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Exeter Times, 1903-6-18, Page 7
11 MOTHER AND DAUGITER ELIf YN Genuine rt 7 rt r Little Liver Pins. Rev. Mr. Talmage Speaks of the Potential 'influence of the Mother. Must Bear Signature) e1 See laac-Simne Wrapper Eelow. •• Starr oaten acid as chole to take so oner. ' • fOili HEADACHES CA T E�5 FOR DIZEIHESS liTLE rail RILICUSNES-to .� D 'Ydlll D LIYElL, la FOR ER ISTIPATIilL. IL 3 roe SALLSW SKIN. NO THE COMPLEXION axi¢Az•Cuua tAr*auAnns,6 4, tte6 lefi9.,.iirgeh eev nYK CfSTUOnCC9 M SnT►IeTaUiCa oTIOBN1oRsiN u '!tE SiRENGTH T4 WEA 11 Ra' BRITAIN4-A!�RINrn�45ENRICtmak,WEAKHEART,Wft- I DtiggQR3sC&ESherrCiT.a' twsi eez sy f tainsimrsri CURE-. S1C10 HEADACHE. tank • Is 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. It cubes Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Constipation, Pimples, Boils, Head- ache, Salt Rheuni, Running Sores, Indigestion, Erysipelas, Cancer, Shingles, Ringworm or any disease arising from an impoverished or impure condition of the blood. Fee Bale by nil Druggists. -- sex:=—r THAT'S THE SPAT! Right in the small of the back. Do you over get n pain there? If so. do you know what it moans? It is a Backache. A sure sign of Kidney Trouble. Don't neglect it. Stop it in time. • ,Wyou don't, serious Kidney Troubles are sure to follow. DOH'S KIDNEY PILLS cure Backache, Lame Back, Diabetes, Dropsy and all Kidney and Bladder Troubles. Price 50o. a box or 3 for $1.25, all dealers. DOAN KIDNEY PILL GO.. Toronto, ,Ont. • 1,.wxau,Ga9m0212M FODIARRHOEA,R' !� DYSE H RY, C®�fl�q CRAMPS„ PAIN IN THE STOMACH, AND ALL SUMMER COMPLAINT& 1 H O EFFECTS ARE MARVELLOUS. !T'AfiTn LIME A fdll4t1189. !t?1El.iiF ALMOST TAN T At4EarlUS* Pleaant1 Rapid, Reliable, flPe ctaal 1t1!!£Rd 4eOUSE SHOULD HAVE Airni,voun CgUCator. FOR i7, TAI u PIO Online. PAICEI a o"'i, 55G, Entered according to Act or eh* Par- liament of eanads., in the year One Thousand Wan `� *laity, Rof. oronto, t tin Department of Agriculture, Uteawe.) A despatch from Chicago says: Rev. Fraink De Witt Talmage preach- ed from the 'following text; 14.3ze- kiol xvi, 44, "As is the mother, so is iter daughter:" This trenchant trutth is well illus- trated by an old yeti ever knew story: A young farmer wanted to find a frugal and careful helpmeet. ire started out from home on his important je.rney. Coming to • a farmhouse, he inquired of the farm- er's wife tier some dough •which had been loft ih her bread pan. 1 e said he bad a sick horse and ho hoard that dough could cure him. The farmer's wife said, "Oh, yes, we have plenty." She brought forth two handfuls. The young Arlan took it and in silence drove away. At the next farm:heuse he asked the same question. The farmer's wife said: "1 wish 1 could help you, but that is impossible. Wo never have any dough left in the bread pan of this house. I .always scrape my bread pan clean. There is no dough left." "Aihl" said the Young -nian. "This is the home where, ,perhaps, I can find my bride. Por if the mo- ther is 'so frugal her daughters will surely be the same." And it was there that he won his bride. For he was of the prophet's opinion. "As is the mother, so is her daugh- ter." . Tho mother's life is inevitably pro- duced in the lives of her little girls whom she rocks in the cradle. This will happen whether she is con- scious of it er not. lIow important then is it, for the sake off' those children and for the sake of those whom they in their turn will influ- ence, that the influence of the mother's life should be of the wholesome and beneficent kind! The girls will be like her as they grow up, and her faults will appear in them. Therefore, the ob- ject of this sermon is to show how the true wife and mother should live. She should not only bo true to her husband, but also true to her father and mother, brothers and sisters, and to her God, as well as directly to the little daughters who will soon follow in her footsteps. As she thinks, they will think. As she does, they will also do. , SOME FOOLISH WIVES. This statement is axiomatic. Yet there are souse women foolish en- ough to suppose that the name . of wife and mother aro not Siamese twins and have no connection or affiliation. They are so blinded that they cannot see that the silver letters of true motherhood are wilt- ten iltten upon the golden background of true wifehood and that the strong- est trongest and best cradle is that cut from the scented wood of the marriage altar. The duties of maternity must never supersede or extinguish the duties of the wile. There are many women who are true wives until the babies are born. Then, in- stead of being any longer the com- fort, the companion, the helpmeet of the man whom they promised on their wedding day to live for, they turn their backs upon their hus- bands' and bury their existence in the nursery. From morning until night and from 'night until morning these engrossed and absorbed moth- ers think and dream and plan about nothing but the one theme of baby. No matter where they are, with whom they are talking or what sub- ject of conversation may be started they talk nothing but baby.. They will tell you over and over again how many teeth their babies have cut and when those teeth came, but they cannot tell you about the sharp, poisonous fangs of business woeries that have buried themselves in. their husband's brains end heart: Neither dor they care how sharp those fangs may be. They can tell you, without ono mistake, how many times last night their babies coughed, but they cannot -tell you how many hours their husbands the same night. walked the floor, hour after hour, trying 9:o think and plan how they could meet the'great crises.of life which may now be con- fronting them. There is many a man—mark this!—who heard the death rattle of all true•,, helpful wife- ly association on the night that their first baby was born. Only" a short time ago I had a prominent man say to nie: "Am' success which I have made in life, I haae won in spite of my wife. From the day that my first baby came she has had no interest in me or my work. .1n my intercourse with my business associates she • has been a positive damage instead of a help." There Is many a husband who is to -day living as far apart in thought from his wife as if he were ten thousand miles away from her- Ho may eat witli^lher at the table and live with her in the same home, but their men- tal and spiritual association is ab- solutely dead.. She lives for her children. TIo lives for ids business, Between them there is the groan ,yawning chasm of indifference, ever widening, ever becoming blacker and More fatal to marital love. TTh6 '7..11UI'fi MOTHER. Now, mothers, I want to say to you that a. woman cannot bo it true mother unless at the same ,itno she is a true' wife, I want to say that if a wife will not enter into the joys and hopes •and sorrows and cares and perplexities of the husband who is by her side and wants to love her and have her share his burdens she cannot be true to the daughters, who will follow in hor footsteps. I want to tell you that no daughter is developed aright uti- 1085 $ite has had before her the ex- ample of a mother Who Inas been faiehfully trying to be true to bole. (AEthol es wilt as to Ver, ;tVould that ot'ery mother might htrvo as beautiful a eulogy :passed upon her by her husband as Pliny the Young- er wrote about his beloved wile: "She has great talents, she is an admirable economist and loves the with entire affection. '1'o these qualities she unites a taste for lit- erature inspired by a tenderness for me. When I plead, how great ie the anxiety she suffers! She engages people to tell her what applause I have a e gained, what acclamations T have excited and what judgment is pronounced upon my orations. She sings my verses and, untaught, adapts them to the lute. Love is her only instructor; hence I .expect with certainty that our happiness will be durable and that it will daily increase." I wish that such a eulogy might be given to every mother. A woman's direct relation to her husband is almost as import- ant in the development 'of a dauh- ter's life, as. the mother's. direct.. re- lation to her child. STRONG LINK'S OF STEEL. God develops true rnotherht>od in many • ways; The factory's machin- ery may seem to the untrained eye to be working uselessly and in ridi- culous confusion. There ase some wheels running from right to left, others from left to right. There are sagging belts, and great piston rods moving up and down, and strong steel bars whirling round and round and round. 'There aro tanks where the goods are soaked and places where the raw goods are chewed into pulp. But after awhile, under the explanation of the super- intendent or guide, the visitor to the factory finds that every hely and every wheel and every cylinder of the machinery is put there for a purpose. All the different parts of that machinery are working together for good, for the completion .of a finished article. So God in the great human factory Tor the creation of a consecrated motherhood has many wheels and at times seemingly conflicting duties. They all have a purpose, not the least of which 'is the influence re- sulting from the right performance of the duty a wife and mother owes to her childhood's home. My sister, how can you honestly expect your children to respect you if you aro stony hearted and refuse to honor the Many wrinkles and the bedimmed sight of an aged parent ? Can your mother breathe forth the bitter lamentation of the neglected old woman who said, "When I was young my children used to tread upon my feet ; but now;' when T am old, they are treading • upon my heart." Are you going to show the selfish spirit of the brutal people of the Pacific islands, who were accus- tomed to behead or bury alive their fathers and mothers as soon as they became crippled with age ? Are you a heartless woman, going to tear your parents from your thoughts and affections, merely be- cause you can get no more service out of them ? How can you expect your little children to love each other after you aro gone when you yourself have nothing to do with the brothers and sisters of your childhood ? Is it nothing to you when they are sick or in financial trouble ? Is it nothing to you when they are dead ? Why, some mothers who think they aro good and true mothers never pretend to have any affection for their' parents or broth- ers and sisters or for their nephews and nieces. Tho inevitable result will be that • some day your own children will cease to love each other. Ah, my friends, blood ought, to lie thicker than water. The ties which bind the human heart to the home of childhood ought to be as strong as links of steel. SYMPATI•IIZE WITH THE AF.. - FLICTED. The true mother goes forth in lifo and sees the miseries and the suffer- ings and the troubles which aro everywhere self evident. Iter heart bleeding with sympathy, she returns home and begins to plan how ere can help the poor. When her chil- dren would destroy their old clothes she turns and says : "Daughter, that is a sinful waste. That dress may not be ueeful to you,- but it may clothe some little girl and keep her warm all winter. I wish that you would wrap it up in a bundle and take it to Mrs. So-and-so's house. kler husband is out of, work, and I fear she is having a ard time to get along. I was to see her to -day," When that little girl carried that dress to the home of destitution and there sees the poverty sticking out through cracks of the hi'1mbio Cot- tage and the grateful tears of the mother who received the dress she learns a lesson of heart love she could loam in no other way. . She learns the same kind of self sacrifice Which gentle Louise Alcott taught in ono of the best of all books, that called "Little Women." There aro many • beautiful lessons taught in that book, but not one sweeter than When the mother of Joe and Amy and Beth and Meg comes in• one morning from making a call upon a poor family. She in substance says: "0-irls, I have just been: visiting Mrs. Se -and -se. The family have not had any food in that, house for two days. There are a numberof little children there. Are you girls willing to give them your breaht fasts and go without ?" "Yes," an- swer all four girls. Under her .di- rection they formed a lino. They walked through ' the village streets, carrying the hot muffins and the coffee and the meat, and went over the hills and into the poor home and fed the little half starved babies, That book called, "Little 'Wonted" was ,only a history ,of Louise 'Alcott in the days' of her youth. Do you neer*** that her mother raised fine' girls, Louise Alcott (or Joo) axiaong the lzulnber ? That Mother's heart was not only beating With love for her own Children, but also for every other Wolllarfs Children who were in trouble or distress. Do you wonder that every mother teaches her chil- dren • the laws of gentleness and Sympathy and Christian kindness when. she herself is ready at any hour of the night to go to the.. sick neighbor's home or to place towers on the white casket of a neighbor's child ? TTI•E CHURCH'S INFLUENCE. The true mother is also always the true church member. Nearly all aer d. grant r ready to g sit that the church of Jesus Christ is the great purify- ing, the great moral and spiritual teacher and developer of every eon munity in which it exists. It is the thrashing floor where the grain which has been raised• in the nur- series of Christian homes is sopa, rated from the chaff. It is the holy of holies at whose sacred altars multitudes are convicted of sin and led to humbly kneel and 'publicly confess their faith in God. Many have been brought up .in Christian homes who would never have given their hearts' to. Jesus Christ except through the church's influence. Where did I surrender my heart to Jesus ? During a time of :a revival in the I3rooIclyn 'Tabernacle, in the church, Where did you, 0 hearer, surrender your heart to Jesus ? In the church, In nearly every case your decision was made within the four walla of a church, Do hot make the plea I have so often heard—that you have little children too young to go to church and therefore you must stay with them • at home. Take your babies along. Tho minister of the Lord Jesus Christ who would become ir- ritated because a young mother brings her baby to church is not spiritually fitted to stand in any pulpit or to preach from any sacred desk. Tho' greatest honor to -day which a congregation can have is to see the pews filled up with the young mothers who are flanked by little children on both sides, Tonce heardof a variety show "giving a per- formance in a mining camp in the days of the California gold excite- ment. The rude theatre for the most part was filled with rough men. While the show was going on a lit- tle baby began to cry. That child's cry mightily affected the miners. They made the players stop so that they could hear the voice which re- called the holy memories of their eastern homes. If a child's cry can soften the heart in a theatre it can teach a gospel lesson in a church service, Oh, mothers with little children, when you come to the church bring your babies. When -I used to be taken to church as a little child the sweet influence of the gospel penetrated my being, tbeagle often before the service closed, in childhood's weariness, -I went to sleep with my head pillowed on my mother's lap. No mother can be a true example to her children unless at the same time she is a true church member. I r E S. S LESSON. INTERNATIONAL LESSON, JUNE 21. Text of the Lesson, II. Tim. iii., 14 ; iv., 8. Golden Text, II. Tim. iv., 8. 14, But continue thou in the things which thou hast learned and hast been assured of, knowing of whom thou hast learned them: Earlier in the epistle Paul had ex- horted Timothy to "hold fast the form of sound words which he had heard of him" (1-13). The word "continuo" in this verse is the same word so often translated "abide" as in John xv, 7, 9, "If ye abide 'in Me and My- words abide in you, ye shall' ask what y..o will, and it shall bo done unto you." "Continue in My love." Our Lord said again, "If ye continue in My word; then are ye My disciples indeed" (John viii, 81). • 15. And that from a child thou hast known the Holy Scriptures, which are able to make thee wise unto salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus. He had been well taught by both his mother and grandmother (i, 6) to believe and honor the Scriptures. Blessed are all such 1- This verse reminds us of some of Paul's fare- well words to the elders of the church at Ephesus, "1 commend you to God and to the word of IIis grace, which is able to build you up" (Acts xx, 32). The Spirit of God accomplished all things by the word of God, whether in creation or redemption. Iii creation "The Spirit moved," and "God said," and tho work was done (Gen. i). In redemption it is the same Spirit and the same word. 16, 17. All Scripture is given by inspiration of God and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correc- tion, for instruction in righteousness that the man of God may be per- fect, thoroughly furnished unto all good works. I once saw an • earnest Christian teacher addressing a congregation, and ho took the Bible in both hands and said, "1 believe every word in this book whether I' understaud it or not."itis action and his words have been a blessing to zee for more than twenty years, The Holy Spirit has written the whole book— the very words of God, some words of the devil, some words of men— but all for our profit that Nye may know God and trust flim ; that we . may know the dovil and resist hint. The inert of God is the man who; being redeemed, is willing to be ' sot apart Wholly for God (Ps. i'v, 8), to liveonly for Him and let Him work out In the life the works prepared. beforehax'd. (Eph. ii, 10) and to this end believes and appro- priates all Scripture. • 1. I ciutzgo thee therefore be- fore cod and the Lord Jesus Ohrist, who shall jage the quick and the king deaddoma . g and appearing' Ilis In his address to. the Athenians he Spoke of the • iudgznont .and the judge ne incitements. • to repent (/ ets ;evil, 80, 81). In Rom: xivr,. 10-12, lie taught• that believers must not judge one another, because all must stand before the judg- ment seat of Christ anti every one of US give account 01 hiniSelf to God. Now, in view of the same great facts, he has a special .exhortation for Timothy which is very Muth needed to -day. 2-4. Preach the word, '* * * * for the time • will come when they will not endure sound dootrine, Well, the time has coxae, and all the denominations, in many the- ological, seminaries and in many. pulpits are professors and preaoh- ere who do not hesitate to say and teach that the l3ible is not infallible and prophets and apostles and oven the Lord Jesus Himself are not al- ways reliable, neither Adani and Eve nor. Abraham, Isaac and Jacob were real persons, Jesus was not good and there is no atonement by substitution. These and other abominable lies from the pit, from the father tof lies, are. taught •to nien who aro being trained to be preachers. It Is a good. time truly to preach the word, tb preach the r chin p ea g that God bids us (Jonah iii, 2), even though the infidelity of so called higher criticism would fain treat us as Micaiah, son of Imla, was treated (I Kings xxii, .24-27). 5. Rut watch thou in all things; endure afflictions; do the work of an evangelist; make. full proof of thy ministry. �P•e cannot be 'faithful to Christ and please Him and have the fel- lowship of those who will not be- lieve God; therefore the words of chapters ii, 1-4; iii, 12; John xvi, 1- 8; xv, 18, 19, are very necessary for us in these days of the falling away from the faith, when men who ought to live to please God and keep the judgment in view prefer to please man for the sake of some earthly preferment. 6, 7. For I am now ready to be offered, and the time of my depart- ure is at hand. I have fought .a good fight; I have finished my course; I have kept the faith. What a joy and what a victory to be able to give such a' testimony! From the day of His redemption on the way to Damascus he had magni- fied the grace of God, and now by the same great grace he is able to give this glad shout as he antici- pates seeing in glory Him whom he ! saw on that memorable clay when lie became blued to all but Him (I Tim. 1, 14; I Cor. xv, 10; II Cor. xii•,9) The same grace is for us. 8. Henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness which the Lord, the righteous ledge, shall give me at that day, and not to me only, but unto all them also that love Iris appearing. Compare the other four crowns and live so as to win them and have somewhat to cast at His feet (Jas. 1, 12; Rev. ii, 10; 1 Thess. ii, 19; I Cor. ix, 24-27; I Pet. v, 1-4; Rev. iv, 10). Note that crowning day is not at death, but at His coming (Rev. xxii, 12; Luke xiv, 14). Those who do not like to hear of His com- ing again will miss the crown of righteousness. eteetee C ti e. BUSINESS -LIKE RUSSIA. We have learned in the past few years to regard Minister de Witte of Russia as one of the greatest finan- cial administrators in the world. Yet every book on Russia gives fresh evidence of mismanagement on the part of the Government in the de- tails of business. Mr. Wirt Ger- rare's "Greater Russia; the Conti- nental Emipire of the World," illus- trates the Russian way of doing things by this account of the post - office service: At the chief postoffices in St. Pet- •orsburg and in Moscow. there is only one clerk selling stamps. He closes his office at two o'clock. I•Ie can- not reckon change without a count- ing board. There are about half a dozen branch offices in these capitals, but stamps are as rare as a postal order in a country store in an American village. At one branch postoffice in Moscow the letter box was full to overflow- ing when Mr: Gerrard called. Ho took his letters inside, but the clerk in charge declined to accept them. "But the letter box is fulI." "Find a letter box which is not full," replied tho clerk, "That will be difficult." "Then wait until one is emptied to -morrow. " , A TELL-TALE ENVELOPE. An American has invented an en- velope which records of itself any attempt to tamper witch its con- tents. The flap is imbued with some chemical composition, which, when Operated, on by a ciampening pro- cess, or any other means of pone- taating to its enclosure, records the transaction by causing the words "Attempt to open" to appear. It is thought that the inquisitive . will think twice before pursuing their researches in faco of such an inven- tion. LIFE-SAVING SUPERSTITION. Tho superstitious collier is often laughed to scorn, but a miner in North Wales is just now thanking his lucky stars that .he believes in omens. He was boring under some coal, and was startled by seeing a rat scuttling away. He walked away from the spot, and directly afterwards a large fall of coal oc- curred just over the place where the man had been working. '. 1. • ,i MIiLL'IONS LOST ON THE eTUR%'. According to tables made by sporting men, over $250,000,000 3s lost on the turf every year. Of this, $50,000,000 is lost on Eng- lish 'racecourses and about $101,.- 000,000 on Australian courses. The resa ab der' is' chiefly distributed •. be- teveen France, the United States, and 1=3ritish Colonies, • Price in Canada: $1.00; Six bottles for $5.00 Women and men who suffer from or pan n nax regiweakon .shoulbackd. take iiSi':>~, JAtheMOsiinWb.t- I R$, which possess remarkable curs.. five influence on functional derange - watts of the kidneys, andexert special tonic actlioli on the whole urinary system, JADuts W AlrnRs. cure bladder troubles and pains of micturition, ;helping the flow of urine and clear- ing it from any sediment. ST. ,JAl+izr,5 WAP �:>�R s are also s a potent sezuai strengthener. ST. 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- plislles much. <4xhevolae of $t.1atnes'Wafere cannot be overestimated. Iia the moat obstlsatedet/Basel lcidneye and urinary ttoubies they have rendered me remarkable entices- see."' Dr. Charles H. Powell, Fitzgerald, Scotland. St, James Wafers arenol a secret remedy: to The numerous doctors re- commending them to theirpatienh we mail the formula upon request. Where dealersarenot sellingthe Wafers. they are mailed upon re- ceipt of price at the Canadian branch : St. ).mts Wafers Co., 1728 St. Catherine St., Montreal. oogs.;o oftto aee©e®tq.o ® FOR �I49 HOME Recipes for the Kitchen. • Hygiene and Other Notes for the Housekeeper. Pa o seeeeel) Gemeees606)06)1 CAFE, MAKING. While it seems easy enough to take the ingredients and make a first-class cake, there are a great many details that the novice is not supposed to understand, and never will understand save through ex- perience. First, pound and sponge cakes re- quire the whole eggs, because they have no mills or water added. It is not only economy, but the cake is Very much better when the egg is divided. The whites should always be beaten stilt and the yolks should be creamed with the butter and sugar.. Unless the recipe lays • to the contrary the flour should be measured after sifting ; then sift the second time with. the baking powder. The standard baking pow- ders are the best, as all cheap brands are adulterated to a large extent. One can detect a bitter, alum taste in cake or biscuit made from them ; then, too, a fine tex- ture is never obtainable. A cake that is too highly flavored is worse than no flavoring at all. Five drops of a good reliable extract are suilieient for almost any cake, yet many put in a whole teaspoon- ful. Sugar and butter should be creamed, not stirred until a heavy mass is the result, showing the grain of the sugar. Cream it until it is of a light, foamy consistency. It is better to do this on the start than to stir for a long time after the flour is added. Many make the mistake of hurry- ing the dough' into the tins as soon as the flour and baking powder have been added, thinking that the fere mentation will injure the cake if it is not gotten into the oven imme- diately. It should be beaten with steady strokes for at least three minutes, five would be better. have. the tin buttered and lined with pa- per ; good sweet leaf lard is pre-. ferred by many to butter ; never use pork or smoked meat drippings or cottolene for any of these will leave a bad taste to the loaf. We do not favor cottolene•; butter is good en- ough and is quite as cheap. A cake that has been baked in an oven of the right temperature will rise evenly, and be flat instead of rising in a peak in the .center. It will be covered with light crackers ; it will be of a fine honeycomb tex- ture, of a delicate straw colored brown. A cake allowed to burn on the bottom is ruined. The oven has been too hot. It will be full of big holes, coarse in texture, hardly fit to eat. Tho dough will not bear hurrying ; it must have time for expansion. An oven too slow is fully as bad. It must be just right anq it is the business of the cook to -See that it is right, as it is quite a loos to throw a cake away. There is quite an art in putting a layer cake together. It must be nearly cold, the filling must be ready to use, and artistic taste can be shown in the icing and decoration of the top. In fact, woman's finest taste has ample. range in cake -mak- ing. It is just as much of an art as painting a picture or doing the finest needlework and it is worth the cook's time to cultivate it.. f BE WA.Tatill The wise merchant knows when to; adopt a new plan and how to ac- complish any given purpose through the ideas of others. It is well to try to furnish all the ideas, but it is foolish to turn down a good idea. just because some other person fur- nished it. What is needed is busi- ness, not originality. If all the business could be done by one man and all the ideas furnished by an- other there would soon be a change of conditions, for the Asan doing the business without ideas would soon be convinced .that . the . man ' with ideas was encroaching on his terri- tory. The merchant with ideas and business will be able to use the ideas to hold the business; and the merchant with business and without ideas will either have to adopt the ideas of others or be willing to let a part of his business go by default. It is not advised that a merchant be a pilferer, of ideas, because that merchant will soon come to grief. The man who has not ability to or- iginate some things may not have enough ability to apply the things originated by others, but the one who makes a. point of picking up suggestions from here, there and everywhere, which willhelp in his business, and • then busies himself seeing that his business keeps up to the ideas, will have reason to be glad of what he adopted, and to ho proud of his work in combining ideas and business, to his own ad- vantage. AVE you T: , _.' been smok: r, )" 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 dr two of Milburn's Heart and • Nerve Pills and get cured before things become too serious. As a specific for alt heart and nerve troublestheycan- not be excelled. A true heart tonic, blood. enricher and nerve re- newer, they cure nervousness, sleepless- ness, nervous prostration, smoker's heart, palpitation of the heart, after effects of la grippe, -etc. • Price soc. per box or 3 boxes for Saes at all druggists, or will be sent on receipt of price by • o The T. Milburn Co., Limited. Toronto, Ont. eat s. 5 Tho Leading Specialists of America. 25 Years in Detro't. Sank References. A6T1Vo Names Used Without Written Consent. YARICOCELE If yon have transgressed against the laws of natute,yoamuststiffer. 'Self abase at recce e NERVOUS DEBILITY sad private diseases ha'vo wrecked' thousands nf" CURED. pad b lives. Treat with scientific physicians .rr we .r...d...v...vvre ted. Avoid' glxacks. 2. A. Sidney, of Toledo, says: ,,At the ago of 14, I learned a bad habit and at 19 contracted aserious disease. I treated with a dozen doctors, who ail promised to cure hue. They got niy money and I still had the disease. I had given up hope when a friend advised me to Consult Drs. Ii. it X., who had cured hint.Withont any confidence 1 called on 'then, and Dr, ftennedy agreed to care me or no pay. After taking the New Method Treatment for six weeks I felt like a new man. The drains ceased, wormy veins disappeared,naives grew stronger hate stopped' falling out, u ' rine became clear and rn sexual organs vitalized. I was entirely cured by Dr. Zenaedy and .recommend him from the bottom of my bead." We Treat and Cure Sylaiailira, Gleet, Vorriooreic, laminations, Stricture, UUPaiiaturai D1echargos, Gex ninai Weairlietss,t iiiolatcy and l5ladctcr D:Mscztatcio. CONsnLrATION ll'kTi . 130031S Fr12Ei3. Cali or'write for naestioa ]Than$ for 23otue Treatment. NO CUk I. NO PAY. DRS, KENNEDY 84 KeRGAN„ Cdr. Michlgl#nt_ Ave. and Shelby Street. Dettofi, ?rich.