000 3"} ELE 0mg 1 col- Our £038 inc» .llowo -Nexi ance’t not“ SPOO- Jan.19,1911 poems contri' That is H Yet to is hnked as that @0111 and‘ “" . . , __v- __, a worm are linked Yet Fahï¬l: .pomrts through to always most effectual. Chamberlain’s‘ d b -d ’ '15}; m 9h“ mg mom“ . . Cough Remedy acts on this plan; a covere m ge W1 9 'Ilhat looms .on the ether smde. It allaya the cough, relieves the :0 match that realm on the To enable our feet .m the next ‘ lungs, opens the secretions and other shore. day’s marrdh, Hide natrure in restorin th - must pass through a .tranâ€" To climb up that golden ridge, ‘tem to 3 healthy c0nditgion. 331:5;- . t We must all Lie O’Wn ‘floa‘ one.|gnd3 MVO‘ 1168131in (to it! super-i or men gmm’ 'nï¬g‘ht’s rest excellence. Sold by Gnn’u Drug must walk unseen, Im‘helped Inside 01 the covered bridge. Store. Lu lavâ€"the outer garb 'morugfï¬ hie eye ‘18 dim brddge is dark: And the niver it SPEEDS mï¬versal tdll saver 1" 993115 1’3 'Wme’ ‘ 1akiedjcines that aid nature are al-l pomrts through to '3 ways most effectual. Chamberlain’s mg mount . Cough Remedy acts on this plan. 18 on rtihe other side. It allays the cough, relieves the our feet in the next ‘ lungs, opens the secretions and s mamdh, . ' ‘aids nature in restoring the sys- up that olden ndge, ‘tem to a healthy condition. Thou- an lie own ‘flor one . sands have testiï¬ed dag its superior «which {the hand soul. V v'â€"â€"-d , Tihe 'Witness has only just decid- ed to offer these bargains «tot genui- in‘e new. subscribers, and the pub- .llisfhers agree to refund the full \money to any subscriber Wll’lo IWrites them in a month that he \or she does not Like the bargain. ‘ " LDLNU luv 3 I i i p D D That’s talk, is it not? The ‘Witness is an up-to-date newspaper. Its {splendid stories are alone worth “many times the price,â€"and its ledlitorials are {history-making and ‘unparalleled. The 'W.itness, Can- ada’s great national newspaper, is, :as everyone knows, always flair and square. and fearless. During ‘its jubilee, just celebrated, news- ipapers and public men of every .province have made remarkable .tributes 'to the value and enter- lprise of tihe Montreal Witness. We i "have only space for one of them and W111 quote the Hon. Sydney .Fusiher, the Canadian Minister of : ;Agriculture, in congratulating O . Q ztlhe. Witness on m’he occasion of its Habilse- ’ GOT A DOLLAR? IF NOT, FIFTY CENTS WILL DO. 'Wlhere cam yoru get a great metropolitan znewspaper for fixflty cents .a year? Bult the publishers of Canada’s great national newsâ€" paper, the Montreal Weekly Wit- mess-31nd Cwna-d‘ian Homestead, 'Will send their paper to yqu on :trial â€" -_J... Dpuu ucbvu {â€"1. v- s - mar one yea frOI‘ only tflixfty cents, or ï¬he Daxily 'Wi'tness for nomily one dollar for one year, on tnial. These offers are only open to “those :who have been taking neither the Daily Witness nor Weekly Witness. - J “I have taken the opportunity ‘of saying, to mamy people that I consider the Montreal Witness the lbest managed newspaper in Gam- laid'a, for this amongst other reals- ionsâ€"flha't it is thoroughly inter- Easting and fearless in its expres- lsions and its principles, and its principles are broad, generous. and in the public interest, alnd ', sound, economically, in public alf- .ialirs.†The 3Witness should be in every home. Remember, NEW subscnib- era may have the Daily kWitnessl on trial for flhe year 1911 for 'Oxnfly one dollar, or ’dhe ‘Weekly 'W-i‘tness and Canadian Homestead, on trial for one year for only fifty cents. Ad- dress ,your subscription at omce to Hike publishers, John Dougadl lSon, Witness Block, Montreal About ‘ï¬he only complimentary thing ever said about an Atchison mania flhart he is good to take medtic'me when he is sick. THE DURHAM CHRONICLE 'Text. "Whose pent shall bite 1 “Thou shalt God. But Wh.v son. You nee ‘RmSmm i let 9 multiplication could prove i edge came ‘ shalt not†is : tect Uncle 83‘ con lights. 6,0 along his coast. shalt a fool as to think unc1e bum a Uuug~ â€Wm, ing policeman with a big stick. continue to bear with him till the time t i 3 “Don’t Go Out the Gate!†1‘ of Rev. xx, 1-3. While there is no 1‘ Feudal days had moats With draw- I hope for that great adversary revealed bridges. Then came walled cities. 2 in Scripture, as to men it is written I then houses with brick and stone ' that the Lord is long suffering toward f walls. Our colonists built stockades; i us, 11 ' a hould 13-9 after the Indians had gone, board! . 0t willing that my S pe i . l 1sh but that all should come to re- fences, then the picket and almost in- - ’ I P iii -9 visible wire or a bed of geraniumsâ€" pentance (I 9t: ’ )' ? now none! “Johnny, don’t go out the T The greatest smner may be saved if 1 he will only turn from his sin to God, ll gate." mother used to say. Now John- lny plays on the street. Whether he thu ldid better among the lilacs and the. hang gold fashioned sweet williams protect- , ged by the hedge or out in the street! which burneth wit } dodging .automobiles and .flipping cig- ‘. of Rev. xxi, 8. If any will not receive . ‘zarette mcturee' Is a question â€â€™8 33 , the truth God will let them believe a. llage of transition. Folio“ mg tne tren ' lie, and for all who will not bow toi ,of tlnngs. we are tearing down many the word of God there is no mornin ; 7 fences. They’re so old fogyish! There ‘ , â€g ', ‘ F was a time when folks got married " for them (H Thess. ï¬â€™ 13’ 1’3; Isa. V111" 1 ' and they said. “For better. for worse. it 20’ margin and R' V')' In all the 1115'}: {till death us do part." That was thei tory of. the ten tribes there was not i 1 understanding and they meant it. If ‘ one ruler who feared the Lord. but all ‘ 1 ’ ‘- walked in the wa of J eroboam the ‘ :‘they had a tiff they made it up long y ' , 2 before communion Sunday at the old ‘ son Of 1:??? who made Israel to 811‘ church. But the marriage fence seems (vDerses ,th )0f 1 th _ tottering. Only one in eight standsll rei 1g! e ortyI-ogglyeags o 91 Reno has a permanent settlement. and \ thgn g 1 3:31.};th ,dw 0 was gni our wives get circulars mailed troml tie wdicd :13}: in h g an most or t .6“ there at the breakfast table. They are me g. t e sight Of. the Lord, six of the kings of the ten tribes either busy tearing down the old Sabbath. rel ed or b n to rei d each fence our forefathers thought was so gn ega gn, an I one is mentioned by name in conneco necessary for the safety of the repubâ€" tion with the year of Asa’s reign when '11:). Even the theological professors he began to reign (xv 25 28 33. m ‘are feverishly removing the barriers 8, 10 15 23 29). No, legs than ’eight about the Bible. Stars! We can reâ€" times d; we ï¬nd Asa mentioned in member when mother used to read connection with the nam \ i ht but the flaming ï¬re and vengeâ€" 1| : ' 1 i ‘ i i 4 1 hedgé those wonderful Bible stories to us. We thought they were true, but it seems not. Of course fences are anti- quated and outlandish. That verse about “Remove not the ancient land- marks which thy fathers set†must be all folderol. hedges." When you read tomorrow morning’s paper you will scan the story or the suicides. murders. home wreck- with this human flotsam Who are they? They are the hedge breakers. and the serpent has bitten them. They have broken some law. Law makes the earth revolve. Light follows dark- With their flowers, harvests, fruits and snows. It is law that lets birds fly, ï¬sh swim, cattle to roam in ,the ï¬eld. If a ï¬sh leaps on the shore it has . broken a hedge; if a beast remains un- der 'water it has broken a hedge; if a plant should refuse water it will have broken a hedge. The serpent of pen- "-v 'â€" altyâ€" will biteuthem. The penalty and natural law, civil law, social law, com- mercial law, common law, moral law, ecclesiastical law, international law. Law is the throne on which the Al- mighty sits. You can’t break one of these laws with impunity. That story back in Eden doesn’t have to be true. There are hundreds of cases before the public eye today where men and wo- men have closed the gates of paradise on' themselves. God help us! The brambles of the hedge have scratched us more than once. Better keep hands off the hedge. Be. fore sundown of your little day you will feel a festering Wound. It means restraintâ€"in the family, parental auâ€" thority; in the social circle, conven- tionality and Mrs. Grundy; in the church, still more stringent limitations. mz'n not I†bu“. v“, wâ€" __ How you envy the bohemians! Will it never cease?‘ Never, from cradle to grave. Children hardly move without “don’ts.†You will outgrow those “don’ts†only to encounter others. Seems tyrannical? You can reach through and get the coveted thingâ€" others haveâ€"but you get it only as the mouse gets the bait in the trap. Fame comes slow. You can become noto- ! flows in an hour. Want money with- ‘4 -4: THOU ‘ VJ. we “wav- First ' visit the municipal hospital. Want your social glass? Better not. Red light ahead! Hedges are really rails put along the sides of life’s toot- bridge. They limit your liberty, true. but they limit your danger. The night rious in an hour. Want money with- out earning it? You can, but theft and embezzlement are on the other side of the hedge. Want to gratify passion? i __QA.-I out, but they also shut you in. Would you let yo'ur child walk the footbridge without them? Neither would God. l Kant’s “Critique :y" or Browning’s system will becox obeying your “thO you had tried to 1 . breaketh : him."â€"â€"Eccl. No mariner think Uncle n With a big not!†Who said so? shan’t 1? There’s a rea- . not know itâ€"possibly stand. When you tell year-old that coffee isn’t an you don’t bother ex- caï¬â€™eine. the active and SHALT to annoy. but to pro- 5 . i 1 maintains 3 .000 bea- Jehovah that could bear WA we must consuler that ever 0 buoys and signals Each one says “Thou ‘ serpent tempted Eve. and I, longer we do not know G< mariner is quite such 11: Uncle Sam a bully- tiently borne with the dev: ith a big stick 3 Out the Gate!†z| of Rev. xx, 1-3. While t i :ad moats with draw- hope for that great adversa' m.†manna rifles. “ in Snrinture. as to men it NOT. of your knowl- The “thou The purpose of hedge Lesson THE Text of the Memory ‘ Prov. xiv, the worst kil the ten tribes. former it is Qvil in the e: Worse than a and of the laï¬ evil in the Si that were provoke t1 What a record of i and how great the and how gre J ehovah that we must con reigned or began to reign, anu eacn u one is mentioned by name in conneco ‘1 tion with the year of Asa’s reign when‘. « he began to reign (IV, 25, 28, 33; xvi. 8, 10, 15, 23. 29). No less than eight times do we ï¬nd Asa mentioned in connection with the names of these kings, and it is to me suggestive of! the wheat and tares of one of our Lord‘s parables concerning which He said, “Let both grow together till the harvest.†In this case it was not dia- cult to distinguish the righteous from the wicked, but often we cannot tell here, wheat and ~tares in some stages' of growth look so much alike. . The wicked prosper, are not in trou- ble like other men. they are proud and3 lofty and very often die peacefully (Ps. INTERNATIONAL Rulers like Omri and Ahab will flour- ish greatly at the end of this age under the patronage of the antichrist and his companion the false prophet who will not hesitate to blaspheme God and 1 His name and make war with the Lamb and His people, but they shall be suddenly overthrown (Rev. xiii; xvii, 14; xix, 19, 20). Then shall be fully fulï¬lled that which had a fulï¬ll- ment when Christ was here in humilia- tion: “Why do the nations rage and the people imagine a vain thing? The kings of the earth set themselves, and the rulers take counsel together against the Lord and against His anointed.†The Lord shall have them in deri- : sion. sneak unto them in His wrath, sion, speak unto the and. His king in Zion :he Lesson, I y Verses, 25 :iv, 34â€"Com ', D. M. Stea we are intr 5t kings in ribes. Omri ““0 “w “a â€"- with a rod of iron and dash them in pieces like a potter’s vessel (Ps. 11). “The lofty looks of man shall be hum- bled. and the haughtiness of men shall be bowed down; and the Lord alone shall be exalted in that day.†“For -- _.___.....A u- 4.“ the Lord of hosts hath purposed it, to' stain the pride of all glory and to bring into contempt all the honorable of the and of wh shall hear more in future lessons, re- As truly as the ten mm were ear- rled away into captivity because of their sin atter_ God had borne long with them and Eï¬Ã©t' without remedy.†. W I. > Lesson, 1 Kings xvi, 15-33. g Verses, 25-30â€"Goiden Texx i ', 34â€"â€"Commentary Prepared 3‘ D. M. Stearns. i i 'e are introduced to two of; kings in all the history of hes. Omri and Ahab. 0f the is written that he wrought 2 eyes of the Lord and did n all that were before him; 1atter it is written that he did a sight of the Lord above all before him and did more to he Lord God of Israel to an- all the kings of Israel that are him (verses 25, 30, 33). record of increasing iniquity great the long suffering d First Quarter 191 1. shall break them Baby’s £0qu Pine! Balsam taxative ï¬eld tablet: For chronic coughs, full guaranteed ...... 5{ For recent coug he a oolds,pleasant to take a -.C effectual ....................... ‘ For grip and infleuen Never fail, if taken in ti: w. a. town om Buy Your Tickets’ Here Children’s