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Durham Review (1897), 25 Jan 1906, p. 2

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r!! H Ill, The second temptation (vs. 5-7). The order oi the tvtuptatione is different in Luke, but thi, r, immaterial ai' there " no statement that inltu on any par- ticular order. 5. Taketh Hilun--As (ind said to Satan of Job :0 now we con- trive. He said of His Son: "Behold He i, in thine hand. but have His life." This surrender to Satan was greater. we think, than is ordinarily conceived. So far as the necessities of the trial required, yet tsith no power of violence or contamin. ation, our Lord's permit MB in his hand. How else. did Satan take flint to the telnple’s summit. or to the mountain- top? Whmion. Into the holy city-Did Jams actually make a journey from the wilderness to Jerusalem? There are var- ious answers to this question. Whedon believes that His person was tramported "with the quickness of thought. so that He is not to be conceived as on His way at any intermediate point." Peloubet thinks he was taken “probably as Eaek. iel was borne from the River Chebtr, in Babylonio: Und the apirit lifted me In between the earth and the haven, "is brought me in the visions of God to Jar usabm’” (Emir. viii. 3). However, he may have gone, to our mind there new little res-on to doubt that Jesus octa- ally mt. with Stun to the pin-och of tho temple. 1'ieyeProultry the t porch built by Herod, overlooking l Mm I'm the summit. to tho bot-1 to. it on. o aftM'st,t a m l.- bdzut, an it ' ‘KM,m Itat" plume. Stones ......bread--You are hungry; now if you are the Son of God we the power you have to supply your "erwisities, and thus prove your divinity. Thin was a temptation not merely to satisfy hunger, but to show his power and prove his divinity. Why would it have been wrong to yield.' Had Satan proposed anything but what was good and right.' When Christ entered the body (Heb. x. G) he became subject to human limitations:. and it would have been wrong for him to n-e his divine power in sustaining his body in a way that was not possible to other men. Under other circumstances Jesus created bread (John vi. 5-14). but it would hare been wrong for him to do so to please the devil and to make a display of his power. 4, It is waitteu-See Bout. viii. 3. In oar-h case Jesus answered and defeated Satan by a proper use of the word of God. "A man who has his scripture hid in his heart haa a sharp sword to fight the devil with.”-;\hclaren. Not live by bread alone-Human support de- pends not on bread. but upon "God's un. failing promise and pledge of all need. iul providential care." How may this temptation be applied to us? Let Dr. Whedon answer: "in this first tempta- tion Satan tempts our Lord, as he did Eve. by the bodily appetite. He appeals to the animal nature first. By this avenue he approaches and conquers the great majority of mankind. Beneath this temptation of bodily appetites all gluttons. drunkards and debauchees have fallen and become they1evil's prey." II. The first temptation (vs. 3. 4).. 3. The temptvr came~Huw Satan appeared to ('hriat we do not know, Wt it he came in In dily form it must have been as an angel of light. It than be-Beware of he :phtinv if it come with an "ii" in its wouiit.--i'aoher. The Son of God-The con.uiutsnesg of his divine sonship may m, win measure have been withheld. Alone in the wilderness. and weak and worn from hating. Satan saw his ('ilulu't'. Stone» ......bread---You are hunurv; now if you are the Son of God force Si (T tNte,ttNNq'tomAL LESSON 30." FEBUAB). 4.1006 Sunday School. Nation at Jesa,.-3Utt. K. 1-11.) In tit. Boniface were let this afternoon, and will involve an expenditure of $250,000. It will be a handsome edi. fice of French Romanesque architec- ture of the twelfth century, which is considered the most, beautiful yet de- vised. The building will be 304 feet long. In the basement of the chapel a receptacle for the remains of Arch- blshopo Ptoveneher and Tnche will he constructed. Quarter of a Million Building for St. Boniface. -Winnipeg, Jun. 22.--The contract!) for the new Roman'Catttolie cathedral in St. Boniface were let this afternoon, and will involve an expenditure of of It is expected that the C. P. It. will touch St. Catharine north of the Grand Trunk station. If this is the case, the city will not be much nearer a main line than it was before. The Grand Trunk is dirided from the main portion of the city by the Welland Canal and two long and tedious hills. An agitation has been carried on for years for the corvitruetion of a high level bridge to obviate the long! rlimll. There is no sstreot railway service to the Grand Trunk, but if a bridge were built the cars would undoubtedly run to the new station. Sir Thos. Shaughnessy Says Route is Not Decided. A tit. Catharines despatvh R. w. Dil. Ion. editor of the Star-Journal. wrote Sir Thomas b'haugltnessy. asking for in formation about the probable routetof the c.. P. It. through the Niagara ais- triet. Sir Thomas replied that the mute lung 13th been decided. upon yf. -- -__ critil't' earthly career. AtWels-1Ivavvnly "lvmst"ll;,'f'l's', spiritual being-s of " higher order than man. Ministered- Supplied supplied him with now-wry food to sup- port. nature. Jesus "tempted of the devil" (v. 1.) "Mun is a threefold being (Gen. ii. 7). In Eden He was prophet, priest. and king (Gen. i. 20), and as a three-fold being had a three-fold temptation (Gen. iii. ti: 1 John ii. 16). lie fell and involved the race in ruin (Rom. v. PP..) God provided a. seeond Adam (Rom. v. 14. 15). In Ch-ist. baptized in the Jordan, anointed with tho Holy Spirit. and acknowledged hy God to be His beloved Son. (Matt. iii. 17), there recurred in perfection all that was lost in Adam." He who was the stin- less "Prophee" (Dent. xviii. 15; John vi. 14; Acts iii. 22, 22. 20) in his life: the sacrificial "High Priest)) meh. iii. l; ix. 25-28) in his death: and will be the sovereign "King of kings" (Rev. xvii. M; xix. IO) at His appearing and King- dom, was erupted as Adam had been, but stood. He won a three-fold victory over Satan that He might open for us a complete "way of escape" (1 Cor. x. 13) from the effects of the fall. He was "led" (v. 1) into ttnnptatort, and overcame the tempter that He might teaeh His dis- ciples to pray, "Bring us not into temp- tation, but deliver UR from the evil one" (Matt. vi. 13, R. V.), He was in all points tempted like as we are, yet with. out. sin, that we might come badly to the throne of grace and find help in time of need (Heb. iv. Iii, 16.) He was made in all things like unto His breth- ren, that He mght Himself having aut. fered being tempted, might be able to snocor them that are tempted (Heb. ii. 17, 18). 6. If Thou be, etc.~-o'aton was“; HI point. In His first term dwil Jesus had shown His eortfi- dence in God. Now Stun takes Him art that very point and assumes that it He did not cast Himself down it would show that He lacked faith in God and His claim to divine Sonship was uno initialed. Cast Thyself down-Show your faith in God. All the world will wonder at so grand an exploit. Prove Int once that you are the Son of God. I It is written-In Psalm xei. ll, 12. The devil has a Bible, but he misquotes and misapplies. "The words 'to keep thee in all thy ways" are omitted. The omis- sion distorts the meaning of the original, which is that God Will keep the right- eous on their journyos. and is no induce- ment to tempt God by trash venturtvor neeedltss risk.--Cam. Bib. This Pt a temptation to presumption. 7. . t is written agaim--rn Dent. vi. 16. trhere is always (hunger in thing isolated texts. Ono text explains and modifies another. i, The Bible is often perverted by wicked) men. Not 'tiuttpt---'"t'o tempt God is tnl put Him to the 'proof-to demand evi. dence of His power and of His will to fulfil His promises. instead of waiting lpatxien-tly and trusting." This is mani- festly wrong. "The fir,t temptation np- , Irealed to tho animal appetites. Thisl one that to the higher sentiment, thei love of ‘shmrwthe gratification of admi- ration. All those who are. carried away by the love of pomp. the gratification of mental taste, the pleasures of imagina- tions the gaieties of fashion. the enthus- iasm for fame, and are induced to 'per- vert for them obit-ch powm‘a given by God for rightful usv, fall by this temptation. They tempt God by ex- pending the powers He tha,. given for ostentatious. wumton. selii,h and (lw structive purposea. The first tempta- tion was animal, the second aesthetic. al."---)). IV. The third t'nuptatio'n (vs. 8-H. S. Jinx-ruling high "r.ountaitt-somn high according to Josephus, "he would butane dizzy, His eyes being unable to reach to so vast a. depth." NEW R. C. CATHEDRAL. C. P. R. AND ST. KITTS. During the night County Solicitor Clifford interviewed Ayer's sister, Mrs. George Bailey, and her husband. to whom Ayer addressee, the words: Nt't all an with me, George; I've bud trou- The authorities expect that the de, tails of the actual commission of the crime will never be. known. but they believe that the deed was done. with an axe or some other 'silent weaponjor they have found that the neighbor. heard no pistol shots or disturbance of any kind trep the Axer home "peiviouss to the fire. Ttki swatch of the ruins resulted in the finding of all five of the remaining bud. has during the early hours of the fore- man. All were so badly burned that it was practically impossible to tell one from another save that " difference in size indicated that of the mother. The maid por'tion of the house stood over the cellar and it was among the ruins, there that the search was direct. ed. I Ayer aeted strangely after his arrival at the Bailey house, and the county " fieials concluded early in the evening. after tt hasty investigation that he hail murdered all seven members of his fam- ily us they lay in their beds. lute Tues- day night or early yastorday morning. l Sheriff George A. Kimball, County Solicitor Thomas F. Clifford. and other officials of Merrimack County. together with the local officers. ntsumed their in. vestigation to-day. The ruins had cooled during the night and a careful search was instituted for the remains of five of the victims. Two charred trunks, one of which is supposed to be that of Mrs. Lnkmnun and the other that of a child. were found in the debris on the site of an ell of the house yesterday. Mrs. Lake.. man usually slept in a room of the ell: Pembroke. N. ll.. Jun. 22:31‘hc auth- orities of Merrimack County. and of the town of Pembroke early to-day, ramm- ed the. investigation of the grim trap," edy in which seven persons were victims, and an eighth took his nun life yester- day. After daylight many of the towns‘ people visited the ruins of the farm house at North Pembroke. which for three you“ had been occupied by Charles F. H.rer, his imnu-diato family and his mother-in-law, Mrs. Isaac Lakeman. Fol- lowing the supposed murder of Mrs. Lakeman Mrs. Ayer and the five children of the latter, the family buildings were. burned and the. bodies ineineratsi. Be. fore the fire was discovered by the neigh- bors Ayer left home for the msidence of his sister. Mrs. Geo, Bailey, in the town of Chichester, six miles distant. where he shot himself yesterday afternoon, after tho destruction of the property had be- come known. Ayer died last night without making a statement which would assist the authorities to ascertain the exact manner in which his seven relatives met their deaths. All So Badly Burned That They Could Cnly be Told by the Difference in Size. His Wife, Mother-in-Law and Five Children All Murdered and Their Bodies Cremated. SEVEN BODIES fOUND BI RUINS or BUILDING. " In my opinion there 18 no medicina made for women which can rompnm with Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and you have no firmer friend m the Dominion mum lam. At the time of change of life I suf- fered until I was nearly many. and was not ttt tolivo with. I was so irritable, irrational and nervous that I was a torment to myself and others. I surely thought thatl would lose my reason belom I got through, when fortunately an old friend tvcoutuieude" your Vegetable Compound. I took it tor five months and than oft mid on until the critical Read what Lydia E. Pinklmm‘s Com- pound did for Mrs. Powless aml Mrs. Mann: l Dear Mrs. Pinkham:-. For special advice regarding this im- portant. period women are. invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., and it will be furnished _absolutety free. Such warning synap- _ “ toms as sense of suffo- r 'i'.. cation. hot flashes, head- r" 7 y, aches backaches. dread st gt of impending evil, timid- gm, ity, sounds in the cars, ‘5; all, palpitation of the heart, , ""4""- sparks before the eyes, - .,' irregularities, constipn- ' -, 4 ‘ tion, variable appetite. _ r, weakness and inquie- - tude, and lizziness. are ‘Mr promptly heeded by in- " telligent women who are , approaching the period in life when woman’s great change may be expected. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound was prepared to meet the needs of woman's system at this trying period of her life. It invigorates and strengthens the female organism and builds up the weakened nervous system. ' When her system is in a deranged condition, or she is predisposed to npoplcxy, or congestion M any organ. the ten- dency is at this period likely to become active ---amrwith a host of ner- vous irritations. make life a. burden. At this time, also, cancers and tumors are more liable to form and begin their destructive work. Every woman who he lects the care of her hgglth at this time in- fltftt! disgust: and pain._ The "change of life”is the moat critical period of a woman's existence, and the anxiety felt by women as it draws near is not without reason. A Time When Women.Are Susceptible to Many Dread mAases--rrtietthrent Women Prepare for It. Two Relate their Experience. THE TURN OF LIFE Mama's Ventahle 00M suaa When Others an. -The auth-l hip." and others when! Ayer' sun during and of the ' his few hours there on “'mhumluy. The mlicitor found that Aver. upon arrival ', mum- . , . .. o", ' ". I?“ m Chiehegttsr, visited lawn Hex-k Danna grim trag- to whom he sold the team in which he one victims had Pomp from Punitbmku. Hi, where. life Vpstets wbouts fur the next few bouts ar" in . _ doubt, but it is pre-11nu-al thot he pur- the towns- . . ' chased the revolver with whieh tte at- farm house forwards ended his life. ib, [mute his for three appearance at the home of his \ish-r Jharles F. about 3 o'clock in the afternoon. It . was batman] 4 and 5 o'eloek when hi, and his . .. . . ' . ' neighbor. William Ir. Fowler. arrived at .enmn. Fol. . __, . _ of Mrs the Boilers and told Ayer of Im- burn- w‘p children inblet, his home. ONTARIO AmeF4 TORONTO Toronto despateh.. Arthur Rainer. the mwen-ymu-ulu son of ('harlvs H. Rnun-r. a strt'l't var conductor. 27 Bruoklyn an» mm. was terribly mangled by a lroll"y car at Queen and Morse MreeG, yew-r- day morning, receiving injuries front whieh he died at St. Michael’s Hoqntal about two hours later. The boy mm on his way to St. John's Flepartttesclirrol on Bolton avenue. and it is said he got. on the back of a farmer's sleigh that “an being driven on the street car track, and that when an eastbound car came along; he either fell or jumped off the "leigh, and fell beneath the car. Arthur Rainer Terribly bungled by Toronto Car. a go. Withcnt " word in ropi-y. Ayvr slrew the. revolver from hi, porkc-t aunt shot hinmelf in the right temple. He non-r regained (-ou-Aoimmir-as. and died at 9.30 "Ht tk in the evening. 'ii'iie? irtvestigatidns disrimc-d the f t that for three months Ayer had been brooding over fancied financial wrong in eonneetion with the settle. ment of the estate of his wife's father. Isaac Lakenvan, who died three wan It has conquered pain, restored health, and prolonged life in cases that, baiBed physicians. What Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound did for Mrs. Powless and Mrs. Mann, it will do for any woman at this time. of life. r " As. I owe my svlendid Banish) Lydia Ill. Pinkhnm's Vegeta do Compound, I am very pleased to write and to” fmthrrr' experience with it. I am the mother of three children grown to womanhood, and have safely put! the change of “he, and feel as y and as strum: as I did twenty years ago, 'llltf know that this is all due to your woman’s friend, Lydia E. l'inkhum'l Vegamble Compound. I used it before my children were born. and it greatly amistpd nature and saved me much pain during the change of life. I took it, " and on, Dr four years. and had but little trouble and sickness that most women have to vnduo ."-Mrs. James K. Mum,“ Jinth- burst Street. Toronto, CUnada. gghl had passed, and It motored unto pct benign.“ WAivAeeto mlaripg yoga: ist? try {sour Végetable qimEGai,biiiiirr Beef, hindquarbers- . . wilt not '(iila'glllt11'li?u'l'1' E. Powlu, Do., forequarters . Desmmto, Ont. Do., choice, carcue Another Woman’s Case. I Do., medium, can; I)??? Pinkhum 111.1 d 1mm Mutton per cwt. . . . . ' owe mv s no i "ia , Pinkhnm's tC'au"f; 'llid,t,tllh',yi,',1 M) [th, per ewt. . . . . .. tslatsed to write and tall 7m! 0mm" m ' per ewt . . . . . . BOY KILLED BY TROLLEY. Ken Were Firing a Salute on New Year's Day. Dauphin. Man.. Jan. tu..-- An Indian courier just arrived from Couriand Lake brings word of a bad nreident which http. pened there on New Wary Day. At the Hudson's Bay poet woe an old connon med for firing solutes on fete (bye. In discharging the gun on the day in auction it exploded and bully injured oeeph Bouluger, B. B. Picker, Captain Knight, John Seymour and the local school teacher. now "ttfer. od most from the opinion, but he is or-i from! to recover. V ' Victorio and Trtrneouver---Wttot- 3nd retail trade hemi- Aih . little quiet athough money is plentiful and collee- Lions on good. Provinciol trade u brisk, following the great activity in ell indus- trial lines. 2',Pggritt ore firm and likely to Idmloe t the dance. in metal: have greatly helped the mink; industry. Hamilton-oe movement of whole-ole goods is light “twinkle“ "tail mule suffers from the lock of new From other district: reports epoch od I good volume ot buoineu for this tin. of the year. been! inlustrieo one “in, Ind the outlook for {more tnde in v.7 bright. Inndon - The whole-do end retoil movement it still quiet, but the outlook tor 3 big spring are continues encou- . g. Reeeipto o gain and count" mace hm are light. vane. “. uh “Mined. reup,',',,ti-2c2ttr',', "W atftt - (on from o "the no the not of now in tone was. but in 'mtirheriemuit-Ahemtuaeur- in; movement. Volu- leoonlly on Quebec-Wholesale trade continues quiet although eolleetions are reportel I little better. The recent mow stoma! nave nomewhat hampered the movement ! at trevellen. t Winnipeg-Country tnde here showe' Iome sign. of recovering from the Inlet ' of the utter-holiday semi, £130.31 all _ lines of wholesale trade continua. dull. stocktaking operations genenll show u very utilfgtory bmineee for tie [not twelv'o months. ing, in many parts of the province in aiso stteeting the movement of, retail goods generally. There is little oomplsint on the score of collections sud paper due " the 4th last was generally taken up. In some lines of trade improvement in collections before the end of ammonia. Receipts of groin at all country points continue light. ttas. 1.0.. mm..- oatirmd a..." --__ Toronttr--Aciual movement of whole. ule stocks here is light and trades gen. erally making final prepamtions for the business of the coming spring. l The hardware trade reports a fair jdbbing movement and the demand. for metals in very brisk. There is no doubt but that the mild weather which has prevailed; un. til very recently has had an effect upon the drygoods trade,_arld ltek. of “eigh- ing material, and finance: and great to tivity in metals. Groceries ere quiet and most of the house. are just oonclud ing stock-taking. Collections are gener. ally fair, and in most instances the coun- try paper falling due on the 4th mst., was well met. In some cases, however. them Are complaints on to the large number of renewals which had to be grunted. Later reports on the put year's busmcas are on the whole, Batis. factory. The majority of business home-- soy the volume of trade showed consid- emble gain over that of the p‘eviouar year. _ _ - Detroit ........ . New York ......., Toledo .......... Minneapolis ...... St. Louis ........t Duluth ........... Montreal-All lines of wholesale emu} -_.. -q.-r- "if" "'""‘ continues quiet here. The hardwaretmo ' _ ts quiet, with advances expected in build. . But Never leached the Latter Insmu Winnipeg Options. The following were the closing quo- tations yesterday at this market; Jan. 76%, May We, July 8tHe. . British Cattle Hutch. Lrrtdon,-CMtle are quoted " Ith, to 11%e per lb.; refrigerator, 8%e. Do., creamery . . . . . Chickens, per lb. . . . . . Fowl, per Ib.......,. Turkeys, per lb. . . . . . . Geese, per lb......... Cabbage, per dozen. . . Cauliflower, per dozen Potatoes, per bag . . . . Celery, per dozen. . . . . Onions, per bag . . . . . Beef, hindquarbers- . . . Red, choice, No. Timothy, bush. . Dressed hogs .. . . Apples, per bbl. .. Eggs, per dozen .. Butter, dairy .. . . The offerings of gun: on the street to-dsy were smle Whest only. with Isles of 100 bushels of fntl.nt Ttie. list- ley unchsnged, 100 bushels selling It ne. Oats are firm, with sales of 200 bushels at 40e per bushel. Eur quiet and stesdy, with “has of IE lands at $9 to 810.50 s ton for tim. nthI, nnd st $6 to $8 for mixed. Strsw .01 " $10.50 a ton for one load. .a. Market Reports .,.a.-. The Week. DL, No. 3 Bradstreet's Trade Review. THE CANNON BURST. Leading Wheat mm round _ In“. IO 00 " 00 JyV um' ___ -- in. scam or A cums: mum TO MU 21mm LIBERTY. ttetA OP?. 010 017 012 I 26 035 027 675 .um . . Ike 2ltiyo' “In" Jan. St:'..- Thy m~L lp- tim . It towarti "svludiug '"." At f 5 of .Pulmonry tiwrculosi' Old IN” the public Ichooh: was taken Ir.t 11n- 'ete ! hind.“ Mutation last night, “he” that the body Instructed all principals and [mu-Ir dly all. to. report the names of “puslwvliu to Ker. superintendent Cooley. The Board mm the W thagtee%tertdeqt Cooley to notify tate. “W and pain-- of children m.- MV N?! ttso " dlpat the child tteh'. 75 Ta mural Under Kin Umbrella Root in a sum of New Westlmut' er, and Witt Be Taken to the Laurette. Vancouver. Jam '22.--)earir.gthri'i- iu death a: IrArey Island Lawn-H... Gulf of Georgia, a Chinese lepvr tub been living for some time in tho qua! }- of an old cedar tree on the tiortir "llc mad. just outside Next “kahuna: i limits. office of the inning: hunk. N, Irs ot ll ls kind are carefully malt-d in a packuve, and are turned un-r lo thr Im‘I-M‘M-W" or other officials of the mlwr hunk. i'ltt. system at the Hearing luum- is lu-rfm'i. hut (Intro: an. pan-kagvs within the past fexx Fears have failed to reach the bunks to which they have been rent. The package “aim-d on Thursday can. taiuwl $325, and the officers at tho Molmns Bunk say they sent the monk). while the ogrsrets of the Traders' Bank stat- that it nq-wr reached them. Mr. G. W. Ytrrker. manager of the charm; hou.w, stated yesterday that he had um wwiwd any official notification of (In- hm, of the money. None of the other banks haw receis, the minding package in thoir pun-0| Sergt. Duncan of the detectivo dulmr tnettt Mated that the police have no t Sex-gt. Dunc-nu} of the d mom stated that the p part of the lost packag Toronto clump-tel” The officinh Traders' and Molson' "nttkr, are I' oring to find out the whereatrotit package containing 8325. which ha mining since 'lhutmday morning. ('usmmary every morning for "acl; in the city to make up the (till.. "ther banks it holds and to in turn through the clearing houmtr out" think of. British North Aim-rim I office of the inning: hunk. N, 1--- c kind an carefully se.altul in " pm and are tufted tun-r lo th,. int-Mt or other officials of the nthvl' Milli system at the Hearing humu- is In hut (mayor. two pm-kagc‘s within tin fexx years have tuiled to reach the to which they have been sent. The [nu-keg: [Min-it‘d on Thursia.s tainwl 83:5, and the officers It Molmns Bunk say they sent the " After his capture the officers d,s-t t"? ed the stump. the blankets and oihiu m feet: that the Chin-man had in tre woodland residence. 1nd he “in [w Tuko to the Imretto tomorrow. The Provincial poliee direoverml 11".. in hi: forest nbode yesterday. H.- hut an umbrella over the top of flu. In» stump in order to keep out the l.tl't and except that his home “an a huh clamp. he was quite comfortable. IL, leHi mother and brother are Rnnul‘ to have had leprosy. and this lt-tl‘ 12.. other Chinese to watch him. “he” signs of the dine-sc- appeared on tun h fled from his companions but thry gm hilrt_up to the polio. CHICAGO BOARD or EDUCATION MAY BAR THE! non SCHOOL. WAS PASSIIG FROM THE MOLSONS TO THE TRADERS' BANK, o-'rhnt'a what a prominent druggiat said of some. Emulsion a short time ago. As a rule we don't mot refer to testimonial. in addressing the public, but the above remark and similar expressions are made so often in connec. tion with Scott's Emulsion that they are worthy Q occasional note. From? infancy to old age Scott's! Emulsion offers a reliable means of remedying im-l proper and weak develop) ment, restoring lost flesh, and vitality, and repairing waste. The ac t i o n of, Scott's Emulsion is no, more of a secret than the) composition of the Emu]- sion itself. What it does it does through nourish- ment-the kind of nourish- ment that cannot be ub- tained in ordinary food. No system is too weak or delicate to retain Scott's Emulsion and gather good from it. HEAR CONSUMPTION. "'iiiijtiilj'"jrf"""iijiii"i timr-Waa Supposed to Go Though Clearing Houw‘l‘hree Hundred and Iwentrfive Dollars Kissing. [WED IN A STUMP; LOST PACKAGE. to can“: each such ample (rd. lam 'uteusptrrsre In a... hdlhhditmthzwnm _ botta of Squaw. n. SCOTT & BOWHE Chemists Toronto. Out. $tte. "d " a“ draws”. Wa will rad morning. h i, ' for each bank the bill. ot' [In I to Wturn tttetti nu-u over the Amvrivu io the i. Notw- of ttus , in a pickup. et.., mun-salivary. oects". to 1rd t.alied m notify ldren 'ttr" did and! m chil- a: :11" I O 'rwrm (Hull ant . He eye. ttl fidgartiu ing hire fucinal nnd the ily as i th "But Era tion, - my i might ment iata lady “ducts and! polite to the adieu. mada and-" l, ovc his macs h that In." All" yes eelhe, , khtl of , in his no stop And one Without opotism o ”In. rho knows, th and it is beautiful ju d dangerous lav . a light of Mon i - of p'u'non on t owe, siren-like. she a nib which nine not resist: that she 60'. - - - by 1 hack Ltdy 1 Brttt with "Do w, Mrs. Inn of us In What m." 1 Wk to his ' " the mmnul Mgbqut Hal “in t M?” has . iU u eyes. and t ing-ru placid Med her. 'hit her. do. 3 lady tion. pern U Outside th [Mk pans: long breath. Iaui.v 1.1 cunning; plea I 1i swiftly III the studin and. TI “k Pam'l swung: m up to it. and t iuNetion of her. tae “Come in." any! 2 . 11H pressure he hurt. Ductile on A scale of wild c l .1 "Three We hav he luck n Lona Packets o D. At .H grocery: THE] "(1 But l " um Oh ' 1k Ms ot in " the Most Teas. LOV wl if lk " Th he , an and un fr do: II" " IS HM fl u

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