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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1902-6-5, Page 6EC C1TY Genuine Carters Little Liver 1.111s. Must Bear Signature of See Fac-Similo Wrapper Below. V7 small timid as 0.607 to take as sugar. CARTEa ITTLE I VER PILL& FOR NEADACIIEs FOR DIZZINESL_ FOR BILIOUSNESS., FOR TORPID LIVER. FOR CONSTIPATION. FOR SALLOW SKIN. "s.te.el.: • !FOR THE COMPLEXION „„,„. ,aucrourrea nuareAve,WICATURC, 2g-nt, PP. Mettle. vegetsarevehone, CURE SICK HEADACHE., 1102..aliOtefmcgmminarcemancm 1 of the diseases that afflict humanity are caused by the accumulation of impurities in the blood. The purifiers greatest of all blood is BURDOCK BLOOD UTTERS. It cleanses the system from the „crown of the head to the sole :of the feet. If you are troubled with Boils, Pimples, Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Constipation, Biliousness, Headaches, Scrofula, Eczema or any trouble arising from disordered Stomach, Liver, Bowels or Blood, give Burdock Blood Bitters a trial. We guarantee it to cure or money refunded. These pills cure all diseases and dis- orders arising from weak heart, worn out nerves or watery blood, sueh as Palpita- tion, Skip Beats, Throbbing, Smothering, Dizziness, Weak or Faint Spells, Anaemia, Nervousness, Sleepleesn.ess, Brain Peg, General Debility and Lack of Vitality. They are a true heart thnie, nerve food and blood enricher, building up and renewing all the worn out and wasted , assaes of the body and restoring perfect health, Price 50c. a box, or 3 for $1.25, at all druggists. erfs iiments. Women aro cern. ing to understand that the Backaches, Headaches, Tired, Feelings and weak Spells from which they suffer are due to wrong action of the kidneys. BMWS Kidney Pills are the most reliable remedy for any form of kidney complaint, They drive away Dna and aches, make women healthy end happy -able to enjoylife to the fulleat. Mrs, Ci 13. Gillespie, 204 Britain Street, St. John, N.B., says: 'I had severe kidney trouble for which doetored with a number of the best plitrsioiane in St. joint, hut received little relief. Bearing of Dean's Kidney Pills, 1 began their use. Before tatting them I could nob stoop to tie my shoes, and at times suffered such torture that I mild not turn over in bodwithoutassietanee. Doana Itidney Pills have retorted me from this terrible fien4ition, and removed every pais and ache' FIRST YIELDINGS TO SIN. The First Wrong Step May Be the Step Ovet the Brink of Eternal Death. Meanieacordijur to tot of the Psinarneut et vt'"44. ih.tt Year no aboureme rrue: lieu. eked end 'Kw*, by William Bally, of Toronto, et Us Dawes:am of Agriculture, Onsets) A despatch from Chicago says :- Ilea. FrankDe Witt. Talmage preach- ed from the followihe text :--pro- verbs I, 10, "illar" eon, if sinners en- tice thee, consent thou not." Na cathedral, it matters not how lofty the spires or hate-, wondeinul the statuary or how. mazy and be- wildering the architecture, awes the tourist into rove:Tate •onleSS time has hallowed it. Then the. ceutawies have (levered up the crenibling wells With. moss and creeping _ivy; then Westininster abbey, with ite dart, dripping vaults, has become .the sepulcher of dead kings and queens. In the same way no man has :a right to give advice or tell as what to do . unless grey hairs hegia to fringe the forehead or he can speak out. his own bitter experience. It is absurd ' for the ruddy faced lad to write an essay upon sorrow, when the only sorrow he ever felt was the fright from the dentist pulling Ms first baby teeth, and what audience does not snale when listening to the schoolboy's bombastic .graduation. oration upon. "How to Win Sue- cese 2" No reformer eau have great influence in attacking a clubvoom when he himself is so unsociable tant the hearers dislike . • the reformer worse than they despise his teach- ings. King Solomon wrote with author- ity. He had drunk from the Chalices of pleasure. He had quaffed tb the bitter dregs every. cup of woe. He • Peer woman alerays greets yott tow with a smile. 3i -t, here in thiS,great city you. :do not even lenow: the •man who Baas across the hell. :Perhaps you say "Good Morning" to him, but that is all. When you cOme home at night, there is nothing but the cold, uninviting bedroom. You long againfor the, farm, for the thatched rOof of the old homestead, for the sniell of tais new inowri lueY and; the sight of the cider presses vehemently at WOrk soueezieg the orchard's blood into barrels and make. St. John's wilderness of rock is a fit name for a great .city. is a wilaerness, and there' are no wilder beasts of passion roaraing among 'forests than sone Of the human monsters which live bete. Perhaps yoer discouragement conies from injustice. You may .have been living in the - great city • now for two years. You worked, and worka. ed hard. Then came a. vearincy in the stove. Of course you expecte! the 'promotion, but another clerk under you who was not as. het - nor as faithful as you had innuendo and he was oatshed ahead. Thee you protested -and veheMently protest- ed. All that the manager. did Was to laugh and say, "Well, if you don't lil•ce it get out ." You Could not get out. You lied no place to go. You sullenly Went back to the desk, 'saying: "What is the use Of trying ? Honesty- is not the ' best policy." SINNERS ENTICE THEE." Perhaps your diecourageinent came in a cruel way. You had your foot upon the lowest rung aud were be - had seen the ups as well as the ginning to climb the ladder of suc- downs of life. He was no fanatic cess, when suddenly the hard times or adveutureaa Ho was the king came. The firm dissorted :and: you who sat upon the richest throno Of were discharged. You are now .•not the then known world. His pillared only looking for a new place, but halls were lined with statuary. The you have to coMmence all over fountains which played in Inc gar- again. Now comes the waraino dens moistened the throats of birds whose ancestors once cleansed their plumage or sang their young to sleep in foreign lands. His' cellars were filled with wiue of choicest vint- e toe not. age. I give you this warning, gladly The throneroom and judgment hall and willingly, My brother, because were circled by rooms above rooms. these are the troubles which are fit - Near by were his harems, in which ting you for the mighty successes the king gathered a thousand wives which are to come. Remember this and concubines: As the wit once great lesson -anything which de - wrote of Brigham Young, King Solo- velops quickly dies 'quickly. The ine mon was the most married num timt sects are generated/and grow to ever lived. Not only was he eneat maturity in a, few hours,' but they and increased more taan all that also die of old ago by night. Tao were before him in Jerusalem, but salved which spread .itself an Ma- hiwisdom remained with him. When laita over the head of the peophet s two women claimed a little child, Jonah withered as soon as it was Solomon ordered his executioner to touched of the east wind. The flow - cut the baby in twain and give half er Which blossoms , in the spring to each. The real mother fell on goes to seed before the fall. It her knees and begged lain to save takes years and years to develop a. the child and if necessary to give cedar of Lebanon. It takes centui•- it to her enemy. Then said Solo- les upon centuries ro bury a coil mon : "She is the -true mother. Give lain°. It takes at least one score her the child." As a gardener, he years to make a man, and the more knew all about flowers; as an eques- obstacles you can overcome the tria.n, all about horses; as an archi-1 nioro of a giant a ou will be. Only tect, all about buildings. He made the gods can reach the stars. Man the ant our teener. As a merchant can become like unto a god if God he lingered in the busy motts to is with him and he keep e 'on stretch - tell us how to trade. To -day, amid jag. wealth and power, within souod of Haig Solomon warns the Young clinking tankards of geld and nimbi- folks against sin because evil er against temptations. Now :thee old sage tells me to put 'the hand ta lover upon your shoulder • and say : "My son, if sinners entice the, Con • ing chariot wheels, the old sage writes an eternal protest against sin, "My son, if sinners entice thee, consent thou not." START RIGHT. Young men dislike to be patroniz-e• ed. Although willing to accost each other in terms of familiarity, we dis- like older people to pat us .condes- cendiugly upon the back. So to- day, as a. young man, I thought you young people would let me try. to interpret thee° words of the Bible. I would especially interpret them now, because many of you who have come from far away are fol- the first time living in a great city. You are away from home, away from father and mother. 'Unless you start right' you will e Dever end right. "Ihe glory of young mere is their strength." The Way to keep that strength is to refuse to allow the sinful dissipations to sap the virility of youth. King Solomon warns the young people against sin, because young folks are apt' to be thoughtlessly reckless. They do not wont to be bad ; they have no intention of throwing overboard all the past teachings of probity and right'; they are naturally religious; they say their prayers when. they arise in the morning, they say their prayers again before going to bed at night. But they are full of am and animal spirits. They laugh and sing and frolic just as a colt capers, a kitten plays with her tail and a bird files hither and thither far the mere pleasure of flying. A full blooded lad cannot keep still. He squirms and twists and whispers end passes notes in the sahboiroom. Pre does about everything that the teacher tells him not to do. If you ask him why he does thus, he could not answer. What schoolbey when out in the country bas not tried to see how near he could skate to the air - hole in the ice 7 What boy has not fished when standing upon a rolling log or has not tried to walk across dangerous trestleor has not climbed a, steep ptecipice until his brain was dizzy with vertigo ? Ihbat Loy has not tried to stvim across a river merely because the • otheh boys, said be could not ? King Solomon warns against Sin because young people are apt to be- come: despondent. Perhaps this dis- couragement will be caused by heine- sickneas. The loneliest place on earth is a great city, In -the coun- try town you tette:a everyt ody, and everybody knew yota While the village minister was preaching you would be Watehing the neighbor's daughter, whom you 'expected some day to make your Wife. Whea you trudged away to School, every farm waggon which went by Was ready to give you a lift When the poor wo- man back furlong the hills was Pick, your mother madeup a paokage and bade you carry it to thehouse. That patuons are always the first to ex- tend the right hancl of welcome. The good. young man says: "I cannot afford to associate with every one. I cannot go with every stray ac- quaintance whom I meet upon the street. 1 shOuld Hoe in the city as live at home. I ought not to con- sort with any companion whom I would be ashamed to introduce to iny mother or sisters." When you eater the store ns . a fellow clerk, he watches you. Dy conversation he finds out whether or no you are a church memberf He is too busy to gossip during business abottrs, and so it will take, sonic tine° for him and you th become fast friends. After 'awhile he will invitc. you to attend a night school or go to some lecture or meeting. Re asks you what books you read and then offers to lend you one of the classics. By and by you arrange to take your vaca- tions together: Then the good young man gives to you the highest compliment of his life -he asks you to come home with him, and visit his mother. That dear ,old lady wel- comes you as only his mother can. She knows your own home is so far away that it is impossible for you to go there and get back to the store -when the two holidays are over. • SOME rALsE FRIENDS. But the bad young man is never hard to become aaquainted with. He will slap you upon the back as soon as you enter the store. He offers you a cigarette or invites you later to takeoa drink. lie stoke you in the hall and wants to have a long talk. Ile is always loafing when the, head of the &garb/lent is .away. Af- ter a little while he begins to make fun. of year Bible. He ridicules you aS stingy because you send Most of yotit money home to support a widowed mother- and five fatherless confirm), and then, if you have money to spend, he and his evil companions will gather around you to help you s. end it if You will let them, as a field of clover tops. will erepty ali the bee -hives from far and near.But after your money ire gone and pos- ition gone and health ghee Awl hon- or gone they will care no more for you than for a dead cur in the: street. The night you die the sa- •loons will be as crowded, the glasses , Will click just no merrily as ever. At that bar whichyou now frequent, there will . not be a tee shed over you. The, day your body is buried the very friends who are nate' eatic- reekiessly and laugh jest as Toad Will gamble just, as ing you away with other a as they flONV do with you, end if necessary and they- could find no other, place they, would be willing to garnale at your grave. • One ' day a gentleinan was talk- ing to my uncle'. AO ono said, "fs it not strarige how willing the World ia to kick a Van When he is de -WV" "So," answered my unae, "I do, not think. the world kick e a man eo mach whe Izo is down as when he is trying to stead up." "My sea, if sinners entiee the, consent thou not." XING SOLOMON'S WARNING, Ining • Solomon warns the yOung People not •to censent, to sin because after eve have once yielded we will nteVer be the same vain. It would 110 1)luraansaalit'i tilel awfeCid50teia,"Wbil01).sar, si'1:117 guess I will stop andstart over again." But we ettnnet. Say or do that. Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap. If a man make a bed of roses, be sleeps in a cloud :of incense. If he gathereth ooly- thetharias, he must be lacerat- ed by the tliorns. After you have once robbed the firm. will .never fully trust you. After you have , once wrecked • your health you can never be anything but a suffering invalid: After you beta once led an immor- tal soul astray and that soul has departed from. earth to meet its judgment at. the btu' of God you can newt change its eternal destiny. Many a numto-day would willingly cut off his right :Inn if he could on- ly change the past. He cannot. The past is fore.ver dead unless that past can be changed in a heavenly sense through the mercy and the pardon of God. Make not tne inista.ke which so mithy older men have made of having, a bad record during the per-. iod of their youth and then having that record curse all „the midnoon rind the twilight of aour existeace aria, curse you down to the grave,: YOUNG MAN'S BEST' FRIEND. But the greatest losson of this text is syet, to be spoken. Solomon tells us not to let evil compel:lone .eutice us away. But nian as a 'so -- dal being. He longs for •friends. He must have friends who will .-associ- ate with hail when he weeps as well LLS laughs,. when he is dying as well as when to is strong and well. Az Solomon bids you to beware at evil corapanions, I will introduce to. you one who will be tdie best Friend a young man ever had. Young man, you cannot afford to- face the tempt- ations of a great city alone. Per- haps you know about this lovin,, Priend to, whom I want to .introdua you. He was with your sister ,when she died. Well, you remember how she smiled up into his face. Ile was With your mother during all her troubles in life. The last words your father spoke on earth was his name. That name -shall 1 speak it? Jesus! Jesus! Jesus! That is the Friend who will see pal all the way through if you will only treat him. You must now make a cnoice -a choice between this dear Friend and evil companions. This is a very. anxious ince:tient for many, of as. It is an .anxious moment for- Christoas well as .for you. One dark night a watchman fell asleep at his post :and failed to sig- nal the -lightning' express. Leaping to his feet' when tbe flying engine, as a shrieking monster, 'shot by, he Saw the train disappear and realized that the draw -bridge was open and all the passengers were lost. it was too much for human brain. The marl went stark mad. Friends found him shivering and cowering in the cor- ner of his room a lowing maniac, muttering to himself, "Oh, if I only had; if I. only had!" Here comes thundering along the limited ex- press full of gosrel invitation. Tile train is flying with the speed of the lightning. What are you going t� do in reference to Christ before it is too late? Over the dark abyss :of sin will you throw . the strong, straight beam of the 'cross, or will you let evil companions crush your hopes into ruins? Shall you be smiled at by the aogel of hope Or hissed at by the voice of despair? Will you accept thisJesus as yoar Friend? . Your loved ones. your Heavenly Father, your Saviour and the rI ysool tner as wemnittthiceteheaen,s wc 07. 7 sent thou not." PLUS AND MINUS. Two men were discussing the fin- ancial affairs of some of their ac- quaintances. : • "Now there's Brown" said one. "He's heen speculating heavily. How has he come out'?" "Well to the good." "And tbero's Williams. He has dabbled extensively. Has he made any tb i rig? " "He hasn't done so well as Brown bas. But Thompson -you know Thome, son?" "Yes, I know hate" . ' "Well, he's worth ••as much as Brown and Williams put together." "There you're' wrong. 1 know Thompson's circumstances exactly. He isn't worth a penny." "Just so. , Brown is worth fifter thousand and Willianis ii'' fifty thou- sand pounds' 7 worth worse off than nothing. If you combine the wealth of the two it amounts to nothing, the same as Thomr son's. I-Ia.ve -you forgotten your mathematica?" S 00TUE S OOHED. An American' general was in com- pany where some Seotch gentlesnet were present. After supper, when tha wine was on the table, the gena eral rose, and addressed 'the com- pany in the following ,words: a'aen- tlernen, I must inform you that when I get a. little too much to drink I have an absurd custom of railing against the Scoteh, I hope no gentleman in the company will take it amiss," A Scoteli gentle- man hnmectiatelsr arose, and with- out seeming the least displeased, said!' "Gentlemeri, I; when I have drunk rather freely, and hear any pereon railing against the Scotch, have alt absurd custom of kicking him out of the companyr hope no gentleman Will take it amiss." It is said that - on that occiaaion the Scotclunan had no opporthaity for the exereise of bie talentEi, * 4— Bystander -Should 3roU' Slay that pietere• Was taken from Critic: "I don't know; but the World Wouldrat stiffer if the artist %vase", .7.777,777.77",0777,. THEs s 1EssoN 4444.*****44.*****4•••44.44......4.........**4movvvvo INTERNATInT. LESSON, JUNE 8. -Text of the Lesson, Acts rm., fa - 33. Golden Text, Gal, ' 22. Then pleased it the apostles •aucl elders, with the whole church, to send chosen Men of their, owii Bcoanimpaabnaypao Aritioch with. Paul and • Paul and ilarnetbao, haying return- ed to Antioch, alter their first snis- siotary tour, continued there a long time with the disciPlee, teaching the -word (xiv, 28), While there teach- ers came from Judaea, whb said that the gentiles could riot he saved by faith in Christ unless they Were also eircuinciseri, There was 'So , much dissension, and disputation about it that the church at Antioch sent Paul and Barnabas arid others to Jerusalem to • the Apostles and eld- ers to lay the Metter before them. The comical, having heard the whole story and discussed it, came to a decision which they, now send to An- tioch with these hrethaert. • 22, '24,. Forapinach as wo have heard that certain which wept out froni us hao troubled you with words subverting your souls. Behold the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and the love of Cod and the fellowship of the Spitit in this kreeting from • the : belieVina, jaws .. at .Ierusitlem, _aid apostles, the riders: fa the . church, to tho. gentile believers, the uncircumcised at Antiodh. Notice that. the Jewish :brethren • send greeting unto the gentile:. brethren. They are all brethren in Christ and .acknotyledge 25, 26, Mee that have liazardecl, their lives for the name of our Lord Jesus Christ. Thus honorably do they mention "Mir belotred Darnabas and Paul" because of their sellarings for Christ's sake, some of Which were Mentioned in last lesson, but het a fuller list Of Paul's sufferinea see 11 Cor. xi, 23-28. And yet hese Paul . say, "None of these things move me," and "the sufferings Of this present time are :not Worthy to be comPared with the glory which shall lee teveatelain us," and "our light affliction which is but for a moment," etc. (Acts xx,, 24; 'Rom. via, 18; II Cot. iv,' 17), tecause he believed God. 27, 28. : It seemed good:to the Holy Ghost and to Us. Observe the partnership. of the Holy Spirit and the church and compare chapter kill, 2. Every • one Who ,receives Jesus. Christ' receioes. else' the Holy Spirit, and, the body becomes His temple, every whit of which He 'jealously desireth for the glory of God (I' Cor. 1, 19, 20 : Jas. iv,, 5,' R. V.. math -in). The Lord Jesus said to His. apostles when He sent theM forth, "It is not ye that speak, but the Spirit of your Father which speaketh in 'You" (Matt. et, 20). Sae • also Acts v, 32; xvi, 6, 7. . • 29. Abstain from meats offered to idols and from blood and front things strangled . and keep from fornication, from which if ye keep yourselves ye shall do well. Fare yeThweesiel. the council considered neces- sary things, but did. not say neces- sary for salvation, rather necessary as an evidence of salvation. There is no salvation by' works revealed in the word of God, but only salvation by. the great and finished Work •of the Load • Jesus, which the sinner must receive as God's free gift, per - chased for hiri by the precious blood of Christ (Acts iv, 12; Ali, 38, 89; Rom. iv. 5;v. 1; Eph. ii, 8, 9; Tit. iii, 5), but being saved' by faith in. Christ-thotis,by accepting Olirist, aeceiviria, Him (John 1, 12; I John v, 11, 12). -then the good worlts ate necessary as • an: evidence to men that: eva are neta creatures 'in Christ (Eph. ii, 10; - Tit, 151, 8; Matt. v, 1.6; Gal. vi,' 15). The believeria 'expected to be an epistle known and read of all Men to the glory of 'God (II Cor. iii, 2, 3). There is nothing burdensome in the seraice Of Christ. His , conuitanqraents are not: griev- ous. His yoke is easy, asad,. His berden is light (I. jobe. v, .3; Matt. xi, 30). . • • • 30, 31. They delivered the ohistie, which When they had read, they re- joiced for the consolation. these words of comfort instead.of the , Words which had troubled them (verso 24). The Holy Spirit is a Comforter, and when He spealtaIle brings comfort to tile people of God. "Comfort. yea -comfort ye, My pee.; pie, saitli your God." `f0 lhou that tellest good tidiegs .to Zion. * thou that ;.tellest good tidings to Jerusalem, lift up thy VOiee with strength; lift it up. De not afraid. Say unto the cities of Judah, Behold your God!' (Isa. al, 1, 0, margin), /1.1.1 God's thoughts to His people are thoughts of peace and Ile does not want His' obedient people troubled Or each '1 -Xis weeds are -intended to makeus glad and give as peace xxix, 11; John civ, 1, .27! Ps. lxxxv, 8): 32: Judas and Silas, being pro-, phots also . themselves, exhorted the brethren •with many .tvorda and con-: fitmed them. - A trueapsaphet is one Who is a sperkesman for God. i Compare :Ex, oil, I, and iv, IA Glad is the Fa- ther of Mercies and the God of .all. comfort, and: He comforts us in all our tribulation that we may com- fort others :in their - tyoublee by the comfort whbrewith we ourselves are conefor•ted al God (II Cor. i, 3, 4), 38. And aftet _they had tarried there a space they ,Were let go in Peace from the brethren unto the Et'thPl°tsptiselea$°Ctr peaceofGod; to come and go privilege to Jive in peace, in peace to have peace always by all means, even, perfect peace (Phil. iv, 6, 7; II Thom iii, 16; Tea, axvi, 3), Our God and ether is the God of peace, the Lord jesus is the Prince of. Peace; ead if we are not enjoyingthe peate Of aod it most be beeatise 'we are not hi felioWShip •ea....4"1:1ahae....ea,eaton T114 -M.. ,)•41pi. 'THE ',..,t1.E.EN .41,14 ;THEILJCHESS. OF DEVONSHIRE. • • • A ernarli able Offer. ; Here is the best offer ever made in this community. By a very excellent e.r. *te rangement made with the Family Ilerald and Weekly Rat' of Ilaantreel we are y eintread to offer Tan Exaleal Tiscas and that great Family Papor, the X Family r.1'...aid and Weekly Star for ono year foe tha smallm saof $1.75 and ino • % jcnlusdis abf eto erai-och ds es 8'0, grozi:,b I,. three nee' uttful pretnitun pictures, of which the follow - KING , EDWARD VII. -True to Hf6Vie besattful pqrtralt, size 18 " X r .., • :::, • 24 Wishes, on beautiful heavy white satM fintsfled Inver i for.ikammg. Tble portral0 has been taken since las Recession to the throne, and tS o'yen ltifebt and best obtainable. It ,cannot be had except throutile gh antaa hiER,A.LP AND aWeinsma area; each pietore bears the Ring's. 3atic.ervtph. ,Ots picture IMO lbe great nierit of being the first taken after the Iningetacerssion, and has therelfore an historical value that no other picture can posseits. ,t Q11E-EN A.I/FiX.A.NDItA.-A.n exquisitely beaotlfol picture of the rmak- er, * ably beeutiful and goci Queen Alexandra, also taltiqo dilb_ve the rconor aeretssion -• 'tr to the throne. It is the earne Mee as that of tbe Jialitifahheotwe :,alihillies.a kiatal- 1! some pair of pictures that alone would sm ell for any t mes the suesereptien prate 4e; of PINIPearpoarutdraPliehl'ilait'clise' King and Coresort tekeu at the fiegoad oe stMee90.11112i,,eit• tinge can have one fraction of tea vales of the first. The'.0 go down tollialtoty. 1 THE DUCHESS Oture. Sold at auction sale in Loadea twenty -I -Tye years age An! F DEVONSHIRBoaThe Renowned GniaebovoughPie- . ? stolen by clever thieves, hidden for ever twenty-ft,nr „years and deliyeead to ta owner qn payment of $25,000 reward andsince sold tem 3. Irler pent Ilergan 16r ; a This, in brief, is the history of ape of the premium pichuees, whieb, by a . °level stroke of entargrise, the'publishers of the a'amily -Herald hare secured for 6, tbeir subscribers.The picture is 22x23 In ten colours, and a reproduced hat for • lino, colour for colour.. with the original. - Copies of the reprodtietion are now seta in New York (My, Montreal and 'lloroato for $12 each, and this le the eleture Family Herald subscribers are going to get absolutely free together with the 41, t. . pictures ofthe Ining end Queen. 1 • Is that not big value? Call at TELE TIMES Odle° and see samples 4. of these beautiful pictures. 4. You wan* Tun EXETER TIMES for the local news,. and pal want Wet f great paper the Family 'Herein for ars -24 pages of general news and family ; reading. Its agricultural pages alone are worth many timeathe subscription f) Pviee eele.inag.or send your subscription to - THE TIMES OFFICE. $44..00.0.041)0•00.4›.....0*(10.4444.41)4:14.14-04000.0000.0.4,...04 WV? • ) If you ever contracted any Blood Disease you are never safe unlesa the virus or ooison has been eradicated from the system. At times you see alarming synipitoms, outlive in hopes no serious results will follow. Have you any of following symptoms? Sore throat, ulcers on the tongue or in the mouth, hair falling out, ach- ing,pains itchiness of -the skin, sores or blotches on the body, eyes red and 'smart, dyspo,?tic stomach, sexual weakness -indications of the, secondary stage. Don't trust to luck. Don't ruin your system with the old fogy treatment -mercury and potash -which only suppresses the symptoms for a time only to break out again when laappy hi domestic life. Don't let quacks experiment on you. Our NEW mETRoD TREATMENT is guaranteed to cure you. Our guarantee's are bucked by bank bottd.0 that the disease will never return. Thousands of patients have beeu already cared by Otir NEW METHOD TREATMENT for over 20 year!, and no returit of the disease. No experiment, no risk -not a "patch up," but a poso tire cure. The worst cases solicited. .ER OUR NEW METHOD TREATMENT will .euro you, and ntake a man of you. Under its influence'the brain becomes active, the blood purified so that an punples, blotches and ulcers disappear; the nerves become strong as steel, so that nervousness bashfulness and despondency disappear; the eyes become bright, the face full and clear, energy returns to the body, and the moral, physical and sex- ual systems are invigorated; all drains cease -no more vital waste fret= the system. The various organs becotne natural and manly. You feel yourself a man and know marriage cannot be a failurr% We Invite all the afflicted to consult uS confidentially and free of cbarge. 'Don't let, quacks .and fakirs rob you of your hard-earned dollars. WS WILT., CURE YOU OR NO PAY. We treat and, cure NERVOUS DEBILITY, SEXUAL WEAKNESS, EMIS- tSefe0dN. S, sYPRILIS, GLEET, STRICTURE, VARICOCELE,EIDNEY and L BADDER DISBASZS, and all diseases peauliar to men and women.Cures guaran.- .. . 1111All ip 1 nAT: ji.auAvitah.:?..!lamzg,,,eleonstdilizpae?011yvo: crTtaenmplwateifg E .t. .I., ...le uess? gOur NewyMethod Treatmelit wsti cur4oloConaTelloneli Free. Vo matter who has treatedypu, write for an honest. opinion Esee of Charge. Charges reasonable. Basks rrea-aoThe Golden Monitor" [Illustrated] on Diseases of men "Diseases of Women." "The Wages of SW." "Varicocele, Stricture and Ce-Ioet." All Sent Free sealed. NO medicine sent C. 0. 0. NO IlarileS on boxes or env.elopes. Everything confidential. Question list and Cost of Treatment, FREE, ter Home Cure. 4 Y i .14 Ft'S.11 ,. . ''% 149 SHELBY ST. DETROIT MICH. ,17-15‘,7;,, ,M. 7.fsgil..„77R473'9"/51.411.M.4.7...M.EML.!.;,AA ,gt sl or in some sense tathelieving, ler the ocl of hope lovesto fill •Elis child -- ren with all joy and peace in believ- ing (Rom. XV, 18).- :4- IDiPERIAL TRA.VELLING COW. • • The travelling CoW of the Em- peror. :and . Empress of lauesia has just died. This beneficent animal was taken to Denmark and Leith in 1896 and then round to •Portamaitth whence she crossed to France. She travelled from Cherbourg to Mont-, parnasse in the Imperial train, and from the latter terminus was driven to the ituesian Embassy, where she supplied milk to their imperial Ma- jesties and. the baby Olga. A Preneh paper states. :"This cow. alwaea travelled about with the Emperor and Empress," She • was of English race, and highly prized by bei' exalt- ed owners. ..When at the Russian Embassyshe was kept all day in the grassy part Of the garden and taken out to walk on the 'Esplanade des That -aides. FINDING SMALLPDX. A. curious test for smallpoX was tried in Portman u th, England, dur- ing an.outbreak which took 'place there many years ago, 'In a certain street in the town there was a death in almost every. house, while M. an adjoining street there were no cases at all. The theory was propounded that the Lir df the former street was irlfected, and the authoritieS resorted to this test : They eretted a tall pole at ethe end Of each street and at the top of each, pole was fastened a piece of fresh meat. At the end..of two hours -the meat in the anfeated street was rotten, while in the other Street it remaind sweet aad good for twentreafour 'hours. It would be iateresting to •learn if there are other Cases of the successful ap- plieatiort of this test, A I3IRD Haying been the victine of a peo- tracted series of thefts froniher home, Mlle. Varvay, a variety actiass in Paris, started to haresti- gate before caushig the :medal; of her servants. Leaving a diamond brace- let on her bureau, she kept it in view throngh the keyhole of a doer leading to An adjoining room. ,Sud- denly she saw it "lifted," The thief proved to be it , starling, who had deposlted up the • chininey all tho Cures Coughs, Colds, Lung ahd Bronchialaffections that other remedies won't touch. MR.TROS.j. Senna Caledonia, Ont., writes: " A year ago I had a very severe cold which settled in my lungs and in my throat, so thatI could scarcely speak louder than a whisper. I tried several , medicines, but got no relief until I used one and a half bottles of Norway Pine Syrup, which com- pletely cured me," zsc. a bottle or five for Saw. Eiti:=1=11=2MIESSSE=1:5911111t IMATRWMPSI/V71.*45.6:ZWZMV1..10,......urta-.S....A.4.6:A.tit • QUAXPEla'S RIG I -ITS Two young women entered a crowded street car. They were obliged to stand wall other•--paeo, ....a- sengers. Irfnally, a seat adjacent to item was vacated, when this conversa- tion followed "You take the seat, dear .° taic'Ne oig would. orefer that yeti should' "I would quite as soon seind.", "So would I, I assure you" "Do take it, dear, I am sure-" Just at this point, a low-browed, cal - toile -settled man, 'who bad been listen- ing to the conversation, slipped past the courteous two and into tbe seat in eat,' troversy, where be took a paper from his pocket a.nd began to read. If glancee could have frozen that man, he would " • have turned to ice where he so a Bub ho did not mind the glances; he merely - read en and on, while the ladies stood. Of course, he was no gentleman, but it appears f e othahtunhiconpossesse, d an na Da,ughter-"Papa„went off in grest humor this inornieg.' IVCOthei-' `My goodness 1 Tha 1, reminds me I for- got to ask him for any money,"