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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1902-4-17, Page 2awanawasazy Ceriuirte arter s Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of See Fat -Shrine Wrapper Seicw. 'lame Innen fate as easy to tram ae sugar. rr HEADACne. MR DMUS& FOR BILIOUSNEi. RR TIMM MEL • COMSTIIPATIOrt, FOR SALLOW SKIN. MR THE C9RIPLEXIBill pors,;. I ,&3711C VIM= MU3T.:1AVC2,011A712,5, Rs enee I nneeay vegetaaiseadareananeee CURE SICK HEADACHE. CARTEIS ITTLE 1VER PILLS. traattc6=25a=mornastara of the diseases that afflict humanity are caused by the accumulation of impurities in the blood. The greatest of all blood purifiers is BEEK BLOOD ETTER& 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. These pills cure all diseases and dis- orders arisiag from weak heart, worn out nerves or watery blood, sueh as Palpi 'ta- tion Skip Beats, Throbbing, Smothering, Dizziness, Weak or Faint Spells, Anaeraia, 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 worn out and wasted 1 tissues of the body and restoring perfect health. Price 50e. a box, or & for $1.251, a all druggists. Gods NORWAY PINE IMP Cures Coughs, Colds, Lung and Bronchial affections that other remedies won't touch. Mit.T110S.j. Stearn, Caledonia, Ont., writes: "Ayearago I had tt very severe cold which settled in rrty lungs and in my throat, so that acould scarcely speak louder than a whisper.. 1 tried several I -medicines, but gene relief until I used one and a half bottles of Norway Pine Syrup, which corn- plctely cured me," 250. a bOttle or fiVe for $t e, AY IF DECISIVE BATTLE. When Death Shall be Swallowed Up in Victory. Minna socerelue to ase et the. Parliament et „rim, unis OT Tm3.1 Toara Ganda a the year Fine Thonsond Nino Flan. tteetleenpar4 Itai7sve°1k4o3r11 WAIStittllirWtitaTlart°' -11b I 'This view, of Coln's% mcvnes it of but Itttle importance whether we are cremated, or sepultared. If the latter is dust to dust, the former is ashes to ashes., if any prerea in- cineration, let them have it without cavil or protest. The world May tea come so erowded that cremation may be universally adopted by law as well as by general consent. Many of the mightiest and best spirits have gone 'through this process. lf the world lasts as much imager as it has thus far, there perhaps may be no room for the large acreage set apart for resting places, but, there is plenty of room yet, and the race need not 'pass that bridge of fire un- til it collies to it. The most of us prefer the old way. But whether out of natural disintegratioa or cre- mation we shall get •that luminous, buoyant, gladsome, transluceut, nasee- Indent, inexplicable structure called the resurrecti en body. You will have it; I Will have it, -1 say to you to -day as Paul said to Agrippa, "Way should it be thought a thing incredible with you that God should raise the dead?" That far up eland, higher than the bawk flies, ager than the eagle flies, what is it made of? Drops of water. froni a river, other drops from a lake, still other drops from a stagnant pool, but now embodied in a cloud and kindled by the sun. If God can make such a Unwheeled artillery, hoof of horse lustrous cloud out of water drops on breast of wounded and dying; many of them soiled end impure man. and fetched fat= miles away, can CHARGE OF THE BLACK GIANT. he not transport the fragments of a human body from. the emelt and In my text is a worse discomfiture. out of them build. a radiant body? It seems that a black giant propos-, ed to conquer the earth. He gather- ed for his host all the aches and pains and malarias and cancers and distempers and epidemics of the ages. He marched them down, drilling them in the northwest wind and amid the slush ofl tempests. He threw up barricades of grave mound. He pitched tent of charnel house. Some of the troops marched with slow tread commanded by consump- tions, some in double quick com- manded by pneumonias. Some he took by long besiegement of evil habit and some by one stroke of the was originally constructed and nic- battle-ax of casualty. With bony tually improve it, do you not 'think hand he pounded at the door of hos- the fashioner of the human eye may pitals and sickrooms and won all - the victories th all the. great battle- imPr°"e its sight and multiply the natural fields of all the five continents. For - eye by the thousandfold ward, march ordered the conqueror additional forces of the resurrection of conquerors, anciail the generals 7:67 and commanders -in -chief and all presi EVERYDAY RESURRECTIONS. dents and kings and sultans and " czars dropped under the feet of his Wby shoed g war charger. But one Christmas You. an incrediit be thought with thinthat God night his anta.gouist was born. The old bragaart that threatened tho conquest and demolition of the planet has lost his throne, has lost his sceptre, has lost his palace, has lost his prestige, and the one word . written over all the gates of mauso- leum and catacomb ttnd necropolis, • on cenotaph and sarcophagus, on the timely cairn Of the arctic explorer and on the catafalque of great cath- edral, written in capitals of azalia I tind calla lily, written in masked cadence, written in doetology of I great assemblages, written on the sceptered door of the family vault, is "Victory." Coronal word, em- bannered word, apocalyptic word. chief word of triumphal arch under which coaquerors return.,. • nouT OF THE KING OF TER - Victory ! WoRrd°Rstorited at Cullo- den and Balaclava and Blenheim, at Megiddo mid Solferino, at Marathon, where the Athenians drove back the aledes; at Poictiers, where . Charles Martel broke the ratansof tb.e Sara, tens ; at Salamis, where Themis- tocles in the great sea fight con-. founded the Persians, and at the - door of the eastern cavern of chiseled rock, where Christ, mune out through -a recess and throttled the king of terrors and put him back in the niche from which the celestial Conqueror had just einarged. Alia 1 When the 'Awe of the eastern Mauso- leum took clown the block giant, "death was swallowed lip in vic- tory." • I proclaim the abolition of death. The old antagonist is driven back into mytholotty with all the lere about Stypnan feriw and Chaeon with oar and boat. Melrose Abbey and Kenilworth Castle are no more in ruins than ie the sepulchre. We shall have no more to do with death than we have with the cloakroom et 0 governor's levee. We stop at such cloakroom and leave in charge of le servant our overcoat, our overshoes. our outward apparel, that we tarty not be impeded 111 the brilliant round of the drawing room. Well, my friends, when we go out of this world we are going to a King's banquet and to a reception of monarchs, and at the door of the tomb we leave the cloak of flesh and the wrappings with which we meet the storms of this world. At the close ot an earthly reception, under the brush and broom of the porter, the :oat or hat may be handed to no better than when 'we, resigend it, and the cloak of humanity will finally be returned to as improved and bright- ened and purified ancl glorified. You and I do not want (me bodies returned as they are now. We v.ant to get rid of ail their wealthessee and all 1 11(31r snsceptifilliti es to cativo and ali their slowness of locomotion. But as to our soul, We will cross right over, not. waitii134 for obsequies, independeet of obitu- ary, into a Slate in every way bet- ter, with wider room and velocities beyond computatiee, Um dullest of united body and Soul atving off as into CoMpanioeship with the tnry from this planet on that last ditY best spirits in their yeey host 1,1100(1, y011 W111 SO0 (100p gashes alt p in the veva' parlor of the UllILO! 00 iud donnathe hills, deep gashes - the four trolls' burnished and paneled all up and down the valle,y, and and piety re.d ond glorified with all they • will be the emptied g,raves, the splendoi's that Ilia infinite God, they will be the abandoned sepul- lf the world lasts as meta longer ea Mum: with . retina grottect tossed vent, Vie -tory 1 ou Oath nide or them., and slabs despatch from Washington says : —Rey. Dr. Talmage preached from the following text :1. Con xv., "Depth is swallowed up in vietory." The royal cuurt of the Sabbaths is made up ' of afty-two. Fifty-one are princes in the royal household, but Easter is queen, She arenas richer diadem, she bWayS 0 move jeweled sceptre, and In her smile nations are irradiated. How wel- come she is when after a harsh win- ter and late apring, she seems to step out of the snowbank rather than the conservatory, to come out of the north instead of the south, out of the arctic rather than the tropics, dismounting from the icy equinox but welcome this queenly day, holding high in her right hand the wrenched off bolt of Christ's sepulchre and. holding high in her let hand the key to all the ceme- teries in Christendom. My text is an ejaculation. It is spun out. of halleluiahs. .Paul wrote light on in his argument about the resurrection and observed alt the laws of logic, but when he came to write the Words of the text his fin- gers an(1 his pen and the part:Mime, on whicli he wrote took fire, and he cried out, "Death is swallowed up in victory!" It is an exciting thing to see an army rained and flying. They run each other down. They scatter everything valuable in the track. Cannot God, who owne alt the material out of which bones, mus- cle and flesh F11'0 made. set them op again if they have fallen? If a manufacturer of telescopes drop a telescope on the floor and it breaks cam he not mond it again so you eau see through it? And if God drops the human eye leo the dust, the eye which he originally fash- ioned, can he not restore it ? Aye, if the manufacturer of the tele- scope, by the ase of anew glass and change of material, can make a better instruinent than that which shoed raise the dead?" Things all around us suggest it. Out of what. grew all thene flowers? Out of the mold and the earth:. Resurrection! Resurrection! - The radiant butter- fly—where did it come from?. • The loathsome caternillar. Ta at alba- taoss that smites the. tempest with its wings—where .di(1 it come from? A Senseless shell. • . . "Why should it be thought 0. thing incredible with you that God should raise the dead?" • Tile inserts flew and the worms crawled last autumn feebler and feebler and then stopped. - They have token no food. They want nooe. ' They lie dormant; and in- seneible,"but soon the sonth- wind will biota the reeprrection and the air and the earth will be full of them, bo you not think that God can do as much fer our bodies as he .does. for ;the wasps and the 'spiders and the simile? This_ morning at half past four o'clock there was a. resurrection. Out of the night the day. an a .few weeks there Ivili be a resat-reel:ion in all 'out' gardens, " Whynot some 'clay a resurrection amid the graves?. - Ever and -anon there tea instate, 000 of men and 'women Ontranced.•11. trance is death followed by resere rection after a few days; total sus- pension of -mental power and- vol- untary action. Rev, William Tennent, a great evangelist of the last generatiore of whom Dr. Ai -chi - bald Alexander, a man far from being sentimental, wroth in moat eu- logistic terins--,-,Rev. William Ten- nent seemed to die. Hisspirit apparently left the body. People came in day after day mid saicl, "Tie is dead, he is dead." . But tlie soul that fled returned, and Will Tennent lived to write what. he had seen while his soul was gone. THE FINAL VICTORY. And so when the world's aast, Easter morning. shall COM the soul will descend, crying "Wheve is my body?" And the body will ascend, saying', "Where :is my soul?" And the Lord of Um resurrection will bring them together, an (1 It Will be a, perfect soul in a perfect bo- dy, letrodueed by a perfect Christ into a perfect Heaven. Victory! Only the bad disapprove of the re- surrection. Ah, there tint1 be mere to rise on that clay than those Whose crimes have DCVO(' been repented of will want to see! lint for oil others who allowed Christ to be their Par- don and their life and their resurree- tion it will boa day of victory. The thunders of the last day Will be the salvo that greets you inno harbor, The lightn in Of will be only the torches of triumphal pro- cession marching down to escoat you home. The burning worlds flashing throngh immensity will be the rockets eelearating ;emu' cove, nation on thrones where you will reign forever and forever and fore ever, Where • is. death? What have' we to do with death? As vane re - ^1. will lie uuevet• on the rent hill- THE s oa aks,. nd One) will be fallm en laa s LEssoN =ante and cenotaphs, and, then for the first time you will appreciate the full exhilaration of the text, "Death is swallowed up in victory," Hall the Lord of earth and heaven!. Praise to thee by both be given, Thee we greet triumphant now; Hall the resurrecliou thole! HODES'S ENTERPRISES. "SO LITTLE DONE AND SO MUCH TO DO." -- His Railroad and Telegraph Sch,eines That Are 'Now Under Way, Mr. Rhodes is said to have remark- ed again and again as he lay, on his death -bed; ''So little done and so mach to do." .-lome of his vast pro - Pets are well under way, but flee far from completion. There is no rea- son to believe, however, that they will not be carried. out and in fact there is every reason waO they should go on, Rhodes was a practical mare and his scaemes for development, vast as they were; rested on a. prac- tical bftS1S, The coMpletion of the euterprises now 110(101' way may be delayed because they have lost the impulse . be- gave to everything he took in hand; but some, 11' not all of them, are certain to be carried out. railroad to the- north, for exam- ple, is pushing onward; it is posi- tively neeeseary to the development of Rhodesia and is bouad to be cone- pleted before Maay years. Many articles novo bemt written on Cecil Rhodes's alleged project for a Cape to Cuito Railroad." Maps have been printed or the route along which the line 111.113 to ;10111 the liOrth and south ends of Africa, Ae mat- ter of fact Mr. :Rhodes diseinctly said in the report he made to the British South: Africa Conipany, on May 2, 181)9, that though he had no doubt, of Hie ulthnate building, of such a, line, the Chartered Company and bimself were content to give their exclusive let -teatime to that link in the 1(51,11 winch would extend from tothe northern border of a . DISTANCE OF 900 MILES, This road was positively essential for the deyelopment of the territory of the Chartered Company and it was going to be built; the further extension of the road to the north did not enter into their plans.* It will be remembered that Mr. Rhgcles asked the British Govern- ment to guarantee the. promissory note or the company so that it might raise the fonds at a per cent. required to bend a part of this 900 miles of road. The Government me fused to give the -guarantee. but a few weeks later Mr. Rhodes raised from companies holding mining claims 10 Rhodesia the sum of 42,- 500,000 on a basis of 3 per cent. to Start the road to the Zambesi. The work was pushing northward when 11)0 outbreak. 01 .6.;0 South African war ceased suspeasion of opera- tions. Money had been saratred to held the first 150 miles of the rail- road. The sun- of $3.5,000,000 would he needed to build lam remain- ing 750 miles and before the war be- gan about $8,000,000 01 1.1110 sum' had been guaranteed at a per cent., the money to be paid iato the treasury in annual instalhnents as needed for the railroad extension of each year. 'Pile Char Lend Company guaran- tees this loan, which is based upon the wonderful gold resottrces of the countrY. They have been proved by the sure -c3. -s to :exist. The gold -bearing area is aboat 5,000 square miles in extent and the won- der of it is that all the quartz crash- ing done by machinery 111 various parts of the country thus far show ore that, thaugh Ime grade, .invaritte bly yields mere gold to Elie ton than on the Witwateasiemd. The paying hatuie e the ova Juts beep, 'thamotaatrated, and oVer 1.30.000 rea gistered anianng claims are scattered over the country, but enost of the mineral emit/11 cannot 1.10 developed uatil machinery be brought to it by rail. WORK ON THE RAILROAD was resumed several months ago with every proemial: that 'progress would be rapid . Mrat . : :Wtles report- ed that a group or men in Loncloa was prepared to raise $1,500,000 to aunt( a marrow gauge broach line 'from the main line to the extensiye cm oal ai& 170 miles away'. that weve discovered: about lave years ago not I far front the great Victoria, Falls of ; the Zambesi River. The money to ; build another road to the G 0111(1(1 milling distract, 100 miles, was rids - ed. before the wan The sum of $.1 a • 000,000 asked for to tendon the gauge of the railroad from the seaport of Beira into Mitsilonal and 11115 Shb- I sevibed three times over. It was re -1 ported 111 February last that !another branch road Would be built withiu the next, two years to connect the main line With the rich copper field coverng iabout forty square miles, near the northern border of Rhodesia 150 11111013th of Victoria Falls. As for Ma Rhodes overland tele- graiih project from the Cape to the Mediterranean it was coMpleted n i ,J'110110131last, to VIM on. Lake Tan- game/then about' 9,500 miles taanth of Cape Town. Mr. Rhodos , Was the baekbone the Trans -African Tee-. graph Company Which has this work in lamed. At lost eccoants the wires were to be stretched to the' Nile and down that riaer to Fa ailed a, distant froth `Win about 1,800 Miles; ht Intahode, the litie Would 00111.11. 01. with ine Wire al:vender complete to Kiesea tem' Mad Alta:tat drift. Method is the very binge of busa ness; and there is am method with- out pa in ctu ali ty.--Ceci I . The Pont man fie the basiness pro•• CeSainn Ilas to he careful Wbat be sayS and how he store it if he would have the greatest lead over hi8 'Mem- petitorn or if he Wants to feel sere that he is ettla front the interferenee of othere in ciairning the lead, ZN'TXMIVA4T11xi,0. 0NAXJW.igSSOIT.* Tet of the Lesson; 'Acts x.:a4-48, Gokten Text, Acts 2c., 34, 8a, 35, Of a, truth .1 pereeive that Goa is ate reapeeter of persons, Aani Clen1 (1,11(1 ii and Revxxi mid xxii so throughout this whole Bible the story is that of God work- ing out His eternal purpOse (Eph. in, 11) notwithstanding the opposi- tion of the devil and Of sinful men eontrollecia by the dealt. The special Story e the Acts is that of the be- ginning of the gathering Out from 'the gentiles a people for EU :name (xx, 14), and this work began in the home of Cornelius Under Peter, as recorded 111 our lesson. Although the Lord had commended before His asconeion that the gospel be preach- seintso„ every creature and ueto the up to this time been ;to the JeWe 1111011110511 part of the earth (Mark. ceive a, spec:lea vision to -teach him that God was no respeeter of per- ava 15; Act S), the preaching had only (xi, 19), and Peet, and to 1e- 80-88, Preaching peace by Jeeps Christ. These glad tidings were for Israel first (Luke .xxiv, 47; Acts i,.33), but 11) ordee that Israel might reach out to the gentiles, which they were slow to do. God matte the sluices one to be sin. for us that we might in Him be made righteoue before God (1.I. Cor. v, 91), and apart from Hem - there is no righteousness, no salva- tion, however devout oe. prayerful a mat may be. Even Nicodeams lead man may be, Even Nicodemlie had tod:cc,ler to eater the kingdom of Clod, and Potful°. sisiactscleto bring to Oornelias and by Which he his house might be saved (xi, 14), for there is tie salaae tion` ..apart from the reception of Christ and faith in rus atoning blood (Acts it', in; Lev. xvii, 11). 89. We are witnesses. A witness cities not need to get up his little speech or make up any- thing. 110 simply tells truthfully what 110 knows. and the redeemed of the Lord are continually on the wit- ness stand proclaimieg something concerning Jesus Christ. IF all the redeemed were true witnesses. 'what a glorious testimony would ever be going forth concerning who is altogether lovely! 40-42. He commeaded us to preach mato the People and to testi- fy that it is He WiliCh was ordained oefara. Gcd to be the Judge of cjuick and d In all their preaching these wit- nesses fail not to declare that al- though the .TOWS kilbcct Jesus God raised laim from the dead and show- ed Him openly to &neon witnesses, and new Peter declares, es Paul at- terward does (vii, 31),. that Vie is ittliftd eiGod appointed Judge of all man- wid,t8n.esTs.o Rim give all the prophets , On the way to Emmaus as He talked with those two that resurrec- tion. day He expounded mato thin in all the Sciaptures the things con- cerning Himself and Wight that ell concerning Plim in the lain, the paophets caul the psalms must he fulfilled (Luke =iv, 27, 14). The Spirit of Christ was in the pro- phets, and the testimony of Jesus is the spirit of arophecy (I Pet. 1, 10, 11 ; Rev. nia, 10), and the uni- form testimony of, all in whom the Spirit speaks is that theefirst great essential is the forgiveness of sias, and this can be had 01313" ilL Christ by His precious blood. aa. While Peter yet spake these words the Holy Ghost, 'fell on all them which heard the word. The message was not Peter's. /nee - sage, but the Lord's; own iaessage thaw:1ga . Peter, and' Corr101i09 50 redognized it, for he had seal to Peter. "We ere all here present be, fore 00(1 to hear alt things diet .are. commanded thee Of Cod" (verse 38). As the word WLLS spoken' die Spirit wrought; their opeiled hearts ree ceived Him of whom Peva' i11 the power of the Spivit spake. end the Spirit Himself came in power upoil thenaat the same time. dna 40. They heard them epeak with tongues nod magnify God, at was as at Pentecost (chapter 11, 4), except that there was no waiting for 1110Sp irit hm aviug coe as our L ord proudsed there , is no longer any need to wan, but where the heart, ie open and 1.110 Lord Iruly re- ceived there may lie also the tilling of the Spirit. While there is no need Lo wait any definite time to be fated with the Spirit, there may be it need to wait because o,f the unreadiness of the betievev lo receive. There came with 1 Mat six Jae Leh Li (AM en from doppa, (Acts xi, 19), who, al- though believers,. were 'astouished wheu they stave the Hoey Spirit given to these gentiles. It is to this Flit difficult for some believers to Until( that any people can be blessed out - aide of their Eto called churehee, but they need to learn that tiod is no more a respecter of,. ,(1ehoudeatiems than of 1)61.50110. 47,48. Ile conamandea them to be baptized in tho mune of the Lord. Here is somethiag helpfal for those who mane baptism witb water essen, tial to caotillTiatm nee;htl't,11, 1(31' 1101101(1 111 some Saved and. Spirit filled people w ho have not Yet been baptized with water* an(1 ere thus baptized after they have been saved and have re- ceived the gilt cif the Noly Ohest. 011 the other hand,we have in Acts xix, 1-0, time 'dietaries •wlio, having beta baptized. had inot heard any- thing about the Holy Spirit, so they were baptiaed again, mid at, the htinds of Paul reeeived. the gift ot tam Holy Ghost :Coil snake with totagoes and prophesied. X ineritheil this to shale that We Must Make as- sentain to salvation only that which Cod makes essential—'vis, tat:ening Christ i, 12; Joint y; 11, 12), 0110 iS 110101 more on trial than in the moment of exceseve good f 01.7 t(1110 Wallace.; tf44•474-44444-4-444-iiiiii4w44-iwworavoetttotworrrri • THE KING THE QUEE and 4 THE DUCHESS • to R eni arkable Offer. • Here is the best offer over made in this community. By a very excellent ar. ; rangement outdo with the Family Herald and Weekly Star of Montreal we are to offer THE EXIIIISIt Txxxo and that great Family' Pepor, the Z. Eamtly .S.;..33.ald and Weekly Star, for one yeer for the email sant of alalo aria in- * elude to each £1.:',gortbe1. three beautiful premium pictures, of which the follow- . Ing is a brief deser1pa7; OF DEVONSHIRE. KING, EDWARD VII.—True to life, a beauttfal portrait size 18 x 24 Inches, nt beaatifutt‘eavy white satin firdshed paper On Warden. This portrait has beeeataken sines his eocession to the throne, enitie Abe very hitetst and best obtainable. le cannot be had except through the Fauna Haeaum AND WEERVI,Svas eaol) picture bears the Ring's atitineetailn This picture hags the great merit of being the first taken after the King's accession, and has therefore ein historical 'value that no other picture ean pauses. QUEEN ALEXANDRA.—An exquisitely beautiful picture of the remark. ably beautiful and gee Queen Alexandan Mee telean since the Wag's, access:foie to the throne. It bE the same size as that of the. Kingthe two fonellent a hand- some pate of pictures that alone would sea, eee remit ffinies the subseripinoa prate of paper and *tenet No peetralt of the Xing and Conspat taken at the seeond or ea:weeding:nit- tinge can have One fraction of the valne of the Orin he :e gbelearn to history, THE DUCHESS OF DEVONSHIRE. —Tay Renowned Gainsbortnegla ture. Sold at auction sale in London twent ;five Years no tfir 1810Y500i stolen by clever thievee, hidden for over twB0t-t0Ur years and dell/erred toits 011115(1 011 payment of 05,000 reward and since sold to Ma J.Inerpont Morgava for $75,000. This, in brief, is the histnry of one of the priandure piotaree, which, boa Mem stroke of entarorise„the publishers ot the'Fanaln Eterald have seentred for their subscribers. The picture Is 22x213 in ten oolearta and is reproduced line for line, colour for colour with the original. Coptes cattle reprodaotioa are new *old in New York City, Montreal and Toronto for $1:2 each, rend this Is the picture ' Family Herald subscribers are going to get absolutely free together with the victures of the Xing and Queen, 4* Is that not big value? ' Call at Tun TIMES Oftioe and see samples • of these beautiful pictures. • You want Ties Examine Tams for the local news, and you. want that da great paper the Family Herald for it's 24 pages of general news and Welly • reading. Its agricultural pages alone are worth many tunes the subsoription • *• price. • • laring or send your subscription to • • THE TIMES OFFICE:. • ocoo•000.w>G0000000eo.oesoot,o4,o44*-)442,44o.000s,..1.o.4.. 4 • malialliSEA,M0514:r; - leo other Medical Firm in the world has the established reputation for curing Wen mad \Venters that Drs. X.& X. enjoy. Their Nevr bletilsod Trona - =acne, discovered and perfected by these altainent Specialiste, las brought joy, happiness and con:dart to thousands of homes. With 30 years experience in the treatment of these diseases they cart guarantee to Cure or rio Poty---Eznie- siosau, Nor ye tan Debility, Syphilis, Variceeele, atrecture, Glect, Secret Pratac,. 1,0P0 teno9, Sextant and Mental Wenkraeso, Amoy arid Bias-doterint.-oases. Their guarantees are backed by Bank Bonds. , , , L...„ ...,., , Li 7 Yon may have a sccret dramn. theoughthe mine—that's the reason you feel tired out in the morning. You are not rested, your kidneys ache, you feel despondent ud have no ambition. Dou't let yeur Life Blood be drained away. Drs. X. & K. guarantee to Care or no Pay. is the scourge 01 mankind; It may not be a crime to have it, for it may be inherited, but it is a crime to allow it to remain in the system. Like lather— like son. Beware of Mercury and Potasil treatment. Drs. X. & X. positively cure the worst cases or no Pay. ARICOCELE 81 STRICTURE The il1eV7 Method Treatment cures these diseases safely and surely. No pani—n o suffering—no detention front btiSiuess. Don't risk operation a Ci ruin your sexual organs. The stricture tissue ie absorbed and can never return* Drs. K. & X. guarantee Cures. „idne s la der Don't neglect your kidneys. 'Your aching back tel s the tale. Don't let Doctors experiment en you. Drs. It. 4.1. It. can cure you if you are not beyond humau aid. They guarantee to Cure or No Pay. CURES GUAR 11..NTEBD. NO CURE NO PA.H. Consultation /*roue. /Books alet Free, (sealed.) Write for Question Blank for Ff. nzn, o Treatraont. Everythissg Confidential. DRS. KENNEDY & KER.GAN, 148 SHELBY STREEn, DETROIT, NitCH 0-77,27.31Fragri. WOMAN'S WRAPPER. Tasteful, becoming morning gowes are essential to making a good hP- pearance as well as to comfort. The attractive model given has the merit of being absolutely simple at the Hain0 time that it is becoming and eatienly satisfactory. The original is made of dull bitle batiste (lotted With black and is trimmed with silk, and n arr 0 W ribbon sill( ; but all washable fa- brics are suitable as tvell as challie cashmere, albatrose and the like. To cut this wrapper for a wonaan of medium size, 11. yards of ma- terial. 27 inches wide, 10 yands 82 inchee 'wide, or Se yclvds 1.4 inches Wide wilt be required. • A BEMA f MARL r, co W. A 11 ritish journal announces the death ,of one of the most remarkable cows that ever figured publie niill tests. This Was a shor L-hovn Guern- sey cresseleved Slie p.n.s in her nireth year at the thne 'of her death.' Some idea Of her greatabil- 11)1 att a Milker may be gathered from the fact that during the 101 months prior to her death she bad produced at, the rate of over 1,500 gallons of innk per animal. On the clay before her death 'Slid gatie 413 poutids of milk. Women's Ailments. Women are eons• ing to understand that the Backaches, Headaches, Tired,. Feelings and weak", Spells from which they suffer are due to *wrong action of the kidneys. eyi Ca.a BOA NISI', N Kidney PIM are the most reliable remedy for any form of kidney complaint. They drive away pains and aches, make women healthy and happy—able to enjoy lifeeto the fullest. ia.1 Josh. n(); N.HB. .(Tsylaespsi:e, 204 Britain Street, st "I had severe kiclhey trouble for Italica doctored with a number of the best physicians in St. John, bat receive(1 little relief. Hering of Dean's Kidney Pills, 1 began their use. Before taking them 3 could not stoop to tie my shoes, and at times suffered such torture that I could not turn over in bed without assistance. Doann Kidney Pills have rescued me from thit terrible condition, and removed. every sin tad ache." WITCHCRAFT 1N BRITAIN. — A belief in witchcraft still exists in some rural districts, though the peo- ple who holcl it are sometimes shy of e:tessalgrti) 0 suni,et.,aLtieyesio,-ult icur tbe ridicule or theimore me lightened neighborseiot long age 1th old11001011 died :who Was poen larly credited with the Power ofbe, lablot0asst11 10 3' 1 0 1 11 1. .01 1 4 likedShe lived in t wretchd hut built 011 t Strip of Waste laud, 011(1her favoite pastime was that 01 when.. She 111.15 laid out: a eindl 11 r was proof nositiye, the rustics a m1,11. hare, One day a. coursing Match gaping tetanal in its flank. ; Shortly afterWards the old woman tiled, and tical I masqueeading uncle!. the guise of a WILS held. in the fields neat' her. rota d a hare, which, however, eon,' trived . to °seance at 'the mint of a wound was found in 1111' 81(10, witicli ed that she and pear pass were iden- t age, 'wheat 01.13 of the grey liquecle seize Se long ago as 11102 the that British 3' itilvtio y 1171.10 111 i CI doWn, (11 Waa at Netedastle, and the rails Weae Made ea wood. IXOrscs ar,ow. the eitr.