The Clinton New Era, 1913-05-15, Page 7DANOER PfiIflO
OFWOMANS'UFE
FROM 45 is 56
Interesting Experience of Two
Women—Their Statements
Worth Reading.
White Oak, Ont. -"At Change of Life
when doctors could do no more and I was
given up by my
friends, Lydia E.
Pineham's Vegeta_
ble Compound came
to the front and did
wonders for me. I
had been having fe-
male troubles for
years, my head trou-
bled the severely at
times, I had bearing
down pains and back-
ache and I was very
anaemic from excessive flowing. I rec-
ommend your Compound highly and do
all I can to advertise it as a genuine wo=
mans 'medicine." - Mrs. - SYLVESTER.
MANNING, White Oak, Ontario.
The Case of elem. Peirlin.
Circleville, Ohio. -"I can truthfully
say that I never had anything do me so
much good during Change of Life as Ly-
dia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
"Before I had taken one half a bottle
of it I began to feel better, and I have
continued taking it. My health is better
than it has been for several years. If
all women would take it they would es-
cape untold pain and misery at this time
of life." -Mrs. Ai,10E Kamer, 858 W.
Mill St., Circleville, Ohio.
The Change of Life is one of the most
critical periods of a woman's existence.
Mauch timeswomen may rely upon Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
Coal Mining Art
' 'hecoal miners of the United
ritenow number nearly three-
iiarters : of a .million, about one-fifth
them being employed in the Penn-
sglvania anthracite. fields.'
A Luminous Gar
A luminous paint for automobiles
invented in England 1s said to be so
effectively that a car coated with it is
visible at night for two miles without
the ode of lamps.
•African Gold
Official figures show Africa led the
world in the 'production of gold last
year, with the 'United States second,
Australasia third and Mexico fourth,
Domestic Scionce Dictionary
Domestic science instruction in Ger-
many has become so important that
a special domestic science dictionary
has been published.
The Smoking Habit
Sir Walter Raleigh and his com-
anions introduced into England the
abetof smoking tobacco on their re -
urn from Virginia in 1585.
'CARTERS
PILLS.
Pick 'irendache and :,ilei c n11 the troublcg!nef-
dent to 0 billouo state of the sotem, suet' as
Dizziness, N. usca Jiro •sins :DlStrees after
nine Pain inthe 4 o T . 1Vhiletucirmeeb
;cmarkable.success has la ashown(ricaring
1 c,.
e'
Fienanehe, yet Ca'ter's Little Liver sills ata!
equally V7 hlnI n t un
st
4
1 , Curin
fi'n
C
venting this .annoying complaint. hdcthey
e
correct ,fflad,s timalatethe
and regulate theb' I Men liver u s t if th
n ] e one
c
Y 5
owed D
REM
y 1 ,vc
Ache they would He almost lir leekeste these Who
suffer from taiswetru-nun sonllouin
hntfnrtur
nately their yeti Resdova notev 1 hr•rc and theee
who once tr them it sat t.
t ill t L1 c! cul! nt
able in PO Many we w that t .oy oI.1 not he WI.'
ling to 4) without t em,
t r,l,.c
.
.Let
d
((,``,��••�„�, fid' ��! I ��
AFF
,n
the bane of en r � �'•'
we
er tv -.vas tl+nt hem is whew
NCn al l:Onl'. ,E.M1Ll
t at Oar )! buwuttbil
t a
others do nc
t
Carter's Little Live: Pills rim very 6111611 and.
TerY eavY tulm. One„tt r.litwnLuatlo .
They are etri+•t!v ve t i•li and lot of grl c or
par .°, all. ,
1 but t+ Cil(.IC oa i
u., a:c tet •,lu ea1_
A 3 ns u}i
t, , e
r,selhara.
ry 041.117073:DiNl1 C0.0 t.mtR, .03i! i',r
g 01 Dom Orall lam
DON'T NEGLECT
YOUR WATCH
AWATCH is a delicate piece
of machinery. It calls for
Tess attention' than most
machinery, but must be;cleaned
and oiled occasienallx to keep
perfect time. 1:
With proper care s Waltham
Watch will keep perfect time
for a lifetime. It will pay you
well to let us clean your watch
every 12 or r8 months.
W. R. COUNTER
,1`cweler a:id Opti :tan.
issuer of
Marriage Licenses.
••••••••••••••••••••••s•••
[T.+ 11 . ivie
•••G"ait. a00iiiiiiii61114406•••o••0
leis belated sleep and hers had.
spared them both the stares and
laughing chatter of the passengers.
But this bridal couple's two 'berths,
standing like towers among the seats,
had provided conversation for every
body; had already united the casual
group of strangers into an organized
gossip -bee.
Mallory got into his` shoes and as
`much of his teethes as was necessary
,for the dash to the washroom, and
took on his aria the rest of his ward-
robe.' Just as he issued from his
loriely chamber, Marjorie appeared
from hers, much disheveled and
heavy -eyed. The bride and .groom ex-
changed glances of mutual terror, and
,li'urried in opposite directions.
• The spickest and spannest of :lieu -
'tenants soon realized that he was re-
duced to wearing yesterday's linen as
Well as yesterday's beard. This was
'intolerable. A brave man can endure
'heartbreaks, loss of love, honor and
(place, but a neat man cannot abide
!the traces of time in his toilet. Lieu-
tenant Mallory had seen rough sery
!ice in camp and on long hikes, when
:he gloried in mud and disorder, and,
he was to see campaigns in the Phil-
'ippines, when he should not take off
'his shoes or his uniform for three
;days at a time. But that was the
field, and this . car was a drawing
room.
In this crisis in his affairs, Little
;Jimmie Wellington waddled into the
men's room, floundering about with
?every lurch of the•train, like a cannon
loose in the hold of: a ship. He fum-
bled with the handles on a basin; and
made a crazy toilet, trying to find
some abatement of his fever by filling
'a glass at the ice -water tank .and
emptying it over his head.
Thesedrastic measures restored
him to some sort of coherency, and,
'Mallory appealed to him for help in
the matter of linen, Wellington
ef-
fusively offeredhimeverything he
had, and Mallory selected from his
'store half a dozen collars, any one of
,which would have gone round his
neck nearly twice.
Wellington also proffered his safety
razor, and made him a present of a
virgin wafer of steel for his very own,
With this 'assistance, Mallory was
enabled to make himself fairly pre,
seutable. When he returned to his
seat, the three curtained rooms had
.been whisked away by the porter.
There was no place now to hide from
the passengers.
He sat clown facing the femininr
:end of the car, watching for Marjorie.
,The passengers were watching Re'
her, too, hoping to learn what en-
iheard-of incident could have pro-
voked the quarrel that separated a
`bride and groom at this time, of all
times.
To the general bewilderment, when
Marjorie appeared, Mallory and she
;rushed together and clasped hands
,with an ardor that suggested a desire
for even more ardent greeting. The
passengers almost sprained their ears
to hear how they would make up such
a dreadful feud, But all they heard
was; "We'll have to hurry, 'Marjorie,
if we want to get any breakfast."
"All right, honey. Come along,"
Then the inscrutable couple scur-
ried up the aisle, and. disappeared in
the: corridor, leaving behind them a
mighty riddle. They kissed in the
corridor of that car, kissed in the'ves-
+tibule, kissed in the two corridors of
the next car, and were caught kiss-
ing in the next vestibule by the new
conductor.
The dining car conductor, who flat-
tered himself that he knew a bride
and groom when he saw them, es-
corted them grandly to a table for•.
two; ered^ about
o, and the waiter r to fi t u t
them with extraordinary considera-
tion..
They had a plenty to talk of in pros.
pect and retrospect. They both felt
'sure that a minister lurked among the
cars so a em wller,they and ate with a
zest to prepare
forth eceremony, ar-
guing
guing the best place„ for it, and quar-
reling aniorously
over details.. Mal-
lory was for one of the vestibul
5 as
the scene of their union, hut Marjorie
was for the baggage car, till she
re
al
ized that Sno zletms might be unwill-
ing
n ill-
ing to attend. Then she swung rOtI(
Malloryeshifted.
to the t e tflrttle but
to the observation platform,
rm
Marjorie had left Snoozleum5 with
i to hide
l• Temple, who trom sed
'Mrs. e e
1"1
him when the new conductor Pass
ed
through the car, end she reminded
1Tarry to get the waiter to bring theta
a package of bones for their. only
"child," so far.
On the way back from the dining
car they kissed each other good-bye
again at all the trysting places they
had sanctified before. The sun was
,radiant, the world good, and the very
train ran with jubilant rejoicing. They
could not doubt thatafew more hours
twould'see them legally' man and wife.
Malloryrestored Marjorie tp her
place in their car, and with smiles of
assurance, left her for another par -
eon -hunt through the train. She wait-
ed for him in a bridal agitation. He
ransacked the train forward in vain,
and returned, passing Marjorie with
a shake of the head, and a sour
countenance. He went out to the ob-
servation platform where he stumbled
on Ira Lathrop and Anne Gattle, en-
gaged in a conversation of evident
Intimacy, for they jumped when he
epened the door, as if they were guilty
of some plot.
Mallory mumbled his uoual, "Ex-
cuse me," whirled on his heel, and
dragged his discouraged steps back
through the Observation Room, where
various women and a few men of evi-
dent'.uncloricality were draped across
arm chairs and absorbed in lazy con-
versation or bobbing their heads over
magazines that trembled with the mo-
tion of the train.
Mrs. Wellington was busily writing
at the desk, but he did not know wire
she was, and he did not care whom
STRONOELY ADV1SE
FRUITA4VLS"
Because They Cured,Hirn, And
They Will Cure You
Ma. ALEX. MCCARTER
WALsrRIorr. ONT., MAY 9th. rgrr.
I have been in Walkerton iu
business for a good many years and
many of my townsmen know that my
health, for long periods was precarious.
My trouble was extreme Nervousness,.
brought on by Indigestion and Dys-
pepsia, from which'I suffered in the
most severe form. It was so bad that
I could not sleep before about four in
the morning, I noticed one of your
published testimonials of how someone
had used "Fruit-a-tives" for similar
trouble and asked Mr. Hunter, my
druggist, his opinion on the matter and
he advised their use. I immediately -
procured severalboxes and I am pleased
to say that I now enjoy splendid health
and could not possibly feel better. - I
can eat with every degree of satisfaction
and sleep without an effort. - I strongly,
advise anyone. suffering from like
complaints, to commence using
"'Fruit -a -lives". AI,EX. McCARTER.
Soca a box, 6 for $2.5o -trial size, 25c,
At dealers or from Pruit-a-tiveslemeted,
Ottawa. l
ane was writing to. lie . did ob-
serve the baleful glare of Mrs. V,'hit-
comb, who sat watching Mrs. Welling -
well
alltoo
ill who she
;ton, knowing
was, and suspecting the correspond-
ent -Mrs. Whitcomb was tempted to
'spell the word with one "r."
Mallory stumbled into the men's
iortion of the composite car. Here
',he nodded with a sickly cheer .to the
sole occupant, Dr. Temple, who was
looking less ministerial than ever in
an embroidered skull cap. The old
rascal was sitting far back on his
lumbar vertebrae. One of his hands
clasped a long glass filled with a
liquid of a hue that resembled some -
'thing stronger than what it was-
Imere ginger ale, The other hand
;toyed with a long black cigar. The
'smoke curled round the old man's
!head like the fumes of a sultan's
'narghile, and through• the wisps his
!face was one of Oriental luxury.
Mallory's eyes were caught from
this picture of beatitude by the en-
trance, at the other door, of a man
who had evidently swung aboard at
t he most recent stop -for Mallory had
not seen him. His gray hair was
crowned with a soft black hat, and
his spare frame was swathed in a
!frock coat that had seen better days,
;His soft gray eyes seemed to searou
;timidly the smoke -clouded atmos -
sphere, and he 'rad a bashful air which
;Mallory translated as one of diffidence
:iu a place where liquors and cigars
!were dispensed.
With equal diffidence Mallory act
'ranted and iu a low tone accosted the
;newcomer cautiously:
"Excuse me -you look like a clergy-
man."
"The hell you say'"
Mallory pursued the question no
further.
CHAPTER XVIII.
In the Compo- site Car.
It was
n the gentle stranger's turn'
to miss his guess: He bent over the
,chair into which Mallory
hadd flopped,'
and said In a tense, low tone: "Youl
ir I'm
r sot. 1
t'oroughbred hb ed
a to u
look like g P
;trying to make up a game of stud
P
�
, oker. Will you join me?"
"
Mallory
hi heavy head
in re -i 3 shooks Y
fusal, and with dull eyes watched the
math h whose profession o no longer,
er
+
aisund rstood saunter up
to
o the
bl
iss
-
cul Doctor from Ypsilanti, and mutt
suagain:
"Will you join me?"
i
"d'oin you in what, sir?"said Dr.
Temple, with alert'em w tl courtesy.
t
1 ,
• "A little game."
• "I don't mind," the doctor
smiled,
rising with amiable readiness. "The
+
Checkers are in the next room." ,
"Quit your .iddin the stranger!
jcoughed. "How about a little freeze -1
put?"
"Freeze -out?" said Dr. Temple, "It;
sounds interesting. Is it something
like authors?"
The newcomer shot a quick glance
at this man, whose innocent air he:
suspected. But he merely dra'ivled:j
"Well, you play it with cards."
"Would you mind teaching me the
rules?" said the old sport from Ypsi-1
tante. ,
The gambler was growing suspicious
pf .title too, too childlike innocence.
He whined: "Say, what's your little
game, eh?' but decided to risk the
venture. He sat down at a':table, and,
Dr. Temple, bringing along his glass ,
drew up a chair. The gambler took,
a peck of cards from his pocket, and
shuffled them with a snap that startled
Dr. Temple and a dexterity that de-
=lighted him, '
"Go on, it's beautiful to see," he
explained. The gambler set the pack
down with the one word "Cut!" but
since the old man made no effort to
'comply, the gambler did not insist. He
.took up the pack amain and ran off
five cards to each place with a grace,
'that staggered the doctor.
Mallory was about to intervene for
'the protection. of the guileless .physi-
cian when the conductor chanced to
!saunter in.
The gambler, seeing him, snatched
Dr. Temple's cards from his hand and
shaped the pack into his: pocket_ ,;,
'What's the ulai.tor tow?" Dr, Tem-
4plo asked, but the newcomer, huskily
+answered: "Walt a minute. Wait a
minute
The conductor took in the- scone
jet a glance and, "stalking tap to the
table, : spoke with the grimness of a
{sea -captain: "Say, I've got my eye
hon you. Dgn't start nothin'."
'Phe sihranger stared at him wonder-
ingly and demanded: "Why, what you
drivin' at?"
"You know all right," the conductor
growled, and then turned on tha be
fuddled old clergyman, "and you, too."
"Me, too?" the preacher gasped,
"Yes, you too;" the conductor re-
peated, shaking an accusing forefinger
'under his nose. "Your actions have
been suspicious from the beginning,
We've all been watching you."
Dr. Temple was so agitated that ht
nearly let fall his secret. "Why, do
you realize that I'm: a-"
"Ah, don't start that," sneered the
conductor, 01 can spot a gambler as
far as I can see one. You and your
side partner here want to look out
that's all, or I'll drop you at the next
'tank." Then he walked out, hiss -ver]
shoulder blades uttering threats.
Dr. Temple stared after him, but
the gambler stared at Dr. Temple
With a homage. "So you're one of us,"
he said, and seizing the old man's
limp hand, shook it heartily: "I got
'to slip it to you. Your make-up is
great. You nearly had me for a come-
on. Great!"
And then he sauntered out, leaving
the clergyman's head swimming. Dr.
"Temple turned to Mallory for explana-
tions, but Mallory only waved him
awes" He was not quite convinced,
himself. IIe was convinced only that
whatever else anybody might be, no-
body apparently desired to be a clergy
man. In these degenerate days.
The conductor returned and threw,
into Dr. Temple the glare 01 two basil-
3sk eyes. The old man put out a be-
;ieecheng hand and began:
"My good man, you do me a grave
injustice."
The conductor snapped back: "You
say a word to me,and I'll do you worse
than that. And If I spot you with a
pack of cards in your hand again, I'll
tie you to the cow-ketcher." ,
Then he marched off again. The
doctor fell back into a chair, trying to
figure it one Then Ashton and Fos-
dick and little Jimmie Wellington and
1Vedgewood strolled in and, dropping:
into chairs, ordered drinks. Before
the doctor could asst anybody C y t0 ex -
,plain, _Ashton was launched an a story.
His mind was a suitcase full of anec•
,dotes, mostly of. the smoking -room
jorder.
Wherever three or four men are
gathered together, they rapidly organ-
lize a clearing -house of off-color stories.
'The doctor listened in spite of trim
self, and in spite of himself he wee
iamused, for stories that would be
+stupid if they were decent, take on a
;certain verve and thrill from their
very forbiddenness.
The dear old clergyman felt that it
Would be priggish to take flight, but
he could not make the corners of his
mouth behave. Strange twitchings of
ithe Bps and little steamy escapes of
'giggle -jets disturbed him. And when
Ashton, who . was a practiced recoil -
!tee; finished a drola:tic adventure
with the epilogue, "And the next
'morning they were at Niagara Falls,'
the old doctor was helpless with laugh
ter. Some superior force, the devi'
no doubt, fairly shook bim with glee
' "Olt, that's bully," he shrieked, "1
haven't heard a story like that. -for
Ogee."
'Why, where have yon been, Dr;
,Temple?" asked Ashton, who could
not imagine where a man could have
concealed himself from such stories.
But he laughed loudest of all when
the doctor answered: "You see, I live
in Ypsilanti. They don't tell me:
stories like that."
"They -who?" said Fosdick.
"Why, my pa -nay patients," the,
doctor explained, and laughed so hard.
that he forgot to feel guilty, laughed
so hard that his wife infhe next room
heard him and giggled to Mrs. Whit-;
comb:.
"Listen to dear Walter. Ile hasn't;
laughed like thats e e since It was a -a.
medical student." Tben she buried
her face guiltily in a book.
n
?"
"Wasn'ts it good?" Dr. Temple de-,
minded, wiping his streaming eves;
and nudging the solemn -faced English-,
r i
man who understood his own ntatfn's.
o
liunior, but had not yet learned the'
Yankeeq uirks. •
Wedgewood e
wool nrade a hollow effortr t at
laughter and answered: Extrem el
e
-very droll,ll but what I don't quite
get was -why the porter said-" The:
!Others drowned him in a roar of laugh -
'ter, but Ashton was angry. "Why, y,You
:blamed fool that's where the joke
came in. Don't you see, the bride-
groom said to the bride-" then he
lowered his voice and diagramed the
story on his fingers.
Mrs. Temple was still shaking with
sympathetic laughter, never dreaming
what her husband was laughing at.
She turned to Mrs. Whitcomb, but
Mrs. Whitcomb was still glaring at
'Mrs. Wellington, whowas still writ-
ing with flying fingers and underscor-
ing every other word.
"Some people seem to think they
own the train," Mrs. Whitcomb raged.
"That creature has been at the writ-
ing desk an hour. The worst of it is,
I'm' sure she's writing to my hus-
band."
Mrs. Temple looked shocked, but an-
other peal of laughter came through'
thepartitionbetween the male and fe-'.
male sections 'of the car, and she,
beamed again. Then Mrs. Wellington;
finished her letter, glanced it over, ad-'
dressed an envelope, sealed' and
stamped it with a deliberation that
maddened itIrs. Whitcomb. When ate
;Asa she P252"2,, za- Whitcomb_ was
Continued next week.
Cepok's Cotton ki?Y' firompailfif.
t �o_. 'Tlis great Uborino,Tomo, anhld
,lti,' i 'Only suer, clfcotnal lvlonty
1Zetrulalyvun whloh'tvbtaencan
elepenu SuId i t threo deqveer,
of a+t agtL.-ire ?:1 ; Ole, 2,
l0 dr �i c s s+.ronF r d8° No. D,
q
'pprcpn{tl on 'roodppt of price,
Asses nm filet. Address: THE
foreasellcn,cs, G" pm box,
Gold 1. all
dra ebb or Sint
SUNDAY
Lesson VI1,--Second Quarter, For
May 18; 1913. ,
THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES.
Text of the Lesson, Gen. xlii, 3-17.
Memory Verses, 15, 15 --Golden Text,
Gal. vi, 7 --Commentary Prepared by
Rev. D. M. Stearns.
The seven years' of plenteousness
were ended, and the seven years of
dearth began to come, and the', dearth
was In all the lands, and even in Egypt,.
and all countries came into si'lgypt to
Joseph: to buy corn (elf, 53-071. One
migbt infer from xli, 55, that some of
the Egyptians rather disliked going to
Joseph tlae Hebrew, and so appealed to
Pharaoh, but he laid them low by say-
ing. "Go unto Joseph; what be saith
to you, 'do." So it came to pass that in
all Egypt, as it badbeen in the prison,
whatsoever they did Joseph was the
doer of it (xxxix, 22)- How like the
great truth concerning the Lord Jesus,
"Neither is there salvation iu any oth-
er" (Acts iv, 12), and how searching
and humiliating to human pride is the
fact that if any wbo know of Him will
not accept His free gift of Himsel4
they cannot be saved! Here is a great`
contrast Corn had, to be bought in
Egypt, but .iesus Christ, having obtain-
ed eternal redemption by the sacrifice
of Himself, gives it freely to "whoso-
ever will,"
Jacob said to his sons, "Behold, s
have heard that there is corn in Egypt"
(xlii, 2). He could not have heard un-
less some one had told. Many have
never heard of eternal life in Christ be-
cause so few tell, or seem to have any-
thing worth telliug. How is it? Is it
nothing to you? Do you care? In due
time there appeared before Joseph,
among those whocame to buy corn,
bis ten brothers, Benjamin having
been left at home, and Joseph knew
them, but they did not know him (vers-
es 3.8)- Tfrenty years may have made
more change 1,x some than in others,
but they would never hare thought of
seeing in the ruler of Egypt the boy
of seventeen whom they had sold as a
Slave. and es to his, to them, foolish
and absurd dreams, they had no doubt
long since ceased to give them a
thought.
Joseph bad forgiven them and had
Learned to see the stand of God in it
all. and now his opportunity had come
to return love for their hatred, but they
must be humiliated and convicted of
their great sin against: him. Tbere is
no life eternal for any except penitent
sinners, and Israel ne a nation crust
become penitent before they can be
saved, but a sight of Him will do it all.
First be accused them of being ,allies,
to which they replied. "We are true
men, e * 1' twelve brethren. the sons
of one man In the land of Cannan: and,
behold, the youngest is this day with
our father, and one is nut (yi t. ee 11,
13). When we consider their ht•atx',out
of Joseph and of their in1Itar at that
time they must have changed i.ra:rlly
to have become true melt; but 1t' they
meant true men as men gn, cn trite la
the sense of their not bring eit-e e h ,r
having come truly fur coral and wain:,;
else, then it stands all t i ^ht'.
They would have time to do some 111l11•
sual thinking (luring their t tl:ti s tit
,BAY{,AFt S.
t a°
M1 P
Aim to make that, strong -and digestion good -and you
will keep well ! No chain :is stronger than its weakest
link. No man is 'stronger than his stomach, With
stomach disordered a train of diseases follow,
lD'a'. Pierce's olden Discovery
makes the stomach healthy, the liver active, and the blood pure, Undo from
forest roots, and extracted without the t160 of alcohol. $old by druggists, in
liquid form at 51,00 per bottle for over 40 years, giving general. satisfaction.
If you prefer tablets as modified by Eat. V. Fierce, imp.. these cars ase
had of medicine deniers or t'ria'l baa by mail on receipt of 3200 Manumits.
MiNifellateTeleilelliMeleletleellegeteekreglees
lesson. Ana nese hl; men-tiernueutiy
story of deliverance. for` on the third
day Joseph talked with them, and
r,greed to let nine of tbem return home
with corn. provided one was left a pris-
oner as an assurance that wben they
came again, for corn they would bring.
their younger brother with them. Then
they . talked with one another in ,fo-
seph'spresence of their guilt of long
ego, for which they bit that they were
now suffering, and they remembered
the anguish of his soul as be besought
them not to .deal! so ,with hits, but to
let him return to his father. yet tin y
would not bear him. i wonder if they
did' not hear those heartrending, cries
many a time during those twenty
years. The memory of some thin;%
will constitute no small Bart of the
torment of the lost, for it was said, to
the rich man who was in torment, "Son.
remember" (Luke xvi, 'dal. Sins for-
given and blotted oat by the blood of
'the Leith will not he remembered
against ns (Iso. xiiii, 20,, land nerd not
be remembered b;r us. Joseph under-
stood n11 they were shying, lint ire
.poke to them thrungh an interpreter
that they might not know him just
yet. 1 -its heart wren greatly touched,
'ane he united away from theta and
wept, but returned again and com-
muned with them. Then. retaining
. i nct n prisoner, hecommanded 10
fol their sodic, put ent•b man's money
in his sick and gave them provision
for the wity.
11'hro they reached dome crithnnt
e nue allbit father, an
ancon r nc tc !d •t tote f t d
that they could not go again unless
they took Benjamin 8100, .Tac•ob was in
r;reat distress, said that Benjamin
shertid never go. and exclaimed most
bitterly. "all these things are against
tate" (verse eat. 11' be only could have
seen the outcome es the now know it
flow tiliferently be would have felt and
talked; But thin wns written for n5
that lvh mi.ht believe that alt things,
hunever dant they look, are for oat
good Plinth. rill. Yat l f we wonld livr
n the love of (Intl, ilio perfect love
(could r'liat nut all fear 11 .[alar ie, 18t,
Jlis
13 e hershno's typtt•tu sin=ges'
thins un this rh'ycter alro conret•uin'
toe "num other name;' that 010110
th,•-wnr111
and E'va'n Ills own knelt' lain'
rant. Ile kart, nil 111011: the entre Inter
put'tit:u 1-11. tt•nrd, t" n0. and Tie t,'iv
Wiz 110 of 111c tnliursp binhn 1. 10, 11; 11
1, 10:.\ran ir, 11: John 5vi. 131.
NON -PARTIZAN ISSUE,
Lloyd -George Seeks Unionist Aid
With Rural Proposals,
LONDON, May 12. -On the eve of
Parliamentary holiday the :Chancellor
of the Exchequer extended the olive
branch to the Unionists, with the
proposal that the land question should'
be made a non-party issue. He ex-
pressed hopes of rendering agricul-
tural labor conditions so attractive•
Viet the populations would flock back
to the villages from the towns. There.
was no industry wherein the work-
ers, he said, were so badly paid as -
the agricultural laborer. 'their wages
and housing conditions were a scan-
dal in the great country. There was
no economic reason why wages
should be as low. There must be
reasons of a social or political char-
acter.
This national question should be
approached from a national, not a
partisan, point el view. He said: "I
do not think there is any question
which more vitally affects the life of
this country than the rural prob-
lem, and I would be very glad to see
real co-operation between the par-
ties in dealing with it, I do not think
it is a question ofattacking any class
or criticizing any class,"
n..
� ,a
g�t�Lr� �Q, (�+
�al
L! h ES'nat.�'3J' e7- 'n 1HtlH
i Catarrhel the
Stomach
i For Thirty Years
i
Catarrh of the Stomach is generally
caused from some interference with the
action of the liver, and is a malady that
affects the whole body.
Some symptoms are burning pain in
the stomach, constant vomiting, abnor-
mal thirst, incessant reaching, etc. On
the first signs of any of these symptoms
elilburn's Laxa-Liver Pills should be
taken. They are a specifie for all dis-
orders arising from wrong action of the
lever.
Mr. Michael Miller, Ellersliet Alta.,
writes: -"I take pleasure in writing you
concerning the great value I have received
by using Milburn's Laza-Liver Pills, for
catarrh of, the stomach, with which 1
have been a sufferer for thirty years. I
used four vials and they completely
cured ane."
Price, 25 cents a vial, 5 vials for 51.(1¢,
at all dealers or mailed direct on receipt
of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited,
Children Cry Toronto, Ont.
FOR FLETCHER'S
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