-——— w——— Vegetarians Found a Hospital, Vegetarianism has taken a stand in England which entitles it to respect m people who are not entire belley e® in the doctrine. The restaurants of the vegetarians are clean and they provide a menu of reasonable variety. One of the latest steps in the line of the work has been the founding of a vegetarian hospital, which a writer in the london Daily Chronicle describes, It was started in 1805, though little was sald about it at the time, as the founders did not wish to advertise it until they were sure of its becoming successful. It was to be for nonvege tarians, it being understood that vege- tarians are never fll. Consequently there was some prejudice to overcome, 1t was also thought that there might be difficulty in putting an invalid ac customed to eating meat suddenly np on a vegetable diet. But no trouble was found, patients did as well could be desired, and the result been altogether very satisfactory. hospital authorities believe that general increase of cancer is due to ex cess in meat eating ‘ine baths and massage treatment, plenty of fresh air, are included in the hospital regimen.—New York Times, Fortunes Awaiting Claimants, By order of Parliament a report has just been made out and published con cerning the unclaimed funds in the keeping of the various English govern ment departments at the present mo ment. The chancery division of the Su as has The the with preme Courtof Judicature has in its pos session over $300,000,000, after paying during the last two years $85,000,000 to successful clalmants. The Irish Court of Chancery some $00, 000,000 of unclaimed moneys, while the unclaimed Government stocks and accumulated dividends retained by the treasury department amount fo $28, 000,000. Unclaimed divide bankruptcy are figured at $50,000,000 while unclaimed army navy prize money and accumulations of pay ex ceed $3,000,000 All funds are used by the British ronment claims thereto have been satis{actor ly proved. An endeavor will be made to transfer to the state the custody of un claimed funds in the hands of bankers and others, These funds are known to amount to a colossal sum, far exceed ing the total amount of unclaimed mon of the holds Mis n and these . > Ty i (sOV¢ uni ey now in the keeping Govern ment.— Boston Transcript nm —III— His Broad Principles. The Farmer—Say, I'd like to h jest as you be fer cornfield Weary Walker Farmer-—Not Weary Walker—Then ain't no pay”? The Farmer—W Weary Walker fer doin’ nothin’? The Farmer nothin’. Weary Wal Af down to tak! *} ie If it's a cornfield save means j rh The Farmer Weary Wi nd Plain Fill Teeth with Glasa ented nr malleabl Oh, What Splendid Coffee, Mr. Goodmar Wi “From one package Berry costing 13 coffoe ib" A package of this eof plant cstalogue i Salzer Seed ( ceipt Maize wo I grow than I ean buy Some veyance an Look out for colds At this season. Keep Your blood pure and Rich and your system Hood's Sarsaparilla. Then You will be able to Resist exposure to which A debilitated system Would quickly yield. fading or. turning gray? Bad Digestion, Bad Henrt, Poor digestion often causes irregularity of the heart's action. This irregularity may be mistaken for real, organic heart disense, The symptoms are much thesame, There i#, however, a vist difference be- | tween the two; organio heart disease is | often incurable; apparent heart dlscase is curable if good digestion be restored. A oase in point is quoted from the New Era, of Greensburg, Ind, Mrs, Ellen Col som, Newpoint, Ind,, a woman forty-three years old, had suffered for four years with | distressing stomach trouble. The gases | generated by the Indigestion pressed on the heart and caused an {rregularity of its action. She had much pain fu her stomach and heart, and was lo to frequent and savers choking spells, which were most savere at night, Doctors were tried in vain; tae patient became worse, despondent, and feared impending death, WEEKLY SERMONS. petition Sermons Is on “The Fower of Rey, Dr. Talmago Dis. courses on Christ as a Village Lad $ext: “Thy gentleness hath made me great.’ — Psalms, xviil,, 35, There is little in the popular idea of gen- tleness to make it desirable for God or man, We think of it Incking in vigor and a long way removed from greatness, Bo sug- gestive is it of weakness and softness that we want very little to do with it. Our {deas of gentleness need rectifying. We speak often of a gentle horse, What That horse is gentle that is nervy and full of mettle, able to pass anything on the road, and yet so easily subdued that the volee of a little child would bring him to a standstill at once, Gentleness'” As re t WN iN} OF REART FAILURE, frightened, but A CASE She was muoh noticed lier, hor heart's action became normal. Reasoning correctly that her df gestion was alone at fault, she procured the proper medicine to treat that trouble, and with immediate good results, Her appetite came back, the choking spells be- came less frequent and flually ceased, Her weight, which had been greatly reduced, was restored, and she now weighs more ban for years. Her blood soon became pure and her cheeks rosy The case is of goneral Interest becaus the 6 Yery common ont hat others know the means of cure me of the medicine used--Dr, # for Pale People. These ts necessary to disease | may in all the elemer ve new life and richness to the bloc re shattered nerves, d and FLASHES OF FUN, t next door? nie i i151 8 m to<day. Marr 7" Tr ’ t MARNE ’ i¥ MeCorker but machine made, 1 supposs a North American $ PF OUR N 1 you said greed Well, meet in politics! they do they Argue over it at's because they ¢ every tin hey now wil York Bun Man riley y piace, lity judging from the » | have It's so negitns { Na blamed healthy hor of old pe here! Healt I guess a y m geen hat of ‘em will any ave to be shot on the judgment day Puck _— Ie wn affairs of a nation wouldn't even make a successful book agent. Is it Is it falling out? Does WAN TART MOT NADANETADIAIAAN ThE MAN. hood miracle that changed common water into a marringe beverage? Or the upine spired story that two sick children wero re covered by bathing in the water where Christ had washed, Was that more won- derful than the manhood miracle by which the woman, twelve years a complete In. valid, should have been made straight by touching the fringe of Christ's coat? Is that more wonderful than the manhooa mirncles by which Christ reanimated the dead again and again without going where they wore or even seeing them? “From the naturalness, the simplicity, the freshness of His parables and simlies and metaphors in manhood discourse I know that He had been a boy of the fields and had bathed in the streams and heard the nightingale’s call, and broken through the flowery hedge and looked out of the embrasures of the fortress, and drank from the wells and chased the butterflies.” Dr. Talmage referred to Christ in the mechanic's shop, having been taught the earpenter's trade by His father, Joseph, “His hammer poundisg, His saw vacil- lating, His axe descending and the per spiration from His work standing on His brow.” on Hercules and the tenderness of a woman, Gentleness is power withholding itself and spending itself in good ness, A good {llustration of gentleness was that on a Spanish battle fleld, French sword was strike his foe tothe earth, but he sawas the sword was about to descend that his an tagonist had but one farm, Instantly staved his sword, brought it to a and rode on, Gentleness in a woman is | magnet, and will attract its own fr onds of the earth, A woman withon a monstrosity, a warrior with it far than he who shows his power by burn ing villages, destroying core prisoners, he great general at tox, conside interests in gray them as his country silencing the sal already under way celebrate viot they should ther humiliated, and send! fed and eq ped for labor well fe farms, declaring : great goldier's ve's mighty the it is i's ones nome on the sitio man tid CHRIST AS A VILLACE LAD. Taimage Discovirses on of Jesus, Text t and strong in spirit, Ie wisdom, and of God was upon Him Luke xi. Concerning what bounded the boyhood of Christ, the preacher said, we have whole libraries of b whole galleries of canvas , but and’ peneil and chisel with exceptions passed by Christ, the village lad. “Yet b three ronjointed evidences,” he think we can come to as accurate an of what Christ was as a boy as of Christ was as a man “First, we have the Bible account of His bovhood. Then we have the prolonged ac- count of what Christ wae at thirty years of age. We have besides an uninspired book that was for the first three or four centuries Ks and seulpture pen have, few what as inspired, and which gives a prolonged account of Christ's bovhood. “The so-called apocryphal Gospel, in which the boyhood of Christ is dwelt upon, 1 do not believe to be divinely inspired, and yet it may present facts worthy of consid. aeration. Because it represents the boy Christ as performing miracles, some have overthrown that whole apocryphal book. But what right have you to say that Christ did not perform miracles at ten years age, as well as af thirty? hood as certainly as divine as in manhood. Then while a lad He must have had the power to work miracles, whether He did or not work them. When, having reached manhood, Chrigt turned water into wine, that was said to be the beginning of mir. ncles, But that may mean that it was the beginning of that series of manhood mir. soles, “In a word, Ithink that the New Testa. ment is only a& small iranseript of what Jesus said and did. So we are at liberty to believe or reject those parts of the apoory- hal Gospel which say that when the boy ‘hrist with His mother passed a band of thieves, He told His mother that two of them, Dumachus and Titus by name, would be the two thieves who afterward would expire on crosses besides Him. Waa that mors wonderful than some of Christ's man- hood prophecies? Or the inspired story that the boy Christ made a fountain spring from the roots of a sycamore tree so that His mother washed His coat ia the stream Then said the preacher: “I show you a more marvelous sespe--Christ, thesmooth- browed lad, among the bearded, white-haired, high-forcheaded ecclesias- ties of the Temple. Following olher events recorded in tho apocryphs, the preacher asked if they were more wonderful than events recorded in the New Testament, “If Christ were divine was at ten or twelve years to describe the human system as well as though He had been fifty years standing at an operating table or in a dissecting room? In other words, while I do not believe that any part | ofithe so-called apocryphal New Testament is inspired, I believe much of it is true, just as I believe a thousand b ot | which is divinely inspired years old, surrounded by , He as g His own ques- z theirs Let me intro- of th ecclesiastics, Rimeon! This long He not able JOKE, none septungel | tions and answering ince you } "his is the great Rabbin venerable Hillel! T These are the Jotirah, The thie i to some nmai ives about knew all worlds arkling morning dewdr front of His heavenly pals » seven Bible words in a wreath boa r Christ Raking id asks hen : ination made itself aby trving to revise its creed made | of years ag: You might as v your grandmother's lo it new creed for all th of Christendon the and no own den vise move a churches in three arti. { cles oereed, need of any more It I had al ie COnRes d people of i all der ing 5 » plain, and I had ¥ it to a vote, that would be adopted with a n This is the ereed I propose ich to put ree arti us ve alli Christen veel jos i dom “Article wad the world {that He gave His only begotten Son. that | whosoever believeth in Him should not | perish, but have everiasting life.’ “Article second ‘his i= a faithful say- ing, and worthy of all acceptation, that Jesus Christ came into the world to save | sinners, even the chief.’ “Article third "Worthy is the Lambthat was slain to receive blessings and riches and honor and glory and power, world without end.’ “Bat you go to tinkering up your oid creeds, and patching and splicing and interlining and annexing and subtracting { and adding and explaining, and you will lose time and make yoursell a target for earth and hell to shoot at, Lat us have eroads not fashioned ont of human in- genuities, but out of scriptural phrase. ology, and all the guns of bombardment blazing from all the port holes of infl- dality and perdition will not in a thou- rand years knock off the church of God ia splinter as big as a cambric needle, What is most nesded now is that we gather all our theologies around the boy in the temple, the elaborations around the sim. plicities, and the profundities around the elarities, the octogenarian of scholastic re. search around the unwrinkled cheek of twelve-year juvenescence. ‘Except you become as a little child you ean in no wise enter the kingdom;’ and except you become as a little ehild you cannot understand the Christian religion. The best thing that Rabbis Simeon and Hillel and Shammal and the sons of Betirah ever did was, fo the temple, to bend over the iad who, first made ruddy of cheak by the breath of the Judean hilis, and on his way to the me- chanie’s shop, where he was soon to be the su port of his bereaved mother, stepned ong enough to grapple with the venerable dialecticians of the ent, ‘both hearing them and asking them questions.’ Home, refsrring to Christ, have exclaimed: Eoce deus! Behold the God. Others have | exelaimed: Ecce Hom), Behold the man, | Put to-day, in conclusion of my subject, 1 ery: Been adolescence! Behold the boy.” first ‘God so | Lost the Subject. A few days ago Rev. Dr, delivered a lecture In a new theater at Washington, lowa, says the Times-Herald, It was a fine bnllding and the company which built and oper ated it also owned a private electri plant which lighted jt. A large audi ence was present, and the lecturer had his subject well ip band, when sudden ly every Ught went ot The was pitch dark A few words from the speaker pre vented a panle, and the lecture was re pamed in the dark. Just at of nun fine period the lights suddenls flashed up again, throwing aud! ence into disorder and disconcerting the lecturer, After a few blinking Dr. Mcintyre settled down to work agaln, and was warming up nice ly when another plunge into darkness interrupted him He was hoped to finish it In the interference. “Patience it. theater the climax the minutes of nearing the peroration and thout ne dark w further sald, Vis absolulely necessary ods In the dally affairs of { Yaka pt t4 4 y lose your temper It is foolls play such a weakness Just then the lights flashed uj speaker walked to the ing WHE wings, and sha his fist at a orawny Irishman w tampering with the wiras, ut in a tone which could have ] WE Away “Confound Will you « to leave idiot! ver enough those wiz That ended the _—__P hPL Jewert 1176 Bome men can bear the ves dollar fart ner ian t The Careteker. 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