Loading...
Exeter Times, 1901-10-17, Page 6Cenuine Carter's le Liver Pills. Beftr Signature of $00 Pee.strato wraPPrr orr Pinsat *Pa aeesee te tales rts 'RR Will/AVM A T puff DI,Z47MES MU FOIOILlail$NESSM Fa:10E1111 FOR CONSTIMOL 014.01V - =ON ACtAtiE4 BRITISH ETERNAL RAM Heavenly Satisfaction in Every Good Thing You Did on Earth. A despatch 170n1 Weslittegton says 7 -Rev. Dr. Taletage preached from the following, texts., Job dv 204 i"He shall be no more remembered." and Pseleis exit. 6, "The righteous ell be in everlastiug rentembrauced" Of oblivioa anti its theeats1 speak teedaY. . There is au old uton.ster that sWeliewe !Iowa everything. it stitches individuate, families, cote- unitiesstates, nations. continents. zoispheres. worlds. Its diet is node up. of years, of ceeturiee. .of ages. ot cycles, of millenniums, of 'cone.. That Monster is called by Noah Webster and all the other :dictionaries "Oblivioss." It is a steep clown whieb, eeerything rolle. ' It As 4 ConflagratIon zn which every,. 'thing is coszetinied. It is a dirge t.vhich ttll orclu:Stras play end a. 'period at whth evifir.ythim stcps- . Itt. is the eemetery of the humeri rate. It is the domaitt of forgetfulness. Oblivion ! At tholes it throws 4 isitadow over ail of me. end I would root prenounce it leaden if I did not onat 'noted in the strength (it the larval God on your Lel f to at - k it. to rout it. to demolish it. In some oin family record a tie- seentlant studying up the ancestral ne may spell our name and front t.he faded ink with gyeat etiort find titt some person by our name was .born. somewhere la the nipetevala century. but they wIll haiow no move • tt us than we know about the of a ehild'e eyes born hst night in 4 village in Pate - ors last night in a village in Pato-, n Tell zee something about your °teat -grandfather. What did be do tt Wbat ever was he horn' What rear . did he die ? Axel your great -grand- ? Will you deserine the Kyle set she wore. :And how titd saeuid your graet-greatleatizer get. on tn. each other's tooratntsiottship ? of 11.043P OIL Was it illerch weather or June 2 g Oblivion ! That tuountain :surge ummENT 1101.144 OVER FVEltrPIIING. Even the pyramids are tieing. Not n FOR ,44- EtasSes but there is cbineied oil a. I pont: of that gratitte. Why tiiere te yule a crust between StZialt 79'444 Inn and the fur 4: t axe ittyle rag ng o Ogn .votasr3P*Pl"',/oint4Into all-, get out. Oblivton lite world it - Stint Inteesv Cosers Colds, Cmgracled ;-elf will roll tato it as eatiay as , Cet4aRbeerretioat Neeragil, Bronei4t,:sp ,t,ehoolebtry's intber ball roll's Croup, Sore Throat, Quinsey, Whooping ", wa. h11, "2" w°" „testes it Ls so ititertocersol by tbe Couele Painful Swellings. 1./..‘ gravitation with (4her tvcrisis that they will go toe, mai so far limu). hornet tear nessatte perpetitete by the monument of Aberdeen :granite in this world there is no .!,uoritl in sight of our etrongeet tele, .scope that will be a ewe pediment 'for ;my slab of eseintsentoretion t,f , Ithe ittet. that We ever lived or died , all. Our earth is struck. with dentate The axletree of the constel- Sliutions will break and let. down the I ipopulatiuns uf other worlds. Stri- per. lunar, solar. mortality. Oblive 'Wu It cun swallow and will swal- , loe, whole galasiev of words as The T. Iiiihurn Co., Limited, alsily as a crocodile tithes down presence of those whose breath is in their nostrils, what axe uoreatt OW- gra.pliles in the alcoves of a, -city library. compared with the IMPERISHE ABLIINCORDS you have made in the illumined mem- ories of those to whom e-ou dui eneh Icitainessee ? Forget them They cannot forget thena. Notwithstand- ing all their might and spleedor. there are sorao things the glorified of heaven gannet do. and this is one Qf em. 'they canroot, target an earthly kindness done. The kind- uesses you do to others will stand , long in the appreciation of others as the gates of heaven will stand. as the "house of many mansions" will stand. rte long oss the throne of God wiltstead. Another defeat of oblivion will be found in the charecter of those 'who nt we rosette. uplift, or SON% Character is oterrtnl. fluSuppoee by a right influence we aid in trensforrit ttto - log a bad man in good man. A dolerens Man into a happy seen. 4 dieheartersed man into 4 COUrageOltS man. every stroke of that win* done will be isamortalized. There Way never be so notch ea one line in re newspaper regarding it or no mar- tal toegue may ever whisper it luto human ear, hut wherever that soul shall go your wo wbenever that soul rises your work on it will rise, and so long os that sout wilL 1.. your work on it will lest. Do you suppose there will ever corae such an idiotic lapse in the history of that soul in heaven that it shall forget that yen invited him to Christ, that you. by prayer or gospel word, turns ed isitn round iron tl g way to the right way? No such lusanity will ever snite at • n e et' iten• It is not halt as Ne A• 11 on earth known that Christopher Wren ptan- and buflt $t. hut 's as it wilt be }mown in all heaven that you I were the instrumentality of building A TEMPLE FOR THE SKY. We teach a. Sabbath class or put a Christian tract in the hand of 4 • passer-hy. or testify for Christ in a prayer zoteetirog or prea.ch eermot and go home discouraged as thougi nothing had been accomplisbed, when we had nem character building with 4 material that no frost or earth- quahe or rolling of the ceeturies can damage or bring down. There is another and a. more com- plete defeat or oblivion, and that, is in the hea.rt of God himself. You have eeen a sailor roll up Ids sleeve and show you his Arm tattmed with tee figure of n. fortress where he was gerrisorted, or the fe.ce of a. deed general under whom he fought You have seen army a band tatooed with the face of a. loved one before or after ma:liege. This custom of tatooing is Almost, as old as the world. It is some colored liquid punctured into the flesh so indelibly that nothing can wash it out. It ratty have been there fifty years but A- LARGE'. norrvz. Toronto, Ont, fit'ke:t oblivion does ot renew, or i Some time ago my blood got out of ' 4 1 woon the man goes /woe his cellist. ceder and nine large boils appeared on sweliow everythisse that lied tee,tfle,r. 4 that Teettee wet go with him cm Ide removed or` swallow el + 1 and what wonderful words free A 1 Phar4011. "Thou shalt, be over n house. and According unto they Ivor kshall my people be ruled," the seem iller in all Egypt, and because Oa 4 bad spoken through him. Accordin to the golden text. God honored Jo Ifc‘ , it . s 1li tells down one and setteth up auoti Dew, 6-7), 41, 43. "And 1 Pharaoh solid unt !Joseph, See I have set thee over it the lend of Egypt." He confirm i it by transferring the ring upon Id I hand to Joseph's hand, by the ves j tures and the gold chain and a place ; in the eecond chariot in the land. It h t,eemed to Pharaoh that he did it, o het it was the Lord's doing. He Permitted Pharaoh to do it and thus accomplish His pleasure. Nebuche.de rezzar probably thought that he took , a hilatim captive, and to human Iesson he did. but it was the Lord (X)nn. gave JeholakiM into his hand Dan. 1, 1, 2). 44. 45. "Joseph went out over all the land of Egypt," No one might •de aught without hint; as in the prison so now in all the land it might be said of him. "Whatsoever they did there he was the doer of (chapter xxxix, 22). There is no be- - liever who may not be so yielded to Christ that what is done in or through them Ile will be the doer of it; as Paul said concerning himself, nI live, yet not I. 'but Christ, liveth in um" (Gale ii, 20). Since our Lord Jesus has said, "Without Ane ye can do nothing" (John xv, 5). why should we think of doing any thing apart, from Him, because how- ever it may look acceptable in the eyes of others, it is "nothing" unless pe does it? Iris new uame signifies, acCording to the margin, "revealer of secrets," and he receiveS as his wife the daugh- ter of the priest of On; here again we have a. two -fold suggestion of our Lord Jesus, for Pfe is the great re- veraer of secrets, making known to us the great mystery of godliness, and of the church, and of Israel's blindness, and of the kingdom, for the. Father loveth the Son. and shew- eth Him all things that Himself do- eth (John v, 20). 46. "And Joseph was 30 years old when he stood before Pharaoh, King of Egypt." Our Lord was 30 years old when He began His public milt- istry (Lukeiii, 23); so likewise was John the Baptist and Ezekiel and this was the age when. the priests began their ministry (Ezek, a 1; Num. iv, 3). Joseph began to rule at the age of, 30, but our -Lord be- gan. His public humiliation, for while He went about doing good, annoint- ed with the Holy Ghost, it was to be despised and rejected and. crucified as an evil -doer, and He still waits for Ffis aingdom. • 4.7, et). "And Joseph gathered corn as the sands of the sea, very much, until he left numbering; for it. was without lumber." This he did dur- ing the seven plenteous years, • for the earth :ln'Otight forth. by handfuls, and joseph diligentl3r made provi- sion for the time to come when there, would be ,great distress. The phrase "as the sand of the sea," or, as it is sometimes, "as the dust of the earth," is a figure signifying that which , cannot be counted. See I. Kings iii, 8; iv, 20-29; II Chr on: i; 9; then see also Gen. di, 17; Jadg: vii, 12; I. Sam. xiii, 5; Ps. lxxviii,. 27...aleow great is dm- Cod thA He can multiply things and people after this fashion? • . .55. In due time the famine came. Then all , Egy 0 t cried to P 1, at, aoh , and he said, "Go unto Joseph; what he eaithe to you do!' This reminds S� did iota invite you down into a cellanteut up on a throne; xiet, in- to tile graveyard, to which all mat terialisee is destined, bue into. a gar- den all a-bloozo, with everlasting re - membrane°. The frown of my first text has become the kiss of the sec-, ond text. Aunitillation has become coronation. The Wringing, hands of a great agony have become the clap- ping heeds ot great joy. The re- quiera with whist), -we began .has be- ome the greed =arca with whieh we close. The tear of sadness that rolled down our elleek has struck the Up on which sits the laughter of eternal trillion)), THE S. S. LESSON. INTERNATIONA1, Oct. 20. Text et' the 1,esson, Gee. xli.,38-49 Golden Text, I. San. ii., 30. Patiently continuing in well doing in his prison life, the time came when he should be delivered, God's time, and therefore the best. The King of Egypt dreamed two tire:one. or a dreaut that Was doubled to him in little different form, but none of his metrictans or wise men could inter- pret for him the *dream, now like the story in Dan IL. 10-27; iv. 7; v, 8; for the wisdom of this world is utterly at fault in the things ot Uod only the Spirit of (led can tell meth things of God (I. (Jewett. 11-14i• Th chief butler. learning of tlie Klug' diflclty,ronembered his iestratitud Lo les prseon and t King how Joseph had interpret their •dreams in the prison. Josep the young Hebrew, was beetily for, giving, God all the glory, (ver 16), interpreted the &eons. assuri Pharaoh that God had by tho droione Shawn him what He was about to do, that the events would surely come to pass anti that Phar- aoh woods! do well to profit by the revelation (verses 28-37). •38. "Can we find such a oue as this, a luau in whom the Spirit et God is?" Thus spake the King to his heeds wizen lio beard the words of Joseph. Ttu he tu% who email inter- pret such dreams and give such ad- vice meet be (11-4 too f s us- ot the saying of Jacob's wivee. "Now, then, •wbathoever God hath said unto> thee, de," (Gen. mat, 1,6t, also of the saying of Mary to the servants, at the marriage in Cana, "Whatsoever He saith uuto you, do it" (John ii, 5). Our great awl on- ly question concernlug the things which are eternal, the things of tbe kingdom, should be, "What bath the Lord spoken?" for Ile (oily hasethe bree.d of life and all must eeme to, Him who would have life. Not only all Egypt had to come to Joseph. but all countriee (57), and, we shalt see in the eext lessou. all Israel, too; and the sons of Israel found that their benefactor was their brother. el Israshalt ztet see that their deliv- erer is the same one whom they cal- eified and to Hint shall all flesh come. Ali who now receive Hint shod leaen or may learn in their experi- ence the true meaning of 'Manasseh and Epitraint, for God will snake them forgee their toil, and will make them fruitful where they have been afflicted (verses 51. li2). The field, which is the world, bt which we are new the reapers, belongs to our Boaz and in the morniag of our marriage to Mut the whole field will be ours and we willathen. if not before, for.. toil and see the true mean- s) of fruitfulness (Rona 18; Isa. xxvii, 6). Being redeemed. Jet us be willing and obedient. PeatAcE OF TECE PORTE, varcien, nil Of Secret Retreats for Hine Who Hourly Seeks Assassinoe time. he Tim Yildiz pelace at, Constantinople ea le a monument to fear. It is asses- sireproof. bomb -proof. eartliqualie- proof, tire.preof, inicrobeproof. Are • chiteets and eugineers are building ng and rebuilding' inceseantly. Some se new secret retreat is always under • way.- Tim entire donntin is surround., ed by an immense wall. thirty feet high. and the choicest troops of the • leundre etand guard around it. An hiller Wail, twelve feet. thick, with gates of iron. Meioses the private re- sidence itself. The walls of the Stile tan's dwelling are tilled with armour Plate. in eaeo of projeetiles. It is said that a mysterious passage con - Sleets WW1 tc.11 sesret bed chambers, forming an intricate lanyrinth. No OniA but bis body attendant lcnows where the Sultan rimy Meep during any particular night. lie has electric lights and telephones in his own ri- ot rtmente. but fotedds thent in Con, ratinople. Telephones might prove tly for conepirators, and he be - s that a dynamite carteidge d be Eent over a wire into the palace, Ile fears electric explosionti. so Constantinople still gets along with gas light. 111) hates the word dynamo, because it sounds like dyna- mite. Balloons are tabooed, lest one ahotild pause over him loug enough to drop a chunk of explosive. As to tile regal luxury of the Yildiz. that matter of course. The domain s a small world 15 itself. Five O thousand people live within the outer - wall, not counting e small army if sion. awl bad been all the while preparing Joseph for this occasion and this oceasion for Joseph. Ile purposet in Himself that which Ile works out according to the COttahfi His own Will tEpli. 1, 9-11), and ha PY are those WhO ere In His will. Mi. 40. -Only in the throne will be greater than thou." FrOM prison to a throne, anti $o suddenie my noel:, besides numerous small ones on tny shoulders and arms. Four running sores appeared on my .foot and leg- and was in a, terrible state, ., friend advised Burdock Blood Bitters, so /premised three bottles. After finishing the first bottle the boils started to disappear and the sores to beat up. After talcing tbe third bottle there was not a boil or sore to be seen, Desid;zs this, the headaches from which suffered left me and I improved so much that I am now strong and robust again. Yours truly, Mass Mee.= WOr.1111NGT011, Fele 3rd, 1905. Goispie, Ont. -ooteea..........seraneeasettiesenegenst A CITY OF ZING. Tide is Beira, on the coast of Por- tuguese East Africa. Every utensil is nfade of it. If you were to break your leg, you would be taken to the hospital on a, stretcher made of zinc, and when you arrived at the zinc building, you would be laid on bed- ding resting on a zinc framework. A titled Man I,ying in a zinc coffin, the latter resting on settles of the Same inetal, is .ta.rt an extraordinary sight, The body is carried to the zinc church, and it luny rest in a. zinc - lined grave, if the relatives so sire and are willing to pay I Zinc seems to be the only cheap material that will withstand for a, reasonable length of time the effects of the hu- mid climate, and it is accordingly employed in every possible way, Children Cry for AST 11r. Bridal (at luncheon) : Is this the best salmon you could get? Mrs. Bridal: Yes; the grocer showed me several kinds, but 1 took this •tin. Mr. 13ridal: Did he say this was the best he had? Mrs. Bridal: No; but it had the prettiest label. Tailor: The postal service is in a wretched condition. Friend: Never noticed it. Well, I have. During last month 1 sent one hundred and eighty statements of account, with requests for immediate payMolit, and, so far as 1 can learn, not more than two of my tu.stonaers received their letters. C TORIA For Infauto a",u.d Children. Tee fa- /1mila eigna-tzte Ig 03 0Perr •9709134 old monster is welcome to hie eeta lThis world wettid long ego have been 'overcrowded if not for this merciful ; removal of nations and getvoratims ' ' NI hat if all tile books had lived that 'mire ever written and printed and ' The libraries would by inunensitY have obstructed he etelligence and made all 'research iine ipoesible. The tate) epidemic of sbooks was a. merciful epideinic. ;Maw of the state and national lila raries to -day are only morgues, in ;which dead books are waiting for some one to come and recognize :them. 'What if al? the people that! o had been born were still alive ? We would have been elbowed by our an- cestors of ten centuries ago, and freople who ought to have said their 'last word 3,000 years ago would isnarl at us, saying "WHAT ARE YOU DOING HERE?" 'There would have peen no room to ;turn around. Some of the past gen- erations of mankind were not worth frememberieg. 'The first useful thing !that many people did was to die, !their cradle a. Misfortune and their ;grave a. boon. This world was hard - ii. comfortable ple,ee to live in be - 'fore the middle of the eighteenth 'century. So many things have come into the world that were not fit to stay in we ought to be glad they wore put out. Tbe waters of relate, the fountain of forgetfulness, are a healthful draft. The history we have of the world in ages past is always one sided and cannot be depended on. History is fletion illustrated by a few serag,gling facts. We may build this "everlasting remembrances" as nay text styles it, into the supernal existence of those to whom. we do kindnesses in this world. You must remember that this infirm and treetcherous faculty which we now call memory is in the future state to be complete and per- fect "Everlasting remembraace !" Nothing. will slip the stout grip :of that celestial teculty. Did you help a. widow pay her rent ? Did you find for that man released from pris- on a place to get honest work ? Did you pick up a child fallen on the curbstone and by a stick of candy put in his hand stop the hurt on his 'scratched knee ? Did you a.ssure ,business man swamped by the strin- gency of the money market that times wated after a while be better? Did you lead a Magdalen of the street into a- midnight • mission, where the Lord said -to her : "Nei- th.er do I °mule= thee. Go and sin no more 9" Did you tell a, man elear discouraged in his wayward- ness and hopeless and plotting sui- cide. that for him was near by a laver in which 1131114.U' wash, and a coronet of °Lorne' blessedness :lie inight weer. 9 What are epitephs in graveyards, what are eulogiums in 1 in bend or erne Now, God says that He has tatooed as upon his hands. Tbere can be no other meaning of ISaralt, where Gott says, "Behold, 3. bave graven thee upon the palms of my hands 1" it was as much as to say: "I cammt open. My hand to help, but I think of you. I cannot spread abroad My hands to bless, BET 1 TIIINIC OF YOU. Wherever I go up and down the boa- ; yens, 1 take these two pictures of ;you with Me. They are so inwrought into My being that I cannot lose them. As long as My hands last the memory of you will last. Not on the Iback of my haseds, as though to an- nounce you to others, but on the palms of my hands for myself to look at and study and love. Though I hold the winds in My fist, no cy- clone. shall uproot the inscription of of your name and your face, and though I hold the ocean in the hol- low of My hand, Its billows sfiall not wash out the record. of my re- membrance. "13ehold, I have graven thee on the palms of ray hands Ilh What joy, what honor, can there be comparable to that of being re- membered by the mightiest and most affectionate Being in the uni- verse ? Think of it, to hold an ev- erlasting place in the heart of God! The heart of God i The most beau- tiful palace in the universe. _Let the archangel build a palace as &rand as he can and then you enter this Palace of a.rchangelic construction and see how poor a palace it is compared with • the greater palace tliat some of you have already found in the heart of a loving and par- doning God and into whicb all the music and -ail the prayers and all the sermonic considerations of this day are trying . to introduce you through the blood of THE SLAIN L.A.M.13. ' 0.11, where is oblivion now? From she dark and overshadowing word that it seemed when I began, it has become something which- 110 man or woman or cialci who loves the Lord need ever fear. Oblivion defeated. Oblivion dead. Oblivion sepulchred. Dut t must- not be so hard on thette devouring anonste,, tor into its grave' go all our. sins when the Lord for. Christ's sake has forgiven • them. 'Just blow a resurrettion trumpet over them ween once obliviOn haS snapped them clown. Not one of them rises. Blow again. Not a stir amid all the 'pardoned iniquities of .t.i. lifetim'B e. low again. Not one of, t hem Moves in the deep grave trench- es. , But to this poiverless resurrec- tion trumpet. a voice responds, half human, half divine, and it in.ust be Part man ' 'and part Clod, saying, "Their sins and their iniouities win 1 rernemoer no More,. " Thank'God r this, blessed oblivion.. So you se Ph beCallSe JesePh had IMItOred Inn Promotion cornett' neither from ft tist nor from the weet, nor from th smith; but God is tile judge. He Pot e.j workmen and the 7,000 imperial guavdemen. There are shops, factor- • ies, e aglastelueray18,* tslitetaaltriees'n:d ulevue8seinamnpielict: 11 agerie. The monarch loves trees, but ti he keeps their branches well lopped off, so that be mon see to the further- most corner of bis park, Children Cry for CASTOR AfAlD'S .OR NURSE'S APRON. F,very housewife likes to see her maid neatly and appropriately dres- sed, and many careful housekeepers find it wise to provide the aprons and caps which they prefer. The tasteful apron shown is correct in every way and bas the merit of be- ing becoming to the wearer at the same tittle that it is satisfactory to the mistress, and that it conforMS to the requirements of good fbrm. To cut this apron for a womati of medium size 41,- yards of material 36 inches • wide will be required when sash is used, 8;1i. yards without, with 1.11 yards each of edging. and inser- tion to trim as illustrated, Children .Cry,for CASTOR A. A NEW FUEL dAS. Much interest is felt in England in the /Wand fuel gas, which is made from the cheapest class of small coal and dust, known as "bituminous slack." This gas, which is intended for furnaces and gas -engines, can, it i is claimed, be supplied at a cest of four cents per thoUsand cubic feet. What is Castoria is for Infants and Children, Castoria is a. harmles$ Substitute for Coster Cell, Paregoric, Props and Soothing Syrups, it contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It ie Pleasant. Ite guarantee IS thirty years' use by Nillions of Notb.ers. Casteria destroys W01112$ and allays reverish- ness. Castoria cures Diarthceaara WindColle. Castoria relieyes Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and olulency. Castoria assimilates the Food, regulates the Sten:melt and Bowels ofTnfants and Olzi/dren, giving healthy and natural sleep. C'astoria is the Obildren's Panaeea—Tho 4Tother's Friend, _OaatOria, "Outsets IS an excellent uzediclue ter children, Afethers have repeatedly teed pie et' Repot), Oka upon their elitlertan D. 0. C. 040000, Lotrai, ltrAts. tenstorla Is se wcil toloptet1 to ettfidrett. WA Z. reeounueu.dit as susetior to .ouy pe seriptien lotowfl to um" auegt=, X, P..etitelte, N.? THE FAO -SIMILE SIGNATURE OF APP ARS ON EVERY WRAPPER. Nerv us e 6, 4 ThintSaeds of Yourg and inhidie-a :nen are annually swept to a _press:dim Frave tbrens.13 EARIAt INDItiCt ETION, BKOUSSUS, AND 13PO010.• 101011MAtlEi8, If yon have any of The following symptoms consult its before it lo too late. Are you nervous and wean, despondent and gloomy, specks before *bo eyes with dark circles under then!, 'Imo( back. kidneys irritable, palpitation of the heart, bashful. dreams and lows, sediment in urine,pimples on the face, sunken eYe s, hollow cheeks, careworn expression, poor esectory, lifeless, ditto -metal, lack Ienergy and strengtb, tired. mornings, restless niglas, cltanseable utoodstAtealc =au: hood, stunted organkpromatttre clecay., bone pains, hair Iotn:e, age tineatt Our Ns w Met toma wreatzucut wid cure a'os. 'IFE LIVOD Noming. eau be tnere demoralizing to eosin:neat zahltne-,1gcti Zen than emissions at night or secret drains through the urine. They unfit a man for business, mar. ried Igo or social happiness. No matter whether canoed by evil lmbits in _youth, natural weakness, or sexual excesses. our New lidetboni Treatment will post. tively cure you. Ourtes 0UARANT4ED. NO CURE, NO PAY. terit-No Names:, Used W1tbout Wirittst Consent. W. A. Muir, of lame, (xi says: --"I was cone of the countless victims of early vice at 15 years of age. The drains on Any -system were weakening 527 brain as weit as my sexual and nervons eye. tem. For ten years I tried scores of doctors, electrlebelts and patent mediciors, Sorne rae, none cured. I was giving tipin despair, in fact, contemplating suicide when a friend ad; olsect tue as a last resort to give the Now islethed Treatment of Dal, X. 4E. a fair trial. Without confidence I consented and in three months I was a cared man. I was cured seven years ago -am married and happy. I heartily recommend Drs. IL ch Z. to lay -afflicted 33eforeTreatinent fellow aten.” After Treatment rWe treat and cure Varicocele, Emissions, Nervous Debility, Seminal Weakness, Gleet, Stricture, Syphilis, Unnatural Discharges, Self Abuse, Itliney and illadder Diseases, and all diseases of Idea and Women. .n.ls10 NAMES USED WITITOUT WE IT'rEN CONSENT, PRIVATE. No medicine sent C. 0. D. No :tames on boxes or envelopes. Feetrythinfi confidential. Question list and cost of treatment, FREE. Ors. Kefinedy iforganl 148 SHELSY STREET, DETROIT, t-14K4gre- These pills are a specific for all diseases arising from disordered nerves, weak heart or watery blood. They cure palpitation, dizziness, smothering, faint and weak spells, shortness of breath, swellings of feet and ankles, nervousness, sleepless- ness, anaemia, hysteria, St. Vitus'. dance, partial paralysis, brain fag, female complaints, general debility, and lack of vitality. Price soc. aim& nr". PA.ItA.4.M.X.AIMP"M124W1PAIra It is not a lighting gas, as it burns with a pale blue flame, and its heat- ing value is lower than that of • il- luminating' gas, but greater than that of most other "producer gas- es-." In the process of manufacture a very large proportion of the 1110.30— gen of the coal is recovered in the form of sulphate of aMmonia, worth nearly two dollars for every ton of slack gasified. -4,---- PRESSING- AUTUMN LEAVES , 'To best preserve autumn leaves, the gatherer should immediately lay them flat between two sheets of new blotting paper Spread -upon a table top and cover over by a stack of heavy books. It is essential that all moisture should be pressed •out of them. By this simple procesg, they should be dry within three ot' four hours. So treated they will re- tain their -'-beautiful colors for years pravided they are not exposed to the direct glare of Old Sollf uot ,horoughly deprived of their nor- mally large percentage of water, they will soon asstune a dirty brown SO-CALLED STRAWBERRY COMPOUNDS ARE MOTH/ NO MORE OR LESS THAN RANK INliTATIONS. TEM GENEME (Put up in yellow wrapper.) CURES Diarrhcea, Dysentery, Colic, Cramps, Pains in the Stomach, Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Cholera Infantum and all Summer Com- plaints. Safe, Reliable, Harm- less, Effectual., tamtivsiironsTagnipswsurtralt 1113 140 EQUAL tint. Few of us realize that, the weight of 4.reen leaves is due CI:13110SL entirely to thei,e water content. If. for example, WC put a hundred pounds of lettuce leaves ia a press and thus squeoee tile moisture out, we obtaio 913 pounds of welor and have only two poll Rds of green vegetable matter bit