HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1900-11-15, Page 4GODI LAND OF THE GOSPEL
The Rey, Dr. Talmage Urges Us to Struggle for the
Heavenly Shore.
A despatoh. from leta.shington sae'
--Rev. Dr. Talmag8 preached from th
following text; "I am escaped wit
the 81t1a1 Of MY 1:884t1i."--.Tab, xi. 2
Job had it hard. He vsii,shed he yea
-dead and I do not blame hina. Hi
flesh was gene, and his bones ever
arY. He cries out, "1 am eseaPe
with the ekirn of my teeth".
A very narrow escape, yo o say, fo
,Torla's body and soul; but there ar
thou.sands of ene,n who make just a
na‘rheiw• eeleates for their soul. Ther
WaS' a time when the partition be
tiween them and ruin was net thicke
than a tooth's enamel; but, as Jo
finally escaped, so have they. Than]
God!
I want to show yoa, it God we
help, that some in.en make narroe
escapes for their souls, and are save
az "with the skin of their teeth,"
We will admire eleat it is more dif-
ficult f.or amme men to arceePt the
Gospel than for ()there. Some of you
in coming to God, will haye to run
tagainst sceptical. notione. It 18 use
leas for people to say sharp and cut-
ting things to those who reject the
Othrietian religion. I cannot say
such things. By what process of
temptation, or trial, or betrayal, you
have come ip your peesent state, 1
know not. There are two gates to
your .nature; the gate of the head,
and the gate of the heart. The gate
of your head es looked with bolts and
bars that an archangel could not
break, but the gate of your heart
swings easily on its hinges. If I as-
saulted your body with weapons you
would meet M8 with weapons, and it
would be stverdestoke for sword -
stroke and wound for wound, and
blood for blood; but if I come and
knock at the door of your house, you
open it, and give rae the bast seat
in your parlour. If I should come at
you with an argument, you would
anisrwer me with an argument; if with
saroa.sm, you would answer me with
sarcasm; blow for blow, stroke for
etroke; lerut when I come and knock
at the door of your heart, you open
it and say, "Come in, ray brother,
and tell me all yen know about
()bleat and heaven."
Listen to .two or three questions;
Are you as ?aappy as you used to be
when you believed in the truth of the
a; those hot -breathed, paesions, and with
a them ride down injustice and wrong.
h There are a thousand things
0. in the world that we ought
8 to be ma a at. There is no
a harem Lu getting red hot if you only
e being to the, forge that evlde,h need's
d hammering. A man who has no 'pow-
er of righteous indignation is an ira-
✓ becile. But be euee it is a righteous
e indignation, and not a petulancy
s that blur, and unravels, and depletes
e the soul.
- There is a large class of persons in
✓ mid-life who have still in' them ap-
b petites that were aroused in early
manhood, at a time whien they prid-
ed themselves on 'being a "littlefast,"
ll "high livers," "free arid easy," "hale
Y fellows well met." They aye now
d paying in compound interest for trou-
bles they collected twenty years ago.
Some of you are trying ,to escape, and
you will—yet very narrowly, "as with
the Skin of your teeth." Gol and
your awn soul only know eviee.t the
struggle is. Omnipotent grace has
pulled out many a soul that was
deeper in the mire than you are. They
line the beach of heaven—the multi-
tude whom God has rescued from the
thrall of suicidal tia.bilis. It you this d
day turn be.ok, on the wrong, and
shaet anew, God will help you. Oh t
the weakness of human help! Men
Will sympathize, for a while, and then le
turn you off. If you ask for their
pardon, they will give it, and say
they will try you again; but, falling y
away again under the power of temp- s
tation, they east you off for ever. t
13ut God forgives seventy times seven; s
Rea/ e all enek men. 1 Preach to t
Yea no iourvded Periodri/E L
Periods, no ornamental 1
S T ESS°
discourse; but,I pot My hand op your
ehoulder, and invite you into th ie peace
of the Gospel. Here 18 a Torok on which
you may stand limn, though the waves
dash against it herder theo the At-
lantic, pitching its surf clear above
Eddystone Eight -hone°. Bo not
cbarge upon God all these trouble:it
of the world. As loeg. as the world
stuek to God, God stuck to the world;
but the earth seceded from his govern-
ment, and hence all these outrages load.
all these woes.God is good. ltor manY
hundreds of yeers he has been coaxing
the world to collie back to him; but
the more he has coaxed, the more vio-
ent have men been in their resistance.
and they have stepped back and step-
ped baole antil they have dropped into
ruin.
Try this God, ye who have had the
blood -hounds after you, and who have
thought that God had forgotten, your.
Try ham, andd, s-ee if he will not help.
Try him and eee if he will not pardon.
Try ham, and see if he will net save.
The flowers of spring have no bloona
SO sweet as the flowering ofoChrist's
affeetions. The surn hath no warmth
compared with the glow of his heart.
Thei waters have nce refreshment like
the fountain that will slake the thirst
of thy soel. At the moment the rein-
deer stands with his hip and nostril
thrust in the enol namentadn torrent,
the', hunter may be coming through
the thicket. Without crackling a
stick Mader his foot, he cames close by
he stag, alms his 'gun, draws the
rigger, and the poor thing rears in its
eath-agony and falls backwards, its
ntlers crashing on the rocks; but
hie panting laart`that drinks from the
water -brooks of God's promise shall
ever be fatally wounded, and shall
ever die.
This world is a poor portion for
our (soul, oh buainess man! An East-
rn king had graven upon his
omb two fingers; represented as
ounding upon each other with a
nap, and under them the motto, "All
s not worth that." Apicius Coelius
hanged himself because his steward
informed hiixn that he bead only 80
thousand pounds sterling left. All of
this world's riches make but a small
inheritance for a soul. Robespierre
attempted to win the applause of the
world; but when he was dying, a wo-
man came rushing through the crowd
crying to him, "Murderer of irty kin-
dred, descend to bell, covered with
the curses of every mother in Francel"
Many who have expected the plaud-
ita of the world,tha.ve died under ita
Anathema Maranatha:
yea, sewn hundred times; yea, though
thee be the ten thousandth time, he
as more earnest, more sympathetic,
more helpful this last time than when
you took your first nais-seep.
If, evitle all the influences favor-
able for a right life, men make so
many mietakes, how much harder is
L t when, for instance, some appetite
thrusts its iron grapple into the
anots of the. tongue, and pulls a man
down with hands of destruction! If,
under suCh circuanstanees, he break
away, there will be no sport in the
madecritaking, no holiday enjoyment,
but a struggle in which the wrest -
'ere move from side to side and bend
and twist, and watch for an oppor
Christian religionWould you like futility to getin a heavier stna
roke,
to have your children travel on in
the road In which you are
now travelling? You had a
a relative, who professe,d to be a Chris-
tian, and was thoroughly consistent,
living and dying in the faith of the
Gospel. Would you not like to live
the same quiet life, and die the same
peaceful death? I recently received
a latter, sent me by One wil'o has re-
jected the Christian religion. It says,
"1 api cild enough to know that the
joys and pleasures of rife are evanes-
cent, and to realize the fact that it
must be comfortable in old age to
believe in something relative to the
future, and to have a faith in some h
syste,ra that proposes to save. I am
free to to eonfees that I would be hap- b
pier if I could exercise the simple and a
laerautiful faith that is possessed by a
many whom I know. I am not will-
ingly out of the Church or out of the 'he
faith. My state of uncertainty is
one of unrest. Sometimes Icioubt my t
immortality, and look upon the death- N
bed as the closing- scene, after which k
there is nothing. What shall I do
'that 1 have not done?" Ah 1 sceptic- fi
ism is a dark and doleful. land. Let w
nra, say that dais Bible is either true s
or false. If it be false, we are as e
well off as you; if it be true, then -
et
which of us is safer.
Do you not feel that the Bible, take Y
til with one final effort, in which th
muicles are distended, and the vein
stand out, and the blood starts,, the
swarthy habit falLs under the knee
of the victor—escaped at last as
"with the, skin of his teeth."
There are others who, in attempt -
pug to come to God, must run between
a great many bulginess perplexities.
If a man go over to business at ten
o'clock in the morning, and comes
e,
away at threo'cloe.k in the after-
noon, ha has some time for religion;
but how shall you find time for re-
ligious contemplation Whet1 you are
driven from sunri.se to sunset, and
ave been for five years going behind
n business, and are freauently dunned
y creditors whom you cannot pay,
nd when, from Monday morning
iatil Saterda,y night, you are dodging
ills that yott cannot meet? You walk
ay by day in uncertainties that have
rent -your brairt on fire for the past
laree years. Some, witb lese business
roubles than you, have gone crazy.
ow, God will not be hard on you. He
nows what obstacles are in the way
f your being a Christian, and your
ret effort in the right direction he
ill crown with success. Do nt lei:
atan, with cotton bales, and kegs,
INTERNATIONAL LESSON, NOV.
. .
,
18.
'rite Ten Ifiepe1'.4 Cleataiwa. tube 17. 111,-19
notion Text.—" Re To Thanlatuk
3, 1.5.
PRACTICAL NOTES.
Verse 11. As he went t Jerusalem..
At the very beginning of his direct
journey to the feast. Ile passed
through the midst of Samaria and
Galileo. The roan leading hirn some-
times on one side of the border, some-
timen the other.
12: He entered into a certain village.
An unwalled town. There met him
ten men tha.t were lepers. The pre-
valence oe leprosy in the ancient
East was-vappalling. Even now the
most loathsome incidents of travel in
Palestine are due to the persistent
beggary of these sufferers.Euro-
peran- methods` of sanitati0/1 would
soon do away with the abominable dis-
ease, but Turkish authority goes no
farther than to compel the tainted
to live together in settlements, and
the restilt is frequent marriages and
the, perpetuation of a leprous race, as
vile and pitiable In morals and man-
ners as in body. Lepers were made
ceremonially unclean by the Jewis/a
law, They geouped themselves to-
gether, and 2 Kings 7. 3 gives a sin-
gular example of a tiny protective) as-
sociation; a sort of "trades union,"
formed by leprous men. Isolated as
they were, the lepers of our story had
heard of Jesus. StOod afar Off. They
were compelled to remain a prescrib-
ed distance front all healthy folk. '
13. They lifted up their voices. The
voice of the leper is husky and hol-
low—an awful travesty on tile na-
tural voice of mankind. These men
were compelled to "lift up" their
voioes' because of their weakness as
well EtS bananas of their enforced dis-
tance. Jesus, Master. " ProphetaTeach-
er." They made no appeal to the "Son
of David." Theygleneve little or noth- i
ing of the public talk concerning Jesu
a.a
s the Messiah. It is ,astonishing how
littie theolegical knowledge is fleeces.-
as he had said to Jahn the Baptist, so
aeted his life through: ."It becometla
US to fUlf11,1 rightecuaness," And
while ate knew that the priests retiree
sellted an effete and dying sYetena;
while he knew that they were Pereen-
ally his malicious enemies, Jesus show-
ed his respect for the sacred law, by
insistingl on his "Patients" obeying its
moat minute requirements. He said
"prie,sts," becatese one of these men
wae acclanaaritan a heretic with whom
no respectable ;few would consort ;
though the degrading influence of the
disease 'had blotted out all
distinction, between Samaritan
an Jew, and • the lepers
had huddled together. NOW they
were to go to their priests—the Jews
to Jeerusalene, the Samaritan to
Mount Goetze/a; and probably they at
once parted ccempany..
15, 16. When he saw that he was
healed. It must ttae-e been with
re range sensations that hey extend-
ed their wholreeoin,e limbs on the high
Toad, and fedi their nerves again
tingle with health. 'With a loud
voic.e gloaefied God, 'and fell down on
hie face , at his feet, giving him
thanks. His voice, like his poor body,
had lae-ern restored to health. He
thanks God and thanles his human
Healer, as 1.e flings himself al, his
feet with oriental demonstrative.
nTe6srvs. He
on to theirpriests, Samaritan.lasrietn
s, and
eewentd
Probably expressed gratitude both to
God and to Jesus when they returned
to their homes. But the Samaritan
cannot vvalt to be formally pronounc-
ed whole until he falls in (ecstasy. at
the feet of his benefaator.
17. Jesus ausenering said. Wthat
a man says when he is plialeed is apt
to reveal much of leis character. Our
Lord never told those who praised him
that he did not merit their praise, as
is often the fashion with as. Here he
makes no remark to the healed leper,
but turns to his disciples to inquire,
Were there not ten cleansed? , No
doubt this very morning God is ask-
ing, Were there not many fed in the
Dominion, in OUT Province, in
our town or village, 'en our
hornet? Where are the nine? Why
are the majority ungrateful, or, if
there. Ls any gratitude, why is it tine ir
xpressede "Well acquainted with
the plans which had already been
sa.ry to saving faith; how little a
man needs' to knew if only he will
trust with all his heart in God. Have e
mercy an us. Orientals would addresa
man.
UNIFYING' THE EXPIRE
--
POLITICAL GEOURAPHY AND THE
BRITISH EllIPIHB.
,
en. George noneriseit Makes an iltntrortaw,
S,peeela Itefore 1t43 lOt,h asseelatere.
At theseventieth ineetiug of the
British Association, Sir George Rob-
ertson gave an address Which thee at-
tracted , con.side,rable alteretion, 11e
todlc as his subject "Political Geo-°•
grraphy and the ,•13ritish Elopire•t"
One elf the points discussed was
this;
'There Is a general impression that,
we have been hastily and 'unfortu-
nately acquisitiv4.) whether We could
help it or not.;' that the new prov-
inces, d is trio is and preitectora tes
are ,some of them weak to fluidity;
that t ha. gre a t and 'unprecedented
gireSat,h, 'of the Empire has led to
stile clung and thinning of its holds
lag Hake whichare overs trained by
the weight of unwieldy extension and
far beyond Uhl help of a proteeting,
head."
SIT George's conclusion Was thus
stated; "I hope to be able to shocalF
that in some important respects this
suspicion is not altogether I:Elle, that
Science, human ingenuity and rattle'
energy have given us some compen.
satione, and that, it is not paradoxj.
cal dr incorrect to say that our ree
cent enormous growth of empire ha
been everywhere accompanied by
creinarkable shrinkage of distance—by
quicker and closer intercommunicae
then of all its parta one with anothes ,
•
and with the heart centre.
"1I1e world as a whole has strange.
Ly contaacted owing to a bewilder -t
ing increase in lines oif conaraunica-
tion, to our mono detailed geographical
knowledge, to the formation of new
harbors, the extension of railwnys the
increased speed and the increased
number of steamships, and the greatly
augmented earring power of great
vessels built - of steel. Then hardly
second in importance to these influe
ences are the great land lines and the
sea cables, the potstal improvements5
the telephones and, perhaps we may
soon add the proved commercial util-
ty of wireless telegraphy. This luinie
versa' time -diminution in verbal and .
persona.1 contact has brought the col-
onies, OUT dependenoies, protectorates,
iad our dependencies of dependnecies,
loser to each other and all of them
fearer still torus. Measured by time-
ist,ance, which' is the controller of
rhe merchant and the Cabinet Minis-
ter just as much as 'of the soldier, the
',arid has, indeed, wonderfully een-
ranted, and with this, lessening/the
such Yverdse to any king or poevealul f
14 When t
he em. When he
peectelvecl theme staAir their` condition.
heard theirrr cry, and perceived their
inner need. He said unto them.
Shouting across the hundred pace
that parted them. •Go show your -
Oh, find your pea.ce in 'GOd. Make selves unto the priests Thia. wee
- one strong pull for heaven Not half- an entiaely new way of dealinwi
g, th
^ I
way, work will do it. There -sometimes lepers. While the disease Nvas popue
cornea a time on shipboard entien eV
'Welk -shed to be inenanble,, there were
e
5 erytlaing must be sacrificed to save orecassionally cases of recovery from
it; aim.' it is not improbable that
severe skin diseases were grouped ren-
der the general terra leprosy. At all
events, the Levitical law furnished
methods by which a lepe,r when cured
could be reintroduced into society. He
was to appear before a priesteand be
officially examined according to oer-
tato parescriptiona. When the priest
was satisfied that the disease was
gone the man was pronounced clean.
Every one of these lepers had doubt-
less hoped that the happy day would
dawn when he could thus visit the
wra<thiest tempest that ever blacken- priest and be reinstated in normal
ed the, sky aT shook the ocean, can human life; but none of them could
hear the faintest iraploration for have expeoterd eo be cured after this
•
meepee abrupt faslelon. Jesus does not say,
Heaven grant that some of you, ho "I will; be to clean." He does not
bave considered your case as hopeless, say,. "AccoSding to Your faith be it
will now take heart again, and that unto you" He makes no Promise that
with a blood -red earnestne,ss, such as, wilen they rea'sh their homes they will
you have never experienced before, lipid themselves well. But just as
you will start for the good land of they are, evith all their repulsive sores,
the Gospel—at last to look back, say- they are told to go to the priest to be 6
ing, "What a great risk I ran 1 Al- pronounced well. Here was the ex -
most lost, but saved! Just rgot tremast demand of faith that our Lord
ver. -
threugh and no more Escaped by the emade. As they went, they were
skim of ray teeth!" cleansed. The rest of the ,story shows 3
ncl hog-Sh-eads, and counters, and
•
mks of unsaleable goods, block up
our way to •heaven. Gather up all
it all in all, is about the best book Y°
that the world Inc ever seen ? Do a
you know any book that has ae much sa
in it ? DO yeti not think, upon the la
;whole, that Re influence has been
beneficent ? I cona.e to you with both
hands extended toward you. In one
hand I leave the Bible, and in the
other I have nothing. e2h15 Bible in eu
one hand I will surrender for ever just eer
n
tia
rm
hr
or
th
ero
d le
130
pa
ing
ur energies. Tighten the girdle
out your loins. Take an agonising
oh- into the face of God, and then
y, "flew goes one grand effott for
e eternal," and then bound away for
beaven, escaping,"as with the skin of
your teeth,"
In the last day it -will be found that
Hugh Latimer, and john Knox, Huss
ant otan teem tienterego eg teSeneem
eei3e12 ern. e0"0" elan& aeafpirte pun
incorrupl; from the contaminations
.preplexitiee 0 uhe OXellallge, the
e market, the eongte and from buai-
es. On earth they were called
okers, or stock-jebbers, orretaileesa
importers; but in heaven, Chrietian
roes. No fagots; were heaped about
elr feet; no Inquisition [demanded
in them xecanta.tion; no usol-
r aimed a .pike at their beart,;
re they had mental tortures, com-
red with wiufch 121 physie,a1 consain-
is as the breath of a spring morn-
ree soon as in nay other hand you can
pt.31: a book that is better.
I invite you back into, the good old-
faettionerd religion of your fathers,—
to the God whom theyworshipeted, to
the Bible 'they read, to the promisee
on which they leaned, Le the cross
On WhiCh they- hung their eternal
exPectations, You have not been hap-
py a day eine& you eteung off; yoo
will not be, happy a minute until you
swing back.
, Again: There tinny he some of you
evho, in the attempt ,after a Chris -
tient life will have to run against
POweriui paesions and appetites. Per -
baps it 15 a elleposnian to anger that
y-ou have to contend against; and per-
, while in a very eteeious nanocnyou
ear of emnething that makes you
fea1that you must ewear or die. All
your good ree0Iutio0s heretofore have
been torn to tatters by explosion ot
temp.er. Now there 15 no harm in r
getting mad it you only get /nad at
ehl, Y.011 need to bridle and saddle
ing
I find in rthrt community a large
class of men \the have been so cheat-
ed, so lied about, so outrageously
vattngeel, that they have lost their
faith in everything. In a world where
every thane eeernie SI, topsy-tureey,
they do not see how there can be any
God. They are oonfounded, and
freneied, and mesantlaropic. Elabor-
ate argeernenas to prove to them the
truth of Christianity, or the truth ol
anythin ole t h t
the passengers. The cargo is n.othing.
The captain puts the trumpet to his
lip and .s?aouts, " Cut away the rae.stl"
Some of you have been tossed and
driven, and you 'have, in your effort
to keep the world well-nigle lost your
soul. Until you have decided this
matter, let everything eLse go. Overe'
board with all those sails of your
pride, and cut away the mast. With
one earnest cry for help, put your
cause into the hand of him who help-
ed Paul out of the breakers -of Melita.
. •
and who, above the shrill blast of the
orged in Judea for his destruetion,
he Saviour yet once again makes 'this a
boundary traet of Galilee the theater e
of this saving love, and even at the 11
first miracle Ma his journey it is (I
manifested to* very much the pre- t
hailing tone of feeling is now altered. t
For formerly a nabracile performed on tils
nue animated many handled tongues
to his praise; now, on -the other hand,
the healing of ten ianhappy ones does
not even elicit from the ma.jority of
the healed, stills less from the inhabi-
tants of the vellage, even a single
word of thanks. He has this tepee
rather concealed than made -consrpicu-
ous the brelliant cha.raeter of the
miracle by it's form, but he experi-
ences at'the seine time hew the Doer
of the Miracles is at once forgotten,
and while he On his Part, even in this
last period, displays his respect tor
the law and the priesthood, he Is re-
warded therefor with a mean slight.
The observation of this fact goes to
the Saviour's heart; and as he had
just shawn himself the compassion-
ate high' prieets, 15 feels himself now;
the deeply contemned Messiah._ Yet
the complaint to which his sadnees
gives utterance is at tits same time
a eulogy for the one thankful rone
--
who appearecl before him; and with
the words, 'Rise gra thy( way, thy
faith hath saved thee," the benefit is
for this one heightened, confirmed,
anctifted."—Van Oosternee.
18. This stranger. . The Samaritan
was farther removed from the sym-
nialthies of the orthodox Jew than
v.:?•Ja the Gentile.
that immediately, when they began to
RELATIVE ARIVIAMENTS. go,
' the
.The naval strength, of the great if
and Japan, as far as artillery is c,on- eeet
eeined, is given
thte healing processes asserted
mselves. ,
any man could do witho t what
12 11
ern life 1harc h rules"
c
ainly the Lord Jesus could Yet
authority, as follows: Great Britain,
10,340 guns; France, 5,052 guns; Rus-
sia, 3,607 grans; Germany, e,864 guns;
Italy, 2,508 guns ; United States, 2,-
324 guns; Japan, 1,592 guns. It anus
be mentioned that in the figures o
th B.ritisb artillery there are yet in
eluded 310 muzzle -loaders eviili which
of course, only the older vessels of the
reserve fleet are armed.
Comparing the artillery of Grea
Britain with the combined strength
of Rusaia and France, we arrive a
10,240 guns against 8,659 guns. As
Powers' of Europe, the United Statea
d inions of the Queen ha ye beer
rapidly consolidating. Nor "A tha
powerful influence by any mea ex.
hausted. In the near future rw
anticipate ,equally remarkable
provrenaente of a leloakind, especia, I
in railways telegraph line.s• and, deep.
sea ca-bles, and 15 other scientific dia.,
cove -ales fort tranamilting man e mese
sages through water, in the air, or-
Perhales, by the vibrations of th
earth. Fotr isa particularly, rail-
way seleenaes of eitension must rbe.
makilen relied upon to open up and
to connect distant parts of the Binh'
phis. But our true and only trust,.
worthy road of intercommunication
between the he.arL of the Empire anditI
its limits must always 15 115 sta. lf
we ever fongert that, there may be a
calamitous awakening. We are a
ev.orla. Power solely because of oue
we/ships and because 'of our command
of the ,sea. • In the future also we,
, <
shall remein a world Power, only sqiL
long as we hold command of the, sea in
the fullest sense of the term, no
merrelyeby the force and efficiency of
the fighting navy, bat by the excel-.
le.nce and the perfecting of our mere
canrtile marine, by increasing ies matte
intrude, ealiyinree vowel and speed, an
by ennienely attending to Its recruit-
AN UNANSWERED PROBLEM, anent by Britesh ennui's. We must ,
"I don't see," She simpered, "how not attenaPt to Ol'k,
e011, well," he gallantly reinarked, ellen semi -civilized ea savage conn -
you ever carae to love me."
, . .
to guard -railway Imes through for
"P6'rhaPs'it would be better t° waive 1 tries by exported er local armies. A
these uzzlin lea din
t• 1 heavy land responsibili,y rests u.1
tus already. I.Tnde.r a little irtore
might ba easily over -weighted- an
orused down. 'We. Lutist concentrate
, o I ,
D:11--011i.fe-SUIVIIIIIllif,:q.,i.",..,S upon WIT 8Da
communications.- .t'''',.\;Eh,e.3.'efore, i he
railway lines which `,'"stt'...spol.c.e of as
Ile''ion.lia Trea mecn
For
f 0E1 anil oks1 ,
i:
- Pew ind.eed aro ta,c fainely, circles feirona whence thetre has not been taken
, some reepalier as the result of neglected ccetet'hre and colds, Ithe
preidenrt mother its. constantrly on guard .1,est, ihrerentle ones fall prey to
croup, laronerlirii.irer, or CtY:'(18. Sho knows that- ef coeds are promptly cur-
ed , t lareere is 1.38Tt a fin/ prcitreictimar a seine t consumption, pneurrioni a and al: li e ti
tong thouh.lere.,
Hosts of nicithers ba•erre 7<earrnercl to trust ienreeleifilry 1.o Dr. Chase's Syrup
of leirreseard and T ex p en. Len e to promptly loosen t 'Ire tight chest cough:5', to ,
allay the, infitarn,th a ttion, to' clear the air' ,,' ;,, c.
• t.t,,, irly c..ui e the s
,r, .
col.d. T,Ire"a' calif ildenee in It}t•is grand preseriptiorn of D-, ritak,e hate never
been shaken beeitu.se lei has never faireed to prrore bailee eci a I. It. is of
. .
euch u,nusionmene. as to have attained 1,o by fan , the liergeert sale of any
., ,
simiria,r preparation< , ,
fax as torpedo tubes are concerned,
however, the British fleet is inferior
tOt the nurnber el 19 tubes'. Great Jeri.
Lain possesses 1,5e.4 Russia and France
1,553 torpedo-lan&rs.
The above comparisons', have, of
course, but a mechanical value, as' not
only the number of guns, but, perhaps,
to a higher degree, their quality plays'
the get a Lost part in buiitIe,•
,QUITE d COME -)OWN,
Toni. Snolerly seeing to Liri very mut%
cast down to-de,y.
Jack. No wonder, Ele asked old'
Grumley for hie daughter's band in
ear.riaege int night.
`loria. Well?
Jaek, rtarrumley itees on the entre
floor, yeti. know.
helping to consoli.d..tEc the .tiMpire
thcl near future are those
are projected os are being hail(1
ehe vat -Ione Colonies 'and dependencies
lines to di,s tribute and colleen ,to con
necit Provindes and feed harbOES.' -
"We oughteartaiely to join all the,'
horce of enre (411,,,Jora's doutlnioris by
Cern oabbes compl,ately cmILT011ed by
1.3ritish authority,. ..1.`o rely upon coif
t1
rlielc'o07f.4'11`h t bee] eLgIvr4:111)1/t ,s0,v'elltre w• sni r tecahbtinP'
A lideOgiala 0011101-ir
Mr. W. it. Wylie, 57 Sexton S,troeli,
Toronto; statree neharly litele grand-
amid...hod isertfered eyeth a naeliy, haole-
Ingeoraself for aliourt 'eight evereilie When
we procured a hottle of Dr. Chaects
Syrup of Liniereed and Turpentine.
Atter the firrat doee She , called it
rherney" and was eager for <medicine
time, to come around. I can ;limply
tee/be that enert of one bottle cared
her end dlus ie new well and; as bright'
elee, cricket,
retilOtaQielle:
r
Wm. Dare -ideate Andreave
Quet• sitat,es '---"Dr, r.:these's' eeyeup' 61 ''
Limeertd: and..Tetreentinahae cured ens
61 bromeiluds, I tha,:ve, ,without
beim, tried. many ' for 'the pa p
eix yeaers. Last. winter NV11871 .1 Jera.d
ereiverreircittricrle and wa,e reelable to e
eveyele''l proenred a torten) of i/r.
cerese foraltra t'earshiniteen r.howehe
rrienidlyir er- to .the.,endS: .9'
ranee Sentient nerves of the. .liseipiea
o .0U -tette' upon shores whieh. mighttte
csaibly- rrbeeireino-,,tearr.niieenyea tectintarY4
"dangerons. rebie panne ref ireekleaSt
ems, then' parent .,r,Of
ielilheholy'ipatailee',oe.'Myrraeritting.
Chase's Syrup of 'Linseed and Tarpon- ee
thirr(1 bottlermW
a de rM3 a, 311 man." f
aced silence whea ive could. not even*
u
eommnteate direel Iv with our oevn'
navel officers 12: ,ert kit, or with '
cia beyond Shenehni, allhougheeve
have iur our poeeeesion it place, of ar
Wei-hai-Wei. UPOti tht Gut f7
Peciurle"
aine and ,brappy to .eta,te. that the tr
eted front these dteadieli'intoae:alS'et
only 'necessary for us to reenextelfelie
he Pekin catasteeetheenhow we,srui-
Dr. Chase's Syrup of LillSee d
ac.otleetas tavern() reneedy for Croup, Bronchitith
Golds, 25 con ta A bot tle ram icy eize con -)iii
i
s nauctle, 60ctia At all dealers. or 1.(13..toiniseit, rt
1,13;
tli
Iglis a nd
it 'Urge times
Co., Toroh
a
,„
111