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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1900-7-5, Page 3.e,....eeeearreereeerterev4144 TEE RZ.T.E.11:.R., • 17-IM11. 1 Notes and Comnients• ' Recent events in France tudicete ethat cleepite the truce tacitly agreed upon during the term, cif the Expesie teen by tlee jarring ooliticat eactions, the republio will be luoky a the sunk, xaer passes withont serioua distur- untie. To begin with, in the municie pat elections held throughout Neranoe lest month, Paris W-44 carried by the Nationalists, or Anto-Dreyeusites, who have now a alar mejority in the Hotel, de Ville, though oe the other great oltze,s, as well as in most, of the rural dietrtots, the RePublicait tennis more thee held their own, :While the latter feet is reassuring. it cannot be forgotten that al- though ita ascendancy has coneidere ably dnishe4 the polities aod wholes of Pari e greatly influence Franee; that if a revolutien, started it vientid begin there; aud that with Natienalist majority in the !Hunt- elpal the flag of inserrection OF LE ANO) Rev. Dr. Talmage Speaks of Sheltering Wings. & despatch from Washington say —Re. Dr. Talmage preaehed fro tile following text:—"Alt fowl o every wing". --Ezekiel xvit, The cedar of Lebanon fs a, roya tree. It stands six thousand foo sionary counted the concentric, ger above) tete level of the sea- A MN cies, and found one tree thirto-eir liuudred years olde-long-rooted.broa branches, all the year in luxertan toile ge. My text in t trea t es tile Christ is the cedar, and the peon!, from All quarters are the birds tba lodge among the breaches. (.1 shall be a goodly cedar, awl 8 uncle le, already raised. FOr the Nottnnae it ellen duell all tow( of every wing., It though loosely conmected, ezn- rae practeally ail the forces of re- motion, Bonapartists, Royalists, Orie- anists, and Iioreintionisis,-,aii wito are tient on the overthrow et the ex- ieteng order, and to that end etnitt predneinga contenipt for the Re- teuttlie. There le no doubt tbet ta a terinielable cerobinetion, the more thet et appeals to the vanity of Fraace, to the feeling, prevaleet among large oittesee, that France is being beaten fn the etruggle for commerce and po- iseeeions, end titat what is waated is a "etrong` goverameat to improve externei position and prestige. it cnn 4,7 chardly tail, therefore, of harelful ef- ll eget en Elie politioal situatfon; end though the Paris MUntripal Cotuvl haa no directpolitical power, its cap - As in Ezektieles time. So now-,,Ohria fra a goodie cedar, and to him are fly ing all kinds of people—young and 91d, TITO aud pop; mete high-et:Wing the eagle, Ohm tierce as the reven those gentle ea the &Pre. "AI fowl of every wing:* Ufeet, the young may coMe, 0 the eigbleen hundred and seventy ens years that have passed, about sixteen bundred haVa been wasted b the 'good in ratsderected efforte. Hu- th Robert Ralicee came, there was no organfzed effort for saving the Yentng. We spend all Our strength trying to end, old trees, when I little preseure etrould hare been suffiefent tor the eapling., We let ;nee go down to the very bottom of siu benne we try to lift thene up. It is a great dealeeeter ce keep a train on the track tieeneto Ceitit on wben it lei oft. The expert - Imre bY the Nationalists glealll a awed reinentan cheeki the fiery Peptaar defeat in tbe capital for the StOe4 the first jump. fur when be Walderkullousseeu raluietry, and thee in full swine'. the awitt !wife ftp influence will be directed to the otking fire from the pavereent,andi letter's overthrow. Indeed. eneourag- the tee between ute toot1,. ins women, 1 el thetr succese in the P4r19 elec tem is irresietible. lit is field the( the Mine. the Nationeliets have loet no yountie num be allowed to sow their time fn attacking tile ininieteee yeah" "wild oats." I have noticed, that Ing its apparent hesitation to poet% those wbo sow their wild oete seldom Me bill granting aninesil to all Peee try to raise any other kind of erop. sons implicated in the Dreyfus affair. Heaven is In one direction, hell it in 'fJttl vewo ending the agitation another. If yOU are going to 'heaven, the question, a pretext for doing you had bettor take the straight road, ao, The government had, introduced and not try to go to leolton by way and secured the passage of this men- or New Orleans. What le to be the mire by the Chamber, but in the Sen. history of this multitude of young ate. Et hod been referred toe eperial people who sit and stand around me ceintuittee wheel) up to three weeks ago liad not reported; a failure wbtell, with* the knowledge thet the records o eome of the witnesses againat Dreyfus were being investigated, posed tbe Anti Drtkyfusites to aua- Peet the goveruneent of had faith., ek_ Ai this suspicion was iatensified by e 11.hte report that copies of clocuments milting to the Dreyfus ease belong- ing to the War Office hadlieen igtven to the press, a demonstration was made in the Senate against the mint - try. which was charged with running tbe government in the interest of tle DreYfusites, the minister of war General De Galliffet, being especial- ly singled out. The diseusmon was closed chiefly beeause the report. lave oring tbe exclusion from the courts of all cases growing out of the Drey- iffus affair was banded in on the same • day, eilaich meant the passage of the amnesty bill; but the attack was sub- sequently. renewed in the Chamber, ending in the resignation of General De Galliffet on the plea of ill -health, and the escape of the governixient from overthrow by a majority of only forty-five General Andre has suc- ceeded to the war p'ortfolio, and the amnesty bill has been passed by the Senate, but bow much these measures will do to restore peace to the re- public it would be difficult to say, the future In France, more than any other country, being difficult to fore- cast. • PROVED TOO MUCH. The troubles of housekeepers with their "helps" are endless, and many thaL actually happen are quite as fun- ny as those that find their way into t'print through the active imagina- tions of the gifted young men who write for the oOlTliO journals. The mistress of an establishment vvent'into the kitchen one morning to see how her new cook was getting along. --efikThere was a wash -basin in the sink, half -full of water, and a cake of soap was- floating in it. -"This is wasteful, Keturah," she id. "When you wash yotir hands, ways takeout the soap and empty ,e water. haven't,used that wash -pan at all ceday, ma'am !" replied Keturah, in- ignantly. . 'The next day Keturah was hunting Or a new situation. • IIVIPERIAL DRINK. eDissolve from two to three drams of ream of tarter in, a quart of boil- , beg water, add the juice of one lemon and a lictle lemon peel, and sweeten with sugar. When cold, it may be tak- en freely as a. cooling drink and diur- etic. A veil/liable drink in threaten- ed munstrok.e and passive congestion of the brain. to -night? I will take you by the band and show you a glorious sunrile. I will not whine about this thing, nor groan about it; but conie, young men end maidens, Jesus wants you. His hand is love; his voice is music; his smile is heaven. Religion will pue no handcuffs on your wrist:, no hopples on your •feet, no brand on your fore- head. Agaito I remark that the old may come. You say, "Suppose a man has to go on crutches; suppose he is blind; suppose he is deaf; suppose that nine - tenths of his life h ie been wasted." Then I answer, Come with orutche8; come, old man, bliud and deaf, oome to Jesus, If you would sweep your hand around before your blind eyes, the first thing you would touch would be the cross. It is hard for an aged man or wonaan to have grown old without religion. Their taste has , gone. The peach and. the grape have, lost their flavor. They say that somehow fruit does not taste as it used to. Their hearing gets defec- tive, and they miss a great deal that Is said in their presence. Their friends have all gone, and everybody seems to go away from them, and, they are left all alone. They begin to feel in the way when you come into the room where they are; and, they move their chair nervously, and say, "I hope I am not in the way." Alas! that: father and mother should ever be in the way. When you were sick, and they sat up all night rocking you, singing to you, administering to you, did they think that you were In the way? Are you tired of the old peo- ple? Do you snap them up quick and sharp? God will curse yoix to the bone for your ingratitude and unkind- ness. Again: The very bad, the outrage- ously sinful, may come. Men talk of the grace of God as though it were so many yards long, and so many yards deep. People point to the dying thief as an encourage- ment to the sinner. Ethw much bet- ter it would be to point to our own' case and say, " If God saves us, he oaea save anybody."' There may be those here who never had one earnest word said to them about their souls. Consider me as putting my hand on your shoulder, - and looking in your aye. God has been good to you. You ask, 'How do you .know that? He has been very hard on me," " Where did you come from ?" Home." " Then you have a home. Have you ever thanked God for your home? Have .you children ?" " Yes." "Have you ever thanked God for your children? Who keeps them sae? Were you ever sick ?" " Yes." Who made you well! Have you been fed ever day? Who feeda you 1 Put yourr hand on your pulse ?.Who'maktaa Its it throb? Listen to the respiration of yoor lungs. Who helpyou, to breathe? Have yon A Dibleen the home spread- ing before you the future life'? Who gave you that Bible i" Obi t has been a story of goodness land mercy all the way though. You hare bean one of God's pet ehildrem Who leas fond- led you and oaressed you, and loved you? And when you went astray, and wanted to come back, did he ever re- fuse ? I know of a father, who, af- ter his son came back the fourth time Amid. "No; I forgave you three time.% hut I will ;lever forgive you again." And the son went off and died. Hut God takes back bis children tbe thou- sandth time as cheerfully as the firat. As easily as with my handkerchief trike the dust off tble book, God wilt wipe °et All your eine, the.% naerey of God: 1 am told it an ocean. Then, I piece on It four swift sailing crett, with compass, and ttbatrta, and choice rigging, and ekile ul uaviggbars, and I Bell them to launeh away, and discover for me the eat of thia senate. That craft nide op itt one direct -op and sane to the north; thlo to tbe south; this to the I this to the woe. They crowd On aU heir cenvatts and sail ten thous- and ewe,, and one day come up the harbour ot beacon, and I eibout to them from the beach, "Have you found the aboree" and they aneeveri "NO More to God's mercy!" Swift ane gel% dispatched from, the throne nt. met to mem it. For a million yeare tjisy fly and fly. but then come baok and fold their wings at the foot 01 tbe throne and cry "No shore: ,Iteliore. to Godes Inertly I" • Again: all the dying will find, their I nest in this goodly cedar. It is cruel to deetroy a bird's nest; but death does not hesitate to destroy one. There was a beautiful nest in the next atreet. Lovingly tbe parents brooded over it. There were two or three little robins in the neat. The . scarlet fever thrust jt e hot hands into the twit, and the birds are gone. Ouly those are sete who have their net in the goodly cedar. They have over them "the feathers of the Al- mighty." Oh 1 to have those :oft, warm, eternal wings atretched over usl Let the storms beat, and the branches of the eedar toss on the wind —no danger. When a storm comes, you can see the birds flying to the woods. Bre the storm of death comes down, let us tly to the goodly cedar. Of what great varieties heaven will be made mel There come men who once were hard and cruel, and deeper - ate in wickedness, yet now, soft and cheriged hy grace, they come into glory: "All fowl of every wing," And, here they ootne, the children who were reared in loving home -circles, flocking through the gates of life: "All fowl of every wing." These were white, and came from Northern homes; these were black, and ascended from South- ern plantations; these were copper - coloured, and went up from Indian reservations: "All fowl of every wing." SGod gathers them up. It is aston- ishing how easy it is for a good soul to enter heaven. et prominent busi... nese man in Philadelphia went home one afternoon, lay down on the lounge, and said, "It is thee for me to goe'lle was very aged. !His daughter said to him, "Are you sick?" He said, "No; but it is time for nee to go. Save Volin put et in two of the morning papers, that my friends may know that I am 'gone. Good-bye ;" and as quick as that, God had taken him. It is eaey to go when the tires comes. There are no ropes thrown out to pull us ashore; there are no ladders let down to pall us up. Christ comes and takes us by the hand and says, "You have had. enough of this. come up higher." Do you hurt a lily when you plunk it? Is there any rude-. ne,ss when Jesus touches the cheek, and the red rose of health whitens into the lily of immortal purity and gladness? NOT EXACTLY A.LI el. , "Thereo another difference between a genius and a lonatio. What's that?' A crazy person never wonders where he is going to get his rietxt meal. • LOGICAL. Little Willie—Where do sea *horses come from, pa ? Pa—Why, from the sea, of course. Little Willie --Then bay horses must come from the bay, don't they, pa ? 'A FOENT OF INSPIRATION. Grigsby wouldn't; lose his mother- in-law for a farm. Wouldn't (he? • No, Indeed. She supplies him with all his motherein-lew jokes THE SUNDAY SCHOOL. INTERNATIONAL LESSON, JULY 0. efeSUS. teie Breed of Llre." John. 0, O4-10. gulden. Text. Jobe 6., 30. PRACTICA.I. zigrEs. Verse 2e. Tim day following, The day after the reeding Of the five thousand. The people, which stood on the other side of the sea. Those who remained where tbeY had been fed, just across the sea, from. Caper- isiauen. John's point of view in this verse. is Oapernature It is difficult fer us to realize the manner of East -- ern life, especially in our Lord's time. Men and women were not anchored to their homes and, plaeee of business as with us. The yearly pilgrimages 10 Jerusalem were one of several forces which made it easy for great crowds lightly to move from Place tO place, sleeping in tint open air when overtaken by night. 23, eneet of the neultitude bad come from the west of the lake. and in the morning saw with Pleasure a number of small boats, blown across front Ti- beriaa, probably by the contrary wind [het had so preplexed the diseiples, eee. :Where the people therefore Saw. In the morning. That Jesus was not there. Though not in the boat wit his dinioen, bit iled gone, antt great effort weds by our leord to 1 they coeld find the dieciplee, they turn 11.1e5a beedlsa -ton'tate trutn tiattmeOits of their bodies to thoughts would plettably find hire. Ceele to 04pernatuu. seolang cur Jowl. of their souls. The only leey (Internment was known to be the place where Jeans ofteneet ebeele. As Dr. Watkins reminds us, "it is lee nee- a T,bey seid therefore. Witb some essary to suppoee that the tive thotiee, evident resentment. tt they lied not and people that had been fed all ree! believed Jeetto to be a Peokihet. thee turned, far mew of them tioubtlesel would not have come across the take tinued on their way to eereeee alter him. But new he as riattning 0 14 I ityarei so they want an addittonal 25. When they had found him ..4Igb4 Want eign showest then then* oe the other side ot tbe see. .1ohn tititIv4 MaY S", 344 buttUve theu' bee telongoo too point of 414,8'14dt a question asked after the Imre Nom, ee we were otonetioatin 1epe,1 atqe seems Inexplicable, but WO, may ernaum and, looking tem ": other " sullyese 1 het many of the eltransex. side ot the so - a" whenno th.people bad not partaken of that meal, but ha cam now awe people tem• itetted only !went of it. They wanted "the other side of ihe ;woe, intrieuloue meal Weil. Teen, too, if our free/ that trout whieh they *tatted. Lord bad the power to work maraelee, Already thee da x had been mete mertt.1wbi could be not work tttent continu,- , orable by the working of a number "u'IY, as3r"fie.1 3'4411"1 10 h ty" 'hule of miracles between the pliee weer° 'Tito deep error of thee* peuple is thet +, plete Representative Man, the Per- fect 'lower of hemanity, the men, in communien with God, and he gives the spiritual food ta humanity. As the miraculous feat at flureihe was n ward or pay, but a gift, so is th meat which eudoreth unto eternal lif Vox- him bath God the Father seate To seal 4 document is to give erode tiais to it—to stamp the chera,oteris ties of s corporation or a persoutalit upon it. Clod hae put bis siguatee and seal on Jesus ebrist. As be i elsewhere spoken of ae the Word o God. SO here he is recognized es tit Writing of Gad. 28. What shall we do, that a might work the works. of Clod. Thes people seem. to be intent on dedgin ordbeary work. Their laeiness trie to, encourage iteelf by our Lord's i junction to work not for the mea which per-oeteth, but if there is an thing they can do in get any non 01 tiny sort as a gift, they think the readyare to do it. The oalY co"' tion itt feaeittg God that the aveteg jelw at this time had was that werks, cereanonielism. 28. This ts the work. of God. Tb 15 the sort of endeavor that please God. That ye believe on butt eho 1 htth pent. "Not merely bel:eve it cent his instructions, but beiiev Qtt him. Tins sentence represents "oarn" eternal treasures is to trust in Christ. they look at Me intraole, not at what the boat carrying our Lord ;Anil his the miracle wee a sign of. There are disciplee had landed and tho ouwn of Capernaun* itnbbi blaster. When '"Itt,"kePti" 4144 613111i-sitelithP4 whQ comet thou. hither. As we have said artl `,11 a 'Peeitiert very that " the" where,. " When "1 Includes ”Ilow." Peelhe` it 31. Our fathers did eat amino in the From John 0.59 we learn that they . Alt It eoutinuuusly, tumid him in tee eynagogue teeehing; therefore the miracle they enjoyed was probably, tts many scholars have sug- , greateraa ththat we have enjoyed. gested, the synagogue that was built,' by the Roman eenturion. Luke 7. 5.411e gave them bread fruin lateaveu to eat. This quotation is partly from We ean faney the eager turiudenoe 11).Sa. 78. 24, partly treat. blood. Id. 4, With which the crowd filled the build- , 3e. etoses gave you not that bread Vag as soon as they knew that the front heaven; but my h'uther giveth Lord wee there. Their question is not 1 , iyou the true bread, tram heaven. Jesus directly ensivered, nor, apparently; had multiplied the bread as he broke are they intent on receiving a direct it;:muses ettepty directed answer. They are full of enthusiasm the Jews to the showers of inertia from God. But for the great Provider, and the tone now tiod gives the real heavenly Bread of their question is that of familiar of which both the manna, ewe the mule followers. But there is not the slight- .tiplieU tomee Nem eownote, est indignation of "hunger anti thirst ' 83. This verse is far above the come after righteousness "—of spiritual prehension of our scholars. It was far ourioeity or desire. above the oompreheusion of the peo- 28. Verily, verily, I say unto you, pie that heard the words spoken. But This was the most solemn way in those Vlho in their spiritual natures which aur Lord could begin have passed from death unto life un - his statement. Ye seek me, derstunds that there is a food from not because ye saw the miracles, but neaven that not merely sustains life because ye did eat. of the loaves. 'Use- but gives it, and that this bread is less difecussions often spring up Christ himself among students of the Bible as to 34. Lurd, evermore give as this whether this OT thal marvelous a,ct bread. A prayer as devout ia words was a nitrates. It is well to remember and torte as was ever offered; but the that, the philosophic definition of function, which nourishea for a while miracles is altogether modern and ed that what they wanted was not Westar. The weed here means heavenly bread, but more loaves. "signs." Our, Lord does not say, "Ye seek me, not because you saw nirlper- formanee, but because you ate;' • he says, rather, "Ye seek me, not be- cause you understood the miraculous feeding; you did not understand the sign; tha loaves did you no good, be- yond merely satisfying our appe- .Dr. Broadus describes the multi- tude as the rabble of towns, who shrink from settled employment and severe exertion, but are always alert to get,a, free meal. We are to remem- ber that the entemeiasm of such a rabble would damage our Lord's cause. They thought themselves to be Christ's disciples, and they were se understood by others, and his teach- ing would be judged by their con- duct. There is not one unnecessarilo harsh word in this whole discourse. These people and all others withm reach) must be taught two lessons: 1, Thlat they could not. make Jesus king, beinause his kingdom was not of this World, and 2, that people who are ,th- tent upon this world's goods were not ba any sense his disciples. 27. Labor not for the meat whioh perisheth. tu the Greek the word or "labor" here iS the same as that or "work" in verse 28. The sense is bscured by our authorized transise ion. Work, but do not spend our strength on that which p?risheth. he meat which periabeth is meat hicia has a limited and temporary ROBBING PETER TO PAY PAUL, notion, which nourishes for a while, No, sir $20, wouldn't reimburse nee notion, whichnonrislies for a while fox: the money I spent on that: un- ut pertnits hunger to reour. That fortunate familyl eat which endurettt unto everlasting Indeed. e is the food of the soul. The Son That's right. I spent eal, and bore man here, as elseehere, is the cone. rowed every cent of it. 35. I am tha bread of life. Our Lord sought by every figure of speech to make plain his relation to needy hu- man beings. lie is the bread of life, he is the water of life, ha is the foun- tain' of life, his are the words of life, he is Lite; and as the physical body depends upon tbe support of food, so the spiritual life of mankind is sus- tained by Christ. 86. Ye also have seen me, and be- lieve not. You have had the fullest evidence. Your unbelief is perversity. 37. All that the Father giveth me shall come to me. The forni of the Greek here turns our attention away from individuals to the grand mass of humanity. Our Lord is consoling bliuself against the ingratitude of -these people. Souls will coma to him although these souls reject him. Him that oorneth to me, I will in no wise, oast out. The whole passage is a won- derful harmony of apparent contra- diotioni—God's eternal purpose and man's free will. 39. This is the Father's will. Not his desire, but his purpose. Of 'all which he hath given me I should lose nothing. Of all those souls who believe in Christ, net one can be lost except by his own will, and even from the weakness of our wills Cheietes power Is an adequate preeervetive. eeeee..„, IQ:11M8 AB 0.1j7 THE ..1filt Rtiodeeitoe Horsa. whe, wee Mrletlered while senoting from. Toil, wee Bret oboineel, to te wagon in the Boer*" TENS THAT WILL mum YOU ' T S S,, I440e.r, and on arriving at Pretoria ATHITIN he ;toys ou the Ra ellf anti 'flume en WA* sentewlad 4' two "al* I*" 141... bow. Looks to need* o 4)iL:i4Pfluvrtr* b°14ige 14. ". *wet:I:ay re: hul5iiene:::111:9e4:71, riEaenour:attal :sae se, ne %Co anot: ah44:111,:ealn: aiBicprittdrains. Ta—fre:ezciae--;:b:oi:fs7laninaeite;ker01:11:deettliliez tin 24C:::010-:01est:.°:„:. ed Rifles,, the eeeend a reservist at :T:hi.4,a:ynGfvao:irttee'rx:t;;arie:: 0411 0'1; :yam onri rifet, othethexY.Ort:ev hiatretheLligrieoentInbfwaLtvia, Ott: shooting, while eeeisete citizen, 31,0 It the West Yorke Militia. Wvtvabe ::eber'rahlalieleso:eserdeib:enfac:',1-tritTliZr. berus, aNso. Iinattlrf.etri71 14* te4to; ese Georgerng Viotor1a. has ten vesseee evailable witb, tbe Queeoslanders in 64-utla of 3,409 teats. being the Largest; a De Verdon, the first Agent -General Oen frigate, the Nre:sen. emol for Victoria* and a nenheW of gr. toas, tfilraiedaingriztooeir"s delaiS4441ituitei5tria...114 EdWaT4 D° Ve 01rde;QQ New Z. eatand, has nearly IMO en,, retied, New Segth Wale* beteg secoed ith 600, but neither Weetere 4.wite tralia nor Tasmania has ravel vole nteers. For the protection, of coltina brads The fiery era.ter of Vesuvius, after finonerwer:laj3siraintiAvetsehreip„stbeorte az;:te 3e7rogtttne ;074:41:0:tr pe:ite.4bee,4144:: Roouteraitg Km.rak,Itt4. .104(ogon. ; quiet all of gamble% It was then no+. mudura, itina4404,nw. zinr‘tn,tautt ticed that its tell conical crater had Wallaroo. disappeared. entnat weee3 expem3 te dd. The discovery that the cone bad dia- per bend of pepowrien en defence. tippearect creetee the livellee; betereet autoper eeleettlets of Naplee. iteveral Weetern Aestralie 4s., Victoria ed. of witoto, togateer with. a few front :ewe while Tasmania eceenemixee et ae_n half tha eatamtt for 40004,,, Rome, ventured the ascent far the Ly apirot invaaten, p of scientific ineeetlgatioa, -we4t Insu moments „re me The eerie bad becenie engulfed. at eolarkabie pberaique, the °Miens .$e'verttl thotnie3 h°1re t/euu Pre" and stall sergeants July being witts, poundett as to how the eruption ot Gor tbe c4oured corporal. Wit° , aeleee aud stow) (mood at a time don. P received the Viotoria errras for an act ivbo the (Kaput wits Streniien, and of great devetiou, hale the distine. else with regard to the dise.ppoar- tion of being the nay native ever nee of the goo*. (,eFeoorravteadtoubyr:wthe. coveted distiaction 11 is genevelle` believed that title elle' , play at aatoree fire-worke ceased on "The betlyeetuttebete," the Wok- mmount of the Makin ot the neeltert name ungratefully given he Me army =es within, a providential weer- Zeittel to the breve stretcher- rera who carry the weunded ftorn 11Pd it not been tor 03E4 there irrigbt buttlefield to the field hespitalle. hpro besp an eruption that woitte guod atwitter of young, leelf-res 03 htwe destroycd Napes like that which New Zealand contingent bunied Ponipitit in 79 A..D. uow ut the Cape They have a btnert , Now thet tite menutsin Is ogitill strong, be brave New Zwiliend. war-ery, weleh may be traueltated.73,er pquoirettie. italtned np oritiwthbeadviilloafterrersheoirt toter Queen and country 1' homesteads in fear and fright. have Major Carlton, of the Lancaster returned, and are taking great In - Regiment, who Is a pre...loner at Peetereet itt the scientific havestigations. Write. is one of four brotitera at the Tehoeytlt,re assisting the learned 18014 by front. One wee eot aPtlea with the 'sno for stoups thrown fin., rh W., eb Fusiliers et Nieholson'S Neke nod oritrteeir. tv.04- another is in commend of the First uvLus 1r witoks presented an Leieestere at Lad,ysinith. preselect speotaole. Abaut the summit Several officers now in South ref - of the dark mountain white smoke rico, are laving roweetteries 'mint out • eetontth4eTer‘vyea:tvleereir.,°Icrndhla3naoltlatitylpEit314i9DeklaeS ICI:nvii,,tdel:3;t14;toarleasNE804enbpuil:::,14:v ::,exinhogeouituttsi:tu!'hvaealuzzyyaatihtuet:::::d: bruelt every three weeks, g'nud. many have etmninnt "risign- heave been at work, and they bave us -One , clouts of tobtioco and eigarettee certalned by laborious trigonometric) on turdka htresooptr aureepotrrte,atttl,ide, buTrhieedoietovououtlitonot; osrhotiolkreotirtiuse:ishiimehio. sI tbe leth HUSsars writes that like jettlettlations that masses of lava were gmItteimm th" spidt"5' 71" j Observatory on the mountains, and beautiful food they aupply to the the viliagera were lu a state of ter- btraooeivaps utietzer,etel4tinwnteey auldaale; incomeliknotiviiianitt homes; wishreeydid not like theatraid to stay Me earning a fair wage." theii lccurally h In the night advance before Ma-. eerie, weird. trastrt:in: magi:e:let vin10 tiot gerstantein, the left-hand men of the panesonn companies, who held the guiding ropes, tourists to witness the fiery displays kept stumbling over the rooks, which produced a strain on the sergeant who acted as meeker. At last he ex- clahned, "Coom up there, boys, doest xpeet me to pull the regiment into action?" itt offIcex who went to the war bad to postpone insuring his life night-time, when ths belchings were theough not having the ready nioney. The committee of the Officers' Fatn-amost frequent.roundth as Icmr areirne thetranislomremnescat Ries' Fund, happening to hear la this, at once effected the insurance. By rinedtogalarfieerthyesneaeigihilbuontriinu:tvinaglagweist,ha the heavens above and even the distant ocean, emitting, rooket-like, myriads of brillient sparks, and you have some sort of notion of what the sight was the Boers, Captain G. Haigh, of the like. 1.14$ LUST ITS PEATSIL, he Men en the **etre er Tehevtae. Suulio Ilao4 t'reven$14tx Anstiter A$ter titre retueelle at close quarters, bet ardent sight- seers were doomed to disappointment, for the police were active, aud rigor- ously prevented anyone venturing be- yond Cook's railway, near the Obser- vatory. The scene was awe-inspirnig at a strange thence the officer was killed in the, first battle in which he took part. Alt an instance of the treatment meted out to eaptured colonials by Great urea roug t Ab ut By the Use of the Famous Prescription of the Ve ner. able Cr. A. W. Chase. Here are reported three Caees in which Dr. Chase's family remedies proved a blessing of incalculable worth. There are thousands of oth- ers just as remarkable, for Dr. Chase, through his recipe book and home' me,diethes., is the oonsulting physician in the majority ot homes in Canada and. the United states. NERVOUS DYSPEPSIA. Mr. Joseph Geroux, 22 Metcalf St., Ottawa, Ont., writes:—"I was ner- vous, had headache and brain fag. I was restless at night and could not sleep. My appetite was poor, and I suffered from nervous dyspepsia. Lit- tle business cares worried and irri- tated me. After having used Dr. Chase's Nerve Food for about two months, I can frankly say that I feel like a new man. "My appetite is good, I rest and sleep well, and this treatment has strengthened me wonderfully. Dr. Chase's Nerve Food Pills are certainly tbe hest 1 weer used, and I say so be- cause I want to give' tun crediE where it is due." KIDNEY OlgEeSE. Mr. Seines Simpson, Newcomb Mills. Northumberland County, Ont., writes: —"This is to certify that I was sick in bed the most tat tbe time for three years with kidney disease. I took several boxes of pills—different kinds —and a great many other kinds of patent medicines; besides that I was under treatment by four different doctors during the time and not able to work. I began to take Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver 'Pills, and since that time have been working every day although a man nearly 70 years of age. Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver Pine have cured me." ECZEMA ON BABY, Mrs. A. MoKnight, Kirkwall, Wil..ington County, Out., writes:—"I feel it my duty to let you know what D. Chase's Ointment has done in a reel bad case of eczema on our bilay: had tried any number of cures witha out any periiianent relief, but frCTixa the hour we commeoced usiug Dr. Chase's Ointment there was great re- lief and the improvenaent continued until there was complete oure. We think it 'the greatest of family oint. men ts." De. A. W. Chase' e portrait and sig- nature are on every box of his genu- ine rerne,cliee. Sold everywbere, Ed- trianson, Bates ele Co., Toronto.. ft,