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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1902-1-30, Page 3°LUTE SECURITY. Cenuine Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Dear Signature of See Pneetemlie Wrapper Below. Tory amn11 fand as easy to take as sugar. ' CARTEKS ITTLE IVER PI LLB. FOR READARRE• FOR DIMNESS:, FOR BILIOUSNESt: FOR TORPID LIVER,. FOR CONS1IPAT1011. FOR SALM sKIII. FOR BE CORIPLEMON 01212.11TIll'Orl MU= 11An HATUI1E, Zs I Privily 'Vegetable R, CURE SICK HEADACHE. In the Ch.stch f Consumption. Don't neglect that persirtent hacking cough till you find yourselfin the clutch of Consumption. It's an easy matter to stop Et now by taking OR. WOOD'S NORWAY PINE SYRUP. This pleasant remedy heals and soothes the lungs and bronchial tubes, and cures lingering and chronic coughs when other remedies fail. •• Mr. W. P. Caen, ran -Ring from lVforpeth; • Ont., says: • "I • honestly believe I Would IllaVes diect of,;.consumption..only for. Di.. Weed's Norway Pine Synge I have used Aeifer yeers and •reensirler • it has no equal for severe merle and throat troubles." . • 1 STROM AND VIGEMOUi Every Organ of the Body Toned up and Invigorated by itr, P. W. Meyers, King St. E., Der] he On., says: "-I suffered for five years •with palpitation, shortness of breath, . .11elip1essness and pain in the heart, but cone 'box of Milburn's Heart and Nerve r Pills ,00mpletelse removed all these dis- •eressingesymptems. I havo not suffered shice eelsing them; and now sleep well tied feel Strong and vigorous." ., blithe= s Heart and Neree Pills etre all disesees arising from weak heart, Weal out nerve tissues, or watery blood. gla-9.j ... ...r...a.romee7rxx,rsoza=tire TRADE IN LIVE STOCK. Growing Rapidly Between. Eastern and Western Canada. Trade in live stock between East- ern and Western Canada has been growing rapidly within the last few years, writes Mr. F. W. Hodson, This increase of trade has been pro- moted, and in fent made possible by the wise and generous treatment of the. 0.P.R. During. the inonth of De- cember and the first .eight 'days in Sanuary,• forty-six cars of grade and pure-bred cattle were shipped from leastern Canada to British Columbia. , These cars. contained 21228 head, and ' i cost in the east something over e30,-. Olt. 000 Besides these, a considerable number have been recently ebeen •sent ,to the North West Territories, and , . orders aro now in hand for addition- ' al shipments to be made to the last I mentioned Territory. In order to pi•emoto this trade, which has prov- e'I, n very profitable in many districts *Eastern Ormada, farmers. should "e'tise. first-class Shorthorn bulls, 13y careful selection and wise treatment .. females sired by such bulls will Aimee excellent dairy cows, . Wes it noticeable fact that seven- terahs A of the stock lased for dairy a . punposes in -Great Britain are Short- horns • and Sher Wore, gradere Pro- bably the most suitable dairy cow for the average farmer is a Short - born -Ayrshire cross.Steers whose dams are strong grade Ayrshire' cows if got by a Shorthorn hull prove ex- . Millent feeders and very desirable shipping cattle. As dairy animals there are none, in the hands of the general farmer, thee will et eel the Shorthorn -Ayrshire cross, Mrs, russay—"Everybolly seers my' denghter gother bestater from me. What, • do you say to that ?", • INer, wittnele're I, 1 think it WitsVtaer .unkind el her to take it , foie PRINCIPLE OF COURTESY Two Sides to Every Man's Character Good and an Evil Side. (Entered according to Ito ot the eargantan of • ceases, in tie yearono Whoustne h inn nue- doe and One, by NV illtmt hotl)', of Toronto, at tea Department ot Agriuulture, OttawiLl A despeteh front Washington says: —Rev, Dr. Talmage • preached from the following text, I. peter ii, 8, "Bo courteous." • In an age when bluntness has been. canonized as a virtue :it may be useful to extol one of the inost beautiful of all the royal family of graces—courtesy. It is gracious - noes, deferences to the w:shos of others, good' manners, affability, • willingness to deny ourselves somewhat for the advantage of others, urbanity. But what is the use of zny defining the grace of courtesy when we alleknow so well what it is? The botanist might say some Very interesting things about a rose, and the chemist might discourse about water or light, but without ever seeing a botaniet or a chemist we know ,what a rose Is and what water and light are. Do not. take our time in tolling up what courtesy is. • Only show us how . We may get more of it and avoid... what are its counterfeits. Mark you, it cannot be put on or dramatized successfully for a long while. Wo• may be full of bows and genuflections. and manes and 'complimentary pestle°, and have nothing of genuine courtesy either in our makeup or in our demean- or. A backwoodsman who never saw a drawing -room, or a, dancing mas- ter or e caterer or a fold of drapery • may with his big soul end hard hand, and awkward shlutatien exercise the grace, while one born un- der richest upholstery and educated in foreign schools, and bothered to know which .of ten garments he will take repro, a royal wardrobe, may be as barren of the spirit of cour- tesy as the groat Sahara desert is of green meadows and tossing foun- tains. • CHRISTIA.N COURTESY ASCRIBE VAULTS TO OTHERS; 1 . .. . What a. curse of cynics and pessi- , . mists afflicts our tine, afflicts all timel There are, those who praise no one until he is dead. . Now that he is clear underground and a heavy stone is oa top , of him there is no possibility of , his ever coining up again as a rival, Some of the epitaphs on toutbstones are se fulsome that on reeurreetion day a, malt rising may, if he reads the epitaph, . for the moment think he got into the wrong grave. Speak well of ono another, and if you find yourself in circles disposed to slander and abuse be for the time as dumb as the sphinx which though only a mw yards away from the -overshadowing pyramid of Egypt, has not witheite Ups of stone spoken ono word in thousands of years. ' Christian courtesy I especially coin - mend to these who have subordin- ates. Almost every person has some one 'under him. How do you treat that clerk, that servant, that assist - any, tat eznp,oye ? Do you acenst him in brusque terms and ' roughly command -him to rlo that which you might kindty ask himto do ? The last words that the Duke of Welling- ton uttered were, "If you please!' That. conqueror in what was in seine reepects the greatest brtttle ever fought, in his lest hours, asked by his servant if he would take some tea., replied, "If you please," his lest words an expression of cour- tesy. Beautiful characteristic in any class. The day laborers in Sweden, passing each other, take off their hats in reverence. There is no ex- cuse for boorishness in any circle. As complete a gentleman as ever liv- ed .was the man who was unhorsed on the road to Damascus and be- headed on the road. to Ostia—Paul, the apostle. I know he might be so characterized by the way he apolo- gized to Anenias, the high priest. I know it .from the way he compli- mented Felix as a. judge and from the way he greets the king, "I thank myself, Xing Agriepa, because I shall answer for myself this day before thee touching all the things whereof I am accused of the Jews, especially because I know the to bo crepert in all customs and questions which. are among the jaws." WHAT -A- MIGHTY-- .MEANS • • •Of -Usefelness is courtesy. I The laitee of it beings to. Many • a dead failure, wylle before :those who possess it In large quantity all the 'doors' �f •op- portunity are open. Yoi can tell that urbanity does not come from study of books of etiquette; .allhotiglir sueli books neer° their use, but from a mind full of thoughtfulness for others, and a heart, in sympathy with the conditions of others. If those conditions be prosperous, a gladness for the success, or if the conditions be depressing, a sorrow for the unfavorable circumstances. Alt this world needs lighting up ! To those of us who :ere prosperous it le no credit that We are in a state of good cheer, but in tho lives of ninety-nine out of a hundred there Is a pathetic side, a taking off, a deficit, a.n anxiety, a. trouble. By a denial: look, by a kind word, by a helpful' Lectern, we may Int a. tittle of the burden and partly wear the: way for the stumbling foot. Oh, What a glorious art it is to say the right word in the right way at the right time. How reprehensible the behavior of thoee who pride themselves on the opposite quality and have a genius for saying disagreeable things, us- ing sarcasm and retort not for tato- ful purposes, but to sting and humil- iate and hurt 1 "Didn't I take him down e". "Did' t 1 make him wince?' "Didn't 1 glve it to him ?" That is the spirit of the devil, • while the op- posite Is the spirit of Christ. • The time =et, come when the world will acknowledge international courtesy. Now courtesy between nu Lions is chiefly made of rhetorical greeting, but as soon as there is a difference of interest their minnirdes plonipoten.tiary are called honer, and the guns of the forts are put in peel, - tion, and the army and navy get ready. Why not a courtesy between nations that will defer to each other Mid surrender a, little rather then have prolonged acrimony, ending in great slaughter ? Room for all na- tions of the earth and all styles of government. What the world NValliS is less armament, and more courtesy, less of the spirit of destruction and more of THE . Srinrr OF AMITY. This century has opeued with too many armies in the field and too many men-of-war on the ocean. Be- fore the century closes may the last cavalry horse be hitched to the plow. and the last warship become ,•••• e • merchantman. If others lack courtesy that is no reason why you should lack it. Re - spend to rudeness by utmost affable. ley. Because .sOme ono elsoidbe s alei ,roc•L Is no reason why you shota boor. ' But haw fear ehowurbanity when badly treated. Human nature Says, "An eye for an 'eye, a. tooth for n teeth, retort for retortsem-. der for slander, maltreatment for inalteeatinent." Bute -there have been thdse you and I have known who amid assault; smil caricature and lustier: haire maintained the lovelia ness of blossom week in epringtene. Nothing but divine grace in 'the heart, can keep such ocitillibrium. That is not laimah hatere until' it is transformed by stipernel influences. To put it on the loweet ground you cannot . afford to be revetgeful and nealig•nant. Hatred and high indig- nation are Stages of unhealth. They enlano the eploom they weaken the nerves; they attaelc the brain.. Itage in a, man is ono form of opoplexer. Every time Yetegot ined you damage Your body and 'Mind and .6-ou1, and you bane net sueh a surplus of Vigor and energy that yea eari Aeleird to eaerifthe them!, Is born In the heart by the power of the Holy Ghost, who has transformed and illumined and glorified one's na- ture. Mark you, I am speaking of the highest kind of courtesy, which is Christian courtesy. Something like it—ordinary politeness—may grow up with us under the direction. of intelligent and watchfuleperenta.ge but .1 am not speaking of that whieh is- merely ragreeableness . of conversa- tion and -behavior. . e Ali that may' be a • matter' of tutelage and fine surrounding and -shoter itself Jo lift- bigethe hto .nassers-byand in a graceful way of askingabout year health and eourfing the right kind 'of regrets when. you _cannot go and un- derstanding all the laws • of pre- ference at. table and parlor door, all of whech is well. I am speak- ing ' of a principle of courtesy so implanted in one's nature that his suavity of conversation and manner shall bo the outburstof what he feels for the happiness and welfare of others, a principle that will work in the next world as well as in this and will .bri as appropriate in the mansions of heaven as in earthly dwelling places. But heart courtesy - must precede hand and head .and foot courtesy. Cultivation of it should, begin in tho. father's house. You of Len no- tice that brothers and sisters are often gruff and snappy and say things and do things that they would not have the outside world know about. 'lough things . are sometimes said in housch-eads which ought never to be said at all— teasing and recrimination ad faulte flectieg and harsh. criticisms, __which will, have their etho thirty and for- ty and fifty years ' afterwatds. Da the e sleet driven by. the east wind no -sweet ithwers of kindnees . and geniality will grow. Let children hear their parents picking at each other,' and those children will be found pickiag at each other, and far down the road of life will be seen the same disposition to pick each Other, Rather than this habit of picking at children, . which so many parents indulge in, would be one good healthy application of the rod. Better a, shower that lasts a few minutes than the cold drizzle Ofmany days. . We never get over our first home, however many homes WE MAN HA.VE AFTERWARDS. Let us all cultivate this grace of Christian courtesy by indulging in the habit of praise instead of the -habit of blame. There aro evils in the world that we must denounce .and there are nion and womou who ought to be chastised; but ' never let us allow the opportunity of aPa plauding good deeds . pass unim- proved. The old theory wee that you • must never peals° people lest we make them vain. No danger of that. • Before any of us. get th through wi • Ilth we will have-- eh- ough moatiand ignoble depre- ciating and 1,,ir ing thins said about us to keep us humble i„gixl liee- provingly recognizes a, system of yew -la -de as well es of puniehmente. In the cultivatioti of' tads habit of Christian ..courtesy let --eis': abstain front joining in the work of defa- mation. Every little while society takes .efter a mann and it: emust horde e victimIf you bed a roll of all. the publie men of this generation.who have beea denounced and deepoiled of their good name, it Would take . you a long while to cell the roll. It is si had streak Inhum= tta.illre that there are . so many Who prefer to believe evil instead of good concerning rimy gine under discussion, ' If eir good motive and a had meting have been possible in the cane in hand, aim man will believe the conduct wag litspired bY a good mei:Wee and ton mon veil' bellege If; WAS inspired by .e,ebaci motel' The More Wilts a, Man' has of Lis ort.L the More willieg IS he lei So I applaud Christian ernertes3r, would put, it Upon the throne of ev- ery heart in the world, The beauty of it is that you May extend It to others and have just as inuett of it— yea, more of it—left in your own heart and iUe. It th like the rairacto of- the loaves and fishes, 'winch, by being divided, were multiplied until twelve baskets were filled • With the rewinants. It is like a torch, with • which fifty lamps rimy bo lighted end yet the torch rerrialns as bright as before'il. lighted the first lamp. But this grace will not come to ite coronet until it reaches tho heavenly sphere. What a world that must be where selfishness and jealousy and pride and acerbities of temper have never entered and never will enter 1 No struggle for precedence. No rival- ry between cherubim and seraphim. No ambition" 04 to who shall have the front seats in the teinPle of God and the Lamb, Courtesy there easy, becanso there will be no faults to overlook, no apologies to make, no mistakes to correct, no disagreeable- ness . to overcome, no wrongs to right. In all the ages te come not O detraction or a. subterfuge. A perfect soul in a perfect heaven. In that realm, world without end, it will never be necessary to repeat the words of my text, words that now need oft repetition, "Be courteous," THE. S. 'LLaaum -a— INTEILNATIONAL LESSON, • ?EB. 2. Text of the Lesson, Acts iv, 1-22. Golden, .Text, Acts iv, 12. 1, 2. "They preached through Jes- us the resurrection from the dead." It was this they taught the people as they preached unto them repent- ance and remissioa of sins through Jesus Christ. It is not at death that the believer enters into the ful- ness of the benefits of redemption, but at•the resurrection,' for, although absent from the body and present with the Lord is a gain, and very far better, yet until the company of cal- led out ones is completed, whether they are in heaven or on earth, . all are waiting until Jesus shall come again; for that event will bring the resurrection of the just, not (1. resur- rection of the righteous front among the rest of the dead, like the resur- rection of Christ and of those saints who rose after Hine (Malt. xxxvie 52, 53; Rev. xx, 5, 6). 8, 4: For their faithfulness to Christ and His doctrine Peter and John find themselves in -prison; but, while they were for a time bound, they could rejoice that the word of God w.as not bound, and we rejoice to reed, that Many whrehearcl believ- ed, and the number. of tho -men -was about 5,000e . What a grand .gather- ing from Israel • -to the .glory, of Is-. rael's Messiah, -thy the gospel was not • yet preached'to the gentiles (chopthe xi, le). Title great result was the Work not. 9f the ap.oseles, but of Him who when on meth said on one occasion, "Give ye them. to eat," and thee. used the apostles. to feed. the 5,000 with broad which He had provided. 5, 7. "By what power or by what name ha.'ve ye done this?" They ask- ed Christ a similar question at ono Lim e (Matt. xxi, 23), but not for any good reason, Lilco some people to- day, they could not, tolerate 'any- thing that did not proceed from them- selves. • But NVO must remember that all that is not of aod shall COMO to naught else.. vile 9, 10). • 8-1.0. It thrills one to hear Peter .declare to these rulers of the people that this work was wrought by Jos - us of Nazareth, whom they had cru- cified, but whom God had raised ft -owe -the dead. He knew that these men could kill him as they had kil- led Jesus, but he had no fear, for he was filled with the spirit. 1e was a good deed which had been done to an impotent man, and it had been wrought by 111m whom they delight- ed to own as Lord and Master, and they ,were His to :be.. His witnesses, and to die for Him if need be. • . In the latter part of this story .(yerees 29-411) they do not ask to• ba' 'deliv- ered from further persecution, but only that they may have boldness to speak His word and 'pewee to honor Ills name. 11, 12, "This is the stone which was set at naught of you builders." Read here Gen. xlix, 24; Isa. viii, 14; xxviii, 10; Ps. mall, 22; Zech. 111, 9; iv, 7; I. Pet. ii, 4-8, and see what o fruitful simile you hey° in this stone which so wondrously • speaks of Christ. Read also pan. ii, 44, 45, and be sure that you are in the Rock and drinking from tt (Ex. xxxiii, 22; Isa. xxvi, 4, margin; I. Cor. x, 4). There is no other foun- dation and no other sato:Won (I. Cor. Isa. xlv, 22). They weim familiar with the words "God is any sale -alien" (Ise, xii, 2; Ex. xv,- 2; Pa. cavil i, 14), but tilos, (these rulers) - would not 'accept Jesus as Clod, They were ignorant of God's righteousness and going about to establish their own which in God's sight was only filthy rags nem. x, Isa: alio 0). ' 18, le. "They tOok, knowledge of them that they had been with jostle" Like their Master, they had not been taught in the schools. They had not the • wisdom of man, but they had wisdom and power which man could not give them. ,The. power of Christ manifestin us is the strongest kind' of preaching, artd When thesr satv it not only in :the al:Mei:lee, but in this. Poor, helpless beggar, they sey nothing ageinet, though tit their hearts they hated it, for they were but carnal, the' carnal .mind is enmity against e God. Peed so covet- ed the power oe• Christ that He Would glory in inflrmities u only the power of Christ 111141.4 rFS i; upon Him (11 Cor. xii, . „- 15-17. "What .81101 we do to these moh ?" Having sent the apostle aside, they confer among thetriseWee es a. council on Ude to them lin- portant meter, and they determine that, any more of Stich work ete- the herding of this impotent man ill the name of Josue must not be tolerated. Why' do they imegine a vain thing and take Counset ego hist the !Lord ? ere that Meath in the heavens dangle The. Lord shall have them he derleion (Ps: it, 1.4), Their counsel ie vain their perpories egain.st the Lord shall surely be frustrated, for "every purpose er the Lord eitall be performed" (Jet', 11, 29; sso itISO xiv, 24). Think of mortal man determining thet tlie, work of the Lord God Almighty shall' 'speead no farther 1 How plainly yisible is, the one behind the, scone a the deVil, who waved, if ho could, dethrotie Gad, and who will before his final ,over- throw gather the nations , agninet • God (Rev, xix. 19).' 18-20. "We cannot but speak the things which we have seen end heard." This Is their rola • commaad not to speak at all not teach in the name cif Jesus, and this cortunand was from the foremost re- liglous people of the day, with the high, priest at their head, whose Ups should speak knowledge and who ought to have been the meesenger of the "Lord of Hosts (Mal. ii, 7). Let any one now preach the whole truth concerningthe second coming of Christ, the, resurrection of the right- eous, the restoratien of 'sestet, no kingdom till Jesus comes, etc., and he will not fail . to find prominent' re- ligious fellers who will if possible stop that kind of teaching. 21, 22. With some further threaten- i ins they were let 'go without punish - meat bemuse, the people were ail glorifying God for that which was done. So they went to their own company of belle\ rt'S and .told ail that the chief priests and elders had said unto them, and with one accord they liftedup their voices to Geste' the creator of alt things, and told Him ell and left it with Him, asking only for boldness to srmak His word and that through them He would honer His name. The Lord's* mower was to shake 'the place and fill them again with His Spiritand cause them to speak boldly, as they had desired (verses 28 to 31). Believing' that they were on earth for God, they feared not the face of man. Like Abram, who, being blessed b3 the•lfost Righpossessor o heaven and esteth, he wanted no fa- vors of the king' of Sodom • like Zerubhabel, who feared not the ad versaries and took no help from them (Gen. xiv, 22r. 23 ; Ex. Iv., 1-8). CANADX'S GOLD YIELD. Remarkable Increase in Output of of the Dominion. Compared with the United States, the Dominion of Canada is still in its infancy as a, producer of the hid- den wealth of nature's* treasure stores, says the Indianapelis News. But it is a _luster infancy, -and the facts. relethig ' to .Cana.digadtance inethis direction. tree of deep interest •to. Americans. The' Doeutnicre seatis- tician, George • •Johnstoo, has .eusg completed • an . examination ' into the. comparative deVelOpittent of the • mineral output of both countries.. Caztatla's yield last yeer was only one seventeenth of that of the' Unit- ed States, but, based on population. it represeetedge, value of $12.1)13 'per capita, compared with $14.03 in the United States. Canada's increase per capita in the decennial Period, 1891 to 1901, was a fraction short of double that of the United States, being $8.14, against $4.11 that of the United States. Ten years ago Orinadees mineral yield would have to be mul- tiplied by eighty-four to bring it up to that of the 'United States, where- as last year the figure had been cut down to seventeen. • At this rate, the Do.mlaion statistician remarks, it will not take Can,sela long to pass the United States. A notable fact gathered. from Mr. Johnston's compilation is that 47 per cent. of the entire metal produc- tion of the United States last year Ca.M0 from the furnaces which melted the iron ores, whine 4 per cent. only Was the figure in Canada.. Gold re- presents the largest part • of • the in- crease -in Canada. In 1891 the gold produ.eed in: the. Dominion._ was only • 81,150,600i 'whereas last yeer it was $27;908,000. The metallic products of Canada chiefly' comprise gold, silver, load, nickel, copper, zine. and pig iron; while in the Uni Led States, besides these, there are produced quicksilver, antimony, platinum and aluminum, which do not appear in the Canada returns. Anthnony is fouad -in one - Province of • Canada, Nova Scotia, and was at one time produced to a small extent, but a lawsuit stopped operations. Altuninum, although not yet produced in Cenada, exists in de- tonss.its to the extent of minions ot o Since Canada began producing gold it has added $186,500,000 worth to the world's store of the metal. Of this,. over $52,000,000 eame from the, Canadian Yukon gold ilelds. In oth- er parts of Canada the yield of gold last year was 85,640,000, an in- crease of $4,860,000 over 1801. In fling compared with that of the Unit- ed States, only amounting to a lit- tle over $3,000,000 last, steal-, 'com- pared with $98.000,000 in the Unit- ed States. TOO MUCH Ole' A GOOD THING. • An old clergyman kept his stock of • sermons in n, pile in the vestry, and it was his custom in preach the -up- per most one and then place it at the bottom of the pile. 33eing absent, ono Sunday, a brother clergyinan offleiated, hut he was horrified to find that he had left his sermon .a.t home. On • looking mend, however, he sine this pile of sermons, arid took the one from the bottom, as he thought it would be the oldest. When the service wee over, he placed the - sermon on the top .0f:the pile—Next .Sendita the rector preached the seta mon which was on the top of the heap, as was' his eustom. When ho wae leaving the church beasked the sextant what be thought of the ser- mon and was sliocked with the fol- lowing reply : 113 was good, sir ; and after heating it for three Sundaste nee linve it. off Wr heart." The deepest lake in 'Europe is Con - Walnut, 1,027 foot. It is equal in areie to the fele of Alen. /*•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••ov•••• ...,**4 . • #0. 01 : • - 4 THE KING, THE QUEEN and THE DUCHESS I OF DEVONSHIRE, ; i A Remarkable Offe,or. i : Here Is the best offer ever made In this community, Be a very Oxcellettb ar- • "k rangernent made with the Family klerald and Weekly Star of Montreal we are E • onaieed to offer TUN EXETEn TIMES and that great Family Paper, the • 't Family ienald and Weeely Star, for one year for the email mum of $1.75 and In- 1 ; elude to each sr heoriber three beautiful premium pietures, of whiele the follow- . lug is a brief descripet-e- I KING EDWARD VII,—True to life, a beautiful portrait size 18 X i . , # 24 inches, on beautiful eeavy weite satin finished paper for framing. This portrait le has been taken slime his /, COOSSIOn to the throne, and is the very latest and best • O obtainable. It cannot be had except through the Renu Resume HeLe AND accession, and has the grea,,,. • t mer t nest Mitten after the King ii refore .0 rr MOLLY rof being the A R; each picture bears the King's autograph. This picture has the I 4. en historical -Nue that no other picture can possess. I QUEEN ALEXANDRA,,—An exquisitely beautiful picture of the remark - to the throne. It s the same Sin as that of the King, the two torn:tinge hand - ably beautiful andgos i Queen Alexendra, also taken shine the Ki ag's accession i : 001110 pair of picteres that alone would sell for Teeny times the subeaription price a of paper and pictures. 4 No portrait of the King and Consort taken at the seeped or succeediniasie O tinge can have eee fraction of the value of the first. Tbe e go down to history. : THE DUCHESS OF DEVONSHIRE. —The Renowned Gainsborough Plc- • ture. Sold at auction sale in London twenty-five years ago for 410,500. • stolen by clever thieves, hidden for over twenty-four years and delivered to its : owner ou payment of e25,000 reward and since sold to 51. j.Plerpont Morgan for 2; $75,MThis, 111briee is the history p1 one of the premium pictures, which, by a • • °levet stroke of enterprise, the publishers of the Family Herald have secured for 0their subscribers. The picture Ls 22x2e in ten colours, and is reproduced line for . liue, colour for colour with the original. Copies of the reproduction are now sold : hi. New York City, Montreal and Toronto for $12 each, and this is the picture . Family Herald subscribers are going to get absolutely free together with tb.e a pictures of the King and Queen. , s. 0 . Is that not ble value? Call at Teta Truss °Moe and see samples 40 of these beautiful pictures. • You want Tug Emma Trmss for the twat news, and you want that oergreat paper the Family Herald for tt's 24 pages of general news and family • reading. Its agricultural pages alone are worth many times the subscription el. 4, price. "l3reig or send your subscription to THE TIMES OFFICE. 4:0•04400••••••••000.444,•••••••04,04440.44414.400 044400004 ervousNeVea. e Thousands of young and middle-aged men are annually aorept to a gretnfure grave through EARLY INDISCRErf Mg, EXCEsaISS, AND LiLoure- BOIS elASene. If yoa have any of the following symptoms consult us before it is too late. Are you uervons and weak, despondent and gloomy, specks before the eyea with dark circles under them, weak back, kidneys irritable, palpitation of the heart, bashful, dreams and losses, sediment ill trine, pimples on the face, sunken eyes, hollow cheeks, careworn expression, poor memory, lifeless, distrustful, lack energy and strength, tired mornings, restless nights, changeable moods, weak matt hood,stunted orvans, premature decay, bone pains, hair loose, sore throat, etc.? Our Now method TrQatxraesat will cure you. EN'S ti L 0 Nothing can be ntore demoralising to young and middle-aged men than emissions at night or secret drains through the urine. They unfit a roan for business,mar- ried life or social happiness. No matter whether caused by evil habits in youth, natural 'weakness, or sexual excesses, our New Method 'Trouts:20ra Will posi- tively cure you. CURES GUARANTEED. NO CURE, NO PAY. gfrlio Names Used Without Written Consent: W. A. Muir, of Lima, 0., says:—"I was one of the countless victims of early vice at15 years of age. The drains on my system were 'weakening my brain as well as my sexual and nervous sys- tem. For tett years I tried scores of doctors, electric belts anti patent medicines. Some helped me, none cured. ewes giving up In despair, in ▪ fact, contemplating suicide when a friend ad- vised me aa a last resort td give the New Rd th oft Tree tin en t of Dm. K. & K. a fah. trial. Without confidence I consented and in three mouths I was a cured man. 1 was cured seven years ago --am married and happy. heartily recommend Drs. K.& N. to My a.Micted Befor.eTreatinent fellow moue/ A 101 bi- A After 'Treatment se -we treat and cure Varicocele, Emissions, Nervous Debility, Settunaz Weakness, Gleet, Stricture, Syphilis, Unnatural Discharges, Self Abuse. Kidney and Bladder Diseases, and all diseases of Men aud Women. r•NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. PRIVATE. No medicine sent C. 0. D. No names on boxes or euvelopes.-Everything conndentlal. Question list and cost of treatment, FRE4. E . Ors. Kenriody organ, "a SHELEW STREET, DETRorlie emote. 7%fit;i1K: FlRE-FLY DRESS. On the occasion of a garden party at Benares, given- by the Viceroy, a, wonderful dress was worn by the Cpuntess Palovolovetsth, which ex- cited much admiration. Seen from near at hand the gown, spouted to be made. up of fongaeeetifebbie. flame, with , occasional streaks of bright light flashing across, and all resting 00 0. bed of liquid lire. Then the ap- pearance would change, and its wearer seemed • to be wrapped in multi -Colored flame.. It was noticetl that the Countess never sat down, but was constantly On the move. Daring her peregrinations a friend asked her about her marvellous cos- tume, and discovered that it was a simple gown of rich brocade erne- mented with fire -flies. There were 585 of these little creatures, each in a tiny net, fastened to the dress. 0— A MAN PRESERVED IN COPPER. The discovery in o. Malian copper mine of the body of an Indian work- man, who had died there many years ago meci who haa been preserved from -decay by the antiseptic action of coeper, is reported in it mining jour- naleaThe mine in question is situat- To Ett4, The pain, nausea and dis. tress that Dyspeptics suffer after every meal can all be permanently removed by Bur. dock Blood Bitters. • It tones up and restores tile stomach to normal condition so that. it digests food without tausing discomfort, Here's proof positive: efies Maggie Spinals, Dalhousie, N.B,, wrote the following! "T have been a eliffera from Liver Complaint and Elys- popsia for the past two years mut felt very miserable, I eoule riot hike Much fciod as it hint me to eat. My Mende Why don't you try B.B,13.' I did se, usiag two bottles, which made such a eompleto mere that 1 can noW sat any- thieg I like without it tatedeg me dietiente 104," Painters' Kidnevs. • The worst thing a painter has to con. tend with is the tine penile°. a. The lead, orcourse, le bd too. But the turpentine cuts the kidneys in. flames and weakens them, makes the painter's life a clan- gerous and 'trouble- some one Wben a painter's backaches, its time for him to begin treating the kidneys. rv DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS bwailclfix them up—take out tho inflammation and congestion, give ease to the achin k. $ Mr. J. Evanson, the well-known painter and decorator, so Oxford St., Toronto, Ont., said: About eight weeks ago I was taken wide an excruciating pain in my back over the kidneys. It was so bad that my wife had to apply hot cloths till the doctot came and gave me morphine. Ho said the trouble was due to a stoves passing front the kidney to the'bia.cider. My water was loaded with a brick thud deposit and scalded on passing-. N.Vhile in this condition I heard of Doane Kidney Pies and started taking them. It was not long before 1 got relief from gain and have been Improving in health eved since. My twine ie now clear and does not smart me, and I feel better than hi years, LCIVI-LIVER. PILLS The.""wa black tellowe act easily' and naturally on the eyetem, . clearing away all bile and effete materiel,' • Constipation, hiliousziess, dyspepeie, sick headathe, heertburn, weterbraslearel di* appear withe they ere used. Theo 250. Iteneeeeee. ereer"—eillereeenerregereeneelireeelerrenr. ed in. the district of Chum:learn eta, in the desert of .e.tacanut. The the diau had eVidently been Killeti by a. fall from the toof Ithite engaged in collecting ritacionite in a remelt I: as - kat Which was still itiS !WWI, hie Stone implements beeng 1-221211 11o . eide, :revere.' 1112121, woman 0191 cliiId spends, 00 201 everege 11 year ott flint] LAI re. • in $