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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1902-1-16, Page 7BRUTE Nan Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills Mut Bear Signature of See Fac-Similo Wolin= Below. Ver.) small und as eass to take es sugar. CARTEKS FOR nll ADAeEs l'OR DIZZINESS. riTLE FR El MESHES -S. IVR FOR TORPID MYER. PILLS. FOR CONSTIPATION. FOR SALLOW SM. FOR THEMPLEXION 25 204 I rare, vege isa7valvaa CURS SICK HEADACHE. Professional *Men. , It's the constant strain and worry under which the professional man labors, the irregularity of habits and loss of rest that makes him pectitiarly sus- ceptible to kidney treubl es. First it's backache, then urinary difficulties, then— unless it's attended to— Bright's Disease and — death. DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS Strengthen and invigorate the kidneys —never fail to give quick relief and cure the neost obstinate cases. - Rev. M. P. Campbell; pastor of the Baptist Church, Essex, Ont., says: "From my pummel use of Doses Kidney Pills, which I gob at Sharon's drug store I can . se.y they are a, most exciellent remedy for kidney troubles, and I recommend there to infferera from aucle eomPlaints.” atRs good urea, If the blood is pure the whol body will be healthy. If the blood is impure the whcl system becomes corrupted with it impurities. l5-44 Burdock Blood Bitters trans forms impure and watery bloo into rich pure blood and builds u tr4 the health. * • • Disease germs canncit lurk in th system when B.B.B. is used. , Miss Efda McDonald, Liseomb Mills, Guy Co., N.S., writes: 'I have found B.B.11. an excellent remedy for purifying the blood acid curing sick headache. I had tried many remedies, but sone of them Wel nee much good. B.B.B. has made elle' so well that I feel like s new veomaa and I am constantly recommend- ing it.to mg friends." . , seaeareitee ameemmusseasee,„ 2,000,000 ARE ILLITERATE. Facts Gleaned From the United Etates Census. 'Although there are over fifteen mil- lion pupils carolled in the common schools of the United States—nearly one in every ,five ref the total popula- tion- of the 'country—and nearly seventeen niellion pupils of all ages securihg instruction in one kind of school or another, the extent of our Alliterate adult population is dis- agreeably large, says the New 'York World. The eensus report -,on the sub- ject just issued states the total mum - her of inalei of voting age at 21,- 829,810, and reports 2,326,2,95 of them. `ao be illiterates. In other words, considerably over ten per ent. of the men entitled to vote— .nless, as in Massachusetts and Sissiesippi, they are • barred by ducational .qualifications—are unable o read and Write. It 18 a, reassur- ng reflection that large as this mass If illiteiate' ts of 'voting age is ` is no as ...... as it was twenty or oven ten ye rs ago, and is get: ting sinaller all the time. And as compared with many European countries it is an extremely' email percentage .of our whole population. Ol coT.msn IT DOESN'T. 'The Motheri"I'm sorry to learn -that you. ran your little cart over one of the boys next door, and hurt ''It Wallet iny fa.tilt. I told him to get, out of the Way, My cart's got 'Royal Mail,' painted en both Sides 01- 11., and it doesn't have to stop for nobody:" ' 11 POLICY. Artalpr.;:s! ITe•--"I tierteinly • hed reaSon•1,0 think youcared fea int—you Write co nice to me." , `,"• so e .$) a !eta:— But X make it a point to be iitqe to eVerY nano Matter how Stupid be zs• • es.• PUT ON TIIE. WHOLE AR All May Look Bright Now, But Do Not Be Deceived. ($eleret. sonata' to Act a tee sentiment el ovade. in ow emir f)ne Thonsand Nine mire rime aid One, by Willi in Daily, of Toronto, ' the Department of Apra:num Ottamys,) A deepatch from Washington savn Rev. Dr. Talmage preached from the following text :—L 'Kings xx,,• 11; 'Let not hon that girdeth on his her - :lest) boast himself as he that putteth it °Ph" Harnees is the obsolete word for Armor It means liarness for the man, not harness for the beast; liars noes for the battle, not harndss , for She Plow. The ancient armor eon- ! Meted of ,helinet for the head, breast- plate and shield for the heart, 'greaves for the feet, The 'text makes a comparison between. a naan enlist- ing for some war and a veteran re- turning., the one putting on the ar- mor and the °thee putting it eV. Benhadad, the king of Syria., thought. he could easily overcome the king of Israel. Indeed. the Syrian was so sure of the victory that he spread an antebellum banquet.. With thirty-two kings he was celebrai ing what they Were going to do. There were in all. thi rty--three kiugs at the carousal, and their condition is de- scribed in the Bible, not as conVivial or stimulated exaltation, but drunk. Their gilded and bannered pavilions were • surrounded by high • mettled horses, neighing and champing and hitched, to chariots such as kings rodein. Beahadad sends officer e oyer to tbe king of Israel demanding the enrrendee of the city, saying, "Thou shalt deliver me thy silver and thy gold and thy wives and thy child- ren," and afterward sends other offi- cers, saying the palace of the king will be searchedand everything Ben- hadad wants • he, will take without asking. Then the king of Israel call- ed a council of war, and word is sent bads to Beuhadad that his unreason- able demand will be res•isted. Then Declutched sends enother messnge to the king of Israel, a' message full of arrogance and bravado., practically F "We will destroy you ntter- ly. I will grind Samarin into the dust, but. there will not be dust enough to make a handful far each of my troops." Then the king nf ,Israel replied to Benbaciad, practi- cally satarig :,, Let inc see you do what you sayee YOU ROYAL BRAGGART, you might better have postponed your banquet math after the battle. instead of spreauing it before the battle. You huzza too soon. .Let not him that girdeth on his harness boast himself as he that putteth it An. avalanche of courage and righteousness, the Isra elitish 'hrillY came down on Benhadad and his host. It was a hand to Mena aght, each Israelite hewing down a. Syrian. Benbaclaci, on. horseback. gets away with some of -the cavalry, but is only saveafrom a worse, defeat, in which 100,060 Syrian infantry were slaiightered in one day. Now we see the sarcasm and the epigramuraeic power of the message of my text sent by the king of Israel to nenba- dad. Let not him that girdeth on his harness boast himself as he that putteth it O.tY." .. - First, I find encouragement in this subject for t he aged who have got through the work and struggle of earthly life. 11,1y venerable friends, if you had at tweuty-five years of age full appreciation of what You would have to go through in the thirties and the forties and the fifties .of your !Retiree you would' have been appall- ed,. Fortunately •the . bereavements the temptations, the persecutions, the hardships,. were curtained from your sight. With more or less forti- tude you passed through the cries of pain ' and sadness and disappoint- ment and fatigue and still live to recount the divine help that sustain- ed you. At twenty or thirty years of yourage at the tap of the drum you put on the harness: Now, at sixty or seventy or eighty. you are peacefully putting it off. You would not want to try the battle of life over again. So many of just your teinperainent and with as good a starting and as fine a parentage and seemingly with as much equipoise of character as you ha.d have made complete shipthreck that you would not want again to run the risks. Though you can look back and ,see many mistakes, the next time you Might make WORetE MISTAKES. Instead of being depressed over the fact that you are being counted out or omitted in the great enclertakings of the church and the world, rejoice that,youhave a right to hang up your. helmet and sheathe your sword and free your hands from the gaunt- lets and your feet from the boots of mAttigLain, I learn from Benhadad's be- havior the unwiedom of boasting of what • one is going ter do. Two mes- sages had he sent to the king of 1s- rael, both messages full of insolence and braggadocio, With brimming beaker in hand he is ttilkiag with the royal grotto about what he will do with the spoils "of the victory he is going to achieve that afternoon. He takes it for granted that Samaria will surrender. He gives conunand for the capture of some, of the inhab- itants, saying, "Whether they be come out for peace take thene or Whether they be come out for War take them alive." But behold the fugitive kilig in frightened re- treat before sundown ! Better not tell boastingly what you are going to do. Wait until it 18 done. You do well to lay out lyour Plans, but there are so 'Maley mistakes and dis- appointments) la life" that you mcier not be able to carry ott your plans, and there is 'tio need of invokieg the aforld's derision- and earicathre; ' Xotice also that itirtext .take it for granted' that you must put OD the harness, else hoWe tan you take it off ? Life -is a, b.. ttle thirSy years', a forty 'yeses' tit " telity years' ware., Helmet you. must thaVe, fer the battiecexesi of even- -f Itietem and ' agaostielslia. • .areSeinsed al? gour head.- Every possible . effort will••be made to make .you ,think, wrong. The young man who gals his bead filled with young notions about God„ abont Christ, about the soul, about the great beyoad, is already captured. PUT ON THE HELMET. ." the latehet well adjusted under the . chin. Think right, aid you will aet right. Yes, breastplate for the heart. That is the most im- portant part . to be defended. That decides what you love and, what you hate, what. you hopes for and what You despise. That decidee earthily happiness • ahd eternal . destiny. Keep the heart pure, .and the life will be pure. Have the heart corrupt, and your acticiris will be corrupt. Oh, that all of up might - have a new heart covered with a divinely wrought breastplate! Yes, greaves for .the feet. So many dangerous roads are we compelled to "walk. So many people tread . on sharp prongs of temptation and -go lame and .limping all the rest :of thee days. ' Iron Mailed ' shoe ,for the loot. We hold our breath in horror as Once in a while we hear of some one, either bee aedident or suicide, go- ing over Niagara Falls, but the tides the depths, the, awtul surges . of in- temperance are et -cry hour, of every day rushing scores or atouoetals down into unfathorned abysm. Sui- cides by the hundreds of thousands! Suicides by the million. Beware of the cup out of which Benhadad draiek personal andnational- demolition! Yes, you must have full armor. There are temptations to an limier° life all the timaninultiplyieg and in. - fermi lying. Read in 'private and discussed, afterward by the refined and elegant in parlors are books. poisoned from lid to •lid with im- purities. Loose characters in the novel 'applauded by rhetorical pens and-. proprieties of We carica Lured as prudery and infidelity of behavior put in a way to excite sympathy and half approval. My wonder is not that so many go astray, buy my wonder is that tell times as many are not debauched. There are influ- ences at Nvork, which, if unarrested, will turn our cleiee into Seamus and Gomorrahs ready for the hail and fire and brimstone of God's indigna- tion. Yes, you must haye full armor for there are' all • the temptations to - GAMING PR A CTFTS either in gambling halls or in the money market, buy- ing tyliresesAley nee-er paid for and setpsheeeedhat they cauz never deliver, firsq borrowing what they cannot return, and stealing :evbat they can- not borrow, All h.00rs of the day and all hours of the - night are vast sums of enoney passing.. fraudulently., for. gambling in all =SOS is fraud, yid:tether- it • be a twenty-five rant prizepackage or a crash in North- ern Pacific, which made Lombard street and the • bourse aghast and shook the natioes with financial earthquake. .„, . . . . Oh, yes, you need the' harness on until 'God tells you to take it oft. In olden times it was leathern ar- mor or chain armor or ribbed armor, fashioned in ancient foun- „dry, but no one can give' yqu the outfit you need' except God, who is master of this world and the in- fernal wcirld, from which ascend the mightiest hostilities. Lay hold Of God. Nothing but the arm of Omnipotence is strong enough for the tempted. . Also see in my subject the folly of underestimating the enemy. That was Bentra.dad's fatal mistake. He could whip them before sundevsn. He wanted less than half a day to cap- ture Samaria, and make the king of Israel capitulate. I3ut what he thought. was so easy turned out to be the , impossible.' Better over- estimate than underestimate the other side. We who are trying to make the world what it ought to be contend not with homunculi. We wrestle not with striplings. We have a whole army of antagonists trying to halt the King of God ciudover- throw the cause of righteousness. If we Secure the victory it will be a struggle al tierce as when Darius and Alexander grappled each other Arbella, as when Joan of Arc rode triumphant at Orleans, as when the Russians met the Swedes at Pol- tava, as when Marlborough come mended the allied armies at Bien- heine Those were fights for earth- ly crowns' and dominions, but the fight that now goes on between all the allied armies of Heaven and all the ailied armies of hell is to set- tle whether GOD OR SATAN'. is to have possession of this planet. Oh, ye soldiers of Jesus 'Christ when the war of life is over and the victors. rest in the soldiers' honie on the heavenly heights pernaps were may be in thte city of the sun a, tow- er of sptritual armor such as in- creased the warriore for Christ in earthly combat! Setae day we may be in that arraory and libar the her- oes talk of how they Sought the good fight of faith and see theta With the scars of wounds fordirer healed and leek at the weapons of Offence and defence with which they became more than conquerors, In that toWer of heaven as the tyeapons of the spiritual conflict ege examined St. Paid may pefint out to us the armor with whielz he ,advised the Epltesians to equip Wornselves and seerea n'That is the shlelt of faith. That s 'As tho helind of salvation That ice,the girdle ortiuth, That is the brettletpieco of rfghttottsness, These are theta:Sled shoes in which they were ' stithl 'With the prepara- tion Of the gdai0," There and then you may recount, the contraSt bes Christian conflict end the day when you closed it ihi earthly farewell end heavenly sa,lutation, Wad the text, which. has So muc1t meaning for us neve, will have more meaning for us then --"Let not him that girdeth on his harness boast himself as he that putteth it off./' THE S. S. LESSON. INTERNATIONAL LESSON, ,TAN, 19, Text of the Lesson, Acts ii., 37- 47. Golden. Text, Acts ii., 47, ' 37, "Men and brethren what shall we do ?" This was the cry of those uho, having heard the gospel preach- ed by Peter, 'were by the Spirit con- vinced of the:17 sin, the sin of re. jecting -Christ. .Compare the cry of Salel and of the jailer in chapters ix, 6; xiri, 30,, when they, to were .convinced of sin, This is the work of . the Holy Spirit,. as the Lord Jesus said, -When He is come, He i 1 coaeince the world of sin, be- cause they believe. not on 111e" (Joirt xvi, 8, 9). Peter ia the pow- er of the Spirit, or the Spirit through Teter, had.. preached Christ oin Joel ii, Ps, xvi and cx. lt rug t be said that lie gave a I3ible read ng from or an exposition of tht se passages from the 'Old Testa- mscnt:. s ,1 here was only One thing .for. tSein te do, and :that . was to re- Ceive Hint Loin they luta .rejected ar d corifesS it by being baptized iiz His name, and they woulu tries se- cciee 1. rgivene $ of sins and, th: get of the Holy Spirit. They heel thought that Jesus of Nazareth was an inapoeter and a deceiver, but they must change their Mind about Him (teat is repentance) and re - jive and. honor Him aadsraet's Mee- siah, the (shript of God, lhe oniV Saviour of sinners, See how Peter. by the Spitit, makes prominent the remiesion of 01/15, as Jesus had coot - a and d in Luke xxiv. 47. The gos pet that does not proclaim the Tot given ss of sies is not the gospel of 'Cod eonceraing Jesus Christ, bet rn thee goseel concerning which Paid sa s, "let the preacher be aceused" (Gal; 1, 3, 9; Cor. xi, 4). 39. Our Lord had said, "Him that .cometh unto Me I will in no- wise cast q.ut" (John vi, 37), and He had pt aseed for the eoldicas who n i Rel Lini to tbe cross, "laatlier. f reit e th-in, fcr, they know not hat they do," and Ile had said ti o penitmt. thief, '''I`o-day shalt th-su be \title Me ia paradise" (Luke :exiii, 84, 48). So later encouraged these whom he had accused of kill- ing ehrist (verse 23) to turn to Him that they night obtain his forgive- n ss. '1 he call is to every one, how- ever far off and dead in sin. to come, f r Christ Jesus calm into the e celd to save sinners, and whose - e • btlidireth in liim shall not be ashamed (I 'Ihn. i, 151A -tom. ix, 33. x, .11). 40 As the Spirit gavd him utter- ance he set tefore thaga the grace .of God in Christ Jesus, urging them to con:e' out" from the nnbelievino rad ehow ,thcinte -yes for Christ. He did not ex. ect that all who heard wou d 1 elieve, fcr he ha4 been trtoght by the Lot cl Jesup that, while some rezd wo l4 fall on good greens& F.01110 Would also fall on the hard beaten ground, some on rocky :and some on thorny soil. 1. Three thousa d, or about' that nrinber, received Christ by receiving the truth concerning or by believing the testimony that Peter ga.ve of Jes-as' Christ as tho protaised Mese si. h, who by the sacrifice of Him- self made atonement for sin, who, having by Himself .purged our sis r, sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on high (Heb. 1, 3) and lent the Holy S.pirit, who now brought these truths home to their hearts. Faith cometh by nearing the word of God, not by any en- ticing words of xnan's wisdom (Rom. x,17; I Cor. 1, 17; ii, 1), and as the word of God is declared the spirit of God works. 'Unless God works nothing is accomplished, fol'' even Christ could do nothing of Himself (John v, 30; viii, 28). , 42, 43. This great gathering was, no doubt, one of the "greater works" of which Christ had spoken (John xiv, 12), and they proved their sincerity by continuing stead- fastly in the doctrine, in fellowship and in prayer (John viii, 81). This was a genuine work of the Holy Spirit, a work of God in the name of the Lord Jesus, and through one of the weakest of earthen vessels; There was nothing of man in it. The wonders and sighs were "the Lord working with them and confirtaieg the word with signs following" (Mark xvi, 2p). The great resurrec- tion chapter concludes with the ex- hortation to be ''steadf'ast, unmov- able, always abounding in the work of the Lord" (I. Cor. xv. 58), and'it is our privilege to say with John, "Truly our fellowship is with the Father and His Son Jesus Christ" (I. John, i, 8), 'Patient' continu- ance in well doing" (Rona ii, 7) is a very good summary of the believ- er's daily life, . 44, 45. “And all that ' believed were together and, had all things comma:in." In this first gathering of the redeemed from among the Jews out of all nations (verse 5) the Spirit seems ..to have so fully con- trolled them that they manifested the spirit of than Lord and Master in so loving each other that they counted lothing their own, but wrought and ived that they Might have 'Le give to him that needeth (Eph. iv, 28), The leaven, always stiggestiVe of veil (Lev. xxiii, 16, 17), soon began to work and to appear, and all ought their own, not the things Which are ..• Jesus Chriet's. ',taut many turned atsay and 10Ved this P1 esent world or steight pre-eminence n the ehurch instead of honoring Christ as pre-eminent in all things Phil. i1et21; II. Thn. 1, 15; iv, 10; /I. John '0; Col. i, 18). 1 1 • 46. "Centintiing daily with one, ace cord.", 1ilhether in the temple or at home, there Nvas true fellowship and gladnees and eieglentelf Of hearts They Were sereente of Christ indeed, tween the clay when you enlisted in r • doing the will of God from the heart, st•PoPtable "te (lod; and approved of men Ciiiph, vi,fi; flow. .a0v, 18), This was not their manner Of iJfe one (10 in the week only, but every day by the grace of God. They were Oiled with and constantly znanifesting these features of the kingdom-- righteouenese .tield peace and Soy in the Holy Ghost (Rom: triv, 17), and God was glorified in them before the 4.5eople. • 47. "The Lord added to the church, r'aily such as should be saved," In the reviser/ -version the ward "thurch” is omitted, In chaptei's v, .14; xi, 24, ,it is said that the be- lievers were "added to the Lord." The church is the body of Christ, which "began with these thousands of Jews end is still tin its way toward completion, taking in all who will coma from all nations, The Lord Himself' is adding to Himself all who truly come to , but tares and wheat will grow together till the harvest, and only . then shall it be seen who are the Lord's additions and who are man's. He Himself said, "Every plant which My Hea- venly Father hath not planted shall be rooted up" (Matt. xv, 18). May all who read be indeed "trees of righteousness, the planting of the Lord, that He nuty be glorified" (Isa. lxv, 8), and greatly used by Him to bear muci fruit to IIis glory. OLD ENGLISH ENGINES. Been on the' Rails Many Years and Still Effective.. The famous "No. 1" Great North- ern engine recently completed • its lour millionth. mile.' It was built in 1870. it is' still regularly employed on express passenger work, says the London Daily Mail. Turning these facts' over in his inind a Daily Mail representative was led to reflect that, after perliaPs there might. be something good to be said for the much -abused British locomotive and he set out on : a voyage of investigation which ..em- • locometive works at Cross. "Oh, yes," replied the superinten- dent M answer to a. query, "we have a number of engines of this class running over our system.' Hauling. Passenger trains? Certainly, and ex- cellent time they keep. American lo- cometives?• We don't, trust our pas- senger trains to them. We keep them for 'minerals' and similar work. Good engines? Well, they may be; we really haven't been running there long enough. to form a, decided. opin- ion." , The editor of the Locomotive Mag- azine was more explicit. "The Brit- ish -built engine," he said, "like the British -built bridge and the 13ritish- constructed -permanent way, is de- signed to stay. There are plenty of engines running to -day on British railways—aye, and on continental ones, tom—that were constructed 20, 30, 40 and e-ven more years ago, and which are still perfectly reliable in every way. "American builders can show no- thing even remotely akin to this. The 'life' of a Yankee `lobo' may be as short as ten years. it would cer- tainly be considered aged at 15. And 1 should imagine that there are not above a score of 20 -year-old locomo- tives in the whole 'United States that are regularly enga,ged in the passenger service of any of the first- claes lines. The American eugineer does not even pretend to build his locoma.ive to 'stay.' Further inquiry revealed the fact that the "No. V' alluded to above is not the oldest locomotive running passenger trains in Great Britain. 'This honor is claimed for an engine built by Messrs. Bury, Curtis & Ken- nedy, of Liverpool, in 1845, 'which Is still in use on the Waterford and Tramore lie.ilwa.y, ie. the southeast of Ireland. The railway on which it runs Is al- most as reniarkable in its way as the engine. It is only seven and a quar- ter miles long, and is entirely isolat- ed from every other railway, its iVaterford terminus being over a mile distant, -from any other. stations. of that town. There are no intermed- iate stations. sidings or • pa.ssing pla- ces, and as the •platforais •at the two terminal stations aro both on the west side of the railway,. the carriag- es are only provided with doors on ene side. • Another British -built engine, which dates from 1845, is still running on the Chemin du Fer Nord of Franca It was built by Messrs. Robert Ste- venson & Co., and was fitted with coupled driving wheels. . e".........$40•4***************4 •••••••••• THE KING, • 4/. THE QUEEN HE DU 393CKE 17"? OF pe'VONSHIRE. Reniarkai)le Offer, 1 nd ,Here is the best offer ever made in this community. By a very exeellent At, le rangement•made With the Family Herald and Weekly Stetof Ildontreal we are • enaesed to oirer Zan Ext.= TOWS and that great Earriily Prier, the : Validly aZ.ald and Weekly Star. for One year for the small sum of $1,75 end in- * elude to mil s,. ',scriber three neautifel premium pictures, of which the follow- , ing is a brief deseriptih" " „ , et i 24 inKING EDWARD VII.—Tree. to life, a beautiful portrait, SiZe 1$ X ik alies, on beautiful teavy white satin finished paper for framing. This portrait * has been taken since las emission to the throne, and is the very lateet and best 40 • obtainable. It cannot be had except through the Fexinv 1.4E11A.e11 AND 114. • WEEteitar Stan; each picture bears the King's autograph. Thie picture has the X * great merit of being the first taken after the King's accession, and has theresere w • en bistorical -value thab no other picture can possess. I) 2 a QUEEN ALEX.ANDRA.—An exquisitely beautiful picture of the rsreark• • ably beautiful and goc i Queen Alexandra, also taken since the King's racens.ion • i • to 'the throne. It s the same size as thet of the King, the two farming a Minch 40 : some pair of pictures that alone would sou for many times the subscription price 0 . of ppeis,r, outdrapitioctifutehse, ..opIcing • and Content taken at the emend or succeeding sit. : • tinge can have one fraction of tne value of the Amt. The 0 go down to history. 0 44 THE DUCHESS OF DEVONSHIRE, —The Renowned Gainsborough .P1O- .. ture. Sold at auction sale in London twenty -rive years ago for £10,500, to stolen by clever thieves, hidden forever twenty-four ears and delivered to its S 4411,‘ owner on payment of $25,000 reward and since sold to M.. J. Pierpont Morgan for * This, in brief, is the history of one of the prerniuraHepraieltdie urleasv,wseheitvcho,dfor bya1 • clevel stroke of enterprise, t•he publishers of the Family O their subscribers. The picture is 22xed in ten colours, and is reproduced line for 0_ line, colour for colour with the original. Copies of the reproduction are now sold X iii New York Oitsr, Montreal and, Toronto for .$12 each, and thisls the picture 4 Family Herald subscribers are going to get, absolutely free together with the : • Pictures of the Rime end Queen. • • Is that not bibirdvalue? Call at THE Times Office and see samples • of these beautiful pictures. • you wens Tag Exe•rea TrKgs for the local news, and you want that • great paper. the Family Herald for it's 54 pages of general news and family 4) reading. Its agricultural pages alone are worth many times the subscription .• .4,, price. `57) THE TIMES • Klesag or send yourepubscription to OFFICE. braced, first of all, the Company's 046.441.$4•••••040.04:00.1>44444.44+$4,e00,44,,,eatata,gagee,••••••••44 , C`FrEAP MEALS. Soup, Bread Ara Pudding for ' Hungry- Children. . Special interest attaches to the latest • venture of the London Vege- tarian Association, says a London despatch. What child aro.ong the 70,00,0 who are said to go foodlesq to school need be hungry or ill -nour- ished when ig catch -phrase of the L. V. A. "three courses for a pemay"— soup, bread and padding-am:a be served to these little ,onee. During the lea three weeks this experiment has been actually put into practice. Down Bethnal -green way behind the musemn le an old chapel without a. pastor, Which serves betweeri a quar- ter 'past twelve and half -past one de clining-room when the poor child- ren of the neighborhood may conic, accompanied if they like, by elder brothers and sisters, or by parents. Every One of these boy S and girls— and so far there has been "an average attendance of 160 to 200 a day— rePresents a penny paid either by parents or by teathers through this help of some charity. • A kitchen has been fitted up with plant sufficient for an army of some 2,000 little ones, Huge asbestos lined cans are also provided hi Whieh sent) ased puddings may be kept hot whilst behig poriveyed to mitlying schools, Thm actual food emestnned by the childi•en is covered by the P0111127 , arid all the ttesociation asks TOr is meady sufficient to eover the Cost of label" and rent. At present, of course, the scheme is, in 1t9411r ftMoY: but everything, in .9view• bfAho 4 . 4.(59178F., AM WO ••1,14. "- Ye you ever contracted any Blood Disease yon aro never safe unless the virus or poison has been eradicated frees the system. litthnes you see alarming symptoms btttlive in hopes no serious results win follow. Have you any of the following! symptoms? Sore throat, ulcers on the ton,..que'or in the month, hair falling out, ach- ing pales itchiness of the skin, sores or blotches on the body, eyes red and smart, dyspeptic stomach, sexual weakness—Indications of the secondary stage. Don't trust to luck. Don't ruin your system with the old fogy treatment—mercury and potash -which only suppresses the symptontsfor a time only to break out again when happy in domestic tilo. Dou't let quacks experiment ou you. Our NEW Z4ETH0D TREATMENT is guaranteed to cure you. Our guarantee, are backed by hank bonds that the disease 'will never return. Thousands of patients have been already cured by our NEW METHOD TREATMENT for over Sp years, and no return of the disease. No experiment, no risk—not a `Tata tip," bet a posi, tive cure. The wort cases solicited.. E V OUR NEW METHOD 'IPREATMENT will cure you, and make a man of you. Under its influence the brain becomes active, the blood purified so that all pimples, blotches and ulcers disappear; the nerves become strong as steel, so that nervousness heal:di:anew: and despondency disappear; the eyes become bright, the face fell and clear, energy returns to the body, and the moral, physical anti sex- ual systems are Invigorated; all drains cease—no more vital waste from the system. The various organs become natural and manly. Yon feel yourself a man and know marriage cannot be a failure. We invite an the afflicted to consult us confidentially and free of charge. Don't let quacks and fakirs rob yon of year hard-earned dollars, WE 'mu., CURE YosWOR No PAY. We treat aud cure NERVOUS DEBIY.ITY, sexuAL WEAKNESS. EMS - MONS, SYPHILIS, GLEET, sTRioTTIRE. VARICOCELE, KIDNEY and SL.ADDER DISZASES, and all diseases peculiar to men and women. Cures guarans teed. IiI Are vett a victim? Have you 103t hope? Are yon contemplating I E . Tetra'niTi. Myg:thbCgo'”:ae:Incel?tea,V.Z3rrye..y.onCoanataireettt; Free. No matter vim) has treated you, write for an honest opinion rree of Charge. Charges reasonable. aooks Free.-0The Golden Monitor" fillustratedi on Dtsea see of men "Diseases of women" "Tim Wages of, Sin." "Varicocele, Stricture and Gleet." All sent Fres sealed. No medicine sent C. 0. 0. No names en boxes or envelopes. Everything confidential. Question list and Cost of Treatmeei, FREE, for Horne Cure. RS E 148 SHELBY ST. DETROIT '441414? „ 1i44 ‘wstAIVAACA',AN:Itcl4 6 as7 severe weather which usually follows Christmas, when the children suffer terribly, is ready for a rapid develop- ment commensurate with the plant; and it is probable that by next win- ter other depots will have be op- ened. in equally poor districts. It is intended to vary the food as much as possible, so that vegetarianisra may conunand itself. Soup is served one day with bread, followed by cake; 'pease pudding and potatoes etnother, haricots another; but there is no mis- taking the fact that the most popu- lar is the plum pudding day. GRAINS OF GOLD. Never quit certainty for hope. Losers are always in the wrong. A good companion makes good company. Better go about than fall into the ditch. For a flying moray make a silver bridge., The d4ease a man dreads that he dies of. ,e • Plow, or not plow, you must pay emesenrames Is,014....X1,411n1.11.1011. BRITISH TROOP OIL LINIMENT rog , Sprains, Strains, Cuts, Wounds. I.Ikerso Open Sores, Bruises, Stiff °intik Bitet arid Stings of Insects, Cog k._ContracIesi Cords, Rheumatism, s4a4% ritrohnoc4initis, Croup, Sore Throe g Cough and all Painful $„, s. A LARGE 001"11.ti 25** PEOPLE RECOVERING From Pneumonia, Typhoid or seertet Fever, Diphtheria, La Grippe or may Serious Sickness Require the Nek+'.e_,Toning, Blood En. riching, Heart Sustaining Action of Wilburn's Heart and Nerve Pills. It is well known that after tuly serious illness the heart irid nerves are extremely weak and the blood greatly idipoverished. For these conditions there is no remedy equals Milburn's Heart and Nerve...Pills. It restores all the vital forces of the berly which disease has impaired and weakened; • Mr. T. Hernicett, Aylmer, Ont., says 1-7- ,• "About a year ago I had -a severe attack of La Grippe which.,left.,my•system hi an exhausted condition.- I ceti,Id• not regaiTh strength and waS'+e.ty neirie'es ii.ndsic*). less at night, and goauealri the Morning as tired as when I went to bed. 4,1 bad no energyand was in a. miser. abln state dillealt. li. ' " TVIfiburn's Heart and Nerve Pills, whiel / got at Richard's DirugSterebere, change me frorn a condi:tail` Of misery to goo health. They beVt up my system, strength. ened my eerves, restored brisk circulation of my blood, and mide a: ine,w'Ris:rr of ree..• "theertily recommind thL:rn.to anytale suffering from the after effects of Grippe, or oirit other severe illnesc." . , i • . ..i.e- your rent. ., - When- a friend aSketn there is herel' , to -morrow. • • ' Tile • submitting to one wrong brings on another... . ,. 'Poole make fashiois alicreviee men follow them. .,t -.— Dy IMO th,.O op,tilatuonelf Len will require 42 ) Manion gel'Solfe 1'6 water a tittY; 'Only 30 millions a day oitu he taken ,the