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Exeter Times, 1902-4-24, Page 6Genuine art r's Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of See Fac, Manila Wreppe. llama a...mamma vary preen and 11.1 easy 0 WED as DUgar. FoR HEADACHE,. FOR DIMNESS; FOR BILIOUSNESS. FOR TORPID LIVER', FOR CONSTIPATION. FOR SALLOW SKIN, FOR THE COMPLEXION CARTEI RILE PILLS. Fese.MU es, ena I issageny vegetanetnenreiene.eenee --errearneaszeiniste 1 CURE SICK HEADACHE. Tunas Bad Blood into Rich Red Blood. This spring you will need pomething to take away that tired, listless feeling brought On by the system being dogged with impurities which have • t tccumulated during the winter. • Burdock Blood Bitters is the t ilt. Is Better Than Bitter CEnta-ea aceoratug Atott ot tee rerinnieut • oneete. ta the Tear Oen notmed Nine Alm dred end sane er willow Boy. et gerceno, the Department ef aericuiture, ovewan A despatch frOm Washington saw:. Rev_ Dr, Talmage preached from th following"text:—Ree'elat ion, viii,• 1 "I'ln.sre was silence in heaven abon the space Of half an hour." . Front all we can learn. it is .th Only time heaven evee stopped. does not stop an other cities for th itigat, for there is Ito night there It does not stop or ti Plague. to the inhabitant never says, "I 'az sick." In does not stop for bank ruptde. , fail. lt does not stop for impass able streets, for there are no fallei snows or sweeping freshets. What then, stopped it for thirty minutes Oro tilts and Professor S tuar t thin' it was at the time of the destructio of ji.Tilsalem. Mr. Lend tidbits i was in the year 8e1, between th CL St' of the Diocletian perseeittios and the beginning of the wars b which Cunstantine gained the throne But -that was all a gimes, though t learned anti brilliant. melees. I de not ktiow when it was, and do not tem tylunt It was, but the -fart that such ail intereegnuat swine took place I am certain. '"There was si lence in heaven about the space n half an hour." And, first of all. we learn that Got : Aral all heaver' then honored silence. ; The , lengest and widest clonainitet . that evf-r existed Which SlillPt?Ss Was queen. Foy eh eternits there had not been a sound, World- . making was a later 'day occupation • For unimaginable ages it was •is min e univ erse. G oil was the only • being, and as there was no one to speak to, there was no litter:Ince. But that silence. hes all been broken up into worlds, e nil it hue became A NOISY UNIVERSE. OF SILENCE Any Sarcastic or Answer. eertein loaf hours. The half hour .when in the parsonage of a country minister I resolved to become a Christian. then and there the half hoar when I decided to become a e OF ermr, (losma4, , the hall- hour when. 1 t' first realized that My son woe dead, the half hone when I stood on the top of my house in Oxford street and saw our church burn, the half 0 hour in whieh I entered. Jerusalem, " the half hour in• which I stopped On Mount ' t'ealvary; the half hour in 11 , , , menet storm on mars hill and about - ten or, fifteen -other half beers are the chief' times of my life. You' May forget. the inane '9-f the exact - years of most of the impoetnalt eVents of ? your exietence, .but these half hour's like the half hour of my. tent, will t- ie he immortal. • I do not query whet t you will do with the tweatieth cen- • tury, I do not query what, you will do with this year, but whet will you do with the next half hour ? Upon • that hinges your destiny,. and due- . Eng that some of you will receive , the gospel and make' complete sur- render, and during that others of yeti will make final and fatal echec- ,. tion of the full end free and urgent e and impassimied offer of life eternal. f Oh, that the next half hoer might be the most glorious thirty minutes 1 1 of your earthly existence. ! Again, my text suggests a way of studying heaven so that we -caei bet- ter understand it. 11110 word "etC`r- ✓ hay" that w -o can bandie so much is an immeasurable word. gnowinh that we could not underetand that . word, the Bible tapes it only onee, We say, "Forever and ever." But how long is "fore -ver and ever ?" I , ton glad that nay text puts under our eye heaven for thirty minutes.. As when . you see a great picture, you put, v. sheet of paper into, a scron anti look througu it Or join eour foreringter to your thumb and look through the circle between. and the picture becomes more intense, so this masterpiece of heaven by St. - john in more impressive When WO take oaly thirty minutes of it at a • time. Now. we have something that WO can come nearer to grasping. and it is a quiet heaven. When we .dis- .course abeut the multitudes of hea- ven, iL nutst be almost a nervous shock to those who have all their lives been crowded by many people and who want a quiet heaven. • For the last thirty-five years 1 ette-e been ranch of the ehne in crowds and un- der public scrutiny and amid excite- ments. and 1 have sometimes thought for a few weeks after .I reach heaven would like to go down in Sotne quiet part of the realm, with a few Worlds in upheaval, worlde, in con - gine t ism, worlds in conflagration, , worlds in revolution. In niy text heavea spared thirty ninntes, but lt, will never egain pare one minutela worship in etrthly churches where there are litany to take gait we base to couns 'el brevity, but how will heavenget itt rapeny enough to let one hun- dred and forty-four thousand get hrough each with his own story aud hen one hundred and lorty-four nuil- lori ann then one hundred and for - y -four billion and then one hundred remedy you require. . It has no equal as a spring e medicine. It has been used by . t ;housands for a quarter of 1. century with unequalled i iuccess. ; n ,n 11 Ind Antes -tour trillion? Not only are all the triurephs of the past to bo onsmemorated, but all the tritimphs o come. Not ouly what we know of d but wh:t 1 wewillof • after ererlaeting study of the deltic. If my text had said there was silence n heaven for thirty (Jaye, I would ot ha to been startled at the an- ouncement, but it indhates thirty nine -tee. Why. there will be so I many friends to limit up, so many 1 the greatly good tend useful. that 'e will want to see so umny of the 'Isere:able things of eat•th we will eed expleined eo utapy exciting erthly experiences we will want to and all the other spirits itil ah the ages will want the same, hat there will be rio opport wti ty nor (nisei:ion. flow Iresy lV11 will be ept in he ving pointed out to us the (roes and heroics that the world ever nilly uppreciated—the yellow tver and cholera doctors who (lied. oi flying from their posts; the f0 - sale niu•ses who recoil pestilence in the lazatee tes, 1 he railroad engineers who stayed at their places in order • to save the teeth; though they theme selves perished. The inu I tit tides of ner and women whoget ne erown n- earth we wilt svaut to site when hee' get their crowe in heaven. I tell on lieu veil win have no more half- hours to spare. My subject aloo impreeses me with Ito Immortality .of a hell -hour. That all hour mentioned in my text is ore widely known than any other eriod in the calendar of heaven, one of the whole hours of heaven measureil oft, none of theyears, one of the centuries. Of the mil.' 005 of egos past and the millions ol ges lo come not cme is 'espeeially wasured off, in tile Bible. But the till hour of iny tent is -MADE InfelORTA.L. he only part, of eternity that us ant'r measured by earthly time - kith Traa measured by tee minute and of nns text. 0111 the half hours! 1 everything, . am not sking what you will do with the ea•rs or months or days of your te, but what. af the half hours? Tell. e the history of your half hours nd I will tell you the etorv of Oour hole. lite on 'earth and the story f your whole like in eLereity. The ght or wrong things you; enn thiels thirty minutes, the right or wrong wigs you can say in thirty minutes, le right or wrong things you can o in thirty minutes are Outdoes or aleful, inspiring or desperate. • : Look out los the fragments of Mine, hey are pieces of eternity. It was he half hours between shoeing horses hat made Elia u Burritt .1 he learned lacksmith, • the half hours between rofessional raffle as a, physician that nada Abercrembie the Christian pita - serene', • thn half hours between his uties tis schoolmaster that. made &Anon Z. Chase chief justice, .the or hours between' the shoe lasts. hat made Henry • 'Wilson 'vice-pre:de ent of the 'Unite(' States, the half ours between 'canal. boats that made ames A. Garfleld president. The alf. hour a 'day for good books or ad books, the half hour a day for rayer or indolence, the half hour 4 ay for helping others or blasting tilers, the half hour before you go O business and the half hour after 011 return' from businees—that makes he difference between the scholar rid the igneranius, - between .the hristiari and. the infidel, between the aint and the &Mon, between. tri - mph and Catastrophe, between hea- en and tEeL The most tremendous hinge Cif your life and Mina Were HERB IS PROOF. 0 Mrs, J. T. Skine of Shigawake, Que., rites: "I have used Burdock Blood iiitters as a spring. medicine for the past , - hur years and don't think there is its equal. Nrhen I feet drowsy, tired and have no t lesire to eat I get a bottle of B.B.B. mrifies tbe blood and builds up tl:e cou- titution better than any other remedy." ; , _ h 11 11 ; : : n 11 ra is 11 11 a These pills are a specific for all 11 diseases arising from disordered h nerves, weak heart or watery blood. They cure palpitation, dizziness, T smothering, faint and weak spells, w shortness of breath, swellings of feet and ankles, nervousness, sleepless- nT ness, anmmia, hysteria, St. Vitus' „ dance, partial paralysis, brain fag, y female complaints, general debility, li and lack of vitality. Price Soc. a. box. am ri TR OP •111.0 LINIMENT /FOR Sprains, Strains, Cuts, Wounds, Ulcers, Open Sores, Bruises, Stiff joints, Bites and Stings of Tweets, Coughs, Colds, Contratted Cords, Rheumatism, Neutalgia, Bronchitis, Croup', Sore Tfiroat, Quinsey, Wheviag Cone and all Painful Swellings. A LARGE BOTTLE, 2.$o: • • • friends, and for a little while • try COMPARATIVE SOLITUDE. Then there are those whose hearing ! 1 is so delicate. that they get 'no sat-- isfactien n'hen you describe the crash, of the eternal orchestra, and theya feel like saying, as a good woman in Hudson, N.Y., said after hertrine. inc speak of Lim mighty chorus of f yen, "That must be a great heaven, , but what Will become of my poor head ?" Yes, this half hour of my • text is a still experience. "There was 1 silence in heaven for half an hour." I "Xoti. will find the inhabitants all 1 at name. Enter- the King's' palace 5 and only take a glimpse, for we have only thirty minutes foe all heaven. "Is that Jesus'?" "Yes," Just un-; t . der the hair aloeg his forehead is c he . tmark of a wound made by a i 1 s 1 6 I \ f :3 d s t g ! i ! t -• 3n Os til01 . k • "It7,.C, the throne in worship of him. • Who Made it possible ter you to got then° at all I _think the rent Of your 41r$t half hour in heat= will be passed in receiving your reward if you have been faithful. I have a ntrangelY beautiful book conng tainithe pie - tures of the- Medals etreck by the English Government in honor of great battles, These- medals are pinned over the heart of the return- ed heroes of the army on great ee- casiOnS,• the royal family present and the royal bands playing—the 'Cri- mean medal, the medal Of the mu- tiny, the Victoria Cross, the Water- loo medal. In your first half hour in heaven in some Way you will be hamo.red for the earthly .strinagles 111 which you won the day. Stand up before all the royal' houses of heaven and reth ceive e insitrida . while you age aenomiced as victor over the drafts and freshets of the. farm field, :victor over the temptations of the Stock Exchangm Victor over pro- fessional . allurements, victor over domestic Over me- chanic's Shop,' victor over the ,stOre- hotisea victor weer • home worriments, victor over physical oistresses, vie - tor over hereditary depressions; vic- tor over sin aud death and hell. Take the badge that celebrates those vietoeies through our Lord Jesus Cheist. Take it in the presence of all the galleries, saintly, angelic and divine. While -all heaven clients,. "These are they who came out of - great tribulation and had their robes washed. end. made White in the blood of • the. Lamb." PrflE Se Se LESSON INTERNATIONAL LESSON*, APRIL 27. Text of the Lesson, Acte xi., 1-18 Golden Text, Acts z.,43. 1. The Gentiles also received the word of God. The apostles and brethren that were in Judea, heard this, and it is plain from the context that it did not them with joy. ITow unlike our Lord Jesus the most of His dis- ciples are! .At one time some of the apostles felt like burning a town be- cause some of its people would not receive Christ, and now they seem to feel somewhat like burning Peter be- cauee through him some uncircum- cised people had received Christ. We receive Christ when we reeeiye the word or Cod concerning Him. It is a simple anti most. reasonable thing to receive with meekness the word of God, yet comparetivety few do it -, . Theewho do iv • o t o • L (Jas. 1, 21; John xvii, 8). WI Peter to Jerusalem, they that were of the cir- cuincision con tended with him. Though they had been for years with Jesus and had. been filled with the Spirit, they had .not learned the significance of "whosoever" nor that "in Jesus Christ neither eircumci- sion availeth anythieg nor Uncircum- cision, but a new creature" (John Li. 16; G '1, 1 5 ). Tbe feeling still OXiS18 in some quarters that it would be wrong to offiCiate or take the communion outside of one's own denomination. 4-10. Peter rehearsed the matter nom the beginning. About the sixth hour Peter feht ed go on the housetop to pray and, being hungry, would have eaten, nit while they made ready Ito fell in- to a trance and saw this vision (x., in 10). At that very time the. lees- engers front Cornelius were near to t101)1)11, and it was necessary that er 'Edshould be ready to receive hem and go with them, which he er thinly would not have done but or this special vision. It is bcauti- el lo see 0 od preparing, is ser - 'ants for the good works which He ms prepared for theme While Peter was considering the ['came of the vision the. messen- ers from Cornelius were at the gate nem ii'ing for Id me and, instrileted by• Ito Spirit -,he called. the men in and edged them, and the next they he nd six others started with thhoemaemosf- enders for Caesarea and the °menus. This book might well be ailed the acts of the Holy Spirit in ye see 0 od and angels a nil men all he name of the Lord Jesus. In it °eking together that men may now the riches Of Cod's grace and Tis wonderful love. 1)1, 14. Who shall tell thee words vhereby thee and all thy house hall be saved. As Cornelius told Peter why he ad sent for him this is what he aid the t the angel said Peter -ould do; therefore at . the time that vision neither Cor- ehus nor his house, however de - 'out, was saved, and Peter had to mile front Joppa to tell them. the ood hews concerning' *Testis Christ hat they might be saved. How few eem to feel as Paul did when he said, "I am debtor both to Greeks aed to barbarians, so, as much as in me is, I am ready to preach the gospel" (Rom. 1, 14, 15). 15. And as I began to speak the Holy Ghost fell on them as, on us et the beginning. Chapter x, 44, says, -While Peter yet epake these words the Holy Ghost fell on ell them which heard the word." So it was white Peter was still speaking and just 4.,:t • the beginning of his discourse that God wrought so marvelously. There was nothing in ell this got up .by Dian; 11 t bet* the discourse nor .the results. All was from God._ I ais my in- cresing. convietion hat if We preach the preachi ng which od bids us (Joneb Ili, 2) the results Will be all that God pleases (Isa. lv, 11). 16. Then remembered the Word of the Lord, hnie that He said, John ihdeed baptized with Water, but ye 001. be baptized with the Holy Ghost, These aseenefon words (Acts 1, 5) bad therefore only a fulfillment at Pentecost. Here is anotherfulilil- mont, and so it vice on and will until the great fulfillment, or Mien - meet, or Joel ii, 2S-82, in the hear future. jesus had told them that the Spirit would bring to their re- membrance what He had said unto them lojohnxiv, 26), and Ile IS nose doing this with Peter.. buneh of twisted brambles,and hi Loot. on the throne has on th round of his iestep another mark o a wound made by a spike, and scar on the palm of the right han and a scaron the palin of the lef hand. But What a countearmee • What a smile! What a"grandeur What 'a loveliness -1 Wbat an over wheleaing look of kindness ttnd grace ;Why, he looks as ifhe had eteleemetta svoeld. 1- But come en for our time is short. .Do you §ee that row of palaces '? That is th Apostolic row. Po you see tha long reach of architectural glories ? That is Martyr row, :Do you ece that im.mense structure e? That is the biggest hoese. in heaven ; that is "the house ef many mansions." Do you see that wall ? Shade s eyes against its burning splendor, bor that is the wail 01 Iteavon, jas- per at the bottom and amethyst at he • .top. See this river rolling a through the heart of the great me- 0 tro tolls ? TItaL • . the corning whicri these who once lived on tho banks of tIto lludsc,ne a Alabama or the Rhine or the Shan. - non say, ''We /let'Or saw the like of 17 this for clarity and sheen." Pass down those boulevards of gold and amber and sapphire end see those interminable streets built by the Architect of the universe into homes, over the threshold of whi eh sorrow novel" steps and out of whose win- dows faces, once pale with earthly sickness, now look rubicund with • immoRTAL HEALTI 1. • "Oh, let me go in and see them 1" you say. No, you cannot go in. There are those who would never col:sent to let you come out again. You say, "Let me stay here in this place where they never sill, where they never suffer, where they never pert." NO, 1.10 •Our time is short, our thirty minutes Inc almost gone. Come on ! We 1111.1St go back to earth before this half hour of hone verily silence breaks alp, for in your mortal state you cannot endure the pomp and splendor and resenatice whett this hell hone of silenee is ended. The day will come when you can see heaven in fun blast, but not now. ilementher we are mortal yet and caneot endure the full roll of heavenly hermonii s and cannot en- dure even the silent heaven for more than half an hour. 'Hark 1. The lock in the tower of heaven begins to strike, and the hail hour is elided. But how Will you spend the first half hour of yotir heavenly °Mune Olin after yeti have gone itt to stay ? After your prostration: before 17, Forasmuch then es Gied, gave theM the like gift as He did unto us» who believed on the Lord jostle Christ, what was 1 that I eould withstand God ? Peter was in the hands a the Lord the Lord's messenger, the Lord's servant, and it was •the Lord Who Wrought all this, -as they might have tweeted He would had they believed what He commanded concerning giv- ing the gospel to every creature and the prophecy of Joel concerning pouring out His Sph•it upon all flesh. Betore Peter and the other tttx Jewish brethren God did for the un- circumeieed gentiles just what Ho had done at Pentecost tor circumcis- ed Jews. • 18. Whert they' betted these things, they held their peace and glorified God, saying, Then hath God also to the gentiles granted repentance unto life. The promise to Abram wasthat all families of 'the earth. should bo blessed in him (Gen, xii, 8), and it was written by the Spirit through Isaiah that Israel shoeld blossom and bud aad 1111 the Lem of the earth with fruit (Ism. xxvii, 0). One would think that in the blessing to this gentile household through Peter the Jew the brethren might have seen fulfillment of these things end not have been surprised at them, Yet . it is • true that many prophecies still awaiting fulfillment when fulfilled shall greatly surprise a host of believets. THE STATUS OF WOMEN, Every Year Marks an Advance in • . Her Favor. • The next ealargemont of the Ii•ah- chise- in. this country on 'that to the south .of us will surely be made through - the granting of the ballot to wommi. Women's VOIC:0 and -ine fitiencc age being more -hilly netiog- nized no* that ever end it is becom- ing a necessity for, het. to be placed in a position to help cleanse the po- litical arena. - Some Of the best men tead women- or this and other lands are convinced of this as the follow- ing will show. In. Des Mciinee, Iowa, the senate has paseed a resolution providing for the submission to the electors of a .constitutional amend- ment for equal suffrage. In Aetna - polls, Md.., the State senate has pas- sed the bill a din itt I eg women to practice in the State Courts, Chris- tiania, Norway, has elected six women to its town council. The -following will show how gen- eral this is becothinge—In France the women teachers elect members on all boards of education. In Sweden wo- men vote for all 'elective officers 'ex- cept representatives; also, intlirentlY, for members of the Upper House. In Ireland the woinen vote Re. the Har- bor .13oards. and. Poor LaNy Guard - leis, aud in Belfast for municipal officers. In Rupsia womea house- holdersvote for all elective -officers -and on local -mattees. Again, "Or the women who recently took com- parative 'examination§ In Washing. - ton for positions in the -civil service, os'er 77 per cent. passed, ap against 62 per cent of the men." • The Hon. W. Dudley Foulke, U. 8. New Civil Service Commissioner, said, at the recent National Suffrage Convention in Washington, "One of the greatest unconscious compliments aver re- ceived was paid me the other day by my _daughter. Some one asked. "Who is master in your house, any way'?" See answered, "I have lived there all isiy life, and I have not found that out. yet." IT° continues, "I do not desist: to haye a wife who in all respects would render me un - 'questioning obedience; it would de- stroy that fair compainonship which ought to exist betwoeo hueband- and wife." e . ADMINISTRATIVE DUTIES. It has been . proven, time anti again, that women are supremely qualified for administrative duties. Strange that .titere should be any hesitancy tie to her fitness for the franchise-, because 'from the • dawn of the world's history it has seemed -perfectly natural foie her to be- a queen." Lat Englann during the reign of Elizabeth. Its advancement in literature, philosophy, science - and commerce, was phenomenal. We. see her at 'the age of 55, the leaflet' of her troops at Tilbury. IS:deep:a of Spain, by her unselfish tact, and keen foresight, made the discovery or this coutinent possible. . And what need have WO to make. reference to the late reign of Victoria? Has it not been the Most reMarkeble on re- cord?' She was not only a queen, but it type of true womanhood as Well, and ber impress will be felt on generations yet unborn. Woman is being rapidly forced la- te her pristine place' and power. Eve. bs- re divine edict, at creation's dawn„ was with Adam to "subdue" the earth, and over it • to have • "do- mini e'en' "Mother," said Harry Higgins, 'Mr. Trivitt sent his little boy on an errand to get it hundred things, and Jimmy didn't forget One.'' '"That's the right kind of boy to have," replied arse, Higgins. "I wish you were like him, because you always forget one or two." "But I could remember all the things Mr. Trivitt told Jimmy to gen" "What were they ?" "A hundeed postage stamps," .4.44.4,....4.34.+44.44414-41rOwcor•4441,,ps.,,ovettvavvro 44. 0, THE KING, THE UEEN and E DUCHESS • OF DEVONSI-IIRE. • I A Remarkable Offer. Hero is the best offer ever mede in this community. By a very excellent ar- , rangement made with the Family Herald end Weekly Star of Montreal we are eneeeed Go after Tint Examen TTLEXe awl that great Family Pape% the Family fseeald and Weekly Star, for one year for the 8=11 sum of $1.16 and in. 4. elude to each san-seriber three oeautiful premium pictures, of which the follow- * lug is a brief descripa•e- IKING rmw.4.1133 Virg -Trim to likt, beantiful portrait size 18 x 24 inches, on beautiful f'eavy white satiu finished paper for training. This portrait 4) has been taken Stile° lus Recession to the throne, and is the very letest mad best • obtainable. It cannot be had excepb throunit the ITA.PdtlLY TilatALP .&ND es Wnereev STAR; each picture bears the Ring's autograph. This pietare hes the * great merit of being the first taken after the Rage's accession, and has t,hersefern •11111 historical value that no othor picture oan Nauss. `0` QUlilN ALBS:ANT:Min—An exquisitely boreal:Kul plature of the remark - 4. 6 0 er pictures of the King and Queen. : Is that nob big value? Call at Tan Tams Office and see samples e, of these beentiful pictures, A Yoa want Tsui Exerrna Tt/dBS for the local neNVS, and you want that • 0 • ignelecaet. paper the Family Herald for it's :el pages of general news and family l' reading. Its agricultural pages alone are worth :natty times the subscription -',e•i; 1g or send your subscription to • 431: ably eautitui awl got 1 Queen Alexandra, ties() taken sitsee Glee acceasion to the throne. It 14 the IMMO size as that of the Xing, the two forming a hi/tail- iNeoerp:ruttriani it'eb.Se. Iv a g some pair of ploteres that alone wottid sell for meatiStimes the subscription pale° or pa and Consort takete at the seeonn or sueceeelinpasit- tangs een have me fret:tam of tne value of the neat, The go down to lit9tok74 „Af TUB .DUCHESS OF DEVONSHIRE.—The Benewned Gitineborough " stolen by clover thlevee, hidden for over tweaty-four years mad delivered to its tures. Sold at auction sale in London twenty.five Tears ego for 410s1500, oweer on payment of $25,600 reward aad since sold to Me 3. Piesponb }genets, an. V15'',C9).°is, in brief, Is the history of one of the prerniern Octaves, willeh, by a clevet stroke of enterprise, the publishers of the Fetutly Herald have seettred for their sabscribers. Tho picture Is 2.2x28 la ten dolours, and is reproduced Mite for line, coloer for colour with the original. Copiee of the reproduction are now sold in New. York City, Montreal and 1:roronto for $12 eisela and this Is the picture Family Herald subscribers are goiug to get absolutely free together with the THE TIMES OFFICE. 061.0,66600.664)0.44.006146.6 000.460.044.4.0 0-0046.6.4 ,tto rvsw I We ak e Thousands of young and middle-aged men are annually swept to a premature grave through EARLY INDISCRETION, ExCEKSEte, AND BLoOD- DISEASE:). If you have any of the following symptoms consult us before it is too late. Are you nervons and weak, despondent and gloomy, specks before the eyes vvith dark circles under them, weak back, kidneys irritable, palpitation of the heart, bashful, dreams and losses, sediment in urine, pimples on the face, sunken eyes, hollow cheeks, careworn expression, poor memory, lifeless, distrustful, lack energy and strength, tired mornings, restless nights, changeable moods, weak man hood, stunted organs, premature decay, bone pains, hair loose, sore throat, etc.? Our Now Method Treatment win mire you. 9 Nothinrcau be more demoralising to young and middle-aged m_eu thall. emissions 'unfit a man xor bustuess, mar- ried life or social happiness. No matter 'whether caused by evil habits in youth, natural weakness, or sexual excesses, onr New Method. 'Treatment will posi- tively cure you. CURES GUARANTEED. NO CURE, NO PAY. Xj-No Names Use,d Without 'Written Consent. iv. A.. Muir, of Lima, 0., says :—"I was one of the countless victims of early vice at 15 years of age. The drains on my systent were weakenin my brain as welt as my sexual and nervous sys- tem. For tett years tried scores of doctors, electric belts and patent medicines. Some helped me, none cured. I was giving up in despair, im fact, contemplating suicide when a frtend ad- vised me as a last resort to give the New d MethoTreatment of Drs. X. &X. a fair trial. Without coufidence I couseuted a.nd in three months I was a cured man. I was cured seven years ago --ani married and happy. I iteartile- recommend Drs. E. E. to my gadded 13eforeTreatment fenow men." Alter Treatment .reelne treat and cure Varicocele, Emissions, Nervous Debility., Seminal Weakness, Gleet, Stricture, Syphilis, Unnatural Discharges, Self Abuse, Kidney o.nd Bladder Diseases, and all diseases of Ilun and Women. Sr NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. PRIVATE. No medicine sent C. 0. D. No names on boxes or envelopes. Everything comideatial. QuessKeudy ," MS SHELBY' STREET, tioon.list annd cost of treatmeent, & ra at uight or secret drains through.he turine. They ESE'rn101?, 110, e 1,..W744` 3 DANGERS OE CELLULOID. A heated curling iron will readils start the -evolution of 001150 11101 highly inflammable fumes if brought in contact with a. celluloid comb or hairpin, says the London Lancet. The proximity of a naked light adds to the danger enormously, for the fumes Of celluloid will • ignite fiercely at some cousiderable • distance from the flame. The inanumeturers of these dangerous articles should be compelled to • stamp plainly upon them the words "highly inflam- mable." The danger is Ito imaginary one. A gentleman with a lighted cigar in hie mouth was playing epee an "American organ" furnished with celleloid. keys. When some red-hot ash dropped upon the keys they in- stantly -burst into fiance and flame, which could only be extinguished with the greatest difficeity.• ENEMIES OF SLEEP. The worst enemies •!.. • of sleep are woerying, overwork, • overeating. in- digestible Slippers, and the habitue I use of stimulants • and deugs. The pure includes strict attention to diet, a well -ventilated sleeping -room, some light exercise, like a wells atm! -the eveoing meal, and' freedom, -of couesee from worey. - Napoleon 'had as many cares and perplexities as the next man, but arbitrarily shu1 btheihtry. neoinirgiIt is not. well go go to oc A cep of hot milk or a light sandwich is advised when that sensation is felt. Yet -it is necessary to remember than insomnia. and a11 overloaded stomach ase closely ac- quainted. Stimulants and narcotics in the end are sleep .destroyers. When the whole subject is ' weighed the main remedy is seen to bp good lutis- ts and a, tranquil mind. Major Merritt Explaining to Lord Xitchener the Use of the Cana- dian Pack Saddle. (This has since beeii ordered 1 or the .my in South Africa.) ,k arpentere • Carpseyntering is nob anea trade. The 'constant ru eaching / and down, the lifting and stooping over are all severe strains on the kidneys. No wonder a carpenter exclaimecl, re c en t 1 y, that every time he drove a nail ib seemed as though he ,vas piercing his own Jacek. He uses DOILIFFS Kildnoy Ps raow on the first sign of Backache and is able to follow his trade with comfort and profib. "I have had kidney and urinary troubles for more than three years with severe pain in the small of my back and in both sides. I could. tot stoop without difficulty, netd 1 had eevere neu- ralgic pain in both temples. Seeing the adver- tisement of Doates Kidney Pills, 1 gob a boxe T'eey have given mama& relief, removing the pain from the:back and sides, and, banishing the neuralgic pains froni my head. The urinary difficulty fallow entirely gone, I feel fresh and vigorous in the morning's, anti am much stronger in every waysineentking th (waning." CLARENCE E. BE ans, darpenter and Builder. Traitor:sine& IVIU CH IN TATTLE. Religion makes good armor but We a poor cloak. There is no place too lowly for the display of high qualities. We never beco the ei (Awes of tho kingdom or God by obedience mere- -4— Prayer is the pulse or the Christ- ian's Itfe—there is no secular, no se- cret], all is God: As we are moving down the strezun of time let us be prepaeed for land- ing at, the right hayee, If you are tut lincommonly • good Christian, you can prove it more easily by your good chives than by your loud words. God likes the men who cliotnie hard _things. Me gives hard tasks es proof of his love to those whom Ile trusts and honors. The Christian who counts on the constant presence and the continu- Otis help of Christ is a person who is hard to discourage. Leindon's whiten temperattire \fere .0,g4s 37dg,5 and its suinnytin le;