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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1922-11-2, Page 6Metry A, P. Steirx$1rteiry AR PRtroples on k med nose y our nen iotche "God 'brieses you forever,. Margaret! fen- a NVI'ltk,' Let it come to him tenc ‹.1-1.1.t. QT. your monieeies of me Fenn: few' remain height and tratereisliet, is - Iflisteeie eid town, Xee r. gr, ee,, -e-rerdend day, lraiity tie otherwiee beettliftd, end ate Fral.1„1141,1112 as he ean bar it, through etaffed, evaiteA, the morrow's roasting* to woo, only te, eent gently away, ' • -1111'-eY'si ri good mancome It ea/fie nizirred by pine- 1-11 1,1•411oh te) ask thee you. share plee aziti other skie tronblee which EXE WItil MY bOY ? sextet"' with 'elay before Thanieseiving -with stare-----theee lead dee sn p -1,r e klyx y '11 • sleekly More tban Ill°11116 oX PliurVudding and loaves Oi nrer irr!rIrther and 111°I•her ibeir-ll were 'is.11.6'"i6' iwb.°11Y bsr lei)i4e,-- -ere's,- 'ease i, tee Knalfehour leter the eri'll•-(er 6:;ea . o the wings of the lightning: 1 A blood Proundeake rip ned sn closely ecivered e•onts, For onee she let herself drop. Irliarq a (4•-aet's i ' Tt d c $ alid ilaIty 4iince and pumpkin pies the roseate glueees of her ereuregemee, Toad ot hoallin herr° -11-lair uric -`11T1 .,°ii,"Ile is here and :safe. I iseve him - toad in 00.01in.ty, rows on pantry plifiesephy and see the forward ea, their attrraL4:"ell'es4 l'()'5t) a ITki taP Ile is my thanksgevieg to Qed—•and i lablea/ Snare e•rris Ism" been aired -stretch of her life as it might besioree, posseesor of the "pimply face" roue- yen, yeu had my lergiveneee long and <tested, and beats freehly dreereed a gra Y <Ina lonesome road wit•h, in the ered ualiappy mid in many casee cal- ago without the asking, as you now in lavender scented linen la prepare- far dia,-tenee, a lagging, solitary figure,berrassed. have iny love. MARGARET." lion for the home gathering of exile Plodding towad. rthe end, There le au effectual reneoar -for Before the glowing grate that Meat, Rivertoniane, 1 1111•014 sound of rattling wheels cheek- these faciel defects/ arra that lE with the leaping liehre aid shadow - . OirlY in the old Colonial bowie gw- eil at her owu gate re:cal:led her to tale 35D1111°°B.• BLOOD BITTBBS PlaYing ullion her Ida1d:nezzt fare, Ma -Ci -1 garret- umixeseed the olsild, bathing the lug Upon the village severe-. where present, Qld Mr. Silae Goedwin, the It axivee ont all the impurities from. Margaret Wynne lived eesth a single everessal.4111, was clambering from hie the blood arta leavos the comPlotrion• tendee little body, and robing it iri E. latithfai serving woman, disappoint- wagem slowly, with due 5ogi:1rd for his deer an healthy, go-wn of eat -white. meet gat an imbidszlen gueen IVIergaret rheumatic knees, He lifted the leiteh- Miss Norale Sharp, Glenhore, Man., "My Auntie Margaret." lead no neer relatives and he fanailY infers weight from its place in the box writes... --4 1 T suif °red for some tiMQ -yes, darling." of diet -ant, cousins whom she hod exs1, and deposited it earefially or the with -pimples , aua blotehe$ ou say face, "-I had a birthda jnet before I came. had: -been, eennhezeee et the feet mos the lei,gla seat, he litfted clown a very wirdeb -••?--aase-edTelP..issoll'huan1teldilsa11 C'')Ie'oed°a'io/1‘16111-s- Is'Innflii; seaMe neliYitgoile'vnIthfat'k—I thhirn'ird pected to partake of he hospitality ei email, then stretehing hie arzne to when Ie wyeaaisrsifoouri.a,rtIt• eoitiliYonl,nti an , list . . w k TilEat, to recall their acieeptance of her little oey, invitation. It was now too late to Smitten with a tremulous wonder, eeplaee them hy other vielters. Margaret rose, and passing quickly One des' 1 heard abut Burdock -Blood rkr Dittere, oud it ltas, relleVed me of both -would be Mgr enough, would you • the headacee$ and pimp e . B. B, is rnaneftietured only by The T. Milburn Co,, Limited Toronto, Out. izeefriniag in an enay chair at the:through the hall, opened. the door and ands t I 1 upon a 'rug' her fee•t• and her usually man. had the child by the hand, and tireless bering idle, in 'her lap, an"e heard hihm syTay in an undertone:. "l'he•t's ere sonn. hat's Mies imaccustomeii Mood of depreseion, fell' -upon hex-. Ie was riot often that she 1 IVIarg'ret. library window, her 'Great Dane ended stood upon. the three:hold The e allowed herself excursions into the The bey dropped the guithng- fingers an o and stepped forward with past. That way cleng.er lay. Yet now , th ddun- , eolith a certain deliberation &he' childish dignity. There was no need retrace the perilous track. ldresof the printed tag with name and ad - began to Margaret was tufty thirtyrtwo, with' dress stitched so tightly to his jacket and face at the prime of gus sleeve, for one took had lei -vented. to form a wornansy therm, yet to herselfracioshe Margaret his parentage, The straight seemed already old. She knew—how ehoulder-8, the e-mell, proud head with impase- its glory of blond curls, the delicate welll—ju.st where arose the , able barrier marking the boundary of highbred features the large, broym, - hes last youth She might, indeed,: appealing eyes. gaze beyond it into thre flowery Hugh Vinton Dura.ncl," an- ows a heart's desire, but never againno/armed the child in a sweet, high re/ could she wander there as M the1trelste. "Are you my Auntie Mar- • •• g.'ret," he said, "tim the little feller bes, out o' earshot. Yon know the 9.30 m stops ten minutes fer refreshents and the -conductor he spent most all o' them ininutes a-finclin' out whether I was the proper person TO take charge o' sucih a lively parcel. I had e'en almosst to swear as I'd known you ever since you wa,s knee high. to a graes- h,opper afote hs could fe.el to trust either one of us. IIe never s•ee such a little tacker, he said. All the oldee children as had their mothers along a-gittin• tired and; cross but not a whi She answered with kisses, "My Auntie 1)langaret. 'Favver told me a story every night ee-t if lthow lh-mo (:.s•Qtrii-olgr'hyeicliofito?TinhelleilLtilepleo RYiaeldl Hen?' " • She told it to him. "You tell it almost as weed Pg fey - ver," he eaid Sleepily from among the pillows—"now 1 fink 111 say rny prayer. "God bless fewer and Hugh and make us good. And there's another prayer now. God -bless my Auntie Mar- garet, Amen." Sueldersly-he brightened like stars t shadow "Favver said A would be some kind of clay after I got here to you—I can't '-'Thankegiving Day- ?" care -free Deming- of the world. garet?' out o' this one all day long. "Miss Marg'ret--excuse me"— --- -re--- She had been jut twenty-five when1 Shaken by tumult cf feeling,. Mar- of the invisible authority he had Fertilizinr, Value of Wood t the! Yes, my darling." - might tell you that I don't like the f,yorite title for himeelt during his in art eoeherees practicing agrioul- twirling his hat awkwardlet—"I'm an ri* ,"Alld he said"--styly—"that I V.24. Son of man. This is oui• Lord's "Oh, yesi Fent-mg-lying! And he said prep& there'd ise- a turkey. Is there,?" younger, garet etooped and drew him inside. old man, you know—bus—bygones eyes, beg ene 1.1.1gb Hugh Dueand, four years cluirned. a, . came to spend a summer Riverton.1 rle old man for.owe 1 a '1 e hen' lorgones—You'll keep the little Ashes. at They 'had mutual friends and the gay, feller, won't ye ?-' 1 traveleng beg. tinsophistica red girl -won -am anc "Keep him—Mr. Silas!" clothing of the turkey," septum on meth. "The Son of Man" ture, including Canada, the ashes of handsome, -brilliant boy had been' She sank into a chair and lifted him The wrinkled face broke into smile.e. "The-clothine?" There was a pus- v.'as a Messianic title derived from -weed from time immemorial have thrown much together. From the first to her knee. Somewhere in same pre- "That's an I wanted to know. Good- eled line in Ma'rgaret's forehead. "Oh! Dan- 7: 13- , been hig-hly prized for fertilizing pur- V. 25. Immediately he rose; an Ira- poses especially for clover, grapes., they found their tastes cong-enia1.1 vious existence she eeemed to have day, miss erenverethi I understand. You mean the. drrees- mediate anti com-plete confirmation of fruit trees ancl leafy crops generally, e They liked the same books, enjoyed ,known that this would he, For a fuel While the old man, chieruping to ing!" 'stake, Christie claim, Departed . glorifY- on sandy and. light loam. Indeed. it the same pleasures, shared the same ' minute the boy gazed at her silent/1Y, his horse, drove briskly up the street "Yes, the dreereing! I made a ing God; free froin o. double infirmitY• was only with the advent of the Ger- eassionate love of the woods and his daik eyes searching- her face. Then and, in the pleasant. kitchen, bld didn't I?" ' Do not fan to SCE his companions man Potash salts that the use of wood eept that she was happier th•an ever • "You leek like fewer said, my b, b the h She bent over him wb-le he hid 'his going home also with him, with joy hi ashes fell off, although, in ithie connee- Sarah replenished her lift,' e visAor's "You funnY darling!" fields, Marearet realized nothine ex- ' he breathed deeply. before, until one never-to-beeforg-otten Auntie Me.rgaret," he decided grave- ilie°tter. . their he.arte fon their reward ler their tion, it has to be remembered that the emearet re ,:e ie sea o her day, when Hugh suddenly 'told her lye "I've come to stay with you be- Hiew treMulous / must have 'little laughing face upon her breast, • that he loved her. At the same in- , cause"—he swallowed hard and his stant her own heart was revealed to lip tremibled—"because fayverls side nallair strekes• "Deal' Mariga.ret.," knowing that far away, beside an open1 and they held each other 'close, un - V. 26. They were all amazed. 0. the man and lilts friends Be- peaderetiron of snob. ashes has clecereas- the disraneeassance of the foreets. ed in quantity of late years owing to the been the hanl which made the fa- love and faith and perseverance. her, but she would not let it speak. He has to go a fee essays' to get well— it ran, eif yan -window through w.larch blew the 10- ., --e e_ were lilee other women I must have breath of the Sierras, a man with a tool' stoart•hlelonn1irefulTitaii%14. ,levaletpardoZt, sifes. .46k,.7-ttheserrsle,:ials-ata7tettty,opclotaassihaei:stlirtehs; hut as an elder eister. He was tao him." Again there was a eenivaiaive asked leave to send you my bay. You s'ILP °I Yellem! Pe1' elrasPea tightlYi ix his hand was snein he •iiy, atone. cussing on the way the latest wonder, term of a carbonate, probably She cared for him, of course, she -said,' so far that he can't take erne with hemee you, to wait evouid have been claim.: and the Phartis..eresi cleperbine with meet acceptable forrne for use as a the place in religion which they yerieng to he sure of. his choice. First catch in his threat. fancies,. were never to be trusted. But Margaret's arms tightened about the ardor of the imperious young the little Renee. wooer boree down all her defences.' "Cry, derl•ing, if you want to," she How, splendid be was, 'how irresistible whispered. "Here on. my shoulder." in charm how utterly dear! Asfter "No, no! I mustn't cry --•not ever!" distrust. r 1 heavy feet, muttering o•ver their latest fertilieer. goods unlea.ched,- dry ed for themselves. . "Since Ills mother 'died three years . V.22. J'esusinerceived their theughts, defeat ' ' . wood ashas there may the present from 1 ago, he has never been a night 4 to 6 per cent, of potash, about 2 per from me. It is only to your armsatlhateyt As Jesus had insight m the whole • A smell fix,e •extinguiehecl in the -cent. of pihrosphorrie acid ami from 25 I can yield him now. You will make storY of 'th,e sick man's inner and: un - thoughts so h‘e reed the stable is che9p insurance, • -be 35 per cent. of lime. k lue of woorlashes for fertiliz- departure she yielded, and Hugh ear- said se. Y•ou must shut your teef to. The. Dutch The.ultsgi-ving is on the mg ars deaa E va ks • , weeks of indecision, on the eve of his He -stooks, alines:Jr, in terror. Favvei of him a better rne.n than I 'could hop.e pharisee and scribe 1.1ke open GO t -with rhe Bulletin No 8 of Never neglect 14, cough, or cold how - slight. If you do it can have but one result; it loavee the throat or hmgs, or both, affected. A. siagle dose of Dr. Wood's. Norway Pine Syrup will help to step the cough, soothe tho throat, and if the cough or cold has beeome settled on the lungs the healing virtues of the Norway pine .tree along with the soothing and ex- pectorant properties of other excellent herbs, rootand barks promptly ers.di- Oatee the badeeffects, and tho persisteat use cannot but cense permanent relief. Mr. Geo. P. Gould, St, Mary's, Ont., writes:—"This is to state that 1 have used, your valuable remedy, Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup, aucl found it all that could bo desired to break up bad cold, the kind so many are afflict- ed with, espeeielly dining the Winter: months. It soothes -and heals the respir- atory passages and effectively checks the eold iu a remarkably short time." There are many imitations of "Dr. Wood's" SO be BUTE 0:2213 get the ,gert- uine. Price S5e and. 60c a bottle; put up only by 'Elie T. Milburn Co., Limit- ed, Toronto, Ont. Awkward, "You've made a mistake in your paper!" iald an inctiguant man, rush- ing up to the editor of the local pa- per. ``i was one of the competitors in the boxing competition yesterday, and you called me the "well-known light- weight champion.' " aren't you?" said the editor. "No, most certainly not; and ite ex- tremely awkward, because, you see, I'm a coal merchant!" Taking His Medicine. Brown—"I'm sorry to see you so un- well. Have you seen the (lector? Smith --"Yes, I'm having three baths a day." Brown—"Whatever for?" • Smith ---"Don't -know; doctors or- ders. He gave me some medicine and told me to fellow the directions on the bottle, which read, "one tablespoonful to be taken three times a day in rieri away her promise. harel,--and bear it. • Then it doesn't "I cannot write much, and I say no -1 23. "Whether is•easier to saY ' • ' erst of October, tor an. that daY/ de, the Dominion Department of Age:Tout- water. Hi s teeters came—long-, frequent, hurt so much." ea e titre, and those who are interested in . thin•g of the past except forgive inel forgiven or . . Rise up and walk. 1574, Leyden, bel gu red a,nd story.; he had eratched "Goehl" said Air. Silas Goodwin I was MC're weak than wicked, Mar- Both the word of forgivesness and the ing, was •delivered from the Spa.nisth ri it el h lin are im ossible words hosts Then it was that the the subject should apply te the Pub- lications Branch of the Department forany neeze nean to sneak. TheY are Salient, Prince e rang , both wa-ede, of -God. - The power eo (likes and see in the sea to driire off . 1--1°1111111°11 .ahan119te Dr- 7- 'Shutt' speek .one involves the pdstrer te spea•k the Spanisb army. Forty years later and the Soil Fertility "Specialist of the them turn to ashes, but an the page under his breath, as he •dr•ew hie red gaTet, but -weakness, e pa n wor .0 ea g 1 loving. ears ago s the phrases instinct with love and pocket, and failure same- be almost worse than • h for a copry. The bulletin, of which the of memory the tender, foolish names, bandanna handkerchief from his causes, in its results erf- vacillation hope, ,steed imperishable. She forced r "The's „itb.e., child went wickeine.es,. herself to recalll how the intervals he- ' on. "Favver panned it enter my poeket. "Se, I have tried abeve all else to tween them had begun to lengthen a I might lose it, you know. Can you teach my bay te be strong. Yet I have little, yet she lead guessed at no take out the •pun? What makes your not had ceueage—he is such a little change. He was so busy, eke told fingers shake se, my Auntie Mar - herself, so tired sometimes; working-- garet?" for her! if he said less of their love', Suddenly hie face lighted. it was because they understood each; "The -res the dog! Favver said he other too tho.roughly to have need of was 'mast sure there'd 'be the same words. SO imperceptibly "blie little one he used to know—old and hg— rift" began! How blind and deaf she , named, Bruce, and he'd shake hands had dwelt in her fool's paradise! with me. Will he, my Auntie Mar - tlae other. Rift the word of forgitse- when. the Puritans sought refuge in Experimental Faeroe Branch, B. Lee- fellow—to expitain to hern—death. He deny, but the -word rof heahng lias re- and afterterarecis in mei i a so of Thanksgiving entitile/di "Fertilizer& for Field Crops; which the Pharisee seaci, scribe IllaY the annual custom thir.les me go•ing on a journey—as in- surlts that scribe and Pharisee cannot a fitting way to express their gratis cation, withResults from Recent ..mx-- deed I am. Gd knows how_ far and deny, ,So Jesus Preeoseued the visible tu•de to God for the bounty of h•arvest P•Elliments in Canada." It deals not but treats ex - long! Spare him furtiser knowledge miracle as a •confirme.tion end proof and the blessings of peace arid I -ell -1°1'1Y With Wtoe'Cl' ashes haustivery with the whole subject of „ --- . eses--e gious freedoen. fertilizees, nese has results that are invisible, Leyden, they became °fa -metier with lie Emslie, are the point anthems, is . • • • ;i Their Nature, Functions and Appli- At length, when she could deceive garet?" herself no longer, she ih,adi written and "Try him„ darling." tenderly, with no reproaehee offered; The •smitill hand was extended fear - him 'his freedom. His reply creme lessly. The d•og licked it softly and weeks later in a newspaper addressee' -raised his. shaggy paw. The child' -s in his- ha.ndrwriting and containing a lipsparted- with a flash of pearly marked notice of his marriage. teeth. The cruelty of it! Sitting in the "His hand is bigger than mine, hall gloom of the gray November day, Favver zaitt so. 1 cant hold it so very rhe felt again the twist of the k-riele 'n the old wound i His eyes roamed about the room, "0 Hugh! Hugh!" she moaned. "If , "Where is Sarah, my Auntie Mer- yeu had ersly told me!" lgaret?---Se.rah that makes, cookies Womanly pride and the resources shaped like animals serith sugar on of a strong, erweet nature had come to ,t1 -.em?' her aid-. Her parents, idolizing their! "Sarah is in the kitchen, dear. I only child, should not be made to self-; will take you to see her. She 'will Ter vicariously. Social and:friendly re- give you some of her nice cookies lationships were still bin:ding and and bread and milk. You're hungry, helpfulne.se the sovereign balm for aren't you?" Farrow. Nevertheless, something had "I fink I am hung -re --frank you, my gone out of her never to be quite :Auntie Margaret." recovered. The old epontaneity of joyl When Margaret came back to the zso keen as to be akin 'to pain, tbe swift library Mr. "Silas was still standing, influx of gladness, just tce be alive on hat hi hand. • a gelrlen -manner day et' a night sown "I jest waited about, Miss Mar - THE STRIKE IS OVER; TIME TO DIG The irlday School Lesson NOVEMBER Jesus the Great Physician, Luke 5: 17-26. Golden Text— Himself took our infirmities, and.bore our diseases. Matt. 8: 17 (Rev. Ver.) Time and Place—A.D. 28; Gaper- padded quilt. Taken with a palsy. The mum. ,story becomes more significant if we Lesson Setting—After thd tempta-regard this .physical affliction as a res time of Jesus in the wilderness, Jesus suit` of evil living, and explains why , began his ministry, teaching and James speaks the word of forgiveness1 preaching and healing, Galilee was before the worsi of healing. The help - the opliere e± his labors an recorded:lees man brought by men to Christ, by Luke, and the synagogue was the gives as the Whole method of the ges-1 centre. This first year ref his ministry pel. Seught means. These men have has been described as the Year of •love for their friend, faith in Christ,1 populariey. His fame is on every one's and energy an themselves. Their faith! lips. The people are astonished at his is a p-ereitent fa•ith.• teaching, for it is with power.- The 1 V. 19.- Through the tiling. The roof multitudes fellow Hue The outstand- was flat and made telir of a layer of iiug er-ents preceslsng our leeson are: rolled clay over flat stones or tiles first. his declaration in the synagogue resting- On wooden nests. Defoie f Nazareth that he is -the fulfiller of Jesus. Thus they overcame the bas- s lesaiah's vision of the Messianic pro- leer of the urressnipathetic mui-titucle gram of mercy. Second, his call -to ewho would not give way to the claims Andrew and, Peter, James and John " el need. Crowds are • very often in to follow after him and beconie fishers the way of reel -merle, even when the of men. Our lesson carries us a, step crowd is assembled in tho name of i farther in our thoughts of Jesus as a religion. world Saviour, for here he makes a V. 20. Saw their faith . . thy sinsi verTriube Thanksgiving. Whenever, Lard, I kneel and pray, thank Thee Thou d•idst turn away • ains Stormsenpetition d From my yes er ay. Most of the misery and eleicalti a, humanity is burdened with arise from disorders of the liver, stem -sell or how - If yell are feeling out ef sorts, have pales in the stomach, espeeially after eating-, sour stomach, bilious spells, sick or bilious headaches heartburn, -water brash, ete., you eliould take a few doses of Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills. They will liven up the- liver, re,gulate the bowels, and tone up the stomata. - ites: 44I ±01-0 had lives troubla ansi. wri11 pains in the sten/mill for a long time. I started to use. your Milburn's -Leen: Liver Pills, arid in a shout these tieed they were helping me. Now r would not be without them and can- not recommend them too highly." Milhurn 's LaXa-Liver Pills are , 25o a vial at all dealers, 01' mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn. Co., Limited, TOT011t0, Ont. Ansi -crave to my reluctant feet Instead this, safe and calm retreat, Where life- is commenelece and sweet; Where I cars herr the breezes call, Carl see the great Vall'S lift and fall, Live with the wide sky aver all, Con spend the long sweet steamer hours With, whispering leaves and happy , showers, • And heal my heart amongst the flowers; And through the ill vast winter • knew • Now Paradise ean overflow, , 'With the white eiplentior of, l;he snow! I • r r. Dear Lord, I thanle Thee when I pray That Thou 'dielst tele ,the, cup away t•-•• t di le front - estertlay Enterprising raps In accordance with other railway , electrification the Japanese govern- ment has decided to electrify the en- tire Tokyo -Kobe trunk_ line, obtaining power from private compahes. A Tough Bird. A young country minister, noted for bit Jollity, was dining at a farmhouse one Sunday arid when his plate of roast chicken was passed to him, he remarked facetiously: "Well, here's where that chicken en- . ters the ministry." "Hope it does better there than it did in lay work," rejoined the bright boy of the family. clennite and hold deolarratian 01 his are forgiven. Pled the man himself "-'-'-------.--4-------4-='-----•-rr''-'111•'-'1't-E—er'----h----------- .. power and authority to forgive saris. ixo faith? Jesus' words would indie,atel ...,.......----- L The llostjle Audience, 17. that the nean?s deepest thought was e.' V. 17. There were Pharisees: The sense of his sinfulness and need for Pharisees were a selec.t party within forgiveneSs. Jesus saw ,not only the the Jewish nation. Nationally they faith of the friends, but the repent - stood for the maintenance af all erica of the sick man himself. It is ' things Jewish, against all outs-idin- fluences of Gentile and heathen. Reli- giously they stood. ±05 the rigorous application of the law to every phase of life, but it was the law multiplied, intensified, and na,rx•oweci by human tradition and interpretation until the religious spieit of the law was lost in endless trivialities and Meaningless ceremonials. Jesus, as a teacher of the spirit of the Law-, must inevitably come in contact with this party who stood for the letter. And here we see them present, not as learners, but as enemies ecelting grounds for opposition to him. Doctors of the law. The Pharisees were a party. The scribes, who were generally Pharisees, formed preefeseion devoted, to the human ex- position eels the divine law. It wee' their interpretation of the Law that the Pharisees championed, relvery town of Galilee. The popular enthusiaem efi the Multitude for Jesue wgIceps their je eu e at tenti on • Judea Jerusalem. Jeens,,on his flret '-vitit to the temale, h ad (hall eng ed. theta: They are on lhie frail. - II. The Believing Friends, 18-21. V. 18, Brought in e 'bed; a rough to this deepest thing tbe Saviour ad- dresses himself. Matthew's rendering of the words of Jests, "Courage, son, thy sins are forgiven thee," confirm this interipz•etation. III. The Mighty Saviour, 21-26. V. 21. The scribes began to reason. These were tremendous words spoken by Jesus They implied, a tre- rnenelous claim. It wee a new note in the ministry ecf Jesus. Without any intermediary of priest, or sacrifice, or Pharisaic authority, he had sleeken the direct word of forgivenees. Speaks eth blasphemies. They eeemed ±0 be oancerned abont Godle glory. They are really concerned; with the complete ware- in which jeens disperessee with ell Xteeponeibie mart Wanted' to repreaent news gathering organization, nutice to, report on pro/mese biaw eonstrue- tion week., eve- hest:lessee, business' changes, busIness eemovaes, fires ,' btd. Couldto easily handled by an, in connection with lila regular business. nopor 1111 tad, '3:45 Adelaide and rooetriee supplied, No Investroant, required, l!Aactean T-311141- ing$1',. NY,,' tonLo brit. ' 424 swz)ccr eizAp GuN ti‘OW' ki/o\1L) I( 4OW -TteAr oc E 'WM i.-0Aba? AN a xi et,(11-$1.1,J4 f.s\ The Newspar,er Visitor. "And so you work in the composing room! Isn't that fine!" ' "I've been here ten years." "Won't you sing something on composed?" In spring, it is invest; in fall it is lea-rve t. 'Die harvest is the cid:nine- . tion of the investment of a season's.; endeavor. About five per cent of the weight of a plant comes from the soil; ninety- five per cent, is built up from the air. It's -a good, time to spray tile brood- er house now., Try an ordinary ev-bile- 1 wash spiny to winch hat been a • c, l. five per cent. of some good tar elisin- feretent. • Use the same principles in choosing, your oandidratee that you -do in select- ing your s•eed cern. Piek them from the field where you -can not their full -record of performance, SUFFERED TERRiBLY FOR FOUR YEARS MU NEW TROUBLE' 91 late years heart tiemble has be- eson-ie very prevalent, 'and wo know of 00 remedy that will do so auucia tr(,,tuike the heatt vegaia its strength and -vigor, ree,pleee its beat and -restore it to a healthy normal coalition as win. - maburn's Heart and Nerve Pills e Miss Joan D. Phillips, Slinbenaeadie, N. S., writes:—"1 suffered terribly, fot four years, with heart trouble. If 1 would walk fast or go up stales me boart would. beat very' feet, and I would get tired, very quickly. f tried differ- ent remedies, but COUla DOir find any- thing that seemed to do eao any good, -One of roy acighbors adviSOci nie'to take Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills, Wilier). I did, and I certeinly, reeeived good "results I cal:. (reliantly say .1 owo my 11.fe to them., and I would high- ly reeommend them to eslyone who la teoubled with heart trouble, Price ' 50e, a box at all dealere or meiled &Met en receipt of price by 1 The T. Milbeeni Co., Limiter,l, l'erento, Ont.