HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1902-5-15, Page 71.0414,.....191•*•••••••01%.1.•
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RSOLUTE
EC fit
Genuine .
Carter9s
'Little Livep
.viust Sear elgriature of
See Pee -SWIM Wrapper Below.
very ammo end, Ala /MY •
tO (aka as sugar.
CAMP'S
ITTLE
IVER
Pi ILLS.
re HEABACRIEe
MR DIZZINESSe.
FOR SWOOSHES -S.,
FOE TOREN) LIVER.
FOR CONSTIPATION.
MR SALLOW SKIN.
FOR THE COMPLEKION
, .13=701.7.11NTB FIUST HMS
34 Wage 'rarely Vegetable.
—
CURE SICK HEADACHE.
• Turns Bad Blood into
Rich Red Blood.
This spring you will need
something to take away that
tired, listless feeling brought
on by the system being clogged
with- impurities which have
:accumulated during the winter.
Burdock Blood Bitters is the
remedy you require.
It has no equal as a spring
• medicine. It has been used by
thousands for a quarter of
a century with unequalled
success.
HERE IS PROOF.
Mrs. J. T. Skine of Shigawake, Que.,
writes: "I have used Burdock Blood
Bitters as a spring medicine for the past
four years and don't think there iA its equal.
When I feel drowsy, tired andhave no
desire to eat I get a bottle of B.B.B. It
purifies the 'good and builds up the con.
stitution better than any other remedy."
IISPeo=telnerair
ITISH
OP
LINIMENT
IL
IrOR
Sprains, Strains, Cuts, Wounds, Ulcera,
Open Sores, Bruises, Stiff joints, Bites and
Stings -of Insects, Coughs, Colds, Contracted
.Cords,, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Bronchitis,
Croup, Sore Theoat, Quinsey, Whooping
Cough andall Painful Swellings.
A FAROE BOTTLE, 25o.
AMID
PILLS
WEAK !PEOPLED
ANO THOSE TROUBLED WITH
EalnitatIon, Thrcibbing or irregular
eating of' tho Heart D.Izzlnees,
Shortness of Breath, distress after
Exert:foil, Smothering Foeliflgo
Spasms orPain through -the Breast
and Heart, ISIorbal Coadition of tho
IV! Mei, Partial Paralysis, Sleeplees-
eiess,Nervousness, Anemia, Genee
re I Debi thy, After -Effects of Grimes,
Loss of Appetite, etc.
Remember, 'Milburn's H e art and
Nerve Pills ware the worst eases
after other remedies fall.
Lti Oi'14,1V014 PHIS eta% 0.0.nailPaillon.,
ONE BOTIIEllS
In Helping a Brother We Make the
Back Stronger.
Mnittrel ernes to AO (.4 till eaTdarilTelite ea!
2aaa Vla iwvir .
red mad wo, by auk. .
tee neysituitat 01 apiculture, Otter.
A despatch from Chicago says :—
Dr, Frank De Witt Talmage
Preached trona the folloWing text ta-
Galatians vi, 2; "Lear ye one an-
other's burdens ancissee Stabil). the
law of Chalet.
Paul was the noblest Chrietian
anaatyrawho eves. lived., He 'could
well quote hiniself as an example for
all his 'contemporaries, Frew: the
very moment when his, blinded eves
were opened by the good • Ananias
on athe Damascus street • called
"Straight" he never ceased to sacri-
fice himselffor his fellow men. Bat
so important is the lesson of vice -
Hoe's burdea bearing 'Paul .would
not have his friends look to any
human guide. He seem' s to dome to
the members of the Galatia:a church
in the sama Way that a staff, officer
of the conunandez"Oof a great army
•delivers his order to e, 'captain, a
major, a 'colonel or brigadier gen-
eral, .and they, are orders of benefi-
cial import, as, were tbose that the
...representatives of Oeperal Giant de-
livered when they rode through the
Federal lines tellthg Sberidan and
Meade and Humphreys and Ord and
Warren and Wright.and Hartranft to
cease- firing :becauee the two nation-
alleaders,' Grant and Lee, were,
meeting ander a flag of truce at
Appomattox. ' •'
Paul seems to say t "The duty of
bearing . one another's imadens is
abt myCINI`n COMMand, nor is if giv-
en to us by the command of Peter
or John or Apollos; but by the com-
mand of the great Divine Chieftain
himself." Read the words as they
were written to the Graatian church.
Hear go the command as it is spok-
en for us to 'hear, Bear one an-
other's burdena and so fulfill the law
of Christ." The law of Christ Is the
jaw with which every Christian
should be in harmony. It is the law
which ought to inspire us all. Like
al/ Christ's laws, It is, reasonable
and is devised for
THE COMMON GOOD.
First, "bear ye one augther's: bur-
dens," because every one is stronger
in some special way than his neigh-
bor. The intelligent traveller gath-
ers information •wherever he goes.
When. talking with a matonhan.apon
the paltet car, With the fates& in the
field, with the mechathe at bis
bench, with the eallor -upon the
ship's deck, with the engineer in his
cab, he can obtain answers to clues -
tions which he hiniseb could never
eolve, Ile dan always find a man
who knows more in at least some
special field, than be himself knows,
no matter how intelligent the :pais-
timer:Might be. The servant in the
kitchen in all probability. knows
how to cook bread bet* than her
reastela oven though the head a the
house may be the chief owner of the
great Pillsbury flour 'mills, where
thousands and tens of stlinusesals of
bushels of grain ave daily turned
into the white substauce which forms
the stasale of every meal. The skill
of the eminent surgeon as, never les-
sened by seeing a carpenter handle a
saw, and there never comes a time
when the man of ten talents Call af-
foM to despise the lessons he may
learn from the man of one talent.
This is an age, for the speeinliza-
tion of talents.. Instead of ono xna,n
making a shoe, as in olden tithes a
single cobbler did, .• it now takes
fifty men to make the sante shee.
Instead of one wthitan spinning ' bee
own thread and weaving her own
cotton and sewing her own garments
each woman concentrates her power
of mind upon one distinct part of .an
industry. civilization has degtained:
its cotton mills; its cuttera, its sew-
ers, its fitters and its itriporters and
exporters, and the combination tends
to the general advantage, We • buy
where We can buy the cheapest, and
ive sell where we can sell the dear-
est. Allethese resplts. come front- the
specializhtion et talent. The* reg
alization ' that someeMen
can do things better than WO. We
in tarn in another line of. business
ought to do some things better than
those who are not proficient in mate
trades. A good gunsmith does not
'always make a crack marasinan.
An expert yacht :builder cannot stla
ways be turned into a trustworthy
sea captain.
Proficiency 'beteg given to us in.
Mental or manual abilities, there is
also proficiency given to us in
• SPIRITUAL ABILITIES.
Certain temptations which assail
one sinner do not appeal to another
sinner, and , slice versa. One man
mayhave a prepensity for gambling,
smother . for . sirink, another for
licentiousness, another for sloth, an-
• other for profanity., another for
theft, another for perjury. Some,
men ere boen &ars. Parents testify
that -Certain children ip one f Manly
have a tehdency to 'lfalsehood from
their cradles : • .other children: born
in the saMe family noun. show it
disPosition to prevaricate. Parents
,ean often trace the lire's weaknesses
,of their children almost Cram the
tirno those children began to walk
•and , teak, They east ,,dissiageisejt
cor-
tain satanic chnnicteristics itsdiss
tinctly as a stranger cap tell whe-
ther a child by the color' of thesskin
is born. front white oe black pareete.
Of eeuree 11 fs often a great deal,
harder to tea whe Lit er the white
child bus a black' rt or n. basek
Skitmed ehial hes a white heart than
to tell the calor of the outside epi. -
&Petal covoriug
•• As nearly every awe is stronger in,
sidrittiel anise in some one Way'
then . hi s neig lamas i t ought t be
that etroag nsannt duty to 'dee
strength to compensate for tad Weak..
'floss of his neighbor. Bear and fer-
iae:Iis the teaching of tbe Bible.
This is the reaSon, akirISL. scot forth
his Messengers two by two. This is
the reason we find impulsive Peter
often walking by the side of the
well poised John ; the gentle Mary
living in the same house with her
awful, awful lot of trouble! :Malaita°
suffered again and agaba. We have
had to go to the family, plot; tta- I
went two Weelss :ago, and to leaVe.
therb a Raved ope. • The grave
look soabig, and thebbsek ,holo Was
dug so deep. But, then, I bethink
myself. : these Is a way we can all
Carry oar oWn burdens. That way.
is to cast ous - Wardens upon the
Lord, and he will sustain' us. tie has
promised thus te do, lf we can on-
ly cast our bardensupon him, do
you .not •taee our ataitris hands will be
free? Then wo eau go forth like
athletes :etripped for the fray., ,Wo
can go forth to help our brothers
and sisters, our pat:eats and children
and all our anoints, carry their bur -
sister, who lost her temper m thedens. ,
..' '
kitchen; spiritualized by her own Let .us go backtO the ' good old
1101150.. country Wiles, when, by fOree of, eir-'
sweetness of sotil that entire
.cumstauces; every one helped. •every
hola. This is the way in which we
other person in the community, 10
can double our noved ones' spiritual
usefulness and diminish their tempta-
those good old times. everyone Was
ready to halve a friend's sorrows ae
tious to sia. "Bear ye one another's
burdens" has a wider and deeper won itS double a friend's 'joYs. When
the wedding bells began to ring, the
significance than most of no have
ever realized. • Yotnag' girls,, the griends of the bease,
used to come from the village aad
Again the text says, "Bear ye one
decorate the cnurch altar with the
another's burdens," because a little
wild. flowers Which they had pleked.
help will often inspire a hopeless,
Friends Would' sew the wedding gala
helpless, Purposeless sinner to Put
ass" assents; friends ,Would serail the wede
forth his own energies until
ding mike; friends would 'help the
awhile he gathers strength 'enough•
to • young people furnish the new •honie;
friends would bear the burdens, the
• HELP HIMSELF.
Have you ever seen a teen]. of horses bonny burdene of joy. :Then when
trcetble..ceste, the' same.friends would
hitched tee a heavy laden waggon come in and hthri the •invalid; they
that , is stuck in the rats ? The Weald pour out the Medicine: they
horses' struggle and pull tmtil they would close the eye -lids in the lest
become absolutely belpless and can sissy;
pull ' no more. Thera have • you they, would- up all night
long With'the dead; they would sew
ever seen it . Couple of men come the shroud thid carry the casket ,and
with some long, stout bars .dig the grave ; The same friends
They place these bars underneath the would raise the headstone. . Friends,
hind axle and begin to heave. • '"Phe the sena° friends Who °ace plucked
wagon moves. Then after the' ,ruts the orange • 'blossoms, would plant
have been passed have you. ever seen the ogpress. •
the team of horses whieh were helps
leas when. the Wheels were stuck in Aye, let us be to each other friends
the ruts, easily pull the wagon along of that kind. Together let as bring
the broad"highway? Have you ever
Seen a great engine, •fastened OS the
end of a long train puffing and blow-
ing, with its wheels whirling around
and around and yet not moving olio
inch ahead? That train is stalled
upon an up grade. Then have you
ever seen another engine being fas-
•tened to that"first engine, liy the
addition of its power •draw the trait
up? • Then after the upgrade has been
passed have you seen the second, en -
gate uncoupled, because the first en-
gine was . then able to do all the
work.? Have you ever seen all that?
Yes: of course you have.
The great trouble of this world is
some mon are too heavily burdented.
They have toe big et pack upon their
books. To tidethe'ngure of the'witg-
on, or the engine, they are stalled
uponethe up -grade. They are stuck
in the mud. When they first ceme to
it standstill, they pulled and tugged
and straggled, angtne more they
pulled the more exhausted they ,be -
tante. The result was instead of getg
"-ing ahead they became discouraged.
They just gave up' all hope and lay
down to die. . If you would go to
that wearied and stumbling man
and help him carry the load up the
crossing, help him out of the ruts,
You -would not only do good to the
extent to which you relieved hini of
his superincumbent weight, but you
would stimulate him to exert his
own energies aatil after awhile he
though weakly, would be strengthened and encouraged to take care of
hianself. • •
But the words of the text,' "Bear
ye one another's burdens, and so ful-
fill the law of 'Christ," bave still
- ANOTHER APPLICATION.
Paul was addressing the members
of the Christian churches. These
churches • were situated in Gab.
alias The ,members had in-
ternal ' dissentions. Li the
coarse of his letter he lays down the
broad statement that each member
must beaa with the faults and frail-
ties of other membere. They shcaild
especially do this because they were
brethren and members of it church
franily of which God was the Father
and Jesus Christthe older brether.
The blond of a belief in a. common
Saviour 'certainly ought to help the
members Of a Chinch. family to bear
With each Other's weaknesses. World-
ly societieshelp their unfortunate
mernbers...
Why • should not the children of
God, bound together by the same
spiritual bond of fellowship, try to
bear . the burdens of their .spiritual
brothers and sisters in Christ? Jos,
Site "came to seek .and to "seam that
agtich as lost." Yet steno of as act
as if a church member who is not
always a perfect Member must be ex-
pelled from, the church fellowship.
When a minister does wrong or the
anger of scandal pbints at the cleri-
cal broadcloth, we say: "Out with
him from the pulpit." Away with
him! • Away! Away!" When it
church -official is weak or indiscreet,
wo proceed to deprive him of his
churchly office: We have no toler-
ance for any wrong -doing, no dispo-
sition to allow for the force of his
temptations- Ab, that is not Paul's
way; that is not Christ's.. • "Bear
ye one another's burden." means that
chnrch -members have a right to leek
for their chief help and rescue from
their own religious brothers and sis-
ters.
•
Lastly, "Bear ye one another's
burdens" means that every one
should , try in a, manful, Womanly,
Christian- fasbionbo bear his own
-
burdens. .We are .very apt to think
that ourown troubles, are' 'heavier to
bear than any other person's trOu-
bles. 33ut if We were allowed, as in
the olcl legend, to go to the plain of
aft:beta-an aad deposit there -our own
sorrows• and wereacompeffed instead
to tato pp the •
SORROWS:OP SOME ONE ELSE
•
in .all prOba,bility, we Weald car-
ry away -freth the mountain ef diffi-
culty • the' • burden pack: Which our
backs have 'been accustonied to car-
ry. • Now, We, amulet help our broth-
er to bear his ',burdens by trying to
pilo upon his stalerart shouldese our
own barelons la addition
• No man. 'ever becomes a healthy
num, mentallY or spiritually, whois
a mendicant ay choice, ,critaviing frorn
dber to door, belting and whining.
Yet there aro sem° burdeas ,that are
absolutely impossible for 118 to bear
in our own strength. Some of tie
have had so much trouble—such at
all our burdens and sins and lay
them at the foot of the eross, and
this is the lasa of tbe gospel: "Bear
ye ono .anetheris burdens and so ful-
fil the la'W, of Christ."
THE S.
S. LESSON.
• INTERNATIONAL LESSON,
, *KAY 18:
Text of the Lesson, .Acts
1-12 Golden Text, Nat.
xxviii., 19.
. •
1. Now there •-- were in the church
that was .4 Antiocat certain pro-
phets and,,teaOhers.,. :
Then follow the names of Barna-
bas andthree ethers and Saul. Ber-
nal:MS and Saul, having continued a
whole year at Antioch teaching much
people, 'were afterward sent to Je-
rusalem With the elating for the
needy. brethreu in Judaea. (xi. 26-30):
in dee time they returned, haying
fulfilled their missionaand brought
with them John Mark, son of Mary,
Barnabas' sister, at .whose house the
prayer meeting had been held ori be-
half of Petea (chapter ail,. 12,' 25 ;
Col. iv, 10). . .- • , • • • ,...
2. As they thinistered to the Lord
and fasted the -Plo.ly Chest said,
Separate me Barnitbas and Saul for
;the work whereunto I have called
them. -. • • eas
TO. stand- before God and serve
Him and minister unto - Him (1.1
Charm. xxix, 11) should be the at-
titude and daily. life of every Chris-
tian, the most ordinary work of the
daily routine done to His glory (1
Cor. x, 31). As Barnabas and Saul
lived this consecrated -life, with fast
ing, giving - more attention to• • the
soul than the body, the aToly Spirit
calls' them tea a •special work which
Ire has for 'them (Eph. ii, 10). These
is real :rest in allowing God to =sil-
age us and work out in us His pleas.
sure. . .
3, And when they had fasted and
prayed dad laid- their hands •on them -
they sent them away: • . . _ .
, The overindulgence of the body, in
any way is not consistent with a
holy . life. Tbat which is safficient
for health God will bless. But the
soul—communion with God, a • de-
light in HiS will and readiness to do
it, filled with His Spirit for . His
service—if this is earnestly desired
it Will be ours (Ps, czciv,.19), and
we.'shalt .be channels whereby God
reveals Himself. . . •
• 4S. So they, being sent forth by
the -Holy Ghost, departed unto
• Seleacia, and front thence they sail-
ed to Cyprus..
Like 'Moses leading Israel or build-
ing the tabernacle, or like • David
giving Solomon the plans for the
temple, or like Noah building the
ark, tbey have no say in the matter,
but are wholly under the gal:ileac°
and control of •the Holy Spirit. -
5. And when they ware at Salamis
they preached the word of God in
the eynagogaes of the Jews.
Salamis WtHi at the end of Cyprus
.nearest the Saleable, while Paphos
of the next verse was at the western
end: Their mission was by the word
of God in the power or the Spirit to
prodlaiin the good news coecerning
JCS118 . Christ, and at once they set
about it, their regular custom 'being
to bogie. with tbe Jews (Rom. a 16;
MIs iii, 26; xiii,-'46):
6. And when they had .gone
tbrongh tbe isle unto Paphos they
found a cestain sorcerer; a false pro-
phet, it Jew, whose name was Bar-
Jeslus.
'l .
1ecIevi has his - servants every -
11\
where and '..Or are, not idle. If the
servants at 6 strist were as busy sow-
ing the good seed as the devil's salts
vents are busy sowing tares, . how
1311101 mere ,quickly the gospel might
be given to every creature.
'7.. Tim .deputy of. -tae country cal-
led for' Ilarna.ba.s and Saul and de-•
sired to hear the ..word of God. - It
is restSui. to know that where Gaul
wants His - message paoclabned 'He
will' give an open door which no' one
Can shut(Rev. Pi, 8)..
• 8. But Elyanas the sorerrer with-
stood them, seekingto tarn away'
the deputy feoin the faith.
• A preachee should• know; that if
Huge Is HO reSiStElle0 to hiii preach-
ing it may he because the devil fears
no harm to his 'kingdom from it, and
he should consider end see if he is awn ef the disease.
•
preaehing that Which Ged bids:him
la the &ever of the Hedy Spirit. -
Os 'rhea Seed (who .e.lSo is Called
Paul), • filled with the Holy ()host,
• get his eyes oh.111131.
• Here is is face to face encounter be-
tween aaservant of Christ and it.ther-i
vant of Satan, ,Paul, filled Withathe
Holy:Cheat's reminds us that We are
=remanded . to he filled With the
Spirit '(Eph. • v, 18), and We :Should
e)pect, it to be always so with Us,
eaying.as• Mary,said, "Be it unto me
ac,cbriling..te.-Tby word" (laulai I, 88)
This la tho •time that Saul is
called rani, and it is interesting to
note thatthe deputy's • name, ie
Paulus. •
10. 0 *u,1 of all subtilty andall
mischief, thou • ebild of the devil,
thou enemy of all righteousness; wilt.
thdu notcease to pervert, the right
swell Of the .Lord?
So Peter was enabled by the Spirit
to react. 'the hearts of Ananias and
Sapphire, (chapter V, 8, f)). Tnas.
plainly Jesas spoke to the self-
righteous* Jews, telling them Vaat.
they were of. their fatherthe devil
(john 'Vika 44). Sena) wonlci..esty
thatthis was not very liberal.. but
God gives no permission to, be libers
al with the devil oz. his doctrines.
• 11: And aiew 'behold 'the band of
tte" .Lord • is upon thee, • and thou.
"shalt .be blind, not seeing the sun for
a season. ••
• Immediately it came to pass as
•Paul, by. • the • -Spirit said, and be
sthiglit for sem° oneato leadshim, by
the hancl. s.Itis oatwardseontlitiop
was 110W a, sign of • the detidition ot
his soul;•, was doulfly blind.
12. Then the deputy, when he saw
what was done, -believed, bell%
tonished at the doctrine of the Lord• .
'Hee sorcerer had probablysiirprised
him by seine wonderful things, but
he laad never seen anything 'like this.
If we Would commend Christ to oth-
ers it .niust beby such manifesto-
tiou of his powda in us as will make
it clear.that Fre is greater thaa Sat-
an and , that His joys are greater
than those the world can giveand.
that a life with Him is truly excel-
lent,
• A TRAGEDY OF WAR.
Dramatic „Incident of the Penin'
miler.
•
After Sir Charles • Tames Napier.
had been :wounded in the jaw ' at
Busaco, durini the Peninsaler ,War;
in 1810, he seems to hate beeit
patient most diflicalt to be suppres-
sed. When' the, shot took effect • on
hm
i' he was Otuegied into the conyent
of, Duseco, and fleally, tiringof ins
attion, he- -got, up- frein the' pallet
whore he haal teen laid, Jand With
blood flowing freely from his wound,.
went to the door to • look for his
horse. One Of his 'comrades seized
him and led him back, saying ,
"Are you Mad, Napier, to think
you can go back to lighting in this
state.? 'Be quiet I" • :..
So he - yielded and was harried
away to Liebon, where he rested
some months itt great suffering from
his wound,'
"It is said that my sight may be
lost," he wrote. "But if it goeS,
why, Hannibal hed but otie eye 1".
But when his division began to
pursue Massena, . and one combat
followed another, he' could nce Danger
bear to remain inactive. With his
wound still .bandnged, lie rode ninety
miles to rejoin the army. He found
his corps, and Pushed forward to
support the Light Division, Then
occurred, one of those tragic.. hap-
penings which are tho ectinmepplaces
of war. •
He knew that fightin''e was going
on in front, and. hoarlyhe asked for
news of his" two brothers. He did
not then even know that they were
living. Thas advancing, he met a,
litter of branches boime by soldiers
and covered by a blanket. •
"What wounded officer is that ?"
he nsked. . •
"Captain Napier of the -Fifty-sec-
ond. A becalm than."
Another litter followed.
"Who is that ?"
"Captain Napier of . the Forty-
third, mortally woutaled." •
. Charles Napier looked ,afterl . the
litters. and passed - on to the fight
in •• front. Captain Napier of the
Poky -third Was reriCinsly wounded;
but he lived until 1860.
CUBES FOR RatasITIVEATIS111.
• --.
There -Are 1,43'7 Remedtes for It
• -Up to Date.
_The latest computation of the num,
ber. Of distinctly rheumatism ,cures
it at 1,437. It is ono of the
peculiarities of rheumatism that the
cures prescribed for it are more num-
erous than the varieties of the ail-
ment .iteelf. •
'A brief .entimertition df remedies in-,
eludes hor sec hes Lnu te. wintergreen
tablets, electric rings, magnetic
'Watch charms, red flannel bandages
--white flannel is considered nt rio
�i1icmacy—goatS ntilic, ealisaya; .borse
hair poultices, raw oniqns carried in
coat pockets, and ice eream ioda.
These are only a few of the best
known reinediee, and do not include
several which oleo their fame to come
•bination s of . sundry ingredients: One
old-fashioned- cure is made up of a
plat of olclalo and it • small measure
of grated horseradish,.put in it jar or
demijohri and allowed to stan.dover
night, afters waich, a glass is drunk
beiore each
nt favor of Many of the -establish-
ed whimsical rheumatism 1 remedies',
it is to be said that they are ustally
palatable, can be bought chenply
and aro german harmless; recalling
in this particuble_ the ..case of the
patient for Whean rock-and-ryo was
prescribed .and .who declared that it
did him great hopefitaseven witn' the
reek candy loft bat.. •
• Rheumatism.' appearta. in so -Many
forms,' it affects or afflictsiro many'
Persepe, :it is se readily Constected
with • Weather C On dilion iutci.. th e
knowledge 'of • its 'Settees' ia So- inde-
finite and • .on some points so much
disputed, 'that the .provocatioa to
give remedies • for .rheumatisan is
readily .thaderstood, though this .Sact
doee not Moderate the general con-
viction of: nears atiffereril -frem rhea-
matisth that .the remedies so -.freely,
offered them tonstitato an aggravia
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••,,,,c,.
THE KING,
THE QUEEN
THE DUCHESS
and
ozvormsHIRE.
Remarkable Offer.
8 Here is the hest offer ever made in this community. By a very excel lent aa. •
agP eneiesed. to offer Tau Exams Taaas and that great Family Power, the l
4, rangement made with the Vatting Herald and Weekly Star loof Montreal we ere i
w Family Hzeald and Weekly Star, for one year for the small aunt of $1.75 gad in- t
* ' .
• elude to each ss, ',gariber three neautiful premium pictures, Of which the follow,. t
Ing Is a brief deseripLi--"- ,
KING EDWARD VII.—True to Ilk a beautiful portrait size 18 x 4,
Si imams, on beautiful l'eevy white satin finished papertor framing. This portrait ea
a• has been taken slam hie Amession to the throne, and le the very lateet and best' 440
w obtainable It cannot be had except through the Fauna' Rana= Arm 4q
• ' 4.,
,0 WEEKLT STAB; each picture bears the King's autograph. This picture has the
els great merit of being the first taken afteethe King's accession, and has therefore i
. ,an historical value that no other picture can possess. I
•
41 QUEEN ALEXA.ND11.1.—An exquisitely beeptitui picture qf the remade- ;
# ably beautiful and goc i Cineen Aleiluindra, Als0 taken since the 11Ctug's accassion 1
i
O to the throne. It s the grime size as that of the Xing, the two forming a hand. •f
2 some pair of pictures that alone would sell for many times the sabscrilation Price 1
: °$17513::000tipoarntrdeP:otrtre. King and Censor: ,t, aken at the second or sueeeeditig sit- 3'
,* tare. Sold at euotion sale in London twenty-five years ago for ammo, .
a, tinge can have one freation of tee value of the first. The e go down to history. .
1 THE DUCHESS OF DEVONSHIRE. --The Renowned Sulashorougli PLO. :
8_ stolen by cat:, ver thieves, hidden for over twenty-four years aud delivered to ite i
X owner on payment of $25,000 reward and since sold to M.„ J. PlerponaMorgan. for 'l
. •
es•0-This, in bile!, is the hietnry of one of the premium pictures, which, by a
8 cloves stroke of enterprise, the publishers of the Ji amily Herald have secured for .,
O their subscribers. The nicture as Mai in tan, ooloure, and is reproduved line for #
lk line, colour for colour with the original. Copies of the reproduction are now sold 41
:'in New York City, Montreal and Toronto for $12 each, and this is the picture i
• Family Herald subscribers are going to get absolutely free together with the
4, pictures of the King and Clasen. -
't. '
'- You wane THE EXETER TOMS for the local news, and you want that •
I .. Is that not big value? Call at Tan Toms Office and see samples
tu
- of these beautiful picres. •
41 great paper the Family Herald for it's 24 pages of general news and family 4,
. reading. Its agricultural pages, alone are worth many times the subscription #
.lie
,,,, price.
4 . 33Ang or send your subseriptillin to
41 THE TIMES OFFICE. , I
:
lie other Medical Finn in the world has the established reputation for curing
/11ela and Warners that Drs. X.* X, enjoy. Their Now Method Treat -
attend, discovered and perfected by these BmiLtent Specialiste, has brought joy,
happiness and comfort to thousands of homes. 'Wfth 30 years experience in the
treatment of these diseases' they can guarantee to Cure or Ito Pay—rtrutis-
alone, Net -roma Debility, Syphilis, vuricoceie, stricture, Gieeti
Secret Drains, Inapeteney, lensattai and 3ifienta1 Weakness', Kid-
ney and Bladder DiMoSaaeq, Their g11ara1itet0 are backed by Bank Bonde,
V& A' itarwr,,etit
P I
LV.E. ri
You may have a secret drain through the urine—that's die reaSint you feet tire/.
out in the morning. You are not rested, your kidneys ache yon feel despondent
nd have no ambittom Don't let your Iiife Blood be drained' away. Drs. S. & X
guarantee to Cr.re or no Pay.
is the scourgeof mankind. It may not be a crime to have it, Inc it
be inherited, but it is a crime to allow it to remain in the system. Luce fat/ie/—
like son. Bevrara of Mercury and Potasig treatment. Drs, K. positively C.169
the worst cases or no Pay.
!COCKLE .&
Th _Trx
The New ltiletbod, Tromitrrienst cures these diseases safely and surely. 140
gpaulanr—aniteesulZrerisji.ir
sexual organs. The stricture tissue is absorbed and can never return' Drs. H. a g.
-,mo detention from business. Don't risk operation and rete ;Ftmc
3. tneys 1 4 e)f
•
Don't neglect your kidneys. Your aching tact tells the tale. • Don't let Dooters
experiment en you. Drs. Ir.., Sr K. can cure you if you are not beyond human ai.2.
'They guarantee to Cure or No Pay.
CURES GUARANTEED. 310 CURE NO PAY. Constritstitoi.
Free. laooke oent Free, (sealed. ) Write for Qv:notion Elanti for EI<Iniw..,
Trionstrutent. Everything Confidential.
DR,S. KENNEDY &KERGAN„, ie SMELEY STFIEE".t.,
DETROIT, MiCII
4_,„-PEZEWAI
Carpenters'
idneys.
. MBE SHIRT -WAIST.
The Niobe shirt -waist is distin-
guished in the fact that it has a
fitted belt. Nothing could be prete
tier than it waist after this design
made of polka-dotted flannel, baying
a tucked front in plain, soft silk or
silk muslin. • The design is exceed-
ingly dainty, and there is an im-
mense. amount of style to it. The
Waist i of coarse made with it lin-
ing, but without the lining it May
be developed in 'wash goods for the
woman who wishes to have an elab-
orate waist.
Quantities of material required.—
Thirty-two and thirty-four bust mea-
sure' will require 'four yards of silk
twenty 'inches wide, with one and,
one-fourth yards 61 silk ler stet,
puffs, etc— Thirty-six bust' ineasure
will require our and one-foarth
yes& ' of • silk, with One and one-
fourth •yards of silk for, vegt, etc.
Thirty-eight and' forty bust Measure
will require four and oacehalf yards
of figured silk, with one end .00e -hall
•
yards of plata silk for vest, att.
• The tete Japanese battleship, the
"Mikitsza," is tho heaviest Warship,
afloa,t. iter displacement is 15,200
tong.
Carpentering iS not
an easy trade. The
constant reaching- up
and down, the lifting
and stooping over are
all severe strains on
the kidneys. No
wonder a carpenter
exclaimed, recently,
that every time he
drove a nail it seemed
as though he was'
piercing his own back. ' He uses
ESCARPS, Ilidney Pilgs
now on the first sign of Backache and is
able to follow his trade with comfort and
profit.
"X have had kidney and urinary. troubles for
more than three years with severe pain in the
small of my bads and in both side. I could not
stoop without diffloulty, and I had severe neu-
ralgic pain in both temples, Seeing the adver-
tisement of Doan'e Kidney Pills, I gob a box.
They have given mo quick relief, removing the
pain from the back and sides, andbenishieg the
neuredgio pains from my head. The urinary
difficulty is now entirely gone. I feelfresh and
vigorous in the mornings, and. arn meal stronger
ipeverywaysincetakiugthesepills." CLAREECE
Seam, carpenter anct Builder, Trenton, Ont.
A FEW POINTS.
A bachelor's advice is waste,c1 on a
'married man. •
The milk • of human kindness isn't
put up in bottles.
The man who is it failure isapt to
think that success is accidental;
An undertaker never has occasion
to do the same job more Ciao. once.
Why is it that grey halve' are' IhOre
often respected than bald heads'? •
Remember •-that it man may be n.
dwarf and still bo every inch a gen-,
Homan.
A mita has to make it name Inc
.All u. woman • het to do is
get metaled.. • ,
. It is better to have it light ptiese
thou a heavy heart,: but 111010 'COM-
fortrible Lo bave neither.
It is hard to believe Viet the good
die young when you • males spring
lamb' in 'a clamp' ' reS tau ra n 1.,
'When aa fellote Itt about 0 pro-
pose.nitl the girl is, nervous. • it is
generelly because she efrian game
one 'will interrupt tamp., before Ile
gets it; out,