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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1908-10-15, Page 7,ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Ccnulno _Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of See Fa .SIm to Wrereer nalow. wary resau awe as saga te talcs as =giro FOR UEAOACNE. FOR Oiu[MESS. fen IIUO111REfl, FPA TORPID LIVER. fell CONSTIPATION. sAusoFOR TjiIdeMOumfine CARTER'S CURE SICK HEADACHE. TIIE LIMERICK CRAZE. British Parliament to Prevent Its Recurrence. Tac limerick craze has had its day in England and will become a thing of the past. Several persons e:.mmitted suicide froru disappoint- ment at never gaining a prize. One or two men were imprisoned for tutting limerick competitions out of public library papers. A few disappointed ones tried to waylay the editors and explain with ft•rce what they thought of their judgment, and hundreds almost ruined themselves in sending six- pences and poor verses that their sixpences might return to theta as pounds. Now that the excitement has qui- eted down there comes a report ft; m the joint committee of the two Houses of Parliament recommend- ing this device for increasing the circulation of newspapers should bo made illegal. It is rather late in the day fur this decision, but it is tat so useless as it seems, for the craze for competitions is one that revives again and again in England and the national taste is catered to by marry newspapers and weeklies. The report demands that an end be put to the possibility of any more systems of coupons, entrance fees anti prizes as offered by these riodicals to their readers. Even competitions in which there is an element of real skill are proscribed l,. the committee if associated with entrance fees and coupons. To discriminate between prize cempetitions was thought undesir- able, hence they are all lumped to- ge4her and a common ban is pro- •unced upon them which will pro- ly he put in statutory form at •nexte. ' s sawnf u Parliament. amens. THE INFINITE REALITY A. Man Is Godly in the Measure That He Reaches Out to Men. 'He that bath seen me bath seen the Father."-Juluc xiv. 9. Still are omen crying, as of old, who will aloes us the way to Gcu i The heart of humanity is hungry ., for tl c infinite reality. Therefore men flock to the cry of each new voice that proclaims, here is truth, here is the, divine secret. l'et again and again we have to turn away disappointed ; it was not a voice; it was but the echo of some outward creed or superstition. Who will show us God' How can another reveal truth to us? Each man must discover his own truth; it cannot bo borrowed ; it cannot be imparted. Another's hand may point out some new glory, some shining spire of the far off city_of tiuth, but each for ourselves we trust make our own way there. But what is the way ; how may cne find this city wherein dwelleth the Lord and Maker of us all? Shall we climb to the heavens where our childish fancy painted a gigan- tic being seated on the clouds! Sh.al we find the infinite by sitting with the seers in other lands, those who peer into life's strange mys- teries? After all is not God nearer than we know'; if we are his cu..uren may we not find the Father through the family? If we have grown be- yond the necessity of thinking of child is the expression of the father; the family of the parents and its members. Is not humanity after all i,t its development and particularly in its social realization the expres- s i„tt of the divine? These aspira- tions, longings, ideris; these com- plex adjustments of our nanifol h+iug and this growing sense of a life that belongs to us all and binds es all together, may not all these be but the heavenly and eternal moving in us all? Now if we would come to know any truth there is one safe and sure path fur all feet, that is to do that truth. If we would know the truth as to the lord of all being, the in- finite source of lite and this father of us all, is there any better way Man the free, full living of that which seems to spring from heaven- ly sources in our living with ono another's This is the way of the Man of Nazareth. He found the Father through HIS LOVE FOR ¶HE CHILDIREN, and he invited men to know the Fa- ther through himself, their brother. The more our lives go out in love t . other lives, the more fully and clearly shall we kt,ow the divine. ROUND WORLD IN 40 DAYS .%N1' ONE ('.1N NOW ('FT JI'LES VERNE'S RECORD 1N '1'11'0. Gross Total of the Trip Would nal Exceed Soren hundred uud Seventy -Ilse Dollars. Somebody with a liking for time table statistics has discovered that in the event of the Cunard Line us- ing English Channel ports it would be possible to reduce by one-half the time taken by Jules Verne's traveller in circling the wortu. This is how the trip could be done i.l forty days: Leaving New York on Saturday, say, at noon, by either the Lusi- tania or the Mauretania, a passen- ger wottld land at Plymouth the fol- lowing Thursday and be conveyed to Waterloo station in London by the London and South -Western Railway either in the forenoon or at such an early time in the after- noon as to enable hire to catch at Victoria Station the 8.35 p.m. train for Berlin, where be would arrive the next day, Friday, at 0.45. He could leave Berlin at 7.12 p. ru the same day, arriving at !War- saw at 8.07 a.m. ; leave Warsaw at 10.03 a.m. and arrive at Moscow at 1.20 p.m. the next day. At Moscow he would have ample time to take a drive around the city before boarding THE SIBERIAN EXPRESS, Christianity tolls of a God who leaving the same day at 7 p.m. loves men, who seeks them, who After a short stop at Irkutsk, goes out amongst them, winning which would enable him to take in THAT INFINITE AFFECTION them to the higher, fairer ways. A the sights, the passenger would ar- a, confined to a definite face and man is godly, not in the treasure rive at Vladivostok the second fol - figure how can we hope to better that he reaches up to the heavens, (•wing Thursday at 10.15 a.m. In know it than through those in whom tut in the measure that he, too, Vladivostok he would have time to affection is best shown and toward reaches out to men; he is divine in rest and whatever sightseeing and whom it may be most freely exercis- the measurethat he catches that recreation the city affords, for the ed? glorious spirit of self -giving. He regular service to Tsuruga does not Through the ages men have been hest believes in God who mos in seeking after the divine; they are heves in men. at es flowers that have through many Heaven is found in humble p tot - stages of developtnent ever turned litre; the divine is in the fac their faces toward the sun. .. o our fellows, in ways of lowly rain cannot bear to look at the sun w. vice and suffering. Not in the which would bring him to Yokoha- naked eyes. may we not read some vaulted skies shallwe find the me.the same day, in time to catch of his glories in the glowing hues both about the infinite, but in the tie Canadian Pacific Express stea- of rose or daisy or poppy'? So we faces of our fellows, in walking the mer, which leaves Yokohama every who are, as it were, shadows of the ways where men and women weep, third Monday. infiinite must find that infinite i'i leading little children out to The crossing of the Pacific re - through one another. fields of happy laughter. in doing quires but twelve days, the arrival Too, may it not be that romehow fur all our kind what we believe the at Vancouver taking place on the the great source of all life is ex- ( highest would do for us all. following Saturday but one. pressing itself in our living? The HENRY F. COPE. At Vancouver the passenger would again have several hours lee- way, for the Great Northern Lim - THE S. S. LESSONited train to St. Paul does not leave lad the children of Machir the son that port until 4 p.m., arriving at of Manasseh went to Gilead, and St. Paul the third day at 2.15,and t< ok it, and dispossessed the Amur.- giving the passenger a few hors to ites that were therein"). INTERNATION.11. LEF SOt Lo -debar -The same town which spare in that city until the depar ' i called Debit in Josh. 13. 26. It tura of the fast Northwest Limited OCT. 18. was situated east of the Jordan and da in for Chicago, arriving Wednes- -. not far from Mahanaiin, the city y' occupied by David for a brief peri - Lesson 111. David's Kindness to od during his exile from ionise - Jonathan's Son. Golden tem. 0. Mephibosheth - Called in 1 Text, EI►h. 4. 32. ('bran. 8. 3.1, and 9. 40, Merib-bawl. Verse 1. !)avid said, Is there yet I t the narrative in Samuel the de - any -Undoubtedly the king madetested 1111111: of Baal has been drop - diligent inquiry to discover wile- peesl and the word "Bosheth, ' ther any members of the house of lueantlig "shame," substituted. The EARLY IN THE MORNING. At 2.30 p.m. he would board the Twentieth Century Limited, the famous New York Central train, arriving in New York the follow- ing day (Thursday) at 9.30 n. m., having thus consumed a little less thanforty or days for the ce entir Y c cir- cuit, - Y it cuit, with plenty of stops. and hav- Saul were still living. The picture hav- same is true with other names hav- ing covered 19,000 utiles by rail and drawn for us in 2 Sam. 21, of ing the sante ending, as, for ex- water. -9.-- David's bearing toward the ]rouse ample, Esh-baal. which in Samuel Nor would the cost of the journey of Ssul in general is not nearly so becomes mes alt -bosh a ht Isom 2 Mephibosheth be exorbitant. Taking it. for grant - 4, to him as is the picture P ed that the Cunard Line would portrayed in our lesson narrative. was five years old at the time of charge the same minimum rate to Froin chapter 21 we learn that at .1.4snathan's death, and since at this Channel ports as it does to !Aver - time he himself already had a young pool, the trip to London would 51,n (verse 12), we conclude that a cost 8135. The cost of the journey considerable period of years must from London to Vladivostok, in- I'hilist.ines in which Saul and Jona- lave elapsed. The parallel account eluding sleeping car, is about $240. We feel sorry for the woman who( than Wert! slain. These seven sons in Chronicles makes no reference To Yokohonia, including sleeping; las no confidence in either !ter hus' or descendants of Saul David is tee the events hole narrated. ear, just over $`l3. bund or her dressmnk`•r' said to have handed over to the 7.!'ear notIn view of the fate A first class ticket from Yoknha- 1)octors and lawyers have at Ieasti Gibeonites in order that the latter !bat had befallen other surviving mit to New York, including Pull - one good trait in common. They might take summary tengean(e up- members of Sattl's family (compare man cars across America, costs never give advice before it is asked et. them because of Saul's earlier r,.te verse 1 above) Mephibosheth over $275. for. bloody cruelty to the inhabitants of might well think his own life to be If we add to this a sum of $100 "'1.omley, I hear you are got il; their city (compare 2 Sant. 21. for tips, meals on trains, hotel ex- tc start housekeeping i'' "Yes, 1-0). 1)arlinggor.�" `What have you got For Jonathan's sake -Out of re• ow e , towards ds it t .•1 wife spect for his anointing t., the office Mistress -''Bridget, it alwaysiof king, David had en different ic- ecems to me that the crankiest mis- tresses get the best cooks." ('ook -"Ah, go on wid yer blarney'" ('ustomer-"Are you surd this is it was the immediate family of real Ceylon tea 1" "Well-informed Jenathan in which David's interest l e.ung Assistant-"('ertainly, sir. centered. Ile does not seen' to 7.1r. Ceylon's name is on every have concerned himself about other package." rnembers of Saul's family, or to have protected theta er their de- scendtutts in any special way. In- deed. from the preceding note and narrative of chapter 21, to which it. refers. the contrary seems to have been the ease. A ntan's voice, through a speak - tag -trumpet 20 feet lung, has been heard a distance of twenty miles. .1t the time he casts his first veto least seven other immediate de- ll man is toe young to realize that I scendants of Saul besides .11ephibo- be doesn't know it all. I sheth survived the conflict with the in danger. Eat bread la t to ( fn table c' �ntinual- ly-A mark of very great distinc- tion and honor at an Oriental court. s. .1 dead dog --The vilest arid fastens refrained from taking �ianl's must contemptible of ubjecteamong life when the opportunity afforded. (r►ientals. .After the death of Sail, however, til' Tlll the land n'. hire -The ata- lns qua of affairs in Mephibnsheth's household thus received the royal sanction. From henceforth he and his servant. Ziba, are to enjoy un - et .curbed the fruits and produce of the land of which they seen to have already been in possession. Fifteen Sults--A rather insignifi- ennt number compared with some e' the Old Testament family re- cords. Twenty servants -From, the num- 2. Ziba-A crafty deceiver who t,,,. e,f 'Ziha's servants it may be in - inter sought to acquire for himself ferred that the estate of Mephimo- and his sons the land and personal abet,' w•as of considerable size. 1•ruperty of Mephibosheth, his eras- i 12. Mephibosheth had a young ter. by lying about hint to David, sun .. . Mica -Who in turn had a Laving first taken advantage of his numerous posterity as it occurs in lameness, which made it impossible Chronicles is spelled "Micah." tot lfephiboshetli himself to look cut for his own interests (compare 2 Sant. 10. 1-4 ; 19. 21-30). 3. The kindness of God --David's Tit FAR ADVANTAGE. cath to Jonathan (1 Sam. 20. 11) r as similarly worded : "Show me "A doctor," remarked the drug - the loving -kindness of Jehovah." gist, "has it on the rest of us." As the mercy of Jehovah bad been "How do you figure that tett 1'' unfailing and unlimited teased queried the young M. 1).' 1)a%id, so he in turn desired to "Why," replied the druggist, show himself toward the family of even if he is a poor titan he can his lifelong friend. take life easy.' 4. Machir, the son of Ani oriel --A man of considerable wealth, and oc- cupying a position of prominence in the kingdom. He is mentioned in 2 Sam. 17. 27-29, in connection with David's return from exile fol - JACK -THE -RIPPER AGAIN .1N 01.1) ('LAY PIPE :1ND WRIT- ING ON 11'-11.!. FOUND. Lettering Was Obliterated Before the authorities Bad Been Summoned. England's excitement over sc :er- al recent murders in which the mur- derers escaped detection has caused Sir Robert Anderson, the former Commissioner of Police of London, to mention some of the difficulties which hinder crime investigation in England. He spoke of the differ- ence between the legal powers and status of the English police force as compared with the French. "In Paris," ho remarked, "if a murder were to take place the house would be at once surrounded by a cordon of officers, the doors would be sealed, the Chief of Police would be at once informed, and no one would be allowed to touch anything until he had completed his investi- gation. Everything would be left )test as it was found ; the most skilled police officers would sea ev- erything as the criminal left it ; they would note the methods of his work by the evidences remaining, and would have placed before them all that would help them to UNRAVEL THE STORY. "See the difference here. 'An Fnglishman's home is his castle,' as :v know, and when the crime inves- tigator desires to enter a house he has to take off his cap ceremoni- ously and say, `If you please.' "Look at two notable cases that I had to deal with. There was the murder of that unfortunate young lady, Miss Camp, in the carriage ce the South -Western Railway. "She was brought into Waterloo station and was then taken to St. Thomas' Hospital. No one thought it necessary to inform the head of the Criminal Investigation Depart- ment, and it was only by accident that I heard of it several hours af- ter it occurred. Meanwhile all the evidence had been destroyed. "In France the doors of the car- riage would have been sealed, it would have been run into a siding or an engine shed, and a guard would have been placed there to see that no one disturbed the body or anything else. "Something of the same kind hap- pened in the !tipper crines. In two cases of that terrible series there were distinct clues destroyed, wiped out absolutely, clues that might very easily have secured for us proof of the IDENTITY OF THE ASSASSIN. "In one case it was a clay pipe. Before we could get to the scene of the murder the doctor had taken it up, thrown it into the fireplace, and splashed it beyond recognition. "In another case there was writ- ing in chalk on the wall -a most valuable clue: ha:cdwriting that •!night have been at once recognized as belonging to a certain individu- al But before we could c dd secu ro a copy or get it protected it had been entirely obliterated. "No law hinders a police officer from going into a private house or private grounds to arrest a crim- inal. But the law gives hits no right tured by the nobles and crowned by t,, enter for the investigation of the them as a muck king of the pea - that and the securing of evidence sets with a red hot iron crown. that Wray lead to the detection of the. criminal. 4 "That brings me, of course, to the question of an alteration of the AIRSHIP RECORD BEATEN.law and the reconstruction (if that TWO FAMOUS LAWSUITS ! Was A Total Wreck From Heart Figure 1301'-.Ri:ESTED, .11;L» 1;. '1'0 131: TRIED .1'1' 49. Famous Austrian Law•sult Origin• Med When I)uteh Settled in America. Tw•o little boys in ltonto were car- rying their father's pistol to the gunsmith's to be trended. They quarreled and the pistol was not so much out of order as to keep Pietro, aged 11, from shooting Paola, aged The little fratricide was at once arrested, the magistrate commit- ting him to prison, while they pre- pared to deal with the case. Un- fortunately for Pietro, the day on which he shot. his brother was Sept. 13, 181'0. On that day Gen. Bixio began his march toward Rome and two days later he entered the city. The Papal magistrates had ample excuse for forgetting Pietro, and Pietro was forgotten for about six ►months, when the newly -appointed functionaries took up his case. Ho deliberately did they take it up that it was NOT UNTIL 1882 that all the material for the prose- cution had been completed. Then the abolition of the death penalty in Italy caused a fresh de- lay. Three specialists were ap- pointed to enquire into Pietro's state of mind, and they disagreed, causing the affair to be shelved in- definitely. There is no one now who remembers at first hand the in- cidents of the crime. Pietro is 49, having spent thirty- eight years in the House of Deten- tion, and once more efforts are to be made to bring him finally Co trial. Of greater antiquity than Pietro's case is a famous lawsuit that has just ended at Agram, Austria. It originated in a dispute between Croatian nobles and small peasant farmers at the time when the Dutch settlers in America were just be- ginning to build Now Amsterdam. The big land owners in Croatia of the time illegaly annexed the pea- sants' lands at Bredovec, and the peasants appealed to the Emperor Ferdinand for justice. An enquiry was opened, which lasted so long that the peasants lost patience and A BATTLE WAS FOUGHT between a force of 10,000 peasants, under Matthew Gubic, and the nobles, in which the latter were vic- torious. The matter lay pra-tically dor- mant until forty-two years ago, when the inhabitants of Bredovec resolved to have the case reopened. Now at last the Court has announc- e(' its verdict, which forms a bulky yc:lurne in itself. Basing its decision chiefly upon the redistribution of lands scheme ieaugurated by the abolition of serf. dom in Croatia in 18-18, the Court has found in the main for the pea- sants many ofc whom ,m hate now sud- denly become well to do. Those who benefit chiefly by the verdict are, appropriately enough. the lin- eal descendants of the peasant lea - la vestigationrl)epartntent, andnthatof the Crimil �is German Officer in Flight for Thin. too big a question to be settled orteen Koury. even discussed profitably here.:' -----.;. Widow Hennessy -- ".1h' Mr. O'Flaherty, whin inc Hold man died, penses at Vladivostok, carriage i it left a hig hole in m1 heart.,' from boats to trains, and vice ver- O'1laherty---"Mrs. Binnisy. would set, it will be seen that the gross ve mind patchin' it aid a t it out o' total of the trip would not exceed mine 1'' $7 75. "Rut you confess, palm." pro- ___, -,I._ tteted the beautiful girl, when the father slowed indications of a de - PASSING OF LONDON HANSOM. sire to withhold his consent, "that Before the days of motor cabs the 3011 (10 riot knnw of n single, snli• horsed vehicles in London number fury thing that is in the least dero- ed over 11,000, while in their pros- gator). to his reputation." "That' t perous days they numbered some just it," replied the old gentleman. 11,000. At the end of the half year "I don't like the idea of bringing completed June 30 the number 1nyonc• into my fanti(3 who is so stood at only 9,197. Soon the mo- infernally sly as all that." tot omnibus will entirely cease to suffer from their obstruction. rAHLBURN's Many people make a mistake in think• in,; that the only oftiee of a pill is to move Vthe Motels, but a properly prepared p111 anld a• t beneficialy ulxn, the liver and 11., entire glandular and secretory system. This is just what Milburn's faxa•Liver Pills do, and hy their 1l'ecitic alterative action euro !.iter Complaint, Biliousness, lsundiee, Constipation, Flatulency, Heartburn, Headache, 1h•apepeis, Water Itrsah, Catarrh of the ttomseh. ('"ata! Tongue, Paul Breath, and all diseases arising from impurities clogging the sys- tem. 'i'h.•y are small and easy to take, and ilo ant gripe, weaken or sicken. They may be need ss a mild laxative or a strung purgative seconding to the dose, , Price 23 cents a vial, or 5 vials for a $1, at ail dealers, or mailed direct on treealpti o, pike by Tb. T. Milburn, Co., Ltd., Toronto. Oat. ('hippy "I was not at all tip to the mark last night tried to say �umething agreeable, but couldn't ch it., somehow ; so at last I bade lowing Absalom's rebellion and them good -lye." Norton -"Ah death. His name would seem to Then you dict manage to say some- Assyciste him with the tribe of Ma- thing agreeable after all:" GREW CONSIDERATE. "S.le that you don't get h•.trt. Ram. it's dangerous working here in the quarry." "Oh: nothing can happen to rte. Joe. I've borrowed two dollars from the foreman. anti since then Lc doesn't let me du any dangerous aerk." 4. -- "She told him she must not see hire any more." "What did he dol" "Turned out the light:" Tourist (to Irish jarvey, t., ahem he has just iven a nip of whisky) -- "That's made another ratan of you, Pat'" Jarvey-"Faith it has, yer honor ; but he's just as thirsty as the other one:" When Theodore Reesetelt was Police Commissioner in New York he asked an applicant for a position i1 the force : "If you were ordered to disperse it mol. what would you do 1" "Pass around the hat, sir," ass the role. No Disease is so Quiet and Stealthy in its Approach as Kidney Disease That is why it is iso dangerous. It may become deep scutal before you realize the danger. It is therefore of greet importance to recognize the early warning symptoms: iain or ,lull aehe in the back, bladder }},mins, smarting sensation when urinating, tic. amt nr surpr,essed urination, sediment in the urine, ere., tee fes.' in iso earl stake kidney disease is easily cured by 1)'Aa 1 Ktrsxi Pius. Mr. Elgin Brisebois, Vernon, Ont., writes: -1 was troubled a great .teal with kidney trouble. 1 had to get up font or five times evert• night. my tiring contained a thick brick.elust sediment, 1 had a pain in the small of my back, and could not eleep at night. I oc.mmenco,f nsing !loan's Kidney Pills and in a very short time 1 was all right again. 1 am very thankful to have found a cure eo speedy in its action, ik,an's Kidney Pills ter., 50e. per boa or 1 boxes for ILO, at all dealers, or ensiled drr.sct on receipt of prise hy Th. Doan Kidney I'dl Co., Toronto. Ont. Major Clross, of the German air- slip corps, the other day. accom- plished the longest voyage yet ma '0 by such vessels, Count Zeppe- lin's Swiss cruise in July being beaten by an hour and teen minutes. The Gross airship remained aloft for a few minutes filer thirteen hours. Some remarkable experiences were undergone by tate crew dur- ing their voyage over sleeping cit- ies, towns and hamlets. They start- er) at half -past ten on Thursday night. 11'hen they were over the town of lIathenow, at midnight, the wind, blowing at thirty-five feet a second, held the airship captive among the clouds for nearly two !leers. Roth her motors throbbed at full pressure /it a desperate at- tempt to make headway, and Major Gross was jest about to turn round and return to Berlin +then the air- ship began to move forward, an -I continued the rest of the journey without n break. The crew• (who, by the way, were spectators of a great farmyard fire 2.000 feet below) declare that con- ditions throughout the night were as fa' ,rahle for sleeping as those in a railway train. but fee the ex- citement. anti eXhilaratori of soar- ing through the bracing moonlight air kept there awake. During the whole night loth me- ters were constantly working. The airship co+e•red only sixty-five utiles during the first eight hours. but from Magdeburg, which was the turning point fur the voyage, back to Berlin. n trip .,f eighty utiles was rccolnl,Iishcd with the irejr1 in throe and ons! -half haves. The return j• limey was over Potsdam. The descent took place safely at the 'Fegel "duck" by means of the motor alone. During part of Ow voyage the sir -►11p '.t as sailing at :i Leight of 4,00'i In such eas:+s the actloa of MILBURN'S HEART AND NERVE PILLS In quiet.ng the heart, restoring its nor. real heat and imparting tone to the nerve centres, is beyond all question, rrarv:l- lous. Mr. Darius Carr, (Mary, N.B., writes : "It is with the greatest of pleasure I write you a few lines to let ycu know thcr great blessing your Milburrt's Heart and Nene Pills have been to rte. I was a total wreck froth heart failure and my wife advised in, to take your pills. After using two boxes I was restored to perfect health. I ant now 62 years old and feel almost as well as 1 did at 20." !'rice 50 tents per box or 3 far $1.25, at all dealers, or mailed direct by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. SENTENC ESERMONS. Many a big sorry is born of a lit - t) • sin. Greater work is the best reward for good work. Character depends more on con- science than on creed. Laws always depend on our es- sential valuation of life. ]religion is not to bind back, but to bind together all tnon. The god who can be expressed in figures is only a figurative god after a. He who sells out his friends lays his own soul cn the bargain coun- ter. Success is not so notch in getting there as in knowing what you aro ti:ere for. Envy is the habit of extracting cur own misery out of the happiness of others. Tho greatness of any man's pre- sent depends on the length of his view of the future. Salvation is more than cont:ci- c•usness of my soul; it is the sense of the worth of every soul. When the preacher gets anxious tc popular opinion on his brain, he bas not his people on his heart. You are not likely to do much for the poor fellow on the Jericho road if you are anxious for the approval of the Pharisee. If you are dissatisfied with your religion because it clues not make you happy, ask first whether you make any one else happy. Many a man has a kick corning that never reaches him. Nothing short of a steam roller can stop a middle-aged woman who imagines she can sing. During the last year 29,208 ves- sels entered the Port of London. Literary Lady -"I am very fond t•f Bacon, aren't you?" Unliterary Gentleman --"Can't sa • Gcti t as I am, 1 but I like ham and eggs." Judge -"What is your name'! ' Prisoner -"I've forgotten the name 1 gave last night." Judge-"Didn I* you give your own name t"' Priso- tier--"No, your worship ; ['in trav- elling incog. I" The bride always stands nn the left-hand side of the groom during the wedding ceremony, save among the Jews, when she is placed at his right hand. Pure water will not rust iron. It i, the presence of carbonic acid and other impurities which cause the surface of the iron to oxidise when exposed to moisture. For Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Stomach Cramps, Colic, Summer Complaint, Chol- era Morbus, Cholera In- fantum, and all Looseness of the Bowels There is no Medicine Like It has been a homaliold remedy for 43 years. You tan always rely on it in time of neat to civ just what we claim for it. Ito not allow an unprineipaled druggist to palm offa cheap sutsctituto on you. The genuine "1/r. Fowler's" is manes. factureel by The T. M,lburu (.o., Limited, Toronto, Ont.. THE ONLY CURE FOR DiARRIiBA. "1 hay., ,:..•,1 itr. Mrs R(ht Rabat, Fowter'o 1•'.t. of gButketon, Ont.. 1%',I.i steaaberry wrist:: - for diarrii ea. ami I think thci a is not a better remedy to bo found, as 1 have a largo family and all subjee t to it. i would not be w,ihor.t it in the hour., +s it is a pock core, and 'tt. only thing • that will owe theta."