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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1902-4-3, Page 61.asentaannotani Genuine C tees tale Liver d11s0 I4fluet Bear Signature of See Feeeehedie Wrapper Teem. Vary visual sae. As easi to lake az eaaar. rqn REABACtig., FOS DIZZINISt ren RILIOUSRES-S. 1O TM LIVER. FRU CONSTIPATION. FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR Ira COMIPLEXION CARTEKS ITYLE 1 VER PI LLS. da. 7UXITC=1;14231rATt25:___;,,..4 OUR SICK HEADACHE. Strike the Iron While ifs Hol Take Burdock Blood Bitters This Spring is better advice. . During the -winter, heavy rich roods are necessary to keep the body warm; When the spring comes, the system is clogged. up with heavy gluggish blood; you feel tired, weary and listless and that all - one, no -ambition feeling takes possession of you. If you take Burdock Blood Bitters it will regulate your system, put you into zondition and make you feel bright, happy and vigorous. ...1Weet V= .:2,6=1,===tt==ellIZOLII ORN10-065 SYRUP I-Z4S AND SOOTHES Tita LEAKS Bil*Nta T et KES COUGMSUiP COW, (War OA 'A puz C E BAOKAOHE LAME SACK RHEUMATISM DIABETES BRIGHT'S DIREASE DIZZINESS AND ALL iDN Ev & URINARY OISEA868 CUF.IED 8V Mits. I. STESVEllt, Edgett's Land- ing, N.B., "vvrites on Jail. is, Igor : •" In the fall 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. 1 took one box, of Doan's Kidney Pills and was completely cured1 have not been troubled with it since*" KINDNESS OF THE GOSPEL The Spirit of Love Should Enter Into Our Business Enterprises. Rename moraine to Sot of the Perlientent ot ()amide. la the year one Thome& Niue lime tired and Two, by maim reale m Toronto, et the Depsrtmeut of Agrienituto, Otto:ire.) • A despatch from Washingt.oe says: —Rev. Dr. Talmage preached from the following tel:—i. Timothy, iv 8, "Godliness is profitable uato things, having promise of the life that nolo is and of that which is to eonte." • There is a gloomy and passive way of waiting for events ler come upon ute and there is a heroie way of go- ing out to meet them, strong in. Clod and fearing. nothing. When the body Of eatiline was found oa the -battle- his intellect goes into a bedwa.rang field it was found far le advitece of. process. So far from that, religion all his troops and among. the enemy, will give new brilliancy to the Intel - and the best way is net far us to loot, new strength to the imagine -a leou, new TOree to the will and wider swing to all the intellectual faeulties. Christianity is the greet central fig- ure al: which, philosophy has lighted its brightest torch. The religion of Christ is the fountain out of which learning hasdipped its 'clearest draft. The Helicou. poured forth no such inspiring waters as those which Dem from under the throe° of God clear as cryetal. Now, 1 continent' godliness as the best •mental diseipline; ' better than belles lettres to purify the taste, better than mathematics to harness the mind to all intricacy and elabor- ation, bettee than loo.''-ic to marshal the intellectual forcesfor onsot and victory% it will go with IIngh Mil- ler and show him the footprints of the Creator in the, red sandstone, it smiles!: you are 0.11 willing 10 will go with the •botanist and show admit that godliness is important in him celestial glories encamped under the curtain of a water lily. It wilt go with the astronomer on the great heights where Cod shepherdsthe great dock of worlds that wander on the hills: of heaven answering his voice as be calls them by their names. Again T renuirk that godlieees is profitable for one's dist ositiort. Lord Ashley, before he went into a. great battle, was heard to oiler this pray- er: ."0 Lord I shall be very . busy to -day 1 If 1 forget thee, forget me not." With such a Christian disposi- tion as that a man is independent of all circumstances. Our piety will have a tinge of our NATURAL .TEMPERAMENT. If a. man be cross and our and fretful. naturally, after he becomes a hearse and a religion of the: cemetery Christian he will always have to be who have no appreciation ofeit armed against tho rebellion of those ion for the . bank, for -Um farm, for evil inclinetions. .13ut religion has the factory, for the wareheuse, fo:r tented abe, wildest natures. It has the jeweler's shop. for the office._ turned fretfulness into geatitude, Now, while I • would not throw any. despondency into • good cheer: and slur on a post-mortea those :who were bard and 1 ungovern- able aud uncompromising have been want to -day to eulogize an ante- mortem religion A. religion that- is I made pliable- and conciliatory, flood of no use to yon while you live will I resolution, reformatoryeffort, will not effect the change. 11 takes a be of no use to you when you die. "Godliness is profitablueto •ate 'mightier 'arm and a mightier hand- - e things. having promise -of the life to bend evil habits than the hand Ithat bent the bow of Ulysses,' and that now is as well as - or that • ale it takes a stronger lasso than ever- . whieh is to come." And I have held the b•uffalo on the prairie. ways noticed that when grace is -very Again I remark that religion is low in a inat's -heart. he .M1:firs a great deal in prayer meetings about good for worldly business. 1 know the general theory is -tbe mere busi- deeths and about coffins and about ness the less reagion, the more re - have noticed that the healthy Chris - thought Dr. Hans, in his "i3iography thee, the man who is living near to of a Christian Merchant" when he God and is -on -the struight road to says : "He grew .in grace the last heaven, is full of jubilane s-atisrac- six years of his life. During • those lion and talks about the ditties. of this life, understanding well that if ' six years he had more business . crowding. him than at any other od helps hint to live right he will time." • in other words, the more help him to (lie right. worldly business a. man has the more Now, ie the first place, I remark opport tinily to serve God. that godliness is good for a man's Now, religion will . hinder your physical health. I clo not mean to business if it be. a ' bad business say that it will restore a broken ' if it be a good business wrongly :down constitution or, drive rheumate or conducted. -If -you tell lies behind ism from the limbs or neuralgia from teethe counter, if • : you. use false the temples Or pleurisy from weights and measUres, if you put elide, but I do menu to say that it sand in sugar and beet juice in vine - gives one such habits and pets one gilt: and lard in -butter and sell for in such condi tiou as (1,30 most favor- able'for physical 133101111. That 080 tititt hthat WlliCh IS aitne0rtfle110- er and that I 'avow. leVerybody 1111 ng with trate bpsiness. bet a . lawful knows ' -that buoyandy of -spix•R is husinesi; lawleity Conducted, will good physical advantage.. . • fled the retie -ion of the Lord Jesise GLOOM, UNREST, ine.)TeCTION, • • e Christ its mightiest auxiliary. are et war witil every pulse- I • Religioa will give an equipoise of tion of the heart and ' ev- spirit. It wilt keep .you from ebulli, eey respiration or the lungs. They tionS . of temper, and you know a lower the vitality and slacken the great many fine businesses haVe been circulation, white exhilaration pours 1 blown to atoms by bad temper. It . the very balm of heaven through al1. will keep you from worriment .about the currents of life. The sense of in- frequent loss; it will keep you in- sincerity which sometimes hovess dustrious and prompt; it will keop over an unregenerate man or pounces you back from.squandering and from. upon him with the blast of ten thou- dissipation ; it will give you a kind - sand trumpets of terror is most de- pegs of spirit which willr be easily plating cied most exhaitsting. while .distiriguished from that mere stare ehe feeling that al' are woekieg to- -courtesy which :shakes hands violent - gather for citie good mid for our le" with you, asking about the health everlasting welfare is conducive of of your family when there is no physical health. anxiety to know. whether your child You will observe that godliness in- is well or sick, but tbe aexiety is duces industry, which is the found t- to know how many dozen cembric time of good health. There is no law pocket -handkerchiefs you will take of hygiene that will keep a lazy and mail well. Pleurisy will stab hien, PAY • OASIT -DOWN. • • miss is profitable unto all things, having elle promiseoi lee lire that now is as well as of • that which Is to collie." So if you, start oue two men in the world With equal PhYsical health, and :• then orie of them shall get the religion or Christ in his heart and, the other shall not got it, the one: who becomes a son Or the Lord Almighty will live the louger, "With long Life will I satisfy him show my salvation." Again I remark that godliness is good for the intellect. 1 Jamey some have supposed that its as soon as a moat enters late the Christian life lie . down and let the events .el lire trample over us, but to go forth in a Christian spirit determieed to con- quer. You are -expecting- prosperity, and 111231 deterinined SO far as .I have - anything to do witt it, that :you Shall not be disappointed, and,. therefore, I propose, aS Cod may help me, to project upon your at- tention a 11031' element. of sueeess. Yoe have in the business ilem frugality, patience. industry, perseverance, ee- onomye-a, very Strong business firm —but there needs to be one member added., mightier than them all, teed not a, silent .partner, either, the one introduced . by my text., "Godliness, which is profitable unto all -things, havieg the promise or the lies 'alai noW 18. well as of that Which is to come." its eternal relations, but perhaps some of you Say, "All 1: want is an opportunity to say a prayer before I die, told all will be well.'' There aro a geent many people who suppase that if they cart finally get safely out of this world they will have ex- hausted the entire advantage of oue holy religion. They talk as though religion were a mere NOD OF RECOGNITION which We are to give to the Lord Jesus on our way Up to a hea- venly mansion; as though it were an admission ticket, of no use ex- cept to give at the door or heaven. And there are thousands or people who have great admiration for a re- ligion of the shroud and a religion or the coffin and a religiou or the erysipelas Will burn 111111, jaundice will discolor hiru, gout wiii ,,,,,,,„1,, It will iirepare you for the practical ph.;;Z:,', duties of everyday I ire. 1 du not him, and the intelligent '''''` mean to .ay that relig,ion will make will not prescribe antiseptic or rebri- us financially rich, but :C do say fuge or aeodyne, 'but sews and ham - that it Will give us, it Will assure US niers and yardsticks and crowbats of, a comfortable sustenance at the and piclaixes. There is no such thing start, a comfoetable subsistence all as good physical condition without , positive work or some kind, although the way through, and it will help us 1 you should sleep on down of swan to direct tho batik, to manage the or ride in carriage of softest uphol- traffic, to conduct all our business /natters and to make the most story or ha-ve on your table all 1he luxuries that were poured from the wine vats of Ispahan end Shiraz, Our religion says: "Away , to the bank, away to the field, away to the shop, away to tho fettory! Do Nome- thieg that will enlist all the energies of your body, mind and sold!" "Dil- igent in business, fervent in spirit, serving. the Lord," while epon tho bare bach of the idler and the drone comes doWn the sheep lash of the ap- ostle as he says, "If any elan will not work, neither shall he eat," Oh, how important in this day, when so much is said about anttioney and physiology and therapeutics and cionie neat style of medicine is ever and anon smingiug upon the World, that you shoula understaed that the higheet eehool of medicine iS the scrtooi, 03.3, 11/1/,.11 declare$ that "godlie significant affair of our life a, matter of vast importance, glorified by Christian 'principle. How can you get along without tine religion ? Is your • physical health so good you do not want this divine tonic ? Is your mind so clear, so vast, so comprehensive, that you do not went this divine inspiration ? Is yout. worldly busi- ness so thoroughly established that you have 110 use for that, religion which has been the help and deliver- ance of tens of thousitads of men in crises of worldly trotible ? And if what 1, have said is true theu yeti see What a fatal blender it is when a nun adjoin -Its to life's expiration the uses of religion. A roan who poetpones religion to sixty years of ago gets religion fifty„yearte tOo late. Ire May get into the Itiegdoin of, Clod by final eepentanee, but What can einupeesate him for a whole Mettle() unalleviatoei and uneolelfeeted ? You want religion to -day in the trainieg of that ellild. You will want re- ligien LO -Morrow in, dealing with that eustom(9e YeaWailted religion yesterday to our]) your teMper, Is your arm stroug • enough to beat your way through the iloode ? Carl you without .being: int:need. in 'the mail of God's eternal help, e•o foeth amid the, assaitlt, of all 'toll's sharp- shootere ? Cellyou walk • elone aeross these "crumbling graves and aertid these gaping earthquakes Can you, waterlogged and nicest Shivered, outlive the gale ? 012, how many there have been who, postpon- ing the religion of Jesus Christ, have plenged into mistakes they never could. correct, although they lived sixty years after, and like ser- pents crushed undet• cart wheel's dragged their mauled bodiee under the rooks to die. So tbese men have fallen under the wheel of awful cal- amity', while a: vast multitude . of others have talon the religion. of .3 esns 'Christ iato e l'eryclay lite and, first, ia practical business affairs, and, second, ou the throne of heti- :realer triemph, have Illustratecl, while ameels lookaci on and a uni- verse appi.oeed., the glorious truth. thet "godliness is profitable urtto ell things, having the pt•innise of the life wilich now is es welt as of that which, is to -come." • THE S. S. LESSON, INTERNATIONAL LESSON, APRIL 6. Text of the Lesson, Acts ix., 1-20 • .Golden Text, iii., 19. • Saul yet breathing out threatenings and slaughter against the disciples of the Lola]. What art evil breath he had! The word translated -htes,thing out" is used only this once and means to breathe he or out, to breathe, to live. His very life was to hate Christ and Cltristians, and yet thQ 'limo came when he could truly say, 'For Me to live is Christ" (Phil. i, 21). Out• first ititroduction to him is in chapters Vii 58; vill, 1, 8, iu connection with the death of Stephen and the persecution following, which ist this time was still going on. Saul'S oWn 31,00011111 of his life in those days is retied in chapters xxii, 8, xxvi, 9-11; Gel. i, 13, 1.4., but ill -.1431).11. lie 1-3. he speaks or it all as being muter the prince of the power of the air. 8, 4. Saul:, Saul, why- persecetest thou me? Thus spake Jesus of Nazareth to him in the • Hebrew language (xxvi, 14) and arrested him in his mad career. for Clod had determined cola cerning him, , "Hitherto shalt thou come,, bet: ne further" (Job xxXviii, 11 . ). Whoever touches a Christictie teaches Christ Himself, • but not Or- en the •devil can go 0110 step. beyond (iod's peemissioa (Job. i, 10; Dan. iv, 85; Zech. •11, 8). Though it was midday, this light from heavell was above the brightness of the sureeeind Saul could not see for the .glo?';'s,' of that l•ight (xxvi, 18; xxii, ). 5, 0. The Lord said, I am Jestat, h 0.0 ti perSeelltest. He recce-a:lees a superior end askS, "Who cat Thou, Lord?" '17lie an- swer him • with trembling and astoeiShMent, ror Jesus or Nazareth is actually speaking to him. Seeing Him to be indeed • the Christ, the Messiah, Whom• the prophets had foretold, he at once acknowledges Ulm as Lorci and meekly asks what he is uow to do. Thus suddenly shall Israel as a nation be surprised sonic day, and, looking upon Him whom they pierced,' they .shall be fill- ed• with 1.1.-013 peuitence and, accept- ing 'Him as their long -expected Mes- siah, shall say:' "Lo, this is rrur Clod. We have waited for Him, and He will save us" (Zech. xii, 10; Isa. xxv, 9). Saul's conversion was a. pattera or type ,of the conversiem the natren. (I. Tim: a 1(3). 7-9. He was three days williceit sight and neither did eat nor drink. The, men what •weee with hien fell, to the earth, seeing the light and being :Afraid. They also heard the voice of some one speakieg, but eild noi hear the words, for those were for Said only. Compare xxii. 9; xxvi, 11. It was somewhat like tile eXperitMe0 of Daniel and of 02131Lord as ,recorded in Dan. x, .7; John xii, 28, 29. • That Saul really Saws Jesus iS evident from verse 17 and 1. Cor. xv, 8. 'What Jesus said to Said aS Ile commtuided him to rise ancl stand upon hie; le'et is fully stat- ed in Paul's testimony before .Agrip- pa in. xxvi, ie -:i8. Consider him three days lined • and fasting, the world slint out, :the body mortified, dying to self, Coddealing with his soul. It is the period of death .pre- ceding resurrection (0011. xxii, '4 ; •elle 17; Jonah ii, • 11; I-Tos. ti, 2; john ii, 10; Rev. xi, 11). 10-12. Inquire in the house of ;Tu- bas for one called, 8au1 er 'Tarsus, for, behold, he •prayeth. Thus said. the: Lord to Ananias, a devOtit disciple and one who had a good report of all the Jews at Da- maseits (xxii, 1.2j',' • Die,. like Philip. in a previous lesson, is prompt and obedient, one on whom the Lerd could rely to do „His biddingilis renly reminds Of' Samtlel • and Isaiah (I Hain, 121, 4, 6, 8; 10 ; Isa. vi, 8). 'Tbeie three daYs find Said and his Lord in inthliatecome mimication. • Saul, . talks with the ford, and the Lord in vision vevaals Himself more fully to Saul. From Jesus Christ by revelation he receiv- ed the gospel and from Him also all • future instruction (Gal. 1, 11, 1(1, 1h). ea -1 A. •Ho' is a chosen vessel 011tO 3110 1 0 bear my nanie. Ananias hesitates .just a little as be t hi lilts 01 8ttel'e ' reputation and authOrli,Y and J118 • madness against Christ i ans. The Loid graelOUSly bears with Ananias in his objections, but repeats Ins co/tuna/Id to go arid assures him that Said is to be His rspeciel messenger to the gentiles. One Would think that lite Lord's first ASsUranee to Anroins that the perseeu Ler was praying wOuld have been sufficient encouragenfent, but We are so slow to expect Wonders from Mai whose earrie ie 11/011001 ltd $aut is not only chosen. to bear the mime of Christ, but also to suffer, for faitheulaese to Christ and sue - feting fee Hie ealro are inseparably conaected ia this present evil age, while the whole world lieth in the wicked One (Gal. 1, 4( I joint v, 19, E. V.) See also John )(v, 18, ; xvi, 33; Philip. a 29; II run il, 402; iii. 12, but be encouraged by Rona viii, 18; 1 Cote x, 13, • 17-20. Receive thysight ane , be with the Holy Ghost • • Time said Ananias to Saul, as, having found him just where the Lord maid he would, he put his hande upon, him and told of the Lord'e commisston. He received sight, both natural and spiritual, eon -festive/ Christ in baptism, • took food for -the body and was strength- ened and • immediately prectched in the synagogues that .Jesus of Naza- • reth is tho Cie.ist, the Son of God. Old things are passed away, all thing e aro become now, the Spirit has clothed • Himself- with Saul (el wig, vi, 84, R. V., margin) and' now henceforth he does but one thing, knows but ono lefaster, aud for Him is reedy to lay down hie life. DR, DOYLE'S GOOD WORDS, ---- • WHAT HE HAS TO SAY ABOUT THE BRIT/SR SOLDIER. Pro -Boer Slanders Against tho Troops arid Administration • Contradicted. Slanders against the coaduct of the• individual British soldier in South Afeice, and false accusations in regard to the general 'administra- tion are ably refuted by Dr. A. Conon Doyle in his latest book on the war. "1 went to South Africa with great sympathy for the iudividual 'Boer," Si1.3!S Ii,,s ilulhor. ''1 was three months in Bloemfontein when there were from ten to thirty thousand men encamped rowed the tome. Dur- ing that time.1 only once save a man '1 oncc heard of a soldier striking. a Boer. It was 'because Die man had refused to raise his hat at the burial of the soldier's comrades. I not only never SatY' ally outrage, but in many Confidential talke, with officers . never heued of one. •• "1 saw . twenty Boer prisoners ewtliesin five minutes of their capture,. The soldiers were giving them cigar - "Only two assaults on women came to my ears. while I was in Af:t'jea. In each case file culprit was Kathr, andthe deed was promptly avengedby the 33ritt9...army." REPUGEE MORTALITY. Ofthe formation of the much -talk- ed • of • concentralion camps,. ' Conan:Doyle says that the 'British had a choice of three courses. '12he,Brst 4i,,it8 to send 'the Boet• women end children into the Boer lines—a course which becalm im- possible when the Boer army -broke into scattered bands and had no longer any definite lines; the second was to leave them where they were ;. the third was to gather them to- gether •ancl care for them as best we c0111tIc1. 18.YOUIDED MOTHER LOVE. • Tho Boer women themselves are eo blame for the deplorable mortality among the children from • measles. They refUsed to allow them to the quarantined. 'Boer mothers, with a natura1 in- stinct, preferred to cling to their ehildren and to make it dillienit • for the medical men to reMOVO theth in the first stages ef the disease. The' result was a rapid spread or the epi- demic, whieh was the more .fetal as 121a1131 of the sufferers were in lot, health owing to the privations, line avoidably . endured in the journey from their own • homes to elite camps." . • BOER kunDniw. The authoe has investigated and proved cases of the Boer abuse of •thee Whiee gag, the plundering caul ..ehoet- ing. BritishWeuturted,• and the sys, tematic murder of Kafiles. He ([11 0165 •t he actual, e.xperi mice • of LanCe-CoVpOriti al; rits- pan• — 'netting wo word outnumbeeed and 'resistance honeless, we• threw down our arms and held our hands up. Pte. Blunt, Wbo was with me, shout- ed `floret• shoot me, 13ae-0 throwa down my rifle.' ' The Doers then shot Pte. Blene dead. He ;was holding his hands above his head 'at the time. LicuL Mair • then shouted, •111itVe mereee yo (2015131 118:" 9112c Boers • then deliberately 131206- vent. Mate dead as he Was standieg with his hands above his head,. Then ' they shot at • Ptes: Pearse and ITarvey, who were both standing with their hands up, thesame ballet hilting P10. rearse in the, nose, and. killing. Ili;101'Ev7itr• '11ESERVATION,C.-3. Br. Conan Boyle's suggeetion for settlement la to forni a Beer reeerve- tion 111 the • northern :Imre of. the Transvaal, like the Indian reseritii- tiOn. in Athol -lea_ "Guaraetee the1fle. as long as they remain peaCeableun- der the 'British flag, complete• pro" •tectioe • irohe the • 11222181012. Of the miner ' the prospector,: . Let tbene bee their own lives intheir own 22. 131 With some simple forte of home rule of their" own. , The .irrecoecilable niezt who cciuld never rub shoulders with the British : could find 0, home there, and the British colonies WoulCl he all ehe stroeger for the placing in querentin 6 of those who Might 'in- fect 'their neighbors with their own, ,bitterriese. . Without , scene such plan the eMpire Will' have no 'Safety -valve in Smith Africa. The work iS at °nee a. defence, and an explanation—a defence of British policy; British • soldiers, and the British -treatment of the Boers ; att explanation of the charges' . which have been eireulated. In fereign ,e02.111- t31e2. by emissaries, of Oa lac :Boor oevernment, Dr. D071.0 has -prePared teltie pamphlet as a gilt to the peo- afin of the 'empire (1(1(1 19 receivinz profit fromlIS publieatien. it has been trail/dated ieto all the Euro- pean langeogete and le -being Widely el:mule-Led ite every eiviiieed country, • 1:040.4.0•40.+444.44•4•4.444:40.4.....44.44.00,4,9*,91npv. THE KING, THE QUEE THE DUCHESS OF DEVONSHIRE.' 4, t Iti ::Here is the best offer ever made in this community. By a very excel lent ar- t rangpment made with the Family Herald and Weekly Star of Kontreill we are to offer Tun EXNrBa Tams and that great Family Paeor, the 0^ .‘ Family ileeeld and Weetly Star, for one year for the small mini of $1.75 and in- tictliugdies toa beraieeht 4se,s'o‘sreivri;br.. three beautiful premium pictures, of whit% the folkeee ee t' KING EDWARD VIT.—True to Ufa, a beautiful portrait size 18 x 4...e. 24 inehes, on beautiful I, eavy white satin finished paper for framing. This portrait 42 has been taken since his Accession to the throne, and is the very latest and best 11.' obtainable. It cannot be had except through the Peelle's. HltBALD AND .41, Witizaer STAit; melt ploteire beam the King's autograph, Tlrls picture hae tho .. great merit of being; the first taken after the King's aeoession, and has therseoro 0 on historicial value that no alter picture eau possess. : QUEENALEKANDRA.--An exquisitely bee,ettful picture of the rani ark. : . ably beautiful andgoc 1 Queen Alexandra, abso taken sinee the King's =melon 0 to the throi• throe. It s the same siee as that of the King, tbe two fottehig a hand- le some pair of pietares that alone would sell for many times the subsoripMon prlee . ofpKing and Consort taken at the second or seeeeediegiesIS• .:4; t ingavspoetudro calioati;arl:pei ticeot,iirlett.efh:ne. ot,ion of tne value of the first. The a ge down to history. I THE DIICFIESS OF DEVONSHIRE.—The Renowned Gairtsboeougla Pio. .0 tura Sold atauction sale in London twenty-tive years ago for, duc000, 40, stolen by clever thieves, hidden for over tweaty-four years told delivered, to its •. „vr owner on payment of $25,000 reward and since sold to WI: J. Plerpent Morgan for t, 8. $75,000. in brief, is the history of onm e of the premiupictures, which, by a t elevex stroke of' enterprise, the publishers ot the Family 1121111(1 have secured for their subscribers. The picture is 22x23 in ten colours, and ia reproduced Hue for O line, colour for colour with the original. Copies of the reproduction ere now sold `r in New York City, Montreal and Toronto for $12 eaeh, and this is the picture e Family a erald subscribers are going to got absolutely free together with the 4, esi, pictures of the King and Queen. 4 fil• Is that not big value? Call at Tits Tamil Office and see sampleS . of these beautiful pictures. . 0 You ,watic The EXJ0Sit TEAMS for the local news, and you want that t great paper the Family Herald for it's 24 pages or general news and family ilir.. reading. Its agricultural pages alone are worth many times the subscription ' • tlie I'm • . lartstg or send .your subscription to 43 : THE TIMES OFFICE.. t • 4. z 0.4.4.4....o..........44o..4.4•44so44**4.4..4,$404*****.04+.34 _ • • • 3:44r 4D to • 43 • • A A, A Re arhable Offer. and COIF Air 1i2918K ,1 AR,IC STRICTUA CELE No other disease is so prevalent among, men as Varicocele. As it interferes with the nutrition of the sexual organs it produces emissions, loss of semen through the urine', decay of the organs, pains in the loins, aching in the back, tiervousneso, des- pondency, bashfulness, palpitation of the hea.rt, constipation, and a comb.nation ci these results in complete LOSS of Manhood. Thousands of young middle- aged meu are troubled with Stricture. If you have reason to believe , en are affitcted with it, don't neglect it It will ruin you. Don't let doctors exp.ri -lent on you by cutting, stretching or tearing it. Our New Method Treatment dissolves the stricture tissue hence it disappears and can never return NT Lure Varicocele and Stricture without operation or loss of time. The treatmen ma.. be taken at home privately. Send for our free Illustrated Book on varicooele, •Stricture and elect. We guarantee to Cure or No Pay. Ki i e s & 1a er • Y., •Anse:teat complaints affect these organs, hence-the,lcirtheys area great source of disease. Have yon aching or weakness over the small of the back, tendency to urinate frequently*, deposit in urine, coldness*of hands or feet, a drovrey feeling in the inc.rning. Don't neglect your kidneys. Our Now Method Treatment is guaeanteed to cure any disease of these organs 02 00 pay. 21281 -No Names Used Without 'Written Consent. 31 O. W. Rowe, of Jackson, Mich., says:—I 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. N. St K. The enlarged veins disappeared in Six weeks, the stricture tissue was removed in eight weeks and nip sexual energy and vitality rettirned so I was a man in every respect. I recommend you doctors with my whole heart." CURES GUARANTEED. NO CURE NO PAY. Before Treatment, After Treatment. esan••••••••••••* We treat and cure Nervous Debility. Lost Manhood, VariCocele, Stricture, Syph- ilis, Gleet, Weak Parts, Gonorthrea and Unnaterat Discharges. Consultation Pre°. Books rree. Write for Question Ifist for Home Treatment. Ors5 nnedy &!Coma% 148 SHgLEY STREET, DETROIT, EVIICH. 41§:1 -VA 31. Ke::SE zWlf .1V86.' %KAM r2,1 The publishers ' are open to recces -o. funds to promote its publication. it •may be had of all booksellers at the cost 61 production, which is tea cenes.: e+ PRECEDENT. : A -clever answer in court NVIIS that given to Chief :rustic() C oleri dge years ago when he was defending a lady Who ,lind bec,onee a Sister of Mercy. and was -expelled from • the convent for refusiug to obey the rules, She had brought all actio n Tor ex- paleion and libel. In the course of the trial Coleridge assumed that breaches of discipline are. I vielal, coutemptible, and should never be noticed. • e'What lure Miss Sawin done?" he asked Mrs.. ICennecly, a mistrese of novices. .."Woll," said the lady, "she has, for exseple, eaten strawberries." , "Eaten strawberries? .What harm is there .in that?" 'It was forbidden; sir,"• said Mee, Kennedy. • • "But Mrs Kennedy. what -trouble was likely to come from eating strawberries?" ''Well, sir," said Mrs, Keitnedy, "you might as well ask what trou- ble was likely to come from eating an ripple; an(1 yet we • know what trouble did come from it." That closed the discussion. • TOLD I -TIM 'IN CONFIDENCE. In a certaii isoiated 'village in lengland there is a congregation wbich is not characterized by lavish liberality. Time after time the Min- ister has eainly appealed: to his peo- ple to contribute more generously to the Snide of the church, The mem- bers indeed gave somothieg, but it was nearly always the smallest sil- • ver !min of tile realm that wits plac- ed in the plate. A shrewd Scot Who had recentr ly gone to the place and joined the church was not lorig 'before he no- ticed the state of affairs, and a re- medy soon suggested itself to his peactical mind. "I'll ten you what," ho said to ,one of the officials, "if 1/00 nuile MO trecteuree, 14.1 engage to double tho. colleetionx in three Months,' ' His offer was promptly aceepted; end ;sure, 10 1 eglt the collections be- gan to incvease, until, by the lime he had stated they were nearly tW tee ael ninth as formerly,2. "ITow have 'you managed it, Mr. Sauderman?" said the pastor to him. one day. "It's rt great eccret," returned the Scot„ "but I'D tell you in contheence.. The folk, ['83115,' maistly geve three- penny bits: Weel, when I got the inoneY every Sabbath evening, I carefully pickedoot the swine .coins end put them by; Noo; as there's. - Only a• limited number o' the tbree- • penneapleces in a little place like tbis, and 1(131 have 21111181. of them, at present ender lock and key, the folk maun give saxpences, cut least, instead. Sae that's the way the col- lections aro doubled." And the pastor wont away dectee- ing that every Scotsmen wits a born financier, .1 REDEEMING TRAIT. • . . Mrs. nattersoe—"Don't you think Mrs. Polkadot is an awful gossip?" Mrs. Hatt erson—`rillay be so. But there's one good thing about her. She nevc.r tells anythin5 about city - one -that there isn't some truth in.", • cubic foci of snow, when melted, make 1 cubic foot of water. STRONG AND VIGOROUS.. Every Organ of the Body Tuned up and invig,orated by Mr. P. W. Meyers, King St. t., Ont., says: " I suffered for five years with palpitation, shortness of breath, sleeplessness and plin in the heart, hat ono box a ilifilburn's Ireart and Nerve Pills completely removed all thette tensing syniptoms. I have nob suffered since taking thorn, and now sleep well and fool strong and vigorous." Milbnrn's I/enrt and Nerve PilIs ears all disliases ;Ageing from weak heals, Worn Oat nerve tissue, or watery blood,