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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1901-3-21, Page 2Th IS A LOVING FATHER Rev. Dr. Talmage Tells of His Great Mercies. 'A despatch from Washington sayS:: tiler to" leap into the middle of the -ReV. De, Talmage preached from tbelawl',,gilhAl'aY. if his. child. be,. there amtl„ f °Ho, wing text When. lie' was yet a 1i1m. ,(11.e,t1seilgov° reat way off his father saw himand than it takes our heavenly fathee to has compassion, and an and fell on his nook and kissed him -St. '1 ..1,.. xv. spring to the deliverance of O. lost thild. 'When. lib was e great way 20, off hie father saw laim." A.riel. this brings me to notice the ve oftea described to you the ge- father's haste. The Bible says he ing away of this prodigal sou from his tatheree house ancl I have .howed You what a hard lime he had down in ran. No wander. Ile did.n't know but that the young •man would change his mind end go baek. He didn't know but that he would drop t e wilderness, and what a very clown froxo exhaustion. He didn't great mistake it was for' him Axil leave know but somethinit fatal might over • beautiful a home for such a mis- tftke him before he got UP to the father ran' ilio erable desert. But he did not •al- sal, 'lad, s° th's'•ilio rba' ways stay in the wildernesS; he came ,GBeella jotsreilic kIlietg.X11°'3t 11110 1,)'''71O' tw smileknachshf lp back after a w.hile. We don't reed a man does want vhen h tries to that hist mother came to greet him: become a Christian. Indeed the pee- 4t719-alee3:uhtoiltida3.tonis ewaYljar=stLilreise sUPPese she was dead. She would have heeni the first to emale out.. The one comes to meet him he had better, fa.ther \vould have given the 'second have staid by the swine -trough chew- kis.s to the returning prodigal; the Ing the carobs of the desert: When mother .the first. rt, may have been thecomes in. at full tide -you might • for the' -lack of her example and Pray - ewe that he 'oeeame a prodigal. Some- times the father does not know how to manage: the children of ..the house- hold; the chiel' wo,k collies upon tlie mother. Indeed, no one ever gets over the calamity of losing a mother in early, life. Still, this young man was not' ungreeted when he came baek. Howeverr well appareled \ve maS be in the morning, when, \ye start cut on a journey, before night, what ,with the <lust and the jostling, we have 1:st all cleverness oi appearance. But this prodigal, when he started from his swine trough, was ragged and \wretched, and his appearance atter lae had gone through days of RUN ON BIBLE PRINCIPLES' ITHE SUNDAY SCIDIOOL 3 orton Itun4 ins, Store am lie Valium ".,.....,, Ike Saviour Would. ' INTERNATIONAL LESSON, gIAR. 24. Conducting his husinesS as lie thinks the Saviour would, is what 'A. F. Nor- *Jesus cruemett ,aud iturietk” Luke 03. to, grocer, of INIarion, Ind., is trYieg 44-33. Golden' Text, 1. Cur. O. 3, to 4o. (When he werit to Marion a P1;101ICAL NOTES. 'year age he anneunced that his gre- VorSe 44. It WaS about the eixth eery and meat uzarltet would be con- hour. , Mark says it waS, the third ducted on the lines laid down by the hour when they began to crucify him, Rey. Charles M. Sheldon in his ram- that is, nine o'clock by Our reckoning; ous book, "In His Steps." In a year the, time • of the Morning sacrifice: he had built up a trade that in the 'Anti:hew, Mark, 0.,ad Luke agree in ordinary couree of events would have the Lents that they mention for tlie taken niany Years to 0.„COOMpliS11. different events of the crucifixion, ilie believes in the honesty of the John. seems to diffe,r, bnit it i now averag.e Man: and for this reason his genorallkunderStood that jOhn adopts customers are allowed to choose their the Roman method of :reckoning, and pirre.hases for themselves', no elork,be- not the -Jewish, which harmonizes hi3 lug in -ter to keep a watchful' eye on' hours with that of the other, orange-. their naovements. 'IIe buys all , his. lists. The, ,Icevs; counted f.riorm; .sun - goods for spot cash, and 'sells on the rise, so that the third hour was abOUt1 same basis, no hooks being kept, Which /nue in the, morning, the sixth abiou he claims to find peofitable. The 'stock twelve, the ninth about three, and the isi selected by Mr...Norton with a view twelfth about six. The Roman to qualitY,. nothing going into the ookmted. front midnight to noon, all store which his 0.1\91 faMilY WOUra not frcan nloton to midnight, aS we do, o use. (Travellers say that, he is a. yery shrewd buyer, and that dcsPito • his rather a4 III"' taught us to 42°' °u •well-known generosity, he 'will not Lord then -wee crucified at nine o'cloc sulanalt to exorbitant prices, but will and remained six' hours on the cros close the interview. at once, saying There wa.4 a da,rkites over, all th that he buys for the interest.' of his earth until the ninth hour. A: .pre 'customers, and that the man who more easily with your broona sWeeP.i w°ultt trx. to I°Ileat timm is d'sh°n" back the surges than you could. dan...10 ' eSL t . Mr. Norton has never used, licpior IxtrIa0usk arthe'ess,1000,flesa.n .\0vrha'°tIlarre u\nre..°Igi'41?1 or tobaeco. Ha believes them to be harmful in their results and will not 'Are we to fight the battle alone and trudg.e on with no one to ai,i,ns and handle them in his business', claim- ing that •a Christian's duty is not to no rook to shelter us and no word' of encouragement to oheer us. Glory 05-{1 a habit which is be to God we have in.the text the an- ,VICIOUS AND DIRTY. , nouncement; "Whe,n he was yet a' great way off his father ran." Wherf the sinner st.a:rtS for Go:], God starts for the sinner. God does not come out with a slow and. hesitating paco; cosJ.t of $2,500 a, year, which would the eefinite spaces slip beneath his have to come- out of the pockets of feet and he takes worlds at abound. the customers. Mr. Norton sells, his "The, father ran I" goods at as slept' a margin of profit I remark upoca the father's kis.S. as possible, calculating,' on just enough "'He fen on- his neck," ray text says, to keep himself' and f,amily. For this The father reason be is able to sell ;much cheaper journeying and, exposure, you can "and- he kissed him." charged hem with none of his wand- than his competitors. thereby, aiding more easily imagine than de -scribe. AS erin g s; II , just reeeirej. him, his customers in their efforts. to be >the people see the prodigal conaing'on• economical. lioniewa.rd, they wonder who he is. HE JUT KISSED HI.M. Mr. Norton's store is: in the centre They say: "I wonder what prison was a rccommen- of the business. portion of the city, he has broken out of. I wonder what His wretehed-nes lazaretto he has escaped from. I ciati.°'u to that father's love. Oh, and he employs about 25 clerks. These wonder with what plague h ,_iii that father's' kiss! How shall ride- h,e pays off every night, starting • • thoughscribs- the lave of Goa? oh, this love. afresh each morning. He thinks they smite the air." He looks as he were intent upon something very Don't you believe it.7 Has he not done are entitled to it, and, that he has no everything to make you think so 1 He right to hold it till the end of the important. The people. stop; they , ,look all him ; they wonder where he ,,nas given Yon life, health, friends, week. He will not carry any insnr- tyour hands, the amen because he thinks that to offer came from; they wonder where be is n'onie the use of the hearing of a /nen compensation when his house • going. I.think the people all a4ound sight of your eYe, ...were amazed. They said: "It is,only Tour ;ear ; He has strewn your Path or store burns down is encouraging O feot-ead : it is only an old tramp with mercies he has fed you, clothed that man to be careless and les.s'atterf- , of the road; don't go out to meet you, sheltered you, defend.e.c1 you, I9v- tive to his business. ed you, importuned Toil, all your life Mr. Norton was brought up a Wes - THE FATHER KNENNT BETTER. long. Don't -you. believe he loves You, leyan Methodist, but belongs to no sons. They are the, first words of 011, this father's kiss! There is so church, believing that there should The change in the son's aloe much meaning and love and compas- not be a divi.sion, such' as is represent- P.sa. 22. There is an; old Jewish sous- pearance- could not hide the sion in it -se much Pardon in it -SO ed by the different denominations. in, tom which has turned this p.Salm into marks by which the father knew 1 , much heaven in it. I prcclaini him the the churches. He is tifty-four ;years a death song of the orthodox Hebrews -the boy. You know that persons LA.11 over the world Jews in dying of , Lord God merciful and gracious, long- of age and has travelled extensively. a great deal of independenee of char- ; suffering and abundant in goodness' The principlee which he practiees he strive to repeat this psalm. This ;leiter are apt to indicate it in their and truth. Le.st you would not be- owes to his father, who inculcated the , does not preclude the statement that . , \\ a . For that reason the sailor al- iieve, him, he goes up Golgotha, and , ideas of socialism and jueticeintc; the !O. -ere was a special application off the most always has a peculiar step, not :while the rocks are rending and the1 minds of all his children. - ' words in dar Lord's cage; but it should only because he. stands muck on ship- 'graves are opening and the mobs are' make ' reverent students go s.lorw in board, amid the rocking of the sea, howling and the tun is hiding he dies their discussions of the sense in which and he has to balance himself, hut he for you, see him. Se.e him on the it could be said that Gd d had forsak- has for the most part an independ- i mount of Crucifixion, the sweat on en hinn The other reaso'n which is ent character, which would show it- his brow tinged Ivith. the blood ex- KILLED BY A POISONED ARROW. of .special interest i% that the word's eielf even if he never went on the uding from his lacerated temples. See are Syrian. • That• was the lang,uage 6---; sea, and we know what transpired at-. 'his eyes swimming- in death. Hear the ia which out. Lord's earliest thoughts i:he Fatal •Aceeptance of a Native's . t2isallet4m. On November 29 last the Hon. David A FLYING TORPEDO. A Remarkable SelfdProttolied l'roJeetile of 11 Svredisit entor. aVlajOIT (Inge of the Swedish Army has spent several years jai ptufecting a torpedo for his Government, and many tx•ials of his inventions have been made during the past few years Swed- ish tItheo3'Pal°vAilll'igingeIrYttalctisleafrtmht3a. SrwRede-- cently the Government made him a grant cut of the' revenue of the State to enable him to make trials 01 hi' the they arc loyal, though some of latest form of aelf-nto,ving torpedoes, intended to carry large charges of high explosives for considerable dis- tances- thr 00411 the air. NATIVES REMAIN LOYAL riEv. NOFFATT MISSIONARY‘ DISCUSSES. THE SUBJECT. • south Amelia Natives Are itovers of Justie -iVell Treated by tiritisitt ,ll'ito 'Used . lihn Elite a Man anti Broke for Ulm *Ito Chains. oi Slavery. E Aloffett the well known African Missionary, in a letter to the London Daily Mail, epealts of tlafi n.atives of South A,itriea. eaysl them \Ylio lived emone, the Boers to save theinselveS, their families and possessions, nmy have seemed to side The object of these experiments is • with the iBs°ea'a ss.i.Z.ain of faithful loY to determine the acouracY of aim at- alty in the Bantu character wlaioh effects of fthteheeXextip'elTslonra.11igeThaenede tehxe- Zinati.c:y.bo says the 314 pPrexesimereuenetsofalaorttilletrey eeefrifictcuol,e'steadPiPn°i'Lnhte- tihsaat tibacatl;ai'sstbmigt'ljaogriTtYabolfe Moun- ed by the Inspector of A.rtillery. The 4 orpeda itself is like an elongat- ed shell in general appearance- and is propelled through the air entirely by a. succession of impulses Produced o• riginal and. the colored races are on the British, side in. sentirn.ent during • • the atruggle )vhich has been going on, for a year and a Mar. 13y ,the Ivithrn th,e torpedo, resultin,g from ored. race I mean, the mixed people in $33:, Pthroe'ducigninitgio?n01 compoasiltsile°17;' ba'11"1-hlieng gases gas- 'bt he ge inentligle*'wai sf u° l -ebtime tl liberated gradually increase pres- sure and produce neetion‘by their es- Lets awl. the imPx'ted ah°rigiaes rut, cape through the passages of tur- to the almost white, lyhose father0, e bine placed at'the base of the torpedo. whatever their motives may have ternaleu'al darknese, not an °clips Nrilleh 00111d n,ot take place at the. full naoon. Whether or not this dark- ness was) confined. to Judea, we • can . • . • only conjecture. 45. The $1.111 was darkened. "The sun's light failing." The veil of the temple was rent in the midst. "From the tap to the bottom," says Mark The curtain of the sanctuary. I 'hung between the.holy place and th holy ott' It was a symbol o the inability of hunaanity to approac God except by rneans of the priest Only once a year dicl the high priest v-enture to. lift its coirne,r o.nd enter its holiest pla.ce. No one elge had lawfully seen its interior. The veil in its sanctity wag 133.13{1:e prohibitive than. ca,ees of troth hung on doorposts of stone and bolted with bras g and steel. Its being sUpernaturally torn was a, sign that every human soul could iadwf collie into eloae relation with God the Father. 46. Jesus .had cried` with a loud voice. "Two word' or "senteenceSe" "Eli, Eli, laanasabachthani?" Matt. 27. 46, and "It ia finished," John 19. 39. The words in the Syriac tongn% though not given in our lesson, are Of special interest toug for two rea- Customers must carry home their pur- clmses, for no delivery waggons are kept in connection with the estab- lishment. This would entail an extra Ihe inc.rea,se of velocity, the increase of pressure of ,the gas, is, of coarse, very gradual', consequently, as there is n,o1 shock, it can be charg- ed even with very sensitive hign ex- . plosives. Having its source of motion within itself the torpedo need not be of great mass to overcome the resistance of • the air, and so most of its weight t can be utilized to carry explosive. The e torpedo explodes on striking. f ht turbine causes the projectile to rota ' • te about its longer axis and thus " insures steadyness and accuracy in the missionary, 'our Zulus have sat S. flight. As soon as the torpedo has still, OT might ha.ve been seen peace -1 sl acquired a certain. rapidity a rota- fully dkiving their plou :es within' been, were Dutch or English." • Mir. 1VIoffatt points out that the nal - tire remembers that the British broke the chains of slavery; that the Boers ha PC reduced them to the lower extremity of human. existence; that the British have given. high wages in! johannesburg and. many other proofs of ,faiendlinees. ZULUS I3DkCEFUL'. "In Natal and. in Zululand, with al, population of Bantu outnumbering the -white pe.eple by ten to one," says, tion a special apparatus, which ef- sound of the guns- round Ladysna(ith4 fects the explosion of the charge on giving us no triouble, simply doing striking-, conae.s, into play au.tomatical- what we told, them to do. ly by the centrifugal force of rota- "The Beclanana. tribes all along the±1011. ' western. border, of the Transvaal The torpedo is fired out of a light have been loyal to us, though inanyi! and simple, tube, which - serves the of them, suffered the loss; of their, purpose, merely giving it the desired stock, which we could. not defend for direction and elevation and is con- them. Further north a message wad sequently cheap, and easy to teens- sent to the well known chief Khania; port. 'We don't want to interfere with you,1 Tbe torpedoes thus far tested con- but we want to come and rout out the tained about six pound,s, of explosive E,,nglish in your country,' The ans- and had a range of about 5,000 yards, weir was: 'If -you cross! the Crocodile, but it is claimed that the larger tor- River, we will speak to you with our, pedoes, carrying about 330 Pounds of rifles.' All these, tribes of the Bantu explosive, will attain a range of 10,- race., millions of men, have helped. us, .000 yards. • not by taking part in the conflict - This weapen, according rto the re- that'we could not allow them to do- hnt by keeping quiet in obcdienc.:e to port of the Swedish Artillery Conamis- sion, may pr.ove of great value in ver- tical fire, 'particularly in attack.ing fortified places and aiming at objects . placed behind defensive works and in coast defence. Moreover, wherever the nature of the country makes the tra.nsportation of ordinary artiller APPRECIATE .1TISTICE. "The native of South Africa knowl; what justice is, and keenly appreci- ates .it: He is able to discrimin.ated Long experience has told. him. that u1 - practically impossible this weapon on on the whole the Briton is just ,to all ial will also come into play, since even. Granted that we often trample our,' men,'and reckons hira as a inan too,' account of the lightness' of its meter - the largest forms of it are easily own. ideal under foot; .granted tfhat." .tx,ansporri,o hty Lana or water. ,_ our national record. is s.tainedwithl •. • many a deed of _aggression; granted, that many of our people are brutal,' that just as cruel things have loce,ne done by individual Britons as by in- terward and from what transpired loud breathing of the .sufferer as he . . were uttered in his boyhood's home. dividual Boers; the native knOws that, before that than prodigal son was of pants with a world on his heart. He gave up the gh6st. He dismissed but he has leann.ed. that behind the an independent and frank nature, Hark to the fall of brood. from brow his spiri. Died 41 his oh n will Briton there is what there was not and I suppose that the charaeteris- ' and hand and foot on .the rock be- •47. When the centurion Sawwhat d th behind BOll Boer of the Transvaa-al ' tics of his mind and heart Nvere the neath-drop drop drop.' look at the great Power, dim, indefinite but yet was ,done, he glorified God, saying, real, and making itself felt -the pow - Certainly this was a righteous man. GOOD ROADS AT EATON HALL. Carnegie, being at that time Assist- ant -Resident at I,okaja, North Ni - characteristics of his Nyalk. And so 'nails ! flow wide the wounds are - the father knew hi.m. He puts out ; wider do they gape as his body comes gerbe was slain by a poisoned arrow, his withered arms toward him. Ha down upon them- Oh, thi$ crucifixion but the story of how Tie met his death brings his wrinkled- face against the, ageny. Tears naelting into tears; blood at the call of duty has now only just Pale cheek of hiS son. He kisses the` flowing into blood; darkness dropping reached home. wan lips. He thanks God that the to darkness; hands of men joined with long agony is over. " When he was ' the band $ of devils to tear apart the Information came to Lokaja tha.t yet a great way off his father saw quivering heart of the Son of God I the people of Ta.ivari. behind Koto him, and had compassion, and ran and Oh, will he never speak again? Will Karifi. opposite the town of Susso fell on his, neck and kissed him." that crimson face ever light lin again? Kusso on the banks of the Niger, . . 1 -IE WILL f -PEAK AGAIN, had possessed themselves of rifles. In the first, place, I notice in this text, the father'a eyesight; in the sec - mad place, I notice the father's haste; 1 while the blood is suffusing his brow ...iThither, with a.n escort of ten men, and in the third place, I notice the and reddening bis cheek and gather- 5.-cting, Carnegie went to Seize them. English Estate Affords a Model, In High, TV a COILS tructIon: . • r The roads of Eaton Hall are the fin- est in England. and pa'obably tile best in. the world-'oif their kind,' says' .a. er Which insisted upon justie,e to eve That the Boman officer who Super- ery in,an, the pdwer which to the na- tive raineldwelt in the 'Inkosikazi,' ' `IVIolaumagadi,' the 'Great Lady' whose passing away has awakened a eolero.as, naournful echo in the remot- est native kraal up the very banks' of the Zambesi river." . vesed the crucifixion -should be so 'im- pressed by the snverrminrai eiroirotn_ London correspondent. • They were ments would deeply impress all who laid. out by noted engineers, and ma - read the gospel. The loud tory Mame- ca.dara, gravel and clay were used in diately followed bY death, and the their. construction. They rouge from word then spoken by our Lord struck the centurion as peculiarly marvel- 5°t° 100feet in Width andare so well ous, interpreting the other awful cir- cumatances of the crucifixion. He saw in 014T Lord's sufferings and the wonders attending them, proofs of a' divine and superhuman power. father's kiss. I ing ori nostril' and lip and YOU think He bad accomplished his work, and .48. All the people that camp togeth- . rrO begin: The father's eye -sight. , he is exhausted and cannot speak; he had returned to the river bank, when er to: that sight. The crowds that "When he was, Vet a great way off cries out until all the ages hear him: the chief Dangara, who was away at were ever ready'to.watch capital pun - hie father saw him." I don't know 1" Father forgive them, they know not the mime the rifles. were seized, sent ishment. just such crowds would as_ whether he could see well that which ' -what they do 1" word to say that he, Carnegie, would aemble to -day, but our laws compel is near by, bu:t I do know that he Now will yen accept that Father's not have dared to do what he had capital punishment to be adrainist er- could see a great way off. " His kiss? The Holy Spirit asks You to. ,done had he beer. I here at the time, ed in Private. Smote their breasts. In father saw hire." Perhaps he had been The Holy Spirit comes to you this This was a challenge which, for the accordance with oriental demonetra- looking for the return of that boy morning, with hie arousing, melting5 sake of policy, it was not well to don. Smiting the bre•ast was the pen - especially that day. I don't know but alarming, inviting vivifying Milli- disregard, and Carnegie and his lit- itent act of the Publican in -the Par- -that he had been in Prayer and .that enee. Don't you think the is here? 1 tie band turned back. At the town able. " This beginning of fear and God had tOld him that that day the re- siee it in these solemn looks; I see it! i t , Da,ga r a and hi people t upon Sorrow," writes Dr. Jones, " may 'have creant boy would come home. 1 in these tearful eyes; I see it in these 1 ihem, and Carnegie fell with a poison- become wiLh many of themea repent- "-, wonder if God's eyesight can des- blanched checks; T see it in the 119- ed arrow through his thigh. Beath a,nce unto life after the day of Pente- cry us when we are coming back to turned face of elaildhood and the earn- came within ten minutes. eost.,, Returned. To the city. ' him 1 The text pictures our condition eat gaz:.‘ of old age. I now it from I ...-we are a great way off. That this silence like the grave. The Holy I Wii-h. 'Creat bra.verY the Jittle es" 40. A11 his acquaintance. His friends , ea/ kept . e na Ives off. and, with- and associates young man was not farther off from Ghost. is here, and while I speak thelout further loss, brought his body lowed him frona Galilee. Not only the his father's house, sin is not farther chains of captives are falling, and the The women that fol- • 1 ' hack t° Lekain: ' ' ' certain women of :wealth and social off from holiness, hell is no farther 1 dungeons of sin are opening, alai the A Punitive- expedition set out for eminence ontributed to his prosper_ 1 from heaven --than we heve been by , prodigals coming arid the fathers run- , , Millar' under Captain Cubit., After ity, but there aro many indications ‘.,four sins away from ' God ; aye, eo ' ni-n•S': ll -r-'1, Cir -ii -‘11§ aYe V-)-°-1.1.IJP-Ci all" de"' some delay it reached the town only that Nvonnep followed in his traill a9 ar off that 'we c°,1AId n°.1.-1 ben?: :hiq, y are tier/awing. k_ia - is a. inounni , to lino -,,. empty.- , 'it( isciv ^/9. 17 ice though vehemently he has call- tons hour. It is charged ' -with eternal , - - e°d us year after year. I don't knew destinies. Tile shadows of the cier- Mr Carnegie who was the younger i., ,A-, eu5.1 e na 1 e e 1 e eon 0.1 the Ear). of `Southesk, was a se""Cor. . Hie Wasatencue-oesn'Phaj'emabeeeri.i.nof- the. Sanhe.drin and a dig,-.inie of ,Ts - us,. , 51. The same had not consented to the counsel and deed. He and Nico- demus May not have been notified of the meeting- of the Sanhedrin, but as _what bad habits yen may have form- nal world flit ever this assemblage. ngneallV ed or ill what evil places you have Hark 1 .I hear the. songs of the saved yanoud5howed NhhrOulitharladat picohLeviseed much been or what false notions you may -I hear the howling: of thedamned. He had travelled far across the West have entertained; but you are ready Heaven andhell Neem tomingle an,d Australian wastes, through the great to acknowledge, if your heart has not eternity poises on the pivot of this Victoria and the' treat Sandy Deserts, been clanged by the grace of God hour. ThY destinY is being decided, narrowly escaping death from thirst that yoa are a great way off, aye, ,thy doom as being- fixed. several times. He had mapped cut So far that you cannot get back of • yourselves. You would like to come back. Aye, this moment you would JUST CAUSE FOR COMPLAINT. • Start if it were not for this sin and that habit and thia disadvantage. But I am to tell you of THE FATHER'S EYE -SIGHT. "He saw him a great way off." He has seen all your frailties, all your etruggles, all your disadvantag,es, Ile liae been longing for your coining. He has not been ineking at you with or.itic'S eye or a bailiff's eye, but with O Father's eye, prixl if a parent ever pitied a child, God pities you. You Say:. "Oli, X jia,ci so many evil Sur- roundings when I started Your Father sees it. You say, "I have so many had surroundings now, and it is very difficult for ine to break away frorn evil 'drained that water .eannot stand up- on the surface, as the top is; composed of macadam 'rolled into a compact mass by, the pressure of 20-tou ma- chines opera,ted by steam power. One can go for miles without seeing a 'epee stone the size of a horse chest- nut. Even in parts of the estate given up to the game preserves the highways are'as good.' ag those direct- ly around' the hall itself. After ;the system of roads was com- pleted. invitations -were sent to pub- lic officials in all parts of the king- dom to visit the estate with a view of educating then in road building - ' The visitors came by the hundred and were entertained at the owner's expense. • Annually people inteeested in road making visit Eaton Hall from various portions of Europe. NO OTHER, 'USE FOR IT. 'A woman came to the docir. ; 1What do you \want ? she demand- , . ed br wean ely. I-er-that is, stammered the Stork, 'blushing with the utmost violence, I had it in mind- , • • 1 NVell, you're too homely to trim hats with 1 ex.claimed the woman and shut the door., , CONFLICT OF ALITI1011TIY. How quiet uncle is -this morning! 11 YOs, his cornS and his rheumatism °don't indicate the name kind of. wea.. tiler ! ,Gives Rise to Painful and' Fatal, Complicaw - - . much unexplored landand d a -rite we have.aiready noted there are indi- ,tlont---The. Liver and kidneys Respon, ton the beek " Spinifcx and sand," cations in the ,gospel narrative that , ha sibie for .tho.PrOsenta of This Poison. the record of his expedition of 1836-9i. ihere was a very vigorous def oufor or • Mrs, Wiggles -I always said that He had worked, too, .as a digg`u,' and Jesus' and 00.6 might '="1-1PP°se that tion 15 dovreeracdrf'llowl driensgultofofthinedligive:r- hilleelpktihdnerenYtetinopuornaursii.11yalteoffroermt'ova:dtb: the Brownsuns were m,eah people. a miner. Joseph and Nicodemus \yore this ,le- • . , , fenee. Waited for tho kingdom of bY crowdmg onto it the mass of un-, exce6s of uric acid. I)r. Chase's Kb) - now? Wiegl s What have they done In Nigeria, wherc he had been but digested food. Failing to do its work', nay -Liver Pills strengthen both the „„,„? ' e - a Riled, Ivhile at: the time of his death God. Planing their hives, Nvith regard undo; thee eenditieps there is (left in , liver and kidne s 013y their invirrer- --- "-- - li, love and °Teat respect' yes( esdity, and they had three of those 1\11rs• wiggleS-WhY' they ul°ved he Inv(In illuc' " ' ter)2t.1113 helesinnianagn 0vVrenthuni\loe'ssi:illa. e, an the kidneys can possibly remoVe. ' to do its duty ilerfectiy, and so removo ,., . t t Pi t a the system more ,nric acid poison , an a ing.effect on the liver they enable it large covered moving vans, so that begged the hedY of Jesus ° A hold The outconae of this state of affairs the cause of u * 'd, - t the same all you. could see, of their furniture deed- thu"' to defy Public' opinions' and is the formatian of uric acid stones time they tone the kielrioys and an-. was the ()Pinion of his, fellow - was while it WaS being carried from, in the kidneys a,nd bladder, a most the front door to tlia cart. counselors. • excruciating, and even dreadfully f,atal 113; Took it down. Armed with tile ailment. q SAVE,'..CY OF CONVEYANCES. RailAvays, automobiles and bicycles are .,tsafer conveyances than vehicles drawn by horses, according to statis- .tics just issued by the French Gov- ernment. In a single naorith 967 ac- cidentS occurred for which horses were responsible, and in these 82 per- Lord's body wa,s 110'W wrapped in waS small of the back. bladder. Dr. Chaee was the first td governor's warrant, lie drew out the iAn early and marked indicatien of 'PERFECTLY NATLTRAT., nails, and reverently lowered his i'vras-' the presence of uric'acidin the blood Stranger -They tell me this is a very healthy country; not, many ante° from the centurion that Jesus elly by pain or irregularity, in urinat- dea,ths here. Cow -bey -Well, Bronco Fete died last WOOk. Pil- Id's body in his own sepulcher. I al- Is a (leposit, similar to brick dust in '(ite only .gave (be permit after a guar- the urine. This is accompanied iisu- liven thein in their task of removing this. poison from the 134.,dy. No treatment Avast ever so suecessf0 ale Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills in correcting derangements of the kid-. ney,s and litter, and so avoiding the de. posits of uric acid, which' cause rhea - as dead. line linen such as the Eng and weal-ne-s or aching in the inatistn or stone in the kidneys and assoclatiOns." Your liather sees sons were ltilled and 885 injuredd a luxury. He took him down from the The cause of uric acid is a derang- eonceive of a combine* trsatment act, - and, if this mo meal t you should. stra I but ih.at wasu,,t a There were 145 rail \vay a ecid en Ls, er0,554 the essistarice of Nie.odo- ed iv , which, fails .o con_vert rig at once on both tile great ilter heaven1;rard as pray you irmly 4 causing eight deaths and injuries to mus, and probr.ibly of other disc]ples,.ige,sted food into urea, teerrrianent nig systems of the holly and the sue., your ,Father would not sit icily clown ii 11511 d"illi137 personsTin rty-elg It auto:11.0J,11 101)) %s as in -a garden near the, rare oan on.)Y be offected by a treat- cens of his prescription, Dr. C ase ( 'arid allow you to struieon,up, to- ' Cowhoy"'Whatl Lamm() toll yer, bilas caroe to grief, and two de 11115' Place of the Crucifixion, and had beenr.ient f3A.Ich' RH. Dr. (lhase's Kidney -Liv- Kidriey-Liver Pills, has been plienorni • ward, him.. Oh, no! Sexier, you a inister when a feller'er ketehed steal- arid. 36 Injured. reStilted. BicycliSts int.enthed by icropli for his own fain- yr Prlls which act dirc(,tly en both the, enal. One, pill a dose, 95 ieents 0 box gem t way off, ho would fly to the in' hoss there cbtildn't nothite hap- lia.d i.19 13ad'accidenrn, six died arid 1 13; ily; ThilS wae he with the rich in liver and lcidneYs. , '=11 dealers, or ri*ladansco4. Bate4 rescuo, long does_ 11 take a fa- pen to triere natural than deattb, were wounded. ,• death. F.ce ISa, 53.9. Alere kid eel, roinediea only stiraulate '..reronto4 '