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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1900-10-18, Page 3tr AGES. Rev. Dr. Talmage on the Importance of Resting on Christ. A despatch from Washington say; ehlir. Talmage preached front the fol- lowing text; "I am Alpha and Omega.", -.-Revelation i. 8. . Alpha is tbe firshletter of the Greek alphabet, and Omega iS the east; so that Christ in hie text represents him- self as the A and the Z. That ie one reason why I like the Bible; its illustrations are BO easy to understand. When it Implements the Gospel as a hanainer, everybody knows it is eo lenoele something to pieces; or as sale, everybody who has put meat in barrels knows it is to keep things from spelling, or as a salve, that is to 0111'0 the old sores of. the heart. The 13ible illustrations go not on sleets, but in a plain way walk straight into the anderetancling. When vve learn to call things by their plain names, we will be getting back to the old Bible way of teach - Ing. Anybody who knows the a b es undtens tends that tho text• "- means. that Christ is the Beginning and tho tend of everything good. fie is the, A and the Z ole the pley- semi universe. By him were all things made that are made. He made Galilee as well as hushed, it. He made the fig -tree as well as blasted it. He made the rook as well as rent it. No wonder he could restore the blind man, for he first made the optic nerve and the retina. No wonder that he could give hearing to the deaf man, for he first set the drum • of the ear. No wonder he could cairn the withered arna., for he made the hone and strung the muscle. He flung out of nothing the first naa- • texial out of which the world was formed. He set spinning around the firet axle, and drove the first pivot, • and hung to the throne the first con- stellation. 1.1e same hand that put up this universe will pull it down. I think • the time will conie when the worlds will have done their work, and must be removed, so that but two worlds will remain; the one a vast desert of suffering, swinging through barmen- eity—the abode of the bad; the oth- er a. Moo/ming paradise for all the geed. For eternal ages will the two swing around in their orbits of, light and darkness. We know not by what process any of the worlds will be taken down, save one; that wiU go by 'fire. All the universe will know who set on fire the one world, -and who shattered the others, for Christ, my Lord, will stand amid the roar, eraokle, and thunder, and crash o. that fiaal undoing, proclaiming, I am the Omega! Christ is the A and Z of the Bible, Here is a long lane, overshadowed by fine trees, leading up to a rnaneion. What is the use of the lane if there were no mansion at the end Thane is no use in the Old Testa- ment except as a grand avenue to lead -us in, to the Gospel Dispensation. All the statements, parables, orations, and miracles of the Old Testament were merely preparatory, and when all was ready, in the time of •Christ there pours forth the Oratorio of the Ales- siah—all nations joining in the Halle- lujah chorus. Moses, in his account of the creation, shows the platform on which Christ was to aat. Prophets and apostles took subordinate Tarts in ehe tragedy. The first aot was a manger and a babe ;; the last a cross and its vic- tim. The Bethlehem star in the first scenery. shifted for the crimson up- holstery of a crucifixion. Earth, and heaven, and hell the spectators. Angels applauding in the -galleries; devils hie - sing in the pit. Christ. Ls the Beginning and:the end of the Bible. In Genes -is, who was Isaac, bound amid the faggots 2. Type of Christ, the Alpha. In Revelation, what was the meter of life? Christ, the Omega. In iiienesis, what 'W213 the ladder over jacolee pillow? Christ, the Alpha. In - Revelation, who was the concineror,on the white horse? Christ, the Omega. In Exodus, what was the' smitten eepen rock? Cbirist, the Alpha. In Revelation, • who was the Lamb before the throne? Christ, the Ornega. Take Christ out of this book, and there are other books I wouldrather have than the Bible. Take Hine out, and man i$ a .failure, and i the world a carcass, and eternity a vast horror. Christ is the A and the 2. of the Christian minietry. A sermon chat has io Chriet in it is a dead failure. The minister who devotes , his pulpit to anything but Christ is an impostor - Whatever great thernee we may dis- cuss, Christ must be the beginning and Christ the end. From His hand NVO gee our commission at first,' and to • that sense hand we atdlast suerender It. Ai sermon devoted to metaphysics in a stock of dry corn -stalks after the torn lies been ripeted out with the husking -peg. A sermon given up to Sontimcntal and flowery speech' is as a nosegay flung to a drowning .9ailor. sermon devoted to rreoral eeiray is a basket off ohips to help on tlae, great leurtung, What the world wants 11 -OW is te be tohl of Jesus Christnyho comes to save men from eternal dam - ,nation. Chript the Light, Christ the !Sacrifice, Christ the Reck, Christ the ' Star, Christ the !Balm, Christ the Guide. If a minister should live one thousand yeare, and preach ten sermons each day, those subjects would( not be, ,exhausted. Do You find tempted? Tell them of Christ the shield. Or troubled? Tell them of Chrise the Comfort. Or guilty? Tell them of Christ the Pardon. Or dying? e'en.' them of Christ the Life. Scores of ministers, yielding to the tlernand.s oe the age for elegant rhe- toric, and sof 1 speech, and flattering apostrophe have surrendered their pulpite to the d,evil, "horse, foot, and dragoon." If these city exquisites won't take the old-fashioned Gospel, then let them go on the down- ward roa.d where they want to go, and we will give our time to the great masses who want to hear dm plain Gospel, and whn are dying by the millions because they do not hear it. Be Christ the burden of our talk; Christ the inspiration of our praeers; Christ the theme of our songs; Christ now, and Christ for ever. Oh for more consecration I 'Christ is the A and the Z in the world's rescue. When the world broke loose, the only hand swung out to caterti it was that of Jesus, Jesue, swift as a rue on the mountains,comes down over the hills. The shilling ones Stand back as he says, '' Lod 100028." Amid the wrathful ellrgOB He beats Ells; way out to the dying world; and while, out in the deep waters, with bloody agony He wrestled with it, and it seemed for a little while uncertain whether it would take him down or He would lift it up, those on the heav- enly ehore trembled, and when at last, in his great 'strength. He lifted it in His right hand and brought it back there went up a hosanna from all the I cloud of :1,e-itneisses. He began the work, and He shall complete ,it, Ring all the bells of earth and heaven to- day in honour of Christ the Alpha and Christ the Omega! Chriet is the A and the Z in heav- en. He is the most honoured personae's in all that land. He is known as a World -Liberator: The first one that a soul entering heaven looks for is Jesus. The great populations of heav- en seek Him out, follow Him over the hills, and shout at Hie chariot wheel. Pas.sing along those streets, spirits bled cry out to one another. "Lookl that is Jesus." Methinks that if the hosts of heaven go forth. in some other rea:lnato figet, their battle -cry is "Jesus." Jesus on the banners. Jesus in the song. At His feet break the doxologies. Around His throne circle the chief glories. Where the evhite Lamb of heaven goes, there go all the flocke. The first tree in the heavenly paradise Jesus planted. The first fountain lie struck from the rock. The first: pillar of light fie lift- ed. At heaven's beginning-- Christ, the Alpha. Then travel far on down the years of etermity, and stop at the end of the remotest age, and see if the Gong line not taken up some other' burden, and dome other throne has not become the c,entre of heaven's chief attraetions. Butt no; you hear it thrummed on the harps, and pour- ed from the trunipets, and shouted in univereal acclaim, Christ, the Omega! Now, what is this glorious One to you, my hearer? Ilave you seen Him n Have you heard His voice? Have you walked thia earth and never seen in the bent grams where His feet had just been? Of all the stars in the midnight heavene, bas not one point- ed' you to where Ile lay? 'erudging on across this desert with thy burden of sine, have you ever made the camels kneel? Is this one, the First and the Last of heaven nothing to thee? Poor wanderer, without Christ, what of thy death, hour? whet of the judgment day? what of eternity If it shall be found at the laet that thou hest re- jected the/ thy only hope, in what dark hole of the universe wilt thou lay thy- self down to suffer and gnash thy teeth and howl for ever? You nmet have Christ or die. But one ladder out, of the pit I But One life -boat frona the wreck! Get in it. Lay hold of the oars with both hands, and pull, if need be, until che blood starts. The world is after you. The devil is after yob, The avenger of blood is after you. But, more than all, Christ is af- ter you, and His cry is, "0 Israel I thou hest destroyed thyself. Innt. in ine thy help l" YOUTHFUL PURIST'S CORRECTION Mamma I 'me mina 1 she cried. Tommy's making faces at ince Ain't doing anything of the kind, retorted the bey. Why, Tommy, corrected the indul- gent parent. I BIM you nayealf. No, you clic:hale [persisted the by. 1 toudn't make a face if 1 wanted to. All I did was to screw len the ready- made one I've got. iffiRE UTOPIA 13 FOUND, SOCH JS ThE LITTLE CoLota OF NEW ZEALAND. No Strilios, No lioderoillIng—The Berne or ,t 1.41tration--AloAt Pro.grorties 4)01Bili" nous. The arbitration law has been incon- stant use in New Zealand forabout four years and a half. During those years these has never been a time where' teerte' has not been. a dispute ending before one or other of the Conciliation Boards or the Central Arbitration Court. I cannot say trona memory what the exact number of disputes finally ad- jueted has been, but, so far, they can -- not be less than 00 or 70. Most of these have been ,carried, on appeal from some Conciliation Boaed, to the Arbitration Court, and settled there. . In about two cases out of seven the Cone:lel:don Coands have been abla suc- cessfully to arrange the disputes. Even where they have not done 90 it by no means follows that their labors have been useless. Very often the appeal to :the Arbitration Court is merely on one or two points out of many involv- ed, and the advice of the Conciliation 'Board is accepted on the others. Often, too, naost of the parties to a dispute have been ready to accept a board's i suggestions, but it has needed the firm hand of the Arbitration Court to bring ;one or two stubborn nien to acquies- icence., The proc,ees may be tedious, but it is ;not costly. Lawyers are not employed as counsel before either the boards or ithe Court: unless all parties to the ac- etion agree thereto, and they very ".;selflorci do agree. •A firm of employers :may appear by a manager or accredit - 'ed representative, a trade union is usually represented by its Secretary or 'other official. During the hearing, of course, the factories concerned remain open and work goes on as usual. Employers! are secured not• only against a dead stop of business, but , against the meaner kinds of competi- tion of undercutting rivals. In the • organized \trades all the shops of a district have to keep the same hours ansi pay the same wages/. No man may filch trade from a neighbor by sweatirig, his own people. The fair- minded employer now knows Where he is, and is freed from many anxieties. For six years there has virtually been neither strike nor lock- out in New Zealand. A.11 these, exceptZ the first, have been years of remarkable and increasing prosperity. During the time of depres- sion which came before them, wages had falten. With improving time employers would have been faced by resolute .demands from trade unions .for a return to former higher rates of pay, and lead there been no arbitration system in working order a series of very bitter conflicts must have ensued. This has been avoided. Workmen .and workwomen have gain- ed notable advances of pay, and also improved conditions as to hours of labor and otherwise. But this has ccene about gradually, and only after careful and painstaking inquiry. . lMany of the demands of labor have been refused; many more leave been modified. In no ease has an industry been throttled or crippled. Not only can we clairn that no factory has been closed for a single day in New Zealand by labour war, but we can claim that the peace thus obtained has not been laouglat at the dear: price of hampered industry and discouraged entcj prise. When :the arbitration act came into , operation the number of hands return- ed/ as employed in the registered fac- tories was about 26,000, It is now, not far short of 50,000. A percentage of this striking increase may be due to more thorough rcgistration,Far the largest part of it represents an actual inereaso of industry. During these years the imports and exports of the eolony have grown apace. The revenue receiveci from customs, from the income tax, from the etanape and the railways has risen in each case rapidly. Employment from being scarce has grown 'plentiful. Building- has been brisk in all centers of (population. The marriage rate has gone up. In a word, New Zealand shows all the signs which we connect wait a highly prosperous country. It would be too much to ,claim that this is chielfy due to the workings of the arbitration act. It is perfectly fair, hoever, to claim that the arbitra- Hon act and the improved Condition of labor and of confidence which' it has brought about, have had •some share in leading tip to this happy state of things. It is frequently asked bow could you possibly enforce an award of the Arlan tration' Court upon an employer or a union stubbornly determined to go to all lengths rathein than obey it In the first place, for nearly five yeari the law has been in constant use with- out a single exhibition of this deeper - ate resistance. That alone should be evidence of some weight that such a duel is not likely.. It is suggeelee thett the decision itself might be ruinous. There need be no fear of that. Experience has shown that if arbitgators err at all it is almost invariably in the direction of overcautionIlusy muy show too great a deeire to "sell' tea/ dieferenc,4' thee' are net in the least likely to int- eoee intolerable conditions either Upon nester or men. Ate employer who hes the ehOlee between' accepting a 'legal decision arrived at aft - ter painstaking inquiry, and being taken into Court and fined, will almost always aceept the decision. In a very few cases he may run the risk of being fined once, but he will not leY nimself open to a seeond Penalty. That is the New Zealand exmorience. On the other hand, it has been flatly declared that, the Court cannot coerce trade unions. Vivid pictures have been painted of the tragic absurdity of en- deavoring to collect fines from trade unionists by distraining on the goods of poor workmen whose union is with- out funds and who are themselves pen- niless. The answer to that is that poverty-stricken unions, composed of penniless workers, are only too thank- ful to accept the decision of a state tribunal. They cannot strike against a power- ful employer; much less can they hope Id starve out a Court of Arbitration. Its decision may not altogether please them, but it is all they are likely to get. The Arbitration Court, there- fore, is ae potent to deal with trade unions as with employers. Wealthy unions it can fine. Penniless uniuns are helpless to fight it. Finally, at its back is the mighty force of nubile opinion, which is sick of labor wars and determined that the experiment of judical adjustment shall have a full and fair trial. SC• HOOLS OF SARDINES. A Boat 0.iteites Front Two to Six Thou - salad o Pay. The sardine fishing season com- mences early in May and lasts until late in the autumn. When the fieh are plentiful] in the nets quantities of iscales appear upon the surface of the water. The nets are then lifted, and the, contents are dumped by the fish- ermen into their boats. The fish make 'a little squeak when taken from the ' water and die almost instantly. An ordivary catch' of sardines gives to each boat anywhere from 2,000 to 6,000 fish, the price of which is about $1.25 per 1,000, according to the quantity of fish that are being caught. Arriving at the packing house the fish' are carefully :eleaned. This operation over, they are sorted accord- ing to size and carried into another part of the establishment, where they are put into pickle. The Ecngth of time required by this operation varies according to the size of the fish. Aftsir this the are washed and placed with care upon wire nets, called "grills," on which they are sent to the drying room, where they are dried by means of large fans or ventilators run by pow- erful machinery. When dry and while still upon the grills the fish are cooked by plunging them into tanks contain- ing olive. oil. After thie cooking the sardines, still upon the grills, are left to cool, and when cold the work of placing them in cans filled with olive oil is begun. ThiS done, the tins are sealed with solder, and are ready to be put in cases holding 100 cans for the market. GLEAMS OF HUMOR. What an indifferent air young Mar- naaduke Gibbs has! Yes. Pity he's so eicla; he would make a good street car conductor. Lives of some men oft remind us If we had but half their gall, We could loaf, too, and behind us Leave not any tracks at all. So that old miser uncle of yours is dead? Well, I suppose you feel better now that he isn't here' to scandalize your family by his niggardly way of living. No, confound him! He didn't leave anything behind to show that he was a miser after all. Architect—We've settled about, the design for the drawing -room. Now, as to the study; how, do you want that finished? Nurox—I aeen in a news- paper once about a study in black and white that was very artistic. Suppose you gimtne one o' them. Mrs. Meddergrass-1 tell you, they just oughi to send the Sheriff after that man Anclree who is going ,to the North! Pole in a b'loon. Mrs, Nexdore e—Why, what's wrong with him ? Mrs. Meddergrass—Paw read in the Clarion that they had found the fourth boy he had dropped from that becion sence he started. A marble thorse's head and shoulders hes been found in the Roman forum, It is believed to date from tile second c tut ry • before • Christ. Classic a 1 Squesi;riau statues are extremely rare. Antwerp has the highest chimney in the world. It belongs to the. Silver Works Company and is 410 feet high The interior diameter is 25 feet at the base and 11 feet at the top. 13erlen boasts that 'tenter den Lin- den" is the broadest street in any greet city. It ie 215 feet wide. Tho Relestreese" in Vienna iS 188 fent; the Parte "G:rand Boulevards" 122 feat and the "Andrassy Steasse" at Bud- apest 153 feet Wide. THE SUNDAY SCHOOL, INTERNATIONAL LESSON OCT. 21 l'ito Lost Sheep owl lite Lost Coln, Logiotl. the presence, of tee ameets or Goa over `•!:)**35. Golden Text. --"There is Joy is one eleeer That litopentetit. Lutio 13.10 ',PRACTICAL NOTES. iVerse 1, Publicans. Tax -gatherers, hated as instruments af Itoman op - Pression, and on account of their own extortions. They bought theii officees, fixed the aeeessments at their own figures, and collected not only for the government, but for their own purses. Sinners. People careless of the Mosaic law, which with it minute tradition- al regulations became to many an intolerable yoke. Those living thue il- legally would be likely alSO to live inamorally. To hear him. Their sense of vilenees had at first kept 'them away. Those who would save sinners; raust be able to feel for them. 2. Pharisees and scribes. Even in Perea there were orthodox Jews hrho looked with contempt on the half - heathen rabble about Jeaus. Murmur- ed. They "sought not the lost," and could not understand the One who did. Receiveth sinners. That which was our Lord's •greatest glory thest3 men thought eharee.ful. But if Christ did not receive any sinners, how could th.ere be any, saint? Eateth with them. Puts himself on their level. Their very touch might defile a Phar- isee. A strict Jew became ceremonial- ly defiled by eating with Gentiles or neglecters of .the law, Gal. 2. 12; but Christ dealt with men as men, and was independent of the traditions. Emphatically, Jesus came "not to Gall the righteous. Cheist came to break down the artificial barriers of class, and to make all men as brothers. 3. 4. He snake. He does not deny the charge they make, but justifies hie • course. This parable. No mere statement could have taught as much as the three parables that follow, two of which are in this lesson. What man of you. Ile turns the force of the parable upon the murmurers by showing that what they would do for a sheep he was doing for a sonl. Hay- ing a hundred sheep. The owner of the flock, not a hireling. Every man belon,gs to Christ, since he has bought us with his own blood. Lose, one of them. The natural tYpe of the sin- ner is the lost sheep, without power to return to the fold and without meane of defense against the foe. Only in Christ is there safety ,for the soal. Tholigh but one larab was lost from Christ's fold, the shepherd would ;ries it, John 10. 14. Leave:the nine- ty and nine. Not uncared for, how. ever, Under -shepherds • were always employed. The background .0.f Idis story was mum ch more a. Jar Lo Jesus'e hearers than to as. Wilder- ness. Uncultivated, grassy plains. Go after. If he had loved less he might have sent a servant. Christ's coming to earth was a going after the lost, and in all his ministry this was his aim:, "to seek and save the lost." Those who would save souls must not be content with sending others after the lost, bu.t must go themselves. As with Christ, so with his Church, the missionary work is of the first importance. 5, 6. Layetle it on his shoulders. As shepherds in the East are often seen carrying elieep too weak to walk. He does not scold -nor punish, but soothes and, helps. Christians should treat re- turning sinners with infinite tender- ness. Rejoicing. This gives us a wonderful glimpse of the infinite love of God. The salvation of souls is not Lo Christ a burden, but a pleasure just as the mother rejoices over her sick child when the tide of disease has turned, although she has nights of weary watching still 'before, her. His friends and neighbors. Whedon re- gards these as symbolizing "his fellow but under shepherds, the pastors of his flock." Rejoice with me. Every saved, soul brings delight to Christ, and should gladden the hea tsot hi Church. 7. 1 say unto you. Therm is a ma- jesty in this calm, simple "1." who came from heaven, tell you what most' pleases heaven." Joy shall be in heavea. • Saints and angels watch with eager delight the earthly tri- unapies of tbe Gospel. Oee sinner that Vepenteth. 'Repentance is here not merely sorrow over sin, 'but sincere turning; from it to •God. The, Lout: when the sinner's will is won he Christ is the hour when heaven rejoices over Idea. 'The most important moment of a soul's history is that when it casts itself on Christ. Just per- sons, which need no repentance. There are (none such; but many were, and many still are, self-righteous, and over such neither the Good Shepherd nor the "angels of God" can rejoice. 8, Either what woman. The preceding parable dwielt upon God's love, thie dwells upon God's thoroughness in endeavoring to save eluners. Some hold •that the wbuian represents the Church, the bride of Christ, the Shepherd. Pieces of silver. Little coine twith the image of an owb or a toitoiee, 01,' th about eighteen .cents apiece, but with much greater pur- chasing power in those days. 'Women. wore them then as a sort of meted fringe upon their foreheads. We, are God's coins. Lose one piece. A seri- ous loss, for it was the wages of a clay's work. The coin, loet in the dust, yet even there bearing the stamp of the king, is an admirable il- lustration of man in his ruined con- dition, unconscious of th.e royalty, and useless to the world; yet well worth seeking. Light a candle. In the East nooses have few windows, .and are dark even in the day -time; hence, to search thoroughly the candle must be lighted. So the sinner cannot be found unless sought by the light of divine truth, the word of God. 'Pati- ence and diligence and minute ob- servation" are as greatly needed in the salvation of souls as are the more aggressive traits of the average re- vival. Sweep the h,ouse. This may indicate the general upturning and arousing :evthich often accompanies the seeking of the sinner. Revivals, and tth,e ingathering af souls are often attended with a certain exeitement and apparent confusion. 9, 10. Her friends and her neigh- bors. No special class of beings is here typified, • but the general joy of the Church over the salvation of men is illustrated. I had lost. Per- haps through his own carelessness the sheep had wandered away, but it may have been through negligence that the coin rolled into t‘he dark corner. The The Church is never altogether with- out blame when eouls are lost from its holy precincts. Joy in the pre- sence of the angels. The joy of saints in glory, and the richer joy of the Saviour on the 'throne. One sin- ner. If one sinner's repentance ea.n attune the harps of heaven, how mea- surelessly sweet and pervasive and in- exhaustible must be the meledies evoked by the constant 'activities of the militant church. NOT SO SLOW. There is no question but that John Chinaman keeps pretty well posted on the political affairs of the country, One day not long since a Chinaman was driving a laundry wagon out in North. Seattle, when he naet two sol- diers camiug in from the army post Hello; John, said one of them. Me belly well, was the laconic re- ply. .Tchn, remarked tine of them evident- ly in a sportive frame of nrind, you're a bexer. You lie! exclaimed the excited Ce- lestial. Me no boxer. You talkee to0 much, elle samee Blyan, NO RELIEF, Now that the heat of surname ape pears to be over, the heat of the campaign will begin. Another case of getting from the frying pan into the fire. SAVED Fli'01111 Ali OPERATION With Its Dangers, Pain and Expense and Thor- oughly Cured of' 'Torturing Itching Piles by Dr. Chase's aintrzle, te Is it any wonder that physicians one- box cured m,e, so that the lumps and druggists are' unaremoue in re- disappeaeed and also the external commending Dr. Chase's Ointmenl as swelling, • I feel like indifferent man the only actual cure for piles ? Is it, to -day a,m1 havc not the least doubt any wonder t,hat minieters and prom- tbat Dr. Clhaee's Ointment saved mo Leen t business a net professional men fa:owl avery dangerous a nd pa inf u willingly testify to tho' naerits of a operation arud .inany years of suffer - preparation which really cures pile„e Mg le is with the greatest pleature and puts an end be the torturing ex- ientl with a thenleful heart that I give aspo,ratling etching 1 Operations this testimonial, knowing that Dr. with the aceo,mpanyin,g risk, expense Chase's Ointment has done so )3:tech for and pain are ino longer necessary. Dr. Chase's Ointment poeitively curee every forna of piles; whether itching, bleeding or protruding. Rev. S. :1)11in a n , Method is t rOsin iS- ter , Consecon, Prince Edward County; this testinionial as tem see fit for the me, You are at perfeet ilberLY to use benefit oeothe re hi n. y tt t eel," Rev. J. se, Held,iein, Baptist minister, • Arkone, On*., Ivrikes 3. great art:el:a/1)1B gts,Laltynee51:IbT Ina; eInclii'sreivilligys trosrbiecl ;‘t0Voaltrh: itig'111(6Pf) el,.\10.11:11:..tp(all'iii '74:1 ansi Lienee e gain/ al vee''vtolent form. Large lumps or ugany 'mania hen I, boUUtit, When abgreet:t.5eSdIff°friclxinlextly ietenSeViadSet%I'll'hith ta0b°U.119'1?10Dfig):veeblialsl',Bil's.t Wm great pain lisIs (a(llwaab1106t °°i t80l:dlnat :Vn.u';ihleeeverecrisis T;tr01esedhex1;xe, ael I0etitre1cured, ofitulDero. r ?nbolls$° 'f!:11111 131111tf'1 a'1 d trilet(1',rt.] Ph% il!,‘1,111'614. „iissealilteg°Ingt:l'ieeriyilleeaVift% a dwVoitirel4C1 various remedies before and to no cure them es it has mr,'* purpose. ler, Ciiiise's Dint anent, 60 Seel e a imfigino mew great and joyoes at ati dealers or EdiinineOiv, Ogtes MIMS ,kny surpriee to find that ,just the Co., Toronto.