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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1901-11-21, Page 2Col ume Carter's le Liver Pi Bear Slsnetture or nee Fee -simile Wrapper Betow. BAD DEEDS CO AC Resolve to Do What Good You Can in This World. A despatch from Washington says : -eller: Dr. Talmage preached frone ithe following text : Xeattah xl, 22. ! It is be that eitteth upon the cirele *fittliiiielet1;ertlizeicorle thoughtithat thei years before they found out that it was round Isaiah, in ener tent, heti- Mated the sliape of it—God sitting 1 uPen the circle a the earth. 'The or gi lues,,htt e :lel/art:el tit oei ff. ut1(11131i)Tc.irTec fitief.T.e, atlilegne:7VIeetrle 1 There are in the natural world etrnight lines, augiee. perellel- te-raires, diegonals. qua:Iran:405h leut hese evidently ape not God's favor- . Aimee& QVC1',3.ulitre witetee yen him geeineerieleg ,you And the e amnion:et, an if not the circle the curve, witich is a circle that. noueg. If it had lived long would have been a full periphery. Alt,CeliKe is a pmsed only a little too hard tet, • sidee, The history of the world goes in a circle. Why is it. that the ehippoig lit our day is imerovitig eo rapidly ? A Mille eliphuilder says it is he- n cauee =ea are imitating in on re- spects what the small wits deride, the old model 44i Noali's arta not tte we ste it iu old time pictores. bet as it l'Cati;1,- WS at cordir.,g. to the a,.'- . ctitat :riven. Great ships have 'we' 1:tow, but anhere ie the ehp ou ehe leca. to -day that could outride a de- luge in which the neave.t mid the :;eartli r.cre wrecked. ImIllii1P: ;CU the :naeategers in eofety. two ot each kind of Divieg meaturee, hundeeds of l'Ortql",ogy Wilt frO ou 'with its act- , svoneette n .. tet musty cen uriee the trorld will have plums end rears wor 41 was a an t OnSandS 0 DIZZINESS' -it XILIOUSNEtts. TWO LIVE& CONSTIPATION. 'ALLOW SKR. T.COMPLEXION CURE $ICK HEADACHE% VICTORI,k, T.C., March it, even, The T. bur Ce. Litnifed, Toronto Qt., Dee r Sirs,—Som e tim e ago rnyd.augtcr, aged 19 years, was troubJed with bad head. on aches d loss of opp2tiZe. She was tired ad listless most the time, and loosing tem got bdJy run dour:, hearing eerier art and Nerve toured a box, rills Wanly :Token or and by the tune she 3a4 used them she had gained ei lbs. hi weight and is now ia perfect health. Yours truly re:as. P. H. CtlitTn. Strong Ports ABOUT 1. Its Purity. 2. Its Thousands of Cures. a. Its Economy. lc. a dose. met. WZ,..313. Regulates the Stomach, Liver and Bowels, unlocks the Secretions, Pericles the Blood and removes all the imytaities from a conartioa Pimple to the worst Scrofulous Soret and CanCTLTAill DYSPEPSIA. BILIOUSNESS, CONSTIPATION, HEADACHE, SALT RHEUM, SCROFULA, HEARTBURN, SOUR STOMACH, DIZZINESS, DROPSY, RHEUMATISM, SKIN DISEASES. ODDS AND ENDS. For every 110 civilians, 380 sol- diers commit, suicide in Great Brit/- elm A record pine log, 9,1 feet long, 10 inches square and perfectly straight, as recently landed at Leith. Italy. and Spain have fewer houses 131 proportion to population than any other country, The Argentine Republic. has most. Since 1810 European towns have increased 670 per cent in popula- tion, while in the country. districts, increase has been but 70 per cent. Britain digs canals more cheaply than other countries. The average cost of English canals being £0,600 thile, against £10,000 in France and £15,5"00 in Canada. Potatoes have ceased* to be the principal root crop of Ireland, if they are to be Compared with turnips by weight or yield—last year, for example, only abotit 1,540,000 tons, against 4,42(5,000 tons of turnips. The tusks of Congo elephants are as a rule very /arge and weigh on an ,everage 60 pounds. Some of thext ere of extraordina,ry size, At the Bexli useels eibition a pair of tusks were on show each of which weighed 156 pounds. . SEWING BIRDS. Most curious are the .sewing or tailor -birds of India --little yellow things not nruall larger than one's thumb. To escape falling a prey to snakeS and 1):1011keYS the tailor -bled picks -op a dead leaf and flies up in - o a. tree, and with a ilt,re for a thread and its bill. for a needle sew ns the leaf to a green oe hanging frond the tree; sides are sewed up, -an pening- to the nest Oros formed . left at the top. That e_nest is "0.1c tree no Snake. or tV01 Man Wtalld S.IMPCCt, , n lived can agorn to work eo slowly as that, cement God in the building 'of eternities allord to wazt . What though God should take 10.- 000 years to draw a circle ? Shall We take our little watch which we nave to wind up every night lest it run down •and bold it up beside the Clock of eternal ages? If„ according to the Bible, a thousaud years are in God's sight as -one day, then. aen Cording to that calculation the 0.- 000 years •ef the world's existence has been only to God as freate MONDAY TO SATURDAY, But what is true of the geed niet true of the bad. Yoa utter D Slander against your lleighbor. It Ilas sow,: forth from your teeth. You liana done the man all the mischief you can. You rejoice to see hint wince. Yon Say, "Didn't give it to him!" That word has gone otit, that slanderous word, on its poison- Ous and bated way. You think it will never do yen any herrn. But I am weighing that went ana Xsei teen -ming to eilrve. wed it curve, around and it b alining at •,,,,our heart. You Itaci better dodge it. You cannot dodge it. It rolls into your bosom. and after it yolis in a word gf an old book rolls Z.11 after it. say - "With what measure ye mete it 411311 Le measured to you again." Oh. I would like to $eo ItuJ th 3,111.5Sitillary. at. the inoment when bie Inkvuve MAWS tO full orb illfdler,C0 rating out. through Antiocb. through Cyprue. through Lystrat, through Corinth. through Athene, through Asia, through En- rolee, through America, through the first centery. through five centuriee. through tweuty centuries. through earth ' h - Come closer, aR neaven. Narrow the circle armed His green neart, 0 Clariet, the Savior! 0 Christ, the Men! 0 Christ. the Godi Keep •thy throne for ever, seated On the circle of the earth, seated on the eirele of heaven, A, ROYAL SATICEBOX ,101,1! Late Dowager Enress of qpr- many as a The /ate Dotrager Enipreee of gel, Many Was for so many years a pro- minent figure in the world's galloy et unhappy women that it is net ensy to ma ,Qf her AS a little, laughing, goldea-haired girl, with a -Merry tongee that often got ber in- to trouble With, her august niether. QM= Vie-4min; yet that is the pler, tore of her Wiliela Vanity Pair pre- sents. The late Queen. Who brought up her children as wisely as ally mother in all England. insisted aimpng other things that they ehould treat. all Menthere of the boneehold with MS, . pect, and address .ech member by his or her correct tit/e. The little Princess Itoy.al frequently- broite this ruleher mese serious- of. foam beiug a determination, whieh no •aenount of punieliment cheekedo to call:the physician-in-orclitiary by hie last mune only—nDrown," Tile Queen, findieg all .otlier pouai tiesfutile. had ivaIJy threatened to eine tho-Praiettee Royal to Led oh he next Offense.. no matter at what time in the -day it should •occur. Walking With her another QUO morn, ing aloug the• corridor in the pakten, the little Victoria met the physician.' "'Good morning. Brown,'" she cried, :tawny.: Loohing up, she met th e Forrowful and disped eyes Of - her utether, and linineellateler added, 'And good -night. Broom. for l'ut go- ing to bed 1" Then, witha eourteSY - to Ow Queen and the • barest nod to the physician, the Princess Royal danced off to the nursery. As soon as elm was inside the room she midwie.11 a. defiant, toes of her golden, curii! head : 111 It" "Fieriee. ea:nobody, put, me to bed, equel ta the patediraical. the wave 01 influence. having mode ro n 1 TUE ART GP GARDENING •full circuit, strikes his sold. Oh. again.' then I would lite to hiin! N • T. RdiTAV cir ,utuies, and ar fte the Peenlings and Mitchells of the , world have done their best in the . far euture the art of gardening et1.1.1e np to the arboremence of the ,e7te,er I. If the makers of colored glees go On improving,mm they ay sonic centuries be able to make sons:- ,4hing equal to the east windoW of 17forleniineter. which was built in the !near 12:10. We are six centuries be- Ihind thoee artiets. But the world :must keep on toiling until it ellen ;make. the complete circuit and. come .un to the end' of those very men. 11 the world coatitazea to improve nute in cuity, we shell have after !awhile. perhaps after the acitaliare of centuries. mortar egiud to, that which ; t o tim au c.. e in:11,11:h city built in the time of the tRoans 1.000 years ago, that mor- ntar to -day as good as the day in w .hieh it was made, having outlasted 1120 inick and the etone. I say, af- ter hundreds of years auttsonry may tadeeince to that point. Weil. now, what is true in the nut- terial univer ,7e is true iii God's mond goverument arid spiritual arrange- ment. That is the xneantug of Eze- kielte wheel. All eonainentators agaea in eaying that the wheel means God's providence. But. a, wheel is of no use unless it turns, and if it turns it turns around, and if it turns around • it moves in ,e, circle. What then? Are we parts of a great iron machine whirled aronnd and around whether eve will or not, the victims of inexor- able fate ? No So far from that shall show you that. we ourselves ^start the circle of good or bad • ' Lions and that it will surely come around twain to us unless by divine intervention it is hindered. Those 'bad or good actions may make the circuit of many years, but coine back to us they will as certainly as that God sits on the circle of the earth. Jezebel, the worst woman of the Bible — Shakespeare copying his "Lady Macbeth" from her picture— slew Naboth because she wanted his vineyard. While the dogs were eat- ing the body di Naboth Elijah the prophet put down his compass and Marked a circle from these dogs clear around to the dogs that should eat the body of Jezebel, TIIE MURDERESS. "Impossible!" the people said. "That will never happen." Who is that being dung, out of the palace win- dow ? Jezebel, • A few hours after they came around, hoping to bury her. They find only the palms of the hands and the skull. The clogs that devoured Jezebel and the dogs that devoured Naboth. Oh, what a swift, what an awful circuit But it is sometimes the case that this circle sweeps through a century or through many centuries. The world started with a theocracy for govenernent--that is, God was the president and emperor of the world People got tired of a theocracy. They said: "We don't want God directly interfering with the affairs of the world. Give us a rnonarelay:" The world had a nionarchy. Proin a 'non- arclay it is going to have a limited monarchy. After awhile, the limited monarchy will be given up and the republican form of government will be everywhere dominant and recog- nized. Then the world will get tired of the republican form of govern- ment, and it will ha,ve an anarchy, which is no government at all. And then all nations, finding out that man is not capable of righteously go verning man, will cry out again for theocracy and say, `'..Let Goa come back. and conduct the affairs of the world." Every stepi--mon.archy, limited monarchy, republicanism, an- archy—only different stepsbetween the first theoeracy and the last theo- cracy or segments of the, great cir- cle' of the earth on which God sits. But do floe become impatient be- cause you cannot See the curve of events and therefore conclude tha,t od s govei*nnient h going to break down. History tells Us that in the I making of 1he pyramids it took 2,- f 000 men two -yee„re to drag one great I stone 11 111 , the quarry and 'Mit it into the randds, If men short t see in o ERITISH j,BZ1yREFDEN. . Tommy Will lifear His Cap on His • Head, Not His Ear. one eau trfl the wide sweep of th circle of Paul's inlluence eave th One who is seated on the circle o the earth. I should not lite te bee tike coun tenance of Voltaire when his indu ewe conies to full orb. When th fatal hemorrhage seized him a eighty-three "ern of age, his Sudo ence did not MM. The most bril Inuit man of his century, he ha used all his faculties for assaultin Christianity. his bad inductee wid n'u„ through France, widening out through erMany, widening all throtiFli Europe, widening through Ameritet. widening through the 123 eons that have gone eine() he died widenli g through enrth, wideni through the great future. until n. last the accumulated innuence of hi baleful teachings and dissolute lit will heat against his dielnayed spir it, and at that moment It Will b enough to make the black hair o eternal darkness TURN WHITE WITII noratoR. No one can tell how that bad num' influence girdled the earth su.ve th one who is Seatecl on the circle o the earth—the Lord Almighty. "Well now," • , some respects, is a very g• lad theor and in others a very sad one V. woultl like to have the good w have done come back to us, but th thought that all the sins we hav esor committed will come back to us fills as with affright." My bro ther. X have to tell you God can break that circle and will do so a your call. I can bring twenty pas- sages of scripture to prove that when, God, for Christ's sake, for- gives a min the sins of his past life never come back. The wheel may roll on and on, but you take your position behind the cross, and the wheel strikes the cross and is shattered forever. The sins ily off from the circle and fall at right angles with complete oblivion. For- given! Forgiven:. The meanest thing a man can do is after some difficulty has been settled to bring it up again, and God will not do any- thing like that. God's memory is mighty enough to hold all the events of the ages, but there is one thing that is sure to slip Ms memory, one thing He is sure to forget, and that is pardoned transgression. How do I know it? I will prove it. "Their sins and their iniquities will I re- member no more." . But do not make the mistake pi thinking that this doctrine of the circle stops with this life. It rolls on through heaven. 'You might quote in opposition to inc what St. John says about the city of heaven He says it "lieth four squaren; That does seem to militate against this idea of a circle. Hut do you not know there is many a square house that, has a family circle fac- ing each other and in a circle mov- ing, and I can prove that this is so IN REGARD TO IIEAVEN. St. John says., "I heard the voice of =Lily angels round about the throne - and the beasts and the elders." And again be says, "T saw round about the throne four ande twenty seats." And again he says, "There was a rainbow round about the throne." The two former imply a ,circle; the last either a circle or a semi-eircle. The seats facing each other, the angels facing each other, the men facing each other. Heaven an am- phitheatre of glory. Circumference of patriarch and prophet and apostle. Circumference of Scotch Covenanters and Theban legion and Albigenses, Circumference of the good of all ages, Periphery 01 sPlencl:,,r unimagined and indescr i b- ablo, A circle! A circlet Bet every circumference must haw a centre, and what is the centre of this heavenly Circumference? Christ. His all, the glory; ITis all the praise; His all the' crowi s. heae-en vtpathed into a garland round about Tim Tahc o CI the imperial s I] d rorn His foot, and behold the ecar • Spiko. Ter`t tho coronet of do- ninion from I -Tie hrow and see where s 1 he laceration or ; th briers. The still' little Orem-shaped forage - t cap Whieh hub hitherto been worn by - the British guardsmen is to be die-. placed in the main to the cloth cap , 14 of the man-of-wareman, eine; the g London Telegraph. This announce - went will doubtless be received with amp regret by Continental carica- turists, who invariably depict Tom- my Atkins us a inan with the tiniest. of bets end the biggest efprotrud- • ing teeth, and their sorrow will be h, shared by those pantomime artists T. who generally rely upon the soldier's 3 head appaxel. worn at an absurd o angle, as a standing menus of Ing the merriment of their audience. c So far the I 01 Gurn'ds oiono' t possession of the new call, Which they wear with a band of green, but the entire brigade will shortly be furnished with similar headgear, with s the exception that the band of the e, Coldstreamers will be white, the 4 Grenadiers red, and the Scots a small check of red and white. This pattern IT which will shortly be familiar to Y every Londoner, has been borrowed— e like the recent army order about -the O training of troops—from the C'ernian O army, and it remains to be seen e whether the rank and file will take kindly to a departure which is in - striking contrast to some of their roost CHERISHED TRADITIOISTS. It will seem rather extraordinary to the lay reader that this new for- age cap, which may possibly be issued to all troops besides the Guards at an early date, has formed the subject of long and anxious dis- cussion on the part of the uniform authorities at the War Office.: 1.1very one has recognized that the old head- gear failed to protect tbe soldier either from excessive beat, wet, or cold, and the object of the clothing experts was to find some pattern which should possess all these ad- vantages. The styles worn by every European Emily were carefully studied and tested, and ultimately the pre- sent ,cap, which in shape and ma- terial and manufacture is similar to the article worn by the- Zritish bluejacket, was resolNed upon. In the matter of itilifOrM, however, the personal equationcounts very large - The authorities know perfectly well that a smart uniform has at- tracted thousands of Mell to the re- cruiting depot, and the old forage cap, des p te its cu Ions , propor- tions and uselessness,•considered from the point of view of a protection for the head, was undoubtedly well be- loved of Thomas Atkins. Will the new forage cap, worn upon the crown of the head and not over the right ear, enjoy the same popularity..? The authorities are p/ainly in doubt on the point, and the present distri- bution to the bric,ade 'of Guards is undertaken chiefly for experimental purposes.. - . Those Irish warri o 5 W.110 11 aVe been consulted on the'absorbing 'chic of the new forage ca,p have not hesi- tated to declare in ftt.vor of tho old type. 'nu: chief axItLinta,ges to which the army . ait oritics lay claim is that the new pattern really estab- lishes' a 1.11)if(M1n style for Ficldjers and liandymen alike, and that the fornaer will not be encumbered, as previously, with the transport of two caps, theold fo) age and field service types, iCh 1. s desired shall be displac:od by the new pat- tern. TilE PASTOR'S MISTAKE. Pastor---"Weat 010 r say in. IflY sermon yesterdaY that You . objected to '1." Mr,„ o 0 d 'Vo 0 surprise tile, my dear .1 din not o bject. to anything," I'a s '1111 1 hoard V(.511 . , V111 y :.3edii3 le. start at something 1 11• Mr. '.1)0 • That. wae'.onlyea' '3'n-dre"' THE S. S. LESSON THE' Ki NG, THE, QP EEN and THE DUCHESS OF r3Evorsis1iks. ; A Remarkable 0-1 fer. • Hero is the beet offer ever made in this commenity. By a very excellent ar- 4.1 • rat.tgement tnederwith the Family Herald and Weekly Star of Montreal• we *re Ves,ana garnbil: lefa. le:.°41 Rif ee egt7 rai:VZ:ne .XEINLz y for ore :ta•clalar foUirattegerneigatil sgtlatnultolYr6r7agearti4dt'ite• • elude to each subseriber three ceautifel premium pietures, of ithich the follow. • • KING EDWARD VIL—Trne to life. a beautiful partritit size IS inches.oa beautiful 1-eamy white satin finished paperfor framing. This portrait • Ihas been taken since bi r.cce.esign to the throne, and is the very latest and best • obtainable. It cannot he had exeept through the Vanier Ile:nem) eene • Wr.eictee SUR; etteh WARe. liCitra the Nina's Autograph. %%IS piettlre has the 'IF • greet merit of being the first taken atter the Eing's acceesion, and has therefore • • an leistoricel value thet no other picture nen peheess. • 0. QUEEN ALEX.ANDRA,-:-An exquisitely beautiful picture of the remark- * ably beautiful mid sect Queen Alexandra. War: taken 5111114 tha Ks accession • • to the throne.It is the same slge as that of the glee, the two fanning ft handy • some pair of pictures thot alone would 44 for many times the subscription price .0 of peper and pictures, No portrait, of the Kleg 0,134 COn5Prt taken 4 the second or succeeding sit- tings can heve eee fraetion of tee value of the lirst. The e go down to history. • INTERNATIONALZES0,v Nov. g4. Text of the Lesson, Ise,. v., 8-3(h da. Irt Golden Text, Isa., v., 22. 4 Sce the eerpent peremaded niaa to heneve that he was wiser than X • God the majority of people have • walked in that way—that is, in their own wisdom, in their own Way, the way of SelfiSlmess, se/f-seeking, selfe righteousness, self -glorification and renunciathen of God. It • is not strenge that the world, lying in the wicked one (T. John v, 19, 11.V.). should do this, but it does seem etrange that the professing peeple of God, who are called in this chapter His vineyard and His people (verses 6, 7, 18, 2,50, should so dishonor God. Those who would find only a so-called temperance lesson in this chapter are something like those wile: End nothing in all the Bible but how to he saved. The book is called "The vision of Isaiah concerning ale dah and derusalent" (chapter L 1), end therefore the first applieation of itn words ineitet lie to them. The SUlanlit of the whole book is seen such paeeuges as verse 10 of our ehapter ii, 11, 37, and eirel- 1 assses, "The Lord alone shall exalted." • 1-7, This patteage eva Ilia epee • cial Care of Israel and liuw instead • of good fruit to ills glory they gave leh ITInI oithi wild grapes and unrighte eausnees Instead of righteousuess. • The sante story of bun ingratitude I is set forth in our Lord's parable of ; the wicked huetarelmen in hiuttla xx13Nt "8•-10tt Willett b here set forth 40. • • as joining house to house end field • to field that they may be in some 1; souse the only people on earth is • very manifest to -day in the so-called "trlists" which have become so pro- minent. in these lest days. It. would • be well if none who hear the name of ingsChrist were mixed up with theep th. The Lord of hosts hears and , ""cy'r'"'"'"v•-vv+914,4.46•4•000-0C4A240.4+ FVCS it all, and ills oomplaint in " g. I. 0, is still the &One. The re- Medy m in Wattle %1. 33. 11-12. From morning until night It is naught but eelf-indulgence, and in chapter xxviii, 7, it is written that the priest and the prophet, hose who should be wholly for man before God and for God before :nen, have erred through strong drink anti are swallowed up of Will(1. Our vers- e,/ say that they regard not the 'work of the Lord, neither consider the op- eration of Ills hands. The Porno statement is found in Ps. =Vat. 5, and the result stated "Ile shall dee- troy them and not build them up." If the adversaiy enn only turn men even% the word of God and thus from God Himself, he hes accomplished much in his line, 23-17. A worse bondage than that. of Rgypt and a worse famine than that which effects only tbe body conies upon them, "not a famine of bread nor a thirst for water, but of hearing the words of the Lord (Amos loin 11, 12). A terribie hu- miliation must come, for the Lord of hosts shall be exalted in judg- ment and the Hone God be sauctin- ed in righteousness (verse 10. mar- gin). The kingdom of Cod shall come, and all iniquity :hall be put owner (J)an ix, 24) not nnly in is - belt In all the world. Happy are all wig: have a foretaste or the kingdom in their hearts and lives g hold upon some that they.rtc- tsIdlutro;1111n-Yis utmost against them. Lto ike 18, 19. Iniquity tribes such a mock God and dare IIim the antediluvians they say: "What doth God know? What can the Al- mighty do to them ?" (Job xxii, 13, 17, margin). They say. "Mere is the promise of His coming ?" All things continue as they were. Be- cause they will .not believe Clod they are willingly ignorant of what has been and what will be (II. Peter Hi, 3-7). These are not drunken with wine, but with their own pride and self-conecit and unbend. 20, 21. Wise and prudent in their own eyes, not knowing that they axe deeeived by the wicked one, they, like Eve, think that to be good whieh God has said they must not eat, and they count it desirable. These are the,people from whom our Lord said that the things are hidden Matth. xi, 25). It is written in Prov. xxvi. 12, "Seest thou a man wise in his •own conceit, .there is more hope ol a fool than of him." The word of God can be ecceived only by the meek, the teachable (Jas. 1, 21 ; Zech. iv, 13, 1.4). "• THE DUORESS DEVONSHIRE.—The Renowned Galnsborough Pin- ture, Ueda at Auction wile in London twenty -dye years ago for 419, etalen by decor thieves, hidden for over twenty -Mr years At1.4 1:11411Viggcl 0 10 °weer ou peyment of ii2,000 reward and eiace sold to lit, .I.Plerpout Morgan for • $70,000. This, lo brief, is the history of one of the premium pictures, which, by a clevet stroke of enterprise, the publishers of the Family Herald have secured QZ their subscribers. The picture is 22.eti in ten colours, and is reproduced line for • lino, colour for colour with the orighed. Copies of the reproduction are now Bold • in New York City, MontreAl and Toronto for $12 each, and this is the picture * Family lieridd subseribers Are going to get abseletely free together with the '0 Pictures of the Xing and Queen. Is that nob big value? Call at Tun Toms ()Mee and see samples of these beeutiful pictures. You weue TUN Rumen. Trams for the local news, and you want that great ever the Family Ileralel for it's ill pages of general liews and fututLY reeding. Its agricultural lieges Alone are worth many times the subscription Bring or send your subseription to THE TIMES OFFICE. • 22, 23. INIne aad strong drink Muddle nien's brains and blur their vision and wake up all tile thexin nati inake them to care only for their own present reward, no matter who-- in ay suffer therel)y. Children regard not parents nor par- tS, 01011' Children. 'The husband thinks not of his wife, ilor the wife Of her ,husl.)an.d. All is 1°61, sight of in tile craving for drink when once this habit liaS ;obtained control. But there i.re malty who never to U strong drinl< yet, are so drunken with thur 01V1,1 intense selfishness • that the,y cannot think of aught but .liow they May be pleaSed and 11.91v . Soma one else May add to their comfort. 24, '215`. Ae sudden e,ntl slmll come to all their glory, and they shall find theinselves in trouble from which there iS 00 cl el i ver a u ce "becau.se they have cast away the law of the Lord of 1Tosts, and despised the word of the Holy ()tie of 3srael.* * ?, 00010 :' to chapter viii, 20, margin and il V., there is no morning for such people--tliat is, the niorning of joy, of His coming, of the Kinghom, will mean /loth -big, to them, (Ps.. elle, 14; axe, 5 ; cxxx, (3), for they will have only the 1)1 ack.ness of darkness for- ever. We do not know thtet the rich m an of felke xvi Nvt'LS ever given to strong drin,. hi i t he was dr tinleij Wil h his own thoughts and posses= SiOnS, and. he di ed. and found hi sel f i11 to r 26, 30. This is a lool< onward to the gathering of all 1'.! 1(13, (hat :Ire 1311 V 1 11 humiliate Israel and then in lat/ons and ce isra el into Um. the Ca et TheueanCe rg young and middle-aged men are annually_ crept to a premature ' mare through .1,..ft.10.! IWIZCItttiEn, ILIV» ' 11.11MARY.:;$. 11 you have any ot the following symptoms consult 115 igtore It Is too late. Ara you nervons nint weata deepondent and gloomy, seeeka beforethe eyes with dere circles under them, -weak baclOciducys irritable, palpitation of the heart, bashful,. dreams and lasses, rettisnent in urine, pimples on the face, sunken eyes, hollow cheeks, careworn capresolon, poor memory, lifeless, distrut.tful, lack energy and strength, tired mornings, restless nights, cite «geable moruis,wcak man hoOdLetunted organs, premature deeay, bona pales, hair loose, sore throat, Ctc,? Our wow Men -toll rercatruczt will cure you. r T VLA a Nothillt, eau be more demoralizing' to youeg a ed eddeleeared mem than mein:1mm at niebt or secret draina through the urine. They unlit a. utan for businese, mar. rted life or sociathaefeeess. No matter whetter caused by evil habits in youth, natural IVCA;Ct%O.S,_or sexual excesses, our New Meel2pd. Troatzeterst poat, tively cureyou, cuRus GUARANI -42D. NO CURE, NO PAY. florNo Names trecci Without WrItten Cont. lo. A. Muir, of alma, O., says:—"I was oue of the countless victims of early vice at IS years of iJ nafye'bralithstcadsr4viells as '221732yY:Yestlail awnedreVIOvrevaoransly7. tele. Vor ten years I tried scores of doctors, electric belts and patent medicines. Some helped um, none cured. TI was giving up In despair, in ID' tie fact, contemplatingsnicide whoa a friend ad- .:- vised mo as a last resort to give tbe Neve ,...- htetboa Treatment of Ere. R. E. afalr 0,. trial. Without confidence X consented and in three months Irma a cured man. 1 VMS cured seven years ago—am married and happy. X heartily recommend Drs, L 6 N.to my =toted BeforeTreatment fellowmen." After Treatment AdrWe treat and cure Varicocele, Braissione, Nervous Debility, Seminal Weakness, Gleet, Stricture, Syphilis, Unnatural Discharges, Self Abuse, Eidney and Bladder Diseases, and all diseases of Nen and Women. • ra'NO NAMES 'USED WITIXOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. PRIVATE. No *medicine sent C, O. D. No names on boxes or envelopes. Everything confidential.; Question list and cost of treatment, ons 4. DB. Kentigdy Kesgail '48 .1ZILE114' 0SETTnriC12.r: co ? fei WO. z atb I • ' AKIN enee iii, 1, 2, 15-17; Zeph. iii. 8-20; Ise. edit, 9-12. -The Lord of Hosts A CENTURY OLD: ' also Lea.. iv, 2-6 ; vi, 3, margin ; - hath purposed it. to stain the pride of all giory and to bring into con- , tempt all the honorable of the i A Standard Remedy earth" Isa. xxiii, 0). The kingdom I will coene, but the unrighteous Omni Usedin Thousands of lionlee not see it. No drunkard nor sinner of any other kind, continuing in sit' in Canada. and dying in the seine, can ever be- , legit the kimedoni, but every drunk- ard, liar, murderer., or ordinary sin- ner who with true penitence turns from his sin -to the „cony savior of sinners, the Lord Jenne Christ, shall in nowise he cast out, but shall be washed, sanctified, justified, by the precious blood of Christ and by that greatest sacrifice ever heard of in the universe; made fit for the Presence of God and. made a, joint heir with Christ Himself (John vi, 37 ; Cot 9-11. ; :Rev. v, 9, 10). SU.111.11AllIld.1 OAOLEREPAIRIi, 'The submarine cables of the NV03.10 are kept in repair by :37 steamers equipped for the work. THE ORIEllelATOF1 OF DOAN'S KIDNEY NILS The. original kidney 'specific for the cure of Backache, Diabetes, Bright's Disease and all Urinary Troubles. Don't accept,somethingjust as good,. See you get the geniune 'h-hiseneu.dia CURES Diarrhea, Dysentery, Cholera, *Cholera Korhus, Cholera Infan- tum, Cramps, Colic, Sea Sickneas and all Summer Complaints Its prompt use Will prevent a great deal of unnecessary suffer', ing and often save life. PRICE,• S5c. The T. Kilburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont mesereeeezemeemememeeeeeem.e.eee,—,,e, _ HOW SEF',DS ARE DISTRIBUTE!), Darwin found' i11 i,he earth arlhering to the feet of a plover till'ec diliel- (3flI kinds of seeds, In the mud ing tn the feet of ducks and geeS.c sliot in Englani. he detected the seeds of pla.nts peculiar to the 1,or31. 'Nyanza, in central Africa, in the soil clinging to tile feet oi a l'exas Steer" the E...ced,, of five differ- , „ ent kinds of weeds ,and. grosses cern-, mon in were ,diScovered 111 York 1y the ai(3 of a nacroseoette