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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1902-9-11, Page 2ESENT DAY ,DUTI .04u%) that mat, tees ao inspiring faith which I lack." But tie by' war - Will Say : "That religion which nutkee him so happy is good enceigh for me. .1. will trust Christ taw bee rying arid fretting about the future, we show that we do not truet Christ thee. others will say : "Ills faith does zlot atand the test. That proe fessing Cheletian is no better off than 1: am. I shall not try to seek a Chriet 'whom that Man ca,nnot God Will Give All of Us to Meet Them. iMntefse ;II:coaling to aat ot tee eadinesie of easels, in the your oue Thousand XIno nun. cited sea See, by William Ifitaii of Toronto, At the pepartmeut of Agriculture, Ottiswful A despatch from Chicago says: 'Rev. Frank Do Witt Talmage preach- ed from the following text: Mat- thew vi, 34., "Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof." Christ is giviug counsel, whieh re- not cross the bridge until yoie eome for us ? If we.,..are, we are eternally calls the edvice ebe dying man once to. it? Iii tee journey o life you all right. If we etre not in toech gave to his children. After callieg tvill find realay bridges down. YOU with Christ,. we are eternally all „Strength IF trust," 'PIUS PROMME IS TRUE, But, no man can sefely let the fu - is te not time for you to stop your tin•e take care of itself Unless he useless fretting? Is it not a seese- &mils rightlY with the present, and less oceupation to be worrying ibout no men eau deal rishtly with the certaia troubles which iu. all prole- present toeless lie deals rightly with ability—judged by the past—will nev- God, or, rather, let God deal rightly er afflict your life? Do you. not with him. Are you and I in touch feel thet the old, Englisd2 peoverb is with Jesus Ciiist so that. Christ can right which declares: "You must and will take charge of or future his eonsecind daughters to his bed- side the dying father said: "My children, I have seen a lot of trail- bles in my time. have semso many trebles that they: have com- Vietely wore me out, and that is the reason that 1 am now dying, when I alight to be in my physical anti , mental prime. But the saddest part, of it is that the most at my trou- bles have been, imaginary troubles. They have been unnecessary treat-, Wee. They have not been troebles of the inuninent to -du, but the vis- ionary to -morrow. They have been troubles which would never leave bothered me unless I had gone forth and 'hunted therii out of their lairs and troubled them, Tho things:, that have given me most• concera have beeu the things that never 'happen- ed. So I charge you, my 'dear children, if you would serve God with your best physical, meetal and• spiritual powers, always obey the words which. Christ .spake in his famous sermon: 'Take, therefore, no thought of the morrow, foe the mor- row shall take -thought for the things of itself. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof. " - Hy glorious text 'teaches almost exactler the same lesson that Mr. Beecher once presented when he said: "All time is divided into three parts—the past, the present and ,the future. The past beloegs to grati- tude and regret, the efresent to con- tentment and work, the future should belong to only hope and trust." It teaches that a dread of future evil is dishonoring to God, because it impliesa doubt whether the good God will be true to the trust we have placed in him and whether he will really keep the promisee he has made to his people. It teaches that after a. Christian has done his best, his level and conscientious best, he should then joyfully and confidently leave the .future in God's hande and IN GOD'S HANDS ALONE. It teaches that no inateer how hopa- less, humanly speaking, may be the • outlook, if we know and trust our God we should let our gospel feith • chase away all the doubts and wor- -ries and fears that fret and tease • and 'tantalize us in reference to the future, even as the rising sun scat- ters the 'darkness and the impene- trable gloom of the night. It teaches that no matter how desk and threat- ening may be the shrieking torna- does of trouble the gospel rainbows should be big enough to arch the widest horizons and bright en- ough to smile through even a shower of falling tears. Anticipated troubles rarely hap- pen. By this statement I do not mean that if a man would cease to worry he could get a divine pass- port which world protect him forev- er from the rough hand of trouble. will' discover -that the spring fresh- wrong. But, my brother, ie your ets have ewept awayqhe embank- ! present relatiouship with Christ is ments upon which countless abut-. not all right, then I be of you not oaeats were placed. But in all prob- 1 to stand still until you can press 1°s -t' t againet the lovitig heart of the for - ability the bridge you worry ia about will be Arra enough aud l giving Saviour. Will yell draw close strong enough to bear you over its i to eleiste bleeding, wounded side ? stream, although you may have to 1 eigli you as Wade into other angry waters a a little child, en- , cOuraged by Christ's love and tile little farther on, [strength he gives you, look up into Anticipating 'troubles is a sin,- be- e. ehe .. face of your Heavenly Father cause the present duties of life taX • anti say, '''Thy will, 0 Lord, and not almost every man's PhYsjeal and mine be done ?" Will you believe meutal resources to the utmost Um- eim e win you it. 'We read with sorrow and ad- trust hine '? Will you commit; your preseut and there- miration about the pathetic struggle e item your to -morrow into his care ? Sir Walter Scott made in his old age to pay oft his debts. By fool- ish investment he becaine responsible • RESISTING POWER. Doctors tell us, in these days of for something like $600,000, With gum and toxins, that tbe thing that his magic pen he went to .work. lie counts xnost in a case is the "resist - worked during the clay. He 'worked in g p 0 Wei,' , 01 the patient. Some during the night.. He worked 711en men and women can pass through an walking upon the street. He lived ePidemic or even be inoculated with and worked for the one purpose, it peculiar poison. germs aad yet that of being able to say he owed shake off infection, unharined:.Others no man a renny. But while he work- apparently just as healthy succumb ed he so worried over this debt that : to the first contact with disease, and one day his physician came to lum sink under it in spith of ,the best and said, "Sir Walter, if you do not nursing.. "Resisting power" is an cease worrying. you will dm." leith ,iadividual affair, and many surprises MAGICIAN OF Al3BOTSFOIID In:mil-looking. patient pulls through that the • , • come to doctor and nurses as the looked up aud gae-e a wan smile as ' Med the robu.st seeming one dies. Medicines can only aid the "resist, he said. : "Why, doctor, as l ong • as ing power" -- they can never take that debt is hanging over my 'head its place. It determines, in the end, I cannot help Worrying: I know life or 'death in every case. the worrying. is killing me. But yeti might as well go and tell my cook • —- toENGLAND'S FIG 0,ARDENS. •order the water in the kettle not to boil as to commanil my brain not The industry of fig culture in Bri- tt) worry." Jain may be said to be centered in As worry racks the physical frame Worthing, though how this neighbor - so that the tired mind is unable to hood should coin.e to .possess the think clearly ; as it overtaxes, • the most -extensive flg orchards it is nervous systera until. the ganglia or hard to say. Those who never have nerve centres 'neve imperfect connec- had an opportunity of visiting the tion, or complete disconnection, lik.e Worthing fig orchards will be as - the telephone when the Wires have tonished to learn of the size, age, become broken or crossed ; as worry and vigor • this tree attains there, paralyzes the digestive organs until Even M cottage gardees in the un - they refuse prciperly to assimilate mediate neighberhood the 4- - tree the food -upon which the human body thrives remarkably well. It is ni 1 is dependent for the sustemence of and around the village of Sompting and cannot Inherit the kingdom (I 0or. fwoorutlrnotdaiTs'.e9 "to-sual2111.3!yy, burit'llehatdrertat life ; 'as it is the forerunner of al1. that the chief market supply of figs 'cle ?-11.), but the grace of God takes houSgeois taste for stilt pork. the fatal diseases by. winch the hu- is obtained. The trees ac here sucu unrighteous ones and makes them . ____ When we started to tobog,gaa the man race ia iavalided and destroyed, planted in groves, irregular noW be- righteous:with His own righteousnese. Garden River the. water was at the so it is an awful sin for you to cause some *have died and been re- 17, 18. Ye shall surely perish. . lowest of the year. We had located fret and w-orry about the future and placed by younger trees, and many He plainly forewarns them that if at a destroy your life's usefulness and in- of them are twenty feet high and as bend in the7.stream whei-e the they away from God and worship current was too swift to launch the fluence. Can you not Els true Chris- many through. They are n°t al- other gods this is what will happen, canoe. This forced us to le tian men and women go forth to lowed to grow higher than this, oth- axe our meet the duties of the present day erwise the labor of gatheriug the not because their God desired it, but Island comp by the back way. Even. and leave the visionary future in fruit would be increased. - -- because if they refused His love and outsetas reeaciciflicnigi.ltivelse caw titliiiel God's hands? •Worry is not a harm.- I the only way of life there was nothing u rebefowreer less gadfly, an insectile annoyance, a I ARMY'S CAST-OFF WEAPONS. for them but perishing because of their channel, we had to get out in the buzzing irritant, a haphazard play -1 Some idea. of the vast quantities own willfulness. See the strong words stream and drag the boat over a ful habit. It is a sin -which has de- of discarded war material thrown concerning God's unwillingness to have sandbar. Alter this the exertion stroyecl more victims than. have over upon the general market by the sue- was mainly in the dieection. of keep- cessive changes in armameut adopt- any one perish. in Ezek. xviii, oui craft from getting. beyond or ground to pieces between the up- xxxiii,' 11; John iii, 16; II Pet iii, 9:. been slain upon the field of battle per and the nether millstones of See the love of God for the wandering We. slid into the channel down „,. a ed by the various Great Powers, may persecution and slander. 13eware be gathered from the list of arms and the lost in Gen. iii, when He natural. chute between a. pile of bowl - THE SUNDAY SCHOOL. LEWN XI, THIRD QUARTER, INTER- NATIONAL SERIES, SEPT. 14. •Text of teie Lesion, Dolan xxa, 11-20. ,Memove- Verses, la, 1.0--eloneen onext. • I Joint v, 3,.-Lommentany Prepared llts Rey. P. Ktearna. [Cope -right, 1S02, by American Press Mee- ' di:atone 11,44. The word Is very nigh unto thee, • In thy mouth and in thy heart, that thou ma)est do it. '- He foresaw that they would wander from Him and be scattered among oth- er nations, and He here instructs them what to do in such a case and what He• would do when they returned to Him with the Whole heart. In these °Polling verses of our lesson Be tells them that the means of their restort), tion did not have to be sought in hear - IF A TRIP FULL OF PERILS, EXCITING CANOE RIDE:DOWN GARDEN. RIVEE. A Fish Seinimer Resort Where the ,. Trout Preferred Pork to • Flies. ' :In the royal sort ,of tobogganing the fruit of rauelx.labor .is a small measure of wild exbintration. So it was, With. our canoe ride down the Garden River, a Canadian Stream emptying into the north pas,sage Of Lake Huron, seers a writer in the New York 'and Express, In- dians and white men who go to the headwaters, to fieh and lumber, Pole up it in flat boats, but WS, after studying the eerrent of the stream, decided to portage around. This journey of about fifty miles occupied „four days, -• being lengthened by good trout fishing in some lakes along the en nor tvt the ends of the earth, but route and heavy forest roads, Rate: chose mg circumvented the river in such :Was alwa4's nigh them. God • • generous fashion we put the ,canoe them to be it righteous people, He Him- • into the witers one summer after - self being their righteousness. If they noon and el/CI down to the outlet in 'Wandered frotn Him into unrighteous- six hours. :Before starting on our long slide ness, there was no way for them but to return to Him from whom they Wandered. An unauointed eye would we slept three nights by the stream. Our camp tvas in a grove of small frrool7ttild, MO stly birches. AL ouu. not see the death and reserrection of river ia its wild - Christ in these words, but that is what est stateeor rftata ge bayou in which weerce:urlciwapscla UV° Paul by the Spirit saw here when he • molested by currents, gleie dsileiorn.- gtioted these words in Rom. x, 6-8, w, eirtel lined with driftwood and shoie•et. 'when he was setting forth that anise! wh•eic,e.e tthiinis bneort known as pulpwood, is the end of the law for righteousne sfamb rmaeric.id jets,rina of the to every one that believeth. When we wilderness hied the water underneatheLI:V'ICSuns'' tain d stand, with God and see from His . by naasses of foam, like suds P°fre°Ind standpoint, we see His way of right- we dropped our lines, eousness set forth everywhere from 'FI'Vewsatsolliondainitsthaebbpawling stream up Gen. ill, 15, 21, on to Rev. v, 9, 10, and to our NV d solved the doublet. 1 problem of, keeping a balance Onward, and it is always His own work, ground stone in a swift current°11andt and His own work alone, by which. He of landing a fly in EL PatCh of quiet brings people near to Him or restore S water, but we caught no fish. rPh them when they wander away from conditions were ideal and we ' had. e Hine 'sought in those places whei•e, so tra- i. , s iould abide, but 15, H. I command thee t 1 d a s ay to love dition SRNS trout 1 the Lord thy God, to walk in His wa s our • and to keep His commandments. - Y el ee s stood eniPtY. This, the Spirit says through ;Moses, 1 A. FISH SIMEMHR RESORT Is life and good, frultfuluess and bless- . The second dayweforded the e er half a mile °Ve camP, entered Ing, and He faithfully set it befor the woods . them that they might choose the del t and followed a litUe , brook that often lost itself =der the Ing and re -crossing• the river, blam- ed us in each note for the sport we spoiled. • And we' filled with conster- nation an old (Wok with „a brood Of little ones, too young to fly. They wei!e paddling in A broad pool not for from our camp When •we ap, protected. The mother went scud- ding doivn stretnia the ducklings fol- lowed as fast as strength allowed, Semi the"guardien of the flock turn - ad about and started up the river. With a loud flapping • of wings arid angry squawks, she sailed. by. at ex- press speed,. • Paddles shipped the nir as she PaSsed.• • We had been paddling ,for. a •mile or so thrOugh babY rifts and had 00- j:CrOd R smooth patch of Water that from a dust 111(0 aPpett :.almost dead.' It was 'not so, howes,er, as we discovered too late, Directly M the anith was a fallen pine. The eur- relit challenged Our beat 'efforts. The odds were .againet ete' aS they are -against • him. -who sing] e handed. fights wind:rind tide. • - A cLOst SPLAVE, • We paddled vigorousle: acrees stream' toWard shore, For one ea- noe's length geined• crassing, • we floated detail three: Then a •paddie snapped. There wasano, Choice of direction. We heel to face the • The tree lane. two feet above the water. The' nrst Uninalse, was to grasp it, swing out of 'the canoe and• let it ' slide beueath empty, to be caught lower down. Before we had .dednitely deciaed on this plan -the bow of the boat was passing under the pine. We ducked, pressed hard .ageinst the bottoth of •the canoe. It :was "low bridge" with a vengeance. We went through safely, with the loss of but .one hat, a couple of pails and a frying pan that -were on the top our traps piled amidships, Luckily the river was coMparatively clear below the tree, as our craft werit its own way for a few rods be- fore, vie could give it guidance, As it Was, it di Up against a rock that rose from the water a little out from, the shore, and the strain start- ed a leak in the bow. This accident forced os to. land and smear the loosened seams with pitch and resin —the woodsman's salve for all ca- noe womuis. We ernbarked in the mended canoe near te gravel pit that furnished bal- way. lime also did Joshua before he roots of giant trees, until it broad- last heir a near -by railroad, The left them, Urging there to fear the Lord end into a pool an acre and a half laboreite had kit for the day. We and serve Him, and yet telling them to :in extent. The approach to it front had not far to go now. The excite - make their choice (Josh. xxiv, 14, 15), one side Was through black, gummy meat of the trip was over,: There and encouraging them to a right deci- Muck. • A tangled undergrowth held only remained. „ the delight of idly r One up on the opposite bank. The floating', down stream.. sion by telling them how he had de- dded, -whatever they might do. The trout were there, however. , The Adventure With aa Angry Xagle. ' . t righteousness- which is required IS to place was a sort of h sununer re - r -an Begg, of Mess•rs,. Wood, Val - love the Lord our God with all our sort. The prolonged hot weather had driven them, froni the river to auce, hLeggieit & Co., the Cordova heart and soul and strength and our gather in this • cool habitation. The I r. ic'erdwaia firm, had a 'rather •neighbor as ourself (Luker, 27, 28). water 'in the pool was like ice. We .excitmg experience at Bee • me - - our cold storage, street petty with Ja.ck Garden,- of Thurlow, , in cone - and until this is done either by us or dubbed . the epot yesterday. On Sunday la.st • • ei er Bay for us by another we are unrighteous and went there. morning and evening . . street, Mr.. Begg 'took in the excur- stion ' to Buccaneer Bay, and while - strolling about the shore lost a $20 gold .piece. He 'did not learn of his loss until he teethed home. Monday morning -he left on the Cassiar for the bay to Took, for his lost gold. After about half an hour's careful search he found the. coin, and then proceeded to roam about the place until the arrival of the steamer Coniox en route co Vancou- ver. He was passing throiern how you allow its fatal poison to n.ow offered for sale from this cause sought out Adam and Eva; in the beau- : dors and a Jam of floodwood and enter sour sinful heart. hY the Italian Government. The tieul stories of Luke xv, as well as in 'then had a patch •of hillooth water The cup of sorrow must be pressed ' list includes 600,000 rifles adopted before us. 'This was the repeated ANTICIPATING TROUBLE all His dealings with Israel, and re- • inust become fountains of tears. eyes, as well as the young eyes, against every human lip. The old is a form of intellectual and spirit- cartridges, 1,200 9 -pounders, and ual sin by which some men are 500 7-pouncler guile, with 200,000 i so recently as 1887, with 48 million member that He sus: "I am the Lord. I chan e not:" "Jesus Christ the same ,..._,. to deeP P ' experience all the way to the outlet. and at the end of them plunging in - Beath angel as well as birth angel yesterlay, today and forever" tame pools It blinded to the appreciation or en-; shells, and 7 -pounder mountain was much like joyment of present blessings Because guns with 17,000 shells. coasting, as, after the slant where must flap the wing over a Phar- ill, 6; Heb. xiii, 8). of this sin they cannot thank God ' speed was gained, we bad a long, • aoh's palace as well as over the poor man's hut. The village church bell, which can throb for joy in a wed- ding chime and swing its clapper to ring out a Christmas carol, is the same bell that can toll out a, slow, melancholy dirge. The house of feasting must become the house of mourning. The orange blossoms • and cypress must grow side- by side. It is by troubles that God trains his children to do the work for which they were intended. It is by the broken heart that he is able to make his songsters and songstresses sing their sweetest music. • In ninety-nine cases out of a hurt• - Cued the troubles which did you the most serious damage were those troubles which, as a tiger, leaped upon you unexpectedly from am- bush, not the troubles that lay crouching and glaring and threat- ening ercm in broad daylight ia the open pathway just ahead. 19, 20. He is thy life and the length of level expanse on which to test • our THOSE SERIOUS TROUBLES came to you as the little pygmy was supposed to have come to the king 01 :01(1. When the pygmy asked the great monarch for permission to rule over all the lands which his little, short limbs could cover in three steps, the royal consent was derisively given. • Then the insigni- ficant dwarf innaedititely sprang up into the stature of a huge giant. With one stride the giant stepped across the land; with another stride the giant stepped across the seas, and with • a third stride the giant • lifted • his sledge hammer nst and •swept the trembling king off his throne. Your troubles, to U500, fa- xniliar comparison, came like a clap of thunder and a stroke of • lightning out of EL clear sky. • They • came as a thief, not by day, but • by night, in a way and at it• time you did not expect theme • As a business matt you lia.ve often :worried about this, that and the Other thing. •You have worried about Whether the firna that failed Would be able to pay for the goods they bought. You have Worried about the tariff laws cind the dee- tions. Yon have Worried abaet the rival concern Which settled on the next block. You never thought that wOrse trouble could come to you than the loss of your store. • 1.7ou never thought tha± your own health • could break down and that you would haVe te resign froM the firm and 8011 (Mt, TrOubiOS came into your,„life, but they invarioirly came the Way andat the tinVa you did not expectr, for their loving wives and devoted i GREAT BRITAIN IS. SMALL. thy days. children. ThNot anything aart from Him, not ey cannot thank God A moin.entum. TET for the food they eat and the cloth -1 Great Britain is only half as big anything we can do, but He Himself him for their opportunities of use-; Newfoundland, It stands fifth in le our life, and -lifeapa ' rt The journey down covered thirty ing they wear. They cannot thank as Sumatra and double the size of there is no fulness and. for health and life. They , point of size in the list of the . • . s made a wide detour of an hairnets( from Him TheNew Testament males miles. At one place the channel are alwas-s thinking. of something world's islands. England, without - .., , - deposit of sand and gravel,. and then this so very plana in such passages as I they naight ha (1 hail ; of some- Wales, is almost identical in point John v, 11, 12 e Cpl. Mei; John XIV, 6, and Moved in a reverse curve beck. ' to the Old Te,stroment varies not .fer hear. thing that inignt be ta.ken away. of Size with Roumania. It is - less i'seithin it. few rods of the 'startles the oul's crY in Such word seas these : I point, . Yet we - hadpaddle . d two , They have no gratitude in their ,than one-quarter as big as Frappe or hearte to God for anything. Every Germany']he whole British .. Isles "My soul thirsteth for GOd, for the miles. The river was full of bends Liss has in it for them the sting of occupy only. one -sixteenth part of the living God," "Whoin „have 1 in heaven and crooks. Tt was at these elbow surface of the globe. a ecorpion. Every sunbeam eclipsed by a dark cloud. Every arbut Thee? And there is none upon 'joints, SO to speak, that the skill of eth that,I desire beside thee.", "Tw he the canoist as most severely' tried, is song has in it the echo of a requiem Lord is My portion, saith my soul" (Psfor there the current swung into the . and a death raE ttie. very moment, is for them a pallbearer clothed, in xlii, 2Lein ; , e5i Lain, iii, 24). One can - shove with terrific forceThen all i the power that one cohld command black walking by the casket of a not 'read th.e chapter from whicli our ' . :WAS necessary to avoid a smashup stenchful corpse. lesson is taken without noticing the ' against the bank. In order to overcome ,this sin • of worry I want you to tey an experi- ment. Every hour of every day try to think of the blessings Clod ' has given to you instead of trying to re- member all your troubles. If you have a poor memory., 1 want you to take a long sheet of paper and write those blessings dawn as you think of them, and then every little while take up this paper and read over the list. You are going to be surprised, overwhelmingly surprised, at the great number of blessings you ca12 put dnurn. Anticipating trouble is a sin. be- cause It exhibits a lack of goer el faith to the unbelievers around yon, who might otherwise be willing to believe in the atoning, saving, ia- spiriog and recreating power of the blood of the Lamb, 'Peek as we may, we cannet get away from the overwhelmiug fact that every pro- fessing Christian is as a city set upon a hill for all unactievers to look at • Ah111, TO BID GUIDED BY. It has beec said that no cook or chambernmid or butler or other em- ploye ever entered the house of Philip Brooks but he or she became a,• Christian, if not already 0110, through the influence of that great and good gospel miniater of Boston. So our Christian lights Cannot be hidden under a bushel, if they are false lights the world will ace that they are falele and will despise there., if th.ey are true 'lighte, the World will follow the lights, What We say and do Will influence others in reference Lo what they say Or do for or against • Christ. It by ,a true, Minnie ft-iith, we 0.051 trust Christ. in reference to the future both tem- perarily and eternally, then ethers FOR DIARRHOEA, DYSENTERY, COLIC, CRAMPS, PAIN iN THE STOMACH AND ALL SUMMER COMPLAINTS ITS EFFgOTS ARE MARVELLOUS, IT ACTS- Lux A SRAM ditillain INSTANTANEOUS. Pieaant is&D1d1 lteliablet Effootual. EVERY MOLISE: sHOULni 1-1P,Vit IT, esti V CS U Ft ontioniwr Pon ti*. VAdr 80 trtinCR, PIC frequent repetition of the name "the The current of a stream like the Lord thy God," not less than fifteen Garden River is, by the way, no times. Then if the previous chapters ' mean opponent. There • are times have been read there will come to mind these words, "That thou ma YSt iw'ohreciel anidt litPtlushes with irmsistible :wean be clone but steer fear this glorious and fearful namee ' your omit pray that there are the Lord thy God," te =Till, 58, and nO concealed rocks 'in the cilium 1. there will doubtless come to wand. 111221.5 'Bat r"1" there alwaYs are and ulalel111221.5 01105 protection 110121 thein chapterW v, 6, 7, as the reason hY lies in a thin layer of tough, elastic they should obey and serve Himb which makes the bottom of But they did not know HIM,' the tlark' Often we Went scooting did not believe His words, and so d olewncttnaw° ater y incline with rocks all they wandered. Israel need is o 1 about a 1 erienced relief when the 'within my heart I delight to do Th deseentan.srvivexp need, and that is to See Our utter heltpr lessnese to keep God's holy laev, thee: feel the sense.% cc000moptl ihsled, olinly to i gbinftedd out to see Him Who said: ``Thy ievir is of the boat as the bottoilnl swelled upwerel svhile we passge aVed a bowlder that. gave no sign. of° let; will, 0 my God," and, receiving Him!'whereabouts, The keel of a. skill rest in His righteansness. ThIS for our' would be crushed in a jiffy in eels redemption; then far the daily life He sort of encounter, but it bark eanoe Who redeemed us 03LiSt live in us, and as we let Hire save us without any NM:ice of ours we must let Him work in us, both to will and to do of His good pleasure, :working in us that which is well pleasing in His sight (Phil. ii, 13; Heb. xlil, 21). Only as we See Elis great love to ue will we be coestrainecl to yield our wbote being te [Tim in glad eurrender. As Dr, Murray says, we must become better acquainted with Jesus Christ in heav- en for us. The knowledge Of the great- ness and glory Of Jesee le 00 secret of a Strong and hely life. This knoWl- Els wo holm in sight, and rushed in. 'edge can be fund only in the Woed, Of te the brusui. is broad anti flat between thwarts. •Though heavily loaded it movee smoothly in shallow water. All the way down the' river, espe- cially where it twisted badlsr, were great piles of pulpwood—spruce logs six inches in diameter and four feet long—that some lazy driver had left +furies the running season, They were high above - the water, secure against dislodgment until the next, spring'b freshets. At one point was .vide path in the timber covering a mountain side—a log chute, so the guides said, At the 'bottom of it stood e, red deer. He sniffed the all God, interpreted to us by the Holy S11r1t, but the Holy Spirit cannot` TICS - Wily lead es inter the pee -or and the blessing of (1.00'S Word ITUIPS8 With stir wbola heart -we hearken to Ilia vokie, ;Yea% Illinself said, "The words. that 1. speak, info Yen are spirit Mid Ore life" (JOhn v 03). EA'PRIDTIVD COMPANION'S, -.We had many feathered companions on the journey. A flock ni crows folloWecl for miles, Seeding out taunting cries from a distahce. Ttvo eagles, swimming Where their wing0 ecerned to touch the sky, Vafchen like eentiliela A kiegilahee ernsse • a thicketwhen suddenly he was startl- ed by a strange noise above him arid upon 10016 up saw au immense eagle swooping ...own 'upon him. Mr. Begg picked up a stick and dealt the bird a blow over the head, but it had little or no effect. The eagle came at him again. • A second blow made the eagle more wary, Out it circled about him lor some time. Ur. Begg believes that he was near the eagle's nest. He is telling his friends about...his experience to -day, and suers he would not, go through it again even for a $20 gold piece. --Vancou- ver World. TJAVE you " been smok. ing a good deal lately and feel an occasional • twinge of pain roundyourheart? Are you short of breath, nerves, unhinged, sensa- tion of pins and needles going through your arms and fingers? Better take a box or two t• of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills and get cured before things become too serious. As a specific for all heart and nerve troubles they can- not be excelled. A true heart tonic, blood • enricher and nerve re- newer, they euro nervousness, sleepless- nessl nervous prostration, smoker's heart, palpitation of the heart, after effects of la grippe, etc. Price sec. per box or 3 boxes for $1.2e et all druggists, or -will be sent on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co Limited, Toronto. OA ECU ITY, Genuine rut r S Little Liver Pills,' Ellust Bear Signature of See PaceSimito Wrapper Below. Tarr oznoll. One es mess, . Uilvdte as Sugar: FthHEADACHEo FON'IMUMEESte MP LIOUSINEit, NitTORPirail 11,111F,11.. FOR tENSTIPATION. nil SALLOW SKIN. 111 7.W.COMPLEX124 peraeterene iiketeeneeeeeienee--- IseiVeley efegetaiellefesseeeeeee- n-theentete CURL s19K HEADACHE. Ss a purely vegetable System Renovator, Blood Purifier and Tonic. A medicine that acts directly at the same time on the Stomach, Liver, Bowels and Blood. 4 It cures Dyspepsia, Biliouqness, Constipation, Pimples, Boils, 8ead- ache, Salt Rheum, Running Sores, Indigestion, Erysipelas, Cancer, Shingles, Ringworm or any disease arising from an—impoverished ce impure condition of the blood. for Sale by all THAT'S THE SPOT! Right in the smali of the back. Do you ever tiet a pain there? Its°, do you know what it mamma it is a Backache. A sure sign of Kidney Trouble. Don't neglect it. Stop it in time. If you don't, serious Kidney Troubles are sure to follow. DOAFS KIDNEY PILLS cure Backache, Lame Back Diabetes, Dropsy and all Kidney and Bladder Troubles. Price 3 Oa a box or 3 fol$1.25, au dealers, • DOAN KIDNEY PILL CO,. Toronto, Ont. • 'HAT THEY SAID. • I'onelope--" Charley called lase night.'' • Justine—"That's twice a week, isn't it?" 'eyes: "1 suppose he'll come three times in the next week?" "That's what my brother says.," "And five ,times the next?" "That's what my sister says." "And six times the next'?" "That's what aunty says." '"Anil seven. tithes the ifext?" ``That's what papa says." "And then what?" • • "Then we'll got married; that's . what everybody sayS.," • "And then what?''• 'Men 1 sha'n't see him any mere of an evening; that's what -mamma says." A AS IT SEEMED. "What's his business?" "Everybody's." . .-/Att6t4 „ ARE if II P IS tA, , Wie ThEtOUSANnal of men ate prisoners of disease as securely ftfi though they Weto Confined behind the bats. Malty have forged their own efitieus by the 'vices oi early yoUth, exposure to contagious disease, or the excesses of manhood. They feel they are not the tnett they ought to he er used to be. The•vim, vigor, and vitality of titatthobd are itictsing. Ave you nervous arid deopondelit? tlred Sit the nieruiriEr? have eoit to force yourself through the day's work? have you little am- bition and energy? Aro you irritable and excitable? eyes Minket', depreueed aud nitegard looking? !memory poor and brain fagged? have you Week back with dreams aud losses at night? deposit In Mine? weak sexually ?—you have • •Fiervous Debility O'nd SernInal kleakness. 04,mm* 1561STEHOO TlitEATItAttriT le guaranteed to ceenre Welwyn*. 26 yeasts-doaauPlt etroi*. Omsk rbieliesilga_pt I'iy.51Tolasfe rlde aliZZI • Free. write for guegtioialiatik for Rome Treatment. DIPes Kovitsetty 148 OSIELTIV tilTIROMT.bIot , cti, Pt. Jt, ,