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The Exeter Advocate, 1898-10-14, Page 3GOOD HANDED DOWN. 'there are Men and women here, the cons and daughters a the Christian ohitroh, Who are sol t as a result of the consecra- tion of great-great-graedluotherte Why, who clo you think the Lord is? You talk aft though his memory wae weak. He can as easily remenaber a prayer offered five centuries ago as a prayer offered live Dr. Talmage Preaches a Sermon on Influence minutes ago. This explains what we ofteu See—some men or woman dieting- uished for benevolence when the father of Heredity. and mother were distinguiehed for peat). . riouthese, or you SOO gem° yoong man or woman with a bat fathez an hard mother aonie mit gloriously ter Christ Grandmothers a Mighty Power for Good or Evil--Wonlan's Quail- and 10 'e chureis sob and shout and sieg under their exhortatione. We stand ties Transmitted to Her Children --A mother's in cornere ot the vestret and WhIsPor over the matter and say, "How Is this, such Great Responsibi ity. great piety in SODS a4 deuglaters of such parental worldliness and sia?" 1 Will Wasbingtoa, iaot. 9,—The atiginentae 'width most they enjoy, the Olcl Testa- explain it to you it you WM 10t013,140 the then a PlrorktAl influence as the cerauries 1 meat or the New, and often stop and old family Bible coetainIng the full go by Dr, Talmage bore sets forth while dwell teaefully ever the family record record., L0t Nemo sepeuagenarian look otoontsitig aaent °tie of the growl,bait way between. te'e bail them ter) dant with Ine clear upon the page cif births enethers of Bible times. The text 1st II. 1 whether he the bouse of God or at the and marriages and tell me who that wo- Timothy. 5. ,adhe noteigned, faitie that aornestead. Blessed is tbat lioneelteld that xuau Was with the old fashioned items of it in thee, which dwelt dret 14 thy grand. has In it a grandmother Lois, Wbere she enminse or Betsy or Meliitabel, Mother Lois." s angels are hovering round and God is there she is, the ola grandmotaer, or In this aasteral letter whieb Paul, the in the room. May bar last days lee U9 great-grendmother, who had enough rea old minister, is writing to Timothy, tbe those lovely auteinnal days that We eall ligion to eaturete a couture'. youne minister, the family record is Indian summer. lentesmittee rolVer brOl1;40 PAU1 practicallY eayet Is it non time that you and I do two "Timoehy, what a goo tt grandmother rim bad! Yon ought to be better than neost folke, because not only was your mother good, but your grendrnether Vas good also. Two preceding generatlens of piety ought to gate Yea a mighty Push in 1h8 rigbt directioin" The taut was ;het Trim, othy needed o *'agement a Wee la peer health, Ineving a weak otomeehe and wee 4 4700104Q, and Pent pretiorthed fer1 er leen. are not inirpriaed at the poetry and pathos him a tout% "a little wino tor thy Ot0111‘. Here we have an untried, undlecussed and pulpit power ot tlm grandson, when wane sake, much evlue, but- a lie- 4E14 Ullegtplered enbject. You often hear yen reed of the rattle and devotion of Ids tie wine, and only as a medteine. And if ahowe your influence upon your tivrn wonderful ancestrese. When you reed Me the wine then had WPM as ob a4 tar en 1 ere not Milting about tbat, teeter, in Which the poured eat her Wild with. Inwood and st'rrehrtille as our 1 Wbat about your tuntience upon tbe widowed trout in langinge for a Otl'S Modern WInee he would not haVe pre* twentieth centery, upon the thirtleth vation, yen will not wonder that Inwood- eeribed auy. But Tiroetbn not strong eenturY, upon 00 fortieth century, upon hag generetlotio have been blessed; phyoically, Is encouraged spiritoelly by the year :1,000, upon the year 4,000, if the. "New York, NAY 00. 1791. the recital a grendueotherly excellence, world lute so long. Tile werld steed eThie de, ree cele. see tett not in at - P al bintina te him, as hint this tes 4,0M1yeera before Chriee cenne It Is not: tor wriaaida,„ yu anein yett, that god Sometimes gathera up as in a resereoir, away back of the active generations of to -day, a godly itailuenee awl then, In reponse to prayer, lets down the power Upon thildrea and grand* children and greangraudebild.ren. Tim World, ie woefully in want of a table of atratietica in regard to what is the pro. Wen:duos aud Inimensity otinfluenee a 5.goo, And upon evert' ute Of them Yo% the widewei Awa, itho emy see ct his one good Woman in the ohureit and the wither of to tray. will have an Jana- world. We have aecounts ot bete 31111th mice tie geed or evil, Arid if in four, k 11 th val. has been wrought by a wolnau Aimee your :10;1,am-tants ehell leartle I repeat iny petition, Sava hie Maul lived nearly a hundred ,yerarit age, Mid of with their nallios, a serail et bun- ante. ai,e atm salvation trettA tiu, It 11 bow many orinitnals her deevendatets dreds of thouetanae, -area acme magai. from net 0; den8er of the seae that oitcsat" furnished for the penieentiary and ehe • ; on P ° rue; It Is pot the herdsbipe be must un - gallows, and bow many hundreds or to ealeulate the number at the emrs ot dergo; it Is not the dread or never seeing tlionsands dollars they cast our coma- beeven and the sands of the stashore, I him more In this world; It is because ptreyr t,uast"wIrtillfraalagritInintl:n pti rIlorptrTy t,'"Itelia.* antsstepiyaoTru floral inldb baa ui tirewf omurant byetLi°41411- pCar10114):11:0 ideighcilzva. /tcilteent:tindliVentu4 t°hee nTwe bUrglarized and destroyed, but will not year of she world'a possible continuance? birth nor its fruit, bile every symptom some one come out with brain compre- Do no; let the grentimothers any longer' og copth,14. totan, the world and seit, amnia° enougb and heart warm enough think that they aro retired and sit clear will. Th1. Ole is what distroases me, and pen keen enough to give us the facts back out of sight from the fooling' anti in connection with this his being 3n regard to Smile good Well= et a that they bay° no relation to It. The. hundred years ago and let us know how many Christen men and women and 're- formers and useful people have been found among her descendants, end how matey asylums and colleges and eburehee they built, and how many m11110113 of dollers they coutributed for humanitar- Ian and Chrletian purposes? Good Weanen's Influence. There the is, the dear ola soul, Grand - the wrinkled, faces aud -steeped ahoulders cemetery there the resting place et et the pose and call down from their Geerge W. Bethune, once a Miniliter of beevenly throues the gedlY grdadmotbors) Brooklya Heights, hie name peYer seoken to give them our thanles, and then to among intelligent Americana without persuade the =ahem of to -day that they 4uggesting two, thinottelequenoa an are Wring for all thee, and dtia again" evangelism, In the seine ellnat sleeps hie the sides 016Tel7 cTlkink) in Willch a n11114 grlrldlnether, Isabelle Cirebant, wile wee is reeked beet the two eternitiee? the chief mepiration bit; ininietry, ree Unreeennahle to suppose that U- latinabed an the orean—Lied's ocean, The stand 4.00 yeere after his arrival. FOUr non; sayea him front abipwrecie, brought thew:end years the world tawung ad In him to ray hone and Allowed me once sin, tail° revel lt 1447 he' swilni-Ung harat more to indelge MY a:fiscal:a:1S over him, into rialtreotiatiess. ordinary rate Ile has been vrith roe but 4 SbOrt tin" ef rellitIplieation of tbe wed l's popula- ,„ and ill bay° I improved it3 he is gone tion in a r outur your dtecendallta wut from my seght, and my heart burets with be over ;late and tiv taco "ent‘t"" "" tumultuous grief. Lord, have mem oa The good women whose tombstones were planted in the eighteenth century are more alive for good in the nineteenth ae century than they were Wore, aa the If good woman ot this nineteenth eentury will be more alive for good in the tavola* eth century thau now. Mark you, I have no Idea that the grandmothers wore any better than their granddaughters, You catmot get very old people to talk much about how things were when they were bees and girls. They bare a reticence and • aon-eounnittolism which make me think they fool themselves to be the cus- todians of the reputation itf their early. enterades. While our dear old folks are rehoareing the follies of the pcosent, if w e put them on the witoess stand and erase -examine them As to how things were 70 years ago the sitcom becomes oppressive. The relebrated Frenchman, Tolney, visited this country in 1700, and he says of woman's diet in those times, "If a premium -was offered for a regimen not destructive to health, mine could be de- vised snore efnoacious for those ends then that In use among these people." That eellpses our lobster salad 1st midnight. Everybody talks about the dissipation of 3noiern society and how womanly health goes down under it, but it was worse 100 years ago, for the oluiplain of a Frenott regiment in our Revolutionary war wrote Lu 178;3 in bis "Book ot American Wo- men," saying: "They are tall and well proportioned; their features are generally regular; their complexions are generally fair and without color. At 23 years of age the Women have no longer the fresh- ness of youth. At 80 or 40 they are de- crepit." In 1812 a foreign consul wrote a book entitled "A Sketch of the teited States at the Commencement of the Pres- ent Century," and he says of the women of those times, "At the age of 80 all their charms have disappeared." One glance at the portraits of the women 100 years ago, anti their style of dress makes us wonder la,a they ever got their breath. All this makes me think that the express rail train is no more an improvement on the old canal boat or the telegraph no . more an improvement on the old time saddlebags than the women of our day are an improvement on the women of the last century. A Glorious Race. But still, notwithstanding that those times were so much worse than ours, there was a glorious race of godly women 70 and 100 years ago who hold the world back from sin and lifted it toward vir- tue, and without their °malted and sane - titled influence before this the last good influence would have perished from the earth. Indeed all °tor this land there are seated to-day—not so much in churches, for many of them are too Nagle to come —a great many aged grandmothers. They sometimes feel that the world has gone motivate of the hest century aro %cedar in the person at their descendants, in the senate, the parliament% the palettes, the 'pulpits, the banking homes, the profes- sional clualre the prisona, the almshouses, the company of inidnigbt brigands, the *ellen, ',he ditehes or tble century. You have been thinking about the importance shut out from artlinalaceo at a dietetics from Cheistiana ibut up with those who forget God, profane his ammo and break his Sabbaths, Men who often ltve and die like beads, yet are accountable or. - tures, who must answer for every mo - 01 time and every word, thought and action. 011, Lord, many wonders bust thou shown nur thy ways of deal - of having the right Influence neon One Ing with me and dine have not been turacry. You have been ehinkIng of the importune() of getting thee° two little feet on the eight path. You }Ave been think- ing of your child'a destiny for the maxi 80 years if it should pass on to be an octogenarian. That is well, but nay sub- jeet sweept a thousand years, a million years, a quadrlilion of years. I cannot stop at one eradle. I am looking at the cradles that reach all around the world and across all time. I AM not talking ot Mother Eunice. I am talking of Grande mother Lois. The only way yea can tell the force of a current is by seiing up atrearn or the forte of an wawa wave by running the ship against it. Running along With it, We cannot approolato the force. In estimating nuaternal Influence we generally run along with it dawn the stream of time, and eo we don't under- stand the full force. Let us come up to it from the eternity side, after It has been working on for centime, mid see all tbe good it has done and all the evil it has accomplished multiplied in mag- nilicent or appalling compound interest. If a mother tell a child if he is uot good some bugaboo will come and catch him, the fear exalted may make the child a coward, and the fact that he finds that there is no bugaboo may make hina liar, and the echo of that halse alarna may be beard after lb generations have been born and have expired. If a mother promises a obild a reward for good be- havior and %tem the good behavior fot- gets to give the reward, the cheat may crop out in some faithlessness half a thousand years farther on. If a mother cultivate a child's vanity and eulogize his curls and extol the night black or sky blue or nut brown of the child's eyes and call out in bis presence the admiration of spectators, pride and arrogance may be proldnged after half a dozen family records have been obliterated. If a mo- ther express doubt about some statement of the Holy Bible in a child's presence, long after the gates of this historical era have closed and the gates of another era have opened the result may be seer, in a obampion blasphemer. But, on the other hand, if a mother walking witb a child see a suffering one by the wayside and says, "My child, give that 10 oent piece to that lame boy," the result may be seen on the other side of the following century,in some George Muller building a whole village of orphanages. If a mo- ther sit almost eveiy evening by the trundle bed of a child and teach it les- sons of a Saviour's love and a Saviour's example, ot the importanoe of truth and the horror of a lie and the virtues of industry and kindness and sympathy and self sacrifice, long after the mother has gone and the child has gone and the let- tering on both the tombstenes shall have been wasbed out by the storms of in- numerable winters there may be stand- ing as a result of those trundle bed les- sons flaming evangels, world moving re- formers, seraphic Summertields, vveeping past them, and they have an idea that they are of little account. heir head Paysons, thundering Whitefields, emanci- T sometimes gets aching from the racket of pating Washingtons. the grandchildren downstal, or in tile God Never rergets. next roorn. They steady themselves by Good or bad influence may skip one the banisters as they go up and down. generation or two generations, but it When they get a cold, it hangs on them will be sure to land in the third or fourth longer than it used to. They cannot generation, just as the Ten Command. bear to have the grandchildren punished, ments, speaking of the visitation of God on families, says nothing about tho see - even when they deserVe it, and have so relaxed their ideas of fainil.v discipline ond generation, but entirely skips the that they would spoil all the youngsters second and speaks of the third and fourth of the household by too great leniency. generation --"visiting the iniquities of the fathers upon the third and fourth These old folks are the resort when calm. generation of them that hate me." Par - great troubles come,. and there is a entai influence, right and wrong, may ing and soothing poaer in the touch of an aged hand that is almost supernatural. jump over a generation, hut it will come They feel they are almost through with down further r'n ee eure he Ye° alt thm the journey of life and read the old book and 1 stand_ here.Timothy's ininistrY following. Do not dwell so much ou More then tbey used to, bartily knowing Was proieoted by his grandmother, Lois. your hardthips that you miss your_ohance nOnlm011 onee; add this wonder to the rest. Call, convert, regenerate awl Web. lish a sailor In the fulth, Lord, all thing' are possible with thee. Glorify thy San and extend his kingdom by sea and laud. Telco the prey from the strong. I roll him over upon thee. Many friends try to comfort me; miserable comforters are they all. Thou art the Qoa of console - tion. Only confirm to me thy precious word, on which thou causedst me to hope in the day when thou midst to me, 'Leave thy fatherless children, 1 will pre- serve them alive.' Only let this life be a spiritual life, and I put a blank in thy hand !AS 10 all temporal thinga. "I wait for thy salvation. Amen." With sub a grandmother, would you mot bave a right to expect a George W. Bethunet .And all the thousands convert- ed through bis ministry may date the saving power back to Isabella Graham. God fill the earth and the heavenn with suah gramlinothers! We must some day go up and thank those dear old souls. Surely God will let as go up and tell them of the results ot their Influence. Among our first questions in heaven will be, "Where is grand.nother?" They will Point her out, for we would hardly know her, even if we had seen her on earth, so bent over with years once and there so straight, so dim of eye through the blinding ot earthly tears and now her eye as clear as heaven, so full of aches and penal once and now so agile with celes- tial health, the wrinkles blooming into carnation roses and her step like the roo on the mountains. Yes, I must see her, iny grandmother on my father's side, Palmy McCoy, descendant of the Scotch. When I firs; spoke to an audience in Glasgow, Scotland, and felt somewhat diffident, being a stranger, I began by telling them my grandmother was a Sootoliwoman, and then there went up e shout of welcome which made me feel am easy as I do here. I must see her. Maize Religion an Heirloom. You must see those women of the early paet of the nineteenth century and those of the eighteenthteentury, the an- swer of whose prayers is in your welfare to -day. God bless all the aged womep up and down the land and iu all lands! What a happy thing for Pomponius Ath- ens to say when making the funeral ad- dress of his mother, "Though I have re- sided 'faith her 67 years, I was never once reconciled to her, because there never once happened the least discord between us, and consequently there was no need of oconciliation." Make it as easy for the old folks as you can. When they are sick, get for them the best doctors. Give them your arra wben the streets are slippery. Stay with thein'all the time you can. Go home and aee the folks. Find the place for them in the hymn book. 'Never be ashamed if they prefer styles of apparel which are a little antiquated. Never say anything that im• plies that they are in the way. Make the road for the last mile as smooth as YOU can. Oh, my, how you will miss her when she is gonel How much would I give to see my mother! I have so many things I would like to tell ber, things that have happened in the 80 years since she went away. Morning, noon and night let us thank God for the good influences that have come down from good mothers all the way back. Timothy, don't forget your mother Eunice and doe't forget your grandmother Lois, And hand down to others this patrimony of blessing. Pass along the coronets'. Make religion an heirloom from generation to generation. Mothers, consecrate yourselves to God, and yoti will help conseorate all the ages 4A0tew&:.•"„z of wielding an influence tbat shall look down upon you frota the towers of an entil t future, 1 enow Martin Luther was right when he consolea his wife 01707 the death ot their daughter by saying: "Don't tale on so, wife. Remember that this iS a bard world for girls." Yen 1 go further and say it Is a hard world for women. Aye, I go further and say it is a hard world for men. But for all wo. men and men who eriest their bodies and souls in the hand of Christ the ehining gates will soon swing open, Don't yen see the sickly pallor on the sky? That, is the pallor Oh the cold theek of the dying night, Don't yon see the brighteutng 01 the cloeds? 'Jame is the Aush on the warm forehead of the nierniug. Obeer up! You are coming within eight of the Celestial City. Rect. a cart Slay En14,rtaiu "As you gala frioncle," sari Ruth Athmore in an article in the Ladiee" Home Joernal on "The Busineee Evenings," "the law of hospitality will govera first one and then another, aud having been found pleasant you will be asked to viele at the henna of eaoh. Per- haps One of these gale may have a reel borne, where, after ber day's work, she Is met by a kindly mother and greeted by tee ohihlren, anti though they live in N,irbaz to your country -bred. epos ROMS 4 Sinall imams= to the city girl 11 counts as a largo one whiola is made by willing bands and loving hearts into a home - Tao other girl, like you, live* hz the hall rO0121 Of a bearding -house, and yet, ore yen:. arrleal, Tett find two Ca three other pleasant glrle there, and everybody is ia tbe micist et a game. The bed le evident- ly a clewed one, for 0000 IS in eight, while en a fancy table to a brae; kettle whieh later Mugs merrily as tt belle the water for a poe of chotalete, 1 dieh of little cakes and *nue pretty Ilttle cups and SIMMS. You ell bare a jolly ovenieg. The next day, talking 44 oVer 'With Tear boetets of the pight before, YOU tlrld eat hew a few cents aeved from this and e Tow eeets eand from that has paid for the pretty belongings; how little the chocolate costs, end how the pretty mon and eoucere have been picked no as bar- gains A good example being contagious, you begin to think hew you will arrange to entertale; then you remember Sheri tiorne unused., old-feshionea mine thal yan aro sure would be sent to you from home, that will net only attreoe by theft peettineee but will have 4 +AMU oharee to you, at least, because et then ssociation." A tiitrearoue Vene1ic:0 Jena, One of the great practical jokers of Liu British navy was one Jack Mahon,. Eft WAS °dicer of the vetch in the day, whet it was customary tor the guard to present arms to the officer commauding the V05501 whenever he left or boarded thl ettip. One day Capt. Burdett remarked, OS thev were going through this ems many before be 'tweet ashore: "Mr. Pia thorn. I am tired of thie guard; don't call it again when I come book." Lia there ala not, but be managed to surprist the eaptalu quite as thoroughly as if ht lied. \Thou that dignitery came over tht side on his return, he founu twenty 01 the after -guard ciown ou choir hands and kneeee With swabs serving them fee flumes and tails, with the nalezentoponet on their bucks with outiassee drawn Hathorn Maisel! was :nitride a quarter master. Tim captain was distinehl: ate delighted with the spanned°, wheroupox leathern explained Oust be supposed that atter the old holden had proved so tire some, a reception by cavalry might provt welcome. Hathern wits dismissed troll the service for this bit ot pleasantry.— Argonaut. Photography Under Water. .A. wonderful invention has recentat been devised by which photogranhs maj be taken under water. The light tor tbit purpose is furnished by an 'amendment lamp placed in a steel case in the dime bead -piece, the luminous rays being pro jeoted by a reflootor placed in the rear o the stool case, and the electricity providet by ratans of a small dynamo carried it the boat above. Tee photograpina appar atus Itself consists of a common minion placed within an India rubber en-velope the front of which Is glass, and tht machine is regulated and pictures take! by pressing buttons tbrough the India rubber covering. The result is snob as tt be pronounced an achievensent, for it hat been doruonstrated that pictures oan bi taken under water of objects at a dis. tame of ten or twelve feet as easily at they oan be obtained above in the full light of day,—London Mail, Docked TAlls on Horses. The following from Halifax may ba an object lesson to dealers in horses and admirers of docked tails. An officei recently arrived wanted a charger, and O citizen undertook to provide one, RO produced a very fine mare at a cost o1 $200, with a certificate as to soundness. On being taken to the officer the dealer was astonished by bis saying it will not suit. "Why not?' be asked. "It is a splendid animal." "Yes," said the officer, "but its tall is docked, and the Queen's regule,ians prevent us from using it. Hes Majesty's orders are that horse e with dooked tails are not to be used in the service." The result was, aq Haligonlans are not admirers of dooked tails, the mare was eventually sold for $60,-a loss to the dealer of $140. A guick Witted Baptist. One of the candidates for the State Senate down in Jefferson County, Ala, was a prominent Baptist, and he expect- ed his fellow churchmen to help push him along. The story goes that be was campaigning on a country beat and had' the good fortune to fall in with a whole congregation of Baptists: Whether a prayer meeting had just been held or what the ocoasion of the gathering was is not known. .About this time a light shower °ante up, and the candidate at once raised a large umbrella which he was carrying. "You aro not afraid of this little shower, are you, Brother -----?" re. marked one good Beptist, standing near. "Not at all," responded the quick witted candidate, "but you know I am opposed to all forms of 'sprinkling' " He °tarried that beat solidly. An Easy One. Another problem has been handed in for matheniatioians to struggle with. No answers wanted at this ofdoe. We have problems of our own. Tell the answer to the policeraan. "A inan owed $1 and had but 78 cents. He went to the pawnshop and pawned the 75 cents for 50 cents. He niet a friend and sold him the pawn ticket calling for 75 cents for 50 cents. Ile thus bad two fifty -cent pieces—$1, in fact—with whieh he paid his debt. Was anybody out and how much?" KEEPING F000 SWEET. Placa * Shallow Dish, ot rime Charcoai A CANADIAN MEDICINE ia the lce chest. Charcoal is of great value in keepIng ice chests'storerocans and food sweet, says Good Housek,eeping; Place a shallow dish of fine eharcoal in the ice chest. II poultry or birdare to be hung irt a cool place for a few days remove the internal organs, and partially fill the body with charcoal. Now, wrap the birals in paper and hang up.11 tbe oueside of the poultry Is rubbed wieh blaOlt pepper It vvill be still furthee protected from flies, Small birds, kidneys, sweetbreads, ete,, ratty be wrapped in paradne paper, and then buried in a bed of obercoaL For keeptiag large plecee of meat and piaorugletrbay rbreerlaeirs haesgisnibeaP144i° d. heallf61111efiavclweu ite chercoal. Put meat hooks in a strip ot Joist told place, It across the top of the barrel, Have a netting spread over this. Tale barrel may be kept in a, cool plaee, and pleeee of meat hong on the books. The citareoal will keep the atmosphere dry and sweet, and the netting will be taken with the Aret semptottes of rhea - a proteetion against insects, Should there matheratacaver exposure, line strea,.ne be danger *rein rate or mice, use wire 1 driyes and the general hand- life of IleFtlrile3sgl; fisk may be rubbed with, salt, lodgemege ee the excruciating diteese, the lambert:eve, paved the way for the wrapped' In payee, and burled in a bed The symptoms 4rst rePalfeet Wet" 13btoxelattrit°d"bal' rr0e1 s c4itlenelleuld *biles celellaalne°agedi hPanTates thrf4114Gradetalley leetcas*ditt445420na grew least once a =tenth. It can be used for worse., .e.t intervals there would be lighting fires or for boiling meats or fish. an ehetemeat or the malady, hut tug 114pplaloyweetveAari;c04, isi tbecnolti ;o get eacItAleYepuarinilewlvar soveZemeilleaxelal 4 de4 teginpeduttionhalpitit,inatuodthaeneotwevuleavelietitt:; th anadt t*oiecwporwkiesivamitimponr5s,thoxe. qtrtoesetioAkui burn red Itet. At this stage open all the fuettrl man had se erten read of um, windows and le$ the pas Pats ea, thee „eedertei efficacy. or Dr, wtmetee close the draughts of the stove. remove -"- the elvers, and leave the roam. When liee Pt4tnelttPiiaerm.to Ree wtld3hwts ht charcoal becomes field it will be ready ba.t,metet ntr that "jut waes thnet hopeful 491i. r use again, reeeiving much benefit, au he had tried ninny inerlieines without any good result lie began the use 01 the and by the fine a maple of Imam 01TO UENI, Ile :OMNI they were helping nillt le simply being delivered, eaye a -ma- lama eneolireged he cont:nued the use ot the medieine. and gradnally writer in Cuba. A Worth tet cattle and the pains and soreness left hinn he was tbeir driver stop before a honee, and the lintelfrtleiriong.e4orlistlepspiyout wllb . 11 Is sa00071.,,,trtbtrt f,'N1'',1•7'ntoorttslroPp.t7te11.114171'n. 11;314 t ff 3tSokT4 Rans- eaW$ are Wing milked, from door tet irge" Dr. Williems" Pinit Pius for less dear, by the dairymen, for tills lathe way than two menebs. Mr. Thine Pays he the gelato cuttau housewives have taker, fatter, hirreeadf in the best of Sillra for their teblee laeteel eupplr 1:1!:alvsirr,,,,7t1tlivalfrtngogfriesiiimailoarrtlisiusfreerermreat net to experineeet with other medleirtes, tut at onea beein the use of jr. Wit - Hems' reek Mlle Rheumatism. seletlen, -neuralgia, partial pantlysis, !ammeter ataxia. nervons ileadaehe. nervous prostration wed di:wales depending upon humors in the bleed, such as errant& sthronic erysipelfia, et',. all insane:ear, before a fair treatment with Itr. into pualrellautg.d rasallelorwglen"inapIPIINeionnits.h7 IZSio°Twd by all deaters and pnSt PUld at 50c. a box or sax boxee for a2.50 by addreee- Binrgoel?vrile”. rtintW. PcehrsuA4Coelal to teke some substitute. Which Has Made a Wonderful Reputation Throughout the World. zvera 4e ore reinishea ls zevestigated by It notPOusibleliewsPaper,-The Advertiser Has Zeolced Into and Glees Below tIse Vartieetars of One of These Ceire.s. From. The Advertiser, aartland. The Advertiser hes come aerose Boa another bastance of ale remarkable earativo powers of the famous Calla - diem remedy. Dr. Wiiiitone' Intik Pills for Pale People. leir. WU1iaxn Tedlie 01 Lower Brighton, • a peondemat lum- berw*tu and tarrner, came very near being a cripple from rheumatism, the dread disease so prevalent along the St- John River, Atr- Tedlie is now 66 years of age, Five years ago he was A. Cuban eiziiicwais. "Row malty cows there are about eetai" somebody =claims, and 11 o 15 eahnly informed that the engrain width is entirely fresh and absolutely pure, Otherwise the guile-131ring vendor might dilute the milk before delivering It to his customers, and craftily stir into the eetieer fluid the juice of the eweet rotate to color it up to a duly rich and creemy cast. Even with the cows milked before the door one mime continue to watch the milkman, for I have °Yen heard at their having a rubber bag et water concealed under their loose :real; and connoted wIth a rubber tube run. nhag dawn the inside of the ewe, Jut tip being concealed in the hollow of the milking baud. Only a gentle pressure upon the bag of water within ie needed to thus cause both milk and water to flow into the cup ue the same time. The milk vendors of Italy and India have also learned their trade to perfeetion, for they practice this identical trick. Vueerate iu Arabia. One of the strangest anti most afro:toting sights in an Arab town la that of the funerals, which may be met at any street corner. The body le merely wrapped in a umt of esparto grass and carried either on a bier or on men's shoulders. The mourners lounge along, some in front and some behind, crooning verses of the le'oran in melancholy tones, wbioh haunt one for days afterward. This wailing, however, is nothing to that whicaa goes on In Mitt bons° of the deceased, When I was staying in the country near Tunis 1 beard it kept up during a whole night In a neighboring village, and Teen conceive nothing more desperately depressing than these strains of lamentation wafted througli the darkness by the breeze. My dog stood it even less well than I did, and he felt uonstrained to join in the doleful °horns until I was half tempted to put a bullet tbrough his head. Per. haps the strangest of all the funerals I saw was at Bizerte It eves that of a baby, whith was being Med to its grave In an esparto haeltet. —The Sketch. A Tiger's Sponge Bath. A Cossaok, ignorant of the French language, and equally Ignorant at fear, was recently hired at Moscow by the lion tamer Pezon to clean the owe of als wild beasts. Their understanding, or misunderstanding, was arranged by means of gestures and dumb show, and Penal 'thought that the man thoroughly understood wbat he had to do. Tbe next morning the Tartar began bis new duties by entering with bucket, sponge and broona, not the cage of a tame beast, as his master had done, but of a splendid Untamed tiger as if he had been a horse or a dog; while the tiger, apparently de- lighted by the application of cold water, rolled over OD its back, attached out its paws, and, purring, offered every part of his body to the Cossack, who washed it as complacently as a mother bathes her intent. Then be left the cage, and would have repeated the hazardous experiment upon another savage beast from the des- ert had not Pezon drawn hira off with diffioulty. The Home NowSPaPor• "Your paper tells you when to go to churob, to county court and probate court," says an eminent divine, "and when to send your children to school. It tele you who is dead, who is married, who is sick, who is born and znany other things you would like to know. It calls attention to public enterprise and advocates the best of schools, of law and order in town. It records the marriage of your dougix- ter, the death of your son and the illness of your wife, free of charge. It sets teeth the advantages and attractions of your town, invites immigration, and is the first to welcome newcomers. Yet, in spite of all these benefits, some people say the home paper is not balf as good as the oity paper that has no interest in their business or success. The home paper, like the home church, is too often neglected by these who are benefited by it." The Typographical Error. A minister, who has sometimes ex- pressed his amazement that the mistakes in proofreading should escape the eye of the editore of the Congregationalist, pre- pared and had printed an elaborate pro- gramme for an Easter service. His feel- ings may be imagined when he read tbis line in the closing:hymn ".Tesus resigns, and heaven rejoices." The minister knows now how much mischief one letter is capable of when it gets into the wrong place.—The emigre. pationallt. Tin Bat Nen tr of Change-. A sporting looking roan undertook to have some fun with the train boy,. and offered to buy a one -gent newspae per if the boy could change a. $20 bill,. The boy was about to reject the offer, - when another passenger handed him a largo and heavy canvas bag. "Take - your change out of that," he whis- pered. The boy opened the bag and found it full of pennies. He counted out 1,219 coins to the facetiouts passen- ger, who was man enough to keep to his bargain, It was afterward learned that the accommodating passenger was coattected with a pennyeinsthe• slot company, and had been making a collecting tour. Dyspepsia or Indigestion is occasioned by the want of action in the biliary ducts, loss of vitality in the stomach tosecret the gastric juices, without which digestion cannot go on; also, being tee principai canee of Ileadathe. Parmelee's Vegetable l'ills taken before going to bed,for a while„ never fail to give relief and effect a cure. Me F. W. Ashdown, Ashdown, Ont., writes: Parmelee's Pills are taking the lead against ten other makes which Ihave in stock." Brum*. a "Hollerdar." A little boy spent a holiday in Vat conn,try at his grandmother's- Snell a good time as le had, miming and rac- ing and sheen g for all he was worthl At last nigh came, and tired and sleepy the little boy sought repose. "Oh, grandma!" be cried, as he kissed ber good night, "now I know wthart a hollerday really and truly Ls, for I've hollered all clay longl" DEAR SIRS.—I was for seven years a suf- ferer from Bronchial trouble, and would be so hoarse at times that I could scarcely speak above a whisper. I got no relief from anything till I tried your MIN- ARD'S HONEY BALSAM. Two bot- tles gave relief and six bottles made a complete cure. I would heartily recom- mend it to anyone suffering from throat or lung trouble. Fredericton. i. F. VANBUSKIZIK. Easily Arranged. "rev ye plaze, mein, there's no fresh eggs to be les.d the market this mares Mil'," announced the kitchen lady. "Then. Nerahr said the young 'wife "go out at once end get' some cannela eggs.'--Ohecago Tribune. Why will you allow a cough to lacerate your throat and lungs and run the risk of filling a consumptive's grave, when, by the timely use of Bicitle's Anti -Consump- tive Syrup the pain can be allayed and the danger avoided. This syrup is pleasant to the taste, and unsurpassed for relieving, healing and curing all affections of the tirroat and lungs, colds, coughs, bron- chitis, etc., etc. A Rlondik is Miser. Dawson Dave—Placer Pete Is a regu- lar old miser --one of the greedy,. grasrr ing kind. Junes, Sake—That's. right- They say ' that ,every evening the old skinflint geti out his pan et crackers and catmts 'ern mid gloats over 'mil like men do ovei timer money laa the stoey books. ginard's Liniment Cures LaGrippe,