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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1909-11-26, Page 9Stmday S000lo LESSON IX.--NOV, 28, 1'60.9. ;'Paul on Self -Penial (World's Tam - prance Lessons -Rom. i4; 10.21. Commentary. -I. Our duty to others (vs, 10 -15). -Difficult .problems Were confronting the early church. The ques- tions of meats and drinks and the ob- servance of days were nearly rendiug the church. In the first part of the chapter Paul exhorts them to have Christian charity one for the other, The only true solution must spring from the law of love. 10• Why- dost thou judge --Why dost thou, Christian Jew, observing the Mosaic rites, "judge or condemn thy Gentile brother who does not observe them; or why dost thou, Christian Gentile, "set at nought," or despise, thy Jewish brother? Shall all stand, etc. --God and not inan, is our judge; 'we are aceountable to him for our conduct. 11. It is written In Isaiah 45. 23. 12. Every one of us -The high, as well as the low, the rich as well as the poor, the learned as we11 as the ignor- ant, the Jew as well as the Gentile. &hall give account -Of his own spiritual life and not of the weaknesses and fail - 'area of others. In view of this, why all this contradicting censuring, clashing, contending and criticizing among Chris- tians? We must give au account of how we spend our time, talents and oppor- tunities. 13. Let ns not judge -Judgment belongeth unto the Lord. Do not usurp :His prerogative by passing judgment on these non -essentials. Let us allow to our brethren the sante liberty we de- mand fee ourselves. Judge this rather- Instead of censuring our brethren let us turn the judgraent upon ourselves, search our own hearts and be careful about our owr conduct and influence. .A. stumblingbIo. h -m ny cause of stumb- ling, or anything that will lead a bro- ther to fall into sin. We should avoid those things that would 'have a :tend- ency to discourage, hinder, mislead or prejudice any Christian (Matt. 1S. 7; Luke 17. 1; 1 or. 10. 32). 14, I know -lay the light of his own understanding. Persuaded by the Lord Jesus -Assured by a particular revela- tion from him. --,Benson. Nothing un- clean of itself -No kind of meat is es- sentially wroug or unlawful under the gospel dispensation. To him that esteem- eth-Who in his conscience looks upon it as wrong. To him it is unclean -He may be mistaken in his conception of duty, but it is wrong for him to vio- late his own sense of duty. The con- science is the arbiter of personal and individual duty. If a man goes against his own conscience, he is doing wrong; for to do what one thinks to be wrong has the same effect as though it were wrong, since he yields in heart to con - Anil to do evil. 16. Brother be grieved - Thy weak fellow -Christian be injured or hurt, so as to stumble in his conduct. Thou wallcc'at no longer in love (R. V.) - The law of lore forbids the doing of anything that 'would injure myself or others. Intnauierance leads to the 4,x - Ott opposite of this. It causes men to break every commandment, and to work i11 of every kind to his neighbor. Des- troy not him Be not, on account of your rash and uncharitable conduct, the occasion of your brother's sin and con- demnation. II. Our duty to God (vs. 16=18). 16. Let not then your geed -Your Christian liberty and independence in Christ. 13e, evil spoken of. -Be misunderstood. sn that you will be blamed if your fellow - Christians be led estray by your lack of Iove for them., 17. Kingdom of Ctod -True. pure and undefiled religion; called the kingdem of God, in distinction to earthly empires and confederations, and also the ]egaI dispensation of Moses. Not meat and drink- -It does not ennsiet in the ohecreance of certain outward rites and religious ceremonies. But righteousness ---•Pardon of sin, and holi- nese of heart and life; uprightness, in- tegrity. Pram -Both with (rod .aid inan. Joy -•-That which is unspeakable and full of glory -part of the fruit of the Spirit. The kingdom of Gml consists COLLA. LEATHER [ ' j ttf'•• 1, A $ IMO f rHIs Collar Bag is truly remark- -_ILL able value at this price. It is made in beautiful tact leather, lined with silk, and holds 15 collars. Delivered post-paid, for $1.00, to any address in Canada -except tfie Yukon --Order by the number --657. SEND POE CATALOGUE Ifle Our handsomely illustrated 194 page cats. Josue et Diamonds, Jewelry, 'Silverware, Leather. Arts Goods and Novelties, free upon request, RYRIE BROS., Limited 134-138 Yong° Street TORONTO IlDraktitL . %i . l4& 4 i>Fr INVIGORATING TOIL FOR RUN-DOWN PEOPLE Your blood bas become thin and weak. The drain upon your system the past few months has been very great. You are con. sequently feeling "all out of sorts" and "run down." Your appetite is bad and youhardly have enough energy left to do your daily duties. You should take PSSYCHINE,the greatest of Tonics, with- out delay. This will put you on your feet at once. Gentlemeat--"I have used PSYCHINE and 1 do think it is the greatest tonic and, system builder known. 1 would advise all who are rue -down or physically weak to use PSYCHiNE';a. Yours truly, Mrs. Jas. Bertrand. West Toronto. if ren are weak PSYCtIINE will make you strong, For Sale by all Druggists & Dealers, 50e. & $3 per bottle. Dr. T. A. SLOCUM UltlITED, TORONTO PRONOUNCED SI -KEEN of the • enthronement of these pure prig- ciples in the heart. it has no sin, strife or misery in it. 18. In. these things -771e Jew and the Gentile who have these principles of the kingdom in them. Serveth Christ - Lives in obedience to Christ's commands, and takes such a course its is we]] -pleas- ing to him. Acceptable to God -Our first and highest duty is to please God. Approved of glen -Of all wise, honest and good men. III. Various admonitions (vs. 19-21). 19.• Follow... • peace -Put away con- tentions about non -essentials, and insist on the essentials of Christianity. This, however, often involves what many call the "little things." Edify another - Encourage and aid those things which build up Christian eharacter. Intemper- ance dues the exact opposite of this. It destroys good morals, social standing, the home, happiness, character. the soul. The law of love forbids the use of in- toeica.ting liquor. forbids its sale to others, a.nd will not permit us to assist those persons who sell liquor to others, either by lending them looney, by rent- ing our buildings to thein, or in any way giving theta our support and show- ing them favor. 20. For meat --A small and, trifling matter. Destroy not the '4o:irk-The work of faith in the hearts of men is God's work (Eph. 2: 10), .All things pure -All meats. the thing about which they disagreed, are lawful, hut "telae man who •either eats contrary to his own conscience, or so as to grieve and hinder another, does an evil act," 21. It is good Honorable, noble, wor• thy. Self-denial for the good of others is one of the noblest of virtues, Where- by thy brother stulmbleth-Nothing should be done that would canse an- other to fall. Temperance lnetettetirvn.• -Che solemn is the greatest curse of modern civiliza- tion. Like a huge octopus it etretches forth its tentacles in al ldireciion, en- teviningr, corruptang Arts destroying ever- institution it enoounterr. It re- ..peets neither the high nor the low. the rieh nor the poor. It seek, the names as its prey. It delights to tear the par- ents from the child -net: and tire htiebapd front the wife, filling the income ensiles and bunting what. should be a most :cu•- recl and delightful in•,titution into ;i lit- eral hell. it iniur0e. body and n:incl, redueam.g a powerful ams neilliant giant to a ,diseased and 1oatllsorne wretch. It fills our in nne mentions:, reformatesie., and penitentiaries, and then goes abroad seeking new violinist, Th ;1It crty and waste left in the trail of the saloon are worse than the dc: tree. tin of e thousand] tornadoes, f'at'eful eumputa:tion shows rant our • annual, drink hill, which now exe'1'1 s two bil- lion d»ntre. w•ntr:41 mare than bus• the five great: cereal cone; of our eni•ir!' na- lion_ - the corn, wheat. oats, rye and bar - le}' elope. .And yet this wealth is worse than wanted The poverty -of the ,hunts. as we'll as mag. if MVP 1>calt0 (^cnn•t ;tad ).risen eapensee. are directly due in the liquor treffie. Furthermore, •th'• Mali):)n ha= ser eor- rmeted one bees}' )ruldtie. Ilae been so law defying and anarchistic, 11.1141 has until innovate eo Held thv pa:liticiatie under it.s la,b that fete .'tions of our c-:)untry have e;;m31ped its demoralizing' innMel.re ott law and order. And testar.:llriuk ruins that a-iiieh is worth nxore than the wealth of the world • -•the souls of meat. It takr.s. a creaeore mane in: the image of (;rod lend' so de- privee hint of nelson. so hardens hie, tem- seierle:e, pervet'te his mere! Renee and len lave'; him with appetites that lie im'.ee all power to live a re.:•pectolrl4 life :ar ,inks to a level lower thee the }eine. have. 1 ,ren men in their righ ()flea las :, niincl:a elites; tt.saloon and after "filling minute', come out little up"for thirty z drunk, boisterous, with their reason tak- en awayob4Ct'ue and leach' for anymime. Afterr looking nn stoat scenes f (3 Johu 9). We are to judge tlie• words .alble that : nation which calls itself civilized. not to ,ay Chi:Minn. eau give Re, sanction lobes protection to stle}r a nesi9p011 of 1111gnity? 110‘n can we pIM- ish men for crime cubeb yet liceese tile in stitlltioo that mantel .them ern:tina14? Happily, the dei of saloon nomination is oudiug, 11.s manifold evils have be- come a. stench to lnnitanity. - let us by word,. by extlniple and •b5' the lrtllnt aid •in Re &r'srtatctiou •• 11. L. 0. Questions,• • 1i3' • wlinun orad to wlior'ii wets. tide epistle writtee ;' Where, when, why, wee it written? 113' whole was it, .eiettt to Ronne?What di3enssiotr wee going on in the ehtirell it Ilnn11'? 11) wlntt were they to have cllttit,y' What clow the hie' of fere !toned' - How i5 (;gel's work so:m.aairs 'c'e •,.'oy.'cl" slow can we "edify anotherµ• Shaw that in- temperance does not exact opposite of tide. Who enjoys peael: of conscience? 1.'BACT'ICAL .A:PP.LICATIO S, Temperance in All Things 1, Individual respon ibility. 'l.acll one of us shall give aa,eccunt of hilnsel.1 to God" -(v, 12). Each sone of us must learn and eat aud'drink and sleep for himself, Each one of roust repent and believe for himself.:Each one of us must die by himself. The pronouns of the Bible are enxpahtic. "Ye Must be born again" (John 3:7). "Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling" (1'hil. 2.12). "Be ye therefore perfect" (Matt. 5.48). Consider "tllysell lest thou also be tempted" (Gal. 0:1), "Each one of us shall give aeeount of himself to God." A gentleman used to say to bis wife, "Mary, go to church and pray for both." But one night the roan dreamed that he and his wife stood at the gate of heaven. A. voice said, "Mary, go in for both" Ile awoke, and sought a personal preparation for Heaven. 11•.•Judgment. "Let us not, therefore, judgeone another any mare" (v. 13). 1. ,fudging is arrogance, . 'Who are thou that judgest another?p0 (v, 4; Jas. 4: 12). Are you infallible? Is there no possibility that you are mistaken? "Who art thou that judgest another man's ser- vant? To his own master he standeth or falleth" (v. 4). Because I judge an act of another's wrong„ does not make it wrong. He whorl I judge may bo "acceptable to God" and worthy of my approval (v. 18). 2. Judging is presumption. "Why dost thou judge thy brother?..we shall all stand before the judgment seat of Christ" (v. 10). Judging is Christ's work, not ours; We usurp His preroga- tive when we judge another to be bigot- ed, or wrong, or wicked because he dif- fers from us in the non -essentials in which each is commanded to 'be fully persuaded iu his own mind" (v. 5). We aro forbidden to 'ledge the motives of men, "the hidden things • .the o01111 - sols of the hearts" (1 Cor. 4. 5). For- bidden to judge "according to' appear- ances" (John 7. 244). Forbidden to judge one another for not keeping Jew- ish ordinances (Col. 2. 16). Forbidden to judge others as regards eating or driukiug or service (vs.3, 4). We are to judge sinful deeds, as Paul did the fornicators of Corinth, (1 Cor, 5. 3), as Peter judged Ananias and Sapphire (Acts 5. 3), as John judged Diotrephes (3 John 9) .We are to judge the • words of professed teachers (1 Cor. 10. 15), to -prove all things; hold fast that which is good" (1 These. 5. 21). Above all we aro to "judge ourselves" (1 Cor. 11. 31) . as to words and deeds and motives. III. Walk in love. "If because of meat thy brother is grieved ,thou walkest no longer in love" (v. 15). Love not only "thinketh no evil" (1 Cor. 13. 5), but love worketh no ill" (13. 10). Love is nob only quick to discern good, and slow to impute et'ii, but love will not do any- thing which. affects agother injuriously person,; or reputaaion, or estate. Ab- stinence for the sake of others is "good," fair, and beautiful, and moral- ly right because it is according to the law of love. "Destroy not him.... for whore Christ died" (v, 15). "For meat destroy not the work of God" (v. 20). A Sunday school super:titendent went to the theatre. Afterward, learning that a member of his soboo] was i11, he called to see him, and found him hopeless of salvation. "My dear boy," he began, "Jesus will-" "Hush!" was the wild answer: "don't talk to ole about Jesus. Three months ago I saw you go to the theatre, and that caused me to go, and to -day I am a lost soul, and you are the cause of it." That superintendent said he would have been wi11]ng to gave his life -work if he could have recalled that act. 4 3,9 - WATER GAUGE BURST. C. P. R. Fireman sadly Scalded. C. P. R. fireman. Geo. 11. Tauffa8, who lives on Robertson street, 1 t William, w1:11( 01) his engine near Weztford happened a nasty accident, The yia'f; gauge of the. 10- coiitotive burst and so:aet} the whole of the left side of his face atd bead terribly. "1' so happens:EL" :+id Thtffus to our re- nrce•entettive, "that I lues a box of Zam-Truk In my pocket, which 3 n •d'for a sore on my lip, ane when. I mid mete -erect trans the first. whack of the aeeldent, 1 enclosed the balm and had it applied freely to the scalded harts, At rise gime T applied is leas suffering acute 11.11017 Y. but within a wanderlully short time Zam-11uic give me cave. 1 was able to eon. time, my journey. and upon reaching borne 1 obtsined xnore Zam-flue anti continued the treatment.. 11 acted wonderfully well, arid • in a few day.: had the wound needy healing. I don't know anything so fine ns a heeler et" 'burns scalds, cuts. and similar dejuric s which workers 'are so liable to: and in no neaten a bon of Zxn'-Ptak should be hem handy in every worker's home." ' "['herr Is something drlfrrcnt and meaner shout Earn -Milt. 'rime and again workers In all branches of trade have proved its vast superiority over tale advertised, ointments and eatves of the day. No doubt the fact that,. .Zorn-buk is made entirety from berbal es - 811,048 and extracts, while ordinary ointments contact more or Tose 3311,3831 fate anti ens, saes a Icing way to simnel Zorn -Bust's super- iority. However 1,bis tete bo, the fact im- mense .that in fur ann3i:s.ents to which it 11:is been introduced within ten years it has become the lulling lrensehold baiml ih'r burns, cuts, scalds. bruises, enema, nili's, ulcers, ring -worm. 'tel, salt -I -benne bad leg. fostering sores, shaiipa:d places, cairn sore. frost -bites, •anct 1111 kind 01 fineries a.ttei , disoaaes, Zaps-Ltuk is beyond doubt, a mm81 marvellous e111'e. lireeeistsand xltores sell at ro ceats a bon ani the Zein -Bak t;o.. Toronto. will mail a box freer, upon receipt of price. to any of our readers who may have difficulty, in ob- tafrslne a sinl'>ly of the genuine Zan1-lluk from their mead etores, • 'i'hr reason a g:t:+ b.11 Pilus 1111 'so gaze kly is because it hats thousands ilf feet. sor skEKEI EZPig0 • ginc 11 erintalinee TORONTO MARKETS. LIVE STOCK. The railways reported 130 ear loads of live steak at the city market since our last report, consisting of 2,135 ertttle, 1,020 hogs, 1,337 'sheep and lambs and 08 calves, Fifty-two eat• loads of these cattle came from Manitoba and the Northwest, 40 car loads of which were shipped direct to the Ilarris Abattoir Co., and were not for sale on the market, which left 96 car loads on sale. Butchers -Mr. Rowntree reports the following prices: Steers and heifers, $$4.202,30 to to $5'25;$4•. cows, $1.50 to 9;4.60; bulls, "It will be seen that no such price as $5:75 was paid for any picked butcher cattle on either of the markets" About $5.255 was the highest price reported for any butchers' cattle, excepting one lone animal at $5.50. Stockers and Feeders --Mr. Murby bought two loads, and reports prices un- changed as follows; Best steers, 900 to 1,000 pounds, at $4 to $4.50; steers, 800 to 000 ponds each, a=. $3.50 to $3.80; good stockers, 500 to 700 pounds eaeb, at $2.75 to $3.25; common stockers, $2 to $2.25, Milkers and Springers -There was a strong market for cows of good to choice quality. Those delivered to -day were generally of medium quality. Prices were unchanged, selling from $60 to $65 each. Napoleon Deziel, the leading cow dealer of Montreal, was on 'the market. Veal Calves -Good veal calves are in demand and sold at high prices, especial- ly those fed by the mother cow, John H. Wickson bought one of the latter kind at $7.25 per cwt. The prices for the general run were $3 to $6.50 per cwt, Sheep and Lambs -Some 1,337 sheep and lambs sold as follows: Export ewes, 83.75 to $3.90; culls adn rams, $2.75 to $3; lambs, $5.50 to $5.75. Selected lots of choice ewes and wethers sold up to $6. J. 11. Wickson got 10 of the latter class at $6 per cwt. We give this latter quotation to show where the $6 price comes in, and to show that it is no cri- terion to go by in selling the general run of lambs. Hogs -Mr. Harris quotes the market easy at these quotations: Selects, fed and watered, $7.65; and $7.40, f.o.b ears at country points. FARMERS' MARKET. The only grain receivasl to -day was 100 er busheli'V l. heatr leyIs worth $1.08,o nd oats ht Gm 443.. Bay is unchanged, with, sales of 20 loads at $16 to $22 a ton for timothy and at $12 for clover. Straw nominal at $17 a ton. Dressed hogs are steady, with prices ruling at 310.50 to $11. 107 $ 1 OS Wheat white, new .. • • $ 107 0 00 De.. red. new 10 2 103 Do.. moose . •.• Oats, bush. 0 43 0 44 Pons. bush, ... ... ... f0 SS D 50 Barley. bush. ... ... • • 0 64 0 63 ItYe• ash, 0 78 0 78 b liar, tlmoihy", tan . 1.6 00 22 00 Do.. mixed. ton • .. • , ' • 126 0000 1 W Straw• nor ton ... ... ... S Alsl- 6 b 6 73 Alxike, fancy, bush.. ... D•o, No. 1 ... .. • ... 600 6 25 Do., No. 2. .,. 6 OO 5 7a- I)o.• N8. 'a . ,...•. 3 40 Tted clover• No• 1, bu• . • i 140 1 00 Timothy -" "' 1!1 4)3 11 00 Dressed ho0s ... • • • . • • " 0 27 1 00 Butter Dairy ... ... 0 2; 0 ' 0 110., 3211crlor • •-• •••• ] el • new ]aid, dozen 0 4n e 4-a Ire.. frc h ... ... .... ..•. U,,^.!1 a 35 Cluckego, lb . ... ... ... 0 18 n la Mucks, Ib . ... ... ... ... 01 014 Turkeys. 1b . ... ... ... .. 020 ') 21 Csem=a, l b . ... ... ... ... 0 11 0 1:: Fowl. 1)10 014 0 in Mimics. bbl. .. ... 1 7.; :: 50 Pctztoes. bag, by Ioad .. 0 60 n 6p (mien-, dozen ... a oar 1 35 Onion: bag. .. ... 1 el 1 10 Cauliflower. dozen ... ... '175 1 `.5 Cabbage, 410Zrn .. .. .. ce fat n 6:5 Beef, hhedq:sir.ers ... ... .., s 59 It' 00 De.. forequarters .. 5 00 A 5O I1er. nu:diain, 31431(13.3'1',,.,.. , •4 (113 S 110 Ito„ mrdiu:n, carcase 1t111110n. rmr, ewe .,. . .. •• 7 fIll los s g4 ",}!1 mime, per cwt. .... .. . 09 10 50 Lamb, ppercwt. r FRUIT MARKET. mud:tlong for foreign fruits are as fol- low1131 inn debt, case ,. ..$ :: 00 to $ • .. 01;:u 'c \'sten •Li ,,......,.0 ,;• 00 I•etl'on -. :t3e1s•In,1 ,,. 00 4 0n (irate fruit, Florida . ., 4 30 (tr:m+: fruit, i erntira .. •t ;+6 Grape,. !d1lal a la^,r , .. •. 3.50 Bal Mader. Canadian, bhi. .. .. J 30 SUGAR MARKET, St. Lawrence $uwars arc quoted as fellows: 011131 111104, $4.85 per 03.11, in barrels: No. 1 1170k1/40l, S4.45 tier cwt. in barrels. heaver, sl.rr; re'r ewt. in bags. These prices are for delivers here. Car lets se lees. In 10o -lb, base, trims are 50 less. - • OTHER HER MARKETS. WINN1t'11( WHEAT MARKET. WLeat--N0%ember 08 3-3o, 1.kwenlbei• 03 1.40, dine 4e. Oat,93-No3-v3niber 35c• Deeenlbca' 3 1-2r, Slay 35 i -4•c. 11R17'I3II CATTLE 'MARKETS. London--I.dverpool and London ,•ob1ec fur cattle arc firm at 13-4c to 14 3-ic per lb. for live exude., dressed weight,: batt tl' quoted 10wer, Ill 10: to 10 25.3c per lb. MONTREAL 1.1116 S1'OC'K, Montreal -About 1,100 head of bu;rhers' cattle 00 m1I¢h crows and spr)ngers--tunre the., three-quarters of them being :springers -1(41 calves, 1,200 sheep a•ud lambs, and 1,100 bops. 'were offered for sale at the east end alx,t•toi, to -day, Trade was gond, with an inative demand for good bac". A few of the Ncrtbwest cattle sold at about 3e. per lb. and a little over. Pretty good animals sold rt 3 1.4 to 4 1-2c; common stock, 2 to 30 pot' ib,: lean cauzi0's sold at from 1-1-2 to 2c per le.: im)leh vows old at from $10 to 380 each, erten-fee calves sold et 2 1.2 to 4 1.-2s per lb.: good venls at 5 to 6 per 1b. Sheep sold a.. " 1-2 to 3 3-4 per 111,: lambs 131 S 1.2 to 5-411 pet- lb. Good iots 01 fag hogs sold at about , 8 1-2c per )b. THE ClIEE$E MARKETS. Why Many a Man Makes a failure of life. Not Because He Lacks Brains or Ability, But Because His Liver is Slow. + An' inactive, lazy liver makes plenty of niers and women seem iutelleetually dull. They really have the Ism" • but are weighed down, pulled down by a slug, gisb condition of the system. In conse- giic'nce lots of good chances are lost,. oojeyneut missed and pleasures refused -all because of a poor wo -king store- mill and a disordered liver, Men and women wake up your fivers,, give relief to sluggish kidneys -they are working hard, but can't keep on forever doing duty. for both the kednees and lover, Let Dr. Hamilton's Pills help you -let than drive those poisons from the blood ; that &press your mind and brain. Let Dr. Hamilton's Pills give you such inward wholesomeness that body '1111 spirit will tingle and glow with health and ambition. You can depend on this -that Dr. 7fami'ton's Pills claar the skin, b"1:}tten the eyes, purify the blood, send energy, vier and good spirits circulating to ev- ery' part of the body. No other medicine menses people se healthy or keeps you always at year best like Dr. Inemilton's Pills .They are mild, curative and safe. 25c per box, at all dealers, or The Catarrhozone (ieL, Kingston, Caapdc.. .1111 Stirling, Ont. -To -day 700 boxes were boarded; all sold; 11 6.8c. ('anlpbellforal, Cut,-- The fin111 meeting of the cheese hoard for 11100 was held to -day; 500 boxes were hoarded. 47t) so141 at 11 1.4'; 8113110 price' was ra 1'tt,ed fele the balance. WELLMAN BACK Chicago Polar Explorer Doesn't Know If He Will Try Again. New York, Noy. 2.2. -Another welter otter the North Pole molted New York to -day, but this one did not bring the Pole with him. He was Walter Wellman,. who returned on the Kaiser Wilhelm II., and he said that he wasn't sure that the accident to his airship last summer, which caused the abandonment of his third attempt to reach the Pole without the aid of 1%ec(uimaux and dogs, or the opposition of ice floes, was not a good thing in the end. "1 don't think," said Mr. 'Wellman, "that 1 would care to find the Pole an'$ then come back home to find myself involved in a bitter oontroverey." }Ie doesn't know whether he will tr±t' any more or not. GOT AWAY, ' Prisoner Jumps on a Train and Escapes From Police. Tilbury, despatch --Breaking away from a ronstarrle with whom he was standing at the M. C. It station, wait- ing for the train which was to convey hien to jail for a teras of three months, Joseph Wilson julnped on a train moving out in the opposite direction. Passen- gers saw the escape and notifed the con- ductor after the trans had got under way, but the conductor decided he could do nothing because the rn:tn had paid his fare. Windsor officers were notified and met the train,' but it was found Wilson had left the twain at some station east of Windsor, Taking Lydia E. Ph1ikbram's Vegetable Compound Columbus, Ohio. -- "1 have taker Lydia E. 1Pin.kham's Vegetable Com- pound during, change of life. 14y doctor told me it was good, and since taking it 1 feel so much better -that 1 can do all my work again. 1 thick Lydia E.1'inkham's V ego tab le (30171 - pound a tine remedy for a 11 woman's troubles, and 1 never forget to tell my friends what It has done for me." -;yrs. E. HA ooN, 304 East Long St., Columbus, Ohio. Another Woman Helped. Graniteviile, Vt. -"1 was passing through the Change of Life and suffered. from nervousness and other annoying symptoms. Lydia E. 'Pinithani':s Vege- table Compound restored nlyhealthand strength, and proved worth mountains of gold to me. For the sake of other suffering women 1 am willing you should publish my letter."-; J CrttsarT'ist13ARc]JA ,3Mr. fi.F.1)., G•ranito- yille, VI. Women who are passing through this critical period or who are suffering from any of triose (distressing ills pe.. ouliar to their soy should not lose sight. of the ,fact that for thirty years Lydia. lt. )?inkh.am's Vegetable Compound, which is made from roots ails .her1'3 - has been the standard remedy for female ills. In almost every ron131.t4- nity you will find women Who have been restored to health by Lydia ill.. ?inkhorn's Yel*'etable Colil»oswd. .