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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1902-3-6, Page 7ABSOLUTE SECURITY. 1,10121M0111=1.1 Cenuine •Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of • See Poo.Sintile Wrapper Below. Very organ lila as easy • to lake as sugar. KS FOS HEADACHE* CARTE FOR =INES& !Trim ron OILIOUSNEA. wER FOR TORPID LIVER: PI LLS. Fon co fISTIPATION. FON SALLOW SKIN. FOR THE COMPLEXION y is cots Irma y eatable. ...roe. eprigi; EALICUJ2970 v CURE SICK HEADACHE. STRONG AND VIGOROUS. Every Organ of the Body Toned •up and invigorated by Mr. P. W. Meyers, King S. E. Berlin, Ont., says: "1 saffered for five years with palpitation, shortness of breath, sleeplessness and pain in the heart, but vne box of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills completely removed all these dis- tressing symptoms. I have not suffered since taking them, and now sleep well and feel strong and vigorous." • Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills cure all diseases arising from weak heat, worn on nerve tissues, or watery blood. oRowods F? AY SYRUP AVDSOOTIIES ette LUNGS AY.E1 aRONCHAL 'rums. CLAES Vg1r4 COUGHS COWS' 9 POO TM ANY MAW 2,5 OTT . „ AU, D von Strike the Iron While Ws Hot is good advice. Take Burdock Blood 'Bitters. This Spring is better advice. During the winter, heavy rich foods are nneessary to keep the body vvaral. When tho spring conaes, the system is clogged up with heavy sluggish blood ; you feel tired, weary and listless and that all - gone, no -ambition feeling takes possession of you, If you take 'Burdock Bloocl Bitten it will regulate your system, put you into collation and make you feel bright, ltappy and vigoron$, OUR COMMON BUM V Gsvielee, thie Chiine of h,arntony struelt into the ear, this Raft tread of a myriad delights over the nervous tissue, this rolling of the crimson tide through artery and vein, this drumming of the heart on our march to immortality? We take all these things as a Inattor of course. Take this practieal religion I have recommended into your, every- day life. Make every day a Sab- bath, and every meal a, sacrament, and every room you enter hol of Give Earnest Thanks for the Divine Goodness Shown You. Metered according Aet of the Perlismen_t of ()sends, in the year One Thousand lene *Ann: ' died end Two, by Pf !rezone), et! • ths Pobertreeet of Aviculture °newel A deenateh" from Washington says —Rev. Dr. Talmage preached iron), the fpllowing text :—T, Corinthians 'tr. 31, "Whether, therefore, ye etit or drink or whatsoever ye de, die ali to the glerY of.Grod." When, the apostle in this text sets forth the idea that so common an :action. : the taking of feed and drink is to be conducted to the glory of Gocl, he. Proclaims the importance -of religion in the ordinary aiTairs of our life. In ell ages of the world there .has been a tendency to set apart certain days, places' and occa- sions for worship, and to think those were the chief realms in which religion was to act, Now, holy days and holy places have their inmort- TheY give opportuility for spe- cial performance of Christian duty and for regaling of the religieus ap- petite, but they cannot take the place of continuous exercise of faith and prayer. In other words, a, man cannot be so much of a Christian on Sunda,y that he can afford to be a worldling all the rest of the week. If. a steamer put out for Southamp- ton and go one clay in that dhection and the other six days in other di- rections, hew long before the steam- er will get to Southampton? lt will never get there. And, though w man may seern to be 'voyaging neeereu- ward during the holy Sabbath day, if (Maine the fo/lowing six days of the week he is going toward the world and toward the flesh and to- ward the devil how long will it take him to reach the peaceful harbor of heaven ? You cannot eat so much at the Sabbath ba,nquet t.hat you can afford religious a.batinefice the other six days. Heroisin and prince- ly behavior on great occasions are no apology for lack of right demean- or in circumstances insignificant and inconspicuous. The genuine Chris - •tion life is not spasmodic; does not go by fits and starts. It toils on 'through heat and cold, up steep mountains and along dangerous de- clivities, its eyo on the everlasting •hills crowned with the castles of the blessed. I propose to plead for EVERYDAY RELIGION. In the first place we want to bring the religion of Christ into our con- versation. When a dam breaks and two or throe villages are overwhelm- ed or an earthquake in South Amer- ica Swallows whole city, then peo- ple begin to talk about the imcer- tainty of life, and they imagine that they are engaged in positively relig- ious conversation. No, You may talk about these things and have no grace of God at in your heart. We ought every day to be talking 11 there is anything glad about anything beautiful about it, anything huportant about it, we ought to be courteously discuseing.' I have noticed that men lust in pro- portion as their Christian expe- rience is shallow talk about funerals and graveyards and tombstones and deathbeds. The real, genuine Chris- tian Man talks chiefly about this life and the great eternity beyond and not so much about the insigni- ficant pass between these two resi- dences. And yet how few circles there are where the religion of Jesus Christ is welcome. Go into a circle even of Christian poi:Tie, where they are full of joy and hilarity, and talk about Christ or heaven and every- thing is immediately silenced. No one had anything to say save per- haps some old patriarch in the cor- ner of the room, who really thinks that something ought to be said un- der the circumstances, so he pirts orie foot over the other and heaves a long sigh and says, "Oh, yes, that's so, that's so I" My friends, the religion of Jesus Christ is something to talk about with a glad heart. It is brighter than the waters; it is more cheerful than. the stinshine. Do not , go around groaning about your religion when you ought to be singing it or talking it in cheerful tones of voice. How often it is that we find men whose lives are utterly inconsistent who attempt to talk religion and al- ways make a failure of it friends, WE mUST LIVID RELIGION or we cannot talk it. If a, man cranky and. cross and uncongenial and hard in his dealings and then begins to talk about Christ .and heaven, everybody is repelled by it. Yet I have heard nth men say in whining tones, "We are miserable sinners," "The Lord bless you," "The Lord have mercy on you," their conversation interlarded with such expressions, which mean DO - thing but canting, and canting is the woest form of hypocrisy. If we have really felt the religion of Christ in our hearts, let us talk it ; and talk it with an illuminated coun- ternome, remembering that when two Christian people talk God gives spe- cial attentiten and writes down what -Utast say : Malachi ill, 16, "Then they that feared the Lord spoke of- ten .one to another, and the Lord hearkened and heard it, and a book of remembrance was 'written." Again; remark, we must bring the religion of Christ into our em- ployments. "Oh," you say, "that 39 very 'Weil it a inan handle large sums of =toy or if he have no ex- tensive teaffie, but in the humble work in life that r am tailed to the sphere) is too :small for the action of such grand, heavenly principles." Who toid you . so' ? DO you • • not know that God .watches the faded leaf on the brook's surface as cer- tainly he does the 'path of a blaeing sun ? And the mese that creepe, m) the. side of the reek Wakes na much impression upon God's mind its the waving tops of Orogen pine and Lebanon cedar, and the alder, crackling limier the eow's hoof; sounds as lend in God's ear as the snap of a, world's conflagration. When you have anything to do in life, however humble it may seem to be, God is always there to help you to do it. If your work is that of a fisherman, then God will help you, as he helped Simon when he dragged Gonnesayet. If your work is draw- ing water, then he will help you, as when he talked at the well curb to the Samaritan woman. If you are engaged in the custom house, he will lead you, as he led Matthew sitting at the receipt of customs. A re- ligion that is not good iri one place is not worth anything IN ANOTHER PLACE. The man who has only a day's wages in his pocket as certainly needs the guidance of religien as he who rattles the keys of a bank and could abscond with a hundred thous- and dollars. There are those prominent in the churches who seem to bt on public occasions very devout who do •not put -the principles of Christ's religion into practice. They are the most in- exorable of creditors. They are the most grasping of dealers. They aro known as sharpers on the street. They fleece every sheep they can catch. If the wheat in the churches should be put into a hopper, the first turn of the crank would make the chaff fly, I tell you. Some of these men are groat sticklers for gospel preaching. They sa,y:"You stand there in bands and surplice and gown and preach—preach like an angel—and we stand out here and at- tend to business. Don't mix things. Don't get religion and busiuees in the same bucket. You attend to your rnatters, knd WC Will attend to ours." They do not know that God sees every cheat they have,.practised in the last six years; that lie can look through the iron wall of their fireproof safe; that He has counted every' dishoneet dollar they have in their pocket, and that a day of judg- ment come. There are many Christians who say: "We •are to serve God, but we do not want to do it in these spheres about which we are talking, and it scents so insipid and monoton- ous. If we had SOULO great occasion, if we had lived in the time of -Luth- er, if we had been Pours traveling companion, if we could serve God on a, great setile, we would do it, but we can't in this everyday life." I admit that a great deal of the ro- mance and knight errantry of :life have disappeared before the advance of this practical ege. There is, how- ever, a field of endura.nce and great achievement, but it is in everyday life. There are Alps tb scale, Mere are Hellesponts to swim, there are fires to brave, but they are all around us now. This is the hardest kind of martyrdom to bear. Again, we need to bring the veil. glen of Christ into out' COMMONEST TRIALS. For severe losses, for be- reavement for trouble that shocks like an earthquake and that blasts like a storm, we prescribe religious consolation; but, business man, for the small annoyances of last week how much of -the grace of God did you apply?. "Oh," you say "these trials a:re too much for such applica- tion." My brother, they are shap- ing your character, they are souring your temper, they are wearing out your patience and they are making you less and less Of a man. I go into a sculptor's studio and see him shaping a statue. He has a chisel in one hand and a mallet in the other, and he gives a very gentle stroke—click, click, click! I say, "Why don't you strike harder?" "Oh," he replies, that would shat- ter the statue. I can't do it that way. I must do it this way." So he works on, and atm: awhile the features -come out, and everybody that enters the studio is charmed and fascinated. Well, God has your soul under process of development, and it is little annoyances and vexes tions of life that aro chiseling out your immortal nature. Again, we must bring the religion of Christ inth our commonest bless- ings. When the autumn comes and the harvests are in and the gov- ernors make proclamation; we as- semble in churches and we are very thankful. Rut every day ought to be a thanksgiving day. Vire do not recognize the common mercies. of life. We have to see a blind man led by his dog before we begin. to bethink ourselves of what a grand thing it is to have undimmed eyesight. We have to see some wounded. man hob- bling on his crutch or with his empty coat sleeve pinned up before We learn to think what a grand thin.g God did for us whoa he gave us healthy " use of our limbs. We aro so stupid that nothing but the misfortunes of othees can rose us up to our blessings. As the or grazes in the pasture up to his eye in clover, yet. never thinking who makes the clover, and as the bird picks the worm from the ful:row not thinking that it is God' W110 MAKES EVERYTHING • from the animalcule in the sod to the seraph on the throne, so We go ert eating, drinking and enjoying, but never thanking, or seldom thankieg, or, if thanking at all, with. only half a heart. * • I compared our indifference to the brutes.: but perhaps I wronged the brute. I do not krtoev but that among its other instirints;' it May hatre instiact by Which it reeog- razes the divine hand that foods it. I do net knew but that God is, through it, holding cordintinication with what WO call„ "irrational crea- tion." Who thanks God for the air, the fountain of life,. the bridge Of suiabeam; thp path of 50011(1, the great fah on a hot summer's day? Who thanks God for this wonderful physical), organism, his sweep 01 GM y holies, We all have work to do;, it us be willing to do it. We all have sorrows to bear, let us cheer- fully bear them. We all have bat- tles to fight; let us eourageouslet fight them. If you want to die right, you must live right, Negli- gence and indolence will win the hiss of everlasting scorn, While faithful- ness will gather its garlands and wave its sceptre and sit upon -its theone long after this earth has put on ashes and eternal ages have be- gun their march. You go home to- day and attend to your lLttle sphere of duties, I will go home and at- tend to my little sphere of duties. Every one in his own. place. So our every step in life shall be a tri- umphal march, and the humblest footstool on which we are called to sit will be a conqueror's throne, THE S. S. LESSON, INTERNATIONAL LESSON, MARCH 9. Text of the Lesson, Acts viii., 3-1'7 • Golden. Text, Acts viii., 4. 3. "Ai for Saul, he made havoc of the church." The Revised Version says that he laid waste the church, but our Lord had. said. "The gates of hell shall not prevail against it," (Matt. xvi, 18). So that this im- prisonment of Christians and power of Saul and the authorities over them did not really hurt the church any more than the fiery furnace or the lions hurt Daniel and hie friends. 4. "Therefore they that were scat- tered abroad went everywhere preach- ing the word." So the disciples could say to Saul and his company as Joseph said to his brethren, "Ye thought evil against me, but God meant it unto good to save much people alive." (Gen, 1, 20). Whea we were persecuted and in the midst of trial it seerhs very difficult to see any good in it, and not to see our persecutors, but faith sees only God and is quiet because Ile controls ,all people and all events. These scat- tered preachers of good tidings were not the apostles, but all except the apostles (verse 1), a.nd they were just the Lord's messengers with the Lord's message (Hag. i, 13). If all believers now were ready to tell oth- ers the love and glace of God, tell- ing His salvationf rom day to day (Ps. lxxi, 15, 24), how soon the gos- pel might be preached to every crea- ture! 5-8. "Then Philip went clown to the city of Samaria and preached Christ unto them." Philip was the second of the seven who had been ap- pointed to minister to the needy in things temporal,. and now that Ste- phen had been so honored and pro- moted he is also honored as the Lord's messenger. If we are con- tent to do the ordinary work of the daily life, the Lord will , Janis own time lead us into greater service. Very helpful words on this are found in • II. Samuel xv, 15; I. Mixon. xxviii, 21. In verses 4, 12, 25 we get a good idea of the preaching of those days. They preached Christ; they preached the word of the Lord and the things concerning the king- dom of God. As Philip preached the Lord wrought with and through him, confirming the word with signs following (Mark xvi, 20), and, see- ing the miracles and bearing the message, the people with one accord gave heed, and there was great joy in that city. Whether the messenger be the woman of Samaria or Philip the evangelist, if Christ is preached the Spirit works, and whenever Christ is truly received there follows joy and peace (Ps. xv. 18). 9, 10. The adversary, who opposes God and exalts himself is always to the front ever since he slandered God to Eve in Eden. Ht is seen in the willfulness and self-assertion of Cain, in the endeavor of the 'Babel builders to make themselves a name and in all who oppose themselves to God and His truth from Cain to the one who shall exalt himself and magnify himself above every god, so that ho, as God, shall sit in the temple of God showing himself that he is God (Dan. xi, 36: II. Thess. ii, 4). This Simon, like Theudas of chapter v, 36, was just one of the great host who magnify themselves and always find a following. As I write a man in Chicago, whom ninny follow and who seems to preach the gospel, has just given out that he is Elijah. And so it goei and will till Jesus comes. 11, 12. Bewitching people with sor- cery might possibly describe many of the teachings of to -day which captivate such multitudes. A great following is not suffiaient proof that the leader is right, nor are few fol- lowers necessarily ail evidence that the leader is wrong. 13. "Simon himself believed also, was baptized, continued with Philip and wondered,beholding the mir- , acles and signs." The power of God is able to break. the hardest heart, and the fact that Sinion was bap- tized and continued with Philip after he believed, would seem to indicate a real conversion. The sequel in verses 18 to 24 may indicate, how- ever, that Simon had not truly re- ceived the Lord Jesus, or they may Mean that he was net right in the matter of the gift of the Spirit, If he had no part in Christ, he cer- tainly was not saved, but if Peter meant that he had no part in this gift of the Holy Spirit he was just in the condition in which most churth nnembers are, and it may have boon in reference to serving God that Ms heart wae•-tot right. Simon the sorcerer is not it comfortable s tudy. There IS much of himself from first to last and little, if any, of Christ even after he believed, 14. "Now, when the apostles whieh were at Jerusalem beard thnth Sae nutria had received the word of Cod, they sent unto them. Veter and John." These two who are so pro- minent in the early chapters are still evidently the foremost among; the apostles and -specially honored by the others. Notice what it wad the people of Samaria had received. They had received the word of God, and, like the Thessalonians, they doubtless received it, not as the Word of Men, but as it is in truth, the word of God, which effectually worketh in those who believe (I. Thss, 11, 13), Our Lord Himself said to His Father on the night be-, fore His crucifixion, "I have given unto them the words which Thou gayest Me, and they have received them" (John xvii, 8). We give our - Lord pleasure when we receive His word, It is to be received with meekness and the held fast and held forth (Jas. I, 21; Tit. i, 9; Phil. ii, 15, 16, Who, when, they were come down, prayed foe thorn that they might reeeive the Holy Ghost." They were somewhat like the a.pos- ties and other believers before Pente- cost, They 'hacl believed, were bap- tized and had become children of God and temples of the Holy Ghost, but they bad not been endued with the power which a,11 believers need to enable them to secure the living and true God, All who trdlyreceive Christ are saved and have become children of God (John i, 12) and temples of the Holy 'Spirit, who dwell in every believer, but it is possible for such to be only babes and carnal (1 Cor. vi, 19, 20; iii, 1, 2), and ,therefore the necessity of being filled with the Spirit and en- dued with power to live the life of faithful testimony. 17. "Then laid they their hands on them, and they received the Holy Ghost." Having prayed (verse 15), they now with expectation lay hands on them, and the special gift of the Spirit is received. So also did Paul at Ephesus (chapter xix, 5, 6). Our Lord's words, "Ask, and it shall lie given you," are in con- nection with these others, "How much more shall your heavenly Fath- er give the Holy Spirit to them that ask Him" (Luke xi, 9, 1.3). TANKAGE AS FOOD FOR PIGS ITS ADVANTAGE AS A FEED- ING MATERIAL. Synopsis of a Recent Bulletin Issued by the Indiana Ex- periment Station. In view of the rapid extension of swine growing, and the consequent establishment of -pork packing houses in all parts of the country,. a recent bulletin (No. 90) of the Indiana Ex- periment Station, regarding the value, as a food for swine, of the packing •house bye -product. known as tankage; may be of interest. Ac- cording -Co the above bulletin, tank- age offers considerable advantage as a feeding material for pigs. It con- tains a high. per cent of protein, and an amount of phosphoric acid that materially excels that found in any grain or bye -products of mills. The phosphoric acid Sor pigs is use- ful in building up bone structure, and this is an important feature with our pigs to -day, while the pro- tein has a value universally recog- nized by. feeders. An extensive breeder of swine in Indiana thus describes the character of this product : "Especially with young pigs, one finds some feed of Teat advantage that is rich in the nutrients re- quired, that is easily digested. and especially palatable * * * A year's experience with feeding tankage shows it the ideal feed for this pur- pose. Blood, lungs, etc., are cook- ed together in tanks at the large packing houses. The fat is drawn off and the residue dried and ground for hog feed. It costs about $25.00per ton laid down at my home, contains about double the protein found in oil meal, and is a very much better feed for pigs. It seems to be a perfect substitute for iniIk'a pound of the tankage cost- ing less than a cent and a quarter, and having a. feeding value equal to about three gallons of skimmed milk. A mixture of thirty pounds of corn to ,1.0 pounds each of wheat mid- dlings and tankage makes a very well balanced ration for pigs up to four months old. A very good ra- tion for older pigs or hogs may be made by reduciug the middlings and tankage fully half in proportion to amount of corn. Tankage dissolves almost immediately when put 111 water, and should be fed in slop. Pigs fed upon tankage show great muscular and bone development, - have ravenous appetites, and are especially free from gouty and rheu- matic troubles. Tankage is so dry that there is no danger from worms or from decomposition, and has been so thoroughly cooked that one takes no risk front contracting disease in his herd from feeding it." A quantity of tankage was sup- plied the Station at the request of the Zirector, by Swift & Co., of Chicago, for feeding stable, This tankage was especially prepared for the purpose, being made from "bones and meat taken from the cutting roora, tanked immediately, ianci pressed and dried." A representa- tive of the above firm wrote that "If tankage can be usedat all for swine feeding, it must be specially prepared. The writer's opinion is thatno tankage that contains any part of the intestines, °toe should be used for this purpose." A same we of this tankage showed the fol- lowing composition :— Moisture,. 8.63 p.c. Pretein 40.81 p.c, Ether extract p.c. Crude fibre— 44644 •*. • 4,78 P.C. Nitrogen free eXtre.et 5.00 pc„ Ash .....1504 p,e,1 4****4—''' •••••••••••••••440.04-foom•••••••50 1,444 • - THE KING )44 3t THE QUEEN and 41, z d'4 ,THE DUCH SS t OF DEVONSHIRE 1.'4.Remarkable Offer, IHero le the best offer over made in this oommunity, By a very eXcellent ar- ringenient made with the Family Herald and Weekly Star ef Montreal we are f and to offer Tma Bx.Wrial Tim= and that grealt Family Nem', the : Fondly itzzaid and Weekly Star, for one year for the small sum of $1.75 and in. t : ciniugdies atobleche dee,Teleeitr,1:bet,,r three oeautiful Premium pictures, et whieh the fellow- • 1 KING EDWARD VII. --True to Iliffe, a beautiful portrait size 18 X 21 inc./As, on beautiful eeavy, white satin finished paper for framing. This portrait : 4 has been taken since Ins accession to the throne, and, is the very latest areVbest obtainable. It oannot be had except through the Fluxxx HERALD AXE WEEKLY STAB.; etch Jethro bears the King's autograph. This picture has the .. great rnerib of being -the first taken after the King's acoession, and has therefeee 'ver An historical yaIne that no ether picture can possess. 4 QUEEN ALEXANDRA.—An exquisitely beautiful picture of the ',mark - i410 ably beautiful and goal Queen Alexandra, also taken since the Klags aceniistoe . to thethrone. It Is the same size as that of the King, bbe two forming a band- : Spilie pair of P,lotnree that alone would sell for many times the subscription price ••• alIttgetarlitcirato Pilelfteht No poKing and Consort taken at the second or succeeding,sit. if tings can have ole fraction of the value of the first, Thee go down to history. c i . THY& DUCHESS OF DEVONSHIRK—The Reneivned. Gainsborough Plc- ,* tore. Sold at auction sale in London twenty-ilre years ago for arszoo, * stolen by clever thieves, hidden for over twenty-four years aud delivered to its t °Viler ou paymentof $25,000 reward and since sold to Dr.: .1. Piet -pont; Morgan for i $76,0006 Th, in brief, is the hisbery of one of the premium pictures, wiliebp by 4. °levet stroke of enterpriee, the publishers of the Family Herald have secured for a, 1, their subscribers. The•pleture is 22x28 In ben of:ileum, and Is reproduced line for 1 .. nee, colekhr for colour with the ori•ginal. Copies of. the reproduction are now sold X in. New- York City, Montreal and Toronto for $12 each, and this is the picture 47 Family Herald subscribers are going to get absolutely free together with the er.), :. pictures of the King and.Queen. 410 Is that not big value? Call at Tan Tates Office and see samples e. of these beautiful pictures. 41. You wane THE EXETER Truss for the lead news, and you want that 40. great paper the Family Herald for it's 24 pages of geaeral news arid family 0 in0 readig. Its agricultural pages alone are worth many times the subscription price. ' 4 'W&ug or send your subscription. to • • THE TIMES OFFICE. 414. I 04,04.49.4;001440.04.4+0044.040604004.1000....0.ato.......444 • •• •44*Pt• • 1,44 • ''",ii-1.•11CWI*X'0.11C-118PK. .11 112.1.1r1 f . .1.• 11 . ITARIC CELE 8 ST ICTURE No other disease is so prevalent atuong men as Varicocele. As it interferes with the nutrition of the sexual organs it produces emissions, loss of semen throughthe urine, decay of the organs, pains in the loins, aching in the back, nervousness, deg. pondency, 'bashfulness, palpitation of the heart, constipation, and. a comb.nation.n:. these results in complete Loan of ltdirtiabooci. Thousands of young air' middle- aged men are troubled with Stricture. If you have reason to believe ott am afflicted with it, don't neglect it. It will ruin you. Don't let doctors exp.rl.dent oa yon by cutting, stretching or tearing it. Our New Method. Treatment dissolves the stricture tissue hence it disappears and can never return W' Lure Varicocele and Stricture vrithont operation or loss of time. The treat:nen ma.. be taken at home privately. Send for our Free illustrated Book on Varicocele, Stricture and Glect. Wo anaraiatee to Cure or No Puy. Kid eys 1 An sexual complaints affect these organs, hence the kidneys are a great source of disease. leave you aching or weakness over the small of the back, tendency to urinate frequently, deposit in urine, coldness of hands or feet, a drowsy feeling In the morning-. Don't neglect your kidneys. Our rdevir Method Treatznent is guaranteed to cure any disease of these organs on no pay. No Names Used Without Written Consent. O. W. Rowe, of Jackson, Mich., says:--/ had varicocele in the secondary stage and two strictures of 8 years standing. I was operated on twice„undergoing great suffering, but only got temporary relief. I was finally advised to try the New Method Treatment of Drs. IC. & K. The enlarged veins disappeared in six weeks, the stricture tissue was removed in eight weeks and my sexual energy nod vitality returned so I was a man in every respect. I recommend you doctors with my whole hearten s CURES GUARANTEED. 1110 CURE NO PAY. Before. Treatment. After Treatment. We treat and cure Nervous Debility. Lost Manhood, Varicocele, Stricture, Syph- ilis, Gleet, Weak Parts, oonorrlicea and Unnatural Discharges. Consultation. Free. Books Pree. Write for Question List for Home Treatment. Drs.uiyKergan5 148 SHELSV ITTRFIEITT:m1;24. IlfrAtOk 1‘1,a-Wrice. Aci•M • mals, and averaged about sixty pounds each at the beginning of the test. The foods used were as fol- lows :— Lot 1—Ten parts of pure corn meal and one part tankage. Lot 2—Five parts pure cornmeal, and one part tankage. Lot 3—Pure corn meal only. Lot 4—Ten parts of a mixture in equal proportions of pure corn meal and shorts, and one part tankage. The food was weighed out at feed- ing time, and mixed with water, forming a medium thin slop, about two parts water. to one part grain being used. The grain was not cook- ed, but the chill was removed from the water before mixing to make the slop. The grain and tankage were thrown together in dry form, and the water -then added. The average daily gain as made by each lot was as follows :— Cost per 'Daily gain. 100 lbs Lot No. 1... ..: 4.68 lbs $3.80 Lot No. 2... 4.81 lbs 4.00 Lot No. 3... 2.68 lbs 5.20 Lot No. 4. 4.55 lbs 3.60 The above results show that the influence of the tankage in supplying protein . to what would otherwise have been a very carbonamous ra- tion, was extremely beneficial in the growth of pigs, as well as ht the linaneial results. With lot No. 4 there is a difference of nearly two cents between cost of feed per pound of gain, and in price received per pound live weight, white the dif- ference, in this respect with Lot No. 8 cornfed is very slight indeed. - The firmness of the flesh of lot No. 8 was not quite as good as that of the tankage fed lots. This was fair- ly noticeable. The condition of these experixnent- al fed pigs during the feeding Was of much interest. Those of lots Nos, 1, 2 and 4, where tankage was fed, had noticeably silkier coats of hais, than that of the corn fed lot. The corn fed animals did not eat wall a keen relish after the experiment wa.s fairly started while the other pigs always did, and therein. a. Marked differenee Was to be sceit, The eern fed pigs developed into very Peer feeders, a,i Iltis WaS Clne to the feed. The conditionOf the stomachs tg the Corn foci pigs Was 01 tifiuiCtIitl interest, these containieg sour of- fensive smelling' emit Mecti which seen -led a sodden Mass, Cer- thinly the contents 'of the corn fod. stomachs tits inferior in a notice.; able Way, when. Compared with the other pigs.. Total., „. .....100 p.c. :To determine something of the Value of 'tankage in a eteine feeding ration, an experiment with a' fairly uniform lot of pigs was begun and continhed foe 1,27 clays. Tho. Mats fed consisted of .16 head of: young pigs, divided into lots Of final* eaeln These 'Were.ell purehreed Anni- KOREY PiLLi CURE. BACKACHE LAME BACK kHEUMATISM DIABETES BRIGHT'S DISEASE DIZZINESS AND AU. KIDNEY et URINARY OISEASES ARE CURED SY Nt 514EY Mits. I. STEEVESi, Edgett's Land- ing, N.I3., writes on Jan. 18, 1901 "In the fail of 1899 I was troubled with a severe pain in the back. I could scarcely get up out of a chair and it gave me great pain to Move about. I took one box of Doan's Kidney Pills and was completely cured. I have not been troubled with it since." tweemeniseeseresetecitetesewereoceseont In 'conclusion, this experiment, strongly emphasizes the weakness ef using corn meal as a, single ratiOU ha feeding growling, fattening pigs, and indicates the great value of adding a feed rich in protein to the corn, thus producing a better bal.- aimed ration and securing more do-, sirable results in both health and growth. MEASURED BY MUSIC. A learned scientist has recently shown how the 'velocity of the wind can, be reckoned by noting the musi- cal pitch at the sound 'given out When the wind blows 01'eaii stretehed Wird. The principal eIe meni s on which, the eeltmletionJe based aro the diameter of the wires and the temperature of the air. The length of the wire is immaterial, so •Iong as it is not changed. Every vAriation in the wind's weevily is faithfully represented by thc rising or falling of the piteh c! the note sung by the, wire.