Exeter Times, 1908-09-17, Page 7NO'1'L s AND COMMENTS
New ideas Nit i. subject that is
rt.ther old and tc, be found in a lit-
tle book entitled "How to Live on
Tttenty-four Hours a Day." The
author is an Englishman, Arnold
Ycnnett, who firmly believes that
the average man of affaires wastes
a great deal of his precious tinie-
THE FRUITS OF 1 Was A Total Wreck
WONDERS GI: TIIE BODY rpasses through the body within the
course of a year almost a ton ani
From Heart Failure a half of solid ttnd liquid platter.
The human body is a prodigious
Thoughtfulness of Others Wins and 'tilt: MOST IVO\f)I:RI'["I. MA- worker --the most compact and pow -
Makes Friends,
in such cases the action oI
CHINE IN •tilt, 11OIILU.
erful engine known. In a single
day the body of a healthy man does
AtULBURN 'S cork equal to lifting a weight of
`� thirty-six hundred tons one foot
"But one thing is needful ; and no plate to bestolen, but where HEART AND NERVE fi izi the ground. A man at hard
Mary hath chosen that better part hearts are rich through habits of lather, a lent;shoremam. for instance,
incorno and does not use his brains whichPILLS 1 helping toload }'
ae he should from the standpoint of he
`,emental health and the interest and Viten you read that story of the
zest of life. The average man, Mr. Good Master commleeding the sister
Fennett besets, adopts a wrong atti- \vlto seamed to slight her share in
the household duties especially
tude toward "the day'," which he p
associates with the business hours.
The sixteen heir rs that remain to
him are poorly arranged and badly
'1 he 11 earl Pumps Ower Si% 111111-
dre.t Thuusamd (:allow of
Blood a Year.
le I►ing o:ic a ship, will de, a
shall not be taken away from sold communion. The weary man ttt,rk of two hundred to two bun- Kiel Ilca,lacl,ea,,J nlieveul! the trot. r."—Luke x. 4�• lifts himself with renewed vigor as In the ancient w -lid there were lied anti fifty foot -tons a clay. Ro >tit«tnef.
in quieting tic- restoring its new. e '' a dent to a bilious state of rho *yateu,bitch as
be looks along the road to the home
B S(t (It wormers. 111 the modern it will be rtndc.rsteocl that the bodywi`''no i Nausea I►:ow•etuess, Diae•t•.a .Iter
+ rn:il beat and ins )anion sates. 1 a!o in the 8i.lo. bo. while their those—r
where lav@ welts, t. hero Cyes tells 1 n toile to the nt rt a world w'e have In reality only ells, in its geeeral activity doses thea work nriuhatlesucethe b81 e. &o, eh�eil thetas
Ir.e�k deep jnto his ; the t►uutan c` ntrc s, is b yond all question, marvel- land that is the humian body, writes of fourteen or fifteen men. This is
knows not the toil and drudgery of 10�• Dr. W. 1t. C. Latsuss in The New many tines what any man-made en -
lurk Tribune. Regarded from a gine can do.
tr
when you hear the usual interprc- the day's work for the thought of
tut•ion of the ineiount as showing the fellowship with those she loves.
that Martha was neglecting her Many are making Martha's mis-
seeul white Mary was caring for take, missing the riches of friend -
hers, you cannot but wonder that ships in the machinery and minis -
used. Sleep, of course, is a metes- the apparent laziness of the one tuitions of hospitality ; we are so
sity, and Mr. Bennett is not one should be praised over the kindly elisions to entertain aur friends
of those who would have us drasti- activity of the other. that we drive them away; we are
catty reduce our allowance for that But the Good Teacher was not see anxious to feed thein that we
form of rest.' But ho insists that,condemning the hospitality of Mar- starve their hearts. Whatever else
tha ; he was commending the larg- people want. this they want most
aside from sleep, the mental facul- el. deeper, hospitality of Mary. To of all and first of all,
ties want change, not rest, and that 1.:nt, as to all, there is but one thing
the man who thinks he is too tired that is absolutely necessary. That
to read or pursue some other inlet- 's not food and dainties ; it is not
furniture and luxuries—it is the
lectual occupation is only tired of 11Cn heart of friendship. There
,: particular activity and needs an- t. as greater refreshing in the
other kind of activity. friendship of the one who sat at his
feet than in all the food that the
Wales might bear. -
'1'u begin whit, ll'_r. Bennott Do we not all need often to hear
pleads for a modest experiment — I:is saying --tae who are careful and
the setting apart of an hour and a cumbered about many things, about
half every other evening for some ed and tables, about clothes and
•• useful and agreeable mental exer- houses—that we are likely to miss
that good and
JUST TO KNOW PEOPLE,
just to have the open way into our
real lives.
No clatter how much work a Iran
may do he will do nothing worthy
it he is too busy to make friends.
The value of our investment in the
world depends largely on the man-
lier in which our own self is drawn
Mr. Dsrius Carr, Geary, N.13., writes :
"It is with the greatest of pleasure I
write yo:1 a few lines to let ycu know
the great blessing your Milburn's Heart
and Nerve fills lta'•e been to me.' I was
a total wreck front heart failure and my
wife advised the to take your pills.
SICK
1 uI'81y mechanical t 1CwpUtllt, the headache, yet Carter's Litt° Liver Pills are
human rely bu MARVELS OFTHE HE.IRT. tequally',tnablein(,,,naul+atton.eur,nsat„11•r♦
tIy is a superbly efficient Vettiugt;iisaunoyinggrowplaiutwbi1. the rAldo
instrument. lnflltltely complex, ex- In order to :flake this more clew••, Mrrectall.lianr.ler+...ltbe«t�►mach,eteu,uiz.tlthe
quisitely (}enter, alld yet power- lei tis for a moment glance at tlie uh er ani1 ui tutLebute.Lt. $vez*11U Yvuly
alma
ful, enduring, and adaptable be -
‘N 'rk of tht- heart. The heart is HEAD
After using two boxes I was restored to yond belief. The human body is a merely A hollow muscle, consisting
perfect health. I ant now 62 years old tits: rocosm of the universe, a nlinia- et two pumps, one of which scald, arhoehAva,,ul,11,.►atii,stp:tccaesat.Iet,oasgno
and feel almost as well as I did at 'lU.., tole world In itself. 1t einbodie i-10 d to the lungs, the (►tiler punrf, seri-'err.eenil,is.li tter;t.note1;:I91tlt;buttortti-
w'ithin its composition, its str►1C- f+ �?,' I pato!rlrielrF,he ueaed ainMe o11tt1 ►sn.ithose
1'ricr 50 cents per box or 3 f.,r $l.2ai, p ltl blood through the tissues. Erle' ` essence. try theu2will One thesoHuh,pin. IAi¢
at all dealers, or Int►iled direct by The tt,re, its ol►eratiuus, ever3.thing slcle of the heart holds two ounces ti.lolusowanyovay:,lhatthey will not be wil-
ing
is to be found anyt:here in th@ of blood; and as the heart contracts
Lugaduwitt,outtliem. i)ucarteraltelckbsat>j
T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont, \torld outside of itself. about seventy-five time a ntinufe
I+'ur- instance, fire Lolly contains this means that one hundred an -i CHE
Bethlehem remain for us to imitate? fifty ounces, ur about one and one- Isthebaneot so man /Ives that ?lora Is a
Lesson 1'II.—Saul 'us esto to Kit} 't1: of the inspurttt•tt chemical ole- y ser
u.ents. Nearly three-quarters of its sixth gallons. blood' We make our gre:atbuaat. Our pills core ltwhile
Of d' others do not.
David.—What impression 011 the \t eight is ImaC1C up of oxygen, that through each sire of the heart every carters I.ituo Liver Pills are eery small and
people was made by David's vic-
tory
most important and universal de- II111111tC. 1'lliit is, about seventy gal -
Thu easy to take. Ono oe two side wake a dose.
retry e the giant.? How was Da -Th• y are strictly ve,eutlleand do not i or
anent. Then there are the other lens every hour, sixteen hundred purge, but by their gentle action Or:swatgmi who
via compared with Saul in the gases, nitrogen, hydrogen c1,1 ,rip and eighty fie?suns every dist•, six tosetl,atn.
greetings of the woolen '1 What. ef- and fluorin. In addition Sto these ar 1 a�T'E YiLICUI cc.. 2�'EW VIZ.
feet was wrought on the kin 1 What gases we find earlier), calcium, gal-
lons
phosphorus, sodium, sulphur, pot-
assium, magnesium, iron, copper,
lead, and silicon, lithium, mercury,
hundred and three thous
in a year, 1s pumped by each
r 1 the ventricles, making the total
work of the heart for the year one
million two hundred and six thou -
arseni▪ c and other solids. The first sand gallons. Think of the work
five pained, the gases, are suffici- done by the heart in ten years, 'n
ent in quantity to fill a tank of twenty, or in a life -time! And the
rit,out four thousand cubic feet ca-
pacity—say of a size twenty feet RUNS LIKE A MILL RACE.
long, ten feet high and twenty feet The stream of blood leaving the
eta and enriched through the touch g la
g sort of an evil spirit was it that
e,f other lives. No man can be possessed him 1 Did he try to check
great by himself ;thine; all great- it. or did he yield to it 1 What did
Hess is a gathering in to ourselves he try to do to David 1 How did
cine—rcadin•�of other beings. David act under these trying cir-
,, drawing, carpenter- I He who chooses to find friends curnstaucos? What great clot, is
ing, listening to good music. "The 1MP-h.1tISHABLL TREASURE has that better part. The snare of
„ ,� ef friends and human fellowship? ? our modern livingis that we are so taught us in the study of this les -
full use he says, of those seven } sea?
' y And when we would entertain our busy here and there doing many ►
and a half hours a week will quick- friends might we not well think less' to.,tgs, most of them perhaps good. Lesson VIII.—Frjendsh'p of Da -
friends g vier and Jonathan.—When did this
e n the whole life of the week and ('i the things we would set before things in themselves but bad when f,.iteildsilip begin ? What was the
increase the interest which you feel them than of the riches of person- they stand before the better and ground of it ? On what was it
in even the most banal OCCU .t- ality, our own selves, we can give higher things; we are so full of bu-
P' them ? based 1 What reasons had Jona-
mess
t it;ns,” In addition, Mr. Bennett, that we miss life's real bles-
I'he great need of every life, that sings.
with ether philosophers, urges half fes; which our hearts are hungry, is He who chooses friendship eboos-
an hour to an hour of "complete not food and drink, it is not even es that which he can never lose.
me -
solitude" every day. This he re-
gold—it
or thinking, is not silver or .es
man can take from you the me -
gold --it is just folks, people, to mory of your friend; none can rub
Bards as of priceless value, for it is know one another, to read open yon of the enriching of mind, the
ec nducive to reelection, to heart- hearts, to taste the fruits of friend -
searching, to stock taking, to deep ship. The one thing needful, that
and high thinking. He suggests a which gives happiness, peace, and
I'ro:,perhty, is just this openness of
railroad carriage as a good place heart, this t.hc►ttght.fulness of others
for reflection. It is_ good, curious- that wins and makes friends.
ly- enough, because everybody else The hospitable home is the nnc•
is sure to be buried in his paper
and to let you severely alone. Mr.
Bennett thinks a t,ewspaper should
be kept for odd minutes, but this
is simply a crotchet that has no
necessary connection with his ad-
mirable argument for care and
thought in disposing of one's daily
budget of time. The newspaper
furnishes not only useful and im-
portant information, but stimulates
' the very mental activity and the in-
terest in other questions and things
that the average man needs in Mr.
Bennett's view.
Each man must arrange his time
pledget for himself, with reference
at•, his affairs, social obligations,
family requirements. But we can-
not too often be reminded of the
)x,ssibilitiss of economy and pro-
fit in the use of our time, of the
pleasure, variety and inspiration
\which so many miss or throw away
tl.r.,r1gh slicer lack of attention to
tl►e matter.
*-----
LEAI I' -YEA R..
The somewhat elderly but still
handsome and well-preserved bach-
elor had long been an admirer of
the young lady, but never had dar-
ed to tell her so. At last, however,
11e� mustered courage to say:
"Miss Jessie, I wish I were twen-
ty years younger."
"Why so?" she asked.
"Because then I should be hold
enough, perhaps, to ask you to mar-
ry nnc•"
With a charming sin;lc she shook
her head.
"I should have tee tell you no,
111. Baxter," she said. "If you
%t e• re twenty years younger you
t.. n:et be--ft—a great deal too
r,•ltng for Inc.''
lie took the hint --and a little
bite later the y wing lady, too.
M ILBURN'S
SmaD Pel Sm�l Do:9, S�a11 Price,
WHEN TO IIINI) A WA'I'L'il.
At the monthly meeting of the
Bi itish \fetch and Clock Makers'
Guild the question whether it is
better to wind a rah at night or
in the morning was discussed.
Some members were of the opinion
wi▪ de. The solids to the bots,, such heart travels six hundred and that it was better to wind it at
an the carhop, lime (calcium), silo- twenty-one feet a minute, seven night, as in the morning the main -
than
sodium, potassium, magnesi_ miles an hour, one hundred and spring would be colder than it
u►n, are all in the ground on which sixty -Dight miles a day, sixty -ono would be after being carried about
tltun to refuse fellowship with Da- ,ort walk. thousand utiles a year. No man in the pocket all day. and steel is
vid 1 What olid David's success probably ohrll►Iy has ever travelled so far !nose brittle when cold than when
mean for Jonathan'? Mention some SO:IIF. OF TI: F. BODY'S CON- as his own blood has. For the it is warm. Mr. Wright, the vice -
or the qualities of Jonathan's TINTS, blood to make the entire double cir- president, said that during the day
friendship. What other notable The body, contains enough fat to cul▪ t from heart.to lungs, then back the watch was carried about and
historic friendships can you recall 1 make about one hundred cans..es tc the heart, thence to the tissues, subjected to all kinds of irregular
What was the use of a covenant ' !and £mall back to the heart again, ecrxljtiuns
enlarging of heart and sympathy enough soap to keep its own surface 3. ga-n, , and when it was fully
that came as you lay with him by in this case? 'What is the Golden clean fur a month, enough sugar to+, requires in file adult about twentTy- wound it was able to withstand
the camp tire under the far off dc, fur a family ureal, and error! n ` three seconds. In.the smaller hod,, these abnormal conditions • better
stars or sat bythe hearthside in Lesson IX.—David Spares Saul's salt to supply the family forge i , r the child the circuit is maderequired winding. He
than when it
the home. Friends become insep-
Life.—Where did the incidents of month. It contains only a little! mach more rapidly, and the heart thought it was a decided advantage
arable soul possessions. this lesson barmen? 11'here teas iron. just about enough to make a• beats correspondingly faster. For to wind it tip in the morning. This
So if you would show true hospi- that region ? What was Saul try -
.couple of Small nails but it has Instance, at birth the heart beats view of the case was agreed to by
where people, have, timF to know relit, to any, let yotnr first concern imp• to tics In what ee►ntl)tion did enuugli hydrogen gas to fill a sal at about one hundred and thirty the majority of the members of the
Yen. where there is always a place be that -his heart is fed. He who David find him'? What was the loon that would actually Lift the: sit; to the minute, and the blood
by the heartitsjde and an ear to tames to your home wants vo►t sI.ggestion of David's comrade? ow nor into the clouds. The. human ; stream makes its entire figure-eight
listen, where the love glows from more than he wants your bread atnd What did David do? How did Saul Lody also contain., enough carbon circuit in about twelve seconds. At
face to face. We soon forget what butter, your dainties and guest de- receive this treatment? What sort L,, make about three thousand lead.three years old the heart rate is
ne have had or eaten in the homes lieacies. There is ,•1 feast wherever of an example does David set in 11
pend s, or n the form of a hod of 'one hundred and eight, and the
we have visited ; but we never lose' friendship freely flows ; there is em- this incident 1 cc.al enough to keep a blazing fire blood stream stakes its journey in
trade who were present.
.--
HIS SENTIMENT.
•Yes, I acknowledge that your
father did me a favor once which
.. SU11 au a -h Jonaf fan Being for an hour or two. That, about fifteen seconds ; at five the placed me under a lasting obliga-
Slain in Battle.—Where did this pulse is eighty-eight, and the blood t:en to him. I a ,t }
} a• a matter of feet, is just what the
what our friends have given us of rt.iness and hunger, no platter how 1 - 1 S 1 d }
themselves, the board may he laden, wher:
The house that has the. great' hearts are eh snrl to one another.
treasure may be one where there is HENRY F. COPE.
tittle occur 1 �l hat forces were cannot, , therefore,
► body does with its carbon—uses it circuit requires eighteen seconds rc fuse to lend you the money. But
arrayed against Israel . l%'bat help for fuel. And the energy derived THE RIVER OF LIFE. come around to-tnorre)►v for it,
bad Saul Fought on the night be- from the carbon or coal does for won't you V'
_-- - �-• fore the battle 1 Who died with the human body dust what it does The blood is the great river of ''Certainly, if yilu haven't got it
THE S.
S. LESSON
QUESTIONS FOR INTERN! }rim en the field 1 What heroic for the steam engine --it keeps the life, a stupendous wterway, the
new."
�7• qualities did he show at the last 1 body warm and gives it energy v to nhust populous that can be ituagiri "Oh. i have it new, all right ;
ATI? SCHOLARS. Why did Jonathan have to perish move, g• ea, teeming with traffic. Laborers
Lessen I.—Israel Asks for a King' along with his father 1 What is thesc.ldirrs, carriers, countless missteps only i hate on such short notice to
A fullgrown man should weighpart t forever tv:t)h what is near and
--1'1'ho meted the people of Israel Golden Text 1 R c f millions of busy workers, crowd ever to tnc."
one hundred and fifty pounds, itmilliand
of this time ? What was his char- Lesson XL—David Meade King tit•}lick should be divided as follows: coming going, each with, his i T
atter as a reser? What did his sons Over Judah and Israel. — How special duty to attend to. In at cu-;
do when they became ud es? pian cars diel David muscle's and their appendages, Ins inch of blood there arc twelve
'
eighty-one Tl{(. J• SPORT.
K Y y' Pass in his g pounds; bones, twentti-
11 hose fault was this 1 How did tt'ilderness exile and advent ' thousand millions of one class of Steersman (during exc;tin7 yacht
What two pounds, fat, eighteen pounjls;
the people feel about it 1 11 Mit quulit'es did he develop dor- skin, seven pounds ; brain, three these tiny laborers. There are near- race)---Man41let cn'erb<,rlyd ! !hall we
did the elders of the nation re- .lig those years ? At the last over1,; two gallons of blood in the hu -I stn or let him drown 7
quest? What did Samuel du with what realm did he become king1 pounds ; internal organs, twelve man Ludy, and a ellen contains ,
pnnnds ; blood, seven pounds. The g Captain (grunt ly)-11 a must
their request.? What did Jehovah How old was David when he enter-
the
contains about seven -eighths two hundred and thirty-one cubic. stop and pick him up. It's against
hid the prophet do 1 In spite of e^ upon his reign 1 How long was water : and so the man would con- inches. Se, by multiplying twelve •the rule.►, to drop any ballast drir-
warning, what did the people say? he king 1 What is the Golden . and
thiel millions by two hundred
twin about :seventeen gallons, or and thirty one, we shall get lip. ing a race.
1 hen what was done? Text '1 more than half a barrel of it.• -----
Lesson II.—Saul Chosen King — + proximately the number of the cry- t ,
Tu whe,rn did the people come for a ti EN ERA I, IN FON til .1'f 1 ON. N01111.1I, FOOD CONSIJ f PTION', throcytes, the red oxygen -carbon- LN 11'lLLI., C'.
king? WWho was selected by Sanlu- , .. _- diorid carriers, in the blood. 1f ; Anxious Mother—How is it that
Irl-1iits of hnoole'il::e-11►out 'HMI
As to food, be would consume these little carriers could be spread you have so much trouble with your
el ' What impression would his every day five thousand grains of ]
INTERN ATI0\ .1 U. LESSON,
SEPT. 20.
Lesson XII. 'Third Quarterly Re.
vi:•w•. Golden 'text,
Sam. 5. 12.
QUESTIONS FOR SENIOR
SCHOLARS.
What form of government pre-
ceded the absolute monarchy in
Israel Who was the last of the
judges? What reasons dict the
people give for requesting a king 1
How dict Samuel interpret their
r( -quest 1 How was the first king
cnoscn ? What was the attitude. of
the retiring judge to the newly
chosen king 1 What was Samuel's
greatest legacy to Israel i What
elements in Saul's character fitted
hint especially for his new position 1
W hat elements of unfitness for rid-
ership did be manifest as king: On
what ground was he eventually re-
jected? What external circumstan-
ces led to the introduction of David
at. the court of Saul t What posi-
tions diel David hold at court and
in the army during Sail's reign 1
Recall the events which led to the
anointing of David to be king in
Saul's stead. State the birthplace.
personal appearance naturally pro-
duce 1 Did Israel need a military
head just then? What signs ef pro-
mise appeared in the new king
When he got a new heart and was
changed into another roan. did he
remain a changed man 1 What was
his radical defect ?
Everything.
There are nearly 2.700 crossing
sweepers in Londe►:•.
In the British A,uty to -day there
are 40,00') teetotal soldiers.
The coldest hour of the ttw,•n1y-
four is five o'clock in the morietig.
to a ayes, they would cover a stir -
lean meat, eight thousand grains face of twenty-eight thousand
of bread, seven thousand grains of !square feet.
milk, three thousand grains of po- 'rhe red carriers are not the only
tatoes, six hundred grains of but- i '
ter, thirty-three thousand grains of ` workers embarked in the great in-
ter, waterway, the blood
water. This mikes a total of food; stream. There are others less num-
and drink equal nearly to eight! eroua, more intelligent, more adap-
Probably not one person in a hon • rounds. • ' more versatile. Their duties
Lesson III—Samuel warns Saul and tiles) knows which is the sec, , d The matter tsps takcrt i t h
ic.usa'kee'ping! You told Inc your
wife could cook.
Adult Son --She can.
"Then what is tl: . 10111.-_.r 1"
"She won't."
1't,'ra. year fully 20,000 of the po-
pulation of India are killed by
snake bites.
th People.—When clivi Samuel de-' largest city in the British l:ml►ir c. I •.Jdy is normall•y balanced b , an t are various and important: in fart,
i they are the scall decriers, the faith- For I)jj{ f'rtlt ii, Dys{;1lterj',
liver this warning 1 What sort of I•. is Burns►ray. equal quantity of wash thrown off. ! fol •
a judge had he been ! What kind The collection of alma in h 'w For the escape of this waste there I .guardians, and tho efficient re -
j g pairers of the bony. Stomach Cramps Colic
p
of a public service had he render- Gardens, Landon, is mush larger avenues; the lungs, which e 1V T) ,
edr
What ►at sins, sometimes charge- than any other in the w srld, nearly
able against- public officials, was ho 590 species being represented.
guiltless eft Why was it an offense Roumania is the most illiterate
to hinl that the people clamored for country in Europe. The last cell-
th king 1 M hat wise counsel did be sus shows that in a population of
give 1 What did Samuel promise' to about (1,000.000 nearly 4,000,000 nei-
(to for thorn always 1 titer writo nor read.
Lesson 1V.—field Rejected by the On the nen. Holland -America lin-
ere four
throw off twenty thousandgrains HAT THE moreL(J\GS 1)t). Summer C
Choi -
daily : the skin, trhirh exerefc�s ten Nothing is interesting than r .Olt. j�lAltlf, Chfll
thousand grains; and the kidneys the body »methods of ecencully. For era ,�i0r�"illti, ��i�ierfl Ifs'
and intestines, which eliminate instance, in its work of taking in , _ _
twenty-four thousand and twenty- oxygen and throw ing off carbuncli- -
six hundred grains respectively. f)f oxide, it needs space:, surface. And
the water taken, the lungs and skirt t e. there has been eevulved a me -
of the Bowels
together carry off just abotrt Otte- thod by which in the lung, the •n-
ralf, the kidneys about forty-four) haled air reaches a surface of sixi There �S no Medicine llcine Like
ler cent., and the intestines the I teen hundred square feet. The
rest.
l,e•rd.--11 hat chief offent�e,r hall et there will be a palm court and a 1
Saul committed 1 What- was this; fi`h P"nd, from which the passes- 1
parentage, and boyhood of David. crowning sin 1 What great princi-
gess tt ill br able to select their fish
W' hat led to the rejection of David ph did Samuel ann,unce 1 Which fe►r mocking.
by Sault Compare an} contrast set of clunes are ut thief importance
the character of Saul nith that ef —those which are !mil a1 eer those
his son, Jonathan. Compare and which are ceremonialWW'hat•sort
eontraq thy' characters of David [,f a man --take himall in all—was
and Jonathan. Descril,e briefly the Saul 1 /‘ hat ""as his chief fault 1
experiences of David while an ex- Lesson V.—David Anointed at
de from court. State the traits in Lethlehen).--11'here is Betfitr}sem 1
I David's character that made him For what is it noted 1 1Vhat pro -
Mang pe,1,10 male, n mietnke in think. I the superior of Saul as a military filet went there in search of a fil-
ing that theonly (Alice of a pill is to more 1 leader ; as k Recall the el s titre kink 1 t1'ho 1'
the t00%vela, bit a properly prepared pill in? events of Saul's administration ;
should act beneficially upon the liver and i 1).ayid's lament over Saul and
fiL the entire 0411'104r and ae.;rctur •stem, i
y s 3 ,lc nathan, and the light this throws
a This iz jttet what Milburn's Lara -Liver j on his character. Was the estal►-
I'illa di, and by their e•peeific alterative j 1'! hrnent of the kingdom in Israel a
step in the line of progress or of
retrogression 1 Which was the bet-
ter form of government, that under
th administration of the judges, or
that tender the administration of
the kings 1 What indications of
progress can you trace in political
and social affairs during the his-
tcrical period by the lessons eel this
Quarter ? What events of this peri -
1 c1 reflect primitive political and
y.•,.ria1 conditions I In what respects
act Ion cure Lis er Cum411at:it, Iiiiionsneaa,
Jaundice, Constipation, Flatulency,Heartburn,Headache, Dyagegaia, Water
brash, Catarrh of the Stomach, CoatedTongue, Foul Breath, and all diseases
arising from impurities clogging the eeys.
Unl.
They are small and er.sy to take, and do
,tot gripe, weaken or sicken. They may
he timed ,as a mildlaxative .,r a strong
purgative according to the dose.
Price 25 cents a vial. or 5 vial* for a $1,
at ail dealers, or mailed dsre.•t 4111 receipt
0, price by •vas David a 111/111 e•f }lis own time 1
lir what respects was he in advance
Th! T. Milburn, Co, Ltd., Toronto, Ont. sf the age in which he lived 1
According is Mitchell's Newswi-
res Press I)ii eetury there are now
published in the United Kingdom
alone no fewer than 2.353 newspa-
pers, of n•hich London contributes
401, including thirty-one dailies.
Probably the oldest man alive is
Hadji Raouf, who lives in Con-
stantinople, and is said to be 132
m c ret hr. fi? years old. He still works at his
11'hat was the lad's vocation 1 }n( profession of,saddle-maker. and
rtes he ttne,inted 111'itat did this
has never left they house be was
horn in. His father is believed to
car" on David ' Did he imtncdi-
have lived t+, theage of 142.
taely become a kin ? Wha 1 The small toren of �t'ord3, i
g tt►'aa
n the
ceremony mean 1 What influence 1
atcly become a king i What was
hie appea rn r,e ' What had ho
learned as a shepherd 1
Lesson VI. --Daviel and Goliath.—
What gigantic champion defied the
•
kingdom of Dahomey. is celebrated
for its temple of serpents, a l•eng
l.uilding in which the priests keep
upon refs of 1,00h serpents of all ii,.
es. These they feed nith birds and
frogs brought to them as offerirt;;•►
their relief ? What gave him re- tress of Fishlnke. near Doncaster,
al mica of israel ? Why were the by the natives.
Israelites dismayed? Who calve to The letter -carrier and postmis-
markable courage 1 What weapons England, has carried letters for
did be Ilse 1 Why did he choose thirty-seven years, her average
them 1 Which contestant won 1 journey being seventeen miles a
What effects nese produced en the day. She is sixty-three years of
i'hillrstinea, on the Israelites, and two, and Finn 1871 has had only
David's dawning career 1 What seven days off duty. Her entire
qualities in the young shepherri )f mileage is about 228,900.
Ali this means that there' pectin tr little openings, or vesicles,
- by which this economy of space is
No Diseflse is so Quiet and !gained nue berarTre hcrcix }pla Breds I.,ialads)ut
Stealthy 111 its Approach
of the lungs in one day no less th to
four hundred cubic feet of air.
Each outgoing breath contains two
cubic incites of carbenlioxid, and
contaminates five thousand cul►c
inches, ahead half a barrel of air.
The lungs exhale every clay an
amount of carbon that if caught
and solidified would about equal a
lump of coal weighing half a pound
The air breathed nett is moving at
n speed of forty-three inches r• s
e mel. and is inhaled at a speed of
two incites a seeond. In a '+u i•
ue ►i intake of breath, as in it soh or
ti Sp of surprise, the Fpee(I e,f t11:
inhalation may be mach greater --
ten or even twenty feet a second.
The external surface elf the _bode
has an area of about, twenty aeti1:1••n
feet and ('contains )even nrll1 ,tl
minute openings, perspirate►ry
glands, out through which the blood
pushes eertnin of its poisonous in-
gre►lients.
The skin has a respiratory as well
Ag a perspirat•►ry function. Throne)
n healthy skin we take ie about
(•rio sixth as match o.rvgen RS
,'h•wgh the lungs.
as Kidney Disease
Thetis why it is an dangerous. it may
become deep-seated before you realize rho
danger,.
Iteri9 tbe►refnro of great Importance to
recognize the early warning symptoms:
pain or dull ache, in the back, bladder
p�ains, smarting sensation when urinating,
frequent or surpre,l,erl urination, sediment
in the urine, etc., because in its c•al1,Y stage
kidney di'eai�n is easily curod by 1.)uaN'S
KIDNEY PI 11.11
Mr. Elgin Brisebeis, Vernon, Ont,,
writes: -1 was troubled a great deal with
kidney trouble. 1 had to get up four or
five times every right, my urine contained
a thick hrirk.efe,MI sediment, i heel a Fain
in the •t11:1 of my back, and could not
sleep at ()blit.
1 o'mmPr4 .'d tigm.: i)•,an'a Kidney fills
and in a t ••ry (lyse! tirne 1 was air right
again. 1 am very thankful to have found
a cure so speedy in IC * 5' then.
i)nan's Kidney I'illa ore &1'. per hos' or
3 boles for $1.25, at all dealers, or mailed
direct on re'•e,ipt of price 1,y The 1),ra
Kidney Pill Co, Torouteo. Onr.
it btu Leon a t:•euoehce1d remedy for 83
years. Yon can Aiwa) s rely on it in timo
of next to do joist what tin elairn for it.
7)o not allow ,.e uriprinripalod druggist
to palm off a ALAI, submit uteon you. -
Tho genuir.1 " Dr. ftowle•,•'s " is maim.,
lectured I,3 The T. kfilt,utu Co., Limited,
Toronto, Otto
THE ONLY CUREFOR Di A R R IIOE a,
"I have used Dr.
Mrs P•oht R ;';rt, !'.,ruler's i'r:st. of
Durk! ton, Ont., Wild Strawberry
writes:—
for elrarrbera, and
I think there IR n.,t
u better remedy to he found, as 1 have it
large family and all subject to it. I
would not he without it in the house .►" it
ia a quirk etre, and 'the uuly thing that
will euro theta'