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Exeter Times, 1909-04-15, Page 3
ABSOIUTE 'MORE GOOD MEN AND WOMEN SECURITY, Corinne 111/1wCartees Little Liver Pills. tr•�" • Must Bear Eijnuturo of see Fac-Slatite 1Yrcrper Cc!ow. Vary email sad es eaip to take a.s sugar. CARTEaS' FCesII 1IDtI1.IItt[SQ. vLF R BN. E!R FGFOR TURILICUSPID LIVERES3. P Lis. FOR CONSTIPATION. .OB SALLOW SKiN. FOR TtitCOMPLEXIOtI Nice (M/4VIM Si aduetMl.lt/'J1aA72,•r., ti e� i pural7 vegetaale.�Jk •r/ t tizzil CURL SICK HEADACHE. WOR'T'H KNU\V1N(�. The Creation is Longing to See the Maui festation of the Sons of God. Porridge mid Potatoes are the For all creation, gazing eagerly ety meets, elects an influential Staples;. as if with outstretched neck. is committee, the influential couiniit Eight ounces of bread and a pint waiting and longing to see the tee meets, elects au able executive; of gruel for breakfast and a pint manifestation of the sons of God.— the ab!o executive meets, carries ltu►nans viii. 19. (New Testament iu pious resolutions, plans great , bread and suet pudding or potatoes modern speech.) :;cherries, goes home comfortably to; for dinner, out one morsel of meat Moro good men and women—for dinner, lives happily ever after- for seven days—that is bow a con - this the creation, gazingeagerly as wards and leaves two or three pee- vitt begins a sentence of hard labor. d ll hisd k} tastes if with outstretched neck, waits and longs. This is the energy of all moral effort—a steady supply of geed men and good women. This is the steam which snakes the en- gine move. In proportion to the extraordin- ary increase of our resources aro They are not valuable; they are Mill meats but twice a week, and h xl ' th �yurld that dangerous, harmful, destructive, if of that four ounces only each time. MOST HATED PUNISHMENT Another he b 920 a barks, and he passe to IN BLUE -FACED DRESS. THE WHEEL -HOUSE, A ('ltl'1:1, A letter may now reach hint once in three months. He may look for - DEVICE FOR PRISONERS. ward to a forty minutes' visit once in the same time. A year before a penal servitude prisoners' discharge he may pass into the special class, with all -blue uniform, tea instead of cocoa, and - greatest treat of all --roast in- stead of boiled beef. Many men say that the everlasting diet. of boiled treat is one of the worst parts of their punishment. The craving for a chop or a sausage be- comes simply terrible, and lasts long after the desire for tobacco has vanished. Penal servitude convicts may also Little Meat is Provided—Bread, A GOOD FELLOW'S WIFE' DR. WOOD'S NORWAY PINE SYRUP Is A Remedy Without An Equal For COUGHS COLDS, And All Affections Of The THROAT and LUNGS HER LOT 1S ('EItTAIN1.1' NOT A ll.tPYY ONE. Selfish, Heartless Man About Town Lets 11'ife Slate at li otue. "'Tho furnace is broke," ex- plained the lady of the house as she led the way to the kitchen and invited her guests to take seats near Coughs and Colds d ► not ,all for a stove. "So I brought the chil- a minute recital of symptoms as the y are dren and my sewing out to the only known to cveryoue, Lt,t their duni;c•ra are ple to do the week. This wort During occur wee ►c► waren spot in the noose. My em- nut turdcrst,xxl ao well. Alt the must would be a better place to live in wool but twice, on Mondays and 1 broidery ? Oh. I'm just doing some : serio us affections of the throat, the lungs ii the people who curry resolutions 1'ridays, and thea only three ounces marking for Eleanor. She admires considerable remiss; of their to work so I sins l� couldn't re ar►d the bronchial tubes, are, in the begin- serious go forth to carry them out,at a time, says an English paper. gainJ' p and when they have planned th©` Even after four months.) when sentences by good conduct andfuse tet do this. 1'ui marking all, rink, but coughs and colds. hard urk du it and say nothing about • long -sentence hard -labor men are work. Hard work pays in every her liucn as well as her lingerie--- T••., much stnsss cannot be laid upon the way, for a clever, handy man may with a monogram I designed for alntenitiou to all resorts affected by the it. let last put upon full diet, these is get the greatest coveted job of her." iubidiuus curlier stages of throat and lung cook or cleaner, or even of gard- GOOD FOOD, BEST WINES. disease, as failure to take hold at once Rill cause many years of suffering, and in the end that terrible scourge of " Consuutp. tion." Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup Is we doing t e got phen, John Ruskin once remarked, to a tits. change the emphases from the we ought to do ? I doubt it. Ste- inner to he outward lite. did not get bishop's pay fur his IMPROVED METHODS ARE long sermon to the Pharisees; ho GOOD, only got stones. Paul had no ea- thedral called by his naive from which to preach his gospel to the! Roman world. When Augustine and his noble munks landed at Ebhsfleet and met the English king between there and Canterbury there was no missionary societ:yl and missionary press behind him. 1t seems to me that we ought to do vastly more with our numbers and wealth than men did WHO \1'FItI� FEV1' AND POOR The res,, of the diet is bread, por- ridge, potatoes, suet pudding, and on Tuesdays, Thursdays ur►d Satur- days a pint of soup. but improved men and women are THE AWFUL WHEEL -HOUSE better, and the soul of improve- is the fate of the hard labor man. ment is the improvement of the soul. Are you a better man to -day, kinder to those about you, fairer to opponents in controversy, more _ just to cit els in business, more Fifteen minutes on and five minutes anxious to render obedience to all off is the unbending rule. It is the claims of good citizenship, more cruelly hard toil for then novice, willing to go out to your way, take cl,imbirt this endless staircase. trouble, make sacrifices to help g our church, to help good move-1Try walking upstairs for a quer- y - stents and to help your fellows 1 If ter of an hour without stopping, We leave the work to the machin- not, something is lacking, some di- M and see how you feel at the end or ery when we ought to do it our- vine electric spark which might lit. Try it again after a brief fie selves. All your machinery needs kindle in your heart the glory of minutes' rest and then a third and intelligent people to work it. Yet the Lord. fourth time. Try it after breakfast we still go on discussing "methods" The machinery cannot be worked, of half a pound of whole meal bread of church work or Sunday school without good men and women, so. and a pint of sticky gruel. There work or something else; and tho we have seen. But this also is true :1 is no possibility of rest, for if the underlying assumption is that there The entire object of the machinery' foot remains an instant too long is one particular specific, all but is to produce more good hien and upon the step it moves away and infallible. "method" which, if wo women. All preaching, all praying,' the next step scrapes the skin from times. could only discover it, would do all worship comes to this, Churches, I the shin. Small wonder that "two At the Strozzi palace in Rome the work itself. e:rgantzations, theologies are ever- years'hard is a sentence which there is a book made of marble, This is preposterous. There are lastingly valuable if they help us to the most hardened crimial looks on the leaves being of marvellous thin- just as many methods as there are keep our hands clean and our with dread. cess men and women. There aro as hearts pure, if they assist us to As a smatter of fact almost any In Persia there are no distiller- many good methods as there aro do justly and love mercy and walk of them prefer five years' penal fes breweries, or public-houses,good men and women and as many humbly before all that ne can know servitude to two of hard labor. The and atiye wine is the only intoxibad methods as there, are idle and or think of God. !food of a convict undergoing penal catink beverage used. i • that The "house'' has four wheels, each wheel divided into compartments, so that no convict can talk to or communicate with his neighbor. A Few Items of Fact That Should Interest You. The cotton factories in Lanca- shire shin enough thread in six sec- onds to go round the world. A cavo has lately been discover- ed in New Zealand which is larger even than the Mammoth Cavo of Kentucky. Germany's colonies are five times ar; big as herself, those of France Eighteen times, and Britain's ninety-seven ener, which is the biggest prize of all. The governor of a prison has, of course, power to punish refractory prisoners. The punishment which The guests admired the work, and the afternoon chat flowed smoothly enough until the man of the house appeared. Well dressed, full blooded, with the effects of even the toughest convict dreads conceit, good food anti the best is a "bashing." Thirty-six lashes wines marked alt over his hand - may be given, and few men can keep consciousness beyond twenty- four. The punishment over, the man is wrapped in a blanket soaked with salt water, and taken to the hospital. The birch is used as well as the cat, and almost equally feared. Next to a thrashing, the cells are the most dreaded punishment with- in a punishment. The man sen- tenced to solitary confinement is put on a diet of BREAD, WATER AND GRUEL. If he is noisy he is shut up in a noise -proof cel}, which is almost dark. Third in the list of severe punish- ward, but it is not generally ment comes the wearing of irons. wife of hie is a saint, if there wasK y In these a man must eat, sleep and ever one, although I do think she known that there is a department work, and even bathe, perhaps, for is too saintly with him. If she'd in each of the Royal residences six months on end. These punish get a little more devil in her and which approximates to the news- ments are wonderfully lice eS a little less patience that man room of the daily paper. Here y might get what he deserves. newspaper items from the great sary. The dread of being degraded journals of the world are '`cut" from his class to the one below it GOOD FELLOW'S WIFE. by newspaper encu, say, for reports is the best weapon against the con - "What's the matter 1 Why, he's of news dealing with the higher vitt in the hands of authorities. a good fellow, and she's a good spheres of politics, foreign affairs, No prisoner cares to risk this, or fellow's wife. He is a spender, and a myriad other topics, alike down town, and he does not half; of interest to the King and his re - support the family he has at home.' sponsible advisers. He is 'one of the boys' down town: His Majesty is a keen man of af- and a nagger and a bully and a fairs, and pi ubably the best -in - coward up town --that's what he is. formed monarcit in the world. Even Ile spends all he chooses to spend when on a special journey, his news - on his vile, conceited self, and his papers are set out on the table in wife pretends the furnace is bro- his saloon carriage for his perusal, ken when she knows that it is sim-; and the morning news finds no ply because she can't afford to more omnivorous reader. keep a furnace fire and she and the: Iii the Royal work -rooms cuttings and references are carefully pre- served in special books, and in- dexed for future references. Xing Edward's editorial offices, as we ' She goes about with shoes like may call therm, are the best or - paper while ho buys his clothing ganized of all, though those of the from the best tailor in town --and Kaiser, at Potsdam, run them very she excuses him because his busi-' :lose. ness standing demands a certain! Now -a -days, however, every good appearance. He spends more. Court has an intelligence depart - for cigars in a week than she does ment attached, and its multifarious for food for herself and the chil- duties provide plenty of work for dren, and, worse, she works to feed Royal messengers and other mem- and clothe thein. Yes. she does:. hers of the confidential staffs. Si sews for her friends—her shirt! — 'i• — -- S1'E(" 1'ACLES FOR HORSES. FRIENDS HELP. — 1'sed Alien j'ciing, They Produce 11i�_h-slel►;►cis. The business of one well known rind the Persian physician? A ter-; get her to make cakes for their firm of opticians in England con- tain young and profligate entrap, I parties, and she does plan the sista largely in the manufacture of exhausted alike in body and in nicest dinners and luncheons, even spectacles to promote high step - mind, sent for a famous Persian' to the decorations and place cards. ping. They are made of stiff lea - physician and said :-- I Of course, it is all done under the ther, entirely closing the eyes of "'I have squandered my youth' pretence that since she does these the horse, and the glasses used are in riotous living. My frame is en- I things so much better than any- deep concave and large in size. The frehled like an old man's, and toy' one else, wo simply couldn't ex- ground seems to the horse to be mind disordered with remorse and • ist unless she helped us cart, raid raised and he steps high, thinking honor Can you help me 1' the pay is simply—oh. thy pride of he is goiug uphill or has to step ''The Persian physician, looking that courageous little suite would over some obstacle. This system gravely at the pale satrap, answer- ed:— " 'You have hut one hope. Go forth and find, if there be such, a perfectly contented n►aa. Persu- ade this man to exchange shirts with you, and you will straightway be strong and happy again.' They are too lazy and cureless to of .all horses should be tested, like "The satrap set out upon his ft el s.(luainish over a pail's lack of t hat of children. sears .. Ile travelled many months principle. His mother-in-law is the ---- in vein. But at lyst he heard of only one who won't 'pretend' for .\n elephant works from the age a cobbler alio was said to be abso- i thein. She visits then) once a year of twelve to the age of eighty. 11e lately contented. ' —yes, she has money, but she won't can haul fifteen tons, lift a half - "The satrap earn(' at last to the give her daughter much because she ten, and carry three tons. cobhler's dt�or. 1'he house was bit says it encourages the husband to :. hovel. and on a board hcf+,re it'. give even less to the home. the cobbler lay asleep. :\waking "lot a few people mislrnder him, the satrap asked if it were stand. They pity hrin for hating The chief otli •e of the liver is the socre. true that he was quite contented, a wife who is so dull she doesn't tion of bile, which is the natural regulator and the cobbler, with a laugh, de- I care to go round with hint and hate "f the bowel'. clarets that it was ;t ,+.►d time, and so stingy she lives 1Vtionever the liver becomes deranged. Ba:,d the bile duct, clogged, liver complaint " 'Them,' said the satrap, 'I have in the kitchen to t,aye work, and is produced, and ii manifeattsl by the I►re- a boon to ask at. your hands. It fc careless she weirs shabby clothes seem of o.mitipation, pain under the right i:, tliat you will exchange shirt, and never makes an effort to keep +Mulder, aaitow eomolexion. yellow cyan, with rte. For thus. a wise physi- hitt kite by keeping her good looks. cian has said, 1 trey become strung "Think of it, he is actually piti- and contented also.' ed, when the whole situation is dire "Rut the cobbler shook his head.' tt his own selfishness." "'Most cheerfully would I grant some, if puffy face, he cast the pale, frail personality of his worn little wife quite into the back- ground. Her gingham, which had been neat before, looked worn and faded. Her thinness became scrawny, and her face was pinched with nervous anxiety. VISITOR'S OPINION. The advent of the suave, jolly man brought the call to an abrupt close. "I can't bear to breathe in the same room with him," stormed the eldest of the group as they walked away. "I hate hen so at times I feel like running a hatpin into his nice, round, complacent body. That not Sold as a Cure for Consumption but for affections tributary to, and that result in, that disease. It combines all the lung healing virtues of the Norway pine tree with other absorbent, expectorant and soothing medicines of recognized worth, and is absolutely harmless, prompt seal safe. So great has been the success of this wonderful remedy, it is only natural that numerous persons have tried to imitate it. Don't bo humbugged into taking anything but " Dr. Woods.'' Put up in a yellow wrapper; three pine trees the trade mark; price 25 cents. ROYAi. EDITORIAL OFFICES. His Majesty is a Great Newspaper Header. Most people are aware of the multitudinous duties -of Ring Ed - worthless people. The great soci- Rev. Charles F. Aked, D. 1). servitude is hardly luxurious, but it run the chance of losing any re- fs better than t la in hard labor mission of sentence. !Meting and knew all to well On I prisons. Breakfast consists of the The swine force which moves one ton on a smooth high -road will moves. eight tons on a railway or thirty-two tons on a canal. Aeronauts have noticed that the barking of a dog is the last sound they hear from earth, being some- INTERNATIONAL LESSON, times then at an elevation of four APRIL is. les. �\ pigeon used by a Manchester firm of mill -owners to carry mes- sages from one mill to another has saved the firm $1,145 in telegrams during the past ten years. A bridal wreath in England is usually composed of orange b}os- Borns. Germany uses myrtle, Italy white roses, Spain red ruses, Greece vine -leaves, and Bohemia rosemary. TIff S. S. LESSON Leseon I11. 'Ilse ('ontersion of Satil. Acts 9: 1.39. (:olden Text, Acts 9: •1. I. What Paul \Vas Converted from.—Verses 1, \Vhy does the account of Saul's persecuting be- gin with "but" ("and" in at ! h•►r- ized version)! To contrast it wit's It may be news to some that, the other hand, the radiant vision he usual pint of gruel and half -pound `though the diet is everywhere the had seen commanded his allegiance. of bread. But the gruel is better same by law, yet there is much It was a promise of ultimate vie- than the hard labor skilly. It con - tory. He would only be leaving the tains two ounces of oatmeal and losing side. And Christ himself had promised hint (Acts 28 : le -18)a notable part in the conquest of the world to Christianity, that he, blind as he was, should ''open men's eyes, and turn them fr'-�in darkness to light." It was a terrible three - days struggle. 2. Converted to Christian Testi- mony (vs. 10-15, 20). What disciple was sent t4) help Saul t His name was Ananias. It is good to have some one to redeem that name. Paul afterwards (Acts 22 : 12) :Aid Three vhundred Berlin streets are the propagating work of Philip, t of him that be was a devout man, ttnucle, and of full weight. SrnaIl planted with 1 1,000 trees, which just described. And why is yet used? held in I►igh honor by All the �1ews� wonder that on this diet men fee Are said to represent a value <,f It gees hack to the mad zeal of of Damascus, in spite of his Chris- • quently regain lost health, and the choice in the matter of prisons. half an ounce of molasses. Wormwood Scrubs seems the favor - There is meat on three days a ite, for there, they say, a man can live without being hungry. But week --beef twice, mutton once—five Portland and Princetown none like, ounces each time, and it is boiled particularly the former. The keen with onions and vegetables. A sea air gives the convicts an ap- pound of potatoes is the dinner al petite which their food is never lowance. sufficient. to entirely satisfy, espe•c•i- THE SOUP I5 GOO[), ally as the work there is perhaps the heaviest of any that is done by being made of beef, pearl barley convicts. and onions. There is cocoa for sup- l+er, of the very same quality as that which is served to the nets-. FOUND AT LAST. '1';,e whole meal bread is well t Poor Cobbler Who 11r1V Perfectly Content. I'ru!tintn, the theatrical nearly 8.00,000. About 1,000 gar- Saul against the Christians at the tian profession. 11 oreover he ens death rate is only ten per thousand man, talked the other day about deners and assistants are employed time of Stephen's death (Acts 8: learned in the law—precisely the less than half that of the health;- contentment. to take care of them. 3). That same thrcatenings and roan that could appeal to Paul. i„ he j waists are dandy. A public notice to the following slaughter continued. Paul himself 3. Converted to Sufferings (t -s. test towns in the country. t I don't �� ork for money, g; The work -: not the hoee ess toil said The hardest workers never! work for money. When did moneys "In the fall some of her friends being content 1 I insist that she put up some fruit "You know the story of a satrap end jell lied .jam for them. They children live in tee kitchen to save fuel all winter lee'. SHOES LIKE PAPER. effect. was recently placarded at (Acts 26: 9-11) paints a vivid pic- 16, 2'-25, 29, 30). \l hat very •o[ the treadwheel. lien are put to Thirlstane, Tasmania : "I, Sarah Lure of this persecution. which , strange motive for following hien .. Fitzpatrick, if not claimed by Fran- evidently involved the death of did Christ prevent to Saul 1 That trades-Artlor frig and shoemaking cis Fitzpatrick in fourteen days, more than Stephen, and which fol- lie was to suffer many things for principally. Many at Portland and �' Dartmoor work in the open air. will be married again. --Sarah lowed the fleeing disciples far be- the sake of Chri-t (v. 1e). chose Fitzpatrick.” i gond Jerusalem and even Pales- sufferings began at once. in separ-Men there arc various privileges, In Abyssinia it is the law that tine. ation from his family. isolation i and ever money, to he gained by the murderer be turned over to II. Hew Paul was Converted.-- from his friends, the entire recast -IP:" behavior and hard work. the relatives of thedead person, Verses 3-7. How was Paul journey- ing of his life. 1t is to this period. A convict on arriving is placed it-. and they, if they please, may put ing? Perhaps on horseback, as (the "many days" of v. 2.1) that we the probationary class. He can him to death in the same manner usually represented by painters ; or iitust assign the retirement into earn eight murky a day. if he has in which the murdered person was en a cancel, according to Canan Arabi.' mentioned in Gal. 1 : 17,1720 marks at the end of his first kilted. Cook; en an ass or mule, record- 1t;, which lasted three years - ai sone hr gets into the third class. A naturalist asserts that if the ing to Felten. After a journey of lca�t c►ne full year and parts of Ile then has black facings on earth were birdless ratan could not five or six days, he was ;war I)ai- inhabit it for more than nine years. mascus, perhaps within sight of All -the sprays and poisons in the the beautiful city. world would be quite inadequate What wonder stopped hits in The to keep down the insects, which way ? It was about noon Acts 22 would eat up everything. • (t;), and the Eastern noon is ex - A fox can scent a man half air cecdingly bright ; nevertheless, mil" .away if thu wind be blowing' there fell about Saul a light. from two others. ' sleeves and collar, he mny write and 4. Converted to the Divine In- receive one letter in six months, dwelling (vs. 17.19). How did .\nn- and receive one visit of tweh1Y-one nias obey the vision? By finding minutes in the same period. lie is Saul. laying his hands on him, cal_ • also able to earn a gratuity of one ling him Brother i$nul in token of • shilling a month - his ndmission into the Christian! 11 at the end of the sec+:titl year brotherhood, and telling hire that; he has succeeded in earning 2,290 in the animal's direction. .\ mouse heaven that was brighter than the the some Jesus that had appeared I marks, he passes into the second can smell cheese 50 feet away. :1 sun (Acts 26: 13), and in the midst in the way to him had sent hemself,,elnss, distingnir;hrd 11) yellow fuc- deer may be sound asleep and yet a of it lie saw the glorified figure of that Saul might receive his sighte inp4. Ile may now send and get he will catch the scent of a person ! Jesus (vs. 17-27). and be filled with the Holy Ghost. , one letter every four months, Reid Tlassing 200 feet off. 111. %%hat Pan] was C'or verted Two great gifts—the greatest in the receite three visits during the year. __________ tn.--Vs. 8-30. At least five results physical and the spiritual realms. of Paul's cunt ersion are indicated IV. Have we Experienced This!ie these verses, which may best bo (Treat Transformation 1 --- That is' stndicd from this point of view. the question f('r its as we cle+ae this 1. Converted to I.owlinesss (vs. 8, lesson. f,). How is that shown 1 By what '�C�(,nyerr►ion" means `'turning.''' immediately ltdIowed. The cum- It roll►lies turning front something. IIA1) GIVEN 111' 11.1. HOPE O1' Heart Trouble Cured by iLSURN'S HEART AND NERVE PILLS 011.1 .t:.. Andrew Savoy. (iratt„n's. N.11.. : in the year of 1;11 1 an, taken 1 did not thiuk 1 eou1d live any time. Mytrouble was with in) p vole tod me that nothing could i• • die •• '„r a case like mine. 1 consulted t . • ,• ',^.+t doctors but they could ilo the n.• ,, , mi. For seven weeks 1 could hardly- '''. ardly, r • 'he floo'•. 1 hail no pale, but same Fn we.tk nobody in the world can believe how 1 bit . t had given up all hopes of living and nig given my tittle girl to my aisle:do- le -v. un( illy a friend carte to see me, and rail tee m,+ by name. maid. ' i.I'ite, if t wore you 1 would tr/ a do±e of ?Iilburn's Mout and Nerve !'ills se they are Rood for firma trouh'e.' My husband Rot Rue a hot. but for two days 1 wait nut feeling any hitt( r. but on the fourth day my husbastl Paid, • 1 Whine those pills are dnirg you go, d.' 1 was able to Fay ' Yea. i feel a good deal he' t.'r this morning: 11e said. ell! w • 11 getnu another box tight aatty.' 1 took t w•n l,,) O a and three do.e* cut of the third one, and t was perfectly well and hive not. keen •ork since then. 1 will never be without them In MT home t r 11...1 knows if it had not t►• -en for Mil. It-irt end Keri a 1'i;h+, 1 wo,;'a rot have heen alive now.' Price '.nee"t- rer 3 batt►. for $1.23. The T. \t11h►ern Liet.l , (., ; .►rocto. Out, `party with aut. in spite of theirand to something else. Paul. as a:niaZ(`ntcnt, arose and stood (y. - we have seen, turned (1) frost► i . before lie slid. Paul's eyes had pride (intellectual and spiritual) t4) 11(•011 closed, and when be 011010(1111e lee liness, a humble following of t lids, lie perceived to his burro. ,lt•stt, awl co-operation with other that lie was blind. ('hrktians ; (0) from t iolent oppo- \Vhat was the i,utward sign 4)f sitiutl to Christ, to the boldest and ' this new 1►,wliness 1 That he was most persistent testimony for led by the hand, and thus brought' Christ ; (3) from a life of author- . . . into Damascus. What a con -'its and carr, to a life of I,crsecu- tr;tt to the entrance lie had !in and sufferirlpt; (1) from tho planned �enip tillers of worldly wisdom, to the Hetes (11(1 lie speed the next three' tltifailing guidance of the Holy <days ! In helpless blindness, so ab-: spirit ; (:) from the weakness of sorbed by his new situation that , worldly power, 10 the invincible he could neither eat nor drink. !qtr"nitt1i of the Spirit. Such a what di(lt his new situation in- turning is made by every true con - cc +t e : if ►:" yielded to w hat he vest. new clearly say was the truth, i and 1:reclaimed himst'1f a Christian it rt•cant the loss of his former in- f1t.c;►ce and power. the surrender of his ttashitie•ns and h+►pe+. the tiring There are 150 firemen on some of up e f his family and his Health, the larger .\t!antic steamers. hee,+Ining a decpised "'.tee4i. Iliim- i1 is estilt►atcd that an earthquake felf c11bjeot t.► the same. 1':'l!1! And t•;1,(0.9 at the rate of between 470 persecutions Hiatt he tied I.eea in- I I..•! ri•l 5;39 feet per second. COULD NOT GO TO NORK BACK WAS SO WEAK. 13a Ladle is the primary cause of kidney trouble. 11'hen the bar k aches or becomes weak it is a warning that the kidneys are liable to become affected. lfeetl the warning; check the backache Anel diepotie of any chances of further trouble. If you don't, serious complications are very apt to arise and the first thing you your request, youcg man," he be - you will have Dropsy, Diabetes or ' gar, `but---' ]fright's Disease, the three most deadiy .,'Nay, (lay, deny me not,' the forms of Kidney Trouble. satrap cried. '1 will pay you any Mr. James Bryant, Ari' hat, A'.5., WAS ► trouble,t with his hack and used Bean's `tint that suit may name. Kidney- i'iils, he writes:--" I cannot say too n►noh about the benefit 1 received after using three boxes r+f ihnn's Kidlney fills. 1 w•aa great!) troubl,s•l w-itlt an aching pain acrasa the sir.111 of my bsck. I could not go to work and my Hick Wes mo weak 1 would have to sit down. It wn•.rlti gu sway for a few data but would shears return. I vt.t• *'Ivleo l 11 try Duan', Kidney rills and i must nay they completely curet! rae." Lreak your heart! I'iT1 "POOR FELL()\\'." ''Of course, some of the other 'good fellows' suspect that 'he' is a sneak. But, some niers don't stem to mind such things. exactly. of spectacle is generally adopted while the horse is young, and its effect on his step and action is said to be remarkable. It has been dis- covered that the cause of a horse's shying is as a rule short sight, and i( is now suggested that the sight LIVER COMPLAINT " '1 seek n( t your gold. youth,' said the cobbler, 'brit-- but----' " 'But what 1' " 'The truth is, I have no shirt.' '' On an average, 1.490 lives are lost by fires in England and Wales every year. 'Price .54) cents per box or 3 boxes for The selling of wine in Spain on a $1.25 at all dealers or mailed direet cm Sunday is prohibited, and inns receipt of price by The Doan Kidney Pill' must close by midnight on Satur- Co,, Toronto, Ont. day. 4r --- CANTON FULL OF ROBBERS. Canton, China, at present i3 full et robbers. It is said that in some parts the people are reaps nfraid to go to rest at night, inasmuch as ''• is certain that thieves will en- slims'-oaate+l t rogue and headache, heart- burn, tiro --line, a ►ur e'.o nisch, water brad),ett. rr1 t of tho 'tom u -ti, rte. Liver Qom)xlaint m•ty be cured by tvoidin thoa►l,,. • nieatioiled causes, keep- ing the 1„tvalt fr: •, and aro;•-•ng the slug. Oslo liver with that grand lig . regulator, ter and rob the place. According- LIY tit GO:A Pt,-at.:fdT. ly seine one si:s up. while t,th0rs '1r.(; • , 1 , '' :,, (.i►t ,writeat sleep. The following is a queer"►t tvi•, t { tfi:;r• t t. Oh1 •• r complaint for criti'ism of ('hina's police by a y'tr. till tried all sorts •,1 temedi(•e. 1 was c►rre ondrnt : ' `\\'e have ail olio e, a is is+•"l t•► try 11iitsrri,'s ris:. lifter E'i11s►. p b p 1 nemqv,t Vitt after taking 1 wo vials '.1 force, mhos*. tt c,rk consist* me+rt ly them. 1 fe •1 Tots a new mat,, en t can in sleeping at post or helping the strongly r •r ►m ii :n,l then) t►• 1►el•++n@," nearest shopkeeper to ehop word Pries ei c.i.t4 h • vitt 0::i ler II.00, 81 (ft a neighboring 1,iaeksmith to all ,lwtlers •,r rr+ I.44 tl: •• t by the The T. blow his fire." j l.t:t,urn C + , :. .i tr:el sint,ut°, Ont.