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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1902-10-23, Page 7nEC �l�TY® CenFfane art(. - Little o to • , itho 'Just Blear Signature c i' See Fac-Shnilo Wrapper Below. Very email end as easy to take as e.gnr. ran HEADACHE., FOR DIZZINESS: FOR BILIOUSNESS.. FOR TORI'!O LIVER. VCR CDNOTiPATIO'. FOR SALLOW SIW1. FON THE fPDIrfWLEXIDN CAI TE18 ITTL - . 'VER Pi U.S. rleP GE verge MUST tuv- aMATU c, Co bs I Purely vegetemeaeatereaaa PURL SICK HEADACHE, A Standard Remedy Used in Thousands of Homes in , Canada for nearly Sixty Years and has never yet failed to give satisfaction. CURES Diarrhoea, Dysentery, -Cholera, Cholera Morbus, .Cholera Wan - tum, Cramps, Colic, Sea Sickness and all Summer Complaints. Its prompt use will prevent a great deal of llllneeessary suffer- ing and often sav€s life. Price, 550.. She T. alitburei deo„ l.lrn:ted, Toronto. Ontario, HOW .TO KEEP YOUNG. One of the secrets of keeping young, vigorous and stpple-jointed, is to continue to practice the ac- tivities of youth, and to refuse to allow the mind to stiffen the muscles by its suggestion of age limitations. ' If hien like Peter Cooper and Wm. E. Gladstone, who kept up the vi- talizing exercises of robust manhood when far into the eighties, had suc- cumbed at: 40' to the thought of ap- proaching 'age, how much- of their ,valuable life -work would have re- mained undone! A 82-XNCIB SOLDIER. The; most diminutive conscript to offer himself to the Austrian mill- ' tary authorities for many years has just brought himself into notice in Brussels. IIe is a young man nam- ed 'lobos Janos, who is not more tlizen 82 inches in height. Notwith- standing his piginy proportions, ho has; presented himself at the ' Aus- trian Legti.tion to make the neces- sary declaration required of all Aus- trian subjects residing abroad on reaching the service ase. Are a Nea' 'rtand .Nerve Tonic, Blood and Tissue Builder and Constitution Renewer for all troubled with weak heart or nerves. As a food for the blood,'the brain and the nerves, they cannot be excelled. If, you are troubled with Nervousness, Sleeplessness,. Nervous Prostration, Pal, pitation of the Heart, Shortness of Breath, Weak or Fainting Spells, Ana;rtiia, or any form of Debility, take MglLBUTl��N S AtAAJJ 5r. E AIIT AND 'NERVE P T A i Their curative power is quickly niani• fested. They purify and revitalize the blood, brighten the brain aid steady and strenghten the nerves from the first few doses. Pratt sec, per box ore Teres ftrr 3t.2S et all deaIeta or The T. Minium Co:, Lirrlited. Toronto, Ont. s GREAT U''P TUMT! They Come to Everybody in an Un= expected Way. (Entered according to Act of the Parltoment or Canada, In the MIA' One Tbousaad Mee Tina• dreg end Two, by William 114117,of Toronto, at alto Degartmnnt of Agriou1bu o, otteozi A despatch from .'Chicago says; Rev. Frank 1)e Witt Talmage preach- ed. from the following text; Gala - tions oi, 10, ",As wo stave therefore ,opportunity, let us do good unto all men." Great opportunities etre willing to knock at the door of only the hon- ored few who have previously made groat preparations to meet and to embrace them. They are not friend- less and helpless waifs on the street. They are not social outcasts. tvho have to beg a place whereon to lay their leads" They are not fugitives from justice who are fleeing the con- vict's cell or the hangman's noose, They are august messengers, who are particular under what roof they lodge and at what table they sit down and , . eat, Thtis we find, by tracing history, that though all -nen who have prepared themselves for success in a certain lino of work do not necessarily got the opportunity to achieve that success, yet in no case a c d o we findthe swiftfooted foo 0 travelers called "great opportuni- ties" dwelling in the hone of one who • has not the mental and moral' capacity to welcome and entertain them. It is essential that the Christian should consecrate his life to Christ inn order to beprepared for great theg opportunities for Christian service. It is very important for you and me to live close to Christ, to feel the touch of Christ's annointing hands upon our hearts, touch of his loving lips upon our cheeks, the touch of. his annointing foot upon our feet, before wo can go forth successfully on our mission of Christian service. Many failures in the Christian life can be traced directly to this lack of SPIRITUAL PREPARATION', we cannot recognize our opportunity when it comes. Ari ancient sculptor once chiseled the statue of the My- thological goddess called "Opportun- ity," with h veiled face.. He said: "The reason I covered Opportunity's face was because so few are able to recognize her when she stands by their side." The sculptor was wrong in- part as well as right in part He should have blinded the eyes of. the onlooker rather than the •far-seeing eyes of the mythological goddess. The chief reason why some of us do not see the sweet faced. Pauline mes- sengers, which we may call the Op- portunities of Christian service, is because most of us are spiritually blinded by our past sins, because most. of us aro not willing by pray- er and. close communion with God 'to snake the spiritual preparation that is necessary to tit us aright for gospel work. But more than more equipment is necessary: Great .,opportunities are willing to bless those only who are ready to sacrifice, and, if need be, to die for the cause those opportunities represent. There is a. wide difference between ' being mentally, physically and spiritually equipped to meet a great opportunity and being willing to make the sacrifice that is essen- tial for the success of that cause after the opportunity has arrived., •Pilate was mentally and physically able to realize the nature of the op- portunity of his position. ITe knew that Jesus was guiltless. He saw clearly and distinctly what he ought to do, but Pilate was not ready to sacrifice .for Christ his political ca- reer as Governor of• Judaea. There- fore Pilate, who saw his opportune . ity, • embraced it not, but shrank from it. - GREAT OPPORTUNIT:IES for Christian usefulness may come to you 'in an unexpected way, as they came to a lady who was one day riding along the streets of Rich- mond. There in the gutter lay a young man stupidly Brunk. She stopped her carriage and bade her coachman lift him in. She took that young man to her home. She• cared for him and started ltinl out again in lite. By her Christian ex ample of love she started him forth in his great career, until William Wirt's , name became that of one of the foremost Americans of Itis day. They may come to you in an unex- pected way, as -they came to Stephen Merritt during business hours, when, by the grace of Cod, he was instru- mental in starting John G. Woolley. out on his career of reform. They may come' to you' as they are daily canting in so •many dilierent ways, thousands of lawyers and merchants enol ministers' and doctors and wives and mcethers. and servants • and clerks. Therefore, - as our oppcirtun- ities for doing Christian -service are coming in tie many differeot, ways,. we should always •bo on the lookout for their.. We should always `be ready to grasp them aril to turn them to account at any cost, oven of • life itself. Great opportunitles always love company and rarely travel alone. They are apt to. be gregarious in their habits. Lilce troubles, they swim in schools. They travel in herds They fly in' flocks. Like the leader of, a 'flock of sheep, each great opportunity seems to be the bell- wether of a whele'tlock of other op- portunities. Like the key log in a river jam, it seems to be the pre- cursor and sets free a whole river - full of other opportunities. But there is a negative side of warning itt my text as Well as' a Positive side -of exhortation. John •,J. IngauIS 'in his wonderful poem teaches the same two lessons in a temporal sense that rau1.. inculcates in it spiritual serine. • T) T NBGA'j'IV•il WARNING - wliicb is implied in my text goes practically like this ; "As wo there- fore have opportunity rho good mite all leen, for if wo.do •not a;' nog- lectod oppor tunity is an ill-used op,. por.tunity. And .an opportunity for doing good orice gone is gone for- evera'' My father used to love • to picture lost opportunities as a •flock of last year's in.kgrating birds, which when gono cannot be brought back. I reiiiember•-well.how he once stood in the Brooklyn Tabernacle crying with a load-voiceto the lost oppor- tunities in these words : "Come -beck, 0c0 past Uakortutrt i os Come ba ! Come back ! !"' Then in an almost inaudible whisper he said :' "1 hear no flatter of any wings. I fear my, voice has not car- ried far enough -yes, 1 :fear • these lost opportunities for doiug good will. never, never •colo back." The old Romans •used to believe, that Op- portunity was a messenger who had, a lock of 'hair growing .upon her I forehead and that the rest of her head was bald. They also believed that she had wings upon her feet and that she could fly swifter than the winds. They believed that if Opportunity was not grasped by the forehead she could not be caught again,' because her wings .could out - speed even the flight of d, meteor.. The Latin symbol is a good one. Momentous is the fact that the past , opportunities for doing good will • never • - come back. There - is Many a .man here who would be will- ing to 'cut off his right arm if ho could only bring back seen of then I once read of a father who in anger drove his son out or his home. The boy, on account of t,.e father's bitterness,- plunged into a 1 i'fe .01 sin. A few years later he was dying in one of the London ,tenements. Just before •his • last breath was drawn he told the city missionary who he was and why he was- dying. Then he sent to pis- irate parent these farewell words : "Tell father I could have died happy if he only had been willing to forgive me. Ask him to forgive me even if I: am dead." - The missionary, as soon as he had closed the dead boy's eyes, went to the rich father's hoine. When he first met the par'ent and said, "I have come . from your boy," the father's rage knew no bounds. He exclaimed in angea : "Don't talk to me about my son, I never'°want to see his face again while he is alive." But when the missionary said. "You will never see your boy's face again while he is ''alive -she is dead," the fhther broke • down and SOBBED L11SL- A CHILD. He then said. th, • t he did, want his boy .back. And t tea 'he Scald r the dying •message his remorse was greater than he a Fuld bear. 'All the remainder of his exthly life that father kept brooding and regretting the severity of his treatment of his son. But his sorrow was useless. Ire could not• bring back his dead boy. He could never undo his past wrong. Ilis opportunity with gono, and gone forever. But, I bethink myself that, as a pastor, I have to -clay an infinite op- portunity which may -never come to me again. I have an opportunity to present Jesus Christ to some young man or woman here who is clot a member of the Christian church,. as were the friends to whom Paul wrote phis Galatian letter, My brother or sister, I want you to come into the !fellowship of the Lord Jesus Christ so that . you•may have a part in these gospel opportunities. ''plead. with • you earnestly that you will confess Jesus Christ to -day and bo - come one of his disciples,. even though no one may bare spoken to you of religion for many years. You Were brought up in a Christian home,.. but when that home was broken up on account of your par- ents' death you drifted away from the church and from the -teachings you ].earned at your mother's knee. You have not been to a church ...SuP-; vice for years. It may be because you were coolly treated in one of the large city churches when. you first came •to town. But last night when you were alone in your room and took down the old family al- bum.: Perhaps that was the first time you had looked at the book for months. Thee you became home- sick for the old scenes of your child- hood. Then you opened some of your dead mother's _letters,. now •yel- low . from age. As you read them the tears came to your eyes, :yet you arc a man tow or a inat,tzecl woman, but the tears came neverthe- less. And last night before you went to bed you,dit+ayed just as you used to do when a child. That is the rea- son yon aro in church this -morning. That is the • reason. your heart is softened. That is the reason I press home the gospel to your heart thaat 3. may start you forth. in Jesus' name to •Christjan service. 'the; op-. portunity for the salyation of your soul may never come . so. near to you. again es just at .this moment. Brother, sister, let me improve. this opportunity by presenting you' to the , Load Jesus. For your dear loved-.onesa sake who are now among the redeemed will you take .'esus now. and become his true and loving disciple ? Will you net hero and new (make this simple, earnest pray- er, which a young man, sick • of site, inado a few years, ngo in a large religious meeting, "Lord take me' as I am and make are what I ought to be -?" Now is 'your opportunity for salvation. Now t Now 1 Now 1 rl TVISE FATHER.. "Thought your, dad Wasn't going to send you back to college `P .."Yes,: dad diel kick on the ex- po/1w, but ,I threatened to stay at hone and help' run the business, and ho decided college would be cheaper." 264,288 negroes in the (vatted States . own their '.ones. There are altogether about :L4 million negro families in' the country. 4. 10 ,4441 .,N:•.,4.x00 •4:44•4N,.,X.4' A:, 4,•:„y,..,H:P,.) „..,,+4:„.a s 4Os:.•:,4:a fe.Ot4o.. 4.a.:4.:. ), . .:: .O4i► . NA { _' ITAIN ...• IN C. • Alarm Over Unprotected Cables Lyine in Shallow Water Off ;.• the Coast.' of Nova Scotia. .I4 a4 •(Oft•.(•• fteet..a. •.taae eteee•Saagesee jeeSea• tea 1c'+4.4Q.4.109.,2,e..0..:44. ,.•;..:..:..:4- ,4:..:•.:0.:•..i England has just awakened to • an- other danger that confronts her. It is one of serious moment to Great Britain. Up to the present no de - Vice has been suggested whereby this danger May be obviated. .Tho facts have been knowle for some time at the admiralty, but it is only lately that the main details have been re- vealed to the general public, As the matter looks at present it seems entirely within the bounds of possibility that eat the first ouLbroac of war against Great Britain the empire woulcl be paralyzed by cut- ting her lines for the transmission of information, the British cables all lying in shallow water in asmall arca off the coast of Nova Scotia. At a single stroke, delivered by an fast s • e aunin cruiser - y term. or ocean- going tug, the Pacific fleets rendez- vousing at-Esquiniault, on the Pa- cific coast; and at 7:Ialifaie and Ber- muda, on the Atlantic seaboard, would find themselves cut off from Whitehall. They could receive no news from headquarters either as to the plans of the enemy or orders as to their own movements. All of Canada would be cut off as well as the West; Indies. The Can- adian Pacific Railway would be practically worthless for the mili- tary purposes for which it was large- Pougier Qua -tier (Drench), one car ble, from Brest to. St, Pierre, but passing Newfoundland in shoal wa- ter, Generale (French), one cable, front Brest to Cape Ood, but not passing Newfoundland in shoal water. German, one cable, from Emden via Azores to Cape -Cod, but not passing Newfoundland in shoal wa- ter. As the German cable runs 'partly through Portuguese territory it is regarded as unreliable and practical- ly valueless to England in war time. It is true there are two ca- bles from Lisbon to Brazil via the Oape Verde Islands, but their con- nections are so complicated and un- reliable because of the countries in which the terminals aro situated that they would scarcely they availed of in war time, even if they escaped being wrecked: They can therefore be disregarded. Attention is called to the recent decision of tate United States Su- prome Court to the effect that those interested in the British cable be- tween :Manila and IlongKong had no redress .from the American Gov - eminent for the destruction- of their property and the loss to their Masi- ness involved by Admiral Dewey's tearing 'UP that cable when he seize ray ---,t`,..1 t ' NEW VUNDLAN ifinez,N . .7=r, 'CABLES CONVERGING IN SHALLOW WATER. ly constructed. -By cable cutting the widely scattered British possessions would be isolated front. the home Government. The article in which,sonte of these facts have been revealed in the cur - ,rent riuuiber of the Fortnightly 'ate - view, points out the grave danger in which such a possibility places Great Britain in connection with a war with the United States. Canso, where the cables converge after their long journey under the Atlantic, is not far from our northern naval stile tions on the Atlantic. It is with- in easy striking distance from the Kittery navy yard. In one day it is estimated a ves: set could destroy all the British trans-Atlantic cables, thereby plac- ing Canada and the West Indies at the merge of the enemy and leaving the British fleets -at Esquimault, Halifax and Bermuda without means of communication with London or even with each other. - In the case of France it is pointed out that the danger is even more serious, for while the exact location of the British cables is known, that of the French cables is unknown ex- cept to the French Government, while many of the British cables ac- tually pass through French territory on the island of St. Pierre. At the time of the Faslioda 'affair, the Ad- miral Courbet, rt. French warship hovering in this locality, created consternation in British naval cir- cles, for it was believed she 'tad the single mission of cutting the - Eng- lish and American cables the mo- ment war Was declared. • TIIE' CABLES. Stretching along the Atlantic bed to -day are twelve • cables;- tea of them being American and British, with two French. while ono German cable is being completed from the Azores. These cables are• as fol- lows: Angle -American„ four cables, from west of Ireland to Newfoundland. Commercial. three cables, from west of Ireland to Nova Scotia, but passing Newf.ouncllend in .shoal wa- ter. Direct United States, one cabin, from west of Troland to Nova, Sco- tia. but passing Newfoundland in shoal water. • Western Union, two cables, from Cornwall to Novn. Scotia, but pass-. ing Newfoundland in shoal water. SEA I FOR NETRVOLI AFFECTIONS.: When sea air is ordered toa nervous person, she ' mit rushes down to the seashore,spends all her time on the beau, frets more or less over the expense, and return after two or three weeks to make up by extra 'Wort( for the brief holiday, The result is an ex- aggeration of x-aggeration.of nervous troubles. The time given to the cure was too short. ST. JAMES WAFERS are as good for the nerves as the sea breeze but in case of nervous weakness, like the sea breeze, they require time.. v , `rA sTRl N Til To t�trl k \DSK STONACH,yiEA.it 13aRT,44iA`� rya dal, ENi: filhit 1QMALWRoNo5o, -- THSHTHtBLOOD&STRiN R3 CONSTITUTION E"9 -"z Orldon, j'lontfeal•Gno•,'' Bos 'v'1PR CIw=a Rf3TltBRITAIN -AM ER IC A aYU99�S& emt Price in Canada : $1.00 ; Six bottles for $5.00 ST. JAMES WWAvi RS are a tissue builder and a reconstructive, not a stimulant. Quick temporary results. are not to be expected ; but perma- nent improvement 'will follow their patient use. S. JAMES WAVERS help stomach, digest food and send the nutriment through the blood, and this is the honest way to get health and strength, the kind that ' lasts, develops and breeds the energy which accom- plishes much, ccrrom personal experience le am able to appreciate the great value or the St. jetties 4Tafer9,rr Dr. Charles D. Camp, Dublin, Ireland. St. Janes Wafers are no( a secret renudy: the numerous doctors, e- commending them to Their Ing e:as we mail the formula ujion regueft, 'Where dealers are not selling the Wafers. they. o9 a remaile d upon re- ceipt of pace at the Canadian branch; St. James Wafers Co., 172$ - St. Catherine St., Montreal. else might die His' servant' Caleb would eater the land and possess it, because he wholly followed the Lord. We think of Paul in the storm at sea when all hope was given up, say- ing to the souls on that ship as he gave them the Lord's message, "I believe God, that it shall be even as it was told mc" (Acts Xxvii, 25). 10. And now behold the Lord hath kept me alive, as He said, these forty and five years. Caleb realized the truth of these words, though not written in his day : "He giveth to all life and breath and all, things, for in Him we live and move and have our being" (Acts xvii, 15, 28). He is .the God. in whose stand our breath is and whose are all our Ways (Dan. v, 23), but' how few seem to think of this! It is well to remember that we continue from day to day only because the Lord sees fit to keep us alive. Happy are those who, like Caleb, keep -them- selves set apart for- Himself, Isis own possession (Ps, iv', 3; Tit. ii, 14, R. V). 11. As yet I ani as strong this day as I was in the day that Moses sent me. Although eighty-five years of age, yet feeling .as strong and well as at the age of forty! It is written of Moses that he was a hundred and twenty years old when lie died. His eye was not dim nor his natural ,force abated (lieut. xxxiv, 7). Then is a renewing of strength and youth ofttimes enjoyed by those who wait upon the Lord, but we can quietly leave it all with Him to give us ail the days here in the mortal body that will be for His glory and our good. 12. If so be the Lord will be with lee, then I shall be able to drive then out, as the Lord said. He asked for mountains where the giants were, for he learned* as a young man, giants and walled cities were nothing to God. At the age of forty he had said: "The. Lord is with us. Fear them not" (Num. xiv,• in, and in forty years he hacl found no reason to change his mind. He bad no confidence in himself, but he had unbounded confidence in the Lord God. 13-15. Hebron therefore became. the inheritance of Laleb * * * because that he wholly followed the Lord God of Israel. It is unwillingness to follow ful- ly that hinders -the Lord from work- ing in His people as IIe would like to, for Itis eyes run to aria fro through the whole earth to show Hliniself strong on bshalf of those whose hearts are whole toward Him (II, Citron. xvi, 0). But where are the whole hearts? ITow few seem willing to 'stand.with God against 1 the wisdom • Of this world, against I culture, society, popular opinion and ! against the false teachers who are found in theological seminaries and 1 in many a pulpit perhaps as never • before! Ilebron suggests fellowship, and the other name, I'tirjath-Arha, While it means city of Atha, may mean also "the city of four," as the word arba is the Hebrew for four. Any one who follows fully as Caleb. did :will realize something of true fellowship with the Pother and the Son and the Holy Spirit and, how - ed "Manila bay. No country at war with England woulcl, it is believed, liesltate to strike at .her cables and would cut then( where they lie off Canso, cts well as those of the'Amez•- lean companies. . GETTING NEWS AT SEA. In the case of France it is pointed out that a warship at sea might pick up the Brest cable, (the loca- tion of which is known only to the 'French olrieials), could thereby com- municate with the home Government and learn if war, had been declared, and would receive instructions as to precisely what to do, repairing the French cable before her departure to sever the enemy's wires. The British navy is supposed - to be competent to protect the cables landing at the Corrfwall and Con- naught coasts,. while cable cutting in deep water is only possible to ex- perts on regular• slow -going ^ cable ships, whose movements would un- -douhtedly be watched by Britain. It is therefore pointed out that the ideal scene of operations is on this side, where tltc cables lie altogether in shallow water and are unprotect- ed, even warships being drawn from the vicinity for the greater part of the year. Says P. T. McGrath, the writer in the Fortnightly- Review: "Prance, the power,, from which England has most to fear in this re- spect, has o, ready inacle base of op- erations for such 'an undertaking in her colony of St. Pierre -i iiciuelon, off the south coast of Newfound- land, The cables from Brest land at :St. Pierre, and three, of the Bri- tish cables pass through it en route from Newfoundland to Canada. It might thus he promptly made the. point of a counter attack; though, -as France lids no territorial inter- ests in this hemisphere, save the klriqu.cJon rocks, England would gain very little by that. St. Pierre in the possession. of France is a per- petua.l menace to the security of the British cables, and it will he from that quarter the blow will come, when come it does. -It was there the Admiral Courbet rendezvoused for weeks in.• 1.81)0: it is there the French warships in North America - spent] the fishing season; it is there the cable -cutting venture could be launched most speedily, and with the best prospects of success at any sea soh of. the year." • - THE S. So LESSON, INTERNATIONAL LESSON, OCT. 26. Text of the Lesson, Josh, xiv., ' 5-15. Golden Text, Josh. xiv., 14. 5, As the Lord commanded Moses so the children of Israel diel, and they divided the hula,' While at one tithe there- remained yet very much lana to be possessed, yet in clue time the Lord gave unto Israel all the land which lie swore to give unto their fathers, and they possessed it and dwelt therein, There failed not aright of any good thing which the .Lord had spoken unto the house of Israel. All came to pass. Tho Lord gave thein rest, the Lord. delivered all their enemies into their hand. Tho Lord God of Israel fought for Israel. They had only to obe- diently, go forward (ilii, 1; '.axi, 48- ,15; x, 42), ,6. Thou knowost the thing that the Lord said auto Moses the man of God concerning inc .end then in SCci deslr barnea. Thus said Caleb, Joshua's old conlpanion,when together they Went with the other ten to spy out the land, as he now appears before ,the on behalf of Judah, to which tribe he belonged (Num. xii, G.). It is refreshing, whether in the Bible story or in the daily life of onr own day, to meet people who believe Clod, who desire only' to know what God has said 'and who rest on a "thus smith the Lord" as on the solid. rock. 7, 8. I brought him word again as it was in my heart. I wholly fol- lowed the' Lord'lny (toes. I:]'e looks back with gratitttde . to the time when he was a young Mita, forty years ago; and praises the grace of God which euabled hire to be sincere before Clod tuid to follow Him fully, This is ,the only thing on which one can look back with real comfort as we aclvenee iii: years --that without any thought of man's frown or favor wo have been able. to sterid humbly,, but sincerely, with God. 9, The land whereon thy feet have trodden shall be thine inheritance and thy children's forever, All through the wilderness wan- derings, as the many, thousands died who were men when •Tush ci.. and Caleb spied out the land. Caleb" hold fast the tborcl of Jehovah- by the snouts( of Dioses that whoevbr• ever alone apparently, can always( truthfully say, "There are four of as." This also is provided by John xiv, 17, 28. It. is, more than all that earth. can give to be able to say, "Truly our fellowship' is with the Father and with His Son Jesus Christ" (I. 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