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Exeter Times, 1902-7-10, Page 2(Genuine art r's Little Liv r Piiis. Must Bear Signature of ,ohe dee2"1 See Pee -Simile Wrapper 'Below. Very small stSataseasy' Us take as sagas. POO NEAOACILL FON DITZINEM OILIOUSNat. PON TORPID LIVER'. Fott CONSTIPATION. FOR 84LLOW SKIN. FON 'HIE COMPLEXION ; 073/ZWZrall NUGT 0.1Nly,..011ATUp c, els Wilts I Illzrrely Vegetablevaw..-p. CURE SICK HEADACHE, CARTER:8 TTL. PILL WaileN CORN RIPENS. Corn Oysters. -One dozen ears grated sweet corn, et cup melted but- ter, two well -beaten eggs, a dash of black pepper, 11, teaspoon salt, and one scant cup sifted flour. Mix all together and beat thoroughly. Fry in hot dripping's or lard. Use one large teaspoon of the mixture for each oyster. Serve at once in a ;warm covered dish. Corn Fritters. -Split the grains of sweet corn, and cut from the cob. Take the back of the knife and serape gently down. the cob. This NM secure the meat and milk of each keenel without any of the hus- ky casing that holds it. To this acid two well -beaten eggs, one cup rich sweet milk, e teaspoou salt, e teaspoon sods. and two tablespoons melted butter. Add enough flour to make a moderately thin batter and stir all together, beating hard. Fry in hot lard. . Boiled Green Corn. -Strip of the husk and remove all the silk. Put on to cook in a kettle of fast boil- ing- water, 1.o which has been added a little salt. Cover closely ao4 cook froin 20 to 30 minutes. Be sore there is enough water to completely cover the corn. Remove from the eire and wrap in a clean, soft towel for amoment or two, Serve at once. Where there are young eiTd- ren it is a wise plan to. split eethe rows of kernels with a sharp knife before sending to the table. Succotash. -Cut one pint tender sweet corn from the cob and gently scrape the cob. Shell and wash one pint lima beans. Put both togeth- er in a saucepan with enough cold water to prevent burning, and a little salt. When the beans are ten- der, add three spoons butter, and one cup sweet cream. Allow to boil up and then serve. Escalloped Corn. -Cut sweet corn from the ear and scrape the cob to secure all the rich, juicy substance of the kernel. Put a layer of corn in the bottom of a buttered baking dish, sprinkle a little salt over it, add bits of butter, then put on a thin layer of crctcicar crumbs, pour over a little rich milk. Fill the dish with alternate layers of corn and crackers, with crackers for the top layer, cover with milk. Cov- er closely and bake one hour. Corn Soup. -Split the grains of one dozen ears of fresh young corn, and serape the cob. Boil the cobs ten minutes in enough water so as to have one quart left after boiling. Remove the cobs, strain the water and return to the kettle. When it reaches -the boiling point, slowly add ono quart cream and then the corn. Season to taste. Boil 15 minutes. If cream is not obtainable, use milk, and add a generous piece of butter, and just before removing from the lire stir in one sola•11 tablespO.on flour moistened with cold water an.d let boil a few minutes. Mrs. ,pprings:. "How careful your little boy is of his health! My boy is constantly running out in' all sorts of weather, without his overcoat, ho matter what I say. How do you manage?" Mrs. Briggs: "When my • boy catches cold, I give him cod-liv- er oil." Sick Headache, Biliousness, Dya- pepcia, Coated Tongue, T4ni1 Breath Heart Born, Water grasho oz fl3r usease of tho Stomachs Liver or Bowels, Lela -Liver Pills are purely vegetable ; ithergripe, weakea eor sicken, are easy o• take and preempt to act T E S CCESSFUL LIFE. It Is Necessary to Have a Truly' Developed Christian Heart: (Entered according to Act of the Parliament or Canada. M the year One Thou$and Nine OULI. died UIC nee br Willitm Bally, of Toronto, at the Department of Atrial:Cm% Ottawa.) A despatch from Washingtou says: Rev Freak De Witt Talmage preaehe ed from the following text: Num- bers vie 24, "The Lord bless thee," Last week I ,received an invite:then. It came front one .of the large eol- loges of the east, That invitation attraeted me because iL was gent by one of my old Sunday school schol- ars. As 1 held the square .card in my hand I seemed to be standing again in the sacred room of the dear old Second Presbyteriten church in Pittsburg, I could see tine young mon, then. a little boy in. short trousers, sitting at the feet of his teacher, I could hoar the sweet young voices singing the oold songs we always loved, to sing. As I read between the lines of that in - Vitiation 3: soliloquized: "How time does slip awayl My Sunday school scholar is now a grown mare Willie's name has been changed to William ITe is no longer • a •child. Graduat- Mg from one of the greatest uni- versities of the world, he is about to step forth to the battle of life a fully equipped recruit, He is about to take his position by my side in the ranks. We must hereafter look upon each other as brothers." Then as I still read that invites tion my study room changed again. I seemed to be a thousand miles away. I was walking through the long corridors of memory. It seeth- ed to me as though 'I had gone back to the thile when I myself, gowned and coped, was marching with the senior class to partieipate in the scenes attending my own gradua- tion. The classmates who were then seated by my side have all scatter- ed. Some are ministers, some lawyers, some doctors, some eke- tricians, some merchants and some soldiers. They are living in the north and the south, the east and th.e west. SOME ARE DEAD. That graduation scene was a sad time for many of us. College af- fections are very strong. We young men knew that we should never be to each other the same again. Then, as I sat in the quiteude of my study with the 'hopes* and anxie- ties of nay own graduation day passing 'in review before me, I said to myself, "I wonder if some of the young people whom t know and love who are graduating from school or „college this 'Tune month would not like me to come and sit by their side and tell them what the Commencement exercises truly mean in their lives." I wondered as I sat there holding that invitation in my hand if I couIdonot at this cri- tical time of their noes say some- thing to inspire them, to nerve them and to encourage them not only with faith in themselves, but also with faith in God, and I bow- ed my head over that white invitee tion and mode this simple, earnest, prayer: "0 God, help me to say something that may be helpful to the young people who are graduat- ing this spring and about to buckle on the armor of life. 0 Christ, may I be able to bring my young friends nearer to thee, so thou shalt bless them. May this plea be an- swered in the noble lives of these young men and women, which shall, be consecrated to thee and thy sea - vice. For Jesus' sake I ask it. Amen." I congratulate the young men and women who are graduating froan the different higher institutions- this June becanee now the financial, struggle which many have undeio gone for thesake of an education is practically over. Here and there a young man who receives a college diploma may be the son of a rich father. He may have Mid during his scholastic career no ainbition; he may have gone through school and college merely because his rich parents compelled him to go; he, may have spent most of his time in idleness and Only worked enough to just slip through the different ex- aminations by what is known as "cramming" WITH THE AID OF A TUTOR. for you and Oharles.' Why, Tal- mege," added my classmate, "1 fejt. so bad when I realized all that my father and, mother , wero :doing for me that I wept Said sobbed like a little child," • Again, I eongratulate you, young graduates, because, while your in- tellect has been traiued and modele ed by the expert minds of a ctillege faculty, your hearts have been spir- itually inftnenced and helped during all these years by the prayers and the encouragement of godly parents. In this age for the specialization of talent it is absolutely necessary for a Young Man to have . . •• A HIGHER EDUCATION. The land is so fined with colleges and high schools and inetitubes of technology and schools of all sorts 1 that the young mau who has no ed - u.i;ti ion or a, sadly defective one is mightily handicapped M the race of Now, young people, while the uni- versity teachers have been develop- ing your brain, in all probability the moral teachers, like your Christian father and mother and sisters end loved ones, have been developing your heart. By your training and your past religious life you know what is right and what is wrong. On the day when a young man, James Harper, left the home of his birth in Newton, L. I.'his mother placed her hand upon his head and said: "Jinamv, you are now about to go into. the great, wide world to make a ,success or failure. Remem- ber my boy, you go from a Christ- ian home and chi not disgrace it. If you disgrace this home, remember that on the great day of judgment before God, I shall witness against you and tell God that you were brought up riga and dedicated by our prayers to his service, ancl that you went to destruction of your own accord," You know just as much what you morally ought to do, as jellies Harper knew what he morally ought to do. But there is another side to this thought. "As you are hereafter to get your rewards if you do right, so if you neglect to co your duty, you shall also receive swift punishment. 'Heretofore you were only looked up- on as a, minor, a child. 11 you did anything wrong in the past, the world was very apt to pardon you, saying: "Well, it was tbe action of a silly boy or girl. The' wrong was i merely the result of a college prank" IBut from now on young graduates, 'remember the world does hot look upon you as boys and girls. You Iare full fledged MEN AND WOMEN. As full grown men and women - you mest take your positions in. life and do a full man's and a full woman's part, and if you do wrong from now on the world will neither forgive nor forget your errors. Oh, to -day, as you must now begin to do a full man's or woman's weak, I pray you seek the help of that GOd in whom your father and mother trusted rod who is able and ready to help you also to perform well your pert in the battle of life. , But as we grow older the years seem to have seven leagued boots. They grow so fast that they almost seem to be born with gray hairs. To the man in active lile January seems almost to tread upon the beets of December, and spring and autumn seem to be twin sisters. My young friends,' though you may hardly be out of your teens. yet in the sense of which I speak you have already liv- ed half of your life. During that first half you ha,ete had a hard strug- gle to get an eduerition. At times you were almost in despdir. But in answer to your mother's and fath- er's prayer's, and also to your own, God always came to your rescue. You were able to gat throngh, some- how. Here you are at graduation day. So, id the latter part of your life, if you trust God and do your best, he will surely see you safely Uvough. You are going to have tr ubles. you are going to stumble over the hillocks , of now made graves You are going to have injustices practiced upon you. But if you will place your hand in the Divine Fath- er's hand, He will never let you go. He is able to oeliveras well as to guide. To illustrate this truth Dr. Newton, the noted English • div- ine, used to toll a wonderful story of vi. arious suffering. The scene was laid in the little German 'tillage of liagehba.ch. One day a mother of people were gathered in the large -room of the -village inn. As the par- ty was merry -making, suddenly a huge dog appeared.at the open door, the only door which aelorded egress fromthe room. The monster's eyes Wore bloodshot ; his long red tongue was protrudiug from the Mouth; his lips were covered with A MASS OF WHITE MAIL But such a young man does not rep- resent the great mass of college graduates: For most „young men and women the acquiring on a high- er education has bcena struggle, an awful financial struggle. Most of the college . graduates come from humble homes, and the education of these young men and women repre- sents intense sacrifice lasting; through many years net only on their own part, but 8,1so on the part of their loved ones. • One day a classmate was looking very blue and depressed. I said to. him: "What is the matter? Has anything gone wean?" "Yes," he answered, ."something . has gone wren, and awfully wrong, You know father and mother. do not dress very well. As I Went arotnid the homes of the different boys and saw how well their parents dressed I be- gan to be ashamed Of my 'parents' wardrobe. Lately I have been up- braiding fathee for wearing tuch shabby clothes. Last night I again asked him to get a new Milt: 'Why, fether,' I said, 'yoet have not bought a new suitefor three years, and ,ino- there dress is so old and has been made over so many tioles that the .neddie marks make the cloth look like a, wire nettibg: all fun of holee.° With that iny father turned and loOked at inc. 'retire come into his eyes as he said: "Harry, 3. ant sorry you aro etimmed of the wayyour mother and I drete; but, my boy, I have not very Muth motley and is harci td get along. WO do not drese OS Well aa w� might beettase V( want you ited your younger bro- ther to he oble to get an edueation at c011ege. Harry, we do not dress poorly from choice, We are doing it At a glance everyone saw that the dog was mac]. Some Of the gue,ts were too feightened to even .:pr6y, From every lip went the cry : "Mad dog I Mad . dog I My Clod, what shall tee . do ?" With that the swarthy bicteksmith rose, 1•118 onus were a 'mats of knotted muscle. "Stand back, Men • he cried, "There is need only- of oho inali dy- ing here. If necessary 3. will be that limn." So, whihs the village black- smith leaped forward and clutched the mad 'clog by the th emit and bore the struggling beast to the floor, the assembled pool* made their escape.' The mad dog buried his teeth in the arine ef th•e black- smith, but he would not let go tin - til all his feiends were ta.Yed; Then he flung the mad aog Mto the..rooto, where the brute was afterwards phot. Tim brave blacksmith then went to his shop and 'took a loeg, stroeg „chaite 116 riveted mie end bf that Chain about his body ' and the other .end about the anvil. '17lien lie turned to hie friends and said : "Now 3: um Wife and can do no hcnm Minn' nJe food and Water tviiila3. live. Keret out of zue reach whoa. 1: am med. ThO rest lecierg 'with Soou the awful peroxystu of hydrophobia olutehillg et his throat. in nine days' the brave blacksmith's agony was ended, pna has made it pose Bible for us all to livo right for time ttnd for eternity,. by sacrificing his only begotten Son Mr us. As. the village blacksmith died in the chain which he had riveted to liIS own body, so Christ, died for us upon the cross which he himself ecu - to• Calverer, Now, My Young friends, who ere about to graduate, I. =limit your eaethly and :heavenly life into the protecting pare of your 'Divine rath- er, And as. your days of letieeing are not eloted; bot have just Oome Menced, as You go nehn college into the great school of life. I bid Yofi perform your task S Wen, 11 you will do this by the power of the Holy Spirit, there shall Como' n day when. you shall be Participants in angther gra.cluatiOn smile. Then you Shall have a diploma taken from the Lamb's book of life. That diploma shall be written in the Mood of Jes- us Christ. That diploma ellen al- low you to graduate from an earth- ly preparatory school into the great university of heOven, where higher lessons and nobler service await you and where you shall never cease to .leern about the goodness of God and to Sing the praises of Christ. and his redeeming love. 4 VIRTUES OF THE PINEAPPLE. Juice Canteens an Active Diges- tive Principle. Tile partaking of a slice of pine- apple after a Meal is quite in ac- cordance with physiological indica- tions since, though it may not be generally known, fresh pineapele juice contains a remarkably active digestive principle similar to pepsin. says the Lancet. This principle has been termed "bromelin" and SO powerful is its action upon proteids that it will digest ,as much as 1,000 timet its Weight within a few hours. Its digestive activity varien in ac- cordance with the kind of proteid to which it is subjected. Fibrin dis- appears entirely after a time. With the coagulated albumen of eggs the digestive process is slow ; while with the albumen .01 meat its action seems first to produce a pulpy gela- tinous mass, which, however,: com- pletely dissolves after a short time. When a slice of fresh pineapple is placed upon a raw beefsteak the sur- face of the steak becomes gradually gelatinous owing to the digestive action of the enzynie of the juice: Of course it is well known that di- gestive agents exist also in 'otber fruits, but when it is considered that an average sized pineapple well yield nearly two pinto of juice, it will be .peen that the digestive action of the whole fruit must he enormous. The activity of this poen:liar digestive agent is destroyed in the cooked pineapple, 'but unless the pineal ple is preserved by heat there is -no rea- son why the tinned fruit sbould not retain the digestive power: The active digestive principle may be obtained from the juice by dissolving a large quantity of common salt in it when a precipitate' is obtained possessing the remarkable digestive powers just deseribed. Unlike the pepsin., the digestive principle of the pineapple wilt o1 e1' - ate in aa acid, neutral, or even alkaline medium, according to the kind of proteid to whioh it is pre- sented. It may therefore be assum- ed that the pineapple enzyme would not only aid the work of digestion M the stomach, but would continue, that action in the intestinal tract.* Pineapple, it may be added, con- tains Much indigestible matter of the nature of woody fibre, but it is quite possible that the decidedly di- gestive properties of the juice cora pensate for this fact. . THE BOY AND THE GIRL.: Germany has just tot about ascer- taining the value of the testimony of children in cases of identification. Into each public school of South Germany was brought a man of or- dinary atePearance, and dressed in working man's clothes. Classes of girls and boys of different ages were made to, walk slowly throegh the room, in at one door and out at an- other, and afterwards required to Write a descriptionof the man as they saw him. Of the girls eighty pee cent. described his clothes with fair aceuracy, but said nothing about his face or general appearance., The other twenty per cent, described With less accuracy both face and clothes, but not onec onfined herself to a description of the face. • With the boys tbe remelts were nearly op- posite. Nearly seventy per emit. de- scribed the mat's fece, and paid' no attention to his clothes, while the rest atteMpted 'with, only moderate success tea describe both face and Clothes, Not a single •ooe lianited • himself to the clothes. NOT WISE ENOUGH. Two inmates of a Scotch asylum determined one day to make their escape from the institutioto After wondering how they were: to get out, they resolved to climb the high wall which surrounds tl3e build- ing. "It's awfu' high, thougb," said Tam. 'Never mind that," said Sandy; `!we can get up easy enough, just let 311e up on your hack, and a'ull get Up aricht." After Tam had seen ids con -Manion safely landed on the top of the wall he exeleimecl; "1 foo atn n to get up noW?" "Hoch, mon," eaid Sandy, oyou're no wise enough yet, You'll hiv tap bldo 10 a wee longe' until you: get somebody else to lift you up," The inost, dangerous' vegetable le - client poison es that 61 theitch- wood tree of the Pill Islaiide. One diet) of the sap felling on the hancI is es peleful tie, a touch of .' a, liot iron. THE S. S. LESSON. INTER,NA.TIONAL LESSON JULY 13. Text of the Lesson, gx, ;Pc', 1-11' Golden TeRt, Luke x., 27, 1, 2, And God spkea1l these words, saying, I con the Lord thy God, which have brought thee out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bonclegel It was now the third month since' they had been , redeemed from the bondag'e of Egypt, They had .come to Mount Sinai and the Lord hant offered to make 'them a peculiar trea- sure unto Himself above all people, a kingdom of priest, a holy nation,, if only- they would obey :His voice. This they readily .promised to do, and now we see them gathered about Mount Sinai, the mountain quaking greatly and covered with fire and smoke, out of the midst of which God speaks thii words of our boson to the people (chapter xix). It was a day uolike any before or sin& in the history ofthe world. So WW1- dorful was, it that a people 'should hear the voice of God out of the midst Of the fire that. the fact • is stated ten times (Deut. iv., 12, 15, 33, 36; v., 4, 22, 24, 26; ix., 10; x,, 4), He first reminds them that their redemption from Egypt was wholly His e doing,, without any help of theirs, for "salvation is - of the Lord" (Jonah li, 9), and He never asks an unredeemed soul to keep His commandmeato. He often re- minded them that Ile 'brought them forth from Egypt (Ex, vie 7; Lev. xi, 45; moil, 33; xxv, as, 4.24 xxvi, 13; Ps. lxxxi, 10), which He called an iron furnace (Deut. iv, 20; I Kings viii, 51; Jer. xi, 4), that they might be His own people and serve Him. Thoo shalt have no other gods before Me. Since they were redeemed by the only living and true God to make Him a name on the earth in the sight of all nations, (II Sam. 11, 23; lea- 1xiii 12, 14) therefore they were forbidden to have aught to do in any way with the goods of nations, idols of wood and stone, the work of men's hands (II Kings, xviii, 36, 37; jer. x, 10, 11). • 4, 6. 1 the Lord th3r 0 o'd am a jealous God. God is called jealous just seven timet. The other six places are Ex, XXXiV, 14; Deut. iv, 24; v, vi, 15; Josh. xxiv, 19; Nah. i, 2, and in. all but the last He is 'so spoken of in comection with the: WorshiP of idols. The word trot:lea' mated "jealous" also means to buy, purchase or redeem. We are re- deemed to be a people for His oven, possession (Tit. ii, 14, 13.. V.), and He wants us all for Himself. Idols are works of men's hands, and it is surely silly to bow downto that which we can make, as if our own. works whiele, we have made could care for us. In Deut. six, 15, 16, the reason for this second command- ment is given. We are not apt to bow down to graven images, but if anything is tolerated in oor haute" - affections that prevents our Lord Jesus from having first place we are grieving the Holy Spirit. 7. Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain, for the Lod will not hold him guiltless that taketh His name in vain, ' The name above every name most be ever hallowed as Jesus tauglet vs to pray (Matt. vi, 9). Not only is all kind of so called profanity for- bidden, but as the name stands for the character (Ex. xxxiv, 5-7), all that would in any way belittle the character of God must be carefully avoided. We are here to honor Him it, every way and magnify His ramie, for there %lee so many who blaspheme that worthy or beautiful or honor- able name by the which ye are call- ed (Jas.' ii, 7). See God's abhor- rence of everything that is merely outward in Tea. XXin, 3.3 ; Ezek, xxxiii, 30, 32, and in His condemna- tion of the Pharisees , (Matt. xxii, 5). It may help some 012O if I pass on, right here a word of explanation given to me by an aged and de- vout servant of Christ who is very familiar with Hebrew concerning a passage which long perplexed me -- "Thou bast magnified Thy word above alt Thy name" (Ps. cxxxviii, 2). He said as I asked him con- cerning it : "Did you ever write a check ? After filling in the amount what did you do ?" "Isigned my "Yea," he said, "and thus you magnified your word over .your name. And the sense of "above" here is "over." He has magnified His word by His name, and if we adishonornine,, a •Ms Wd WO ill treat His 8-11. Rethember the Sabbath day to keep it holy. This command takes us back to Geo.. ii, 1-3, the word "remember" pointing us to something befoi.e made known. The Sabbath was made for man, and the Son of MOM is Lord of 'the Sabbath (Mark ii, 27,' 28). If, then; He is my Lord, the Sabbath is einxialler minethat on it 3: may have special eonimunien with Him. In Ise,. loin, 13, 14,we are taught that we OAT' W. honor' Hine not doing our own ways nor; finding otte own pleasure nor speak- ing oua own words, tied that thus we shall delight ourselves in the Loyd.' In Cel. ii, 16, 17, eve, read that even the Sabbath is a 'shadow ef neage to come, perhaps :referring to the keeping of a Sabbath that re- mains for the people of God, but Which' We can foeetasto even here (Hen. iv, 9, 10). The word "Sab- bath" means rest, and there is 00 rest but in Gillett end in His fleiph- ed work,' We never find rest untie we cease from all our own effort, oer own Works end accept ETim and the 'berieet, Of His great Work of redinep- tioo. Then being mood by His blocal, Which includes His Mtn' Hie death cella resurrection, we meld to lolow the rest which comes by ceasing from all our works in the daily lile gp Gliristians and allowing God to work in us bOth to will and to do 'of His good pleasiire (Phil. lir 18), A ; 0•4•41044**** * 04440+44 0 • ****40 44.0.000000,0001010P4910,40, 0 , . . 1 1) i, , sT HE THE EE T'Et,•Li HESS I OF DEVONSHIRE'. t we : 0 • ai c, Here is the best 'offer ever made in this community. By a very excel lent ar. 46, 4 rangement made with the Family Kuehl and Weekly Star of Montreal we are 1 I t enzteeed to inner Tun Exnalta Truus and that great Family Paptpr, the a. irnagmisilya ht.; dIdesaonrdiv\Va.e..e.kly Ster, for one year for the Small sum 01 1.'75 and in. .al 4 olude to each s. ',scriber three beautiful premium pictures, of which the follow. 4r1 . ".. - 4 i 41. KIN'G EDWARD 'I[. -True to ItIts, a beautiful portrait size 18 x ee O 24 inches, on beautiful 1,cavy white satin finiabed paperfor framing. Ifs portrait • ' it hasi3een taken since his eceession to the throne, arid is the very Jabot and best 74; obtainable, It cannot be had except through tleh Faerree Hunan) AHD • WEN1Iiir STAR; each picture bears the King's autow'aph. Thle picture ham the . . I great merit of being the first taken after the Kinlef3 accession, and has thereforo en lostorical value that no other picture can possess, ZQUEEN ALEXANDRA. -An exquisitely befuddle1 picture of the remark - la ably beautiful and goci Queen Alexandra, also token, since the Kleg,'s aeoesdiao ,i,' to the throne. It is the same size as that Of the Epx,g, the two forininee a hand- SOMO pair of pictures that alone would sell for many Clues the subeeripilon price : of paAer and pietures. . • Noportratt of tile King and Consort taken at thee seriond og sueseeding,eit• • tinge can have one fraction of tee value nr the first. The, e go down Pe history. I THE DUCHESS OF DEVONSHIRE. --The Renowyed Gaineborough Pk, e tura Sold at FlUction Bele in London twenty-five yeiirs ago for ammo, • stolen by clever thieves,lidden for over twenty-fouv }nave and delteered to its 1' • owner on payment of $80,000 reward and since sold to M. .3'. Plerpont Morgan for ; 75'12°°Thi.s. , in brief, Is the history of one of the preneinin pictures, whish, by a : clevep stroke or enterpgise, the publishers of the leathily Herald have secured foe e ; their subscribers. The picture is 22'28 in ten colon , and le reproduced lime for ,* line, colour for colour with the original, Oopipe of t le reproduction are now sOhl irk New York City, Meatreal arid Toronto for %S18 each, and this is the picture 4, Family Herald subscribers are going to get absolutely free together with the e Matures of the King and„Qneen. O Is that not big value? Call at THE TIMES Office and see samples : of these beautiful pictures. • You want Tau Borten Tams for the local news, and you want that * great paper the Family Herald for ins 21 pages of general news and family * rpeariedeing. Its agricultural pages alone are worth many times the subscription Meow or send your subscription to K1 G and Remarkable Sffer. THE Ti ES OFFICE. • * ***++4,441.44•Goo•4,ws,44.t.o.00000#44,..;0044....0*0#i4 'I 1 •, • 4.1e... 14 7.^4-nt "An. Alf,1 Treovellers and Tourists Travelling from place to place are subject to all kinds of Bowel Cornplaint on account of change of water', diet and temperature. is a sure cure. for Diarrhcea, Dysentery, Colic, Cramps, Pains in the Stomach; Seasickness, Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Cholera Infantum, Summer Com- plaint, and all Fluxes of the Bowels in Children and Adults. 0 Its effects are marvellous. It acts like a charm. Relief is almost instantaneous. Does not leave the Bowels in a c9nstipated concni,I,AL If you ever contracted any Blood Disease you are never safe unlesa the virus or poison has been eradicated from tite system. At times you see alarming symptoms, but live in hopes no serious results will follow. Rave you any of the following syniptoms? 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, dyspeptic 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 wheu happy in domestic Ole. Don't let quacks experiment on you. Our NOW' METHOD TREATMENT is guaranteed to cure you. 0 Ur guarantees are backed by bank bonds that the disease will never return. Thousands of patient have been already cured by OUT NEW METHOD TREATMENT for over 20 yeare, and no return of the disease. No experiment, nO risk -not a "patch up," but a posie five cure. The wean cases solicited. OMR NEW niasTEiolo TEalannediteettle will cure you, and make a man of you. Under its influence the brain becomes active, the blood purified so that all pimples, blotches and ulcers disappear.; the nerves become strong as steel, so that nervottsness bashfulnese and desponeency disappear; the eyes become bright, the face full and clear, enemy returns to the body, and the moral, physical and sex- ual systeuts are invigorated all drains cease-tto More vital waste from the syttent. The various organs become natural and =Italy. Von feel yottrself a man and ktidtv marriage cannot be a failure. We invite all the afflicted to consult us confidentially attd free of charge. nowt let e_ttacke and fakirs rob you of your hard-eareed dollars. WE Winn CURYOU OR No PAY. We treat and cure NERVOUS DEDIIATY, SEXUAL WEARNESS, EMtS- SION'S, SYPHILIS, GLEET, STRICTuRel, VARIOOCEI,E, XXONF.IY and noADDEP„ DISEASES, and all diseases peculiar to men and women. Cares oaten - teed. I Are you a victim? Have you lest hope? Are you coetemplatioe I:MADER Ooss? 005 New MethodTit?eatinent v7iIllettrae yoti.o Constsitotion martiage? Has your blood eett diseased ve u any week. Free. NO Matter who has treated eou, write for ate honeseopleloo Pree of Charge. Charges reationabIe. Reeks Frea.--"The Golden Monitor" [illustrated] onttiseaSee of men "Diseases of Woreen" "The Weges of Sin." eVaricocele, Stricture and Gleet." Air sent Free sealed. No medicine acid 0, 0. 0. No names en boxes or envelopes, Everything confidential. Question list and Oost of Treatment, FREE, for Rome Cure. Dr% E 140 SHELBY ST. jt:3-ntfitignrifig OtTROIT Mairkrennan