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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1902-3-20, Page 20, Genuine ,arter Little Liver Pills. ghtee Bear Sianciture of rof*--.V.:sase-au.e.s $ea Pec.Sieshe Wrapper Mow. ere sesess east ar, gs7 to take ele sugar. READAkiillt CARTElig reN ElIZNIESS. iTTLE NILIVIISNES.S., vEn IT/I TORPID ME% LLs. Fen OEMTIPATION. RR SALLOW attio. RR VIE COMPLEXION .tetviewe.,,tputat.pnc, 25rhts1:-9-'1"rez7vogelable./506. : CUR -a SICK KE,AbACH,E. Women's Ailments. Women are com. ing to understand that the Backaches, Headaches, Tired, ;: Feelings and. weak Spells from which they suffer are clue to wrong action of the kidneys. EtlifiAN7S Kidney Pilis are the most reliable remedy for any form of kidney complaint. They drive away po.ins and aches, make women healthy and ppy-able to enjoy life to the fullest. Mrs. C. It Gillespie, 204 Britain Street, Sb. John, N.B., says: "I had severe kidney trouble for which If doctored with a lumber of the best physicians in St. John but received little relief. Hearing of Doitn's Kidney Pills, I began their use. Before taking them I could not stoop to tie my shoes, and at times suffered such torture that I could not turn over in bedwithout assistance. DOan'S Kidney Pills have rescued me froni this. terrible condition, and removed every paha end ache." These pills mire all diseases and dis. orders arising from weak heart, worn out nerves or wately blood, such as Palpita- tion, Skip Beats, Throbbing, Smothering, Dizziness, Weak or Faint Spells, Anaemia, Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Brain Fag, General Debility and Lack of Vitality. They are a.true heart tonic,. -nerve food and blood enricher, building up and renewing all the SiOrn out and wasted tissues of the body and restoring perfect health. Price 50e. a box, or 13 for $1.25, at all druggists. • 131011151.IDIMMICROM.11.0flt 1 5 Threatening Clouds Gather and Thicken and Blacken. tatereet sassreise to ask or the roetteuiset cesees, in the play One Thonsenti 'Mee Ken. dosa :ma Two, by Wininn fly et Toronto, at the nessautait of esrieuatars, seamed A. despatch from Washington sayet ev. Dr- Talmage preached front, the folloteing text: hlatthew 87, "Even as a, hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, end ye wo tad not." Jerusalem was in 'sight as Christ - came to- the crest of Mount, aliisee height of 700 feet. The splendors "Of the religious _capital of the whole earth irradiated the landscape. There the-tezunle. Yonder is the king's palace. ;Spread out beforehis eyes are the pomp, the wealth., the wick- edneee and the coming destruction of Jeruselem, and he bursts into tears at the thought of the 'obduracy of .-a place. that he would gladly leave saved end apostrophises, saying, "0 jerusalon, Jerusalem, -. how often would ,I have gathered thy children together, even as a hen gathereth her ehiekens natter her wings, mast ye,. Would not!" Why did Ohrist select heni and chickens as a simile? Next to the appositeness of the comparison. I think it was to help all public teach- ers in the enatter of illustratiou get down. oil their siilts and yea compsarisons thnt all can -understand. The plainest bird on earth is the laarnyard fowl. Its only adornments are the red comb la its had -dress and the Tattles under the throat. It has ne grandeur of genealogy. All we kna. is that its encestors. came from Itita, some of them from a height a 4,000 feet on the sides ol the Himalayas. It has .no pretension of nest like the eagea's eyrie. It has no lustre of plumage like the gold- finch. Possessitig anatomy thut al- lows flight, yet about the lest thing it wants to do is to fly, and in re- treat uses foot almost as much as wing. Musicians 'have written out, in musical settle the song of lark and robin redbreast and nightingale, the hen of my text hath nothing' that could be taken for a song, but only ready :to piungs, there are cialtra•of antirement ready .to clutch. Now •I see the peril. Now I understand the urgency. Now I see only safety.. Would that Christ might this day take ow sone and daughters iuto hie shelter; "as a hen ,gathereth her chickens under her wing." 1314 we all need the protecting Whig. 'If you had known when yo. eutered Upon manhood or woman- hood what Was, ahead of you, would you have dared to undertake life? How much have you been through? With most life has been A DISAPPOINTAIENT, They tell Me so. They have not attained that which they .expected to attain. They have not had the physical and metiers.) vigor they expected or they have met with rebutTs which they did not anticipate. You are not at forty or fifty or six- ty or seventy or eighty years of age whereyou thought you would be. I do not -know anyone except myself to wham We has been a happy -sur- prise. I never expected anything, and so when anything eamo,in the shape of human favor or comfortable posi- teem or widening field of work it was to me a surprise. 1 was Told in the theological seminary by Neale of my follow students that I never would, get anybody to hear um preach; un- less I changed my style, so , that when 1 found that some people did come to hear me 'it was a happy surprise. But most people, accord- ing to theiwown statement, have found life a. disappointment. Indeed, we all need shelter from its tt,',1-PSI.5 The wings of my - text suggest warmth, and that is what most folks want. The fact is that this is a cold world whether you take it liter- ally or 'figuratively. We have a big fireplace called the sun„ and it has a very hot fire, and the stokers keep the coals well stirred up, but much of the year we cannot get near en- ough to this fireplace to 'get warm- ed, The world's extreinities are cold all the time. Forget not that it is colder at the south pole than at the north pole and that the Arctic is not so destructive as the Antarctic. Once in a while tke Arctic will let explorers come back, but the Antarc- tic hardly ever. When at the south pole a. ship sails in, the door of ice is almost sure to be shut against its return. So life to many mil- lions of people at the sotith and many millions of. people at the north is a prolonged ehiver. Bet when I say that this is a cold world I chiefly mean figuratively'. If you want to know what is the meaning of the oplinary term of receiving the GLITCH AND CACKLE. Yet Christ in the text uttered while looking upon. doomed Jerusalem de- clares that what he had wished for that city was like what the hen does for her chickens. There is not much poetry about this winged creature of Clod men- tioned in any text, but she is more practical and more motherly and more suggestive of good things Ahem many that fly higher and. wear brighter colors. . She is not a prima donna of the skies nor a strut of beauty in the aisle of the forest. She does not cut. a Circle under the .Sun like the. Rocky Mountain eagle, but stays at home to look after family ;affairs. She does not swoop like the condor of the cordilleras to trans- port a rabbit from the valley to the top of the crags, but just scratches for a living.- How vigorously with her claws she pulls away the ground to bring up rshat is hidden beneath! When the breakfast or dinner hour arrives, she begins to prepare the re- past aud calls all her. young to par- t t ake. '1 am in warm sympathy with the unpretentious old fashioned hen be- cause, like most of us. she has to seratch for a living. She knows at the start, the lesson. which most peo- ple of .good sense are slow to learn -that the geinirts of a livelihood im- plies work and that successes do not lie on the surface. but are to be up- turned by positive and continumis -eiTort. The reason that society and the church and the world are so full of failur&s. so full of lortfees, so full of deadbeats is because people are not wise *enough totake the lesson Which unv hen would teach them that • if. they would find for them- selves. and -for thosedependent upoe them anything worth having they must scratch for it. Solomon said, "Go to the ant, thou sluggard." I say. ga to • the hen, then. sluggard. In the Old Testament God compares himself to an etude stirriug„ up her nest. and in the New Testament the Holy Spirit is compared to A DESCENDING DOVE, but Christ in a sermon that began with cutting sarcasm for hypocrites and ends with the paroxysm of pa- thos in tho text compares himself to a hen. One clay in the country we saw sudden consternation in the behavior of old Dominick. Why the hen should be so diaturbed we could .not under - O ftae diseases that afflict stand. We looked about to see if a I neighbor's dog were invading the humanity are caused by the, farm. We looked up to eery if a 1 stormeloud were hover -Mg. We could accumulation of impurities. in see nothing on the ground that the blood. The greatest of all blood purifiers is BURDOCK DLOO9 OITTTERS. It cleanses the system from the crown of the head to the soles of the feet. If you are troubled with Boils, Pimples, Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Constipation, Biliousness, Headaches, Scrofula,,Eczema or any trouble arising from disordered Stomach, Liver, Bowels or Blood, give Burdock Blood Bitters a trial. We guarantee: it to cure or money refunded, could terrorize, and wo could see no- thing in the air fo ruffle the feathers of the hen, but the loud, wild. al• frigiited cluck which brought alt her brood at full rue under her leathers made us look egain around and above us, when we saw that. high up and far away there was a rapacious bird wheeling round and round end down and down, and, riot seeing te as we stood in the shadow, it came nearer and lower until we saw its beak WaS curved from' base to lip and it had two flames of fire for eyes and it was it hawk. But ell the thickens were under old Dominick's wings, and either the bird of prey caught a glimpse of us, or not able to find the brood huddled under wing darted bank into the clouds, So Christ calls with great earneetress to all the young. Why, what, is the matter?' It is bright thinlight., end there can be no danger, Health is theirs. A good home is theirs, 'Pieta- ty of food is theirs. PresPeet of long life is theirs, , But Christ cantiettes to dell, callewith more amphosie and urges haste and says not a -Second ceight 10: be lost. Oh, do tall what.is the ;matter. Ah, now 1 see; there are hawIts of temptation in the deep erfewhanIce aad hear the village bell that called yen tie worship and seeisig the horses whish, after putling you to church, stood around the old 'Clapboarded Meeting hose and those whe at at either encl of the ehurch pew and, indeed, all the ecenes of your first fourteen years, and you think .Of what :yob were then 'ands -Of what you are now, and all :these thoughts are aroused by the sight of the old hencoop.. Some Of you had better go back- and Start again. In thought return to that Place and hear the cluck and, see the outspread feathers and emne nne der the wing, and make the Lord your portion and shelter and warmth preparing for everything that may dome and so avoid being classed among those deseribed by the (See- ing words of my text, "ns 4 hen gathereth . her " chickens tinder her \liege, old ye would nat." - • When it good man asked a young woman. who hail abandoned her h.orne and who was deploring her wretchedness; why she did not return the reply - Was : "1 dare, not go home. My father is se provoked he would not receive inc home.", "Then," said -the Christian man, "I will Lost this." And. so he wrote to the father and the reply came back; and in it letter marked outside 'Im- mediate" and inside saying.; "Let her come at once ; all is forgiven." So God's invitation for you is mark- ed "Immediate" on the outside, and inside it, is 'written, "He will abun- dantly pardon," Oh, ye wanderers from God and happiness and home and I -leaven,. come under the shelter - Leg wing.. Some of you .have been it long while drifting in the tempest of sin and sorrow and have been Making for •the breakers. Thank God, the tide has turned. Do YOU not feel the lift of the billow 7 'The grace of God that bringeth salvation has appeared to your soul, and, in the wordi. 01 'Boaz to Ruth, I. coin Mend . Ton to "the Lord Gedef - Israel; under whose wings then hest come to trust." ' -Cohn SHOULDER," get out of Money. and try to bar- rowf The conversation may have beee almost tropical for lueuriauce of thought and speech, but suggest your necessities and see the ther- mometer drop to 50 degrees below zero, and in that which till it mo- ment before had been a warm room. Take what is an unpopular position on some public question and see your friends ffy as chaff before a windmill. As far 'as myself is con- cerned, I have no word of complaint but I look off day, by day and see communities freezing out men and women of whom the world is not worthy. Now it takes after one and now after another. It becomes popular to depreciate and defame and execrate and lie about some people. This is the best world I ever got into, but it is the meanest world that some people ever got into. Tbe worst thing that ever happened to them was their cradle, and the best thing that will ever happen to them will be their grave. But notice that some one must take the storm for the chickens„ Ab, the hen takes the. storm.. .I have watched her ender the pelting ram. I have seen her in the pinching frosts. Almost frozen to ileath or almost strangled the waters, and what a fight She makes for the young ender her wing if a dog or a hawk or a man come too near 1 And so the 'brooding Christ takes the stolen for us. What flood of an- guish and tears that did. not dash upon his holy soul ? What beak of torture did not pierce his vitals ? What bark-ing Cerberus of bell was not let out upon. bine from tbe ken- nels ? Yes the hon„ takes the storm for the chickens, and Christ takes the storm for us. Once the tempest rose so suddenly the hag could not get with her youhg back from the new ground t,e the barn, and there she is under the fence half dead. And now the rain terns to snow, and it is an awful night; and in the morning the whiteness about the gills and the beak down in the mud show that the mother is dead, and the young ones come out and cannot understand why the mother does not scratch for .them something to eat, and they walk over her ivings and Oen with their tiny voices, but there is no answering cluck. She took the storm for others and per- ished. Poor thing 1 Self 'sacrificing even unto death 1 And does it not make you think of Nina whe endured all for us 9 So thb wings under which .we come for spirituel safety.. are blood spattered wings, are night shadowed Wings; are . TratrnsT TORN Illy text has its Strongest applica- tion for people who were born in the 'country, wherever you may now live, and that is the majority of you. Y,ou cannot' bear my text out havieg all the rustia sceneS of the old farmhouse come back to you. Good old days they were. Yen know nothing much of the World, for You had not Seen the world. By law Of association you cannot recall .the brooding hen and her chiekens. With. - out seeing nisei the barn and. the haymow and the waggon shed and the house .and the fireside with the the.re are vulturtrs. wheeling for big backlog before which you at and +um,. 11PoN7 4-Vustua rei bonito a /loath yteiritthoretonei be bit fal eyol flux titagri THE S. Se LESSON, INTERNATIONAL LESSON, • . MARCH 23. Text of the Lesson, Eph. v., 11-21 Golden Text, Eph. v., 1.8. 11, 12. "Have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness." This week's study in this epistle and the next on the resurrection need not necessarily break the continuity of our study of the acts of the apos- tles, for in' all the Scriptures we have the 'things concerning Him .01 whom Philip spake • to the eunuch and whom we must see as the cen- tre 91 every lesson. In this .epistle we are, as one has said, taken into the presence chamber of the Jeln. and tne.de acquainted with His se- cret counsels and purposes concern- ing ns. Only as we by faith enter into 'Elise love and purpogee will we be delivered from the works .,,oledeeke ness mentioned in chapter iv, 81; I. Cor. vi, 0, • 10; Gel, v, 19-21.Intem- perance, as generally .understood, is one of the many wcadce of darlaneas," but the child, of God should be free from all if he would know the joy of being a, child of the Lord Abnighty (11. Oor. vi, 14-18). 13, 14. "Awake thou that steepest and arise from the dead and Christ shall .give thee light." The three apostles, " heavy with . sleep on the Mount of Transfiguration and actual- ly sleepin.g in Gethsemane, show us how the most highly favored believ- ers may be indifferentto the great things of God and how this cry, "Awake thou that sleepest," • may apply to us all. 15, 16, "See, then, that ye walk circumspectly, not as fools, but as wise, redeeming the time, because the days are evil." The Revised Ver- sion has. on these two verses eithdr in , the text or the;margin "Look therefore carefullyhow ye walk," `Sbuyinfr up the. opportunity." , The life 'cif the believer-Is:Spoken of as 'et continual dying -to self, an overcom- ing, a conflict, a race (lie Cor. 11: I. John va 4, 5; Eph. vi, 12; Heb. xi', 1), but in this epistle and elsewhere it is also called "a walk." In the climax in Isaiah xl, 81; the walking -that is the steady plodding -is more difficult than the mounting on wings or the running. We are entreated to walk worthy of our vo- cation, not as other gentiles walk, to walk ixi love, as children of light, to walk worthy of God, who !lath called us unto His kingdom and glory (Mahe iv, 1, 17a 'v. 9, 8; I. Thess. ii, 12). As to buying up the opportunities, if we had the zeal of unscrupulous business men, Who for their own gain-'enake corners ev- en in the , neceesaries .of life how much: might be accomplished in . the service of Christ?. 11 we Walked as Christ walked cr. John]], 6), all would be. well, but who is sufficient? Our sufficiency is of God (IL Cote 411175. L"Wherefare be ie not' unwis0, but understanding, whee the will of God is." It is not the will of God that any Shonid Perish, ,for Ile will have all to be saved and has made full provision for the same (II. Peter 111, 0; 1 Tine it, 4; John .16). When,. sinners aro 'saved, He desires that they should be holy and so ful- ly yield to Him that they may preve in daily life how good and ac- ceptable aad perfect. Ills will is (I. Thess. iv, 8; Rom. xii,. 1, 2). Our blessed Lord eould truly say "I seek not mine own Will." "I de- light te do, thy will, 0 my God" (John iv, 84; v, 80; vi, 88; Ps. xl, 8). 18, "Be not drunk with wine, whereiw is excess, but be filled with the Spirit." Drunkenness belongs te the untreitful Works of darkness; to be filled With. the Spirit is the privil- ege of every child -of light, Wine stleaulates and exhilaratee unna- turally, but the Holy Spirit stimu- lates supernaterany ; tbe one is for self, the other for God.' There is a, drunkenness that does not ttome from wine or strong drink. (Thrt, xxix, 0), but, is just, as much the Work of the adversary. Only that which is of and thrmerli :Cheitsit nitres .light and life ; all that is not of God causes stoner and drunkenness, and the maeifestation of the flesh • as God only eon give life, 'Se Goti only eau live in ete the life He desires; and He is pleased to do this by Tis tb-erefore, thenecessity of be-' ing filled with the %Melt by whom alone the life eau be'hved 19. "Speaking to yourselves in psalms and hymns and SPirittlS3 SOngS, Singing and inaldng melody in your 'heart to the Lord." -A drunken Men is apt to Intlke himself knOwe by his noisy talk or ribald song, but a, Spirit :titled person„ having . true meloclsr in. his heart, will .sing unto the Lord. Each proclaims, his mas- ter by that which collies from the abundance of his heart, To Col. iii, 10, we have the same result froze the word of Christ *Welling richly in ua ; therefore, according to ars axiofn which says that things that are equal to the same thing are equal to. one another, there is pro- bably some connection between being 'filled with spirit and filled with the word of ood. We know that the Spirit has written the word, and the Spirit is the weed, and the word of God, the Lord Jesus, is the embodiment and martifestation of -the written: word. If we would be lled 'by the Spirit and used by the Spirit, let us lay tip His word diligently in our hearts 'Meek. iii,. 10, 11), • • • 20. "Giving thanks always for all things unto God and the Father ia the name of our Lord jest's Ohrist.” In 1 'Mess. V, 18., it is written "In :everything give thanks; for this is the will of God in Christ .Tesus con- cerning you." How earnestlywe should covet -to be iilled with. ' the Spirit since he alone can live this holy and beautiful life, in us 1 who spared not His Own Son, but delivered Him up for us 'all, how shell He not, with Him; also freely give -us all things" (Rom. viii, 32), and since "Goa is love" and has so loved us, Ho cannot give es any- thing that is not love, so we will thank Him for all things if we be- lieve this. Mrs. Bottom° tells of two waiters whom she saw accident- ally jostle one. another, the -one thereby spillieg .sorne hot water on the other, , who meekly. replied, "Never mind, it is all in., the will:" A ,3ady whom I know told me • that having spilled a, .bottle of ink 'on her carpet she was able to take it meek- ly and as parte Of His will. • 21. "Submitting yourselves one to another in the fear of God." Some -one has said that submission is the highest inissiou on earth. higher than home or foreig,n missions and tlas,t unless one hasjearned it he is not fit for missionary service an.ywhere. In His life at 'Nazareth, in His baptism, in His public minis- try and in His sufferings our Lord fully Manifested This grace of - the Spirit. As we canonly show our love to God by our love to others; so we can only manifest true sub- mission to God by subMission to others. . TRAILING SKIRTS. --. They Are Absolutely Dangerous to Ladies cannel:It. b4aalttol'id too often to abandon the unhygienic fashion of trailing dresses, at least in the street. They should be brave and show the world. that they care 'for the health and welfare of others. When one considers hop many, lions of dangerous bacilli and micro- organisms are gathered up with the dust and brought in.to the. house .by this unhealthy mode of dress, further argument is hardly necessary to prove that the wearing of trains is absolutely dangerous to health. As the poet of the London Truth puts it in his "Song of the Skirt," why should dresses be made to do 'the scavenger's dirty work"; "Sweep -sweep -sweep - Where the waste of the street lies thick, Sweep -sweep -sweep - However our patli we-piek; Dust, bacillus, arid _germ, Germ, bacillus, and dust, Till „we shuddets and turn from the sorry sight With a gesture of. disgust. • . men with sisters dear! Oh, men who have well-dressed wives It is not alone an expensive mode, It is one that hazards lives! For malignant microbes swarm In the triturated dirt, And throevderess that sweeps it up maY p A shroud as *ell as et, skirt?" Footwear is also a matter of im- portance. Shoes should never be worn too tight. They not only hin- der free movements, but the eonstrie- tion of the blood vessels causes im- paired circulation and coldness"of the. extremities. If it is found hecessary to wear underwear at night, it different set should • be kept for that purpose, which, with the night-dress or night- shirt, should he well aired ..during. the clay -time, EASTER GIFTS. Now that the custom of giving Beater tokens has become general, there is quite a call for articles ap- propriate for the' occasion. "There are a few articles that, .while ihex- pensiVe, lire pretty. • Materials required are it few small round tays, such es grocers use• for butter, .green, brown and yellow tise sue paper, and diamond dyeof such colors tte you wiele ' Cut yellow tis- ste .paper into strips two end one- half inches 'wide, fold ad cut 01•06S- \VISO, leaving one-half limIi at eaciz edge to hold the fringe. With a little paste fasten a strip of fringe close to the .edge of the tray, then another strip it little tray.in- side, so that the fribge cover the pasted edge of the Jest rOW continuing until the tray is entirely covered. Crumple the fringe. eliedrely with the, hand, t� give it the ' ttpL pearanco of straw, and, your 'nest is ready for • the eggs. ' These mest Mat be boiled hard in clear water 151seohre it very little blee Pies:afoul dye in a sattcer of hot tvater then roll three Of. the eggs around in it, and they' will be it ioVely sky bItic. A nani;,),..'n. littLo sketch, et leas. **4•••44•44•••••••••+44•40•4•••••••••••••••,otolifycooy. ,. : . *, THE KING . v. . 4 a TH QUEEN ,ard ate' THE DUCHESS OFF DEVONS IRE. ; il emarkable Offer. vor Here is the best offer ever made in this community. By a very excellent ar- 0, rangentent made Witb the Family Herald and Weekly Star of Montreal we are ana,,,od to offer THE Barrett Tams and that greet Family Papier, the eq.• 4,Family il:‘^ald and Weekly Star, for one year for the email suet of 8145 nden • einlusid; a tobile ea.olficies„.:Oesrl,eiriy..r.three eeautifal premium pictures, of whieh the follow. g • • RING VII.--Trne to lift, a beautiful portrait size 18 x 43, 24 inehee on beautiful heevy white satin finished pa,perfor framing. This portrait • • has been 'taken since his tteceeeioa to the throne, and is the very latest and best * obteinable. It cannot be had except through the Femme Hayssen Arra 41 • • WeSIKLT STAU; each picture bears the Ring's autograph. This pieture ha e the • great merit of being the first taken after the Ring's accession, and has therefore \ te en historical yalue that no other picture can poseess. QUEEN ALE.KANDBA.-An exquisitely beautiful pleture of the remerk. • ably beautiful and goc 1 Queen Alexamlos, also taken since the King's „Accession ee to the throne. It is the Sehth size as that of the King, the two fortning a bend • - 04' some pair of pietures that alone would dell for many times the subscription price02 • .44 PlIo°,rpcantilit4loli'ethes. Xing and Consort taken at the see'ond or succeedin.g,sit. * tinge can have one fraction of tee value of the The ss go down to history. THE DUCHESS OF DEVONSHIRE. -The Renowned Gainsborough Pie- * ture. Sold at auction sale in Loudon tweetysilvyears ago for ;ea" * stolen by clever thieves, hidden for over twenty -fur years aucl delivered to its d, 4' owner on payment of $23,000 reward and sine° sold to M., T. Pierpont Morgan for 4t $7",000 4. Vats, in brier, is the 'lister), orone of the 'Grandam pictures, which, by a • elevei stroke" of enterprise, the publishers of the Family Herald have secured for * their subseribers. -rtie pleturc.4 L efIxtlein ten polours, rknd is'reprodueed line for • • liue, colour for colour with the original. Copies of the repreclutetion are now sold * '0 in New York City, 1Vlontroal and Toronto eor 512 each, and this Is the picture at -Family Herald subscribers are going to get absolutely freetogether with the Pictures of the King and Queen. Is that not big value? Call at Ten Thins Office and see samples • go: these beautiful pictures. You want Inn Been= Trsoss for the local news, and you want that • great paper the Family Herald for Ws 21 pages of general news and family - „• reading. Its agricultural pages. alone are worth many times the subscription X price. 1• 3Iing or send your subseription to ' o THE TIMES OFFICE. • • •••••••••••••••=9,44,0 40.,b • **0 0***********0$4....•"+ ‘174 IUMS,MIE :EP "No other Med cal Firm in the World has the established reputation for miring eSem and Wossaemthet Drs. K. dt K. enjoy. Their Now Method Treat- irneent, discovered endperfected hy th.ese almineut Specialists, has hrought joy., happiness and comfort to thousands of harem With 30 pears experience in the treatment of these diseases they can guarantee to Cure or siwo Pay-Exclis- afoot), Nervous Debility, as:91.2111.e, Varieeeele, titricture, Giant, Scores Drains, isupotsney, tie=ual mud Mental Weal -snows, tttd- ansiIcitladdlerf Diet:awes. Their guarautees are backed by sank Bonds. 9 a, 1 Ew' You may itave a Secret drain thronalt the twine -that's the reason you feel tired out in the morning. Yen are not rested. yoar kidneys ache, you feel despondent nd have no ambition. Don't let your 141e 3e1008 be drawee away. Drs. K. & K. guarantee to Care as no Pay. Bypitili, in the SO:large sf mankind. Itmay riOt be a reale to have it, for it may be inherited, but iris a crime to allow it to remain in the erstem. "Like father -- like ses• Beware of Mercury and Potase treatment. Drs. X..k 10. positively Mare the worst cases or no Pay. ICOCELE TRICTUR The New Mietbari Tr=tn..-nnt eifses these diseases safely and surely. No' pain-uo sufferinst--se eeteatiou from -business. Don't risk operation and ruin your, sexual organs. The sthicturs tiss;thth a'asor.b.ed and can nerck'keturn• Drs. IC. itt K. . . , guaranteecnres. ' Kidney crtt er Donn neglect emir kidneys. Your aching back tells the tale. Don't let Doctors experiment on you. Drs. 35. Sr 35. can cmce yottif you are not beyond human. aid. They guarantee -to Cure or No Pay. CURES Nt) CURE eito PAT. Conoultatiosa tsc,Ileoolto neat Froo, (sealed.) 'Write for Question 33liar431: for Pl-a+,47 Treat=ome. Everything Coniidontial. DRS: KENNEDY & KERGAR, 1413 SR Elan' STREEt , OrrrritinT, Mem 07ife:ni 4."4..t. V, V.,,,t,,,,;:faW„,g • ter greeting may be traced on the egg with a stick dipped in lard bee fore line; ,ere put into the dye bath, and it will remain white. -Place the btu* and white eggs in • the yellew neat, and it is 'dainty en- ough to please anyone.- Make eeste in the ewe: way ,of the green or - brown paper, and color :eggs 10 cbres trest• prettily. Little glete may be _made of egg shells which have been prepared by carefully breaking' the small end of the egg so that the contents may be poured' out. 'nem the edge of the shell as .eyenly as possible and bind it with a strip of gold paper pasted on. Use Iternala -floes to crochet a cover. Plain -open ,work • crochet or a feeey pattern may be used, Shaping it to fit the shell ; make a row of shells to finish the top. -Use Asiatic Witching silk of the same color for a draw strieg, making . a tiny how at each, side and leaving Lour strings to bang it up by. Tie them together about six inches from the top of the shell, with blue Roman floss or Asiatic twisted embroidery Baby ribbon may be used in place of the ASiatic couching silk, but is not quite as pretty to woek with and, the color cannot be so readily matched. Any color to suit the fancy may, be used and the ;little cases so ina,de, can ba used to held hairpins, matches, a -thimble, rings, etc,' FOR AN EASTER PARTY. The invitations sheik' be written on it ileavY cleality of light, old red cartridge parley, and tied with willow green.rope-silk, and sealed at the place of tying with Asap mahogatty sealing wax. Extending from the Upper left hand corner to the lower right hand corner in.. fancy lettering should be the words,. "Who will sing en 141a,ster carol ? 0, Pussy Vila Ion; 1" At the haft side, a little ohove the center, should extend e rOW of or seven cats, dove in crayon or 'water, colors, every sura ceeding eat en the right growing sins -010e. Below this in 'the open !pitlrc a uthwew iavitstion should be rit- cashould be a bonder of 'Glassy willow ani eat trate, done 111 oto oe water ceders around the The' paper should then be faded over to aim et the 5120, at very large postal et id the silk eord mat in place, the ' waX Put en and the address written ' on, the mite 'do "the ,bo tee 060V 0118 fib.0 ti 00 &Ca ,plissy-willoW and 'eat tails, [with lilies banked or inlardideres, J1 Inc ale° benests of. colored Cures Coughs, Colds, Lung and Bronchial affections that other remedies won't touch. Mit. Taos. j, SMITH, Caledonia, Ont., writes le" A yea.rago !bad a very severe cold which settled in my lungs and in my throat, so that I Could sc,arcely speak louder than a whisper. 1 tried several medicines, but gotito relief until I used one and a half bottles. of Norway Pine Syrup, which coma pletely cured me.' , .25c. a bottle or five for $i.ori, • • eggs, some downy chickens tutcl bits (cotton flannel . ones) in etilex- pected places, Refreshments natty be served as for any party. + • TO THIS ',END, Persietence is a great thing hi ad- vertising. Fighting' the campaign to the end, making success in spite of all obstacles, planning large sales with an assurance -of values in stock and conveying the impression se a desire -to .supply. the w ants Of the people tti, the right time it the right way, this is what ie necessary' to-utry to -morrow and every day, This 18 What .makesbusiness certainthis week, next weela all throegli the Spring and all .through the 'year. Keeping at it makes geenter sueeess possible. Neening at it ineeres the ,attention. of the hliyieg pub] ic, there are twenty chickens in a coop," said the teacher,. , and two were, missing one Morning, how manY.wduld you haver. "Well," Said the leading: rianat of the class, "it they were uty chickens to begin With rd. have eighteen: but it they wore ..•soinebOdy •else's I'd have only two.'.1