HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1901-9-5, Page 6Cenuine
Little
jp ME LIFE r
t May be Humble, But Woman's •Cheerfulness Will
Gild It With Splendors.
A despateh fro= Washingtoit says:
ficv. Dv, 'Talinage preached fromthe
ft:Lowing text :--ttetzeSis it„
areee tool feiattle created he thenit."
verItt ether worda, God, who eon
ete eleihe no =Isla/ea. trate.e man mid
;.7 )1' V woria and A.4)
eetettettler
$phereve-nmet to
reertare faea hie ron'tta, Wettnatt to lot.'
1,eit:t. TeIt.3Inthiry
anal •Stwiteeeleattl,
hettatea•ea Eng:stied =al Scotland, is
net =ore thorenality marked Gatti
'ate vinare-act:leo feetoveee the empate,
nee-eel:tee otel tot. eranalre. fetid:al:ea
eetieely dieehailer ore. the i
teot. eon, <
• • e siinage theei tL*.t.t1
Must klear S;g:IP.eurei at7
$ee FaireSiralle Wreneer Bean -a
4 as easy
6rtgarot
Fe,3 IF.A9ARrao
,C,45TER,&Foaranitizze;
rint: pitEcumt.t.
V.-ii3ED Lela%
CariBTIPATIGfl.
Ffil -M5.71PLEXIIM
VE
- CURE laM ACHE,
Os
Slings
Mictiniatt4
Crntpl, Saaea Varna,.Qy1 171%-;:tving
Cough andU Painful Stt‘r
Ono
441,4 0-intrazied
ttrafg1a, Eir;incttit.
ti. LAZO raorrtz, 357*
rlircns V!!tl'
iheiee TV,'Y'‘.tialreaeee- tares hie
ferea,-.. tee at Iteeley tinter/ay. loten
_wee !l11. tkr F,8,7
1% :„.-.!,t-age have lotaiNer ,adeitte,
11.171, # rate fatund-
ed ,t *1 E,* Wit`, poor
fer three waelin 4411
tete:teat; Tie* Strut!, of itelpere ore
of tier ae.et-41...etera iteanates in the
hvir ion It)
*113;' 0itweeleel ant a farm and
211 111 'th!aee.:.Iistet airen a levy_ Lard
T sevesaso a's111% :Ind for -
tea elaW who. ttgaa :114 aS 1,1
toot I.41,4, t't-ontertkINT Lied
anelt to a !tete:I-eta:4er, Esetax
let a air.toer. laad the Dude. to": Nor-
elotruleseseal-the hatal ttle. prond
L0111414 ,,iltAiteCory.
IlAillv `1°,151I -IS IlAIINEST.
1J44- -'41% eamenereial travei-
ler t --r aten., ate,. you all order. tataite
otarellaveleni.
•Tat.: ete'r-Lt nee at. least, show
1A't
214' ,i,t11:111414,S.
2,e,:.? 1 L)01t. at them.
'Trateller-Theit will you allow me
ter i.voh. at theett myself. It. is three
week -a since I have even the=
THE MOST NOBLE' ORDER.
`*T112 meet aneient. aud most noble
order
Order of the Thistle" is the smallest
of three great orders of knighthood
in point of uninbers and the longest
in point trf title. IL consists of the
Sovereign, Britieh Princes and six-
teen lutighte.
Children Cry for
TO 1 ft
ROYALTY'S CAST-OFF RAIMENT.
One reason wily the confidential
set vents of royalty have been able
to amass comfortable fortunes in
spite of their moderate salaries is
that, they receive from their em-
ployers many gifts of old clothes
and other things which they can
turn into money. The out -grown
raiment of Queen Victoria's children
used to be quickly purchased by
discreet persons from the confidential
servants, • who did not offer these
perquisities to the world at large,
but only to a select clientele. In
Catholic countries, the church and
its various sisterhoods are glad to
take over the leavings of royal and
imperial fatuities ; for splendid robes
can be turned into vestatients for the
111aelonne, or the priests, or for altar
draperies.
For Infants and Children.
no fan-
tail:210
olgnatare
of
,ca?"
WARM&
, every
•
coo oxyato, :„.
geass.. trees etei etere•
•
t OA. :` •1:0 "
Ur: 4.,ette Of
8;2:4 1:;y tnVei
delieetor ;et he can we,4.tist 111
dierieeeels,
it ta.itere aro
seoees teta'alaaree thet OPE
in t het. etrittinient
eigoittst let
thhe av.,;et s tt ire -I eottl, Inalles •t
enaete,.,! woraalr'e notei
Ithee LAW! with yot .1,re ,e0tYlle a
a„,,ot L. the,. tIttatt r'ril,r 1.00 4,
W. - int eat "roh' I 01100
,on t.nr des% the ewe:Oh:v. nee: typed.
tehnreterivollad W.C4t of I larriet
I 1,,t; aua,/ ref, 114..1wf4g
ati 1, earge Eliot 'tram V. 400 on '1
• r 01)001 1
i;i the
•
Mg. Salesmen exaggerating. Ten
oats seeking less rent: Landlords tit.
mantling mom (Iola fidgety
Struggles about oillee. Men who ar
in. trying to keep in; alert out tryina
to get in. Slips. Totubles. Defel
cat ions. Valdes. k'at 4istr0phes. t
Women- thank God you have a. home
anti that you may be queea ia it
Ilet-ter Les there than wear a queen"
arortneet. • Better bt• there thou coma
thenairse of a priacess. Your eihod
may be humble, but you aim by yom
-
...
•
e
THE S. S. LESSON
INTERNATIONAL LESSON),
SEPT. 8.
. Text of the Lesson, Gen.
10-22. Golden. Text. Gen.
xxviii, 6.
r
)
,
•
-otaa la (nod atm your cheerfulness
tie:asset:or gild it with spl.niders sari
lipliasterer's haed never ye
Wintt right floes women want. Ilia
t '
• aane toan to be i.pleea sue!!
reaint? Why, the 4.;tt.ftes of heave:
cannot neross that dominion
Hotaea pantmg and with letheret
thinks are not swift enough to rut
to the outpost. of that realaa
say that the sun nes-er sets upo
the Beitish Empire. but 1 have t
cel'a you that on this rintire cif was
natz's iniluemee teernity never marl;
my pourer ietun
"iinonsh throne porered by the na
tiotes ro.4ttl.;e:wa. hat s41., who ;
Neett 13 a ltoree tern newer lose, net
hrone, and tt.atit itself will only bt
be azinexation of
1
1
1.
•
s
• < to:et-the,• letit ileft yoli :4
- :vas, snot.- r 10-iv:its' to 1
an 10 anti
tit.. St..)t,,•inntlt:.;(
Stet its). 1
,
'1r: 1:— of vete-- le, 21 Wal8 t
;
rt.tt a
t ",.• aents c‘f
r• •,,e if
1:11:/iN t
-; •
d 1 43anitio
j. VAC:::.:4".7.1
!::"1 renlu,1
n.a«so,es. is ta. li••r reohn. s
„sit ,,tor C1..9) •:--.‘01,0 tot it 1.
' • te,„0.111.
dee:aquas:: or /4,1
ti-:,- .,11,1
HEAVENLY PRINT' PALIT1 ES
One t after had been
alaylog with the children for some <
iota,. I lay down on the conch to
4"'"4 • anti. haft asieen and half ;melte.
seamed •to dream this dreamt. It
eteued to 10e that 1 was in a far
listant land -not Pereia, ult hough ,
nose thole oriental luxuritinee crown-
,.
lt•!:,°,1 rolled tato
•
a the Cities: nor tla• tropic's, a.
hough mori• than tropical irtzitful-
91'.;`,. garde:as.. nor Italy
!though more then Italian aaftteas
Ailed ;tic. Anti I woteleeell
irerstil ii•olting for thorna
tetl, 1 fotatart P4401. 4,) 1,!...a
bk're. Arad 1 w.or,...11 ,t1.1,t 1
-.0,w 1140 son rise, and "aid, "Wit•ni
till it sot ogailtr' and the snit
• Aial 1 savr ;t41 the people in
;apparel, / said.
t ill U'•4 Fit toa't Ottia.4:24.131\ gorb
atal delve 111 tile Mille and
. ••
-.• •
1 181 -eh titett. woloeu. of 'mos
!V....4," ..:',:k.71.:. :..4131.4. v.-lrel rhataeler 1*13
toLi.' 4.1,4V4 1-.. t,,,.eit,itLw. 170,0i1r4 1„,
1;7-::,:,s of th.hr onn or forsithing
/tsar, own hireen'a totittItag abone then
vaetote„. until we Liatew very well Vett 1:
ter thenteelve- are t'a neither. to
V, ,te n,c):. tat to heap haense. Their ,,a!
ntreerou seems< to tee la ilumilitite the
4M0,* *:,:;,4.8 14 tlo• 414iotl.tEd4 •,f wisat
eny oti4e of 0,, 114,I10.it 1,eeotile. No,
otvo Wont.; Wtnt to Gilt, meter tho.
law, that szteh women would mon.
oW 141 ria„..Vt. 0.14 till014 :414.14try 16,,
(shot:beau Mot leech women would !
I
state.. not I will ehow you that the
-I, eel regitte aim w,tm,,,n eon oNvu .t.i...
lotto.a.13,' Ike, it.. her pettion. 1 thnt
I:tor r,t,,ittittIII in tIn'-- eiellarr at Gals,
time is WA aa;,.., t.§ c#,,nuoti,.oral ion,
1,4Et4 ;ate of eoletratultitiou ; that the
gratehear and power of her realm
have :atter yet leant appretioted 1
that she sits toaeley on a throne so.
high tiaatt all 1140 thrones of earth ,
piled on top of earl! other wowaid mit
matte for her a footletoet. Here is
Ala. platferm oa. whit+ Ski! Ma MN.,
AVC.# #10ant 14.11M- ill :Ire thP ballitt i
I iit NA ii/Liq. tit' . NV. A;;;IVSSHMA I :1`-..gt.113. i
1.04:9* taid the
. 1
LEGISLATIVE HALL.
Woman always has voted and al-,
ways will vote. Our greategrand-
fat iter,4 thought they were by their
votes. putting Wtehaington iuto the
preehlential chair. No. 111.5 moth-
er. by the priaciples she taught, hint
tural by the habits she inculcated.
made him president. It was it t2hris-
Ilan mother's hand dropping the bal-
lot when Lord Bacon wrote, and
Newton philosophieed, and Alfred
the Great governed. and Jonathan
Edwards ! thundered of judgment
to come. How many men there have
been in high political station who
' would have been insufficient to stand
the test to which their moral prin-
ciple was put had it not been for a
wife's voice that encouraged them
! to do right and at elfe's prayer that
sounded loucler thau the clamor of
partisanship 1 Why, my friends, the
right of suffrage, as we men exercise
it, seems to be a feeble thing. You,
a Christian man, come up to the
ballot box, and you drop your vote.
Right after you comes a, libertine or
a sot, the ofiscouring of the street,
and he drops his vote, and his vote
counteracts yours. But if in the
quiet of home life a, daughter by her
Christian demeanor; a wife by her
industry, a mother by her faithful-
ness, casts a vote in the right di-
rectien, then nothing can resist it,
,and the influence of that vote will
' throb through the eternities.
My clitef anxiety, then, is not that
women have other rights accorded
her, but that she, by the grace of
God, rise up to the appreciation of
the glorious rights she
ALREADY POSSESSES'.
I shall only have time to speak of
one " grand and alI-absorbing right
that every woman has and that is
to make home Ileppsr. That realm'
no one has ever disputed with hee.
Men may come home at neon or at
night; and they tarry a comparative-
ly little while, but she all day long
governs it, beautifies ita,sanctifies it.
it is within hoe power to Make it
•the most attractive ,place- on earth.
It is the only calm harbor in this
world. You know as well as 1 do
that this outside world and the busi-
ness world is a hIng scene of jostle
and contention, The man who has
a .dollar struggles to keep it; the
Man who has! it ngt straggles to get
it. Prices up. •Prices down, Losses
• Gains. Misrepreeentations. Cloug-
jugs. • Uhderselling. Buyers depiectit-
welter ot the forge?" But neither
tairia•eits n• ti,<• flail they
14* •ot Atal waudered in the son-
'Wis•re do tbev
oury the dead of this great city?'"
ANI looked toIttntt the, 114:S
Where It Wtetitl b., most beanttful for
• dead to sleep. and 1 saw castles
ond 10W,'*" tool hot ienutets, but not
11 mensidenni nor monument, nor
utile slab could 1 see. And I .wenI
halo the groat chapel of the town.
and 1 tN.titl. "Where do the poor wor-
-,.hitpc! whore. aie the benches on
wilielt they sit?" And a wive an-
swered. -We haVe no poor in this
great oily." And 1 wainler#.41 tnat
seekieg, to Mal the piace where Wore
the !MVOs id' the deetitute. anal I
found anatisioas cif anther and i-eary
end gold. but
NO TEAR DID I SEE
or sigh hear. I was bewildered, and
I eat under the shadow et a. great
tree, and I said "Mint ant 'and
wientee comes all this?" And at.
that moment there came from among
the leaves, skipping up the flowery
patha and across the sparkling Wt
ter. a very bright. and sparklime
group. 1111t1 When .1 SOW their Step I,
knew it, and when I heard their
voires I thought I knew them, but
their apparel was so different front
anything 1 had ever seen I hoWed. a
a stranger to strangers. But after
awhile, when they clapped theta.
hands and shouted, "Welcome! IVO: -
come." the mystery was solved, and
I saw that time had passed and that
eternity had come, and that God had
gathered us up into a higher home.
and I said, "Are all here?" and the
voices of innumerable generations an-
swered. "All here." And while tears
of gladness were raining down our
cheeks and the branches of Leb-
anon cedars were eh-4)pin their
hands and the owners of the great
city were chiming their welcome, we
began to laugh and sing and leap
and shout, "Home! Home! Hanaelh
4--
CONCERNING SLEEPLESSNESS
10, 11. "And Jacob weut ou
front Beersheba. caul went tower
Ilaran." Tile previous chapter tell
of the deception proc t iced upo
Isaac by Jacob alai Ids mother. lit
beltala and of Esall's hatred on
purpose to tin his brother becaus
he had supplanted him ond. tahe
his bleasing. and as a result of thi
the sending of Jacob to liaran t
Rebekah's brother Lehazt for a Una
idur lesson is the story of the al
petwing of the Lord to Jecob as h
jourileved to Huron and is a recor
of the wonderful grace of God. le;
seems also to imply true penitelic
on the part of Jacob after lie 1.,-f
his father's house, for he would law
much time to nii•ditate as he jinn
noyed onward alone. if ilebekal
had believed God and had trusted
Mtn to aceeraplish in His own W13,
His prontif,e to I•er (chapter xxv
2:1). she anight have been spared
this separat lint from Jacob. Du
she $eeina to hitso• feared that the
purpose of Cod might he frustrate(
bv Eseu anil his father and that
it was neeessary fol• nor to net
promptly men if not honestly. It i
0 restful 1 !deg to believe that ever,I,
purpose Of the Lord shall be per-
formed both for llis yeople ano.
nEt'ailett. Ottr. :lit
lsa. xiv. nd
ajusz abide in Hm
AiK Jacob jourfleyed from his home
thebit o( bling of hie father t vers:e. l-
aud the lova of his mother wouhl
lift him sionewha allow t hi
thoughts of his hrother'a eager. lint
he knee: he hail sinned against tiotl.
even though ids mother was thf,
most guilty. for saw /tad been his.
counselittr to do wickedly t 11. Chrou,
Jodi. and there must have been
gaining would be unbecoming in a
child of Abrahtuu who cheerfully
it paid tithes to Molchisedek (chapter
xits, :20). If we should --read it.
"Since God will be with me," etc.,
which translation, some stoe, the
word will allow, then it becomes on
the part of Jacob a grateful conse-
(nation to the Lord who oppeare
latter reading is correct. but !et u
who are redeemed hy the preclint
) unto him. sIVe may hope that, the
od
Woof Christ see to it that we
a ..gratefulty mid cheerfully and eon-
scientiously give heLord at least
s the tenth of all He gives us that we
may in our experienee otintifest the -
truth of 3.11.al. iii. 10. and 11. Chron•
xxxi, 10, iklid prove l's. lxxxiv, 1.
PZRSOKA I, POINTER S
▪ Note 4 of Interest About Some
)- • : Prominent People.
o •
d A German paper is (looted as stat
t mg that since 1888, when the Um -
e p.eror 11111hun sue ,, ,,, eded to the
throne, His majesty has delivered
- 01 6 public, speie•lies, of which, 22 were
in prelim (in eonneetiOn With !WWII
tel were IEnglish, 3 in Ras -
Sinn. and. 873 in the German hut -
n
, ; The DukeS of Sutherland. De
u-
aitd Devonshire are joint ;
t lords of 2,004,6.00 acres of land, an
area equal to more than eleven 1imes1
„that of the County of Middlesex. anti !
represeating a slice of land stretch-
ing front the 'south of England; te
s• the extreme north of Scotland more
• than live miles wide. If this land -
PSVere all in England about an
teazre
out of esry sixteen would. belong to
; one or other of these dukes.
• A. peculiar Souvenir is kept in Lord
a $alisbury's.; historic home at Ilate
. mid. It is a. stone, over a pound in
weight, with which the window o
' Lord Salisbury's carriage was soutsits
At Dumfries on October 21st,
18144. 1iis- two thoighters were setti-
• ed with his lordship in the vehicle.
; but fortunately all three eseaped
• injured. Lord Salisbuta• had ou that
' oeeesion delivered the hist of it sere
. ies of speeches in Scotland.
i; Madam Rejan., the celebrated
e'rentli ocii•ess who Iris lateiv been
$ome searching of heart. before clod
Il -is pt etiii.-.41 to send jot
• hint when itis brother's anger hai
quieted. but we do not road that :slit
ever saw non otraos int eorth.
12 Behold fatitifr 5%,, up t.2:1 the
earth and 11,410,18 the ttogeli. of Uoti
escending and tI.,-.1.-knk:iing',.141t3n it.
114, •s;lid to pt al Itatinel
"Hereafter ye -hal! see 11.1tven open
4.44241 11%.* 11:!-6.%; Oc.ri ...cop:ling and
• does...le:ding, upon the Son of 3t8tt "
teachc.r. MS that
the ladder Ira:* typieol of the Lord
throullt whom alone hilift71
e-141 come 10 thlti or hav.e tur.),*
rev.4ation God to him.
, 11. Behold the laird stood
'above it aml said. 1 am tito 1.orti
OW of Abr.thain thy father, and the
tbul or Isaac. All thittgs are of clod
P thrOlIgh ChriNt : tOn 15 (If thee
Lord. The inieliatigeable
here confirtita to the in:worthy Ja-
cob Ilis protniee to Abraham and
Isaac. Ovine' to Jacob the promise
of seed as the dust of the earth,
whereas He had given to 'Isaac the
promise of 8001 CIS Starii of liett-
Volt kV:tarter XXVI. 4). It is possible
that when the kingdom e011408 141*2
shall see that the promise to leant:
refers to or inc.' udes I he 'church,
while the promise to Jacob refers to
the earthly seed Israel. and by the
two righteolis companies shall the
A
righteous King of kings oad Lord of
lords rule all the earth.
• 13. "And. behold, I am with thee
and will keep thee in all places whi-
tiler thou goest and will bring thee
agate into this land." This is the
; fourth "behold"- of our lesson. : a
ladder, the angels„ Jehovah and now
the assurance of His presence, His
keeping power, His guidance and the
!fulfilment of all Xlis promises. What
:more could sinful mortal desire?
' How undeserving is J acob Ilove
racious Jehovah ! Can anyone
else appropriate such a promise, or
was it only for Jacob ?- Why should
any child of God hesitate since in
Christ God hath blessed us with all
spiritual blessings, and all things
are ours in Christ ? (Eph. 1, 3; Cor.
Hi, 21).
16, 17. "Surely the Lord is in
• this place, and I knew it not."
Such were his waking thoughts as
Ile remembered his beautiful dream,
and a great sense of his unworthi-
ness and sinfulness filled him as he
considered that the God of his fath-
ers had appeared to Win. also. He
` probably felt like Job and Isaiah
and Daniel and joint when. they saw
the Lord (Job xlii. 5, 6; Isa. vi. 5 ;
'Use of 1VIedicines to Produce Slum- Dam x, 8 ; Rev. i, 17): Simon..Pe-
ber is Dangerous. ter had a, somewhat, experie
once when he -saw the great good -
Ono warning cannot be too often ness of his Lord and cried, Depart
repeated -Medicines to produce sleep from me, for I: am a sinful man, 0
are dangerous, with different degrees Lord (Luke v, 8). The believer
of danger, lo be sure, but, still not
things to be trusted to ,ho hands of
ignorance especially where ignorance
is personally interested. Sleep -in- math. aaato. 20,
clueing drugs are
save from worse estc1,0bulletet°1s1Seayi
'Yneetc°I ever saying,
should never be found where .he can -
place," but the precious truth of
ceasiug comfort to us, for He is
not say, "Surely the Lord is in this
"Fear not ; .peace be
should be an un -
supervision --a. doctor's supervision, mite you See also jet-. .xxix, 11. -
that is.. - " •
8, 19. His pillow became a pil-
Lastly as to the -economy of ner-
lar annointed unto God. May it
vous energy. On this, too, much has ' .
been said, but the text is a fruitful suggest the change in nimself that
and suggestive one, and many ser- whereas in More senses 'than one he
mons could be hammered out of it, had recently beau prone upon the
First, let it be repeated that earth be was now by the grace of
whether 'the essential cause of ncr- Gnd an uPrIght man before God and
vousoess can be reached and con- annointed by ITis Spirit. One of the
quered or not, the less opea manifes- Promises to the overcomer is that
tations of nervousness the patient he shall be a pillar in the temple of
permits herself the better it will be G°d (-33.th• iile 1-2), and Paul wrote
cOncerning James and Peter and
far her in every Way.
Do not talk about your feelings or joint that they seemed to he pillars
yen/. fatigue or your sleep, do not (Gal. ii, 9), speaking of the time
&lease the word nervous to he tit- when they gave to I:laments and to
tered In your presence. To talk himself the right hand of fellowship.
about yourself is -a torin of • bee There is one great truth that be -
manners, to say the least ; •t be Revers are very apt to forget, and
sorry for yourself will not make that IS that their bodies are templet
anyone more sorry for you, and self- of the Holy. Ghost and that they are
pity is a poor kind of an emotion. 00 t (heir own , but m a nsi ons • in
If onee this kind of talk becomre n Which Father,. Son and Holy Spirit
habit, an tincoascious eoeggereuea ha'7"0 (1 41110 to C1W011 (I. Cor. vi, 3.9,
soon creeps into it ; the violin be- 120 ; John alit, 17; 23); The word
gins tie rxike the nTrIst of the feel- "nbode" in. tIohn • xiv, 23-, is the
ings and patins whigh have OCC 410<1 8amb ns "mansion" in verse 2. and to look for new ones, 11.4 order . 20, 22. "Of all that thou shalt
to. get all the sympathy p0 12)9. give me 1 will surely give the tenth
and from thi5. to imagining sy1,0p- unto thee." Ileading 5111 S passat,,;o.
tents is a short and sadIV easy stt:1-)7 jest. as, it is in our A .V„ it lopk8 aS
To cultivate and encourage genuine if .Taccib did not quite believe. Clod,
!whet -ions to oveegrowth is had bet Mid, If God will do as IT e hats
enough, to sow and tilt a crop. pf said, then 1 will give Rini the tenth
f alse einotione is a niorat crime. 0 all that •Ee gives itte. -Seat 4)11
*‚•‚
London auiieuves ht
dame Sans &lone" and other come-
dies, haq beNs the i eeipient of orders
and ,.;inorations from every C4mrt in
Europe. The King of Vortugal. be- ,
fore whom Matlatno has ap-
peared on .several occasions, marked
his appreciation of her great talent
us an actress by presenting her with
a "liair of very beautiful mules. Thima
With.411 ore extrenielY
;tecompany Madame lie,tanti on all
her European t ours.
It hut": not be generally known that
Abdur Rahman, the Atneer of Af-
ghanistan, is a horse breeder on a
larger scale. Soule years ago he!
founded 0, Government stud, which
110441 e0111priSes 0420,41 2,01)1) nntinnatt.
Some aro English thoroughbreds anti
some Australian, -whilc. others are•
Arabs. Turkontart. oval Indian coun-
try -bred horses. To look after them
the Anew employa en English veter-
inary surveil named Clements who
tea -wiles twenty young Afghans his
Profession and imparts to them the
correct nrinciples of horse -breeding.
A glance at the Royal iiersollages
in the Ilireet line of succession to the
British throne reveals some interest-
ing facts. How many people know
that there are only two adult males
between the Emperor William and
King Edward? It is, however sin -
prising it may be, a fact that the
German Emperor is the third male
successor over twenty-one,
stands twenty-fourth in the list. but
most of those before WM are women
1 or children. Only two men are of
:full age -the King's only son, the
Duke of Cornwall and York, and his
Only living brother, the Duke Of
'Connaught.
' One of the most interesting of Eng-
!
land's surviving men of science is Dr. ;
James Glaisher, F.R.S.. who recent-
2,1'- entered upon his ninety-third year.
Many people think of the veteran
meteorologist .only as an aeronaut,
!on account of that memerabIe and
unparalleled aseent which he and Mr.
i•Coxweli made Marty forty years ago.
!Rut . Mr. _Glaisher is not an ;unti-
1 naut, though he has made- softie
51111'-
ty ascents skyward for Seientitic pur-
poses. He iS a meteorologist, as-
tronomer, and mathematician, and -
a fine sample of what a vigorous
mind in a sound body can do -hale
1 and hearty at oVer ninety-two.
Eleanore, Duse, the famous Italian
actress, is peculiarly marvellous.
• When she is not at rehearsals or act-
ing she spends her time in perfect
rest,. She receives -no one ekeept old
friends, and only a few of these. She
has a lady companion who arranges
her journeys and engages rooms in
the hotels. This lady sees that
Duse's. rooms are at the back of the
hotel, and that, if possible, they
look out on a garden. She cannot
beer street sounds and sights. The
clanging of a tram -bell sets her
crazy. The furnishing of her rooms
is important. There must be iso pic-
tures or busts about, -nothing to dis-
turb her highly -wrought aesthetic
sensibilities. Everything must be
scrupulously clean, severe, quiet. She
never goes out watkirig, and is ridic-
ulously careless j-abtrat, her toilet end
thielee -siragi'seental -appearance,- except ma
Children Cry for
ST
OAIMIED OFF BY EAGLES.
in a wood near Polnora., on the
edge of the Northern Carpathians,
a •woman went to gather sticks,
leaving her baby in a secluded spot.
Uppn her return she saw two , great
eagles 'hearing away her child, whore
Shy had (Remembered, Upon a hunt
being Made by the:Inhabitants the
bones of the baby were found in the
eagles' nest on the rocks amid the
atm w ,
Children 01-y for
CAr'T
fair'
hat,
Nsv,.
Oa ilk:.
Castoria is for Infants and Children. Castoria is a
harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops
and Soothing Syrups. It contains neither, Opium,
liforphins nor other Narcotic substance. It is Pleasant.
Its guarantee • is thirty years' use by alillions of
Xothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays Feverish-
ness. Castoria cures Diarrhoea and Winti Oolic Castoria
relieves Teething. Troubles, cures Constipation and
Flatulency. Castoria assimilates the Food, regulates
the Stotnaelt and Bowels ofInfants and Children, giving.
healthy and natural sleep. Castoria is tits Children's
Panacea—The lKother's Friend.
Castoria.
“Castorfra is an excellent medicine for
children. Blethers have repeatedly told me
of its good effect upon their children."
Da. 0. C. ()seem>, ZaNeil„irg.ts.
THE
Castoria.
"castoria GI wen adapted to children
that I recommend it superior to guy we-
seriptiou 'known to me."
II. A. Alternate Brag*n, N Y
FAC -SIMILE SIGNATURE OF
APPEARS ON EVERY WRAPPER.
i'Vtista
C117NTAU4 CQMPANY, TT MURRAY 4T4I4CT.: AMU/ "YORK CfTY.
#:e
.44
ttfleIN
If you ever contracted nay Blood Disease yon are never aafe netass The vial* or
[:311042 0144 -Wee eradicated ircca tIl syStettit .Ati110'-4 you see alareor.s symptoms,
butlive hopea no serious reaulta will fol!ew. Dave you any of the following
symptoms? Sore throat, ulcers on the tongue or itt the mouth, hair out,.tch-
lug pains itchiness of the akin, scres or in:aches 081 tha hody, eye.; rod arta smart,
dyspeptic storaach.sexual weasmess-hulteations of thesecontiary stage. Dann
truet to luck. Don't ruin your aystem with the old fogy treatment -mercury and
potash -which only nuppreesea the symptoms for a thue only tenreak out agate wheu
happy la domestic life, Don't let quacks ex.peritueut ou you. Our NEW METIIOD
TREdTMENT fa guaranteed to cure you. Our gotarcunteen Are bactrect
by bra3a3r lboncks that tIva disco:at; will never return. Thousanda of patience
have been already cured by our NEW METIIOD TRICA.TMENT for over Oyears,
and no return of the disease. No experiment, no [4534-4204 41 "41.itch up," but a posi,
tive cure. The worst ca3e3
4.1)
ITT
OUR NE1W 11.215.1THOD TRE:nntsr4narze will =re 708, 43211 =aka a marl
of you. Under its irtfluence the brain becomes active, the blood purified so that
all phnples, blotches and ulcers disappear; the nerves become strong as steel, so
that nervousness bashfnlitosit and despondency disappear; the eyes become brkitt,
the face full and clear, energy returns to the body, and the mom], physical and sex-
ual systemsare invigorated; all drains cease -no more vital waste from the system.
The various organs become natural and manly. You feel yourself a matt aud knoW
marriage cannot be a failure. We Invite all the afflicted to consult us confidentially
and free of charge. Don't let (peeks and fakirs rob you of your hard-earned
dollars. Wil CURS YOU OR NO PAY.
We treat and cure NERVOUS DEBILITY', SEXUAL WEAKNESS, EMIS-
SfONS, SYPRILIS, GLEET, STRICTURE, VA RICOCZLE, KIDNEY and
BLADDER DISSIASZS, and all diseases pecilliar to emu and vforaen.Cures guarame
teed.
fl 1 1 P.zitalzwillan;zaT,roordoter dtpaesldP g,s
7014 aoy weak.
.LW lilti nese? Our New Method 'Treatment will canyon. Consultaties
Froo. No matter who has treated you, write for an honest opinion Free of Charge.
Charges reasonable. Books free. -"The Golden Monitor" [illustratedb onDiseases of
men 'Diseases of Women" "Th0 Was ea al Sten* "Varlcocale, Stricture and Gleet."
All sent Free sealed.
No tnedioine sent C. 0. 0. No names on boxes or envelopes. Everything
confidential. Question list and Cost of Treatment, FREE, for Rome Cure.
sciPs
14.8 SHELBY ST.
kyr,
,
DETROIT MICH.
'V.acittntiaRC KATilok
Felt
CHILINEN AND ADM.%
CURES
Diarrhcca, Dysentery, Cholera,
Cramps, Colic, Cholera lInfantum,
Cholera fillorbus, Summer Com-
plaint and all Fluxes of the
Bowels.
BIAS BEEN ail USE FOR
HALF A (CENTURY.
Harmless, Reliable, Effectual, and.,
should be in every home.
SURE REMEDY.
Mr. F. Churchill, Cornell, Ont.,
writes: "We haVe used Dr,
Fowler's Extract of Wild Straw-
berry in the home and always find
it a sure remedy for dysentery."
USED 9 YEARS.
Mrs. Jones, Northwood, Ont.,
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 onr
family for. the last nine years and
would not be without it."
ACTION WONDERFUL.
Mrs. W. Varner, New Germany,
N.S., writes: "I have great con-
fidence in Dr. Fowler's Extract of
Wild Strawberry for various dis-
eases in old and young. My little
boy had a severe attack of summer
complaint and I could get nothing
to help him until I gave him Straw-
berry. The action of this remedy
was wonderful and soon had him
perfectly well