the barge in„ co 011tete" „ Irh.ere' Sho Was foe Months a ;Haiti:ye to In ilaie m ;Mort- Bit u atisni tiondes mace' Cured tier, Petroloa, :March. 12. -No lady rest - dentin this town is more widely known, and 3,1101'0 ,highly esteemed for her many goal qualities, 11011 is Mrs. A. Fletcher, of the Fletcher House. Throughout the adjacent country dis- trict, also, he has a-' voles wide acquaintance. All who know this estiinable lady, kwinv that for months 70111, she has been aceaseless sufferer from Inflamma- tory Rherana,tism. So severe did the disease become that her linger joints and fingers were so- terribly swollen that she could not bend them. She was unable to get clown stairs with- out assisteeice, and every impending change of weather brong,ht her the most indescribable agony. Many remedies were used, in efforts to effect a cure. Different medical men were called in to attend her, but all failed dismally.• At length. Mrs. Fletcher, having read of Dodd's Kidney Pills, decided final to give them a trial-ae a, nal resort. She did so and the only possible result followed. "The first dose soothed her awful pain. Every succeeding dose did more and more good. and iIve boxes left her a 81111110 and healtby W01111011, Not., a vestige of her 'old disease remaills. Rheunin,1h,m has no terrors, when Dodd 1-7.idttr nny Pills e used. Dodd's 'Kidney Pills (111.1(3 'Rheumatism (and all other Kidney Dseasell) just as coin tai li)y, ea to] i kly as a (Miele 01 water mime thirst. vwxtiv•M'VV. 7 OF JOHN LABA1 London, Are undoubtedly 11,1E1 ZEST. Testimonh ials orn 4 chemists, 10 medels, 12 diplomas. The 311081wheieSOnie 01 beverages TORONTO, Ont. Deafness Cannot be Cured bv. loeal epplications, as they cannot reach the diseased! ortion of the ear. There is only one way to cure Deafness, and 11101 is by constire- tional remedies. Dearnest, is caused by sit in. 5101011 condition of . the 01110005 Ileitis of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube geis inflam- e) yeti have a rumble -1g sound or imperfect bearing, and ethee 11 13 entirely siesed Dsafness IS the result. an)1 unless the inflammation can 1)13 1111(131) out end this tube restoted to 111 1 Or - Ma 1 so `ditiOli, hearing will be destroyed for- eger; nine ('1813 0111 et ten are eaused by ere teeth, 1101011 18 eothing but am inferned con- dition of the mucous surfaces. We. will give One flundred Donors fer any ease of Destfne,s (caused by 1.1.1111110) die, can- not be cnred ley nail's Cetera cure. Seed for cireulass free. . F. J. CTIENEY Si, 00., Toledo, 0. gae-Sold by Drtigeists 75e, Seienti fie Cookie g. Mrs. Hooclless, who lectures on scientific cooking, tells how to cook eggs on» scientific prmciples For eggs the water should he brought to the boiling point, the eggs pat in and then placed in the rear of the stone. In six minutes they would be ready. Don't eat fried eggs, she said. For scientific toast the bread should be put in the oven until it is dry. Do not allow it to , get herd but simply leave it in long enough to have the moisture and gases driven off. Two minutes in the toaster will complete the operation: Instead of putting in the oyen, the bread might be turned several times while toasting, before it is browned. In making it the knack is to keep it from getting to hands An Explane,tioe. Teacher -Now I want all the chil- dren to look at Tommy' s hand e and observe how clean they are, and see if all of you cannot coine to school, with cleaner hands. Tommy, per- haps, will tell ns how he keeps them SO Dice, Tommy Ires'm ; Oia makes me wash the breakfast things evely niorning. There are coca of cousguription so far navel:used that, 1:lick/e1)' .A 71 l:i'Consurnpiive Syrep will not curs, but 710(113 so had that it will not tei Ye relief. For coughs, aolds and all 01100 110)13 (01 the to at lunge rind chest, it is a N)nnifin which has iiever been known to fail. D, Iwo:notes a free and easy expectoration, teereby removing the phlegm, awl gives tl:e disea,sed natte ehantie10 heel. elotangunity of Bandits. In Sassari, Sardinia, 400 people are now being tl-led as bandits. These inolucle landlords, tradesmen, state and municipal officials, and many WO - mon. There aro 1,000 'witnesses, 120 la.wyes and 200 largo volumes of documents. A big wooden building has been erected for a trial. Stand Up to Eat a Shoe. "People would find less difficulty with ready-made shoes," said the ex- perienced salesman, "if they stand up to fit them on instead of sitting down. Nine persons out of ten, particularly women, want a comfortable chair while they- are fitting a shoe, and it is with the greatest difficulty you can get thexn to stand» for a few minutes, even after the she is fitted. Then, -when they begin walking about they wonder why the shoes are not so com- fortable as they were at first trial. woman's foot is considerably small- er when she sits in a ch.s,ir than when she walks about, Exercise brings a larger quantity of blood Into the feet, and they swell appreciably. The muscles. also, require certain space. In buying shoes this fact should be borne in mind." unforgivable. Jaggles--Why did Old Soak get out of the Company? Waggles -He heard the stock was watered. LJCAS, STEELE & 8111ST01, IMP0RT4R3 OF aFrooernea, 3C...S.& 13. xtrant Write HAM(LTON, L•S• 1.:Slliees BINDER TWINE AND MANILA ROPE, ONTARIO :BINDER TWINE' CO., 11 3 Unioe Station Arcade. Toronto, CAT/ID1 011 017 LIC Religious Pimutes, 8i3.:11111(y 57)0 Church Orme ments, eldiumtionel ith His. Mail orders receive prompt att (teflon. D.& J. .0 Co, Montr'1, stercitl Aeisfelieretilla7 713,RIC,, etas tri M.11301-5 ar,'IY6:;`..):,,2.,,i,.??,euTi,e.),V).,:t.001, :°' tigin,,,,,";.(%11,...» (0 ,It'r so i- you a eenecovenri arldress fer mist ic't,' lel, seise !Moss tormox. a S T.' )p'p', n FR 1,', el. Pe -reser. ern- e ly Mem I. ret ur.15U'S 01211aT li'Enviittrr01:104. Pesiti vrt. cure for 11 11 I4101, Is 01301011, l'its„ Pii Eplicesy, SI emit. ,oet st. "Vit es' De.nce. No Pete or NArvrins 1, , after ars1 day's ere, - Troatle° and ese, trial boteto soilt, thromin Oanedil ri le, ,ce Piing 10 Vii 1/1 tiont,,., t h. ey pity trig repro,. etril .Q18801111. whon rc ePive cf. 8 c.ii (1 16 3).t* is:11a t., ii'i 1.1. »11 vi., l'hi'allolphin,Pe. tx....vemattrarcuovinframmo,,,,,,,,..4saa-rn . • 4, ....mc ,.., .1-,, • Per90113 C111illoti, or expecting to ill - 1101'11, 211 0 1,1 1.-,y or ' 'estates left te 11, t old 00 it n tell? 14, 81)0115(11 751)75 575 W'1175 ii kllOW 111 11 t 141 Lt 8 1151 1, ak50 await, heira er their seentla tits le tele coil 1 try' llooli, of 03.0153 1,0111 oil receipt of 10 0(111 (0. Dlitnal ..lticleAle:LANE, Ilos 1411, Itouro» N.S., (1)1113(1 1, rantior STEEL TOWERS ANO WINDMILLS We 11130 lOake ieel ring. stmts., Grant Grinders, /roe Wooti Su p‘01 Send for 'New Cal - 111(71111)', jgaq G WIN 111 51