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The Blyth Standard, 1902-11-20, Page 2t. _ THE PINKHAM CURES 1TTeec1IAe GREAT ATTENTIed AMO14G MING WOW. Mrs. Frances Stafford, of 243 E. ll4th Si., N.Y. City, adds her tes. timony to the hundreds of thou• sands on Mrs. Pinkham's files. When Lydia E. Maim nl's Reme- dies were first introduced skeptics all Over the country frowned upon their calrative claims but as year after year has rolled by and the little group of women who had been cured by the new discovery hiss since grown into a vast army of hundreds of thousands, doubts and ekepticisMs have been swept away as by a mighty flood, until to -day the great good that Lydia E. Pinkbatn's Vogeta►leie Compound and her other Medicine are doing among the women of America is attracting the attention of many of OM leading scientists,.phyeieuins and thinking people. • Merit alone could win melt fame ; wise, therefore, is the semen who for a cure relies upon Lydia E. Pinkham's VegetableCompound. SilIjday SCIpoOI. INTERNATIONAL LESSON NO. 1'111. NOV EMBbat _3,1002. World's Tempernin a Lesson. Int.?s: 14 3. Common tary.-Espia milory. "Turf, Chapter begins with a lhvn!Ida tion of the approaching ruin of the Is- raelites by Ahatlmaneser, \close power In compared to a tempest or • float, andtds keenness to the eager- ness with whls•11 oite plucks and swallows the graft' that Is soonest ripe. It oven torus to the two tribes of Jut1n11 111111 19miamln, u•bo were to ontithrue a kingdom after Ole captivity of lb,ir brethren, and gtres first a Int -arable prediction or, their effaIrs and r Hezeklab, bet', soon changes to reproofs and three 1. - tenings for their lut'nnre•anee and profanruess. 11e assured thein that there mem only one method under heaven whereby they could be sate: that, every of her vain re001rce would fail In trio dog of raid's visitation. 1. Woe-(irf'f. sorrow, misery, a heavy calamity. a curse. Ta the Brown of tprlde-I:y the crown of pride the prophet refrre to Samaria, the beautiful c01)1111 of Israel. The city waw situated on tha top of at round hill and surrounded by n rich valley. 111te drunkard's of Ephraim -Ephralm, the lending tribe of the nation, had Noonan, debased in vier. Wiley were a trite of drunkards, and because of tIds the woe was upon them. A failing flower -A very for- cible figure. Their beauty and glory would fade e4 a flower. The flit val- leys -Tile valleys around Samaria were very !crude and beautiful. Ottercome with alto' - Wine causes anon Id fall an easy victim to temp- tation. Alcohol destroys the will power. The drunkard Inas a bad char- acter and gvnernlly enters recklessly into the vilest sins, 2The Lord legit n ... strong One -Tills Is a reference to the army of the Assyrians, which WOO 1001 41 come up diem like at leyaetit• ing storm. The destruction Would be complete, like a terrific h•til starer or a great flood. S. Trodden tinder foot -She !ma n- 'aer, with the Assyrian Myst, invad- ed, overcame and carried the fr.-s- plit ro-alta nwny, never to return. It is an unsolved p:•ohlrntl to this ,day Where the ten tripes are; whether they coetlpnr' to exist or are en- 1lrely ettdnet. All of tide wags ho- Main Of sin, and especially the rein of drunkenness. 4. .Ae the first rip" (Ig -As the fitst flips fruit was eagerly melted by the rrultt gatherer and hastily patten, sn Actmerle would bon delirious mor- ael for the Assyrians. S. Unto the residue -The prophet now turns from the ten tribes to the two tears -of Judah arta Benja- min, the remnant of Grxl'r; people, "1110 were to continue n kingdom .'or more than a hundred years af- ter Isrnel wart carrier' .into replIt•- 1ty. Judah wta❑ to bo favored and blessed. 8. A !'pint of Judgment -A clear r/1'rer'ption of God's truth. 4. clear head 1s promised as well as %itr,•y snot beauty. Turn the brittle to the erste-Who parruc the fleeing enemy oven to the vert' gates of their own atty.-Clarke. We have n rpiritnatl ;Warfare to wage (Ent. 0'l. 12), and ilro,arr pledged to coaque• the world :tom Christ. T. But these 111110 have erred (n. t.) -"Jerusalem as well am Siam - arta has her Inebriates and 'teener Of dtsgnwting ntoxication. Though Der irtnlahmi Is -not as near as that of the northern kingdom, there 7000G¢CCm00099O0tDOG• are seen thi marks of mire de; '11"0"e"i ►'1worjb„, Y 4..0)1si!1 ciine" K. The•„ 1e no glean place -- The liquor Nu-inass is a filthy bustneoe, moll every one 11 to It em,a,ged in it or 1105 anything to do with It is made filthy by It. 11 is the parent of u1,eleanur.e. The isdy, mind and soul of the our connected with It ta-eolne paline l awl corrupt. { p. 10 Whom shu11 he teach, etl.- \lacy roe:a oil these verses as the { words ascii by the scoffers as they the p:0phet. "They trent ru,''s method of dealing with theta, and warning On in by Ills prophets, o ft I, (luau met and derision," 11. Gay (It. C,1- Tho prophet's reply begflio ‘0 Oh this verse. Isaiah attacks th, m bb 1th great force and severity, turning their uttn 10siguage, spoken n, monk( r0', bark upon themselves. 12 This i.: the rest, etc.-t;od luta ,n•.et. (brat rrpeutell and fulthtul u ;innings, pniti ing out to them the true rest and the way to obtain It, hat they had eio•aed (heir ears and 'ennui 1101 hose," and wore going on in their fancied security to certain loot ruci lent 13. And fall hecklvllyd, etc. -They hail had groat light., and this made them groat sinners, and they descry. - td a terrible punishment. 'Phonghts•-Thi misery of this life come from Sat 1111. Tho tray to keep .nit of sln is 10 resist tenlptnl'lon'. Drunkenness is the moats by, widen the devil drag's down to perdition hath young and gild. Christie 110 whit f0110w the B1tile will be total abstain- ers. TRP priests were forbidden to drink wine: we 111'0 q,110st* t 1. Peter 11. 31. therefore wr ought to avoid Il. Our world to staggering under the awful (urge of rihoholism. The liquor trntfle le n 011 neer eating the very life out of society. 1t drstoys the morals of the country clod Might, wherever It teaches. Christians can- not oppose it sun strongly. I'ItA('Tit'\L DV EY. In this boson, Goal, by the 111011 1 11 of ills prof.Il'l, proIoalees 11 woe on tha i11111bltants of Ephraim, probably inducting the lPD tribes. The eh vital G t'iry,. N;Itn•trin, i.+ re- ferred to as the "Liam it. of Pride," nail the "gloriuns beuult ttinch in Ott the Renta of the fat valley," 1. (1f this city God said: "Il is a rail - Ing flow rr." 2. God not only see Res tho turn of Ep)n•ilim of icing drunk - t r io, bol compares 111(111 to a e0111 - pa 11y of loon indulging in strong drink and revelry. 3. l"harncters of tics kind always pont' to .:home as n [•coup of their own indulgence. Thr_ fertile valleymade the Proud city of 'i-immi 4fi 'ossible. 'PM Lord of frosts is "n crown of glory' nod n diadem of beauty:' 11111 "n spirit o1 Judgment' and "stnthgtlf'' for them that trust in Ilitlt. These are the blessings that Uol brings to Judah,. '•uhe residue of Itis lsrople." "not they also have erred through whip, awl through strong.; drink are out of the way; the priest and the prophet hove erred through strong drink, they are swallowed up of wine, they aro out of the way through strong drink ; they err .1t1 vision, they stumble in Jndgutettt" \otw•Ith- st11nlbi0 these ,blessings promised, ,vet hecauee they keys sinned simi- lar to It ttiaint. thty must endure 01 lan• punishments. Intemperance has been at vice of the human family through all time and probably aiming all people. We are Informed by a person of wide research, that every race In the world his its Intoxicating, drink. Whitt '110 (wino:. verify this state- ment by recognized historical au- thority, so far as we are familiar with the races of men, ancient and modern, we are forced to believe that the statement is true. Tills uttiverbnl desire for, or disposition to drink Intoxicating liquor, must spring from as evil heart, which is common to n•11 111.1. We will heat clop here to discuss what per mutt. of the world's pop- ulation ilo noir indulge In ardent spirits, but caul attention to an- other factor that enters into the problem, Namely, environment. flow many of our staunch temperance people would be such, had their surroundings and nseoei,lions been like those of some of their drink- ing neighbors. Let )2s thunk God if we have es- caped this terrible mousier, drink, and he ready tawny.; to extend a helping panel. Ito our unfortunate brothers and stet ere who hate fall- en Victim.; to Ito lower.. Ete•y Christian and rrrry lover of his race should array himself on the side of temperance. The curse le to be fought in every land. Snap Shots. Dallas News, No vai0 man likes to see his 'dens pulled up by the root* and nim erred broken to pieces, Son roust tell some mortalo when to laugh. An nnronsidered trifle ,sometimes ditches ll long trait. The slings and arrows of out- rogeons fortune are enough. to harden the heart. Ther line been no time In 11e toorld's history When men eodidnot find some sort of bloody chasm to shake hands over, 1)o not deliver your stinging re - bake t0 the wrong man, Three Woolen. "I will grant each of you ' one wish,'' assented Fate to three wo- men. "I choose beauty," exclaimed the youngest. "(live me power," said another. ".And to me a low, persuasive voice," the last murmured. Each hail her will. The beauty of the first was ruined by an accident. The power of the second lasted but One season. But the third woman kept her talisman thmugh a long Ilfe,,and from it came many things, among them powtlr, Mluda 'Monate_ Antrim, in November Lippincott's. SECRET SIGNS Preventim alld Gare 01 firitorax. OF THE: HOBOES. r.060061110011=a',.+'9d90GOMOC 6 Department of Agide littire, ((t tan a. Peter Sands, a( Castle Valley ,luu -Di rrpq to ihr qii tion, "le uu- a mysterious porter user tramps. 111) 10 a. dagger lu hnuuudty 7" pal reveal 1y 10,a rintly oro spsaprr, 1111- Ne makes n stark upon a wall -;i (I Iii fa a Hood disease it l irli affects rule, a diamond, to trbnngi(-;uta 1111 io11r'El1c 1111111111 IS. t'arnitora ur 01'ery Ire WI who i1'tppett0 along 00- limit eaters, dings for rtlnuple, enjoy- gaards this mark ford dors .straight- 11 high drgtru of pro1e•tfml ugl(nst it bol, 111 bees, lolly, Ito, N1111.111101. way what lir. Stands requires of flan Limed! i0 (1111' su urptiblr, nod him, Inking to his heels In terror, sheep, goats, hnrhrd rattle and or aih•anring lcitlt nundit,stat1bons horses are especially liable to eine of lay. tract it. The result depends Ment the imoCastle Valley Is n. Montt 1103 1' It r1Itt11 sit opo body that i* affected I pas14110 111(' 8(0111:101 Doylestown, and Sir, i4unds is a and develop: in the lttestlnes, death wealthy widower. Ile has giten n follows. 1f in the case of a luno a part of his leisure durhlg the last wound on the haul or the leg gives tho 'poison earn 1101' 11110 the laxly, two years to a study of the tramp thea malignant pustules form. Often - and hr bas found anal there really times such pat lent s reeuver: possl- (a tab had su often been declared) a bly ohs to lire may die. The sante tramp Cipher, a kind of hieroglypbie may be said of horned stock, but Iauguago, which throw auudrrers sheep it al' goals, with one or two write upon the walls of Irluseefor raviolis exat'ptiolle, 1111 11' little or no the guidance of those who follow resisting powers, and n)21[man ince alter them. 3)r. lues los learned in a !boll often elaims uuo-ha11 its this cipher., A few. of Its chnnecl,'t•s number ass 1lcllnts. -the cir(l0 or the square -would The canoe of this disease is it be useful to auly 1(1(011, For ne oho Plant ton 111in11 by ins to br seen should write in chalk upon his Ivan by the eye mudded. Vanier the nd- 010her of those two signs would not Clvrst'opc IL looks like a rod about be troubled by tramps so long 1e five times as long as it le thick. they remained. Fite thousand of those roils of bac- 'The tramp language, no far as Illi Put„end 10 end alight lnwneure know it;' 11r. Sands said recently, rape locin length. TOO* rod-like "Is u very simple thing 11181 to very 0,41;01 g000 10 90'11 ender certain crude, direct thing. 1t can express a""'ellII1Rtnll'ee, a point to he remem- bered, forcibly upon mat oriel bait - which because it is this we'd riIY tern it sono any: 'Tide is tine,' or which gives to 0 almost 'This is rotten,' Mut it is quite un- Uullndted fewer 1111. 4'aasfng L014s00 able to any 011btle or spiritual These seeds (spores) can stand both tblugs like 'Sermons in et MINI,' or km!, find cold, dull can lie for }cars 'The suusct's luminous peace.' It has no need, indeed, ever to be spiritual or subtle, for a spiritual or subtle tramp does not exist. "Tho tramp lb very mint of 1111 111111111I, IAs 1leuguugr deals 011)' WW1 tutlmal-uutteat 1 11110gs. JI .u, W010011, food, dogs, flight, mono; ;nal drink ore the snbJeeto that 11 boort) Ills mind. And in his own sign language, wlti- h lssunudclllgible t0 that outside worbl, 1aq treats of there subjects. The thing, he writes nre r•rltirisins-term:', sltong tsatotials, Ilatterlag or 1111 kind, which hr chalks twin the walls of the houses he has tisllxd. These dttotinle nee a bowl to the tramp who comes atter, for lite,' tell him k:c house's to sock 11led 1.110 unison to at old. The dblmoud is th:' sign of the tramp's favor. The dluumid, hl tramp language, signifies abundance. Its uppemaahee on a house wall urians tint within thorn is goad cheer for the hobo. The elect, 1s the opposite of the diamond. It signifies zero, or noth- ing. It means that the hungry tramp would misty Ids One b=ggiig In the 1101140 It lo affixed to. There le a circle on m>' 01.11 residence,' 111x. Bands said with 11 Retie. " A cross or X Is as unfavorable a tritleism a9 tit' circle. The cross means 'The; will pat you to work,' and its tueaning originOled out of its likeness to the saw^ hors'. Wi v- lttg 'w'ood is nboul .the only work that tramps mai be trusted to do, and thcrofore a saw horse, or X. makes for then( a very god symbol of 'work lu general. The double cross m010115 'very Hard work,' and this symbol has taken Its place to the Mang of the day. To give to man the 11000l0 cross is to do tho worst Mogi passible to him -to met him to work, according to the tramps (mitt of ties. ' The sign' for a man IR an up and dory etrrtlght lite. That for a. 11-'0.- Mali 0.Hari IN a kind of crioe hour glass. These signs undoubtedly arose from the difference In the mate and female appearance. Han is more or less straight up and down, and wontan Is more or less pinched 111 at the tvalot IUte an hour otiose. A sign frequently to he seen on houses hostlie to tramps 1M a huge figure '10,' the '1' whereof Means 'man here,' and '0' nothing to he had.' "That is an unlucky dwelling wtticli has upon its wail an hourglass and a diamond side by side. No house so decorated 1s even' passed by a tramp. Ile gore in whir an assured 'Irmo' and he gets, without e11T- pr101, a sumptuous meal or a gift otmoney. These things are no more than -he bind expected, for the sign upon the wall had told hint that a woman, not a main, ocarp11101 the house, and that 'hes woman was both !lett tin 1 generous, "It Is important for a tramp to know whether or not there Is ado% about tin plume that he proposes to lbit, for, if 110, not kholot this 11e might, through ear'lessnrss, be bitten. Ream there is in his lan- guage n sign for n dog. It to a hori- zontal line, supported at either end Ili a dry place without loss of vital- ity. A combination of heat, moisture, and food, such poo the animal foody offers, slay cause the seed to ger- minate and develop an epidemic anew. Once w(t1111 the animal body. anthrax plants multiply without sent formation, tu1+1 if they (11)211, the 11141111 of the nnitnnl, and it IR hurled without a dissection m' mu- tilation, which would allow rift to come into contact with the blood, then, in a short lime, the plant dies, and nothing remains to gener- ate future trouble, tiniest invar- iably, iron•'list"ly after deatla,how•- eter, blood exudes from all the nat- ural openings 01 the 0,1rr110' of an anlhtat t1.,t1111; therefore it lo the duty of tit, farmer to take etre that 111. •01n'enss IR erenulle.I iutme- dintely life Is ex tin; t. In no ens! shol.ld do carcase be akmned or the' plagt.e may extend not only among Om raid anent flocks and hulls, lint to vita tanners and their Minors who by Iwo o.'rtbcnl I(nts. IL Iroks to the iayn'':n like a ovule draw•iugof 11 Isaiah, but to the tramp it looks like n tog. Thi' horizontal line Is the back of that nnintnl and the four 1(1(1 ones are Its four lets. A t•au;t in enuring the yard of a house marked with' the dog ,.Ign gots Leery e•ewltoisly, his pxs'keto filled with stones and n club iu his hand. "There is a 01411 [111111 three than tramps would Tike to ore, and as re"- turglo surinonnted by a semicircle makes it.' This sign means ' Il oto' here,' and when a tramp behobdtit oh a house wall he hastens forward light h.'trtedly. It is a entd,'dr•'iw- lag of a beer can, or growler, the rectangle rrpre$ettling the pail ptopt'f, and the semi( kelt, its han- dle. Few I101.14e0 are ever decorated with till, sign. "Ona dour wall or a. gate on the octok(rts of ca town th.'re lo some- times to be seen a square filledwith parallel virtual' lines. When a tramp Moms to Hach a town's out- ekIi'ts and reads tits sign Ivo utt"rs as lout oath and turns backward for the meaning of the symbol 1s, 'They pttt tramps in j111 lore.' Tlie upright 111101 within the square iear a eon- eddernble reeentblance to prison bars and that is why the sign came to have its present meaning.' Mr. Sanas says that tramps lin re some kiln! of 0 secret order among them( with at number of strange ways of comntunleatulg one with' dnolh^r. Their only menus ofcom- mtrnicutlon whirli hr his salved thus far is this sign Inngmclgt'.--Phll,tdel- phka Times, Answering the Hell. 1'011100r, Olar,mnn. "Didn't you hear the doorbell, Brid- get ?" "Tem, mutt." "Well, why didn't yet answer It ?" "I did 11.1110001' Lt ; 1011id, 'Oil, fudge 1' Main.” t,k' pant in r, tuotltlg the hide from ho auunial. 1 rear a bulletin was isbu"tt hl 111,, 1 Department of Ag- 1h•clloie , dealing with anthrax. and I.nionslraHag 1In' efficacy' of the no, or l'nbl,'ur'b Nil eilter to produce lumm11lny. The )tithrax lewd i themselves are rosily killer(, but their spores resist cedine ry ge•net:ides, and even stab dr'arees of heat no kill other spores of bacteria. If the disease be left hn0be•keii and preventive measures b„ ITU 11(1, not 0111,0' may pre- sent 6r1i0t11i Ie,oReb ire expirieneed but the 101111(1lteell•Mnyl ' Rendered Infective for ceeturle•s. The stores of the haellhts In some way gel into the ground and remain there in a dor- mant state for many years. The skin, hair, wool, heats and horns of infected animals, 1f Rolled with blood, 11 PO COatnn1i)1111)01 by tho bacillus. It is lel infection the very reverse of that of contagLnts pleur0.pucumotha, 111411 requires the contact of living dtseused animals with living healthy aulhnnls, wlleoas anthrax Infection rarely takes place from living atnl- nlalR, illdPse 1110 blood containing bacilli 110 allowed to contaminate the food, or inoculate a wounded surface. The carcase neat excreta nee to be dreaded as the source of Infection. If atter death the blood be con- flated within the body, and discharges trona the natural openings he pre- vented by plugging them with tow saturated with a 20 per cent. solu- tion of eariole acid, and tho carcase he 1111rlrrl, Dot dragged, to the place prepared for burning 11, no Infection 1s likely to talo.' place from it. .As a precautionay measure, however, the stall end enrromldings where the death 0ocnrred elwnld be thoroughly disinfected, (IR well all the cart or wagon in which it Inas been carried. After burning the carcase bury the 1e11PR deeply with lime. The risks that are run by any carelessness in dealing with a carcass from widen millions of millions of infective spores may be given off, which may years after infect and destroy cat- tle, sheep, Rwltle, and horses, and enormously reduce the value of 11' farm, must be obvious. Vaccination or protective inocu- lation should not be undertakes by any llleperleneed person, and on no account should old or doubtful lymph be used. Protective lymphs nuts be obtained through the Dominion De- 011111nenl of .Agriculture at a dis- count of one -1 bird on the ordinary retail price, 'G'P.6'B'F"-•Er.I J".1 F PriN..'n"p' liP.'N' TRRNSFORMRTION SKiRT ti Verde'ee.e...aesorWi?cYt Gardaor— And, apropos of t as question of a prnc tleal gown. 1 111.00 just bad thio most llmeirll of skirt shown rue, 011yr timer Corneae in ler Falls letter -a 'amity 1 have no yet remarked-- , haft n• tool to 1110 11 Milan W110, when trarrlltng, wants to have as little luggage es possible, or the woman 1110 cannot easily afford an outing as well as a walking postume, or even the wealthy woman who pre- fers net to be forced to change her skirt upon her arrival at hor oountry, club 11 she wishes So indulge in a PIMP of teneA or golf. The skirt in gnestlon 1s called by the pleasing name of "transformation skirt," it appears like nn ordinary, weltout, flowing skirt, trimmed around the bottom with two ruffles. The skirt, however, Is made in two distinct parts. The upper part is 11 smartly short, plain skirt, finishing with s plain, moderately wide Item, trim- med with five or seven rows of stitch- ing. l'nder this hem a row of what the French call "pression button- holes" 1s attached, These are simply a series of button -holes, such as ono sees on gloves and the hacks of skirts, which fasten with mechanioai D1steDings. 1 ` The under port of the skirt, or the • second part of it, consists of the two ruffles, mounted on the foundation material. At the top of the ruffles 1s as welt stitched heading along which rune a row of mechanical "pression buttons," which correspond with the "button -hours" already deocribed. Whey madam scants to lengthen and give the necessary dressy appearance to her skirt Rbc simply slips the ruffle heading under the lam at the bot- tom of the skirt. presses the buttons into the button -Melt's, and tile trana- (ormatton 1R complete. When she de- sires a short skirl the ruffle ie quick- ly slipped of( and the trick is done. THE DREAD OF AN OPERATION Stares Many Pile Sufferers in the Face—The Safest and Surest Cure is Dr. Chase's Ointment. • Possibly you are n sufferer from piles, and have been disheartened and discouraged because your pity- ' simian has toltt you that nothing short of an operation trill cure you. Toll dread the thought of a surgical oreratloa, for, beddrs the expanbe and strain on the nervoussys- tem. there is the risk of lite itself. It is only it fear months duce a member of the Ontario Legislature lost Ms life as the exult of an operation for piles. The risk of a1 operation Is too great, and besides it Is un- - necessary. Dr. Chase's Ointment Inas frequently cored piles litter surgical o;'r xattons have tailed. It is every da11 caring cases which physicians have staled to be tncurnble by any treatment short of an operation. If you coapt read a f(w of the letters wo reecho from persons who have been cured of Atlee by using Dr. Chase's Ointment you would soon be courtnoed of its wonderful control oyer thle frightfully common disease, Rev. 13 A. Parrot'. Methodist minister, (.bosee0n, Prince Edward County, Ont., states: "I was trou- bled with itching and bleeding piles for yearn, and 411(1 ultimately attained to a very violent form. Large lumps of abscesses formed, so that 11 was with great difficulty land (onelderahlr pain that I was able to stool. At this severe crisis 1 purchased it box of Dr. Chase's Ointment, but I had little, or no faith 1n It, as 1 had tried various remedies before and to no purpose. "No, imagine flow great and joyous was my surprise to find that just the one box cured Inc. SO 'Oa'Oa-the lumps disappeared and at theexternal swrllinq. I feel (Ike a different man today, and have nob or the leant doubt that 1)r. Chase's Ointment saved m0 from a very dangerous and painful operation, and man/ ears of sutfertug. It is with the greatest pleasure and with a thankful heart that I give this testlmon- I, kt:awing Haat Dr. Chase's Ointment has done NO much for me. Toa are at perfect liberty to us+ this testimonial as you see fit for thebenefit of others similarly afflicted.' Dr. Chase's ointment, 00e a box. At all dealers. or Eduanson, Bates & Co, Toronto.