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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1901-7-25, Page 2ABSO1TE SECU f rr T L Del ino Carter s Little Liver Pills* REWARD FOR THE FAITHFUL How it is Possible for Us to Accuniu late an Eternal Fortune. A despatch from Washington says: Rev. Dr. Talmage .ge preached from the following text : "For the Kingdom of IIe'sv,"en is CtS as imtua traveilit;g Tato a. far country. who called his awn servar:ts arid delivered unto* deem his goods. • "And unto woe he gave five talents Must Boar Sleplatttrea Rif tes auto:hel two„ und to another one; to every e l ar. ixtied!n;g to his st:ver- aad agility. --$t. xxv. 14. 1J. Many of the j 1a b1t•s of Jes's ('hi'ef were tnort, graate:tic in the bailee i l which lie need than they are now, beacase circ gaga. t.ltees hove •a Wolof changed. In erica tai when az main r za.ted to wet."I.• geondge upon his neighbour. after the• farmer had seattered his reed wheat over -the fed Chad tray expecting the harvest. e st. his : ve•r.g r would go 'cross the sante field with al sac% gall of da1r el gran~., scut tering that recd all over tine €it•:a, anal of etearese it era'-nkei sprout up and spoil the whole crop: teed it was to that Christ rc faziezea d in the te?ratb'R" S:1 as Sac �pkt a.' 4'f t, tares l.'tir:g sorsa: among the vi'u a3C. 44:e • a'e•%ant s tE?' OA i t the text d „t-.1 f � a aares.t'm.lr,•r:• a?. t.P �1littt.a. The talents are our aiaffere:ut quallifica- [ do a osi tfsoftnize a eaves it tdiffere et '; Drool ."nt.aeat'.s to agile resit lte"alple. The y counter kick. of r ^t.' t'eSCn;eer IS toe l.a,re' .ta;'s_rls retairientg far the judge Meet to make 9:a.1 Erdtlement. The riot at ' t4 a)n:e ct these mien to be datrer. a.t'+.f n t • or twee cities iS the I 1tt aliva 14v tko iii:,iet.++.)nth at the ^t'-• aeon meta? ti i.a,1Liar, n,ttt t+f' 1 the er I tl • r•+el.t.:'•.itann of all ti -o who leave sash. iaa.darz'ved their is priviiecee. Leann f ret falai tine see:in et, that l,rfres : ,•', n,.: . (a..i . _ .e C'la: a tn.)a1 ie a . r.•'y gt t.. i. oat to :rar.'. li veal Lave eery ro- laare. r. cdo.Aqt. t u is ..a ., is Claris - !tiara. rat's`-tiaara1 wave ties enslia u.. tastier tf:e r •r:i 14,•.'if year ct.: nota) thee ku i itol of Gen, it, aril iToing ins tl flair-a.et eet. horiet,const nt- t )Ra °�i4:C tlli-Lis Se ai- 1 nen: iniere ere a r l'e.eF. t .a.y leave f...i. '1 r.• :ai..l. n. - 1:tartie r.& bone aatssest tIs t']ari-ts..It 1wF., -Ian la: t'rkaka ; a ve s l aaa tsdth call the ee ereins of Iseel ', a....:3, reed ..:..nti, is a worthy =•ervorsi. enol lie wiser *lees not is an unworthy $•ervalrlt. Wizen tl:g war trumpet Follett`. all the l eaa'el's; soldiers nnust march. however denp the sreivs laa:l} tie., or however leserfaii the cads against t tt n'Under our. ti Pr !t we 17LcolonelsCI4 and captains mail generalsin time of loiter. but in the Church of (;cid there is sae peace until than last great viet.n;v shall levee been aEhieved. lint I have to till you it is i. A VOLUNTARY SERV IeId. See Recaelsmfia Wrapper Below. Toe I„ U &rad aas'euy to take as vegan, i '-�--� +. FFG HADAcHir,a C R 'E , FOR bIZIIltESSa titTL Elei3 sWI! I MEW. 1 yr . MERPa E { . '•G GCAa.c► tIP.�TiON.. Y Sa.•- FOX. tMUCR STIR. . !FOS TatECOM.?'l:EX1OI4 CURE SIQK HEADACHE.. e T i1. LIN EMENT OR ,Sera: s, Stalls:, Cuts, Wounds, 'Men, $Fen Wires, Bruises, Stiff Joints, Bites and Stings of In:s :tat Coughs, Colds, Contracted Gath,,1` 2cutauati;,fn, Neuralgia, Bronchitis, Croup, Sara Tbra:at, Qawas.0 y, 'Whooping Cough amd$PsLfui Swellings. A LARGE BOTTLE, 25c. There is no drudgery in it. la our v..tridly callings clearer Imes nor' al.rve,' get wore out, and our head ,sehes. sand our 1e11ydicasl faculties level; d-.wn. but in this service of •( via 9t Lord u 1 harder n t Ije k i s .. the o r• r e4 t and a v1•.e • •* better 1 sakes 1 n R � �l�f aIt all lett a� . 1 tta+en in tjtiy audie•sscn, Who it;t:t been The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. Some time ago my bleed got out of order and nine large boils appeared on my neck, besides numerous small ones on any shoulders and arms. Four running d • 'ry a:,ea tln(1 for forty ys!ars, enjoy: 0 ° the employment better tb;in when he first entered it. T1i* mei:Weest honor that con ever be biatuwed upon you. i, to have Ciuitt say to on on the lest day; "Hell done, good and faaith- Ertl 5ervatit I" Again. I learn from this parable IOW. different qualifications aro giv- en to different people. 'Tine teaeher lifts a blackboard and he draws a diagram. in order that by that dia.- gram ia-grana he may impress the mind of tits) pupil with tlse truth that Sae has been uttering. And all the truths of this Bible are drawn out in the natural world es in a great diagram. Isere is an acre of ground that has ten talents. Under a little culture. it yields twenty bushels of wheat to the acre;.. Here is another piece of ground that has only one talent. You mast plough it and harrow it and cultivate it year after year, but it .1elds a mere pittance. So here' is a. man with ten talents in the way of gettnee good and doing good. He soon. under Christian culture, yields great harvests of faith and good work. IIere is another man who seems to have only one talent, and you may put upon him the greatest spiritual culture, but he yields but little of the fruits of righteousness. You are to understand that there are different qualifications for differ- ent individuals. There is a great deal of ruinous comparison when a man says: "Oh, if I only had that man's faith, or that man's money, or that inan's eloquence, how I would serve God !" Better take the faculty that God has given you, and employ it in the right way. The rabbis used to say, that before the stone and timber were brought to Jerissaleni for the Temple every stone and piece of timber was mark- ed; so that before they started for Jerusalem, the architects knew in what place that particular piece of timber or stone should fit. And so I have to tell you we are all }narked for some one place in the Great Temple of the Lord and do not let us complain, saying: "I would like to be the, foundation stone, or the cap stone," Let us go into the very place where God intends us to be, and be satisfied with the position. Your talent may be in personal ap- pearance; your talent may be in large worldly estate; your talent may be in high social position ; your talent may be in a swift pen or eloquent tongue : but whatever bo the talent, it has been given only for one purpose - PRACTICAL USE. You sometimes find a man in the community to whom you say, " He has no talent at all ;" .and yet that elan may have a hundred talents. IIis one hundred talents may be shown in the item of endurance. Poverty comes, and he endures it ; persecution comes, and he endures it; sickness conies, and he endures it. Before men and angels he is a speci- *Rik of Christian patience, and he• is sores appeared on my fent and Ieg a"1 was in a terrible state. A friend adv.sed Burdock Blood Bitters, so 1 procured three bottles. After finishing the first bottle the boils started to disappear and pp the sores to heal up. After taking the third bottle'`, there was not a boil or sore to be seen. Besides this, the headaches from which I suffered left me and I improved so much that I and now strong and robust again. Yours truly, Miss i41AGGIE WORTHINGTON* uNGTON* e Feb. 3rd, toot. Golspie, Ont. FOR TIIE OCCASION. A Scottish divine was noted for his pointed and cutting sayings both in; and out of the pulpit. One Sunday morning, just as he was about to be- gin the service, the kirk door open- ed and in walked a sprightly young ploughman in a brand new pair of light corded trousers. The young mac was inane hurry to get to his seat, and when he did get there he stood up and deliberately and slowly arranged his coat tails before sitting down. The minister had eyed him from the first, and as the young man was turning round to see if there was any dust on the seat, observed in an impatient voice: Ye can sit doon noo, my man. We've seen yer breeks. FRICASSEED SPIDER. A Trench scientist recommends in- sects as an. article of food. Be has often dined off spiders prepared ac- cording to the following recipe:Take a plump spider, remove the legs and skin., rub over with butter and swal- low. However, he does not recom- mend them, stating two objections to spiders. They are not insects, and they feed on animal food. Cock- roaches are a foundation for a. deli- cious soup; Here is the recipe: Pound your cockroaches in a mortar, put in a sieve, and pour in boiling water or beef stock. The most pop- ular insect food is the locust. It is eaten fried, dried in the sun, ground in flour, broiled in milk, or fried and served with rice. Tho Jesuit Father Cambon thinks that Iocust-flour might become •t opular in Europe as a condiment.. Children Cry for C-.., e a r� n }]° " Q really illustrating the powerof Christ's Gospel, and is doing as mucin for the Church, and more for the Church, than many more positively active. If you have one talent, use that ; if you have ten talents use them, saatistied with the fact that we all have different' qualifications, and that the Lord de- cides whether we shall have one or :theater we _hall have ten. Again. I learn from the text haat anftrlority of gifts is no excuses for i4doirnce. `fins man, with the smallest amount of money, calve ;..rowiing into the presence of the „weer of the estate, as much as to say, ••1f you Iiad given nue seven thousand dollars I would have t'2 eaglet forlrteen thousand dollars as •reel as this other man. Ion gave :Le only fifteen hundred dollars, and 1 ln,tr,iiv thought it was worth while to u:e it all. S. I laid it 'n se nap- in, :and it prodeeed no result. It's because you didn't give me enough." But •inferiority of faculties is no ex - for indo:e::ce. Let me say to rile atnaaa salatn leas tl:e least 5. 4.•• fica- t .ons. by the grace of trod he may iv made almost ode a€nit , t aalaae:H1'ott nt - Tho r liana who' -e cergoee cone out from every island of the :ea. Coad v i+e+. ley cease .trok a of the pen can mange the whelk" face of American commerce. has not so much power as you may have before Clod, in ear- nest. faithful. and continuous pray- er. You say you hove no faculty. Yes. the eaten with one tuknt are to ..ave the world. or it will never be eyed at ;til, '1'he une8l with :Ivo -or ten taalteaits are tempted to toil chief- ly for 1hcnlse!Ives, to build up their own great name, end work for their own aggrandizement, 011(1 do nothing for the 1 ieviaation of tie world's woes. The cedar of Lt•14.11ajn, stanad- ia:g on the mountain. s. ells to hand dewn the :aortae out of the heavens to the earth, tent it tears no fruit whilni some dwell Rear t* ess lees more frilit ora its ta:eate 9-i.•- • ratan it eaan carry. Dettar to i.aave One ratio::+t gaud put it to mall use. than eve bemired e.eain. 'tde sub s'r t te,acl.v.-; me that there is going to eaerlle) a day of tttLl` *1N+1 TTLE•:` E:NT. "Tine (lay will come when the Lord ie^ssts t. lal'i-t will oppe ar. and will any to you. "11rat have you been with My i'mt.l=e'+'tye abet have t yen eons thsieg with lily fanellitie ? AS hal at havi ylat 1,4114 liurta:r with what 1 gave you for acetnut:Wit a Therepurpoee- es?" ,., will C �1• 2Iron: 1 fu �. n 1 t•c. t 1 gtH:ast t•ettlenient. 1 have sontetitles ken iatelar".'d 10 sea. how an :tC:eoun- taat trill run up and down a lung line of aigures. If I eve ten or fifteen ftt;ure•, in a lin(+ end I attempt to add theta up, and 1 add the•Ita up two or three times, I nuke them tlil erent each time. Rut I have admired the way an aat'cenntant will tithe to Ioag lire) of figure~. and without a single rnistalce. and with great celerity. announce the aggregate. Now in the last great settlement. there will be a correct account 11 ee`ettted. God Ieas kept a long line of sins. a Iouig line of lerolten Sabbaths, a long line of profane words. a long line of dis- ! carded sacraments, a. long line of nlisimproved privileges. They will 011 be added up, uad before angels. and devils, Y (. , and nia"tl, the ag,grvg.ete will be announced. Olt. that will be the great day of settlemeut, I have to ask the question, "Am I ready for it?" It is of more Jalljtoi'taWCe to me to answer that question in re- gard to myself than in regard to you; and it is of more importance for you : to answer it in regard 1.. n yourself than in regard to nue. Every man for himself in that day. Every stomata for herself in that day. "If thou be wise thou shalt bo wise for', thyself; if thou scornest thou alone shalt bear it." We are apt to speak of the last day as an occasion of vociferation -a demonstration of power and- pomp; but there will be o11 that 'day, I think, a few moments of entire silence. I think a tremen- dous, an overwhelming silence. I think it will be such a silence as the earth never heard. It will be at the moment when all nations are listen- ing for their doom. "Come ye 1 blessed!" It shall thrill with new'. joy through the ranks of the saved. "Depart ye cursed!" It will throw additional darkness into the aban- donment of'tlie lost. • Lastly. I learn from this parable of the text, that our degrees of hap- piness in' heaven will be graduated according to our degrees of USEFULNESS ON EARTH. Severai of the commentators agree in making this parable the same as the ono in Luke, where one man was made ruler over five cities, and an- other made ruler over two cities. Would it be fair and right that the professed Christian man who has Lived very near the line between the world and the Church -the maga "who has often compromised his Christian character -the man who has never spoken out for God -the man who has never been known as a Christian only on communion days: -the man whose great struggle has been to see how much of the world he could get and yet win heaven -is it right to suppose that that •rna.n will hava as grand and glorious a seat in heaven •as the man who gave all his energies of body, mind and soul to the ser- vice of God? The dying thief enter- ed heaven; but not with the same startling acclaim as that which greeted Paul, who had gone under scorchings -and across dungeons and through maltreatments into the .kingdom of glory. • One star differs from another star in glory, and they who toil mightily for Christ on earth shall have a. far greater reward than those who have'rendered only half a service. Some of you are hastening on to ward the rewards of the righteous. I want to. cheer you tip to -night at the thought that -there will he sane kind of reward waiting for you. There are Christian people in this house tonight who are very near Heaven; This week some of you may pass out into the light of the setting • sun. Oh, weather-beaten voyagers, the storms are driving you into the har- bor. Oh, any brothers' and „ isters, how sweet it will be, after the long wilderness march, to get home. That was a bright moment for the tired do"e lu the time of the Deluge, when it found its way safely into the win- d .aw of the ark. UNCO1 t 'ORTABLE TRAVEL. Bow It reels to Go By the Trans- Siberian Railway. The discomforts of trans-Siberiaai railway travel are described by Rev. F. E. Clark in "A :yew Way Around an Old World." The best cars run at the time of his visit were marked "fourth ellass," and be quietly re- marks that they were "no better than they pretended to be." They had wooden seats of the hardest sort, and three wooden shelves, one above another, afforded cramped op- portunity for a .than not more than five feet long to stretch himself out. Each of these cars, with its three tiers of shelves, is supposed to ac- eomnlodate forty-three passengers. Into these cars were crowded, hel- tor-staelter, pell-mell, higgledy-pig- gledy, Russians and Siberians, ntuz- hiks gold Chinamen, Tartars, Buriats and Englishmen, Frenchmen*. Ger-' sin brought the deluge and destroyed all except those in tine ark, sin brought uSht the confusion of tongues. and now. after 2.000 years sin again Prevails. and front the idol worship- pers beyond the river the Lord takes Abram that Ile may l;Jess hies and make him a blessing to all people on earth (Joshua xxiv, 2, 3) 1-3. I will bless thee and make thy name great, and thou shalt be a; blessing. and in thee shall all famil- ies of the earth be blessed. These are some of the words of the Lord 2e Tants that had totem shelter. to Abram 'while yet in 1'r of the there, while we shuddered gas we we e Chaldees, by which He would .draw IIhU front country and kindred and thong}tt of the cusuing night in ti.)so perform through him all His plea- sure - by separating !dm unto Him - mother, who did her daily washing Ile would in due time give flim as ion the uleper bunt;. 11e were fat>aei:1- an inheritance. Stephen said in his; THE SUNDAY SCHOOL. INTERNATIONAL LESSON, JULY 28. Text of the Lesson, Gen. xii, 1-9. Golden Text, Gen, xii, 2. In chapter x we have 70 descen- dants of Noalt among whom the earth was divided, and Deut. xxxii, 8, says that God set the bounds of the people with reference to the num- ber of the children of Israel, although such people were not then in exis- tence except before God. From be- fore the world was made both the church and Israel were real to God; and Ile clearly saw the end when through them He would rule the world int righteousness (iso. xlvi, 9, 10). Chapter xi tells of man's de- generacy and union against God to make theta a name. Trois is the be- ginning of the story of Babylon, the end of which is found in Rev. xvii and xvi}i, and the great feature of which is self glorification. "Let us make us a. name." Here.. we have the beginning of languages because of this rebellion. The follow the ten generations from Shen to Abram inclusive. 1n chapter v we had the ten generations front Adam to Noah inclusive, these 20 generations being on the line of the righteous and leading on to Christ. Man apart: from God ever degenerates. Sin turned Adam and Eve from Eden, mans and Americans. Odors inde- C ' ,.erabable llradc. the air thiel: and al- most murky. The stench, the dirt, the vermin, grew worse the longer . the ear was inhabited. And in thes„' dreadful eats we had to remain for four weary days and nights. During these long and weary days we were obliged to get what diver- Sion we could from our fellow pas- • sengers. We watched the mother who combed her t -d sprieg's hair with • a carving -knife, with which she made. vigorous inst. ti *Iat on t1 acre latera" ted in rile otltet" self and+ placing him is Band which P n L a in a pint cup, and hung it out to .IIy cited by the tic+lt}zee who e,rf , i; discourse that the clod of glory ap- 1 n ons►1• t Pea" to Abr.un. and it is evident their morning' as/Miens by t•il:itie; a large mouthful of water Erato a from another record that somethings. teapot, then alnit•tiaag. it on *heir more 131112* the earthly inherit:Ince bends. 1igorola :ly te:eslaed their fact•s =AS set before holt, for be looped for Ian the pease of alae filth natal alis at city which loath foundations whose: comfort of this sherd iottl'ney, I mist !milder and maker is God (Acts vii.; record that we n."t many courtesies '1; ilei', xi, 10). Notice in the=e and !;il:2Ate-'-es front the host 118-' cuing verses of our lesson the four- pronaising of our follow traveller*. fold "I will" of the Lord --"I will Some of the p,",a ,ants were ladies 1(2121 shew," "I will hake." and 1110 gentlemen at heart. witty would Iac- (luta151e "I will bless." The promises eousanode 11,101w -elves toS dal to tett* and assurances are all front (god. Comfort. `I'111'y were m 'ntennl2Pr-' Alsraln hears, believe:*. obeys, lir. tate or noir`;', and in gent ltialste- (iced in faith. net having received thee ress could have given n points" lonIu. for God gave ve 115.Mune in- to certain members of our party wh., ht"ritanee in it. yet lIe promised that Prided themselves on belonging toa lir would Web. xi. l8; Acts vii, 1).. nation luted for itsgood manners. 4, 5. A 3n was v e t t and five, years old when he departed ed out of Baran." In chapter xi, 81, 3:3. we read that lois father, Terah, who served other gods (Joshua xxiv. '.i). accompanied him so fur as Reran. take a -hang breath with the several Abram Tarr}etl there until his father times shut. Repeat. this several . (lied, quad then. taking with hint Lot, teat uutilomit you begin its feel life his ta1'other'is son, they cantle Into Ca- veat vertu nftim It re( -tires only a honour. Did Terah hinder Abram? Ca - very short time to do so. The hang. Might he have gone on into t'anaan USE OF A. LONG 1UO;A'rII. When flailed by evpo'nt'e to cold breath quickens the pulse, and this if he had been willing? These are not as important questions as such personal ones as the following: Am I by a lack of faith or by an unwilling- ness to be separate froth this present evil world, hindering any dear one whose heart is longing for a closer walk wish God? Am I a Torah, say- ing that Reran is far enough? (l, 7. And the Lord •appeared unto Abram and said, "Unto thy seed will I give this land, and there he build - ed an altar unto lulu." We do not read of any appearance of the Lord to Abram at Iiaran, for the first verse of our lesson refers to the Lord's appearanc and message in Mesopotamia (, s vii, 2, 3), but now, Abram have obeyed fully, the time second ar to inn a Lord.appe s and confirms His promise. Until we obey fully up to the light we have we cannot expect further light or re- velation. This is Abram's first altar in the land. 1,y sacrifice' he wor- ships God in His appointed way. At this place Jacob afterward bought a;, piece of ground. There Joshua ga- thered Israel for his farewell address. There he buried the body of Joseph, and there Jesus talked with the wo- man o -man at the well (Gen. xxxiii, J oshua xxiv, John iv). The land - ewes al- ready occupied by the CanaaniteS, and Abram must be content with his tent and altar and to be a pilgrim and a. stranger until God's time should come to give him the land. 8. There he builded an altar unto the Lord land called upon the name of the Lord." This is his second al- tar in the and, and it is between Bethel and Hai. The margin says the Ai of Joshua vii, 2. Bethel sug- gests Gen. xxviii, 19, and the story of God's gracious loving kindness to Jacob. But the principal truth and practical•,essou are associated with the altar and the sacrifice. Happy is the man who, whatever be •his home or dwelling place or surround- ings, if it be a hurt or a palace, in some heathen wilderness or in some great city, never fails to have his altar unto the Lord! Redemption by the blood of Christ and constant communion with Ilim--these are the two greatest .things than 'any mortal can have, stud they are possible to all who have ever heard of Christ and of Isis redemption. He is calling all who have heard IIis voice to separ- ate themselves from• this present on still toward the south." It is good to be always going on in. the world and live wholly for Him. 9. "And Abram journeyed, going way of the Lord. We read of David that he went on and grew great (margin, going and growing), and the Lord God of Hosts was with him (II Sam. v,•10). An enlarging and a winding about is not out of place, if it be "still upward, still up- ward, still upward, by the midst" (Ezek. xli, 7). Peter would call it growing in grace and in .the know ledge of our Lord Jesus Christ (II. Pot. iii; 18). But while on this present earth we are in the enemy's country, for even our Lorci said that the devil is the prince.of this world (John xiv, 30), and we need to causes the blood to circulate faster. The blood flows into all parts of the O't"ins and arteries and gives out a great tdeaI of heal. It is stated that a tong deep breath. held as long as possible, ,wall close the pores of a • heated shin. and the danger of tak- ing cold, un stepping; outtloors, may • be thus weeded against. • Children Cry for CASTOR I� }---- PHYSICIAN AND SOLDIER. An 'Instance of Lord Kitchener's Way of :Doing Things. le A sergeant of the Royal Engineers, vt+lno has lately returned from Africa, tells a good story in a. London daily of Lord Kitchener's stern sense of justice. In the sergeant's company there was a private who always did his duty in a. quiet, unobtrusive man- ner, which gained for him a certain respect from his immediate superiors and companions. One morning this man presented himself at the office and reported that he was ill and un- fit for duty. ITe was ordered to ap- pear before Dr. X., the medical offi- cer of the corps, who pronounced him in good health and ordered him back to duty. Against this order there was no appeal, and the soldier returned to his work, which was preparing planks for a temporary bridge. He found it impossible to work, and mentioned the fact to the sergeant, with whom he was on the most friendly terms. • "Why not lay the case before Lord Kitchener?" asked the sergeant. "He is in the oilnce now." "Oh, I dare not," replied the man. "He is too stand-off and cold." "Weil, if you're afraid, I'll do it myself," said the sergeant, and he "Order the man here at once," said Kitchener, without looking up, '"and also Doctors Y. and Z. Each of these doctors he made ex- amine the man in his presence. Doctor Y. reported "typhoid in a marked stage," Doctor Z. made the same diagnosis. "Send for Doctor X. immediately!" said Lord Kitchener. "Please Doctor X. examine this mal carefully. • IIe is either i11 or malingering." Doctor X. performed the command- ed task, and nervously said: "I fear I have made a mistake. This man is in the early stages of typhoid." "Rave the man at once removed to the ' hospital," •came the order, "and you, sir, apply to the adjutant for your papers, and at your earliest convenience return to England. Children Cry for ' � fa setrbnielliseetrianitelaatseaszieerealesseer What i Children. Castoxia is a; Castoria is for Infants and CIli harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups, It contains% neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance, It is Pleasant,.. Its guarantee is thirty years' use by Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays Feverish- ttess. Castoria ewes Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and. Flatulency, Castoria assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels of Infants and Children, giving health and natural sleep.0 as S' l C trivia is the C.itildrela, ft Panacea -The Mother's Friend. Castoria. **Castoria is an excellent medicine for children. Mothers nave repeatedly told Fre Qf its good effect un;.n their children." Pr.. G. C. .147,cell, .cr:r Mau. . u Castoria. e CAstorie ,is se well adapted to children hat I receenruend it as eepaior to any pre- eript}at? lemma tome." t41.Areonu r 4 tai 3f. A .lr oakFa'n N. . It THE FAC -SIMILE SIGNATURE OF ,APPEARS ON EVERY WRAPPER THC CCNTAVR CO ]PANT TT MteeiRAV GTRSLT, NEW YORK Ctrl. ervcnisloFieak Mu. Tnot:&an.!3efyo andmildit. ..] ee ere emenallr . le 1 renaat're tar so through EARLY ...,1 RLY itt'd L lscRETliorq :t'•Nt:#3s9113. 111 2) 141.00n.7[)il'11E.ktll t31. Yf pea have any of the fotiotr(og '.:*"10ms commit as before it is tcolate. Ar.' you nervous and weak, despondent and greenly, st.e es 'before the eyes with dao.; eir.!es ender th, m, a1. al( tach, kiuiie sin 114200, palvatatlau of the heart, kestdiil dri'arns ugld loWse$, &a 1iei.•et !u arae, plaaaf+ t1 cn 122€1 fork, •tiukcu eyes, bellow casette, careworn ettpression, l'orr memory, lifeless, distraotful, lack energy and Ftrc!ute, tired mornings, resile,e tnigeta, chargeabie moods, weal; 1'l. att- iaooa11 stunted organs, vrereeture t,1, !tv time pees, flair arrest, Gaits toms, etc.? our Now Mottled Ttrca icst: 'Mil care you. E S ' ethL 0‘ Nothing can fca ore lo morala"aI• 20, rngand toldulc-aged meq than =lesions atnight orregret dralunthroagh`The. urine. They unfit a man fee ba41 ccs, mar- ried Weer social happluess. ieia matter weather caused by evil ltabtts in youth, natural wearu,eee, or sexual exccssen. our 1ioW Monied Trectament will pool- tively curoyoe. 6VRi;S tiUARANTI221D. NO CURL, NO RAY. Pfirllo Names used Wituotit Written Consent. W. A. Muir, of Minna, 0., nays: -11I was one of the coma/cos victims of carie vice a t lS rearaof age. The drains on myoystem.werev:•xakenie:g my brain as well as my sexual and :torrent. sys- tem. For tett years 1 tried scores of doctors, electrlcbel 1sanu patent ruedicines. Sonne heipee 211e, none cared. i was giving up in despair, ht fact, contemplating suicide when a friend ad- vised me as a last resort to give the New r lttetbod Treatment of Drs. N. & S. a fair trial. Without confidence I consented and in three months I was acared matt. I was cured , ` ` seven years ago -am married and happy. I 1 �, fp heartily recommend Drs, L& E, to my afflicted BeforeTreatment fellow men." After Treatment Itv'.'We treat and cure Varicocele, Emissions, Nervous Debility, Sentinel Weakness, Gleet, Stricture Svphilis,'Unnatural Discharges, Self Abuse, .Kidney And Bladder Diseases, and all diseases of hien and Women, tC"NO NAMES USED WITHOUTTSOUT WRITTaA CONSENT. PRIVATE. No medicine sent O. t). 1). No names on boxes or eavolopes. Everything confldentigl, Question list and cost of treatment, PEAR. Drs. Kennedy Ker an J' 4s'"'SP'lEL6Y STREET, b ! DETRO!Y, Meet. These pills are a specific for all diseases arising from disordered nerves, weak heart or watery blood. They cure palpitation, dizziness, smothering, faint and weak spells, shortness of breath, swellings of feet and ankles, nervousness, sleepless- ness, anaemia, hysteria, St. Vitus' dance, partial paralysis, brain fag, female complaints, general debility, and lack of vitality. Price goc. a box. watch- • and' pray lest we fail into temptation. If there is one thing that the devil stems to hate special- ly it is to see a believer wholly se- lying upon Him alone: The rest of parated unto God, living for and re - this chapter tells 'of some sad wan- dering and stumbling on the part of Abram, even a compact between him- self ain.d his wife to lie in order to save his life, and a consequent re- buke from a heathen king. New Prisoner (receiving his first rations)-Wot? Eat that? Not me! Why, I'll leave the bloomin' gaol first! For Infants and Children, no fat. nestle disnataro of P'Cwomb sevez ie on were SO-CALLED STRAWBERRY COMPOUNDS ARE NOTHING MORE OR LESS THAN RANK IMITATIONS. THE ENUME (Put up in yellow wrapper.) CURES Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Collo, Cramps, Pains in the Stomach, Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Cholera Infantum and all Summer Coin" plaints. Safe, Reliable, Harm- less, Effectual. HAS NO EQU L1 €'i rs r1� �7 J EQ04, Florence Nightingale has reached her 81st birthday. Her father was William Shore, vvl_o assumed by let tiers patent the surname of Nightin- gale in 1815, The naive •.and the- family , property came ti•oiu Peter Nightingale, agafast whom Ark - Wright, inventor .02 the seaming jenny, in 1776 brougllt ane of his' ac- tions for itlet•rugenneiit of patent