Exeter Times, 1901-7-17, Page 2TE
SiCURIT
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after Q.
Me Liver Pills.
rtfiust EteAts Sietriature of
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FareShaile Wraproe Dam.
dnr:.i. Peewee
to tausa 4,s*--bc=.
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ITTLE Flan
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flatly Things That Cross Our Path=
way Are Oniy Phantoms.
A tleslutteh from Waahington eays: DOWN Tim FRIJIT•
-Rev. Dr. Talmage preached from A. perfect. universe! No astrono-
Peer has ever proposed an amend-
ment. Does God make a, it is
a, Complete nano. Staiediug Antid
its dreadful aud delightful truths,
YOU seem. to be in the midst of an
rehestra. Where the wailiugs over
sit). wad the rejoicings over pardon
and the martial strains et victory
ma.ke a chorus like the authellt of
eternity. This book seems to you
an ocean of truth on every wave of
which Christ walks sometimes in the
darkness of prophecy, sconetimes in
the splendors with which. he w aleed
n
Again: 1 learn from this Jordattic
passage that between. us and every
Calmar/ of success awl prosperity,
there is a river that must be passed.
how I should like to have some
of those grapes on the other side."
raid sone of the Isroelites to Josh-
.
"Weil" said Joshua, "if eeell
want son ie ot those grapes, why
don't you cross over and get them?'
A river of difficulty between us and
• -r 'thing that is worth having.
That which wets nothing is worth
nothtag. God did Pot intend this
world for an easy parlour thrmve!
which we aro to he drown a rock
ig-ehair, but we are to work pm
Passage. climb niaste. PgItt battles',
eettle mountaine, ford rivers. God
hes mere -thing valuable difficult
get at for the setae reason that
he puts the ....old chore in the mine.
1 the pearl' cieter down in the sea:
is to make us dig and dive for
111 We acknowledge this prim',
worldly things. Would that
were wise enough to aclotteaSiedee
in religious things. You have had
eleitiree ele-aer to their le-ierts and
scores of illustrations under your
nc'w ' own observtttion. WIWI) Melt lutvc
t. teiega an open the bank-ern:oil had it .trizSt US 110 ril t1ivy mead
w"Trk"rs. , , elgi141rflltJo " 11 110 it lite vet 'titer while hati
• . • •
!wee. mite or Ins wontte;‘1111 .I.01%. it easy. Now the wails et their
the •following tet: "And us they
that bare the ark were come into
Jordan, and the feet of the priests
were dipped, the brim of the wa-
ter, that the waters . which came
down from. above steed and rose up
on. a lamp very far front the city.
Adam, and the priests that bare the
ark of the cover:ant of the Lord
stood iirre on dry ground in the
midst of Jordan, and all the Israel-
ites passed over on dry ground. un-
til ail the people were passed clean
over dordan."-Jeshua, 111
Noe long ago we saw Joshua en 0.
forced March. During that hone w
saw him .erose the Jordan, blow.
down the walls of Jericho, capture.
the city AL deraolish the kings, the
esteonoray of heaven changed to Ore
hiet time immesh to completely whip
. " .
: out ntS enelletes. -.ate vanguard of IAS
rf host., attacle up of the priests, ad-
vanced until they put their IPA .4t
the trim of the river. wilco immedis
utely the streets et Jerusalem were
eo more iltw than. the bed of that
r'ver. It was ee if .all the water had
'Stela drawn oli. ent! thee, tee datops
ess had beea seeked up with a,
F ttr.ti then by a towel the
reed had been wiped dry. Yonder
go tee greet arrey of the Philistittee.
.. wives, the thilOree, The Ilene.
the hosts in miller= following. them
the herds. The peeple 1084e, -up at
tr!le.;Zal wall of Jericho 1,15 they pass,
and thiek what an awful disaster
would come te them if. 1ft:,rt, 13-1e1,7
got, to the 4.1pposite bank of tamer -
:telt tool oleander teed willows. that
e/ioeiel fall upon them, and the
ti.coialtt makes the mothers htz7,. their
ACKAOHE
LAME 43 ACK,
1-1,5:UNIATISra
merres
DICCASU
8,9S Atte Atte
1;SiliNEV 1,,IRleleRY
wsziassa
neo e•Ir
e thade preeotee be completed forever.
• ' 1 * • ,
raelites got through the Jordan but
the best part of the brute creation
got in after them,
But whether Gott be so or not
there is 0110 thugs certain, I get from
111y text. and that is: We have a
right to expect our families to go
with vs. Sem) of your childree
have alteady
GONE alls TuE argER BANK.
Yoelet them down on this side the
bank; they will be on the other aide
to he you up with supernatural
strength..
Every Christian will go over ee
Shod. Those of us who were
brought up in the country, remem-
ber when the summer one coining ou
in our boyhood days, we always
longed for the day when we t.ould
barefooted, and alter teasing our
mother. in regard to it a good
while and she baying consented, we
remember now the deliciouS senSa-
tion a the cool grass and the soft
dust of the road when we put our
uncovered foot down. And the time
will come, when these shoes we wear
aow-lest we be cut of the sharp
places of this world -shall he takeu
off. and with unsandaled foot, we
Shall step into the be of the river.
With foot untrammeled from pain
and fatigue ele shall begin that last
that will be heaven. 1 pray for ail
lay deer people sae Jorthade pes-
journey. When with (me foot in
the bed of the river, awl tilt' other
foot on the bank we spring upward.
rage.
1 ask a question and there seems
C01110 back an answer in heave.ely
cho. ''What, will you never be
siee again?" "Never be sick again."
"What. will you never be tired
Never be tired again."
"What. win you never weep egain?"
'Never weep again." “Whatwill
v never die again?" "Never die
gain." Oh, you army of departed
kindred. we hail you from bank to
bank. Wait for us. When the Jor-
dan of death shall part for us. as it
parted for ;vote eerie eeevn avid meet
us half way between the willowed
banks of eerth end the palm groves
of heaven. May our greet High
Priest go ahead cd as antt with his
bruised feet touch the welters. ew!
there shall be fulfilled the words of
my terve: " Aed all the Israelites
1 Sertted thie moroleg, am the shelve eels that nattle.foreign IOC UN 110014
• %PI l$11 (11•1* ground. until all
ing 2441.i st mu'. 1 11.""k "1144 1110 entli.T.C..1 their feet. The v"' ° summer "?--‘ • • .
,1 0:41:tn trraet-e Joshua el., t• -•;i.":,1 .uind lute the „2,1141 lee the People were 11455 -ed demi 0‘
trFauttltal march of reinhatv 14)1 011 voleion• gc,rgeaus eacaigli for a ,sul. Jordan."
01" "t '.4111it.11 tan. The :diver on the berness of that,
Ni'ne. I. S7zm, E•tlf,,,•ott's Land- levy:41'4s Veealiw 1.14e 1.qt/tllstils3.. The silver on the It:truces of that
wil-re Christ wois Isiv114%,iI•4ior dancing span is etrifled -tweet
N*2" WIlt°5 011 3"1/. 18' '9°1 I , 14'411=00. river where 114i" l'orrowe drops. That beautiful dress is faded
" tile fall of 1$49 I Wee troubled e 4-0,:.head utiraculousi:‘, sward tbe Calico over which (lot!. put his hend
- •
ritocatEss CREITATION.
Ilelievers in cremation will derive
encouragement from the report just
c mutt
• ileum' le the ( oun 11 of I ter -
with a severe rain in the bock, 1 propitetts ortler, the river illustriteas oPProvinglY, turning it to Turkish Liu. n Society of England, which
n the historY of tize world for hero- satin or Indian silk. Those tlia- shows continued progress of the
gonad scarCely get up out of a cimir • i
40 owl auu otunipote11t1
"Praneemonds are the tears which suffering MoVeruent in that country. During
and it leave me great pain to move • and typical of seems yet to trans ----------- fell. the year under review 301 creme-
about- I took one box of Doan's Orr. ht peer life and mine, 50e1105 Oh, there is n river ei eigieulty leS-1 Gene have been carried out by the
' 40
cured. I have not bewl troubled . tn,tt. stadm,„. standing on the
to the acquisition of knowledge. The; per cent. This brings the total uum-
With it since." i se,,no. of that aarighted anti fugitive auelente used to say that Vulcan i ber of crematione 1) 104 at. We-
yer •Jertittn. 1 learn for myself and struck J (miter on the head and the king
.. fel yeo, thee obstacles when theY goddess of Wisdom jumped out, 1 1... up to 1,821. During 1000
eighty-eight bodies were cremated at
re touched, v:tuish. trbe text says lustrating the truth that 1/:114"111 Mattchester, sixteen at Glasgow, and
Gott when those prieets eame down i eetnes by hard Raarks. And so ,
and touched 010 edge of the water them is. my frienos. a tug. 0 105111,, 1 forty at Liverpool. This brings the
total at these places to 475, and 109
ith their feet, a 1 rial. a push, an anxiety through ! respectively. The recently -formed
TIII: W.ATED. PARTED. which every man must go before he 1 London Cremation Company has
comes to worldly success. Now be ,
They did not wade in elfin deep or wise enough to apply the principle '..1e site
sfiotzetunate in securiug an exten-
which will enable them to
• ist deep. Or koce deeP, or ankh= in religion. Melee:it Christian cher-;
Cresswell, March 28, 1901 ee,,, I make provision for the disposal of
ol. but IIS soon as their feet tough- aeter is only attained by
of an immense population
A the water. it venished. it pnssage. No Marl jUSt hafjm0ernds-t.01 the "hes
Lor a number of years, and at the
(41 (14 of life eeed only to be ap- so much about the SCriptures? Ile same time to create a beautiful
l'roarleel in -order to be conquered. NV't studvin t the Bible while e.ou place which will remain an open
Kid Pills and NnAS completely •c""git to
ney make us from eole of foot ,
tweta afnl every earthly achieve') society at Woking. US against 940
crown of heed to tingle with in- *neut. you know it is se in reg!tee during 18911, heing an increase of Xi
The T. Milburn (Co., Limited, Makes tee think that, &sliest ell the gel good. why does that mon know .
Toronto, qnt.
Dear Sirs, -I Write to say that .1 •Int.uit;es touebec , vanish. t is le w‘er'e.‘ reailing,'' a novel. He wns on !Vac'
I have used Burdock Blood Bitters tresble, the difficulty, the obstacie fire with the sublimities of the Bible
there in the distatnce that
with excellent results. Last while you were sound asleep. It Was
a.ents so huge anti tremendous. ity tugging and toiling and pushing
spring My daughter got all run The apostles John and I?aul 80004ed and running in the Christian. Ilfe that
down and was very' thin and to hate (Toes dogs. alto apostle he beenme so strong. In a hundred
. Paul said in PhiliPlfittus : "Dewere Solferinos, he learned how to fight.
weak, of clogs.- and John seems to shut
Her face was covered with red
the gate of heaven against all thehow f n nwim,
With- la a Mildred shipwrecks lie learned
.
canine species when he s "-- - - --
spots and a large boil formed on out. are dogs." But 1 hatttY•es been told TEARS OVER SIN.
her cheek. I procured 2 bottles that when these animals are furious Tears over 'Zion's desolation, teat
and they corue at you, f yomrzill) over the impenitent, tears ove's
of E.B.B., and. by the time she keep your eye on them and
had finished them th
Children Cry for
RA
HOW KNIGHTS ARE MADE.
Quaint Ceremony of Investiture
by the Xing.
gra.ves, made a Jordan which that'
e spots and u on them they will retreat. So
the most of the trials of life that man a o pas The
boil disappeared and sh has
get e UP014 P thins the hand. There are mourn -
your eye -upon theta, and advance ing garments in every weu•drobe.
upon them, crying 1 °Begone 1" will
---- There are deaths in every family re -
sink and cower. cord. All around us are the relics
Again: this Jordanic passage of -the dead. The ehristian'Ime pas -
teaches me the completeness of ey- sed this Red Sea of trouble, and yet
erything that God does. When God he finds that there is the Jordan of
, __ease'''. put an invisible dam across the 01*- death 'between him and heaven. He
THECOMMERCIAL SCORED. clan and it halted. it would have comes down to the Jordan of death
been natural, you would suppose, and thinks how many have been lost
for the waters to overflow the re- there. The Christian approaches
gioen round about, so that, great de- this raging torren.t, and as he nears
vastation would have taken placeit, his breath gets shorter and his
But when God put a dam. on in last breath leaves him as he steps
front of the river, he put a darn o11 into the stream; but 110 sooner has
either side of the river, so according he touched the stream than it is
to the text the waters halted and parted, and he goes through dry shod
reared ad stood there, not over- while all the waters wave their
flowing the surrounding country. Oh pittmes, crying: 0 death, where, is'
Ole completeness of everything- that thy sting? 0 grave, where is thy'
God does f° One would think if the vie:tory?" "Gocl shall wipe away
water of .Torcian had dropped until all tears from their eyes," and there
it was only two or. three feet deep shall be no more death.
that the Israelites might have When I see the Israelites getting
marched through and have come up through Jordan and getting up the
on the other bank with soaked and bankse and I see their floeks and
sa.turated garments, as men come herds .following right on after them,
ashore from a shipwreck., and that the suggestion comes through my
wourd have been a 1170aderfal dello- mind that perhaps after all, the best
avenue. .So it would. But God does part of the brute creation may have
something better than that. One a. chance in the great future. You
would suppose, if the Water had say: "Harmonize with that theory
been ettawn off from. the Jordan the passage, `The spirit of -the brute
there would leave been a bed of Mud goes downward.' I can harin.onize
and slime . through which the army these two great things a greed deal
would have to march. Yet here, ime easier then I can harmonize the an-
mediateler God prepares ' apath nihilation of the brute creation with
through the, depths of the ,Iordan the ill-treatment they, here receive.
It is' so dry the passengers do not do not know .but that in the clear
even get their feet dampatmosphere of that other C0U11tr32',
Oh, the cempleteness of everything there may be a bird heaven. Ido
that God does. 1 Does he make a
universe ? It is a perfect clock, run-
ning ever since it was wound, up,
fixed Stars the pivots, constellations
the intenrioving, wheels, and ponder-
ous laws the 'weights and swinging
pendulum ; the stars ill the great
dome striking' midnight, and the sun
with brazentongue tolling the hour
of noon. The slightest, comet has
upoll it the chain of a law which it
cannot break, The thistle -down fly-
ing before the schoolboy's breath' is 110'1 1OW Llat i(,•) rapidly away. Judgin' by the ads -
controlled by the Same law that con- but if they have such a courd,ry 1.0 sus, I shouldn't think ye did.
trols the atm and the planets. Tbe go to, I should. like to see them ',Me
rose bush in your window is goverte moment whentheir galled necks
ed by the same principle that gov- cured 7111d their foundered knees , - _
ren ry
for
erntr
s the great re of the universe, straighten.ed, and their dph fid k.;-
on which stars are ripening fruit, tempers healed, free from. the Collar
"and on which God will one day put and the tight check -line r.,nd
a
ceremony of investiture is an
exceedingly quaint one. In most
Sorrow stains the cheek, and S:Rit3
le eye, and pales the brow anti cases tho order followed was iddnti-
43 as hound your steps, if you can. only
• cal; therefore thut of a knight com-
mander of the Order of the Bath
may be taken as typical. On being
admitted into the Royal presence,
the knight commander to be invested
made reverence to the king by bow-
ing three tixues-once on entering the
throne room, another in the middle,
and again on approaching his nea-
jesty. He then knelt on. his right
knee. In conferring the honor of
knighthood the king placed a sword
on both the candidate's shoulders.
The knight, for by that tint° he had
become such, raised his right arm
horizontally and his majesty placed
his hand on the knight's wrist, who
then raised it to his lips. While the
knight still remained kneeling the
king proceeded to his investiture by
placing the riband and badge of the
order round his neck, and afterwards
presented his hand to the knight,
who kissed it. The ceremony being
con.cluded.. the knight would rise,
and; retiring, make similar retrerence
•as that with which he was admitted.
got strong and fleshy again.
I consider B.B.B. the best blood
medicine known.
MM. I. DAVIDSON.
Disagreeable Passenger (to com-
mercial traveller sitting by open
window) -Excuse me, sir, but that
open windew is very annoying.
C. T. (pletteantly)-I'm sorry, but
Ian afraid you'll have to grin and
bear it.
D.P.-I wish you would close it,
sir.
C. T. -Would like to accommodate
you, but I can't.
D.P.-Do you refuse to close that
window, sir?
C.T.-I certainly do.
D.P.-If you don't close it I will.
C.T.-I'll bet you won't.
D.P.-If I go over there I will.
QT. -I'll give you odds you won't.
D.P.--111. ask you once more, sir,
will you close that window?
OT. -No, sir; I will not.
D.P. (getting on his feet) -Then
will, sir.
C.T.-1 would like to see you do
it.
D.P. (placing his hands on .the ob-
jectionable window) ---r11 show you
'whether 1. will or not, sir.
C.T. (as disagreeable passenger
tugs at window) -Why don't you
close it?
D.P. (getting red in the face) -It --
appears -to be stuck.
CT. -01 course it is. 1 tried to
close it before you came in.
And then the disagreeable passen-
ger felt fool ieh, one the other pas-
sengers chuckled audibly.,
For Infants and Children,
as
trroDY
writpr47',
PRIMA, FACIE EVIDENCE.
Au: English lord of the manor Was
returning home one night, when he
found a country bempkin standing
by the kitchen door with a lantern
in his ha.nd.
What are you doing here? the lord
esked, roughly.
I've come a-coortinh sir, was the
reply. :
A -courting? What do - you mean
not knew but that on 1:hose fair by that? •
banks, there may be ' a lily 'heayen, rna.a follower o' the kitchen
amara,thine heaven. 'When I see
a professed Christian man abusing
his • horse, my common Sense of jus-
tice tells me that that horse ought
maid. •
Is it your habit to carry a lantern
when you are on Such errands? '
Yes, sir.
to have a better tulle,. m the future 'Nonsense4 retorted the master,
than his driver! If really the jaded angrily. Don't talk such stuff to
and almeed car and omnibus horses tr.el Be off with yourself! Courting
of our cities have any better .01.211:- with a. lantern! When I was young
try to go to when they leave this 1 never used such a thing.
world -I do not know that they do, Nr,. sir, said the yokel, moving
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL,
LESSON. 111, THEM) QUARTER, INTER-
NATIONAL SFIIES, A/4Y 21.
Text oe the Lesson, 0 el'. , vill:
Ilaleelult.orvyi,liseficeo:i,lne14--tarG; X prde uerTrret,
4
by the fl.3), DI. Stearnx.
_ .. . .. • - - - -. -- . .
AI net weelf's lesson will tithe Its -'to
Abram, we may be eahl to ha -re but tale
lessee on, the first 2,000 Tears of the
world's history, for the previous two les-
sees kept us at the beginaitig of the sto-
ry. Cain; and Abel represent the two
great lines leading oa to antichrist and
to Christ, Cain being of the devil and
Abel of God 1,1 John ill. 12). The Bible
does not give us any record of Adam's
numerous posterity, but just the two
lines of the righteous and the earight-
eous, mentioning some prominent men io.
each, Abel, Seth, Enoch aud Noah bon
among the righteous of these first 2,000
Years. Whe tendeucy in all ages since she
entereil is away from. God, not Mewed
God, and after the first 10 centuries toe
testimony of God was that all gestt had
corraPled his way oo earth and that the
finagluatien ot the thoughts or the heart
of nem was only evil continually (chap-
ter e•i, 5-12). He iustrueted Noah to
build an ark for the preservation of him -
feet and his family and some or all living
creatures trora the impending judgment,
revealing to Noah Ills determinattee le
destrey all others. both Mall and beast,
from off the face or the etude Noah did
$ust as he was told, and probably duriue
Ole space of 120 years (vi, 2), with no
signs of a comiug storm, =Outwit to
build his vessel far from any sea and
doubtless amid the scoffs awl jeers of an
ungodly world, We have the matinee 01
their speech recorded in Job well, 1r;471
dude, 1440. In due time the ark
Auished jUSt MI GOd had tommauded eud
therefore perfeetly fitted for that which
God intended. The limit of His merry
was reached, the time of judgment come.
He called Noah and his family mato Ulm
into the aric aud then brought in unto
Noah all the creatures He intended to
save alive and shht him in, and after ser.
en days the storm began,
1-0. This brings us to the beginning of
Ole chapter assigned for our tem% and
la the fourth verse we rend that the ark
rested upon the mounteins or Ararat
just five months after the flood began.
After this the waters decreased coutla-
ually until on the first day of the tenth
month the tops at the IllOtintAine were
seen. zuni 40 days later. width would be
Ole tenth day of the eleventh month,
Noah sent forth it raven and afterward a
dove. The raven, being au unclean bird
(Lev, xi, 10-13), could rest on may flont-
Mg dead curettes, end therefore returned
not to the ark; the dove a clean bird
findiug so resting place, returned teethe
ark and Makes us think of the Holy
Spirit as a dove, finding His first perfect
resting place on Christ at Ills baptism.
Have you the spirit or the raven or tho
dove? •
10-12. Seven days later he sent forth
the dove again, and in the evening alto
returned with all olive leaf in her mouth;
so IN.Toalt Imew that the waters were abat-
ed. That would be on the seveuteentit
day of the eleventh mouth, or just nine
months alter the waters began to come
upon the mile Ho wallet' yet other
seven days atul sent forth the <love for
the third titae, and she returned no more.
13, 14. One month and morn did Noah
still wait before the surf:tee of the earth
was dry and nearly two months longer
before the earth was dry enough to Lava
Izim leaee the ark. On the twenty-sev-
*nth day of the second month of the six
hundred and first year of Noah's life was
the earth dried, so that, counting the
wren days that Noah was in the mit be.
fore the, rain began (chapter vii, 10), ha
a•as in the ark altogether one year an
17' days, or seven months after the ark
rested on the mountains of Ararat.
What faith and patience he had oppme
tunity to display! What quiet waiting
with God! The Lore had said, "Como
thou into the ark" (vii, 1)1 so the Lord
was the first to enter the ark, and ne
was with Noah in the ark. Happy are
those who find their joy in God and in
His presence and are glad to abide with
Him anywhere and as long as Ilo
pleases: 'What matters it whether we
are going or staying, shut up itt the ark
or roaming the earth, it only we ant
where He wills? .
15-17. At the command of God Noah
builded the ark, at the command of God
he entered the ark and not until God
commanded did he leave the ark. Ho
and all the living creatures with him are
brought forth upon the new earth that
they might be fruitful and multiply. It
is a. new beginning, for in II Pet. iii, G,
we read, "The world that then was be-
ing overflowed with water perished."
rhe people had perished, but Noah came
forth upon the same earth, perhaps
!changed as to its configuration.
18-20. "And Noah builded an altar un'
to the Lord." His first act was one of
Worship in God's appointed way -by sac-
rifice; not the way of Cam, but of Abel
God had commanded him to take Into
the ark two of eecry kind of livingte
•
cre
ture to keep them alive upon the earth
(vi, 1(3, 20), but Seliovah (God in rela-
tion to man as his Saviour and righteous-
ness) had said that he should by sevens
take a all clean beasts and birds (vii, 1.-
3), and thus 146 1)8(1 abundance for sacri-
fice. The thought of sacrifice takes us
back for a moment to chapter vi, 14,
where we read that the ark which pre-
served Noah and all creatures wasectiv-
ered within and without with pitch, this,
of course, to make it to float safely and
preserve all in it But the word tranalat-
ed "pitch" and only here so translated is
the eery word elsewhere translated
"atonement" or "reconciliation" and is
surely suggestive of the great truth that
there is no safety from coming judgment
but by the great eacrifice of Christ.
21, 22. "And the Lora smelled a sweet
savour" (margin, "a savour of rest"). In
the next thapter we have a full state-
ment of the everlasting covenant with
North and his seed and all creatures, of
which brief mention is made in these two
verses, and also of the token of the cot --
enema the bow in the cloud. When we
see the bow, iee 'should remember that
God looks upon it too (ix, 16), and will
never agaiu bring a flood upon the earth.
,Bet see II.Pet. iii, 743, and say if you
believe these things or are you, lie.e the
People of Noah's thee, among the scoff-
r..rs? The limey who helped Noah to
build the ark aud could have told n11
0004 it perished because they were not
in it You may understand hilly God's
Iand teach 14;110(1Perhaps be aetive it)
some kind Qt so called churn work, but
apt:lento:: irrdenaptio.n and be able to tell it
if you are not in Qhrist by His blood you
'eiefeAles` eeeee: e • ei
,euttenaesemeSeuensullementeelemee.
eb1T'rcpiiraUonfrAs-
similating
ting Ike Stomachs arABowels of
AT THE
AC -SIMILE
SIGNATVRE
PrazoteeNeslioniCingul-
nessandriest.conthins neither
OpitaitIslorphineaorneral.
Now Nialc owxc.
,:asgearaglirSZE17=7
.21,74m Sea-,
difrjer"7
.4614;143074Ij
-
...faiza h'er4
vllia
1'0.&4L44444e
mfeelee
•
/a:40940 'e4"
IS ON THE
WRAPPER
OP EVERY
Or
AporfectIlernedy fur.Couslip-
den Sour $tQgch,D1T1loa,
Worms genvuisions,Pevorish-
nes$ond.Lo.p.s or Sugg
SXACT copr Pr WRAPPER.
ts't
14;_wiqqa.MPLPIKPFlaaXzW.aWamallia
2sf le pet, ep In clIzre-4.5 hettlee only.
in holit. .Dca't allow one to le.1l
en anythhig cheso tie) rice or prozr.the tint it
"j8 t gcel."82111 "URI OCSVOr e1e1'7 prf•
ess,' Aqr•Ste eV:1.g= get 04,e,T.0a...1.4,
V..
I .0
'..7eetit*s P
tit
1T4Mt".
71,44(14
meule IT the world has the established reputation for caring
atDra, N.4 N.c J., Their Now Allotirtoti Toone-.
ve peifeczea by tbese leminent epecealteta.bee brought Jeee
Itappineso and comfort to thousands at laorte$. With year; ceeexleeci In Inc
treatmentof (11 20 direasel they can ,m14.2)it10 to 4;toro Qv !No Pay-NmItt-
(goats, Net -coma 1)chtlity* Varicocala, Stricture, Gloat*
Secret Drutria, Impotosany, boxual road hitcratul Wonalincarst_ESd..
:may mad Bladder atscrance, Their guarantsca aro hooked by Danklionds.
Yon may have x cr,st drala throughthe 21th2e-thftts ttte r0o you feel tire
out in the morning. 'Ye: aro not rerited. your kidneys ache., you feel deocenden
have no ambition. Pouliot year 1.41fe "Hoed be drained, away. Drs. 1C. It
arentee to Cern or 110 Pay.
Seplitile Is the scourgeof =evaded. Itimy not los a crime to 143 itt for It may
boinuerited, but It is a crimeto allow It to 1'e4Th1111 111 the aVt.tertn. lokre
like sou. Dowers of Mercury and Pou-sb. treatment. Dra, IC. 4: IC. positively cure
thc worat coma or no Pay.
WRXCtI CUE & ICTURE
The Now reictLtod Treattracitt cures these diseases eafoly and surely. No
Paln-no sufferino-no detention front husluess. Donn risk opera don and ruin your
sexual organs. The stricture tissue 18 aboorhearmacaunevcreeturni Drs, N.
gone:act:seines.
Kidn ys lad
Done neglect your kidneys. Your aching' back tells the tabs. Don't I gt Doctera
experiment on you. Drs. IC. & X. can cure you if you aro not beyond human till.
They seareutee to Cure or No Pay.
CURES GUARANTnED. IVO CI:31113 NO PAT. ConsuItatBon
rrec, Booku neat Fro°. (sealed.) Wr1te1orQut1oui2forlIewio
Trcafanaont. Evcrythi=g Contlaouttol.
DRS. ENNFDY cS: KERGAN, 145 SHELE3Y STREET',i
DETRorr, Mcs1.1
OLDEST TOWN IN' ENGLAND,
This is Norwich. There is not a
straight street, nor in fact, a
straight house ih the place ; every
part of it has the appearance of hav-
ing recently suffered from the visite:-
tion of an earthquake. Norwich, as
everyone knows, is the centre of the
salt -industry. On nearly all sides of
the town are big saltworks, with
their engines pumping hundreds of
thousands of gtallons of brine every
week, At a depth of some 200 or
300 feet are immense subterranean
lakes of brine, and as the contents
of these are pumped away the upper
crust of earth is correspondingly
weakened, and the result is an occa-
sional subsidence. These subsidences
have a "pulling" (elect on the near-
est buildings, which are thdr'upside
down
ways," giving e town a
down appearance.
Children Ory for
AREA.
SURE CURE
FOR
Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Ner-
vous Prostration, Loss of Energy,
Brain Fag, Faint and Dizzy Spells,
Loss of Memory, Melancholia,
Listlessness, After Effects of La
Grippe, Palpitation of the Heart,
Anmnata, General Debility, and
all troubles arising from a run-
down sygtem.
They will build you up, make rich
i'ed blood and give you vim and
energy.
Price, 50c. per
box, or three boxes
for $1.25, at drug-
gists, or vvill be
sent on receipt of
price by The T. Mil-
burn Co., Limited,
Toronto, Ont.
,
FOR
Diarrlicea, Dysentery, Colic,
Cramps, Pain in the Stomach
\ AND ALL.
Summer Complaints,
BTS EFFECTS ARE. MARVELLOUS.
liT ACTS, LIRE lCHARM.
RELIEF ALMOST INSTANTANEOUS'
Pleasant, Rapid, Reliable, Effectual,
Every House should have it
Agk year Dluggist for it.
Take no other.
PRECE, 3 ce
111.1CMCIIIISMS=M9g0111.071w
We have heard many complaints
of the insufficient size of state -rooms
on ocean liners, says a contempora-,
ry, but the record has been beate14
by a recent passenger, who assttred
us that his 1) 1.41 cal)in was ,so small
that he had to go outside it i11 or-
der to change his mind.