HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1902-5-22, Page 2SOLi. TE
EC Rift
Genuine
Carte r's
Little Liver Pills'.
Must Sear Signature of
See latc-Sluille Wrapper Below.
✓ y wenn nun as eesy
to We as sugar.
CARTEKS
FOR DIZZINESSk_
TTLE FON BILIOUSNESS.
1VER FOR TORPID LIVEN.
PILLS. FOR CONSTIPATION.
FOR SALLOW SKIN,
FOR ME COMPLEXION
CallICEVEZM IdUar Kam:. 44,014ATuttc
aft I Par87 Volfeteblo.,
CURE -SICK HEADACHE
Strike the Iron
While it's Hot
is good advice.
Take
Burdock Blood Bitters
This Spring
is better advice.
During the winter, heavy rich
foods are necessary to keep the body
warm. When the spring comes,
the system is clogged up with heavy
sluggish blood; yon feel tired,
weary and listless and that all -
gone, no -ambition. feeling takes
possession of you. If you take
Burdock Blood Bitters it will
regulate your system, put you into
tondition and make you feel bright,
happy and vigorous.
.1
el.
KIONItlf 1L4
CURM
BACK ACHE
LAME RIAOX
RHEUMATISM
01 AIBETE3
BRIGHT'S DISKA6D
DIZZINESS AND Awl.
K1PNEY & URINARY
DISEASES
ARE CURED: Er/
Nt PINY
IS
Mts. 1. STEEVES, Edgett's Land -
tug, N.B., writes on Jan. itE3, rgox
"In the fall of ag9 I was troubled
with a severe pain In the back, I
could scarcely get up out of a chair
and it gave me great pain to move
about I took one box of Doan's
Kidney Mils and was completely
cured1 have not been troubled
With it since."'
HOW T
,
LIVE HAPPILY.
Opportunity to Live Content With
Small Means.
tEtYlaTe51"eeitit Velleettertrillitrftu:t.
sate Sed Two YY INVI11404 B.41y, of atittetaa e
r
the Deentieteek 0 Airttoultuts, mama:.
A despatch from Chicago says:' -Rev
Prank De Witt •Talmage peee.ched
trona the following text —Mark viii,
36, "What shall it profit a man iS
he sball gain the whole world and
lose his owie soul?"
A most magnificent text, especially
easy of interpretation at the preseut
time. This ia pre-eallaently a com-
mercial age, Eirerywhere man is
struggliner after the mighty (taller.
Capital arives to beat down every
obstacle, that it rivers of gold. may
gra* into oceans. Prove to a 113;a4
who has money that by a certain in-
vestment he can make more money
and there, is no trouble to persuade
him to invest, Why does a veal es-
tate speculator buy land? TO make
mone,y. When examiniag a piece 0
.teroperty, he saYs to himself: "If I
buy, shall I be able t� sell at an
advanced price? Is this suburban
region giling to he built up? Wil
the electric cars conie out hoe?
Saall . thee filter° .residents „have, pew.
teats to the city? Shall I be able
to Make enough out of my bargain
to warrant the , oat') t t t of , aleelettiag
this :Ear'm up into. streets and build-
ing bets—enough to pay my taxes in
the Meantime?" The meachantman's
chief, thought is to decrease his ex
-
penses and thereby increase his pro-
fits. To have the maximum of re-
turns for the minimum of output he
sends his •buyers to Europe. There
they can buy the cheapest. He has
wires strung round the store so be
can dispense with his cash girls. Fe
pays proxuptly for his goods to avail
himself of the discount.
more trade he has his delivery V
V°r NN11°-
gons stationed in the neighboring
towns. His custothers are thus ac-
commodated. They do not have to
carry their bundles home.
TO INCREASE THE PROFITS •
and decrease expenses the large cor-
porations are being formed. There
are the steel trust, the Oil trust, the
tin can trust, the sugar trust, the
tobacco trust, the coal trust, the
flour trust, the meat trust. A trust
is primarily forraed to regulate the
selling prices; but secondarily,- a
trust is formed to lessen the cost of
production. .
Thirty or forty men in the same
,
line of business come together. They
say to each other: "What is the
good of trying to financially cut each
ether's throats? Why not have a
community of interests? . Ineteadaut
having Many different offices we can
have one big central office. Instead
of having thirty or forty different
presidents and secretaries and trea-
surers and cashiers and superiutend-
ents and general :managers we can
have each department under a single
head. If we are in the brick bile',
ness, we can have the brick yard
which is nearest to the site of the
proposed building- make the bricks
and thus save expense or cartage.
The tie which binds the leaders of a
great corporation is not one of sen-
timent. but one of profit. Christ, in
my text, talks to his brothers as
though they were a collection of busi-
ness men, He practically says: "Be-
fore you settle the question of your
eternal destiny I *ant you to enter
into sonict gospel matheinaties. I
want you to put down upon a piece
of paper all the riches of the world.
Place there the value of the gold of
countless mines and of the cattle on
a thousand hills. Place there the
value of the palaces of kings and
queens. The value of the great com-
mercial interests of the . world. Put
all these values down. Add the fig-
ures up. Theo from that aggrega-
tion of numbers subtract the value of
your immortal soul and behold what
you have left."
but in the Oast, Now 1 haste rieheS,
a, eity moue:ion and a cow try home,
These results of fimeacial -success do
not bring to Me peace of mind and
contentment, The happiest time of
my life was when a poor young man
lived on a. small salary. Though
eenneoruarialgteo,,,
s were not large, d
yet ha
g
......arry on. 1 Won, a true,
good, noble wife,. We.started out in
two small rooms. The babies came
one by one. The small salary was
somehow able to stretch enough to
furnish food and clothing ' for all.
We always had enough to eat. Our
gar:mats could defy any cold. Never
were a pair of birds happier hatch-
thg. out their eggs in a dovecot than
my wife and I in our little nest. But
nowinstead of workbag as a me-
t
chanie ten hours per day, I am plan-
ning most of the time. I •am afraid
the men will strike and the whole
pla,nt will stand idle. My poor
brain, tired from overwork, serial not
let um sleep at night. I am worried
because I fear that if I should die
I my children could not stir:tighten out
the estate. They Might lose every-
thing." Indeed, there is but little
.ptesutaousieno being rich and owning
m
• a .TITAN -YOU CAN LIVE IN.
MA'TIIEMAT1CS CANNOT LIE.
Two and two always make four.
Ten times ten make 100. Twelve
divided by four always gives three.
Five from five leaves nothing. come,
let us try to solve the greatest of all
problems, "What shall it profit a
man if he shall gain the whole world
and lose bus own soul?"
Satan coulee to • re man who
in all probability will not
live over five or ten or perhaps
twenty years, and he says: "My.
friend, you give me a mortgage on
your eternal soul, to be foreclosed at
your death, and I will give you a life
interest in the world. I will give
you more food than you can eat,
more clothing than you can wear;
more houses than you cari live in,
more money than you can spend,
and at your earthly demis 1 will
not care for your ameey or your
•stocks, but I Will may -demand and
take yam. iramortal. soul," Come
now, let us reason 'together. Are
you, an immortal mon, with a soul
which shall live on through tbe cora-
leg ages, with a soul that shall
stand by the cradle of unborn Mile:
len:limns, with. a soul that shall yet
witness this earth gasp and ale of
old •age, to enter into: sutra a con-
tract? Read the simple statement
of tha proposed agreement. Ask
Yourself. this .neomentous eptestion:
"What shall at prof; t a man its he
shall gain the *hole world and lase
his own soul?" and exercise the
common sense Clod has given you,
great worldly possessions do nett
accessitily haply a Inc intereet tfl
happiness. Indeed we believe those
in the eedinary walks or Hfe have
ETT 1'OSHJ B IL ITT ES
for happ.inesS than time° in the high-
er walks. The more influential one
becomes the greater his reeponsibille
ties ana aiteletieS,
• Wbat was the happiest time of
your • life? You are • DOW a great
merchaat .or lawyer et phyeielea Or
go vei'nor or senatot Is, thns. your
supremely happy Moment? • "No,"
you. ilswer, "the- happiest •thoel of
my life is boa awed in the present,
When the man of the .text gains a
life interest itt the world by losing
his own soul, he unkennels and un-
leashes the bloodhounds of his lower
passions. He enters into a contact
with Satan the same as hci would
tor. As a merchant there comes to
him a questionable proposition. He
knows that if he yields great profit
will accrue, He knows that if he
does what this questionable proposi-
tion demands he mast practice
cIa-
cciTt. He lies awake two or three
nights trying to, deeide whether or
no he Will be dishonest, At last, in
the midnight hour, he yields. He
practically calls Satan into his bed-
room. Mile lighting -the gas he
says e "Now, Saima, I am resolved
to be dishoneet I intend to be a
qhylock and deniand the fall pound
Of flesh nearest Antonio's heart.
Give me success, and I am willing to
sell you my soul;" When a nazi
comes to such a decision as that,
he naturally lets loose the lower
part of his nature. As a merchant
he becomes a mere money making
macbine. As a lawyer who seekpo-
litical perferment he becomes an
Aaron Burr.'
Now, while there is nothing in this.
world that can be compared in value
to an immortal soul, my text does
not, haply that if a Man givae "his
gent to Christ he shall have nothing
but poverty and humiliation, the
poorhouse and a potter's field. The
Bible refutes that idea.. In 'the
thirty-seventh Psalm we read,
have been young and now am OA;
yet have I not seen the righteous
forsaken nor —his -seed -bogging
bread," The same' God who cares
for the sparrow ,and who numbers -
the hairs of our head will not let his
children want. The Divine Father
will always see.
IF WE DO OM DUTY,
that we have enough* to eat and to
drink, enough to wear and a place
where we can sleep. Every one who
gives his soul to Christ will be able
to sing Manning's symphony. Ile
will have, at least, an opportunity
to live content with small means,
to seek elegance rather than laxury,
refinement rather than fashion, to be
worthy, not respectable and wealthy,
not rich ; to steely hard, think
quietly, talk gently, act frankly ; to
listen to stars and bird's, to babes
and sages with open hearts ; to
bear, all cheerfully, do all erayely,
await occasions, -hurry nover—in a
word, to let the spiritual,' unbidden,
grow ap through theaommon. Could
happineee demand any , greater op-
portunity to exist than these . op-
portunities Which are given by. Clod
to all his children who obey him ?
I would that we all Might go back
more contented to our everyday
duties of life, no matter what these
duties may be. Whether they are in
the store, the office, the 'pulpit„, the
parlor, the nursery or the kitcben
it matters not. I would that we
would all go the more cheerfully,
because the harder our lot in life the
hearer these troubles can. bring us
to God. 'When we are friendIeas and
poor and helpless, then God is al-
ways ready to pour out the Measure-
less wealth of his affections upon us,
his suffering children.
A NOTED LONDON PREACHER
was delivering his sermon . in an
open field. Upon the Outskirts of
the audienee there halted the car-
riage of a farnoris family: Lady
anne Erskirie (for that was the name
of the occupant) becanie an absorbed
listener. St -Mace -1y the minister turia
ed and, facing OAS aristocratie beau-
ty, began to dell her soul, as though
she was on the onetime Week and he
was the auttiolicer. "My brethren,"
exclaimed the .preachea, "1 atia now
going to hold an auetion eale, and I
bespeak :your -attention for a lea
moments. ihave here re lady and
het equipage to eapose to public
sale, but the lady is the piancipia
and the may Object that I 'wish to
diapose of at the present time. There
are three earnest bidders • in the
fleid. The first is the world.' Wen,
and what wilt yeti (rive for her ? I
will give riches, bnoz pleneure,
That will not do She ,is worth
more than that, for she will live
whezi riches, homers and pleasures of
the world hrarre passed away. Yu
cannot have her. The next bidder is
the devil- Well, and What Will you
give for her ? I will ,glye ail the
kingdoms of the earth tied the
glory of then:. That wilt not do,
for she Neill continue to exiet when
the king -dams of the earth and the
glory of them have vanished like
the sbadowa of the night before the
rising sun. You cannot have her.
lArt list and hear' the 'voice of riet-
other bidd&r, and who is that ? Wh
the Lord JOS US' .Christ. Weil, wh.
will you give for her .? 1 Will gi
grace her and glory hereafter,
inheritance incorruptible, und011e
and that tedeth not away. The
three bidders still contendfor ti
possession of souls—your soul, a.
8001 and the soul of every one th
COIneth into the world. One bid
the other we must kleCQPt• .`11
choice must be made. Tele decisio
.rests with you. May God help aver
one of us to decide aright, for wh
shall it profit a luau if he shoul
gain the whole world.and lose hi !'Own soul ?'
TIIE WEST'S GREAT FUTURE
POSSIBILITIES Or TRE. GRAIN --
BEARING TERRITORY.
It IS Prophesied That 40,000 ,•Am-
ericans, -Will Come in This,
Tear.
The Amealean invasionof the
North -Ws t is at fell advance; and
sweeping across the 'wen -try from
north- to South: and from east to
west, says a: despatch from, .Regina,
N.W.T. Trains loaded with the Anie
oaken farmers and their effeets 101 -
low each othea in rapid sacoession,
The land rigents oZ the seeeria rail-
road companies and the Governinexit
officials are working 24 hours qt day.
Amerlean land lookers and investors
are hustling first to one Ideality and
then to another, looking oeer leads
xind -bayingthe best :farm larids in
the North-West • Territories -Sit tracts
of 640 acres to a ,whole township.
Deputations from nearly all the agra
'cultural states in the United States
ate her buying amaenee tracts of
farm landsmod have bid lialtbreen
scrip up to $3 to $4 an acre.
The American farmers now buying
lands in the North-West in Most ha
stances pay cash down for their
lands, The Canadian farmers from
Ontarioare satisfied with a Sarni lef
160 to :320 acres. The newcoiners
from aeross the water look for home-.
steads and cheap lands. The Ameri-
cans buy tracts of 640 to 20,000.
acres, and then telegraph for more
money,
As predicted in January that 40,,
000 Americans would locate in the
North-West Territory, the present, in-
dications confirm...this statement.
Thousands will come after their har-
vest is gathered in the United States,
and if there is a good grain crop in
the North-West Territory this year
it is safe to predict that in 1905
there will be over 1/10,000 Americans
in this part, of the Dontanion. "
GREAT POSSIBILITIES.
There are over 200;000,000 acres
of -land ixi the territory, of which
50,000,000 acres are known t� be
grain -growing latide. There was de-
voted to grain last year 720,847
acres, which is equal to. 31.29-100
townships, or in even figures 1-70 of
the territory. This little space pro-
duced 11,776,592 bushels of wheat,
11,450,1384 bushels of oats, and 749,-
032 bushels of barley, xnaking a to-
tal of 23,969,908 bushels of grain
raised On less than 32 townships,
and utilizing less than 1-70 of the
land available for raising grain. •
Computing on a basis- of 30,000,-
000 acres of grain -Producing lands
in the Territories, which in the near
future will be raising grain, the
breadstuffs for Great Britain can be.
supplied from one unformed province
in the Dominion of Canada., and with
millions of busheleto sell to other
countries. The average yield per
acre litst year was 24.42-100 bushels
in the Territories, and on the basis
of the average he the United States,
11 bushels per acre, the Territories
alone would produce 550,000,000
bushels or grain per year.
850,000,000 BUSHELS.' .
The average for the past ten years
in Manitoba is 17 bushels per acre,
and at this aVerage the Territories
would produce 850,000,000 bushels
of grain a year. On :a basis of tht
yield per acre this year theta woulcl
be 1,250a000,000 bushels of grain la
the. Territories if all the available
farm- leads were sown' to grain,
The proposition that causes the
most discussion in the Nortb-West is
the transportation problem.. If the
crop of 1901 blockaded the raliirciad
system for four =meths, what will be
the result, when the North-West Ter-
ritory produces a third of the grain
of America.
THE JELLY FISH.
The Bay of Naples abounds in lam-
dusea or jelly fish; often growing as
large as two feet in diameter and
weighing fifty and sixty poem's.
Some of them shine at night with a
greenish light and are known. as
"nectiluca" (night lanterns) by the
natives. The jelly fish .sometimes
make migrations in great groups.
sometimes so large and so thick as
to impede the navigation of vessels,
like the floating plants in the Sar-
gosse. Sea of the tropics. Thee
shoals of mechesae; as they are called
may be so .dense that aapiece of time
het plunged in among them will be
held apright aseif stuck ie .the mud,
arid ordinary rowboats cannot force
their way through them. Their mi-
grations have never been explained,
They are irregular and OCCur at no
Martieulat season of the year and
under' no particidae Influence:a
PROVE USE OF PHYSICIANS.
Tu We United Sled es theta is one
ITO glared - physician to eVevy O'17ill-
habitat-as, California has a doctoe
For ovate/ 420 of its penal:Won, while
New Mexico has one for every 1,891
of its iehrtbitanie Mailed with a
tow death rate, has a larger :profane
el:on-ate rleneibetr of doctors than any
other country in Europe, azul Nor-
way has a small oiumbee of doctors
driel a,bigh death. rate, There ie
mice 'a. good effeet on the health or a
cometeer when its proportion or phy-
SithInS in creases. Ia'Fingland, where
the ).0110,1301.' Of physiCiana is constants'
ly fuereaSing, ..there is rt. corrermend,
decrease 1,1 the death' rata in
-the vast ItuSsian Empire, Ivi th its
eitormoliA. pop Illation and small num-
ber of doetorS, the high death ,rate
continuos,
'
THE S. S. LESSON.
ZNTERNATIONAL LESSON,
MAY 25,
Text of the Lesson, Acts xiii.,43.
52. Crolcien Text, AetS,
38.
43. Paul and Bareiabas, epealehig
to them,: persuaded them to continue
M the grace of God.
Crossing from. Cyprus to the main-
land, they arrive it Peagrei WhOre
John Mack left them and retarried to
Jerusalem.' Thence they joureey to
Arietioch, itt Pisidia, aud are foerud itt
the synagogue on the Sabbath day;
end, being invited to speak, Paul
begios at the exodus of Israel from
tlgypt, and preaches unto, them. Jesus
and the resurrection, and throogh
Him the forgivehess of sine: Af tee'
the Service many asked to hear those
words again the next Sabbath, and
as they followed Paul arid Barnabas
they fGod.ynorgedtaa to,. eontinue in the
a
44, And the next Sabbath day
dame alinoei; the whole 'city together
to hear the Word of God.
The aPostiee had .110 doubt spoken
lo many througli the week, and
those who had heard thepreceding
Sabbath bad, not been qedet :Oda
the wondrous resurrection story and
the consequent great, redemption se
fully and - feebly. proclaimed. It bee
crime the talk of the town,- and an.
immeeee congregation' aeoembled not
to hear .the Wisdam or the oratory
Of the apostles,' but. to .hear the
weed of 'God. '
45. But when, .the Jews saw :the
Multitudes they were Ailed with envy
arid spake: against those things. •
Such manifest working' of the Holy
Spirit could , not but provoke the
adversary to envy and blasphemy.
Compare Acts v,‘ 33; Neil, 54. If
none of the religious people of a
Communi•ty is stirred to talk against
the preaching, it is an evidenCe either
that he is wonderfully hi sympathy
with Christ Or that the preaching
lacks salt (II. Tim. iii, 12; Cor. iv;
6). There are not many who are
willing to eadure sound doctrine (II.
Tim. iv, 3).
46: it was necessary that the
woad of God. should first have been
spoken to you; but seeing ye put it
from you and judge yourselves un-
worthy of everlasting life, le, Nve
turn to the gentiles.
To the Jews first, then to the gen-
tiles, was the principle acted 'upon
in all apostolic preaching (Acts. iii.
26; Rom. i, 10). Man has the power
of receiving or putting from hien
this great • gift, pi -everlastiag life
which God, has provided at such in-
finite cost. •
'47, I have set thee to be a light
of the ,gentiles athat thou shouldest
be. for salvation unto the end of the
earth.'
- Paul's COnnnisSion. Was to hear th
na,nle Of the Lord not only before th
children of Israel but before the gen
tiles (Acts ix, 15), and he quote
front Ise.. xlix, 6, concerning Is
rears Messiah, called the Servant o
the Lord. While the mystery. of th
church is
not clearly re-
vealed in the Old Testa
meat (Eph. 111, 5, 6), -the calling o
gentile nations after Israel shal
have been converted is an oft 're-
peated fact and yet Paul gathers
froxa this passage something con-
cerning his mission to the gentiles.
48. And when the gentiles heard
this they were glad and glorified the
word of•the Lord, and ae many as
were ordained "to eternal life be-
lieved.
The gentiles gave heedto the
message, and by receiving tho. word
of the Lord they glorified it and
were made glad in Him whom they
thus received. In this age not
all are given to Christ, bat all who
are given shall come, and whosever
will may acme, with -the assurance
that none who come will he cast
out (John vi, • 37; Rev.' xxii, 17).
This is the time Of salvation for
the 'elect church, after which shall
come the salvation of• all :Israel -and
then. of all nations.
49. And the word of the Lord was
.ipvugbiloisnbed throughout -all tbe
This is the work and the privilege
of every redeemed OM, for it is
written, "Let hian, that heareth say
come." And if we have received the
gospel for ourselves it is not for
ourselves only, but we have been in-
trusted withthe message that others
throagh us may hear it also, and to
all who have not yet Imard we are
debtors and should say, '1)1s' much
as in Me 18 1 am ready to give them
the gospel" Rev. xxil, 17; 1 Thess.
ii, Rom. i, 14, 15),
50. flut; the Jews stirred. tip the
dcvout and honorable women and
the chiefanen of Um city and raised
persecutidn against Paul end Bar-
nahas and expelled them out of
their coasts.
Was it for this the Spirit sent
them forth ? Did He know that they
would be thtiS rejected ctlici 111 treat-
ed ? Yes, Perfectly did He know it
all, and even our Lord Himself told
them before Ile died that 'they would
be put out of the synagogues and
killed for His sake, and they must
not be offended nor afraid (John
xvi, 1, 2; Matt. x, 28).
51. But they shook off the -dust of
theie feet against- Ahem and came
mite Iconium. •
Compare chapter read see
their hist:awl:ions. in Mark '.1 11:
Lake ix, 5, It 15 001 gl ori o us privi-
lege to proclaim the glad. tidings; to
mal e 'known the lo'.e of God, to
offer to all in His name eternal re-
demption through the blood of
lit ist keowing thaL ae we do 80 ill
reli WIC° 'Upon the Holy Spirit
Word Will never return to Him void.
52. And the disciples were filled
with joy and with the Holy Choet,
All that are are called upon to beer
for the sake of Christ and HiS
fi til 11 should be borne cheerfully. for
1.4.0 hos tanght us to be exceedingly
glad rend leap for joy under such mit
einOstances (Matt, v, (1.-1:.:1; Liiki
22. "2f1). We are told. that the
sufferings of this present, time are
tioOmortny to he compared with the
glory which shalt be revealed 08 ;
thtlt 0 1ir afflictions are light own-
70747.4"44.•+•443-444,0440-41'414444-0.ffilfsittittr,erofpviiplo
THE 1,KING
THE.:QUEEN
THE DUCHESS
and
OF DEVONSHIRE:.
, s
.,Remarkabiem Offer.
I . r e ,e
..
Here is the best of% v. r made in this eommunity. By a veils excellent ar. t
rangement made with the Family Hexaid and Weekly Star of Montreal we are
enite....el to offer Tax Marren Trxas and that great Family Pallor. the
• Family '1a1Land Weekly Star, for one year for the small sum of $1.75 and 111•
elude to each s,:',,seriber three peautifl,ii..,p_zr...eitn:iti,.a.v.,.p.:leturee, of which the follow.
. . .
mg Is &brief deserii.:,:-. ... .
24 inehes, on beautiful heavy white satin. fintsbed paper for fEarrting. PAIS POrt '
KING EDWARD VII.= -True to Ilk A heimbtful portrait else Ili I
•-•
has been taken since has accession to the throne, anti is the very latest and bee
obtainable. It cannot be hadexocol through the PararLv Rens= AND
WEEKLY, $T.A.S4 "gob, pieture bears the Ines • autogragh, This picture las the
• gleat merit of iietug the -first taken after the- King% tte ;aloe, and hat thearstoro
tin historic:al yarn° that no othevpletare eats p0sse$0..
1 ably%!Urfmli!.lji jgd1r-kgofNipalteen.-1.Wittltai4itlatbairvtririugrtiritcli4 ett:emaro;
to the throat. it is the sanya sine as that.of tint- Fang. the tiro for. ming a Immo.
some pair otpictUres that aionevrould seli for ninny eitstes the subscription price
ooerpornaraPiP'ettlf Ill> King and Consort taken at the accoad or suceeedingsalt-
tinge can have one fraction of toe Value of the Meat. The% go down Lo history. •
THE DUCHESS OR DEVONSECIRE.--The Renowned Gainsborough Pic-
ture. Sold at auction sate ta London twenty-five years ago for :2100500,
6. stolen by clever thieve's, hidden for over twenty-four y„eare and delivered to its '
X owner 011payment of 05,000 reward and since sold to Itt. 3', Pieroont 3forgan for
0 0
$76,00 • .
O Thie3.in brief. is the histnry ot one of the minium pletu'res, whioh, bya
se elevet strokeeof enterprise, the publishers of this IPantily Reread have secured for
6 their eubserlhera, The -Picture Ts Wall in ten eologre, and is reproduced line for i
.... line, colour for 'colour with the original. Copies of the repredattion are now sold . 1
; ill Nerr-fork City, Montreal and Toronto for $12 each, and this Is the picture litt
• Family Herald subscribers are going to get abeolutely free together with the i
6 Pictures of the King and Queen.
• Is that . not big value! Call at Tan Trams Ofilee and see samples
. of these beautiful pictures. • . '
• great paper the Family Herald for als 24 pages of general news and family
EP prIoTe.ou. want TIM EXIMER Trams for the local news, and you wen
. t that
i reading. Its agricultural pages alone are worth many times the subscription .
.
. Is•letg or send your subscription to
I THE TIMES OFFICE.
444.0.4>......4......00lse..044o....404.41.....4....0.04++
—
Nerv us
Thousands of young and middle-aged men are annually swept to a premature
grave through EARLY END/SCRET10N, EXCESSES, AND lOLOOD-
DISEA.SES. If you have any of the following symptoms consult us before 11 11
too:ate. Are you nervous and weak, despondent and gloomy, specks before the
eyes with ,dark circles under them, weak back,Icidneys 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 Treatnaerat will cure you.
FIEN F
anaa
n
Nothing can be more demoralizing to young and middle-aged men than emissions
at night or secret drains through the urine. They unfit a man for business) mar.
ried life or social happiness. No matter whether caused by evil habits itt youth,
natural weakness, or sexual excesses, our New hdathed Irreeatsaiesat posi-
tively cure yott. CURES OUARANTHED. NO CURB, NO PAY.
Atar'No Names Used Without Written Consent.
W. A. Muir, of Litua, 0., says:—"Iwas one of
the countless victims of early vice atl5years of
age. The drains o11 my systemwere weakening
ray brain as well as nay sexual and nervous sys-
tem. For ten years I tried scores of doctors,
electric belts and patent medicines, Some helped.
me, none cured. I was giving up I/1 despair, in
fact, contentplating suicide when afriend ad-
, yised me as a last resort to give the New
Method
Treatment of Drs. K. &K. a fair
< trial. Without confidence I consented and In
three months I wawa cured man. I was .cured
seven years ago—am inarried a.nd happy. I
heartily recommend Drs. K. & K. to my afflicted
BeforeTreatnient fellow men."
/15
AV?
After Treattumat
We treat and cure Varicocele, Emissions, Nervous Debility, Seminal Weakness,
Gleet, Stricture, Syphilis, 'Unnatural Discharges, Self Abuse, Kidney and Bladder
Diseases, and all diseases of Men and Woraen.
WNO NAMES USED WITHOTJT WRITTEN CONSENT. PRIVATE. No
medicine sent C. 0. D. No names on boxes or envelopes. Everything confidential.
puestion list and cost of treatment, FREE.
46 SHLSY STREET
Drs. Kennedy & Blink 'E
DETROIT, MGM.
e:
Aftillig-WW11015ir&A
t:14
pared with His and but for a mo-
ment when compared with eternity.
STAFFORD WAIST.
The 'Stafford waist is one of the
more elaborate of the shirt -waists,
and is adaptable to soft woolen
fabrics and to silk. Thi S waist
would develop smartly in blue or
red deeim, made without- lining and
worn over a, guimpe. Ttak effect will
then be most pleasing, in any Ina-
terial it inay be made without lin-
ing, and Worn in this way. Corded
pique, for example, will serve in
this way.
Quantities of material requirea :—
Thirty-two and thirty-foar bust
measure will require three and rem-
foutaa yards of geode twenty-seven
iuchee wide. t.1.11iiravesie: -bust Mea-
sure will require three and anehrilf
of' goods twenty-seven inthcS wide.
'Thirty-eight and forty bust measitre
will requive four equals of' goods
twenty-seven inches wide. Five
eighths of a yard of goods for collar
' vest, t wen t y inches 'wide,
Now •VorWs population is growing
at a rate of f?.50 n, day, about the
0111116 pace a8 that of :Under),
STRONG AND VIGOROUS.
Every Organ of the,Body Toned
up and invigorated by
Mr. 7. W. Meyers, King St. E., Berlin, •
Ont., says: "1 suffered for five years
with palpitation, shortness of breath,
sleeplessness and pain in the heart, but
one box of Heart and Nerve
Pills completely removed all these dis-
tressing symptoins. have not suffered
fsoiolncosttraokniongantahevmig,oarnoudser d
sleep well an
Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills cure
all diseases arising from weak heart, worm
out nerve tissuea or watery blood.
NAMES IN SOIJTII AFRICA.
English-speaking people are slow at
acquiring a foreign language, but
they do not allow this defect to
trouble them greatly. TA a Volunae
published befove the South African
war begati are some amusing exam-
ples of the way in which names, and
titlem wetal shnplified and merle easy
by Englisbmen in Africa.
Jolinny'', was the -name by wli'
the British .soldier always ri.ddressec
himself to every native. ":111oy" was
invariably- used by velutiteers from.
Cape Colony when, addresting Li, col-
ored 1110,11, The name ol a chief,
however, was Nvorta .retaining in inc.
mory, or rather, something to tee
ailed the Englishman of it. So it
was that the chief Mankorciane was
called Marcaroni ''for shoe and of
course no one forgot that..
The commander's orderly aimounc-
ed the visit, to headquarters of a na-
tive einele "The chief Catchatt-easy,
'Itt 11tt (tome and wishee -to see you."
"The chief who?"
Catch -it -easy, sir .°
it turned out that it wits the chief
1.Tascitsitrie who had called to pay his
respects to the repreeeatative of the
/I