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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1901-10-24, Page 3A TRANSPARENT BIBLE. , .CITTs Providence That Seemed DarkBe. fore Becomes Clear. Centime _ � ter's Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of $so Fac•Slmilo. Wrapper 131!oy',. Yeer canon snit as easy to take its sugar. 0 ._ FOR HEADACHE', FOR DIYIIiiESS , !TILE FOR BILIOUSNESL.� 1VER FOR TORPID LIVER. P1 LLS. TDRC NsTIPATION. FOR SALLOW SKiN. FOR YfigC01314141tW0K 14Varaef tgtiANN74!at. GVRE SICK IiEAQAQ G I E LiS. BY USING MILBU N'S PILLS. Viers t, 1;.C., Mardi $, 199li, 'rho T. Wilburn. Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. DearSirs,--Some timeago mydaughter. aged 19 years, was troubled lith bad head• ekes and loss (appetite. She was tired and listless most of the time, and was loosing eb. I3tlrsystcm got badly rain down, so hearing. your Heart and Nerve _ ..11,s highly spoken of I procured a box, enc, by the time she had used them she bad ganged 9j lbs. in weight and is now iq !; perfect :health. Yours truly, MRS. P. H. C T tdR nS. THE ORIGINATOR ®F DORPILLS, The original kidney specific for the cure of Backache, Diabetes, Bright's Disease and all Urinary Troubles. Don't aceept something just as - good. See you get the genuine AN'S. AN EVASIVE ANSWER. "Pat," said an Irish clergyman to ``I shall be very busy this afternoon, and if anyone calls I do not wish to be disturbed." "All right, sorr. Will I say you are not in?" "No, Pat, that would be a lie." "An phwat'll I say, yer reverence?" "Olt, just put them off with an evasive answer," At supper time Pat was asked if anyone had y a called.- raiz, there did," said ho. w4.0 did you tell him?" "Sure, and' I gave him an evasive answer." How was that?" queried his re- verence. "He axed me was your honor in, and T sea to him, sez 1, 'Was yer grandmother :a hootowi?' • A1.TO L 4 For Infants and Children. fat. simile slftaistara� of ig oil every • wrappoh !t lJ',AUTOMATIC LIGHTHOUSE 'USI' A new Scotch liglxtshis ..will have no crew, Gas. stored in tank will supply a masthead lamp by a pipe in the hollow mast, .and a fog -bell will 'be rung by the rolling of the vessel in rough weather, and, failing that, by the current of gas. Children Ory for Ci ,, . STOMA. A. despatch from Washington says: rail kinds of beautiful things.,. Ass* —Rev, Dr. Talmage preached from hien what he thinks of religion, and the following text ; Job xxviii, 17, be will tell you 1 " It is the most "The crystal cannot equal it." beautiful thing I ever saw. ,,The Many f a Y o thea• . precious stones of clic crystal cannot equal it,", Bible have corn to prompt recogni- tion. Beautiful in its symmetry.3l hen the less uvaluable present IJpb,e in it presents God'e charactit does my text„ compares sa.�ing ivisA in net present. him as .having. Love like with a specimen of topaz. An inti- a great protuberance on one side of del chemist or minex;atogist would Iazs nature, but makes that love in pronounce the latter worth more harmony illth I cc jtstirts all to love than the former, but J ob makes an that will accept those intelligent comparison, hooks at re- wha come to Him, and a Haien, and then looks at the crys- lustzca that will by no tat. and pronounces the former as of far superior value to the latter, ex- claiming, in the words of my text, "The crystal cannot equal •it."' Now, it is: not part of my sermon- ic design to depreciate the crystal, whether it be fount in Cornish Woe or Harz inountain or mammoth cave or tinkling among the pend - means clear the guilty. Beautiful re- ligion in the sentiment it implants! Beautiful religion in the hope that it. kindles! Beautiful religion in the fact that it proposes to garland and ent1trone and emparadise an immor- tal spirit. Solomonsays it is e. lily. Paul says it is a crown. The Apoc- alypse says it is a fountain, kissed by ants the sun. I zekiel says it Is a foliaged of the chandeliers of at, cedar. Christ says it is a bridegroorra palace. Tine cry+etel is the star ei come to fetch home a bride. !Wile the mountain : it is tete queen Qf Job in the text takes up a whole cave , nod it is the eardrop of the vase of precious stones. -the topaz hills t it finis its heaven in the diab and the sapphire and the chrysopras. mend. Among all the pages of not- es ---he bolds out of this beautiful ural history there is no page ruor4 vase just one crystal and holds it interesting to ore than the Page or up until it gleams iw the wane light cr,,stailograplrio, But I want to Of the eastern sky* and he ea;clailns, The crystal cannot equal it." 'crystal in the other, he .declared Again, religion is superior to the out: thg former iii of far mere value crystal in its transformations. The and beauty than the latter. .recant.- element is only a crystallization. teen drug it to all the people and to :A nes iso of )fine rises until it be- ali the ages, declaring „'rhe crystal ox - ale nof copper crystallizes ointo cubes cannot equal it. show you that Job was right when. taking religion in one hand and the and octahedrons. Those erysta 1N TiUI FIRST 11.,ACE, which adorn our persons and o 1 reuxark that religion is superior to )mines and our museums have ons the crystal in exactness, That been resurrected from forms tha sh:a,ptless muss of crystal against were which you accidentally dashed your PAR FROM LUSTROUS. foot le laid out with more exactness tlr.amI env earthy* elty. Thera ere Scientists for ages have been e•• six styles of crystallization and 'all enduing these wonderful transform of thein divinely ordained. Every tions. But I tell you In the gospe crystal bas nmatheraatical precision, of the Son of Clod there is a nxor (hod's geometry reaches through it, wonderful transformation.. Over and It is a square, or it Is a ret:- souls by reason of sin black as coal tangle. or it is a rhomboid, or in ,and hard as iron Cod. by his Cohr- some way it has n mathematical lilt- ; forting• !;race, stoops and says, ure. Now, religion bents that in the "'Alter shall be ranine in the day, simple fact that spiritual accuracy ;when I make up ley Jewels." is more beautiful than material ea.' 'Mutt!'" say you. 'Will Gori wear curacy. God's attributes are exact, Jewellery?" if JIe wanted it Ile could God's management of the world ex- make the stars of the heaven Ilis act. Never minting wrong though belt and have the evening cloud for Ile counts the grass blades and the the sandals of His feet. but He does stars and the sands and the cycles. =,not want that adornment. He wilt His providence's never dealing with not have that jewellery. When God us 1 � wants 1 � perpendicularly ental'! when nt, c 1 n ho pros, eller 1 P p v c those o-- , no conies es dew c videnees ought to be oblique, )nor tic ins it oat ofthedepths and daark- laterally when. they ought to bo ver- gess 01 sin. 'These souls are all erys tient. Everything in our Iife arrange g- tulsizations of mercy. He puts then) ed without any possibility of lints- on and Ifo wears them in the pres take. Each Iife to six -headed prism. once of the whole universe. He wears i3oa•a at the right time ; dying at !over on the franc) that was uniiccl, the right theme. There are no ')tap -,over titre heart, that was pierced, on glen so's" in our theology. If I a the temples that were stung. "They thought this was a slipshod universe ' shall bo mine," saith the Lord, "in I would be in despair. God is not 1 the day when I make up my Jewels.' an anarchist. Law, order, syrme-:Wonderful transformation! Where try, precision, a perfect square, a ! sin abounded grace ellen much mare perfect rectangle, a perfect chem- abound. The carbon becomes the Sol - bold, a. perfect circle. Tho edge o1 Retire. "The crystal cannot equal it." (rod's robe of ,government never Note', I have no liking for those frays .out, utero are no loose screws People who aro always enlarging in in the world's machinery. It (lid Christian meetings about their early not just happen ,that Napoleon was dissipation. Iso not go into the par - attacked wlt.hx indigestion at i3oro- ticulars, my brothers. Simply say dino so that he became incomnpetent you were sink, but make no display for the day. It did not just 'happen of your ulcers. The chief stock in that John Thomas, the missionary, trade of some ministers and Chris -i on a heathen island, waiting for an time workers seems to be their early outfit and orders for another mis- sionary tour,received yx c cm ed that outfit and those orders in a. box that float- j I s ed ashore, while the ship and the crew that carried the box were nev- er heard of. I believe in a particular providence. I believe GOD'S GEOMETRY -'' shove you off in an opposite dire- tion—oft' from peace, off from God,. oft from heaven, everlastingly off, and the port toward which. you would sail would be a port of dark- ness, and the gens that would ,greet you would be the guns of despair, and the flags that would wave at yam* arrival would be the black flags of death. Oh, my brother, you must either kill sin or sin will bill you: It is no exaggeration when I say that any man or woman that wants to bo saved may be saved. Tremen- dous choice! A thousand people are choosing this moment between salva- tion and destruction, between light and darkness, d m nes between ettveen charred roil..: and glorious crystallization. T1113 S. S. LESSON, INTERNATIONAL LESSON OCTOBER 2?. Text of the Lesson, Gen. ,xlv 1-15. Golden Text, 1t.onzr, xii., 21, 1-3. "There stood no man wi hint while Joseph mnstde hinas know unto his brethren.'" T story as told in the intcrveniz chapters between the last lesson and this one is most fascinating in its. detail of Joseph's dealings with his brethren. butespeciallyin its fore- shadowing of conning events In co nection with the return of Chri and His revelation to Itis brethre The first visit. of Joseph's ten bret ren to buy corn, Benjamin bein carefully kept at home lest ev might befall hire. Joseph's recogn tion of iris brethren. his trying the by calling thele sales and putt! them in ward three days, their re- membrance of their sin and conver- sation concerning it in the presence of Joseph, whom they supposed did hnauy .are so occupied with their stuff and the care of it that they neither see nor enjoy their riches In Christ. 12, 13,"Tell my father of all my glory in Egypt and of all that ye have seen." They probably found it, difficult to believe their eyes, for it must have seemed too good and too wonderful to be true. When they ar- rived horse and told their father, he believed them not until he saw the waggons which Joseph head sent. Then his spirit et vived, and he said: ".[t is enough. Joseph,•'my son, is yet alive. I will go and see hire be- fore •I die(verses 26-28). As be- lievers evens beating testimony to Christ" His sufferings and His glory and our inheritance in Ilin', many will not believe unless they see scarce wag- gons, something in our lives to prove the truth of our words. We are to love and pzovt our love not by words only, but by the good works which He wilt work in us, 14, W. The weeping and kissing and the communion afterwards make us think of the welcome which the prodigal son received and the feast that followed. This is the fourth of oven weepmngs of ,Joseph. two of which are in our lesson (verset3 elf " and here), two in chapter 1, and one each in chapters xlii, xliii, xlvi. he They are worthy of particular study. tg Note also the three weepings of our Lord, at the grave of Lezarus, over Jerusalem and. in Gethsemane. clad consider that by Ili: great humilis.. tion and sac* He bas made. pro- p -!vision for the forgiveness and bring- st ing near and everlasting care of .all. la,' who conte to Him. 11m ng the s Is.lnot undertstand their language. as ur he had spoken to them through an y interpreter ; Ms holding Simeon as t a hostage till they should bring their younger brother, his sending the others back with corn and each „lman's money secretly put in his sack ana ,Iacob's pitiful cry when told a- that the ruler. of 1 y'pt would not I see them again unless lienjanrin was with them—this is all told lu chap- ter ilii. Their second visit. taking; Ileulamin anti double yr -41V (Ake returned Money and .money to buy .note corn) and a present for the man. Joeph's reception of thew and feast for them in his own house, with bis special interest in and favor to Ilenjaullnn. :we told in chapter m+lhii, .Joeeph's plat., seemningly, to retain Benjamin and the earnest and eloquent plea of Judah, who had be-' came surety for Benjamin, aro the topics of chapter xliv. Now follows in our Iessoln Joseph's revelation o bimselt to therm. 4, 5. "And Joseph said unto his brethren, Come nearer to me I pray you."Nothing ill his heart but levo and pity and forgiveness for them as he yearns aver them. Ile would take thele to his heart and bless them, bidding them not to be grieved nor angry 'mith themselves ' because of their pest misconduct, as- suring therm that God had overruled it all for Ike good of many. His words, while comforting, were truly heart searching. for we cannot know the comfort. of forgiveness in its fullness till WO have: seen and felt something of the enormity of our sin. To his first words, "I am Jos- eph,"lle now adds, "I am Joseph, your brother, whom ye sold into Egypt." There could be no mutat. ng this. He was the very same Joseph whom they had envied and hated and sold as a slave to the Midianites as they said, "We 'hall ee what will become of his dreams.' 6, 7. "God sent me before you to preserve you a. posterity in the earth and to save your lives by a great deliverance." We can hardly suppose that the hand of Clod was as plain to Joseph in rall the events ncs of the past years, in his slavery and imprisonment, as it was to him now looking back upon it from the glory to which he had been brought. We cannot see how all things are work- ing together for our good as children of God, and we do not always con- sider that they work together ac- cording to His purpose to conform us -to the image of His Son .Iota. viii, 23, 29), but as truly as Jos- eph could look back and see, not his cruel brethren., bat God working out His purposes, so we shall find that no real evil has ever befallen us and that all enemies and all adverse cir- cumstances have been really for us, for our good, under the controlling hand of Gad. CRIMES AND DISSIPATIONS. The number of pockets you picked and the number of chickens you stole make very poor prayer meeting rhetoric, !Besides that, it discour- ages other Christian people who ne- ver got drunk or stole anything. But it is pleasant to know that those may bo seen e ia all our life Ymore who were farthest down have been beautifully titan in crystallography. brought highest up. Out of Infernal Job was right. " The crystal can- serfdom into eternal liberty. Out of not equal it." darleness into light. From coal' -to Again I remark that religion is su- the solitaire. "The crystal cannot perior to the crystal in transpar- equal. it." ency. We know not when or by "Oh," says some one, putting his whom glass 'was first discovered. hand over his oyes, "can it be that Beads :of it have been found in the I who have been in so much sin and tomb of Alexander Severus. Vases trouble will over come to those crys- of it are brought up from the ruins tals?" Yes, it may be—it will be. of Herculaneum. There were female Heaven we must have, whatever we adornments made out of it 3,001 'have or have not, and we come here years ago — those adornments found to get it. "How much must I pay now attached to the mummies of for it?" you say. You will pay for it Egypt. A great many commenta just as much as the coal pays to be - tors believe that my text means come the diamond. In other words, glass. What would we clo without nothing. The same Almighty power the crystal ? The crystal in the that makes the crystal in the moan - window to keep out the storm and tain will change your heart which is let in thee day ; the crystal over harder than stone, for the promise is, the watch, defending . its delicate "1 will take away your stony heart, machinery, yet allowing us to see and I will give you a heart of flesh." the hour ; the. crystal of the title,- "Oh," says some one, "it is just scope, by which, the • astronomer the dcptrinc I want. Gad is to do brings distant worlds so near he can everything and I am to do nothing." inspect them. Oh, the triumph of My brother, it is not the doctrine the crystals in the celebrated win- you want. The coal makes no resist- dows of Rouen and Salisbury 1 But ance. It hears the resurrection' voice there is nothing so transparent in in the mountain and it comes to a crystal as in our holy religion. It crystallization; but your heart re- is a transparent religion. You can sists. ' -The trouble with you, my put it to your eye and you sen the brother, is the coal wants to stay man—his sin, his soul, his destiny. coal. You look at Goa and you see some- I do not ask you to throw opeii thingo e f the grandeur of His char•- the door and let. Guist in. T only actor. It is a transparent religion. ask that you •stop bolting and bar - Infidels tell us it is opaque. Do ring it, My- friends, we will have to you know why they tell us it is get rid of our sins. I will have to opaque ? It is because they are GET.. RIDOF 1 blind. " The natural man receiveth MY SINS, not the things of God because they end ' ,,you will are spiritually. discerned." •y have willt neo ,.. exnetl. There is rid of your sins. What . we do no trouble with the, ,crystal. "!'lie. with our sins among the three crys- trouble is with the eyes which try tals? Tho crystal atmosphere would to look through it. We ' pray.. for displayour pollution. vision, Lord, that our eyes maybe P The crystal river would bo befouled with our opened 1 When the eye salve cures touch. Transformati our blindness, 'then we find matt teat _ that re- place now or no transformation at ligion is transparent. all. Give site .full chance in your People talk too P much about their heart and the transformation. will cross and not enough, about their o 1 be downward instead upward. In - crowns. Do you know that the Bible stead ofi1 " crystal it will be a cinder. mentions a "cross but seventeen' In the days of Carthage - y ge a Chris times, ` while it mentions a crown than girl was condemned to dio for. EIGIITY TI112ES ? her faith, .and a boat was bedaubed with tar and pitch and 'filled with Ask that old man what he thinks combustibles and set ox fir of religion. Ile has been a and.set m e, and°tat obse•v - n ., close. Christian girl: was placed•,iii the boat x .et . I- has xas been cultrvati:ng and the wind R'as offshore and the an aesthetic taste. He has seen the boat floated away a with � isprecious yat sunrises of half a century. He has treasure. No one Can doubt. ,that o:: been au early riser. He has been air tit boat landed d admirer of cameos and corals and tine ,at the Shure as heaven.ySin wants to put you in a .fiery bo!anfl 8. "So new it was not you that sent me hither, but. God, and 1Ie liatix made mo a father to Pharaoh." Note the threefold "Gad sent me" (verses 5, 7, 8). We think of our Lord Jesus, who, when suffering so much from His enemies, saw not them but Iris Father, and said, "The cup which My Father Bath given Me, shall I not drink it ?" (John xviii, 11.) When Shinier cursed David and threw stones at him, ))avid saw not Shimmer, but God, and just left him to God to manage (II Sam, xvi, 5-18). • It is blessed indeed to see God and not peopleor circumstances and believe that not a dog can move its tongue against us without God's permission (Ex. xi, 7). See also Ise. xli, 12, 13 ; lir, 17. 9-11. 'Thus saith thy son Jos- eph, God hath nmde nee 'lord of all Egypt. Come down unto me ; tarry not." This was the message to his dear old fatlxer urging him to come quickly with all' his children; and Children's children and flocks and herds that Joseph might noux•.ishand etre for them. See the •verse foiloty- ing the portion assieiied for Our les- son and. note the interest Pharaoh. took in bringing Jacob and all hat lie had down to Egypt, sending wag- gons for - the wives reel little ones and urging them to regard not their stuff, ' because the good of all the land of Egypt was theirs. Our Lord Jesus said in Itis prayer to His rather, when speed:ig 'of His.dis- ciples, dis- ci 1 s The :glory Which c thou ga,veet Me 7have given: Chem (John hu xviii 22)' and it is, written :in I Cor. 21-23, that all things are ours, •but eiestriallalseetlieltrillellienainaaileaseassmot r1iF1 , ....y I - Mi 4 Li F..,f ll,.i , t! ,!4411 .. oar , VegeiablelreparationforAs- simiiating IhefoadaodUeguta- ling theStumarisatuiBoweis ' S1EE THAT TH$ FAC -SIMILE SIGNATURE Pro11ioireThiestlon,Cheerfui- -- lessandBest.Contaills neither pionnir,Morpl*Le nor Moult OT Nc � 0 Tye" ApertectBemedy forConslipa. tion, Sour S'tomat:tl,Diarrt1tlea. 't'Yoruts,ConliUsious,reve;rish- ness end Loss OF SLEEP: IS ON TIM WRAPPER OFA' BOTTlaW OASTORIA Cact2714 is pat lilt le osellze tiott1 cepa Zt 1s, not spld is belie. Don't abrin aayoxnt to holt you asnythilrg eke cit the plea cr promise that It Is"Jed aa gain an4 "sill answer or Pr.. MAO AO. i?,s tl at yet get 0.11-8 O-lt-T•,8:. 'S DRF,SS. 6 Months to 4 Years. Pointedyokes, with bretelles fall - big over the shoulders. are exceed- ingly becoming to the little folk. and make a charming effect. This dainty frock is made of sheer Persian lawn, wall all-over tucking kind trimming of Valenciennes lace, but r t thedesign c lt,lt is suited to all fabrics used for wee children, white for occasions of dress colors for the times of play and frolic. To cut this dress for n. chile) of two years of age 21 yards of ma- terial 32 inches wide will be requir- ed, with } yard. of tucking and 3„ yards of insertion to trim as illus- trated. T1 -IE WATER WE DRINK. Do we drink enough water ? The question is asked. by the Sanitary Engineer, who evidently thinks we do not. Says our contemporary t --- "We believe that much of the bene- fit that conies from visiting the most noted watering places is not so much because of any special medici- nal property as because of the free use of the water itself independent of any real or alleged mineral prop- erties, combined with the rest. Peo- ple go to drink the water and bathe in it, and they drink it morning, noon and night, and between times, and during the night. As a result the e stomach bon kidneys, s, liver, pores, and eIse rven the blood vessels themselves, get a much-needed flush- ing, and the over -clogged machinery of life gets a fresh start, and the Supposed mineral in the water gets the praise. Children Cry for - CSTORLa r_ QUEEN AND PEASANT. Her Womanly Kindness To His Two Children. The Naples papers tell a, pretty story of AJ'argherita, now the wid- owed queen dowager of Italy. 'On one occasion, as she was driving to the royal wood of Licalo, the coach- man mistook the road, and the par- ty knew not which way to turn. One of the gentlemen in attendance ask- ed a coititryman the way. The man looked atthe fine carriages and hot ses, the servants in livery and the gay company, and thought they were simply making fun of ban. Ho therefore refused to take their ques- tion on serious) Y• "As if you did not know," he said, with a broad grin. ''The queen laughed, and " assured him that they were lost. Not until then did thecountrymnan condescend to point out the way, after which ho walked off, as if still afraid of being laughed at. "Give him twenty francsfor his trouble," said the queen to one of her escort, who at once rode after the countryman.'' "Here, my man, is, a little res p enc from the Queen of Italy,who you," said the thanksY " messenger. `The queen : re plied ileo cou. _ 1 )tiny man, and immediately returned to the carriage. "Forgive me that I did not know thee," he said, "Thou art as beau- tiful as a May rose. God bless thee ! The carriage drove off, but the countryman, having once spoken to the queen, wanted to see her again. The he followntg day he presented him- self at theall: p ice, and :asked to see tier. "I know her," he said mysterious- vARICOCELE ICTUR sTR rise other direace lea ca;revsteat aruong aaen as Varicocele, As it interferes with tJae nutrition of the sesta!, organs It Produces eaasashaa5, leaf of semens through Use . inlet, decay of the organa. paha in the loins. aching In the back, nervousness des. iwadency,bashfulness, palpatatIon of the heart. constipation. and acomb nation ca thee restd*s in coup1eta Losthese resalto in conipieto Loon vi hxastbood. The:mu:diefyoung an'Middle- aced Alen are troubned veldt Stricture. if yon have reesee to believe ei are attracted with it, don't market it, It will rainyou, i' n't bet doctors "exp.ri meat on yen by cutting, stretching or teariu¢ it. Our Now method Treatment dissolves the etracture tissue hence it disappears and can never return W a,ure Varicoce,eand Stricture without operation or loss of time. Tbo treatmen ma: be taken at home privately, Send for our Free Illustrated 13oolt on Varicocele. Eatriatura and elect. WP hash raxtio to Coro or No They,. Kidneys All sexual complaints affect these orgaes, hence the kidneys are is great source of disease. Have you achidg or weakness over the small of the back, tendency to urinate frequently, deposit in urine, coldness of hands or feet. adrowsy feeiiin in the morning: Don't neglect your kidneys. (Inc New Method Trenton at is guaranteed to cars any disease of these organs or no pay. 11 To Names Used Without Written Consent.. varicocele In theysecondarylcstagey4andl two strictures of 11 years atandiug. I Was operated on twice, undergoing great suffering, hut only got the New relief. I was finally advised to trr ew hietbod Treatment of Drs. R. 8 K. The enlarged veins disappeared In six Reeks, the stricture tissue was removed la eight weeks and my sexual energy anis vitality a returned so I was a man to every respect. L recommend you doctors with my trhole heart." CURES GUARANTEED. NO CURE NO PAY. d/ Before Treatment. After Treatment. ills We atWeakcPart , Gon Nervous Debility. uUnnatural Discharges. onsultatio Free• . Books Free. Write for Question List for Home Treatment, rs. Kennedy Q, I/organ, 143 SHELBY DE RpiEZ',,M10H. Strong Points ' ABOUT Ba B. Ba 1. Its Purity. 2. „Its Thousands of Cures. 34 Its Economy. le. a dose. Regulates the Stomach, Liver and Bowels, unlocks the Secretions, Purifies the BIood and removes all the impurities from a common Pimple to the worst Scrofulous Sore, and DYSPEPSIA. BILIOUSNESS, • CONSTIPATION, HEADACHE, ,, SALT RHEUM, SCROFULA, I1E!ARTBURN, SOUR STOMACH, • DIZZINESS, DROPSY, • s RHEUMATISM, SKIN DISEASES. HLF A CENTURY OLD: A Standard Remedy Used inThoueands of HOMOS An Canada, ly. I spoke to her yesterday, and I want to speak ;to her again." The porter would have had this, in- trusive Countryman arrested for a madman had it not happened that the gentlemair who had given the peasant the twenty francs appeared et ethat xnonxent and recognized him. When the queen' heard of his arrival she seta: for hire. "Yes, 'tis. thou," he said, in a tone of. great satisfaction„ when he looked again upon her face, " I thought; I had seen a fairy„ Thou art just ` an angel.. I did not tell thee yesterday that I have two lit- tle ones ,without a mother. Wilt thou be their mother ? :With wpnianl y kindness the queen.' accepted th',trust. Then there's the twenty francs thou gayest meh esterday," said Y the countryman: I thank thee, but I avant no money," and he went away Child reg Cry for CASTOR CURES Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Cho �' �'� )era,; Cholera Morbus; Cholera Infan- tum, Cramps, Colic, Sea Sickness and all Stammer Complaints. Its prompt use Will prevent a great deal�' of unnecessary suffer- ing and often save life. PRICE, 3SCy ThtT i T. Milburn Co.,Limited, Tt7. ixalto, Ont. crying and smilin • like a little The queen adoptedg tle chies, the little gimes, and they are in an institution under her special patronage. Ii C sir please, se, I beau_ ;717 allowed a pin! n.! ex. .rte ed a servant lmt girl, m`1x:m- ring into tier :employer's study. Ne ver t>zincl, r.a'ry, he replied, dr. -;,, a;,t study,, hers's', another. wit It