Exeter Times, 1902-3-13, Page 2Ip0011.1:144:1611
Genuine
arter's
Little Liver PiHs.
Vilust Bear Slignatare
• See PecsSirstio Wrapper Below.
year smell and as easy
to take as stager.
CARTER'S
1TTLE
I V En
PLL
FOR VaEADACtilio
FOR DIZZINESSa.
FON BILIOUSIIESt.
RR TORPID LIVER.
F011 CONSTIPATION.
na$ALLOW SW
FON 1101E COMPLEXION
car.r431CWW2 W.I4T NOW tIAT22LtiL.
-VegetsQlevisrs.0
....07Z71==g717•374".."`"
CURE SICK HEADACHE.
These pills are a specific for an
diseases arising from disordered
nerves, weak beart or watery blood.
They cure palpitation, dizziness,
smothering, faint and weak spell;
shortness of breath, swellings of feet
and ankles, nervousness, sleepless-
ness, anmmia, hysteria, St. Vitus'
dance, partial paralysis, brain fag,
female complaints, general debility,
and lack of vitality. Price soc. a box.
. ire
THE ORIGINATOR or
DOES KIDNEY PILLS,
The original kidney specific for
the cure of Backache, Diabetes,
Bright's Disea3a and all Urinary
Troubles.
Don't accept something just as
good. Sea you get the genuine
AN'S.
011 EY HEAD!
ROW IT ACHES!
Nervous
Bilious
Sick
Periodical
Spasmodic
HEADACHES.
A Terrific Strug
gle is Going on in
Many
a Soul.
•••
rsmersd mercies to Act et the Parliament
Canada, in the year One Thousand Eine Hun.
dred and Two, Is, Musts Bails, of Tomato, at
Dosartstent Agrkalture, Ottawa.]
A despitteh frone Washington says:
—Rev. Dr. Talmage enamelled from
the following texts :—Hebrews
1, • 'Sec lug we also are coMpaseed
about with so great a cloud of wit-
nesses;"I. Corinthians xv, 32, "I
have fotight with beasts at Ephesus"
Crossing the Alps by the Mont
-
Canis pass or through_ the Mout Can-
is tunnel, you are ilea few hours set
down at Verona, haler, and in a few
minutes begin examining one of the
graadest ruins of the world, the Am-
phitheatre. The whole building
sweeps around you in a circle. YOU
stand in the arena where the coin -
bat was once fought or the race run,
and on all sides the seats rise, tier
above tier until you count forty
elevations, or galleries, as X shall
see tit to call them, la erhich sat the
senators, the kings and the 25,000
excited spectators. At the sides of
the arena and under the galleries are
the cages in which the lions and ti-
gers are kept without food until
frenzied with hunger and thirst, tilt*,
are let oul upon some poor victim,
who, with his sword and alone, is
condemned to meet them. I think
that Paul himself once stood in such
a plata and that it was not only fig-
uratively, but literally, that he had
"Sought with beasts at Ephesus."
The mart day has come. From all
the world the people are pouring in-
to Verona,. Men, women and chil-
dren, orators ancl senator, great
men and f41111111, thousands upon
thousands come, until the first gal-
lery is fall, and the second, the
third. the fourth. the fifth—all the
way up to the twentieth, all the way
up to the thirtieth, all the tvay up
to the fortieth.
EVERY PLACE IS FILLED.
Immensity of audience sweeping the
great circle. Silence. The time for
the centest has come. A Roman offi-
cial leads forth the victim into the
arena. Let him get his sword with
firm grip into his right hand, The
25,e00 sit breathlessly watching. I
hear the door at the side et the
arena creak open. Out plunges the
half starved lion, his tougue 'Athirst
for blood, and with a roar that
brings all the galleries to their feet,
, he rushes againet the sword of the
. combatant. Do you know how
stroug 'a stroke a. man will strike
1 when his life depends upon the first
Ithrust of his blade ? The wild beast,
lame and bleeding, slinks back to -
1 ward. the side of the arena ; then
rallying his wasted strength he
comes up with fiercer eye and more
terrible roar than ever, only to be
driven, back with a fatal wound,
while the combatant comes in with
stroke after stroke until the mon-
ster is dead at his Sea*, and the 25,-
000 clap their bands and utter a
shout that makes the city tremble.
To one of the Roman anaphithea-
Weal audiences of 100,000 people
Paul refers when he says, " We aro
compassed about with so great a
cloud of witnesses." The direct re-
ference in the last passage is made
to a race; but elsewhere having dis-
cussed that. I take now Paul's favor-
ite idea of the Christian life as a
combat.
The fact is, that every Cluestian
man has a lion to fight. Yours is a
bad temper. The gates of the arel1a
have been opened, and this three bits
come out to destroy your soul. It
has lacerated you with many a
wound. You have been thrown by it
time and ag'ain, but in the strength
of God you have arisen to drive it
back. I verily believe
Ileadache is not of itself a
disease but is generally caused by;
some disorder of the stomach, liver
or bowels.
Before you ean be cured you
must remove the cause.
BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS
will do it for you.
It regulates the stomach, liver
and bowels, puriiies the blood and
tones up the whole system to full
health and vigor,
YOU WILL CONQUER.
I think that the temptation is
getting weaker n d weaker. You
have given it 00 many wounds that
the prospect is that it will die, .and
you shall be victor, through (.;hrist.
Courage, brother ! Do not let the
sands of the arena, drink the blood
of your soul !
'Your lion is the passion of strong
drink. You May have contended
against it for twenty years; but it is
strong of body and thirsty of tongue
You have tried to fight it back with
broken bottle or empty wine Mask.
Nay, that is not the weapon. With
one horrible roar he will seize thee
by the throat, and reud thee limb
from limb. Take this weapon, sharp
and kcen--reach up and get it from
God's armory—the swerd of the
spirit. With that thou mite,reet drive
him back and coaquer
Men think, \V hell hey coutend
against an evil habit, that they have
to fight, it all alone. No I 'They
stand in the centre of an immense
circle of sympathy. Paul bad been
reciting the names of Abel, 'Enoch.
Noah, Abraham, Sarah, Isaac, Joa-
eph, Gideon and Barak and then
says, "Being compassed about with
so • great a cloud of witnesses."
Before I get through I will Fhow
you that you fight in an arena,
around which circle • in galleries
above each other, all the kindling
eyes and all the sympathetic hearts
of the ages, and at every victory
gained there comes down the then-
dering.'applause of. a great multitude
that no man Can number. "Being
compassed about with so great a
cloud of witnesses." •
On the first elevation of the ancient
amphitheatre on the clay of a cele-
bration, sat Tiberius or Augustus or
the reigning kipg. - So in the great
arena of spectators that Watch our
struggles and in the first divine gal-
lery, as I shall dell it, Sits our
Xing, one Jesus, On his head are
many crowns. The Roman emperor
get his place by cold blooded don -
quests, but our Xing hath come tie
his place tier the broken hearts heal-
ed and the
TEARS wirtz AWAY
and the souls redeemed. The Homan
emperor sat, with folded arms, ine
different as to whether ,the -swords-
Mari or the lion boat, but our laing's
sympathies are all with us—nay, un -
/ward of condesceusion I see hint
come down from the gallery into the
arena to help us in the fight, shoot-
ing until all up and dean his voice
is heard : "Fear not 1 I will help
thee 1 I will strengtheu thee by the
right hand of my power I"
They gave to the men in the arena
in the olden time food to thicken
their blood, so that it would flow
slowly and that for a louger time
the people might gloat over the
scene. But our Xing has no preeeare
in our wounds, for we are bone of
his bone, flesh of his flesh, blood of
xis blood.
Once in the ancient amphitheatre a
lion with one paw caught the com-
batant's sword and with his other
paw caught his shield. The VIEW
took his knife froe, eie atrial° and
slew the beast. The king sitting in the
gallery, said: "That was not fair.
The lion must be slain by a sword."
Other lions were turned out, and the
Poor victim fell. You cry, "Shamel
shame!" at such meanness. But the
Xing in this case is our brother, and
he will see that we have fair play.
He will forbid the rushing out of
more lions than we can meet, He
will not suffer us to be tempted
above what we aro able. Thank
God! The King is in the gallery!
His eyes are on us- His heart is
with us, His hand will deliver us.
eraulsetssiendhimar.e„ they who put their
t
r look again and I see the angelic
gallery. There they are—the angel
that swung the sword at the gate of
Eden, the same that Ezekiel saw up-
holding the throne of God, and from
which look away, for the splendor
is insufferable. Here are the guard-
ian angels. That one watched a pat-
riarch; this ono protected a child;
that one has been pulling a soul out
of temptation! All these are inessee-
gers of light! Those drove the Span-
ish armada on the rocks. This turned
Sennacherib's living host alto a
heap of 185,000 corpses. Those yon-
der chanted the Christmas carol
over Bethlehem until the chant
AWOKE THE SHEPHERDS.
These at creation stood in the bal-
cony of heaven and serenaded taa
newborn world wrapped in the swad-
dling clothes of light. And there,
holier and mightier than all, is Mich-
ael, the archangel- To command' an
earthly host gives dignity, but this
one is leader of the 20,000 chariots
of God arid of the ten thousand times
ten thousand angels. I think God
gives command to the archangel, and
the archangel to the seraphim, and
the seraphim to the cherubim, until
all the lower orders of heaven hear
the command and go ferth on the
high behest.
Now, bring on your lions! Who
can' fear. All the spectators in the
angelic gallery are our friends. "He
shall give His angels charge over
thee, to keep the in all thy ways.
They shall bear thee up in their
hands lest thou dash thy foot
against a stone. Thou shalt tread
upon the lion and adder; the young
lion and the dragon shalt thou
trample under foot."
I look again and see the gallery
of the prophets and apostles. Who
are those mighty ones up yonder?
Hosea and Jeremiah and Daniel and
Isaiah and Paul arid Peter and John
and James. There sits Noah waiting
for all the world to come into the
ark, and Moses, waiting till the
last Red Sea shall divide, and Jere-
miah, waiting for the Jews to re-
turn, and john of the apocalypse,
waiting for the swearing of the an-
gel that time shall be no longer.
Glorious spirits! Ye were howled
at, ye were stoned, ye . were spit
upon! They have been in this
light themselves and they are all
with us. Daniel knows all about
lions. Paul fought with beasts at
Ephesus.
loolt again and I see the gallery
of the nairtyrs. Who is that? Hugh
Latimer, sure enough! He would
not apologize for the truth he
preached, and so he died, the night
before swinging from the bedpost
in perfect glee at the thought of
emancipation. Who is that army
of 6,066. They are the Theban le -
glee. who
DIED FOR, THE FAITH.
Here is a larger host itt magniffEent
array, 884,000 who perished for
Christ in the persecutions of Diocle-
tian. Yonder is a family group
Iselicitas of 'Rome and her children.
'While they were dying for the faith
she stood encouraging them. One
son was whipped to death by thorns;
another was flung from a, rock; an-
other was beheaded. At last the
mother became 0, martyr. They are
all together, a family grout, is
Heaven! Yeutter is Johu Bradford
who said in the fire, "We shall
have n, merry supper with the Lord
to -night!" Yonder is Henry Voes,
who exclaimed us he died, "tf 1 had
ten heads, they should all fall o:f fop
Christ!" The great throng of the
martyrs! They had hot lead pour-
ed down their throats; horses were
fastened to their feet, arid thus they
were pulled apart; they had their
tongues pulled out with millet
pinchers; they were Sewed up in the
skits of animals and then thrown
to the dogs; they wore daubed with
combustibles aad set on fire! If
all the martyrs' stakes that have
been kindled could be set at proper
distances, they would make the
midnight alt tbe world over bright
as noonday! And now they stt
yonder in the martyrs' gallery. For
them the fires ot persecution have
gone out; the swords arNov
assiieattilli003d
and the mob hushed.
waath us with an observing sym-
pathy. They know all the rein
all the hardship, all the anevish, all
the injustice, an the privation. They
Cannot keep still. They cry: "Cour-
age! The Pre will not consume: the
floods cannot drown; the Donstali-
nnoo
iotdowaronouarip, Courage (lovas these
look again, and I see the aal-
lery of our departed. Many of
those, in the other galleries we have
heard of, but these Iva iMoaa Oh,
how !Wittier their faces!
THEY SAT AT OUR TABLES,
and we walked to the House' of God
in company. Have they forgotten
us? Those fathers and mothers_
started us on the road- of life. Aro
they careless as tie what becomes of
us? And those children—do they
look with stolid indifference as to
whether we win or lose this battle of
life? They remember the day they
left us. They remember the agony
of the last farewell. Though years
in Heaven they know our team They
remember our sorrows:, They speak
our names. They watch this fight for
Heaven.
My hearers, shall wo die itt the ar-
ena of rise to join our friends in the
gallery? Through Christ we LIMY
come off more than conquerors. A
soldier dying itt the hospital rose
up in bed the last moment arid cried,
"Here, here!" His attendants put
him back on his pillow and tithed
him why he shouted "Here!" "Oh,
I heard the roll call of Heaven, and
I was only answering to my name!"
I wonder whether after this battle
of this life is over our names will
be called in the muster real of the
pardOned and glorified and, with the
joy of Heaven breaking upon. our
souls, shall cry, "Bela, here!"
THE S. S. LESSON,
INTERNATIONAL LESSON
26. "And the angel of the Lord
spake unto Philip, saying, Arise and
go toward the south." The previous
verse says that Peter and John
preached the word of the Lord in
Samaria, and then, on their way
back to Jeri -tactical, preached the gos-
pel in many villages of the Samar-
itans. They evidently left Philip
busy in the midst of a great work
in Scunaria, and while continuing
faithfully to preach Christ a messen-
ger from heaven is sent to him com-
manding him to leave Samaria and
go down to the desert way, which
was between Jerusalem and Gaza.
It may have seemed a strange and
unrettionteble thing to leave a great
work and go to a desert road with-
out being told why or wherefore, but
the great motto of a true weaker
with God must be "willing and
obedient.''
27, 28. "And he arose and went,
and, behold, a man of Ethiopia. who
had come to Jerusalem for to wor-
ship, was returning and, sitting in
his chariot, read Esaicts, the pro-
phet." Here, then, is the reason of
the angel's visit to Philip. God saw
the hungering peel of this man of
great authority under the queen of
Ethiopia, and ale would satisfy that
longing soul, and Philip, the faith-
ful messenger in Samaria, was the
chogen vessel. God knew that He
had a prompt and obedient servant
in Philip.
29, 80. "Then the spirit said unto
Philip, Go near and join thyself 1.0
this chariot." At Samaria an angel
spoke to lain; now' the Holy Spirit
tells him what td do. As to the
Spirit speaking to believers see
chapters x, 19; xi, 12; xvi, 6, 7, and
consider the promises in John xiv,
26; xv, 26; xvi, 13. It is possible
for us to hear the voice of the
Spirit and be guided by Him. Hee
also Isa. xxx, 21. God haapromised
that He will surely guide His peo-
ple (Ps. xxxii, 8), and I believe Ile
guides in one or other of three ways
—by His Spirit through. His word.
if necessary by His Spirit apart
to it, and by klis providences or the
from His word, but never contrary
events of daily life. A believer
ought to be a Spirit filled anclaSpirit
controlled person, gad since God de-
sires it what can hinder but our
unwillingness ? Pronipt and obe-
dient, Philip ran to the chariot, and,
hearing the eunuch reading in the
prophecy of Isaiah, he said "Uuder-
standest thou what thou readest ?"
See what pains God will take to
cause one to understand His word
'when ITe sees that desire in the heart
and remember how the Lord Jesus
on the resurrection day took two or
three hours to open the Scriptures
to those two who were slow of
heart to believe (Luke xxiv, 32),
May His patience be ours.
81. "He desired Philip that be
would come up ancl sit with him."
The treasurer of the queen was a
great man and at this time ticlthg
in his chariot, while Philip was poor
and probably had the appeaxance 'of
wayworn traveller, yet see how
cordially he is received by the man
of authority. Many messages have
been unspoken and letters unwritten
which the Spirit has svhispered be-
cause some timid soul has feared re-
buke. It is ours to obey ; reetilts
are the Lord's. See Jer. i, 7-9.
82, N. He was wading of some
one who had been cruelly ill treated.
bat, like a lamb or a sheep, was
dumb before his peeseeii tors—one
from whout all justice was talten
away and who was finally slain.
Thu story is so familiar 1.0 110 that
it does not affect us. We have
heard it from the prophets who fore-
told it and in the gospels from those
who actually wittesseet the
fulilil-
tnent of the prophedes. We knoW, or
profess to know, 1 -Tim of whom the
prophets spelee, who fulfilled every
prophecy concerning His humiliation
but how much do we .care? This
Man rend with interest and astonish-
ment, perhaps for the first dine.
There aro mauy who have natrer read
of Him because those put in trust
with the gospel have net beert faiths
ful to their trust. Contrast Rom. i,
14-16; I. 'Mess. ii, 4,
34, 85, "Then, Philip opened hie
mouth raid began at the same Scrip -
tare sad preached afitcf him Jesus."
This he did in reply to the eunuch's
question, "Of whom *speaketh the
prophet this?" Philip did net waste
ahy thee on the style et the Pro-
phet or oh the possibility of therre
MARCIE 16.
Text of the Lesson, Acts viii.,
26-40. Golden Text, Roin.
x., 10.
being two Isaioi, each af whottZ
wrote part of the book, neither did
he se much as hint at the jiposst-
bility
or anY one writing ofe things
700 years before they happeneaa but
fr011t thls aad other Scriptures he
Made plain the .truth concerning
Jesus,
86, 87, "I bellow; diet Jesus
Christ is the Son of God." Compare
the confessions af Peter and Martha
in Matt. xvi, 16; John xi, 27, and
note I. John. v, 3, "Whosoever bele
lieveth that Jesus is the Christ is
born of God," Unlesa you have Over
talked with and led to Christ a soul
really Maim for the truth you can-
not understand Philip's joy as he,
by the Spirit, opened. the Scriptures
and saw this man drink it all in and
then ask to be baptized, Truly the
Lord himself was With them '(Matt.
xviii, 20), and the Spirit wrought
glorioaely. "With the heart man
believoth unto righteousness and
with the mouth confession is made
unto salvation" (Rom. x, 10). The
eunuch had believed itt bit heart and
confessed with his mouth and was
quite ready for a further public con-
fession. before all his servants, for
doubtless there were many with hint.
88, 89. "The spirit of the Lord
caught away Philip, that the eunuch
saw hiti no more, and he went on
his way rejoicing, How strangeathe
whole thing must have seemed to the
driver of the chariot and the rest of
the company—taa stranger invited to
ride with their master, the earnest
coaversation, the baptism, the hade
den disappearance of the stranger
and their master's now joy, which
no doubt he told them all about,
and the queen, too, when he arrived
home! The Lord by Philip wrought
a. great work that day and some
time we may hear the sequel to this
story from the lips of the eunuch
himself, 1 sun sure that Philip was
and has been many a time glad that
he was so prompt and obedient. How
the Spirit of the Lord caught him.
away I know not, but I believe that,
having anished his work, he super-
naturally disappeared.
40. "Philip was found at Azotus,
and, passing through, he preached in
all the cities till he came to Caesar-
ea." This last place seems to have
been Philip's home, and a church
was gathered there (Acts xaci, 8;
xviii, 22). It matters not whether
we find Philip in Samaria or in the
chariot or going from place to place,
he is ever preaching Christ.
FOREIGN GROWN SEEDS,
aar
WHERE OUR PRINCIPAL SUP-
PLY CONES FROM.
By Xr. G. H. Clark, B.S.A., Chief
of Seed .Division, Dept.
of Agriculture.
If the faxiners of Canada were ac-
quainted with the sources of supply.
of their root crop seeds, and the av-
enues through which they pass be-
fore reaching them, they would be
a great deal more particular when
making their purchases.
Practically all the seed for our
root crops is grownin foreign coun-
tries. However important it may
be that the seed of such crops be
grown in the country where it is
wanted for sowing, the cheap la.bor
in those foreign countries, which liave
become the seed gardens of the world
has made the seed growing industry
unprofita.ble to Canadian fanners or
seed specialists,
Our supply of foreign grown seeds
is bought and imported principally
by our larger seed firms. They may
make their purchases either by pay-
ing a connuensurate I:idea to reli-
able European seed growers, men
who grow seed from. selected pedi-
greed stock, or they may buy seed at
a much lower price—seed that is
grown by men whose chief aim bas
been to produce a largo quantity, in-
dependent of the quality of the crop
it will produce. 3.n the former case,
the seed is grown from selected
plants—from roots which have an
ideal .size and amen and are known to
be
TRUE TO NAME.
For instance, an ideal turnip is one
having a small neck, and top growth.
Such a _root when planted will pro-
duce a comparatively small ' growth
of stalks, and consequently a small
amount of seed, but the seed from
such a root is apt to produce a crop
like the mother root which was
planted. On the other hand a small
turnip having several root prongs,
and an excessive growth of top com-
ing from two or three separate neck.
growths, will transmit its like
through the seed to the next crop.
Seed cat Often be grown froin suph
roof -A much more cheaply than from
selected roots, because, in the first
place, the mother roots are culls,
and are not as valuable for feeding,
and secondly, they will produce a
much larger quantity of seed., '
During the last ten or fifteen years
the seed trade has, to a great ex-
tent, been passing from the hands of
scedsmen who devote all their time
to a, study of seeds and
the seed trade, Jute the hands of lo-
cal dealers. Unfortunately, fair cent -
petition itt the seed trade, is practi-
cally impossible, since the appear-
ance of most commercial seeds, is
but a. slight indication of tilde real
value. The competition has boon,
and is too largely confined to prices
alone. Farmers continue to DatrOrl-
ise the local dealer who is able to
gtioto e, low price for his goods. The
local dealer demands a. low-priced
seed of the wholesale firms, and in
turn there has been a growing strife
ameing wholesale seed firms in the
buying of cheap goods, with which
to supply local -dealer's.
It is well to mention, however,
that through, the progressive spirit
of some reliable seed houses a lim-
ited trade of the boat stocks; of root.
crops bas been fostered, and there is
little difficulty eXPerisnaea ildnOtig ill-
tolligent farmers, in getting the best
quality of seeds provided ' that they
go the right way about it, ancl are
1 willieg to pay re COMMCIISUrato
Mine. But much of the root crop
seeds sold in Canada are retailed to
the fariner at a price quite as loW ns
our Canadian Seed lamb% have to
***4444444.444444"44.4.••••••••****444..•••••••ettcmv**1
• ZO, THE KING,
•
: 1* i
T E a n d f,
• --,,,--dr, in T EEN
: .,.:,,,,....:,.. io
H ES S
• .„
• li
•
•
. OF DEVONSHIRE. i
•
•
•
•
I
4.
Of
Hero is the best offer over made in this eommunity. By a very excellent cue 01
rangement Made with the Family Herold and Weekly Star of Moatreal we tire
enaeSed to offer Tee EKE= Timis aud that great Family Pepor, the
Family ile-ald and Weeray Star, for one year for the mail sum of $1.75. and in-
clude to eaeb se ieteriber three beautiful preatiura pictures, of which the follow.
Ing is a brief deseripa•e .
IA Remarkable Offer.
1
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
KING EDWARD VIL—True to Ilk a beautiful portrait size 18 X
24 indices, on beautiful tesay white satin finished paper for framing. This portrait 0
has beau taken since ha imeession to the throne, caul is the very latest and best 40
Obtainable. . It eannet be had except through the FAMILY Hanaen AND •
WEEKLY STAR; each picture beam the King's autograph. This picture has the .
great merit of being the first taken after the King's accession, and has therefore :
en historical yalue that no other picture can possess. \ 40
QUEEN ALEXANDRA.—An exquisitely beautiful ploture of the ren,aar. *
ably beautiful andgoc i' Queen Alexandra, s1S(1 taken since the King's accossion .
to the throne. Ibis the same size as that of the Ring, the two forming a hand- .As
some pair of pictures Shoe alone would sell for many times the subscription price •
of pagnerpoarubdraptitcotifirtehse.
Xing and Consort teken at the second or set:weeding:At- 1
tinge can have one fraction of tine value of tlie first. The se go down to Mame,. ;
THE DUCHESS OF DEVONSHIRE.—The Renowned Gainsborough Pic- .
stolen by clever thieves, hidden for over twenty-four years and delivered to its i
tare. , Sold at auction sale in London twenty-five yeers ago for 410,500,
owner on payment of $25,000 reward and since sold to M. S.Plerpont Morgan for t
$75,000.
This, in brief, is the history of ono of the premium pictures, 'which, by a 2
°levet stroke of enterprise, the publishers of the Family Herald have secured ter : 4'
their Subscribers. The picture is 22x2ii in ten colours, and is reproduced line for .
line, colour for colour with the original. Copies of the reproduction are now sold 8
lit New 'York City, Montreal and Toronto for $12 each, and this is the picture 8
Family Herald subscribers are going to get absolutely free together tvitO the '3'‘
. - •
pictures of the ging and,Queen.
se -
Is that not big value? Cell at Tan Tales Office and see samples •
of those beautiful pictures.
• You Want THE EXETER Tams for the local news, and you want that
1 great paper the Family Herald for ti's 24 pages of general news and family
reading. Its agricultural pages alone are worth many times the subscription
prIcie.
arang or send your subscription to 4-
• +11,
9
THE TIMES OFFICE. •
•
•••••••••••••••••••0••••••4•0•0***414.+4+0.....0.004$ I
ea.
110(,-v
. t
' traa
• •
-445.124.11-
aea
1 If yon ever contracted auy Blood Disease you are never safe unless the virus or
poison has boort eradicated from the system. At times you see alarm lug -symptoms,
but live in hopes no serious results will follow. Have you any of the following
symptoms? Sore throat, ulcers on the tougue or in the month., hair falling out, ach-
ing pains itchiness of the skin, sores or blotches on the body, eyes red and smart,
dyspeptic stomach, sexual weakness—Indications of the secondary stage. Donn
trust to luck. Don't rain your system with the old fogy treatment—mercury and
potash -which only suppresses the symptoms for a time only to break outagainwhett
happy in domestic life. Don't let quacks experiment on you. Our NEW hIETHOD
TREATMENT is guaranteed to cure you. Our cuarnatees are bricked
by frotiair borsds that the disease will never return. TttouSande of patients
have been already cured by our NEW METHOD TREATMENT for over 20 years,
and no returu of the disease. No experiment, no rise—not a "patch up," but a pod.
tive cure. Tim worst cases solicited.
OU DftITY
OUR NPAIT lidETITOD TIZRATNIRNT will cure yon, and raalte a man
of you. Under its influence the brain becomes active the blood purified so that
all pimples, blotches and .tocers disappear; the nerves' become strong as steel, so
that nervousness bashfulness and despondency disappear; the eyes become bright,
the face full and clear, energy returns to the body, and the morassphysical and sex-
ual systems aro invigorated; all drains cease—no more vital waste 1 roni the system.
The various organs become natural and manly. You feel yourself a man and know
marriage cannot be a failure. We invite all the afflicted to consult us confidentially
and free of charge. Don't let quacks and fakirs rob you of your hard-earned
dollars. WS WILIt CURE YOU OR NO PAY.
We treat and cure NERVOUS DEBILITY, SEXUAL WEAKNESS, EMIS-
SIONS, SYPII/LIS, GLEE?, STRICTURE, VARICOCELE,ICIDISEY and
BLADDER DISEASES, and all diseases peculiar to men and women.Cures guaran-
teed.
ERABElp Are you a victim? Have you lost hope? Are you contemplating
mat -nage? Ras your blood been.diseased? Hare yea any treatc.:
t nese? Our New Method Treatment win cureyou. Consultatios
Free. No matter who has treated you, write for an honest opinion Free of Charge:.
Charces reasonable. Netts free. --"The Golden Monitor" [illustrated/ on Diseases of
men "Diseases of Women" "The Wages of Sin." "Varicocele, Stricture and Meet."
.511 sent Free sealed.
110 medicine sent C. 0. D. No names on been or envelopes. Everything
confidential. Question list and Cosi' of Treatment, FREE, for Home Cure.
RS.
ee.
et)
143 SI-IELBY ST.
aaal
Iss
4‘
•ai 171'
a Se
DETROIT
ea -
•Sir,
irefaa
•,•
. .1%136" 116.113e801.K..,_
pay • reputed Earopean seed growers
for the best seed from selected
PEDIGREED STOCK.
Appeals have been made, both by
seedsmen and farneers, to place such
restrictions on the seed trade, as
will serve to withdraw the responsi-
bility connected therewith from the
hands of incompetent local -edeelers.
With root crop seeds, this aim, may
be reached ay dalowing only reliable
seed houses or seed inverters the
right to place such goods on the
market; by allowing them to place
goods in sealed packages, each pack-
age to be properly labelled, and to
bear the name and consequently, the
reputation of the seed house: in the
hands of local dealers to be solcl on
commission only. Official interfer-
jectionable features,
once in the seed trade
mPayerhhiatpvse t°Ibee-
most striking example of where leg-
islation has been applied to improve
the conditions under which commer-
cial seeds are sold is in the State of
Maine, whore all seeds sold must be
accompanied with a statement, show-
ing the percentage of pure and vital '
seeds. They have extended to their
seed trade a modification Of the Act
which is used iaCaitada to regulate
the quality of commercial fertilizers
and the results have clearly demon-
strated that, whatever evils may me -
company an enforced guarantee sys-
tem In connection with the seed
trade-, it is an effective way to im-
prove the quality of Commercial
seeds, especially of clover and grass -
CS, of Which a great deal is sold in
some districts in Canada, abet con-
tains large quantities of noxious
wood seeds and is 0, decided -injury,
not Only to the fanner who -buys it,
gbruotwtno. the locality where it is
INFECTrON BY SALIVA.
/IOW the Germs of Coxisaraptioe.
Are Transmitted.
Since the tubercle bacillus may be
fdund in the saliva, of a tuberculous
patient, it is best mime to kiss sech
a Pasteur, en the mouth. The habit
of kissing or caressiug domestio ani-
alals (parrots, canary -birds, clogs,
cats), many of whom are tubercu-
lous, is equally dangerous, for
through such habits these animals
cat eertai aly transatie tebeeettiosis
to mart. •
Tube r cu 1 oa s pa Li en ts Jiotild have
their own dehiking Wasseo, spoons,
rotas, eta- or. at least, all table
utensils whitat have served the tubeie
Those who have used Laza-Liver Pills
say they have no equal for relieving and
Curing Constipation, Sick. Head.*
mehe, Biliousness, Dyspepsia,
Coated Tongue, Foul Breath)
Heart Burn, Water Brash or
any disease or disorder of the stomach,
liver ,or bowels.
Mrs. George Williams, Fairfield Plains,
Ont., writes as follows: " As there are so
many other medicines offered for sale in
substitution for Laxa-Liver Pills I am par-
ticular to get the genuine as they far sun.
pass anythingelse for regulating the bowels
and correcting stomach disorders," •
Laxa-Liver Pills are purely vegetable;
neither gripe, weaken nor sicken, are easy
to take and prompt to act.
MOVIEGIIIMM02199211WWFOIMOZTICCIellt111,111MMTNAME=ZARAISI
eulous patient sb.ould be boiled after
use.
The patient should never, out of
false modesty, swallow hie expector-
ation.He will thus avoid the dan-
ger of contracting intestinal. thber-
eulosis. How important -this wean-
ing is may become ovidont from ob-
Servations Of the tuberculoas ineane.
These unfortunate people, with whom,
'hygiereid education is impossiale, of-
ten Swallow their expectoration, and
as a eonsequenee intestinal tubercu-
losis or eonsumption of thebowels is
very frequent •canong them. Every
CoiaStilliptitre .patient Should ethical-
ber never to touch food before hav-
ing Washed his holds very thormigh-
ly. Igvenwith the greatest care, it
is .possiblethat he may have soiled
dis hands With tulairatious expector-
atiorie
Corpl.. Alfred: amines;Bishop or
Whitbread, of the 050 'Co. 'Imperial
Yeomanry, melding at Leicester, was
et Dumfries sentenced eo six menthe' ,
imprisohment for hiavivg bigamously
'florae R, SoLuostio ne,vazit.