Exeter Times, 1908-05-14, Page 3A
CARTERS
-'elft---
(CURE
Sick ltoo a bill, uadaelte ral state relieve of tththe e system, sucinci-
dent
Diuluass, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress after
eating, Palo In the 81,1e4 de, While their roost
Ntaarkable succors has been shown l.0 curling
SICK
41111Iradaeha. yet Carter's Little Liver Pills aro
squally valuaile In emintIpati,u, curing and Inv -
venting th le annoyin
nt-
vcntinglhteaunoylu compWnt,whilothey also
Correct elldisordorsof thoetoniarb,stnnulaie the
Inver and regulate the bowels. liven U they only
tet.nd
HEAD
aehethey would be almost priceless W those who
suffer Im,n this distressing complaint- but fortu-
nately tlelrgooduessdoes noteud hers,and those
who once try them will and these little pills valu-
.ble in so: any ware that they will not he wal-
ling to du without them. liut after allsick head
ACHE
1. the brae of so many lives that here Is where
we utak oour great boast. Our pills cure it whits
others do not.
Carter's Lints Liver Pala are very small snit
very ea..y to take. One or two pills snake a dere.
They are strictly vegetable and do not gripe or
yaerg - but Ly their gentle action please all who
Orsm.
CLfTZ12 if{
h
kZctDa tcnic CO., Its, TOIL
hall i ail Priv.
hail
NOTES AND COMM13NTS
In The Bookkeeper 1 r April there Ls
e'1 article called "Back to the Soil," by
J'cr4est Crissy, in which the writer ex-
erc's:-es the opinion that the mad rush
of the people of the United Stales to
EXPRESSION OF RELIGION
No Healthy Being Can Be Content to Sit
and Listen to Sermons Forever,
"And tvhoso('ser shall give drink unto
one. of these little ones a cup of cold
e. al( r mils. } in U lc nate) of
disciple,
1
I say unto you, he shall in tee
w 1, : reward, \lett, x., 42.
,e. rte -1 ptesent need in religion
is the discovery and use of adequate
method; of ptuet cal expression of our
lelicfs and emotions. There are. inure
than sufficient forms and means (,f
4.11t1 ,
ru >rressial; tie need tel know how
tt • /nay 1, •.y put into work and service the
•4:.1-, aspirations, passions, concep-
tr_:ri,, land eonwiebolts that make one's
religlutt.
Many turn front the church and the
organized twins of religion because
these
00 elle
tri
simply
.•
seem t
11 1,
be 11 C-
rangements fur satisfying the desire fur
letter things here by listening to flow-
er} descriptions of it fairer wort.! and
an ideally adjusted social order solnt•
%•here else.
Feelings move the world; but the lite
of feeling alone soon become; n living
falsehood. The finer the emotions that
ate sedulously nurtured and then de.
teed their nornitil expre,slon. the great-
-: (11) daulugo to the life. This life of
ours needs fine feelings deeply stirred,
but only' that we may be move' to do
the things of which we dream tilt,
right the 'wrongs over which we weep.
A rrinn ((els this sir ,ugly in religion.
Ile Ls conscious of the world's sin and
s(rrow; he kn ews its imperfections and
his own; he is tnoved to
REGlt•rF•,OUs INDIGNATION
ogninst social abuses and enormities; he
1s stirred to longing after lofty, sp'ri-
the cities Is over, that the tide has teal Ideals; but unless he is already
turn a
ed. and lied there Is now a whole- atrophied by emotions unexpressed. he
Is crying, What can we d.>, about these
things?
It often seems that all that is being
done, as definite expression of religi-
ous ideals, to bring about better collie
Lens for Individuals and for society is
being done outside the church. The
churches furnish the stimulus and
leave to juvenile courts, mothers' con-
gresses, child tabor leagues, to the
many organizations that care for the
helpless and defenceless these ihing;s
that the great master himself began to
do amongst leen.
t..nle tendency brick from the city to
the stn. As proof of the tendency he
refers to the movement from the United
elutes to the farming country of Sas-
egitchewal, This is the way he puts It:
"Fur years the American people seem
le luive lien possessed by a city mad -
hoes. From the farms ani villages a
tide of youth has poured centres of !lfeadil into
the centres
population until it scent-
ed as if the cities were boutd to sap
the country of its best blood. But the
tide bus turned, and to -day there is an
un(4Ilinble movement running counter
to tills current -a movement which Is
recognizctil by thoughtful and far -sight -
+•,t ten as one of the W1ok'somest de-
velopments of the age. The most mark -
(d instance of ti's counter-nloyemenl,
end Ile one that has served fo call the
'Monti in of the world to the fact of
It is the development of 'western Can-
ada, particularly its most recent phase.
lie opening up of vast areas in Sas-
katchewan."
1t happens that almost at the sante
lime That Iles article appears the New
York Sun contains a news item in re -
Nerd to the Saskatchewan movement,
in which the 'following statement 19
n ode concerning the people who are
engaged, in it:
'These people do not go to Canada be-'
(:;t11Se they are ,tot doing well in the
Felted Slates. but because they hope to
.1. letter in the new Intel. Many of
111evu nl•e of tit' close which ios made
fur groat West. They or their fathers
obtained lands in tate 11'est either be
leenesteading or 9,p pureluisc fur
email 'sum an acre. They can now sell
All thrse movements for the better -
Meld t U
1 f our t•'•
tel h
t,ur o
(, s and our race
are good and i1 is not touch use uur
talking abut our religion unless tt)
ere tieing our part along with all tiles
w L) u'ek to tripe away oodles tear
410.1 redeem humanity from darkness
who feed the hungry and (lithe the
destitute. art
t ate. ,\u man needs to 'curr). over
Ills spiritual
itf' h
f ho is moved cel by the
sprit t o
t suer
ifi u
n61 we for
his fellows,
'tews
•f r.
1 he is giving himself Thus to therm.
Wet sorlleLitne.s we feet that 'such
cleans are ton formal for the full. free
hying out of the rel)gioi s life. We can
Cody touch these great problems oc-
etl
iannll'
t andc•
in :spots;
of
1
we
may do through organizali.,ns, (here
still rennins much of our 'faith
t\'r1'fmou-t' ADEeUATE EXI'IIi.SSION.
I 27. And straightway the cock crew-
' In accordance ''slit the wal•ttlug predic
ten of Jesus. John does not record
IS ter's inunediale repentance, though
h does relate the eircwnslances of his
1.•s(uration to apostleship (compote
chapter 21). The preliminary Trial of
1. site I414,i1e AOnas was followed by
his trial before Cauaphas end the San
-
Lenin, ,
ell 11 N•
h 11 proceedings of which aro
not recorded by Jelin (compere \Intt
ee and 27: \taik 14 and 15; Luke 721.
John's narrative proceeds at once fri•.•;
this r0int (4) the account of the trial
lx lure the !Ionian authorities,
•
RUSSIAN RAILROAD i- i uitY.
c !low a Student Thnuilhl to Iteliete the
'Tedium til 'drat el.
Be we not here need 10 learn of hint
% ho
taught men so well the religious
1i fc?
The test way to put our religion into
ou^ lives is to live his kind of a lite,
to be just what the man of Nazareth
wits to 1111'1, a friend to every one
%thorn he met. Full, free, living friend-
ship is the best avenue for the expres-i
glen of the best in any of us, and the
faith 'that doss not 111n'(i• a man n)
friend uniongst men is nut the faint obi
lite- great fr:end of shiners.
Our word nce.Is friends. Folks need
more than inevements. organizations,
and impersonal inacttillery for their re-
itof; they need folks, eyes that look into
theirs, lips that frame supple words of
kindness, hearts that go out to their
own ore,. fusing In the litre of sympn-
thy, lift their hearts and raise their
ryes to better things. ti Iu,pe and cheer
and happiness.
How simple it all is, how sufficient,
fust to be a true, helpful friend In
ctery other one, to kook on him, not
with tho critic's eye, but with friend-
ship's eye of faith; to lift hire. not offi-
cially. but with n brother's tenderness
and strength, r
t nglh, just to go about amongst
neon with the strength. cheer, sympa-
thy. and helpfulness of the friendship
that lids and ennobles,
HENRY F. COPE.
THE S. S. LESSON
iN'1'ERNATION:t1. LESSON, MAI' 17.
Lesson 11I. Jesus Betrayed and De-
nied. Golden Text, Malt.
17. 22.
TILE LESSON WORD STUDIES.
Rased on the text of the Revised
version.)
•
Tho High -Priestly Prayer. -A fitting
close to 111e long farewell cout•ersali m
of Jesus with his disciples, in which he
had sought to prepare them for the
Doming disappointment and snrrow,and
in which he had sought to direct their
nttentlon beyond the piesent, or even
the immediate Muir, In the ultimate
glol•ious cuIninntlon of his mission and
ministry, was the simple, earnest, gel
their holdings for many lion's the ore sublime prayer of Jesus for his disciple.;.
•gnsnl coal and take Their money, their� John's record of this prayer intervenes
experience an.l their equipment into a Ix'hceelh our Inst lesson and this one
new country and (here buy land for a from his completed work on earth
few dollars an acre and ser its wane, Jesus turns This thoughts in communion
increase as dirt 111( value of their fauns with the Father to s( glory awaiting
in this country.'' him. and Itis cnrncsl petition to the
ralher's that it's follow. r- also mny share
t with hint in this glory. Ills departure
11 w Jl be nol;cal Thal. according lei itont earttt will leave them alone in the
Ibis despatch, the emigrants lo Sus. I midst of persecutions. aril nfiliclions'
tkalclw wan arc not city people going i which a world of unbelief will bring
1•attc lo lite soil, but American farmers, J upon ((lens Jesus therefore cr,snmits
min Imre exchanged their Americani Them In the rare of the heavenly rasher,
(omits for cheaper lands. The asking that they be kept from the evil,
} have and equipped for the sacred work which
ase eel got awayfrom 1 .c
rho soil, and for i• 10 devolve upon them, Unwin); re-
corded the words of this sublime peti-
tion. John omits all reference to the
trlurncrs. espeeiolly returners site ( personal struggle in prayer +chick
Jews must. have hnd InlntetiakMv after -
bud never litre( In the country. %\'e11.1. ard. and which is spoken of In Thrw1JN I crl.l .� 11 h w o ete • s 1'r no tc s fl r arra icestat liters 1s y P t laving comforted
no movement !nolo the city toward Ilhc 1 his disciples, and prayed with aid for
(mots, for, as a matter of fact. there' them. it separates himself from them
Ly n little distance, and white they
have been many farm and orchard ill- I eieep lie' wrestles alone In agonizing
vestments of recent years by erten w9"•l prayer, until the hull' ticlory 15 won,
have spent their lives in the cities and and he is prepared to meet tele" (riot
ail.► king for achange. Thaw success• erefeeurrender lite ignominy and the
pail of his impending sacrifice,
fie their ventures arc is not a halter! Terse 1. Ile 'went furfll-il is usually
r r. cor•1. 1 sltppr,seel Mel the events and comer -a-
- l• - re ordcd in chapters 15.17 of
DOES YOUR HEAD dhl narrative ohadrre after Jesus
and his dlselplcsl
had•left the upperlianher in whist they had partaken of
Fee) As Though If Was (tieing the Last Supper. This euppx►.silion is
1115451 upon the closing eon's of chap-
1••••••••
Thal rens ,n their chats:es are much
better 11►orr they would be if They were
if n r
.trucnec'
f1
1•''• 1 t. "Arise. lel its pfd hence.' It is
As Though It Would Crack Open? 0411 cerIAln, h'ot' •er, w iaeIht'i this SuS-
Aq Though a Million Spark. Were geslion of Jt•ses enc fel!owtsi, or write.
titer. having suggested that They adjourn
Flying Out of Your Eyes? • to some other place. they still tarried
horrible Sickness of Four Stomach?' In the upper room mild niter lesns Wel
offeredprayer.
N Nevertheless. s. it
plain
The
t .eadache ,
BURDOCK
.-�
BLOOD
BITTERS
will offend relief from headache. nn matter
whether Fisk, nervou., spasmodic periodical or
bitiou., f, cures by removing the cause.
kir. Samuel J. H.btard. Belleville, Ont.,
write•: -last apting.1 ass very poorly• my
appetite feted me. 1 fait weak and nen our. had
in 1. headed).. we. tired all the tams and not
all: 10 work. 1 esw 8urd,•ck Wood Hitters
eecotnmented lo: Jura Foch a erre as mina and
1 tot two bottles of il. and Lund it to be an
excellent blood medicine. l'ou may use my
Lame Ila 1 think that oilier* shoed knew of tea
eroadert
W
. .
aurW c, ' DY
diff! Blood Bitters."
r en,"
horn the' wording of the ha•rative at
( This point that the little company and
! net }et creased over the ravine of Ktd-
j 1, '1. The name of the strewn means
leral'v "Brook of the cedars,"
A gnrtlii.--,1 small orchard of olive
trees "uti!ch nas named Gethsemane.'•
2 ilelray(.1 tool --Or, "eklivered him
ICncsw 1)1e pia.''--R.'r'nu=c, as John
lmmetliate'w goers on t•-• exslntn, le_sits
nighties ter .flee) ihilher with 1115 (he-
el; lee Luke n1.se mentions the filet
Odd his retirement 'unit his dLsclpiee to
the sees" cf O.vet was according to
III= Isnot rm.t.4n 'Luke 12. 39).
a. 'Thi band . for. "cohort." The r.
Lori enc Oslo tenth of tido Romer' le.
► 1 11
Rion. and 18 tern) Fermi !n refer fei
n cunslderable portion tf not the en-
tire garrtson of the Roman fortress of
Antonio. Probably, however. on
perlion of the cohort was sent iron
ferlresa to assist Jades in his tea
one errand of arresting Jesus.
From the chief prists and Plum
-Permission to use the Roman s
fee had been granted at the reque
the Jewish authorities,
With lanterns and torch(( --Sine
was night, though probably now
preaching the early morning buur
Weapons -Perhaps the spears
short swords usually carried by
Iiunlan soldiers.
4. Went forth -From the grow
disciples, or, possibly, even from
garden inclosure.
5. Jesus of Nazareth -Lit.. i, t.. " Jesus,
Nazarene," n title of contempt :comp
John 1. 46; Mall. 21. 11).
Judas also, who betrayed him -
kiss of betrayal mentioned in the
noptic narratives (elall, 26. 4t) was p
bnbly given at This Eminent.
6. Went backward, and fell to
ground -'fix' calm etignily and mnjc
with which Jesus bore himself overn
cd his enemies. and threw them h
momentary confusion.
7. Agnin therefore he asked theme
order to bring nut the fact that it is
• his own arrest none, 0041 not Tor 1
arrest of his disciples also, that 1
have come. Hence the request In the
1051 verse, if. therefore, ye seek me,
let (hese go their way.
B. The word -(fort of his own inter.
cess.,ry prnycr ;John 17. 12).
10. Sinton Peter therefore -When. as
Lube
points 10(5 out, he "saw what would
follow" having a sword drew it.
The high pries) s servant -Greek,
"•Landeerwnnl," that Ls. rate of the high
priest's housefr,ld. The Inenlkln of the
details, including the name of the slave,
Ls peculiar to John. and is one of the
marry little illuminating (ouches which
we fin.! In this record of nn eye wit-
ness of the events narrater].
ly n
1 the
cher-
etch-
51 of
e `t
ap-
5.
and
the
of
the
the
are
The
sy.
re -
the
sly
tw.
1 to
-In
for
tie
hey
I. 'fhe cup --A figuratito expression.
Fvunlirient in the synoplic'aI record of
the events which occurred in the gar-
den.
1:1, To Annas first--I'nr a preIlminnry
examination. preceding the regular Trial
lefore the Sanhedrin. Annus himself
had one lime held office of high priest'
a position afterward held by five of his
suns. the last of 'shoot, nls) called Ari•
Pas, put to death the Lord's brother
Jemes. aorne Thirty years later.
15. Another disciple -John.
1G. \\filo we; known unto the high
priest --A side light on the influential
position which John's family apparent-
ly heel itt Jerusalem,
18. (rf coal:- s-.
1
k.",
"of
charcoal.' it
this t 0.1! dr.. r.pt',n of John. \lark
ridd.s nrl.,ih r .tela I, namely. that Peter
was "0 armlug (uiti'elf" tel his open fire
In lite court The city of Jet neaten] lic-
2 500 feel move s. a tete(, and the nights
during the wailer and until after the
Ia_ ,
ter season are often cold thou It
cliu1111t' is a semilropica1 •
one.
1`►.
'the high priest therefore -'that is,
Complies.
2.''. With his hand --Or. "wilts a ". t.
A1t'werelh !lou the high priest s'
One of the virtues of the Hebrew f•.. -
pl. was their reverence ter Hee merest
Itcc. noel for the prlee h 0d in p,,en.
cra1.
21. :\nnns therefore sent hien behind
unto 1.
11o I.O
11e
high priest --FrAM
Ihic terse and weer(' 1) above we should
Infer that the referee -e in tel:ce 19 was
not to Ceiaphas, but I(, :Uinta. erre '1
not tent throughout Jchn's nnrrntit•e it
to the former, not the latter, who is re-
ferred to by Ilk, specific Idle of "high
priest.' it is possible ihet Annas may,
have had nportnlenta in the ollicial
t s• -
h t t
.r t:•
a residence, 1 "
g deft( .
1 and that
It'fill
them Mrt' t
hat tho .prrlunlnary. trial w 1.$)
Conducted, Calaphas also being present.!
'the tidium of railway trnvclLtig in
Iltlssit
l was relieved the other da
in
Y i
�•
eu► unexpected manner. In a compart-
ment of the train going from Kursk to
Kiel set a beautiful Y •nb ad un '
1 nIn
lady
a chatty priest, with whom site held an
orientated conversation. Opposite sal
a student who envied the pried the
causerie which he was enjoying. writes
the '1 n
it b, Petersburg lr
t r br correspondent
les d
wu e
the London Globe.
g 1 nt til
As Ile evening came on the girl fell
as:ec•p and the priest nodded his head
�•: slumber. Ther was an 614x:eUn»
which no sell-resper•t•ng prast cal jo
er could afford to let slip. Bending fo
ward, the student kissed the sleepi
damsel (111(1 sprang bark into his sera
The salute awakened the girl, wit
thinking that tt was tier neighbor, I
priest, who had dared to kiss he
Iv
r -
n4
0,
he
r
jumped up and gave hitt a sounding
box on the errs. The student rejoiced
greatly. There ens a commotion, Inc
policeman accompanying the train was
attrurnoned, nerd he at once thew up
•'pnntocsuf' against the wronged priest,
while the student offered to appear as
a wllness in the law court at Kiel.
Ant at the last moment a young Jew-
ess who had been sitting in a dark cor-
ner unobserved by anybody stepped
h,rtverd, exonerated the poor priest
front the terrible accusation, and then
:L was the student's turn to Leel nil's
viable.
DEATH IN TiiE CAMERA.
Remarkable Story of a Snap -shot in
nor
Aua(ria,
A r
c t knb
is by
c I,ai,edy occurred
L Screnja, Austria, recently, as the
fine! of a snapshot.
Peter lieges!), a military inspector,
id been out in the a iuntry taking
lotegraphs, end on his return called
n his fiancee and gratefully told her
had .discovered another romance in
to vilinge. Ile had seen a friend of
5 walking with his nrm around the
aist of a girl, and had snapsiwtted
cut as they went by. Ile explained
at he did not identify the girl, but
at when he had developed the plate
w•oukt acrid it to her.
lis -fiancee asked hila to destroy the
le. tie it might cause trouble, but
gesh replied that he could not miss
ch an excellent juke, and went home.
.aler in the day he rushed back with
revolver in one hard and a photo.
ph in the other. Before his fiancee
t!d soy a word he shot her through
heed. He then turned (tie weapon
Mist himself and committed suicide
hi' photograph showed that his Mtn -
had taken advantage of his absence
the country to go out with a 1111116
nd.
11
se
ht
p1
(,t
he
11
it:
«
Ih
lit
th
he
pia
Be
su
1
a
gra
out
the
01
tee
file
TIGER SHOOTING ILECOiRDS.
An indite Deputy Conm►hsitber Who
Killed Four in Ten 1liuulcs,
Ry accounting for .seven tigers with
hit own gun (luring a recent shioot in
(;walior Lord \Brite, Viceroy of India,
lips accomplished a feat of which the
n::,sl successful of big game shooters
might well be proud, although he has
not riva)Ld (he eensnlional perform-
ance of a lire. Walker. w•ho when De-
puty* Commissioner at leirnnr nclunlly
tiled four tigers in len minutes, says
I' a Westminster Gazette.
F. C. :;eblts, who hod a phcnomcn•
:i; record as a slaughterer of big game,
• ace brought down Three full grown
lions with tour slots. while his bag in -
eludes more than a hundred elephants.
nearly till of which he shot on foul, and
twice ,is many buffaloes.
In tour years '1877 to 1880) Mr. Sekets
killed 100 huffnkees. twenty elephants,
thirteen Ions. and over 500 other big
gl.tne, ranging from giraffes +eighteen)
(.4 zebras and antelopes. Sir Robert
lavey's guns have wtoughl terrible
hat•oc in tunny parts of the World, teem
Africa and India to Iceland.
Only a orneriest n,nn can fully npprl'.
einle the !Millen] sletemenl Ihnt there
will be no marrying in heaven`
MILBURN'S
Heart and Nerve Pills.
3Ar. a •perifle tor all diseases. and d1• -C
Ord. rya art•ing from a run down smith;
thin of the h.•art or nerve at et. in. eta
as Palpitation n/ the Uear1, Nervone
Pro.trat.,a, N.reoa•n..a. Saes:Aess
no N. }•a)nt and now"•Iles Brain }ear.
it They ars espe.-lolly b.ne!f.-1a1 to
a „leen troubled with irregular men•
etnrstlon.
peke go sent., per rn,v, .,r 8 for Ka
Ail dente:,,, nr
Trot T. Mit aense ('n, /./soma.
Tot Ito, cont.
BRITAIN UNDER THE JAPS
$'Il1IKI.\'G
141:11 111: uF A Pllsalltl.l:
co\11\1:1:\I.l',
StitO1tJ Japan conquer in lar They
\V •,stld initiate `lent' Wild
1:h;,nncs,
A Jnpane-e tt r.t, r has Leen eSercis-
Ul !. his r i. neer.
,
union, )• Il a,
inhere t!!Il:c• tve,rld. 1d petering the
be -
"V" 11 lies! and \Vest s inevitable. rcat war 11 c
tic Jim's. Jason will off ccr Int nrny
• if four nlili+ n sal u'se fro p;. ; ud 41 -
iccl herrn 11,31:1, t f:::r !' . f :'
•
pur•1•os._• •:.! ..t,l 1. u.: 11: , 1.
< ec
Ilk
t.
It
.1
! le
t t u
hr
that Jog Inn s'iou.'d Utile ,ter. j,: etc
(hilt Ile 3- 'l, uh! . leis,
tot tit:0i' twelves,
"in! an se t , t• rodeo oro itt rill respects
bele tl : ' 1: • I to govern both E(1l I'0
1)11:1 \• 'I :lc Io1 Leal Olsten,' -l> to
tees 1, . „ le „it the les stot•n ti
cube led v .'t I \‘;,.,11i to c5 rife
ou
t u
to c .
d us
t
111141 nd
lt.• ;
II" wo; t I n ., Le fr•w1i,' it nearer
h• n slate 1,f perket.ou, for the benefit
•1 all (las-es."
ICiN(, iN NAME ONLY.
Picture cur cend:ll,n Mee this hap-
tens. \\'hat :1 Au'lnalia wore Jttp-
ntl@se (stony. India trial:;•e1 Count
Uleumn'.s deem and 1 e •an.c 'nd pend. c
sots and Japan conque.e i us, and es•
tabt shot! her ru'c :,ver Enelan 1? What
would follow? asks F. A. \!.:Kenzie in
London Answers, e
'1
feed on us, and the benefits we were
leaping froItt Japanese rule.
The Japanese might naturally be ex•
levied to bring one new industry into
this land -that of the production of
bt,gus gt,utb. Ll Osaka tate manufac-
ture of hint/11k tis of first -(deltas F:ut•o•
pear goods has reached (Witt! elitism -
(,us )u'ol;oreens. Some European firms
do not Tike it. and recently urn' of the
chi. f of Alen' 'red to :ndu+v The Japan-
, Iris to curt'':el a1 o111r11.X.0us
. l
!r
er
1u t�, '
this du.5li 0. It )wu, prey, .1
oe el doubt that tits• man had 03x1;
Puropenn goods with abontln-
ub. tut. s. Ile adntitt.d 11v nitwit
hi1,,.•l
f
Litt
11e Court decided tit
d 1
td
t it
was no n(((ose, and !el him go.
poi\II'LI 11111' EF1'lit.'1'lV .
if
may be protested Riot Englishmen
would never stand this. The Japanese
bail, e
a very r
orfs way of dealing with
rebellious 1 1
!leer '
s
spirts • '
� u
P l .►
conquered land.
\\'
b•rt'rer an liuglisluuan tried to raise
a hand ngainst the Japanese, not only
would hr be punished, but the entire
community :0 which he lived would sut-
ler wilt true. Thus. if there was a ris-
ing
.n
h. I
ll.]
1 d against nst 1
f to
(• Japanese
11
A ev!
i
it', .1 rat tilers, ShtJield would be burnt
jilts) the go u•:d, and a large nuutb r of
its people sled,
Japan. careful for our Moral train-
ing, would be certain 10 send over num-
bers of Ruddiest !Nee:eater:es, and
' lddhist tcmj,l(s tt' ,nisi 1,. erecbd, the
lest of them near the Jt'.anese re,iden-
y•goncrai n' Iiuckinghatu Palace.
And tel ••ins.• of us, despite all this
veldt' fa 't •I1n:d the 'yellow blessing"
tch'chP c raiinger generation of Ori-
ntals is ambitious to bring to Europe.
he old way Ls good enough for us.
f'-
SEN'TENCE SERMONS.
The fearful are always taittkss.
Set your heart on a living and
fe.
The selfish cannot, know satisfact
11 takes a clean heart to keep a c
ad.
The greatest gain in any life is
ss of greed.
Cleat/te-s never was bought by
le of goodness.
there can tee no right manners w-
t right ;metes..
Ile who leas no time to get ready
ver ready al any little
A Jai anese testicle -get -ere tv .uld, ..f
course, be placed in charge o1 the
country, and resitienls working under
ltim would be established in all cities
and large districts. The K ng would
probably- be kept on the tht:,ne, but ne
would be atriciy guarded. Ile would
tx allow,to see' no one except with 11
,'
the consent of. and in the presence of,
the Japanese governor of the palace. he
one would ile allowed to enter the
palace without the governor's consent.
There wvu'd probably le a large clear- to
rice of pala::e officials. on the plea o►
notional economy, Prince Eddy would so
Le removed to Japan for his education.
The jury system would be aLo.I-hetir s 011t ,,
for Japanese law -makers do not bei
Let a in juries. In sods Mere Eng-
lish judges were still in the (;,.u: h Vice
w 1
onldto ,
i,ltcn ]npanc-e advisers. But.
g(nerally, the judges would be Japanese,
and certainly 841 in ail Courts where
there were any pont cal issues at slake.
Japan -se judges are f•unous all the
world over for a very keen pair et sin,
which induces then to decide in favor
(:1 (heir own countrymen, 'whatever the
evidence.
ENTHUSIASM TO OlIDEJ(.
A scale of social posit ons would be
eileblished which would have 50111)
carious ►(ref's. For instance, when the
resident -general vi.silea Leeds, the heads
.,1 the Japanese gendarmes woukl tired
issue orders about the spontaneous re-
joicings to he nn.lerteken by lite rctople.
Alen of the first grade -such as °Algiers
above the rank of rnnjor--would have
fo stand in certain posillons; MPH of
the sceoed grade -teachers, Buddhist
missionaries, and the like-would/land
acrnewhcre else.
For the simplification of Japanese
adm(nietratinn, we might exsect. Japan-
ese tithe to be established her.', and all
official dccutnenls would mention Eng -
'left towns by their Japancs /Mmes,
Japanese tickeesellers al the railway -
stations would expect you (o tell then'
In Japencse where you wanted tel go.
Fomeone may tell me Ih:il I am (alk-
ing absurdly here. 1 can only say that
in lit veil they are doing these very
things. and a roan who goes to a Ko-
rcnn station and asks for a Eckel for
the Korean capitol under its own name
is drivels off.
ONLY.A
Common Cold
BOT IT BECOMES A SERIOUS
MATTER IF NEGLECTED.
P NE LIMON! .t, BRONCHITIS.
ASTHMA, ('ATARRH or ('ON..
r! ).
sea
r
Il ( '
THE
RESULT.
T
Get rid of it at once by taking
Dr. Wood's
Norway
Pine Syrup
p
Obstinate coughs yield to its grateful
soothing action, ami in the racking, per-
sistent cough, uflou present in Consumptive
cases, it gitea prunrpt and sure relief. In
Asthma •►and
Bronchitis it Iaa successful
remedy, rendering breathing easy and
natural, enabling the sufferer to enjoy re-
freshing sleep, and often effecting a per-
manent cure.
Wo du not claim that It will cure Con-
sumption in the advanced stages, but if
taken in tiuio it will prevent it rca. hing
that stage, unit will give the greatest relief
to the poor sufferer from this terrible
matin
Y•
Ila careful when purchasing to aero that
you get the genuine I1r. Wood's Norway
Pins Syrup. Put up in a yellow wrapper,
three pine treoa the trade mark.
Mr. R'nt 0. Jenkins, Spring Lake
Alta., writes: "I Bail a very had cold
settled nn my lungs. I bought two Lott lee
tit Dr. Wood's Norway Pine .Syrup but it
only required one to euro me. I have
sever met with any other medicine as good."
lose Price 23 eta., at all dealers.
tear ELEPI1tNl-S OF LO11AG1'NDI.
the 1'r•t/forted Beasts Thal are D,,tIse inp
Property and KIIIirtu People.
the The !ley. \ir. Grantham, who is in
charge of the \\'esleyan Mission at Lo-
ith• tigundi, has again had occasion to
tnplain of rho destructiveness and
Is ciuttsnoss of the ekpiutnts that rav-
e that district. A few wears ago
ere
was only or s
y ie .mallherd titabout
dozen, but today \t• Grantham
ccs their number at over 1011.
flits has been corroborated by other
ntlenten. who hate placd boys at
Nous relies of the ouuntry for the
dal purpose of ascertaining the num-
nl strength of the brutes. They
about the district In small herds of
tit fifteen, and have for the lust
C mouths been a source of terror.
othing Is safe trona them. and they
apparently fearless. They raid the
ads at night. scattering the fires in
lands, and what They do not eat of
crops they destroy in pure wanton-
s. Already three kraals have been
(fled owing to Their frequent vise
its. fate whole of the L►nt•okwe
ge, which extends for a good many
es, Leats traces of (heir depre4o-
s.
fees are rooted up and broken down
to the hills and the finis are o•)1-
tw
dh the pits made by the animate
oaring. Ahtiost livery 1141,1 sun.
5 a member erenlves, and tee older
hoots are vielotts in the extreme,
woe betide any unsuspecting me
who happens to conte upon it herd._
r agility and the rapidity with which
travel is wonderful, and they can
through the veldt almost noise-
s.
natives that have already been
ell were usually unaware of the
tree of the brutes unlit they cattle
jeing down upon them. Vicious
destructive, they are a soar(( o'
er to lite. Representations aro
made to the Governnu nt and it
ssible that specie! ale,.s Wil( to
to rid the district of the pest.
DENE-11OLES IN F,NGLAND,
A large group of the singular exca-
vations k»OWti QS dens-Ilolcs 'vas re-
cently discovercvl in lies forest between
VWno1w•iclt and teeth, 'Their I;(tsitluns
Were indicated by cup -.lino depressions
in 11►e ground. Two of the holes have
teen explored Each posers a circular
shaft about three feet in deimeter. With
holes in tate sides, apparently intended
for the support of ladders. The hors
run down ahead 50 feet through earth,
then pass through 4 or 5 feet of chalk.
and expand into caverns 18 feet in
height. Each cavern has 6 chambers,
grouped radially round the bottom of
the central shaft. 'il s is the ordinary'
arrangement found in dere-holes. writ:••'i
have been thought by aneheoiogis:s to
lie secret receptacles for the storage of
grain used oboe' the time of tfte Roe
pian occupation of Britain, or earlier.
She Indlgnanlly)--1'ou had nn business
le kiss me. Ile -But 11 wasn't business;
11 was pleastr•'.
••••••••••••••••••••••••••
• •
111
ti
V; w;
No church can be cleaned properly Ih
ly soft soaping the saints.
A
r1.
r1
1h Ls
worth what lea
L
1
le gives
world, not what he the pia
The self and the sacrificeinany gift ge
is the only measure oI its worth,
Netts
h all the fricti:,n o1 life conies from spec
having our longues loo well oiled. eric
Entry is the habit of losing our own p:•)
ltappiness while longing for another's. (dao
The sermons that do most effective r,(n
work in this world are those on ht•) N
kgs.
The lines of eternal grace in any char- era
are
atter lutve to be cut with extremely utt
sharp toots.
} the
'There. is no promise of a crown of the
righteousness for proficiency in rcgulal- es
ing your neighbors. Ars
A good life is impossible until one toile
Len ws thnt there is ever something ?inn
desirable titan living, b more rr,a
You cannot cancel Itto cnsLnn of prey- Ifo.,
ing on your fellows by occasional pray- lI t
lug lo your Father above. all o
(red
wall
• MEDICINE 1'11011 SEAWEED. lain
step
Horsehair Combings for Upholstery - and
Soap !lade From Itanana Skill, he
rete;
in the South of Norwuy formers are they
now making a far better living by gal►►- glide
(ring seaweed than from tide r farming less'_
crcvatioru. '1'hs seawe.d fi dried ouJ The
burned, anti tom 111e resulting ashes injur
which are sold to manufacturing elle,- press
mists, iodine, a valuable medicine, is cher
obtn Inc(!, mid
Ilorseheir combings ate valuable, Bang
)sing worth twenty-five cents per tieing
is po
taken
Naturnlly, a very large 1111/111tl er of enc
Jnlo11ese COOIi;s. attracted by the high,eti the
wp;,!es offered, [would flock into this )
country. The eoolies have not very
usesTh
nice manners. They 1111 stnnd together, I
pfd n mon who attempts lo avenge the V\
1411 nl'1 r � honed
When the Japanese
tool e g:,es Int:, n 1or•cign land ate cnr-
ries a sword, and knows how to use
11. A number of traders would come,
loo. it may be thought that thine
Uaehrs twot!d find difficulty :n obtatirting1
Ion, 1. Not at nil Picked sixes through.1 ixirs.
out England -the finest business and
nlnnufnrluring sites --would be taken, $ (lent.
ostensibly for military purposes. Ja- l fold !
panese e(imntercinl houses and shops l Into b1
would arise on these. (lays
So -CALLED
nonkcs
COMPENSATION.
c
h n
1. After being e'eued and grad -
hair is need for upholstery.
intiecent banana skin teas its
also. Il is rich in alkali mid in
'est Coast of Africa; the skins aro
ed, dried and afterwards burn)
Ice. This ash mixed with went
1 y Bono by one of them excites
ILc wroth of nil. 1\'bac
ane!
pales oil goes to make a soap ball
which is seen esti every viltoge market
stall.
If you were told that you had combed
your hair with an old boot, or butt red
dress with an old pair of slip.
you might relsent such 8 stale -
It is quite possible, however.
ha •s are cut up by machinery
null pieces and sorlked for rr few
in chloride of sulphur, which
lee leather hard and brlllk, 11
dried and geeing' to powder,
'htch 11 i` new." with Sr,n1e nm.
f the nature of Klee or guar, and
ressed Onto the requ red shape for
combs, knife -handles, and such
ONE OF MANY.
husband told my
A colnnhission would conte front Tokio: feria! o
lc decide the amount of colnpenvtli,n i con ►
tc be (waist lo line owners, Incnthe Poll buttons
ponese would scorn Io lake till the lane!
for nothing. The auninlssion would things.
decide that, since the value of certain
land in Norfolk twos .L'I2 an ncre, it
wonmake a uniform rale r a,ln
pen�l(tedmn fol fu
seize ( Caul nil o'•er Ihl./ sirs.
c iuntry it that prix. People whose, hu"bond
land ens token (night or in get not 4.b-home
loin (heir comJ.(usniieu three or tour mil'. 1
years aftr'rwtirds. Absurd. ycu soy( law, lit
1sett. 1 !late kneel' Just thio kind of
thew done i
other parts rls c
l the
stolid toriti
where the Japanese core i,K,wern;ni,•.
A nurnttcr of (rade nv.m-.pol•cs would
b" cstaiiishell. no. first of these would
h, n tolaccu monopoly. A ditty or,
says 20) per cent. would Ix, put on all
iltelepcnelent lobaeco Imports, and
freely fa:ate;ries would turn out cigars
I nu.1 6F/it-elks for home consumption
that his word was law at
i;fkins-"yes; it is one of Ihosu
at Chit never enforced."
•
CELE ( .
•
1 R.\'TINII. •
CO
•
Alt
. Agr .\ly husband always
lakes • n die
o day oft %•hen fte has a [downy., t aorne
mei. !Cutting -"When you bare (Ate s • whirl
1 reckon you like a couple of yeah/ • liver.
eft • regal
�_ ,I, •
as
• a
J
NSTIPATION.
bough generally described as
ease, can never exist unless
of the organs arc deranged,
1 is geuerelly found to be the
It consists of nn inability to
arty evacuate the bowels, and
egular action of the Low els i•
utely rsr.ential to general
t, the least irregularity should
he neylectel.
1•,a lati{Iishlrwvr do Telt lit.( Japanese alisol
01 a IP/111011girls horn, 871.2C6 crt •
• hoali
_ fells+, and 1 have yet to find enc alive f In. it's months okl; of e„,,, I • heal''
+1,1111(1 tr1'itP,• nesse
I•
e my friends in !teen who has
1 Ur- courage to try a Ja,,aties0 (0y.
• i .soden' cigar. But It would Ie nears•
i:.ly ter us 14) rihp.•,th• (me tastes.
'fltel)F:i(1 \\01"1.1) ste•T (7.
The Conceeatott, toe et, lltsee trad-
ing privileges 04 ukl 1e will et, new.
her. and noted tel it 11 fnrane,i.e
hands, .tllhough nohtn+i y dee' 1 v •a
pnrtncrshl,r heltvr'e,t liutau4 un 1 .t.. 1
t offer neem •hip 1.w . e:i., l /,4 t.v li
English loxnli••u, w•.n11 ;r•y .;:tr
1(►nlc. 1 subsidized Prose rail 1 e .
t an se (sudors. tv till ns•uree us t 'tie
eller dray That 1111 Iles' 1l) n a 0. r ' he had .
4)111 {•r. e1:;111114111111111111)1;
. 1111:1 fur Thr` pnrrue.'S , :I r..
hilth•'st ;.tai anUrrop!V amt nethl•'.cl p ,. i r
1 ce. Japnnca • .pt•nkers e•ou'eI tell ret f
of the blessings that were b.•ing show. dirt
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
sm•'1: , in n. • MILBURN'S ••
•
I tisk l t• .1 1r ; t •• LAXA-LIVER PILLS
•
delicu,ll.s things 1.. eat; 1. .. • have
gl.tle simp,'e. 1 alssnys ',.se Ill., • curing
•
he f ,sv dinner and bold her on nye kc..• � • Vt'ater
baler dinner.'' 31rnah--"Hilt %1181 d0c•S • laver
y_ur %rte spy?" Jones -'(Ih, she doe -silt
• Air. A.
ul• et'I. She's , "
j the c ;),. writes
u
i
• trouble
00 equal for relisting slid i
Constipation, Biliousness, •
Brash, heartburn, and all
Troubles,
0, ilettes, Vancouver, R.C., •
-For same years past i was :
•I with chronic constipation •
Bolls headaches. i tried •
everything, but unlw got :
ary relief. A friend inure e,1 •
try Lnza-Liver !'ill , aria •
111 1tnets .4.g story 1189: ani! h(
I • n 1 174:741'111.1111:111:.1, 11 1s s;tIl In Inas), • nearly
1 pent . r . ,,u .' • 1 ;.g It.. other 54:i
tenlp nt-
• nue to
• they cured tee completely. •
•
•
Price
25
cents
r tett or
per h 'reefs •
for 11.00, all dealers, or :MIIed •
• .Erect on receipt of price. •
• THE T. Mitemes Co. f,t),liTrn i
• Tnront.,, Ort;. •
•••••••••••••••••55.5.55`5
t'. tt • , L•' t ..I 't. ' u. -fortune Ip
• •• I r '1 moment he eras
In 5:0 what dam -
end before he hnd re-
:,,. nninal. o black re-
.
• • 10 him. bonging
1.141 Is . it tail, which had
•n alfa ckan off