HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1901-8-8, Page 2Trfccrimum OOMPAIMV, 11. MORRAV 61111Sgr. CM.10 VORA GITV.
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mann sad es caw
to teeteaseiteer.
A TEKS FT:nrit:
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FOR SONSTIPATIOR.
FOR SALLOW SIM
FOR TUEOOWLEXIO
ItAv,„
ARTISTS AND ORCHARDS, THE S. S, LESSON,
Analogy Between Production
Crops and Growth of Grace,
A despatch from. Weshingtoli says:
Dr. Talmago. preacted from
Uhe foilowing texto-e"Me, father is
the huebandulan----ololia sjei.
-
Win it not be appropriate if 1 areoch
a harvest sermon? We were nearb,
all of us boro the comitry. We.
dropped cora in the lain. our grains
to the hill; and wept on Satuedity
to the mill,tying the grist be the
centre of the saces, so that the coo-
. tepee on either side the :horse bal-
anced each other, and _drove the cote
tle Plie bare feet wet with the
dew; and rode the homes with the
halter to the brook until we fell off:
.a.nti hunted the mow for nests until
the feathered :occupants went each-
og away. In Bible times the land
-as so plentiful and the inimbitante
few that Noah was right when he
gave to every inhabitant a. certaiu
portion ot land, that land. if culti-
rs.te4i4.AU ter to OWn il
were(-
.ted to etiltivate ground eacelte
t nisteies of religion.
This wee the rule in regard to the
ahem of the ground: "Thole shalt
Wt plough with an ate and, an ates
gether." illustrating the folly of
r putting 'intelligent and usefia
od pliable it= ht asseciaeion with
the stubborn and the. unwieidy. The
vast Majority of trouble in the
chureliee itt th* refortitatory
Lit-
5tfttus comes from the disregard
Of this rommand of the Lord:
- shah not plough with au ox and an
oss together." 'there were lam
amount% of property invested in cat-
tle. Tee Moidates paid over oee
hundrea thousand sbeep as art annual
taN. ob had maven thousand sheep.
' three titottemel -camels. five hundrea .
plea oe o'in. The time of viutuge
wee ualaereal i wit it mirth and music.
ell:Iso-ra. of the vim' were put ire,
to the Witte preee and Uen five uen
-would get iitto the Itres e and trample
out the ;nicc. from lite grape lentil :
tlaer garments. were saturated with.
ttee erine, tand they lieeauie the en -
hs Of elaughter. Chelst, itiniself!
wouridea mail covered, with the
blood of vniciection. nutaing use of ,
this allusion. When the ireeeigete
OURE
EADACHg.
BR TIST-1
L N MENT
FOR
was asked: "Wherefore art, teelii reit
tin thi1e. tipp-ere! a gaim,mts
hLe olte who e 11 the wine vat?"
Ate respoTleTz have truilaen the
seraioa Streinn Cutte"Wationthe 'Ulcer*,
Oen Sores, Dretiees, Stiff Joints, Bites and wine alone!
S
tbe first place I remark, 1 tinge of Insect", Coeghs, Colds, ContNeicl"
gr es as in the fields there
Cord'-Racernatieria Neural la,),Ionchitist
iiittiT BE A PLOUGHING.
ooping
Croup, Sore Throat, ' y, 'Wh!
Cough asad Pai ; That which theologians CaLL con-
iSw
victim is .nnly the ploughshare turn -
log up the sins that have been root -
t • MI matted in the soul. A farm-
nid to his indolent solo "'There
ne- a hundred dollars buried .deep in
1.1 at field." The son went lo work
and ploughed the field from fence to
fence. and he ploughed it very deep,
and then coniplained that 110 had
itot found the, MOWS: but when the
crop had been gathered and aold for
a hundred dollars niore than any
previous year. then the young man
took the idut as to what his father
meant when he said there wits 0huu-
tired dollars burled down in that
. field. Deep ploughing -fur a crop.
Deep pioughing for a soul. Ile who
makes light of sin will never amount
,to anythiug in the church or In the
world. 11 a man speaks of sin as
though it were an inaccuracy or a
`mistake insteed of the loathsome,
abominatele, consuming and danining
thing that God bates—that man
1 will never yield a harvest, of useful -
12055.
The difficulty with a great many
!people is that they are only sci-atch-
od conviction when the sub-
soil plough of God's truth ought to
be put in up to t,he beam. My word
is to all Sabbath -school teachers, to
' all parents, to all Christian workers:
. Plough deep! Plough deep! And if
in your own personal experience you
are apt to take a lenient view of the
sinful side of your nature, put down
beside your soul the ten command-
ments which boomed from the artil-
leried mount, and study the holiness
of God, and before you get through,
the team with flaming, nostrils Nein
be harnessed to the sharpened and
glittering coulter that will turn up
your soul to the ideepest depths.
Plough up to the cross. Aim not at
either end of the horizontal piece oi
the cross, but at the upright piece,
at the centre of it—the heart of the
Son of God who bore your sins and
made satisfaction. Crying and
weeping will not bring, you through.
"Him hath Clod exalted to be a
prince and a Saviour to give re-
pentance." Oh, plough up to the
cross!
Again: I remark, in grace as in
the field there
RG E BOTTLE, 25o.
P111111.4.11°.- .41.141.11:71t1)tli 4:iZT14111;•111.;:li'.°:;a1;pile:41)-AilirC. j'eriod, (ram
wall the Turks in leg,ypt, onevares
to tito date of Vt ater100, the whole
ilead eterrid wae prat:tit:ally at
'Mkt. leariug theee years tliere was
teal tit Slagle Et2rupealt nation that
'woe not ender ;trate, Britatio Was
ligleeng ibe Ere:Iola in India, alai the
Alive -lean, on the high seae. us weil
2*2 ta Canada; Clatet was in contliet
oath iie :elle-lean-4 in Canitrel Asia,
teal iha or were revolutions 1,0th in
,iiel the Arginatine egolust
domination, besides other
trees el -in -Item in South Am-
erico. Previimis le the general peace
of letiorlit in 176:1 there waa 11 pur-
l/4e oleo. ottrey countries were at
war Tinecs were lighting the
Ittie,etio. the Poles were at war with
them told with Austria, Prussia won
Silegie from Russia, and Austria in
1768. England was in conflict with
Framea end Spain, and the custom-
er:: chronic state of warfare between
piratical states of Northern Af-
riea and the European nations con -
tinned ail the time from 1756 on-
Waril3
Children Cy for
‘54, ST 1
LIFE-SAVING MUD.
In London, when the streets are
muddy. there is a marked diminu-
tion of diseases that are prevalent
when dust is blowing. Consumption
often gets its start from. dust. Other
illnesses, almost equally grave fol-
low from the inhaling of flying par-
ticles of flying filth. Add sufficient
water to transform the dust into
mud, and the power for harm is
goue, for mud is not inhaled. The
germs that infest dry dust become
iuert in mad, because these germs
cannot go anywhere unless they are
carried. Moreover, mud is very like-
ly to get ultimately into the drain-
pipe, aad the germs are carried off
where they can do no harm. Even
whoa mud dries on the clothing and,
is brushed off, the dust that arises
therefrom does not appear as dan-
gerous as that which has not been
recently wet.,
mAron IT WORSE.
'rho old idea, said tbe lecturer,
Was an eye tor eye, a tooth for a
tooth.
3s, coincided one of his hearers,
and there were no painless dentists
in those days, either. '
'DEFINED.
Say, pop, I've got to write a cone-
positioa on Hope. What is Hope,
• anyway'?
One fourth of a pound of paint , is
loWed for every square yard of
priming coat, one-sixth of a pound
per yard for the succeeding coat,
Children Cry for
RAa
MUST BE A SOWING.
In the aututima.I weather you find
the farmer going across the field at
a stride of about twenty-three inches
and at every stride he puts his hand
in the sack of grain, and he sprink-
les it over the field. It looks silly
to a man who does not know what
he is doing. He is doing a very in],
pertaut work. He is scattering the
winter grain, and the snow may
come, but the next year there will be
a great crop-. Now, that 18 what we
are doing when ive axe preaching the
gospel, when we are scattering the
seed. It is the , foolishness of
preaching, but it is winter grain,
and though the snows of worldliness
may come down upon it, it will yield
after a while a glorious harvest. Let
us he sure we sow the right kind of
seed. Sow mulleiut stalk, and mul-
lein stalk will corn° up. Sow Can-
ada thisties, and Canada thistles
Will come up. Sow wheat, and
wheat will come up. Let us distin-
guish between truth and error. Let
us know the difference between wheat
and hellebore and henbane and colo-
quintida. The Lord ;Jesus Christ
nineteen centuries ago planted one
red seed of doctrine, It sprang- up.
On one side of the stalk are all the
churches of Christendom; on the
other side oi the site& are all the s
free governments of the earth, iend k
INTERN.A,TICNAL IiESSONi
ALM. •11,
Texe, of the Lesson, Gen. xv., 1-18
Golden Text, Gen. xv,
1, "After these things the word or
Q n the top there sbole, be a flowering the Lord came unto Abram in o
one red seed of doctrine, Every
milleaninat after ft .All from tioolita.:e'itatianotiliige •metehledszelsetahelint:%"013.1uroostf
word that parent or Sabbath school the previous chapter width the Holy
teacher, or city miesionary, or Spirit considered of such importance
Christian worker speaks for Obrist, that be speaks of it and its relotion
miles up with compound inteeest. to Christ in Psex and la Ileb. y.
You, saving one soul, that cote AzIV- vi find vii. Let no teacher therefore
beg tem the ten a hundred, the hu- pass it by. Note the riew oame of
dred thouSettid, the thousand. ten Deity "the most Itioh God,
possesoz
thousand,. the ten thousand hue.- of heaven and eaxth," teu.d consider
deed thousand—on, on forever. It its use elsewhere. The blessing- of
seems Vezer. insignificant to see a Him who ovals all things enribles us
mother teaching her child. "Now 1 to rise above the temptation to look
lay me down to sleep,- at or long for the things Or the help
Again I remarkin graee as in the cd this world. All believers, as
farm, tbere children et Abralti. must not fail to
WW
A
give at least the tithes to our efel-
REAPING,
csedth
ek. Note e suggestiveness of
?trolly Chrianch
sed.
s speak of religion as the breted and wine. We here in our
thoua it were a matter of ecotone,- lesson to -day a good many words
ies or of insurance. Thee, eeneet to and phrases used /or the first time,
reap in the next world. Oh. noi such ae -the word of the Lord."
Is the them to reap- Gather,o? "feer not." "shield," "rewaril."
joy of the Christian religion Luis oeelieeeeo. e oriohteensnessoi etc..
morniug, this afternoontide nightawl as the tirst use of it, word lielpe
If You have not as neoCh grace as, us to undersand its significance, We
you would liee to C. thank Goo have a most importaut lesson. "The
for 'irhat You have. And PraY for wdof the Lord" may refer to the
more. on are no worse enslaved meesage which mune to Abram ay it :
thatt Josephor worse troubled than may refer to the messenger. the
wasDavid, or worse tempted than Lord Himself (John 1: Rev.
wits Daniel, or worse scourged than lea) nen we read the word of Goal
was Paul. Yet amid the rattling Of we most accept the tueeseges as spee
fetters aud the gloom of dungeons cooly eor irhie, first ore" not
rand amid the horror or ehipwreek. takes es to tee many uthor
they triumphed in tl-te grace of God. words in thus tte'
is preciobook, auto
The weakest man in this house this which these have been .and are a'
morning has O00 acres of spiritual d e sa. Nil. 10, le,
jeer all rine. Whe• do You not go xliii, 1; joel Merit v, 36.
and ivap it ? You have 1, een green-
in2-3. -And Abram. said, Lord God,
g over yoter infirmities for thirty
years. Now give one round shout what wilt thou givel ute' seelug go
" He reininded God that -
"ver Your elll°41elPatl°": You su'le ehildless?be wasm
still Childless and seemed to
you have So hard. You might wonder how and when the promised
have it worse. 'YOU wonder why
this great cold trouble keeps "veto, seed would ,coute. Ins faith was tetii
ing througe your soil like a grind- we3h* but grtavirtg- Faith emileth
stone, turning and turning with black hY .1,-Ilenari"g„ '11.1° wOit'414 tictd (Rom
hand on the crank. Alt ! that trou- ;1r' 4 glotli Zile more of Ins word we
bie is the griedstene on which zeon 111d receive the more faith We
are to sharpen your sieldeee n,,tra• %Cm have. JAI mu New Testament
fields1 wake: up)... 'take eie yew record the failing.ti are omitted. and
green spectricheree your ohie spec, cagy the mighty foith is scen. So
tacle ..' 466. black spectacles. Pull mien our story is finished it shell be
eti•F' Tho comers of your inouth as far "en tht:tt the precious blood has put
as yen thou down. To the eway ad that was iff usand there -
fields 1 neap 1 neap 1 fore einful. and only that which was
'me saviour folds 0, loath in his a...-rought m us by God shall be Seen
bosom. The little child filled LL"teileb xt• 8'49; Rom br.
the house with /ter music, and her 4-6. "And he believed in the Lord.
toys are mattered all up and down oral Ile counted it to blot for righ-
the stairs just as she left them. teousnese." Abram is assured that
Wba.t if the band that plucked four- his heir .shall not be any one merely
o'cloces out of the garden Is still ? born in his house, but shall be his
It will rave in the eternal triumph. very °Wu chittI, whOln heaven Omit
What if the voice Gott made music in due time give 11111t. How eugges-
in the home is still 2 She will sing Hoe the words, "Look now toward
the eternal bosanna. Put a white heaven!" This should, bo the Attie
rose in one hand, and a, rel rose in tittle of' every believer at all times.
the other band, and a wreath of never relying upon an arm of flesh
orange blossoms on the brow—the nor upou any human device, but up -
white flower for the victory. the red on the Lord alone. The record of
flower for the Saviour's sacrifice, the the next chapterhad never been if
orange blossom for her marriage day. Abram had persisted in looking hem -
Anything ghastly about that? Oh, venward. In last lesson we noticed
.no. The sun went down and the the protease that his seed should be
flower shut. The wheat threshed as the Stars and its probable sig -
out of the straw, "Dear Lord, give nificance. Abram reeeived the word,
1120 SieeP," SOW the dying boy, the Literally he amen'd God or said
son of outi oe my elders. "Dear 1 amen to God. The Holy Spirit bas
Lord, give me sleep," and he closed ;noticed this three times in the New
his eyes and awoke in glory,
18-21. Here we mem for the Brst
His presence will always sustain us
time the bouzidariee of the laud well
defined, not simply what we know as
Canaan, but from, Egypt to the Eu-
phrates, an abundant posses.sioa for
all [steel when they shall have re-
turned to their own land from all
the nations where tlfey are now
scattered, for they are to dwell in
their land, a united people under one
King. never to be scattered or pulled
up,22 ozt it uo
n,o z5rz,more
2 ,20 nios i'
14. 15). He will yet perform the,
truth to Jacob and the mercy to
Abram which lie has sworn from the
days 01 0 (ttic, no. 20). May er
bo fully persuaded that what Go
has promised He is able to perfon
and fearing no evil, walk humbly
with him in quietness and ilk confi
(ROIL Vtii, 28; Tea. xliii, 1, 2).
0
d Castoria is for Infants and Children. Castoria is a,
11 harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops
and Soothutp; Syrups. It contains neither Opium,
Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It is Pleasant.
Its guarantee is thirty years' use by Illillions of
Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays Feverish-
ness. Castoria cures Diarritcca and Wind Colic. Costoria
relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and.
e- Flatulency. Castoria, assimilates the Food, re4fulates
the Stomach. and Dowels of Infants and Childrenogiving
etafteSteettedeetieeleeneeterasegiageoeingeinee-a.
hat is
efeeeeieed' nee-, eerie ireeee
0.
leeiTTLED SUNSHINE.
Raelbarn Has Wonderful Power and
/5 Highly Expeneive.
Bottled sunabine ha e at last be
a possible thing, though som
what costly. Radium is the rainero,
which promises to furnish us wit
practically claim -nig bottled sun-
shine. The peculiarity of this bot
teed sunshine. 110WeVer, is that it is I
OaStaria.
f(Cit,StOria IS an excelleut medicine for
• cbildreu, 1519ther5 have repeatedly tem me,
of its gee@ efrget upon their chleirmi."
without heat.
Prof. Longley, who bas been wok
Ing experimeuts in this direction, re-
centiy *received two itereneticall),
sealed vials coutaining radium, a
mineral discovered by Mute. Tklodo
welen. Crude. et Polish chemist, in the
salts of uranium. professor bas
found radium to possess wonderful
aPrreule)earctitiesa.bot7°tIline tslizetrofvyilloitsu.whfcll'
Uttie
liiignguetrissatillesu. uceetiing greenish -white
This remarkable light gives its int-
. mediate surroundiugs a. peculiar
glow. like that from X-rae-s. One of
the vials contains a white, starch -
like powder; and the other a Similar
substance brolten into cubes with
faces a tenth of an inch in dimen-
sion, Ile the derk these vials give
ielitficient light to enable one to read
a printed page held closely to them
The power Shown by this small
quantity of radium leads the scien-
tist to the conclusion that bait A
I pound of the mineral, if thinly
spread out, would light an ordinary
4 sitting -room.
Moreover. 11 111 giving off Ilght tlze
lutetium parts with energy. it is so
slight as rot to be measurable. an
estimate being that an almost in-
definite time would be required to
exhaust the light. -giving properties
of the two small vials in question.
Its energy is af parently in the min -
Oral itself. for after being in the dork
for a couple. of months the light
given forth was nowise weaker.
Curiously enough chemists used to
treat radium as though It were prac-
tienfly valuelass. but now the in ner-
al has become so precious that it
costs about $1,000 an ounce; for on-
ly small quantities of it are found in
uranium, and its extraction is very
costly.
This mysterious radium is capable
of emittiug two distinct sets of rays
1.0 oz buoy daylight and the
other like X-rays. Moreoe-er, the
rays have the effect of sunlight on a
photographic negative,
tried as an X-ray, the light as
foutla capable of photographing
through the wood of a plate -holder,
healthy and natural sleep. Castor. is the Children's
Panacea—The 11.Tother's Prieud.
'Testament (Ibom. iv, 8, 21, 22;
I have one more thought to ere- (lM. iii, 6 : Jas. 11, 23) and strong -
sent. I have spoken of the plough- ler emphasizes this great truth, that
ing, of the sowing, Of 1.110 harrow- the righteousness width God requir-
ing, of the reaping. I must. now ! eth can never become ours by any
speak a moment of works of ours, but only by faith in
TILE GARNEBING. Jesus Christ geom. iv, 5 1 Ieph. ii,
'Where is the garner? Need I tell 1 7. "1 ton the Lord," That should ; _
8, 9 ; Titus, ill, 5).
you? Oh! no, so many have gone I settle everything and dispel every
out from your own circle—yea, from fear. Notice how- it begins and
your own family, that you have had ends the seven great "I wills" of
your eye on that garner for many a Exodus vi. 6-8. Notice it as a suf- 6
year. What a hard thno some of ficient reason for all that God re- 1
them had, in Gethsemanes of suf- quires of them (Ex. xx, 2 ; Lev, 1 p
tering they sweat great drops of oxii. 31-33; xxiii, 43) an.d an all '
blood. They took the trembling 'cup sufficient assurance to them that He
and put it to their hot lips and. will do what He says (Ezek. xxxvi, c
ol
Children Cry for
CASTO A.
TO :HAKE YOU THIN.
A. German Physician's System of
Weight Reduction.
Schweninger, the celebrated Ger-
man physician who reduced Bis-
marck's weight nearly one hundred
ounds, invented a special system of
weight reduction,
His system aims to improve the
ondition of the heart and liver,
hich often have a tendency to dis-
ase in fleshy people. It has no cut
nd dried rules, as is the. case with
most systems, but is adapted to in-
dividual conditions. In some cases
sugar and farinaceous foods are al-
lowed in moderation, while in others
they are strictly prohibited. The
great advantage of the Schweninger
system over all others ie that the re-
duction is permanent.
According to Schweninger, all
watery articles of diet should be
avoided as far as possible. Thiu
beef and mutton soups are allowed.
Of bread aad farinaceous foods only
six ounces a day are permitted.
These six ounces consist of gluten or
stale bread or dry toast. Water may
be taken in moderation between.
meals. Fat soups, sauces, spices,
cerealg, macaroni, potatoes, pastry,
tuddings, pies, cake, and milk are
on the black list. Tea and coffee,
with milk, may be used. For de. -
sorts, fruit is recommended, the pre-
ference 'beinggiven to grapes, or-
anges, cherries, berries, and acid
fruits. In the matter of vegetables,
there is a wide range given—mar-
rows, 'turnips, asparagus, cauli-
flower, onions, celery, cress, spinach,
tomatoes, radishes, lettuce, and
greens being permitted.
cried, "If it be possible let this cup
pass from me." Pursued and hound-
ed and crushed, with tongues of
burning agony they .cried: "0 Lord,
deliver my soul." But they got over
it. They all got over it. Garner-
ed 1 Their tears wiped away. Their
battles all ended. Their burdens lift-
ed. Garnered! The Lord of the
harvest will not allow those sheaves
to perish in the equinox. Garnered!
Some of us remember on the farm
that the sheaves were put on the top
of the rack which surmounted the
wagon, and these sheaves were piled
higher and higher, and after a while
the horses started for the barn, and
these sheaves swayed to and fro in
the wind and the old wagon creak-
ed, and the horses gave a struggle
amid pulled so hard the harness came
up in loops of leather on their back,
and that when 1 he front wheel
struck the elevated floor of the barn,
it seemed as if the load would go no
farther, until the workmen gave a
great shout, and then with one last
tremendous strain the horses pulled
in the load. Then they were unhar-
nessed, and forkful after forkful of
grain fell into the mow. 0 my
friends, our. getting Into heaven may
be a. pull, a very hard pull, but
these sheaves are bound to go in,
The Lord of ' the harvest has prom-
ised it. I see the 1 oad at last com-
ing to the door of the heavenly. gar-
ner. The sheaves of the Christian
soul sway tO lartcl fro in the .wind of
de.ath, and the one body creaks un-
der the load, and as the load strilces
the floor of the celestial garner it
seems -as 'if it .can go no farther. It
is the last struggle until the voices
of angels and, the voice of our de-
parted kindred, and the welcoming
voice of -God shall give a shout that
shal1. send in the leo.rvest rolling in-
to the etereal triumph, while all up
and down the sky the cryis heard :
"Harvest home ! Harvest 'Jiom!"
22, 28, 32. 36), and the great truth
that all nations have yet to learn
(xxxviii, 28).
8-1L "Lord God, whereby shael I
know that I shall inherit it ?"
Strong and weak, steadfast and
wavering, up and down. seems to
have been, the way with him as he
grew in grace and in the knowledge
of God. Therefore be not discour-
aged, weak and trerctbling one, for
the Lord will perfect all that con-
cerns you for His name's sake. The
creatures that he took at God's
connnand and prepared- as a sacri-
fice comprised all ever -used as types
of the great sacrifice of the Son of
God. If you ask, "How shall
know?" the answer is, "Behold. the
Lamb of God." See the love of God
in the gift of His dear Son and be-
lieve Rom. Till, 32.
12-16. The shadow of coming.
eventscasts itself upon him, and -the
Lord tells him of the coming centur-
ies, of a great bondage and a, great
deliverance at an appointed thne.
And so it came to pass. He declares
the end from the beginning and from
ancient times the things that are not
yet done, saying, "My counsel shall
stand, and I will do all My plea-
sure" (Ise. xlvi, 10). Compare Ex.
xii, 10, 41, and not how all came
to pass just as the Lord said. ,See
also I ,Kiligs xii, 2, and II :Kings
xxiii, 164 17, as an illustration of
the literal and exact fulfillment of
ophecy. Neither Abram nor' his
seed could inherit the land just thee
because the iniquity Of the inhabi-
tants was not yet full. One reasen
why our Lord a oes not come and
judge the nations is because their
iniquity has not yet come to a head.
There is a proper time to lance a
boil.. dineLord. will not be too late
in attending to the gathering,
17. The smoking furnace and the
burning lamp describe the way of the
people of God as they journey to the
kingdom. There will be the furnace,
but His word will prove an tie fail ins:
lainpin the world we shall have
tribulation, We must through much
tribulation enter the kingdom., bu 1
'we need not be troubled (John ,iv,
1, 22.; :evi, -33; Acts xiv, 22; Math.
xxiv, 6), for ' nothing can come to
us that will not pi dve to be the best
for us in the light of the glory, and
Mr. Grouch went to a masquerade
the other evening disguised as a
bear . anyone recognize hien ?
Only his wife.
Customer: Waiter, it, is nearly half
an hour 811100 ordered that turtle
oup. Waiter: Sorry, sir; but. you
now how slow turtles are, sir.
a
KILLING BATS BY CIAS.
Some interesting experiments have
taken place at the London dock.s to
show the effect of a new system for,
the extermination of -rats on board
ships. „The vessel is charged with
sulphur dioxide as, which appar-
ently has the effect , of , attracting the
rats from their hiding -places, and
aS soon as they breathe the fumes
they become suffocated. In the ex-
periments on the 'steamer Gourkha
several huudred rats were destroyed
in a few minutes by means of the
gas, which has no injmeo us effect
upon the decoration of the saloon.
For Infants and Children.
tro tn.
emile
agazeirs
01
1-444‘
lc es
erne.
sermon
Pa. O. c. Aware?, Leiren, afore
THE
CaStoria,
odastorla Is se wen adapted to children
that I recommend it es StipedOr to any pre-
scription talown to me:*
A. Attc,rian, Zd. A. Prook ben, A.
FAC -SIMILE SIGNATURE OF
APPEARS ON EVERY WRAPPER.
ete:
ea
11
-ea J
Isj
If eon ever contracted any Blood Meese yen au; never e11e6 unless the Time or
poleou Lae been eradicated from the velem. fit times you cee ale -ending nye:Times,
but live In hopes no cedeue results watt f0lI1.xi Bev* you any of nue femme;
symptoms? Sore threat-, tilzere petite tongue Grin the month, helr falling out, acli-
Ingpains itchinesa of tho Side, &Weer biotchto oa the body, eyes red and smart,
dyepeptic stomach, cexual weallueze-indicatletio of theseeondary Mag.% Dou't
trout, to luck. Don't ruin your eyetent with the old fogy treatmeta—merettry and
potash-wbicle, only supprees.ae tbo oymptoute for a timo only to breek out again wlien
happy In domestic life. Don't let quacks cesrl meet on you. Our 1,1 U1V 1,1ETROD
TRKATIUENT la guarantee/I to Cure. yee. ORW srlicarantelio tiro blacked
by bitnIc bo=tIn teat the dieease will never return. Thousands of putout+,
have been alreedy cured by our MOP lUETUOD TREATMENT for aver ZS year&
and no return of the discae. No ezperitnent, 03 riek—cot a "patch up," but a peaO
lave cum The worst CaSee rtolielted.
:ELI Y
013E1 NEW mr,Txxosat TREATMETIVP wilt curie you, and make a tintn
of you, Under its influence the brain becomes active, the blood purieed so that
all pimples, blotchea soul ulcers clisappeer; the nerves become strong us steal, so
that nervousness bushfnIttere and despondency disappear; the eyee become bright,
the face full and dear, energy returns to the body, and the moral, physical and sex-
ual systems are invigorated; all dralus cease—no more vitalwastefront the system.
The various organs become natural and manly. You feel yourself a man audit:law
marriage cannot be a failure. We Invite an the afflicted to cousult us confidentially
and free of charge, Don't let quacks and fakirs rob you of you, hard-earned
dollars. 'WS WII414 CURE YOler OR NO PAY.
We treat and cure NRRVOUS DEBILITY, SEXUAL WEAKNESS, !MIS-
tSeIe0dN. S. SYPIIII4S, GLEET, STRICTURE, VARICOCLE, KIDNEY and
BLADDER DISEAS'2;S, and all diseases peculiar to :nen and uotnen.Cares guaran.
froe, No tnattiernateltso?Ita°nutTreNat4rd ,-,
1-1 111-1131 tiraorA:N'''''fat:Togai'v,?„1;f1,ZdifAldttil,g;colitZPisavVig-
fone,tEtworidtetriroerakmanehnotavesIttlopcithirielogitO.FUr.eeCOotitttctibltsartglot
Charges reasonable. Books frao.—"Tlae Golden Monitor" tinustratedi onDiseasesof
RE
men 4Diseases of Women" 0Tha Wages of Sits:"Taricocele, Stricture and Sleet.
Ali sent Free sealed.
No medicine sent O. O. O. ido neates on boxes or envelopes. Everythin
confidential. Question list and Cost of Treatment, FREE, for Rome Curo.
14
148 S'HELBY ST.
ree.
e'e
,
DETROIT MICH.
eat!
eee-
..M.MORAWAnta,fiSq...161A111...
Fon
CHILDREN AND ADULTS
CURES
Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Cholera,
Cramps, Colic, Cholera Infantum,
Cholera Morbus, Summer Com-
plaint and all Fluxes of the
Bowels.
HAS (SEEN eel USE FOR
RALF A CENTURY.
Harmless, Reliable, Effecttial, anil
should be in every homa.
family for the last nine years and
would not be without it."
SURE REMEDY.
Mr. F. Churchill, Cornell, Ont.,
writes: "We have used Dr.
Fowler's Extract of Wild Straw-
berry in the home 'ancl always find
it 'a surd remedy for dysentery."
USED 9 YEARS,
Mrs. Jones, Northwood,e0nt.,
writes : "My baby, eight months
old, was very bad with dysentery.
We gave her Dr. Fowler's Extract
of Wild Strawberry and it saved
her life. We have used it in our
ACTION WONDERFUL.
Mrs. W. Varner, New Germany,
N.S., writes: "I have great con
fidence in Dr. Fowler's Extract e
Wild Strawberry for various dis
eases in old and young C' My littl
boy had a severe attack of summe
complaint and I could get nothin
to help him until I gave him Stra
berry. The antler: of this retne
was wonderful and soon had h.
perfectly well