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Daily British Whig (1850), 9 Jan 1909, p. 14

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Ah de : PAGE FOURTEEN rnin "%, 'BEAUTIFUL DEATH SCENE. The Faith and Submission of an Emperor. \ He Died in Humble Trust. The closing scene in the \life of the great Em- peror William ¢f Germany, is of permanent his- torical ifiterest as well as an inspiration because of the: 'humility and piety. The court preficher, Dr. Kegel, approached the emperor's and after a few words of greeting, in which he $poke of the prayerful. sympathy of the whole people, he repeated to Ste august patient the words of Psalm xxiii. "Yea, though I walk through the valley of he ihadow of death, I will fear no evil: for Thou art with me; Thy rod and Thy gat they comfort me." Then, Isaiah liv. 10; xliii. "For the mosintains shall depart, and 2 the hills be removed; but My kindness shall not epart from thee, neither shall the covenant of ¥ peace be removed, saith the Lord that hath ercy on thee." "Fear not: for I have redeemed thee, I have called thee by thy name; thou art Mine." swered, "That is beawmiful" _As the minister continued: "I know that my Redeemer liveth," "Christ is the Resurrection and the life," he gave his assent, saying, "That is true." The passages which were repeated to him in the cotirse of the evening were Isaizh xiv. 27: "For the Lord of 'hosts hath purposed, and who shall disahnul it? and His hand is stretched out, and who shall turn it back?" Romans v. I: "Therefore being. justified faith, we peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ." Matthew xxviii 20 0, 1 am with you always, even unto the end of the world," 1 John i. 7: "The blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanseth us from all sin." John i. 29: "Behold, the Lamb of God, that taketh away the sin of the world" Then Romans xiv. 7: "For none of us liveth to himself, and no man dieth to himself. For whether we live; 'we live unto the Lord: and whether we die, we die unto the Lord; we live, therefore, or die, we are the Lord's. to this end Christ hoth died, and rose, and re- by vived, that He might be Lord both of the dead! and living" The emperor's favorite hymns were also repeated. One verse was: Thou seest our weakness, Lord! Our hearts, are known to, Thee. Oh! lift Thou up the sinking hand-- LU iCotffirm (the feeble knee! Let us, in life, in death, Thy steadfast truth declare And publish with our latest breath Thy love and guardian care.--Genhardt. After the text, "Lord, now lettest Thou Thy servant depart in peace, according to Thy word; for mine eves have seen Thy salvation," Grand Duchess of Baden asked her father understood. distinctly have seen the if he He answered in the affirmative, and repeated the last words, "Mine Thy salvation." During one of intervals, the emperor said of his ow "By His name hath He, helped me. time he spoke as if he were dreaming, "Let us arrange to have an hour of prayer". Later. he said; "I" have rad a dream, the last solemn ser- vice in the cathedral was proceeding." the accor d, Ariother Possibly his own funeral services were Hess to higimind Aman. When the chaplain repex "The Lord is my light a shall I fear? The Lid life; of whom shall 'ibe Duchess asked, "Pap. He replied, "It wal Duchess then said, it sitting beside your § and hand?" He openedifhises and then closed t evident that "Psalm xxvii, ph, hpi wt sStradfith of ty i id i the Grand ar The Grand that mamma is is holding your , gazed fixedly at her Fever. When it the near, the Shapisin blessed the dying Mi'these words, "The Lord bless thy going oft! ang thy. coming in for éver- more! Depart in peatet' fore a rest to tha people. of God. Thy hands -1 comma sy, spirit. deemed me, Thou God of truth." was as Thou hast re- Then as the emperor breathed his last, the family knelt down | and Dr. Kogel offered prayer in which he thank- | ed the Triune God for the faithfulness He had shown to him in sparing, redeeming, saving and sanctifying him, and for converting his departure from this life into a home-going. It is impossible to avoid being strangely im- pressed by' this closing scéne of a wonderful life. It is as though one of Wordsworth's little ballads had been: found winding up the resound- ing war cries of Homer! Nearly a century of life, and within compass every great vicissitude. Poverty and wealth, dangerous sickness and ro- bust health ;' the \bokrowed rags of a peasant and the réyal purplel {he acclamations of his people and the assassin's bullets; sometimes in the its fore- front of furious battlefields, and at others leading | a peaceful, homely existence inthe quiet, German capital, Lo & Expansive New Year Time. > Chtistmas is a still almost unknown among the ( Their festal 'period is the New Year, celebrated during the first which corresponds, to«our 'February the laboring and. middle classes festivities continue for two weeks, whole month aniong the official and wealthy classes. Hopi and "sociability are su- preme among rich and poor. The household paper gods are exchanged for new ones, and doorway, pillar, and wall decorated with in- scriptions on red. ' Stores and work-shops are closed for a fortnight. < Feasting and fire- works, silk dresses and huge red calling cards; are in order. This toiling, suffering, poverty- stricken, benighted Middle Kingdom is off duty on its great holiday. term hinese. month, Among New Year but for a A Valuable Possession. "Knowledge, without common Lee, ""is folly; without method, without kindness, it is fanaticism; ligion, it is death." it is wisdom: sense," it is waste; without re- Jut with common sense, with method, it is power; with charity, it is beneficence; with religion, it virtue, and life, and peace.--(Farrar. The erown of all faculties is common sense. It is not enough to do the right thing. It must be done at the right time and place. Talent knows what to do: tact knows when and how to do it.--(W. Matthews. Fine sense and exalted sense dre not half as useful as common sense. There are forty men of wit to one man of sense. He that will carry nothing but gold will be every day a loss for readier ch » --( Pope ---------------------- says is The noun "frazzle," with its verb, "to fraz- zle," will take its place in the dictionary. "We have them beaten to a frazzle," President of the great United States remarked. The word was not new, but previously it had not had the sanctidn of a patron of high ideals. In the election returns the significance of the word was made manifest. jo Christianity is a life, mot an abstract dream or a set of good intentions. "I Have never heard anvthing about the resolutions of the twelve disciples," said Horace Mann, "but a good deal about the acts of the apostles." The Mormon "missionaries," undiscouraged a futile campaign in Ireland, have reached the sick-bed, y To each of these texts the emperor an-. have whether | For , eyes | Hom | Lo fand that?" There réntaieth there- ' Father, into | village ! THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, S ATURDAY, JANUARY 9, 1908. THE PROFESSOR'S GRAND RELICS. vile ; He Picked up the Bundle that Belonged to a Per)istant Tramp. The tramp was seated by the roadside on the outskirts of a country village. The usual sort of tramp; bursting out of Mg 'garments, hair bristling through the broken crown of his hat, toes from the ends of his boots, He had finished his afternoon meal, and, reserving the surplus against emergencies, was tying up all his real and personal estate in a red handkerchief. This pri- vate property consisted of a hambone with meat still adhering to it, the breast of a tough chicken, a fragment of decayed cheese, a crust of bread, an empty beer-bottle, and three halfpenni As he tied the knot he perceived an ancient Ittle | gentleman, whom he put down as a professor, ambling along the road towards him--a dusty | blinking, spectacled old gentleman, who carried a bundle knotted up in a red handkerchief so like his own, that the tramp had to assure him- self that his own bundle was still in his Posses- sion. [ep « "Beg pardon, sir!" he said, /rising and touche ing the plage where the brim Jf his hat had been. "Spare a copper--poor man--onf 0' work--nothin' to cat since yesterday. "Dear me!" ejaculated the professor. "You look strong amd. healthy enough: What is the matter, my, g@00odiman? What do you want?" "I ain't got nothin', guv'ner," remonstrated the tramp. "l want everything." Ah! to be sure!: So do all professor, "Xus; rged the of us," said the but I don't tramp. none get LS ASOT aothm' t # all, )» eat guv'ner since yester I have; always argued that we eat too *o bserved the professor. "I have my three meals a day; and you, who only have one méal casionally, and, I presume, at irregular intervals, are far more robust and heartier than I am. Naw, how do you account for that?" { Since the professor did not stop; the tramp was keeping pace with him; presently, tired of answering questions, he began to slacken off. "I never give money; you would probably drink it," said the professor bluntly. "Not that I object to drink. It is necessary on dry days; and if you care to accompany me as far as the tavern yonder, you shall have a glass of cider." It was a poor temptation, but the tramp went on. In the tavern the professor stood. his bundle carefully on a form, and the tramp casually placed his beside it. ' "Good health, sir!" he said gloomily, drinking with a sidelong; calculating gaze on""#he s.. "And may you always havg plenty to "Thank you," "1 have a very, much." "I don't git no chance," "I'm always hungry." "Ah! capital!" the professor beamed and nod: | ded... "That's-the- Healthy ~opemtair appetites" j He paused to glance at his watehyt +": imust make haste, or I shall miss my train: Good-day, Dear me! where did 1 pttses--g There are spine very valuable---- Oh, heresit-dsd™ (ind Wpfbightcdly snatched up the bndle that was yea $4 to him, as if he did wot notice the other, Wjs gone. For an instantithé tramp to call after him, then threw a round, annexed the id outside, peered after the varishs he professor, and departed guiltily direction. Long before He 'féachéd fe, home in South London the pros; gotten him, f ¥ *aly d ? be Said to his wife, "I have been Fofauriate I Have had some excellent 'finds at 'a shop in a ountry town where they are making some excag@tions--picked ip some dfirios I | promised tg try and get Tor the vicar. He Has) Sir Samueli Chortney visiting him this .cvening-- a most earnest collector--and Jane shall «take these round at once." The 'vicar was chatting over dinner with Sir Samuel, when the maid gave him a letter and the bundle. He eyed the latter with a distrustful sniff, but learning. it was from the professor his face cleareds, He placed it on the table, and opened the Titer. "My dear vicar," he read aloud: "I have been on one of my hunting expeditions, and send the accompanying interesting relics to you without a moment's delay, as 1 know you have Sir Samuel Chortney with you, and he will like to see them. There is ja. quaint' Anglo-Saxon drinking vessel, the shin-bone of that remarkable extinct animal the Peliodorus (duplicates of which I have in my own collection), a few rare Roman coins, { which I do not think you possess, and three fossils that you' will readily identify. Pray accept them with my best regards. I shall do myself the pleasure of coming to-morrow, if I may, and assisting to label 1 vour ad- 1 : museum, return the hand- returned the professor absently, small appetite. I cannot eat wled the tramp. ing fi in the op; ' his respect} fessor hadg and arrange P.S.--Kindly them in car flushed with the anticipation of the Keen thus] ast. "He dropped the letter to wrestle with the keiots m "the handkerchief, and Sir Samuel came excitedly round the table to look over his shoulder. The red handkerchief was unusually dirty, even for so eccentric a person as the professor. When the beer-bottle suddenly rolled out the vicar and Sir Samuel gasped, and when the whole contents lay exposed they could do no more than stare at them, dumb and fas- cinated. "Is this a practical joke?" feebly. "Certainly not!" replied the vicar, phasis Sir Samuel faltered with emi- "He is the last man in the world to think of such a thing. No! This is te rribly distressing --terribly! I have noticed that his eccentricities have been growing upon him of late, and I am ously afraid--I have no doubt this means that, poor fellow, he has gone off altogether!" * "Gone off, has he?' exclaimed Sir Sangtiel testily. " Well, you know him, and I don't but"-- ne moved back a little and took his nose firmly between a finger and thumb--"I can answer for his relics!" " The Church Exalted A Feast. N. Y. Churchman. Christmas no "so-called Christian" festi- val. It would take in all of God's children.» It is no pseudo-Christian or half-pagan' fe ast, be- cause the Catholic Church of the early ages was big enough and brave enough to take over and make its own a festival of Roman pagan- ism which taught in a natural, unconscious and joyful way the meaning of social equality to a people oppressed by class distinctions and bur- dened with the institution of slavery. . This act of the church in ab:orbing a pagan cele- bration, in' giving it a new and deepér mean ing was typical of that catholicity which trusted itself and believed in its mission suf ficiently to know that its birthright was of God and founded in humanity itself. is A pretty custom in the Polish province is to. spread straw under the tabld at the Christ- mas feast, so that no one shall] forget in the; midst of thefriment that the two fl remaining THE DUKES BREECHES. Story in Which J. C. Loudon was the Hero --A 1ddie to Wellington. The London Lancet tells a delightful story of the Waterloo Beeches, of which J. C. Lon- don, the botanist, was the hero. Wellington, sitting in the House of Lords, received a note from him to this effect: My Lord Duke,--It would gratify me ex- tremely if you would permit me to visit Strathfieldsaye at any time convenient to your Grace, and to inspect the "Waterloo Beeches" --Your Grace's faithful servant, J. C. Loudon. he "Waterloo Beeches" were those planted just after the battle as a memorial. Welling- ton read the letter twice over, and misread the signature as C. J. London--(the bishop then being Dr, C. J. Blonificld).. He thenire- plied as follows: -- My dear Bishop of London,--It will always | give me great pleasure to see you at Strath- fieldsaye. Pray come there whenever it suits your convenience, whether I am at 'home or not. My servant will receive orders to show you as many pairs of breeches of mine as you wish; but why you should wish to spect those that I wore at the battle of Waterloo is quite beyond the comprehension of--Yours most truly, Wellington. ; . When "My dear Bishop of: London" re ceived this epistle he was, not unnaturally, somewhat astonished. He showed it to the Archhishop of Canterbury 'ahd other bishops, who were as much exercised by it as if it had been an Education Bill. The Bishap of. Lon- don said that he had not wiitten to the dyke for two years. However, explanations event- ue ally, came about and the mystery was cleated up. ! Lowness of go Cannibals, An Italian naval surgeon, Dr. Baccari, who spent four years in the Congo 'Free State on a scientific mission has published a book abbut his expedition. The natives' are cannibals simply because they like human flesh, and they eat their fellow creatures with the same #a- difference as we do animal food. A native who had been brought up by Europeans and taught to_ abstain from human flesh, com- plained one day to the local magistrate' that some natives had eaten the body of father,' who had dicd a few days "They have eaten it all themselves without giving a single picce to my family or evén to me, who am his son," he said, and he asked for redress because he considered , himself defrauded. The wars between different villages are un dertaken mostly with the object of. proeuting human flesh, hence prisoners are never ex- changed, but always fattened and slaughtered, The victims never complain," in fact many consider. it @freat to he eaten, owing t&' the fact that before. being: Killed they spend BWo or. three months in idlcnéss and are' well fed while others -afel vobliged: to work: © Wétiten are not allowed. to edt hwnbn flesh,' at Yedst ngne isogiven'ito them, but/ they like it gi as the hen 'do; says Bd; Baeeari. i 4 i Wit } > 1 1? " gietng Out the Old Year, bes an "Herald! Youth and age, Dart and fehl ei .passing of the ald year with' equal interes The girl and 'the bay 160k forward, with qon- | fidence. Youth; fears nothing. : Having 18 encountered the storms which shake the soul, "wh Should they be dreadéd? "He whose gaze is toward: the SHR et knows' that they. arg COIN, but experience 'gives poise and calmness. Especially does thel aged 'Christin meet 'the New: Year: with a Heel. come akin to joy, The bonds of earth have been growing lighter. One by one the heas his yond. He 'whose temper has been chastened by the ministries, of pain, whose dearest ones have been torn from his side, may, the grace of God, say with the poet: What matter though; I stand alone? : I wait with joy the coming years; My heart shail reap where it has sown, And garner up its fruit of tedrs. In one of George Matheson's meditations, he warns the young to be grave "Youth," he says, "is the most solemn of all seasons--more solemn than the hour of death. My cry to thee, O youth, is to enter upon thy battle with reverent fear. . Life is moré (an- gerous than death: Thy wayward heart mis- guides thee." Thy brother's hand misleads thee, When thou standést by the beaugiful gate of life's temple, it is thy time .to pray." And as the New Year comes in it is. well that the man who has lett youth behind should afso' face his especial perils, and reflect upon what him the duty of the hour. Let him that Jacob cart ted RS age song of his life, eping harp-strings that in his youth were s The days of climbing, of sleeping on the pil low of stone, of wrestling with' the "angel, were overpast, and he might well rejoice. It is so likewise with the aged man of to- day. His hardest fight is over, but let him be- ware of the dense conservatism and apathy of age. In the words of an eloquent preacher, let him cry, "Write my, name among the sons of this young century! Interest me in their problems; inspite me with their aims; inflame nie with their larger view. Not as a leaf would I fade, but asa dawn, losing myself in the greater light. Let my heart catch the glow of the coming sun." Lowly, faithful, banjsh fear, Right onward drive unharmed, The port, well worth the cruibe, is near, And every wave is charmed. beautiful is for remember the first thé nt SW¢ A Mystery of Iniquity. Lutheran Evangelist. There is no 'more threatening peril to the United States than the secularized Lord's Day. When God laid the foundation of the family and organized society proper emphasis was given to this oldest institution, coming down from Eden, and thus with the family, as' Gad ordained it--are two pillars upon which the whole social fabric rests. Even good people are drifting strong towards the half-holiday Sunday, om the Holy Day, given for rest and we to meet the needs of all body, soul and spirit. It is one of the hopeful signs 'of the times, that not only in America, but in Europe and Great Britain and elsewhere, is public attentionqbeing : aroused in behalf of a better Siinday That organized labor in all its fe dbes not demand one da in seven alwax rest and worship, as God's best boon, is part of the ms y of iniquity, < EE ---- Christmas should put a star our complaining anxiety. It reminds us of the wonderful love of God for us--a love that proved itself by the most stupendous sacrifice. ana away srship beings ms to « our foreboding: ouf | There are 105854 students in the Loudon] il & schools, lan increas: before. | as treasures have been gathering in. the home he- v through | period this } | they ld fiofr: "Ft Joeks "ne ve PAGAN CUSTOMS THAT SURVIVE. Numerous Customs Become Ingrained Into the Life of People. Though the British people have enjoyed the unspeakable grace of Christianity for nearly 1,500 years, numerous customs and supersti- tions have become ingrained into the life of the people which owe their origin to old-time heathenism. When the foundation-stone of a church, school, town-hall, or other important building is laid, current coins and newspapers are placed | directly 'under the stone. This is a relic of | very old heathenism, ds iting from prehistoric | ages. Savages, when they erected a rude build | ing, sacrificed a 'slave, and placed the body! beneath tie foundation, with a view of pro pitiating the gods and demons supposed to con- trol the forces of nature. The horrible custom exists in' Africa to this day. Mr. White, the | first missionary who attempted to evangelize the Zalus (about 75 years ago) tells that the ! Black Napoleon Chaka slew upwards of 2,000 people to propitiate dis horrible divinities be- fore he built the royal kraal of Buluwayo, the well-named place "place of slaughter," now the capital of Rhodesia, As civilization increased, human sacrifices gradually gave place to offerings of bread, fruits and eventually money, being placed under the foundation-stone, a custom still re- tained, and which will be of use to historians of - the digtant -futyre, as they will be 'able to tell by the dates on the buried coins the exact edifice was constructed. Why have the British people such jection to eating horse-flesh? by their Erench neighbors." The reason is that aur Saxon: ancestors worshipped the horse. Whenever they made their conquests they cut great "white. horses" in memory of the white horse of Hengist on the chalk hills and downs, and they used to eat the flesh of horses at their important pagan ceremonies, The early Christian missionaries preached greatly against this practice, and in 'the courde of centuries succeeded in establishing an inveterate pre- judice, which survives in Gieat Britain to the present: day. an ob- It is not shared Brautiful Aesthetic Japan. The impression is apt to obtain of a certas n mere prettiness mot to say pettiness; as charac- teristic of Japan. It is quite contrary to the fact. The Japanese, to be sure, know well how to handle delicate things and themes. They have a genius for whatever is dainty. Their exquisite politeness is a lesson to the world, and their love of children also. Their house- hold art and decoration is distinguished by an incomparable simplicity. One feels himself in contact 'with a people gifted with rare delicacy of taste. They have an inborn love of flowers and 'an intuitive feeling" of 'their harmonies. The "finer shadings and colorings constantly astonish and charm; but that is not all. of their' ten fiples "Haye a statety, solemn. dignity which qtitd relibyes an impression of petti- ness," The * scenery both of the c¢ Fland fs ° mire 'thidh ' pitty Show- 5 owned. Fujiya, "vist 12,500 Yeet™ irom sheer. sea level gives charted inl MN shall we sa¥ Brandeut' to Jah, o id' Nikko is dest ¢Hbably beautiful. The Jipanest "hava "dang: One . must nevEs Say *wekko" (bawtifuly until He his séeit! Nikko; #hd] We may ald, When he hag sden'it! lie will fed the poverty ' of language Hs Hever before. 1t4s'thé nahi 6f Doth & tow kid of tire région" abont 113" @rdit' mouhiain "made not unlike th ¢ Kdironldacks 'Fn general}'" but with 'peaks' neatly "tice 38 Righ antl chHvered with "the 'wealth of verdure, 'almost' 'tFopical, when" we were there il May" FesitRarm' tel! tres about tHe soléthn' beauty of the 'shrine of Fyeyasu," one of 'the' greatest of 'thé Sh rulérs, who is: bitidd "therd, and 'thé shrine of his scarcely less famous grandson, Iyemitsu, Shogun. These shrines, es- pecially surrounded by a group buildings set forest of | magnificent cryptomeria trees--giants of the | forest, rating only Second to our .California | monsters--the avenue approaching the shrines | bordered on either side by these glorious trees | for twenty-five miles--a marvelous spectacle? truly. nearby also 'a that of of 1m Iyeyasu, are yble in a The Local Option Wave. Rev. G. S. Anderson issued an' address the electors of 'Morrisburg, Dundas cotifity, urging them to vote for local option. Having within a few months changed his opinion as regards this question he felt justified, both for his own sake, and also for the sake of thé nmunity,' in making known reasons why lie favors the closing of the bar, and sé bani the enticing but deceptive and des- tructiv custom of treating. He sure that i doubters and "liberty lovers" could but see and hear what God's ministers" frequently with in the homes of the intemperate; if they could know the wretchedness and the poverty in those homes; if they could study | the sad faces of the sorrowing wives and mothers and pity the poorly-clad and haM- starved children; if they 'could attend the deathbed of the victim of strong drink, they would not long be disposed to advocate the open bar. He submitted these opinions from other minsters of the church: Rev. T. B. Smith, of Toronto Junction, claims "that local option has been an inesti- mable benefit to that young but rapidly grow- ing town, "We have over 1,500 working men and boys! There is not an open bar for them to pass. "Instead of wages going over the bar go to pay dedlers in necessaries with the result that there 4s fot a more thriving. town in: Canada. New houses are going up and during the three years. of local option we have incteased from™7,500 to 10,000 'people. Spoiling The Generation. St. George's Leaflet, Ottawa. : "He that spareth the rod hateth his son" was the opinion of Solomon of old. No doubt in 'years gone by this received a somewhat severe 'interpretation as some older ones can testify, who in their school days received a dole. of floggings as regularly meat and drink: Nowuddys we are swinging off to the other extreme. All kinds of devices are being substituted for the old fashioned strapping We are terribly afraid of breaking the spirit of thie boys. Judging, however, by what one hears there are some spirits that"stand in great need of A zood bending at least. Strange stories about the boys offering to fight their teacher | bring ng snuff ar to chgol, ete, wl 1g back longerto be regarded az ar to some 18 ct as are ing €ms no The other Some ; t and in- | Doctors had to her EA Esrerrnisg, Ost, Oct, 1, 1908, For seven years I Wied with what phy- led a = Water I would get so tx at times that I contd hardly endure the pain, I could neither sit, stand. nar lie. down. Hypoder- niies of Morphia had to be given @ me or I could a never have borne the pain. Many § treat- bat my seemed hope) rss, and my friends hou ny ex-~ me, 4 a : B n will publish this testimonial, if it will further the interests of "Fruit-a-tives." They should be in every 'house- - 'hold, Yours very truly, Mrs. JAMES FENWICK, hrongh the whole country around Enterprise, Ont. le ae talking about this wonderful Cure. By their marvellous a on the K iiars "Fruit-a-tives" cured Mrs. Fenwick when the doctors said slie could not be operated otf and was doomed to die, "Fruit-a-tives" cured Mrs. Fenwick when all else failed. "Try them for vour trontle, 23¢. and 50c, a box, at dealers or sent Pepg, on receipt of price. Fruita, tives Limited, Ottawa, . - Lox of tie house, t mieh posaasion 1 commenced ta take thems, but I was so bad that itowas Pek Naptha does, my washing, And Tihave time to spare: « For whilg the clothes aré sonking; T m fre e 2 from Ww ork and care, For scrubbin housecleaning' and dishe washing Fgls-Naptha soap Is just as superior as it is for washing clothes. It does a Il any ap will do--besides lots of things impos- le with other soaps oe instance, iit lm floors in additio: to gleaning them; takes dirt off varnished surfaces of hard wood without dulling th varnish;- brightens dingy paint work brings out th i¢ colors in Orla and oleum; ;--and in doihg this cleaning you use a cloth instead of a scrubbi ing brush. Easier, isn't it? | It will remove stains from carpets and Tugs as i ug as can be done by a professio nal fee It will even take out blood stains-- severest test a foap can be put to. Full directions for doing all the se thing the Fels-Naptha wey are prinfed in the wrapper--the red and green wrapper. the i i {BLOOD fen {day a tesicher was dismissed for tnsubar ginnify to re ha fves ng 1 we The Li claimed 3 ¥eity and tife Bnest temple in China i La Chor eyected to. b EOI g Ea * " Re DISEASES Guaranteed Cured or No Pay. ou ever had any contracted or hereditary Blood disease, you are never safe until the virus or péison has been removed from the systen. You may have had some disease years ago, but now and then some symptom alarms you. Some poison still lurks in your system. Can you afford to run the risk of more serious symptoms appear- ing as the poison multiplies? Beware of mercury or mineral drugs used indiscriminately-they may ruin the system, . Twenty years experience in the treatment of these diseases enables us to prescribe specific reme igs that will positively care all biocd diseases of thé. Worst character, leaving no bad effects on thé gystem. Our New Method Treat- ment will purify and éndich the blood, heal up all ulders, clear the skin, remove bone pain, fallen /} out hair will grow in, and swollen glands will re- =| turn to a normal ~ondition, and the patient will feel and Took like.a different person. All case; we aocépt for treatment are guaranteed 2 cia- plete cure if instructions are followed. Reader if in doubt a3 fo your condition, you can consult ts FREE OF CHARGE. Beware of incompetent doctors who have no reputation Drs. K. & K. have besa established over 20 years. <T reliability, se CURE Nervous Debility, Vi corel Divenses, Kidney and 8 un &his to call write or A Gua alion a i Hung Chang has been pro-| §

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