Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1902-4-10, Page 2SOLUTE 11111% Genuine Ct rt,r's Little Liver Pills. Must Doerr Signature of See Pace51re110 'Wrapper Below. Vievy swain ea az nosy te take as Eattgas. 'FON NEADACIIL RH DIMNESS.: FOR SILIOUSIIEO., FON ,TORPIO LIVE% flfl CONSTIPATION: 'FON SALLOW SKIN. FOR TNE COMPLEXION' Urals risirefl" TePt-°12ets‘ihrshse. CARTEKS PLL CURE SICK-HEAPAOHEo 011 MY litkal llowjT ACHES! . Nervous Bilious Si4c Periodical Spasmodic HEADAC ES. Headache is not of itself a disease but is generally caused by some disOrder of the stomach:liver or bowels. ,,, • - Before you can be cured, you must remove the otrase. BURDOCK BLED BITTERS will do it for yon. 1 i It regulates the stomach, liver awl bowels, purifies the blood and Jones up the whole system to full health and vigor. ' _—:.....;..;.;;;.;...i'..; THE tHattlati AVM OP 0011ITS KIDNEY PILLS The original kidney specific for the cure of Backache, Diabetes, Bright's Disease and all Urinary1. Don't accept something just as good. 'See you get the genuine ! ISAPPOINTMENTS OF LIFE. The 'Vitiate Hairs of the Aged Show 'Where Trouble Alighted. a/Meree evroreiott te4g ot the Pertiereant tit osesee..in the yilPir OW) aseessua Nine th,ed ann Two, 10 WUUi 3411y, al Toronto, re the Daparttaaut Ot Agriculture, Ottawa.) A despatch trout Washington says : —Rev, Dr, Talmage preaeheci from the font/Wing text xxviii, 27, 28 : "For tho /itches are not threshed with a threshing, inetiet- ment, neither is a cart who turned about upon a cumuutn, but the 'itches are beateu out with a statf and the eumutin with n. rd. Broad corn is bruised because he will not ever be threshing it." iklieforteines of various kinds come eipou various people, and in all times the great need of 111nel:3i-tine people out of a hundred is solace. Look, then, to this neglectea alle- gerg of 1,1Iy text. There are three kinds of seed men-- tioned—litthes, cunniiin Mad corn. Of tho last we all know. 13ut it may he woll to state that the fitches and the cummin Were smali seeds, like tho caraway or the chickpea. When these grains or herbs were to be threshed, they were thrown on the floor, and the workmen would conic around with staff or rod or flail and beat them until- the FOOCT aroufdbe separated, but when the corn wns to be threshed that Was thrown on the floor, and the men would fasten oxen or horsea to a cart' with .irondented wheels; that cart would be drawn around the threshing floor, and so the work woald bo adeompteihed. Different. ;Uncle, et threshing for (M- ime -at products. The fitehee are not threshed with a threshing inetrument neither is a. cart wheel turned tbout upon the cunimin, but the 3tehesaro beaten out with a staff and the cum - min with a rod. Bread corn is bruised hecauee he will not ever be threshing, it." My subject, in the iirst place, teaches vs that it is 110 compliment to us HOLD ON PPR:OVER, ood comes along with some thresh - lug trouble and betas us loose. We started imder the delusion that this was a g'reat world, We lcarried Out of our -geography that it was so Many thousand miles in diameter •and se many miles in .circumference, ancl we . said, "Oh, my, what a World." Trouble mune in after life, and this trouble sliced off one Part Of the World and it has got to be a smaller worldand in same Ostia mations . a very insignifietuit world. and it is depreciating all the time as a spiritual pronerty. Ten per pent. aLT, 50 per cent. off, and; there /11'0 thOSO Wilt) wonlit not give ten cents, Soy this world—the entire world—as a, soul pOssession. • Another thing my text tnaches us is that Christian sorrow is go- ing to have a sore terminus. My text says, "Bread corn is bruised beet:lase • he will not b over threshing it." Blessed be 'God rfio,urritl,hofilli.;! Polled away, flail! 0 wheell Your work will soon be done, "Ho will not be ever threshing it!" Now, the Christian has almost as much 'use in the organ for thestop tremulant as he has for the trumpet. but af- ter awhile he will, put the last dirge into the portfolio forever. So much of us as is wheat will be separated from so much as is chaff, and there will be no inore need of poundiog. They never my in heaven because they have nothing to cry about. There are no tears ofbereavement for: you shall' have your friends all around about you. There are no tears of poverty because each one sits at the Rang's table and has his own chariot of salvation and free access to the wardrobe where prioces get their array. No tears of sick- ness, Tor there are 'no peeumonias in the au'', and no malarial exhalite IP WE ESCAPE GREA.T TRIAL. l Lions from the t•olling river of The fitches and the eimunin on one ' life and 110 cruteh for the lame limb and to splint for the broken arm, but the pulses throbbing with the health of the eternal God in a climate like our Jane before the blossoms • fall or our gorgeous ta: tober BE'FORE THE LEAVES SCATTER, threshing Door might look :over to the corn on another threshiug floor and say, "Look at that poor, miser -- able, bruised corn ! We have only been a little pounded, • but that has beeit'alinost destroyed." 'Weil, the corn, if it had lips, would all:slyer and say: "Do you know the reason why you have not been as much Is there not enough salve in this pounded as I have ?. it is because text to Make a, plaster large en - you are not of so much worth 0.0 1 OUgh to heal all your w000ds? am. If you. were, you would be as 'When a. child is hurt the mother severely run, over." Yet there are is very apt to say to it, "Now, men who suppose they are the Lord's it will soon .feel better." And that favorites -simply because their barns is what God says whoa Ile =bow are full and their bank account is oms all our trouble in the hash of dush and there are ne eeneralsin this great promise. "WeePhig may the house. It may "be because they endure for a night, but joy' come are inches and eummin. while down, eth in the • morning." • You may at -the end of the lane the poor ; leave your .pcieleet handkerchief muy be the Lord's corn. You ere !sopping Wet with tearson your but little pounded because you are 1 death s pillow, but you will ,go up. but little worth and :she bruised andlabeolutoly. .sarrowless. - They Will ground because she is the best part I wear black; you will Wear:white; of the harvest. The heft of the :cypresses for them, „palms for you threshing machine is according to you will see,: "Is it possible that the value of the grain. 'If you have "e ein here? Is this heaven? Am not been threshed • in. life, perhaps 1 I so pure now I will never do thei.e is not ninth to thresh 1 Ifenythin,g wrong? T so well you have not been mach shaken of that I will, never again be sick? trouble, perhaps it is because there !Are these coimpanionshipe so firm is gang to he a vory small. yield. !that they will never again be brok- When there are plenty cif blackberries. en? Is that Mary?. is that John? the gatherers go out with large has-. Is that my loved one I put. sets, but when the drought has al- I assay into darkhess? Can it be most consumed the fruit, then a ;that these aro the faces of those who gusset measure will do as well. it !lay so -wais and .onateiated in the took the venomous snake • Paul A !back room that careful night flying? hand, and the phi:Indies of him with ; oh, how radiant: they are! Look at stones . until he was taken up for 'them! How radiant they ere! Why, dead, and the jamming against 111m hounlike this place is from what of prisou gates, and the Ephesitin thought when I left. the averId vociferation,..and the aokles skinned low , ministers grew pictures of this by the painful stocks, and the found- ering of the Alexandrian corm. -ship,. and the beheading strrilie of the Ro- man sheriff to beieg Pant to hie pro- per development. .It was ]lot because 'Robert ileroffat, and. Lady • • Rachel land, but ilOW t0,1110 compared with the reality!. They told me on eerth that death was sunset. No, no 1 •it is sunrise! Gorgeous sunrise! I see the light now ,purpling the hills, nd the .el o eels flume with the Russell and Frederick Oberlin were canons day worse than other people that they Then the gates of heaven will be had to suffer. It was because they intoned and the entranced soul,. with were better. and Gqid wanted to irldiCe the' =lioness end power of the celes- threshing you may always conclude I 1 them best, By the carefulness of the meee down .ution the banner pro - tial vision, will look thoesands of THE VALUE OF VIE GRAIN. Cession, a • river of shimmer' ng .splender, and will cry out, proportions our trial's to what we Next, my text teaches us that God "WTM ARE THEY?" eau bear—the Steil for the the rod , for the eunamin, the iron wheel for the corn. Sometimes peo- ple in great trouble say, h`Oh. can't bear it 1" But you did bear t. Clod would not have sant it upon you if he had not Imovexi that you could bear it. You trembled and you swooned, but you got through. God will not, take front your eyes one tear too monk • nor one sigh too deep nor from your temples one throb too sharp. The perplexeties of your earthly business have not in them one tangle too ia- tektite. You sometimes feel as if' our world were full of bludgeous haphazarii: Oh, no ; they are threshing instrumepts that God just suits to your case. There is not a dollar of bad debts on your ledger or a disappointment about goods that you expected to go up, but that have gone down, or a swindle of your bueiness, partner, or a trick on the part of thoso Who ate in the same kind of Merchandise that you are, but God intended to overrule. for your inunotIni heip; • "'GIs", you say,, "there is no neect. talking that way to me, I don't like to be cheat- ed and outraged." Neither. does the corn like the cora threshee, but after it ii`as been threshed and winnowed 11; has a, great deal better opinion of winnowing mills and cern -threshers. Again, my subject teaches' that God keeps trial oft us untii we let go. Tho farmer .shoutg "Whoa 1" to hi horses no econ as the grain is dropped from the stalk. The !farmer tomes with his fork anti toSsee up the Streit, • and he Sees that the: Straw has let go the grain and , the Vain 10 thoroughly threshed, So God.' Siniting rod and turning wheel both cease es goon as we let go. We hold on to this World. With ite, pleaeures and . lichee fold einolue meets, aptleemt .kaucklefs are 00 Oral- ly set that it seams as if We could • 'Those who have used toxa-Liver Pills ilIay they have to equal for relieving and outing Constipation, Sick Xlead- ache, Biliottenese, Dsrepoopela, _frioatecl Tongue,. Foul, Breath, kteart EAurn, water Drat& or tiny disease or disorder of the stomach, liver. or bovvels, Mrs. George Williams', Fairfield Plains, Onto Writes its folleWs "AS there are so many other medicinee offered for sale in substitution. far taxa -Liver Pills 1 ant pare tieular to get tlaigenoine, al; they far sor- passany thin g el se for regulating the bo.weis arid correcting sfogiach disorders," Laza.liver rifle arc purely vegetable ; neither gelpgi AVOni(011 nor sicken, are easy to take and vi eilhot to act. And • :the angel of God, standing close by, will say, "Do you not know who . they - ere?" "No," says the entranced soul, "1 cannot guess who they aro." The angel Will say: "1 Will tell you, then, „who they are. They are they who came out of great tribu- lation, or threshing, and had their robes washed and made white ie. the blood .of the Iamb." History has no more gratulatory S0000 than the breaking illof tho English armY upon Lucke ow, India. A few weeks before a massaeee had 1.orlezirreadn ci eb.d•naowrennpliiir,adairixtd01126p0i,tivoit-.1 it room. Then five professional bute cheas went in. and slew them. Then the bodies' of the slain were taken out and theca -Oh into a well. As tho Eliglish army mune 11110 Cawnpur, they went 100 tha rooni, and oh, . IvIlat a h Ord tile scene! Sword strokes on the • well near .t he goer, aho'ving 1,11 at the poor things ilLta Cr Ditched When thoy died, arid they saw also that 1110fioor Woe. ankle deep in blood. The soldiere Walked 011 1:1101I' heel8 11010145 10St their shoes bo seboterged of thecarnage.• Aral .011 that floor of ialood there werc! flowing Iocks •hale and fragments of dresses, . Gut in Tateknow they had heard of the messacee, and the women were waltieg- for thesame awful death, wattiag amid aughish lititold, wait- ing . ti 1.10 111 and star vat ton, 1)01 wa FIlut heroically, when, ono day, Hateilock arid Gutrnin and No 101(11 1111(1 and Sit: David' 'Baled kind Pooh the heroes of the thglisti are mysgbuzza, for then:11-1001W in on that 'h ore ible eep; 1 0, and Witne ;Vet the. guriO WON sounilthg and While cheere. Were ieeving from the eterie log, ilyieg peopl0 on the (ma side and front the travel worn and pew - der :blackened aoldierS on the other, right them, hi front of the Palace, Utero was such a seene of handshaking and embracing and boisteroue joy as would utterly Poo - :found the pen ot the poet and the PENCIL OP TElle FAINT1i)11. And no wonder, when these exnaciated wosnen who had suffered so heroically Tor Christ's sake marched oat from their ineareeration, one wbuilded English soldier got up tia his fatigue and wounds an leaned against the wall and threw up his cap and shouted, "Three choess :my boys, for the bravo wanton!" Yea, thwe was an exciting scene. But is gladder and more triuMphant scene will it be When you, come up into heaven from the conflicts and in - of this world, stream- ing with the wounds of battle and wan with hunger, and while the hosts of God are cheering their great. Hoeatina you will Strike hands of congratulation and eternal deliverance in the presence of the throne. On that night there will be bonfires on every hill of heaven, and there will be illumination •every palace, and there will bo a candle in every wiadow. Ala no! 1 for -- get, I forget. They will have no need of the candle or of sun, for the Lord Goct givella them light, and they shall reign forever and ever. Hail, hail, sons and daugh- ters of the Lord God Almighty! DRILL OF THE CHINESE.. " They Are Admirably Suited for 'Perfect Discipline. The aptftude showa by ()Meese eel- diers for drill anal manoeuvres in close rank is said to be remarkable. The " drill is modeled on German methods; the gun is eai'ried over the left shoulder, 'the parade step is the base Of abi the marches in Mose rank but the Chinese still keep to their large red standards; there is one for about 'every ten men. The 'only oth- er European method employed is the "tiger &Di" a eerie -us fencing move- ment with • the bayonet accompanied by fierce heaVings and sa-vage thrusts at the throat by the whole battalion. The native character of the. Chinese soldier is admirably suit- ed: to the maintenance of perfect dia.. atoll& and a faultless execution. of parade drill Commanded well he will, perhaps, equal the Japanese soldiers, who are already equal to European troops, but the Chinese officers ignore 'the at of war and even do not command their troops during drill. While the military mandarins sip cups of tea seated in comfortablearmchairs in a corner of the drill camp quite inferior officers give thedirections and exercise the real eenintand. A. ROLLING STONE. In is recently published book en the war the author deeeribes one of the irregular reginteete in these Words:— "A -rough • crowd are the 211d Bra - bents, amongst them adventurers th'a'svn beam every gearter of the globe—roles, Jews, Texan cowboys, Mexicans, Norwegians and Swedes; and, of course, =Any Dutch. Here is the life history of one of these troopers: Born in Belgium, when nine years old he emigrated to the United States with his parents. Di'ilting into Texas, he, when Old ehough, be - mune a cowboy. But he was a true rolling stone, and had been found wherevee the elhsh of arins was heard. Ile bail taken part la nine South Ameeican revolutions: The Spitnish-Cuban war proved irresisti- ble, and he fought on the Sleben side until the Americans lancled, when he joined and fought with his Old Com- panions, the :cowboy taciagh Riders' ," until the conclusion Of the war. Then .Cf1,1110 the South African war, and he and twenty more, takiitgotheiy high. - peaked' eaddies, at mice &nested the Atlantic and area" in their lot with Brabant's /Terse,. in Whoen ran ke , baying been 0000 severely wounded,. he is still enrolled." " PERIODS OP: GROWTH. Children born between SopteMber and February arts same mithoritiee etato, hot see tall as those born in the summer and spying Months, and the growth of children is much more rapitl ,Fram March till Angust. The extremities geow rapidly up to the sixteenth year; then thei'e is a slow growth till the thirtieth. year. The logs chiefly' grow, betweeit the -tenth and seventeenth years, ()wavering the general resells, it appears that these exe six periods of geowth. The first • extends, lip to • the sixth or, eighth year. and is one 01 very aapid growth; the second. period ,front elevot to fourteen yettre, growth is slow; the third period, from sixteen to, seventh= the fourth period SilOWe is SIONV growth up to the age of thirty for height, tip to fifty Tor, cheet girth; the fifth period is 0110 Of rest, from thirty to fifty yea re; the: Sixth period is cheraeterized by a de- crease 111 all dimeneloas of the .be dee, 13AKERS' TF;ETH. Vt. dentist has called attention to the deplorable condition of the teeth of bakers, and Stl,t/H he is Orton able to tell the profeesi on of -the Patients by the eondition ot their teeth, The tooth decay is soft and rapidly pro- gressive. The principal Oar te t- iacked are the outside SUP faces of the teeth, conameileing at the top of the, root nod 1`0 pi(1y extending to the grinding surface, °mots wz..-DpreG, A record in courtship and propos- als has occurred at :Lubec, in Gore Many, where reeideean hotel pro.: prietor. With 0 family or six' children --fottr apOs and (Ova 'daughters—who were all betrothed 111 one day, The halt -doze». happy mingles were also rear ried on the oanie.' 'oloy, arid one wedditig breakfast -Served ler them THE S. S. LESSON. ILTTERNILTIONAI. IXSSON, APRIL 13. Tex.t of the Lesson, Acts 43, . Golden Tezt, Acts ' : 84. 82. no came down also to hthe saints .whieh dwelt at Lydda, • This isritten ‘g Deter as Le passed 'frwom glee() to ;none on his Master's bueiness .feeding and , eating forthe elteep and the lambs (john xxi, 1547 ; I Pet. V, 1-4), as he had been tionunissiotied to do. In Acts x, 88, we read that 'elhestis :of Nazareth, anointed with the Holy Ghost and with power, went about doing good and healing Lill the oppressed of the devil; for God was with Him. : If We Will receive' that which ie written to john xvii, '18 ; ax, 21 ; I john 11, 0, WO Ca11110t but believe that He expeets each of His redeemed to live the same. iife that .He lived. 33, 84. Aeneas, jeeus ChtisL inaketit theca:whole ; ariso and: make thy• bed. Finding 'one Who bad kept his bed eight years, being eiek With paleY, he thue eddeessed hini, and imme- diately he was Whole, for Jesus Christ 'at the right hand . ef the Father is the very : eame canvas- sioaate, all powerful. Saviour its When Oa earth Hewent about heal - Mg the sick (Heb. viii, 8), and His rodeented ones, agehere to make that great fact manifest; 85. :And all that dwelt at Lydda and Saron saw him and tarried to the Lord, • • The Lord saw that in the heal:ing- ot Aeneas He would be glorified and that many would-thusbe led to then to Rim for their. ewn geed :and .for His .glory. While 1 believe it; is is high anti holy and graciaas privils ego to trust the Loyd far the bodY as well as the soul, I cannot, sym- pathize with those who consign all. 'drugs and doctors to: the devil, nor call I belleire that health in this mortal body is more important then :glorifying, God. 36, 87. Now there was at Joppri, ct :certain disciple named Tabitlia. She, like her Lord, liaed for others and far the good which Be inSght bo pleased to accomplish through her, and 11.1 her active, • sell denying life Godwas manifest. Some only talk of 'what they wonlel do if they could, but this woman did Whatoshe could. the Lord working through her. In tho midst of her busy life siekness came, and the away, death- was permitted to touch her,. and she one day found herself in; perfect health and in the vigor of a' life she ' 'had never known beibre. absent from the body, present with the Lord,' expe- riencing the gaia of those -who miter upon the "very far better," See II Oor. ts 8; Phil, i, 21, 23, R.V, 38, 39. Lydda :being near to Jop- pa and the disciples at Joppae hav- ing heard • of the Lord workieg through Peter at Lydda, -they send for Min, urging hint to mite quickly to them, which he did, and he soon found himself in the midst of a lot of weeping widows. We do pot read that they talked of her present hap- piness and rest freni her labors and their joy because of her promotion to the immediate presence of her Lord, yet 1 have • lima Many tt -time in homes of mourning Where these were the topics and there was no de- sire to • have the loved Tate back again even though: the hearts ached and the teats would polite because of the loneliness. , • ' 40. But Peter pat them all forth and kneeled claWn and prayed, So did our Lord in -the cese of the ruler's daughter (Mark v,. a0). I ex- pect .that Peter, as lie conuntmed With God,woold inquire as to the will of G.od.in this niattei• and whe- ther .it rnight 130 for the • glory of God to have -Dorcas return to the Mortal. body :for a season. Ho Mast have laic:hived some assurance -Irina God as to His twilh; foe, lining to the body and calliug hor eaaw, She opened her !oyes, and, seoing Peter, sliel,tilteilP, * ttbe :gave her his heed anti lifted her up and When he had called the saints and Widows presented her alive. ••• So. Dorcas came, .book loom the rest and the glory ,to sojourn again in a mortal body for the good Of others, and the' selfish repeivors of ber labors vere doubtless glad to ham to . go. at it again far their sakes, but whatever elie did it was for „Testis' sake (1.I. Coe. iv. 11), not for their sakes. Should wo: :1144 ourselves suddenly in His Peesence. and in the enjoyment of all that can be enjoyed 'apart from the body anti he asked .by Him to return' to Oarth 'agaia for a season, for His sake. that lie might be further glorified 'in as here, I doubt, not bet Tlis :grace weaId be stifficient to enable US to eaY, "Yes. Lard. anything, anywhere, for ilTheo (TT. bo). ix, .8). 42. And it .117110 known throughout all Joppit, .and many belieged in the Lord. Thita 111 these two Oases of God working through Peter clue result was that many lu each Pioce believed in ,the In the coke of many sick onos Who .dopiro health and olaim, as they say, the result of the PotOiroO of faith, there is of ten no 11.0•L, sire that others. should he led t6, be - i11 the lord, or that they them- selvee eheauld live henceforth Wholly for :Ohio hot :merely :a desire for their • beta perspnal hoinfort and to be rid o1, their"affliet ion, We mud. .1101; sit 'in judgment: noon God, nor 111t137: WO OVOn judge pOOPIO (ROM Xiv, (er. iv, 5), but Oro onay be lit:Hoc:My sure that tlie judge of ' all the earth col ways does right (xviii. 25, of Genesis). 13. Ile 'tarried Many days itt Top - i1 with ono Simon; 0 ttumer, Healing the sick or raising the dead oe ietereri ng With Si 1T1.011,, the -termer, Ood was glorified in Peter, oloco not want Work so much as iLuiL, WO there may be much fruit When ono seems Compelled to Jive in appaeetit idioneee, Doula- less the Lord JOStis glorified -the Poo. tiler in alt tho thirty years at WitS- arethas well ae in the fow- years Of 11iS pubill miniOtrY. i • 4.4k THE KING 34: Th -E 91? THE QUCHESS OF DEVONSHIRE. I ALRetnarkable Offer., Here is Ole best offer ever made in tine community. By a very ovelient a17. I rauRment made with the Family Herald and Weekly Star of Montreal tvc are • • •d to offer TUB Eamon Taos and Web great Family Panor, the • Eamily olooald and Weekly Star, for ono year for the small sum of $1.75 and in- ;elude to eaeh s..-'uleriber three Demitiftil ,Preinium pietures, of which the follow. ino Is a brief XING &WARD VIT.—True to Iteo, a beautiful portrait size /8 x O