HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1899-12-21, Page 5TIIETR1ALS OF TItCTN
• • Pillars of Stroke Typify God"s
Power and, Mercy..
TH1 . FIRES OF PERSECUTION,
Dr, Tabu at„e Tette of Triuut. ntaunt etre::
Flee tor the sake •►f Truth,-God"e Sus
l taiaia g Grace Can Carry AJ1 Through
the `reuse of r)atrrrnest au< Doaa,a+ir,
Washington, Dec. 17. --The trials
leme,,through wiirci the truth has strug
gled aro by Dr. 'Talmage here set
forth under a. Bible se elbol of great
auggestiveness and „power, text,
Solomon's Song W, ee "Who is this
that cometh out of the wilderness
like pillars of srnolce?"
The architecture of the smoke is
wondrous, whether God with his
Anger curves it into a cloud, or
rounds it into a dome, or points it
in a spire, or spreads it in a wing,
or, as in the text, hoists it in a
pillar. Watch it NI, hiding up from the
Country farmhouse in the early morn-
ing;, showing that the pastoral in-
dustries have begun, or see it as-
ceudiug from the ehinrneys of the
city, telling of the homes Sed, the
factories turning; out valuable fab-
rice, the printing presses.% preparing
book and newspaper, and all the 10,-
000 wheels of work in motion. On a
clear day this vapor spoken of
:mounts with such buoyancy and
preads such a delicate veil across
he sky and traces such graceful
lines of circle and senticirele and
waves and tosses and sinks and soars
and scatters with such aiiiue•nee of
shape and color and suggestiveness
that if you, Have never ao-
tifeed it you are like a man
who bas all bis life lived
in Paris and yet never seen the Lux-
embourg . or all his life in Rome and
never seen the Vatican, or all his
We at Lockport and never seen Nia-
gara. b'orty-four einive the Bible
Speaks of the smoke, and it is about
time that somebody' preached a, ser-
mon
ermon recognizing this strange, weird,
beautiful, elastic. chartaint;, terrific
and fascinating vapor. Across the
Bible sky floats the smoke of Sinai,
the smoke of nodous, the stroke of
Al, the smoke of the pit, the stroke
of the volcanic hills when God towh-
ee hem and in r :
text thtag lot-
ious church of God coming up out of
the 'wilderness like pillars of stroke.
In the first place, these pillars of
smoke in my text indicate the suf-
fering the church of God has endured.
What do X mean by the Church? I
mean not a building, not a sect, but
those who in all ages and all lands
and of all beliefs love God and aro
trying to do right. For many cen-
turies the heavens have been black
with the Smoke of martyrdom. Xf set
side by side, you could girdle the
earth with the fires of persecution--
Rowland Taylor burned at itadleigh,
'Si Latimer burned at Oxford, John
Rogers burned at Smithfield, John
Hooper burned at Gloucester, Juba
Huss burned at Constance, Lawrence
8auuders burned at Coventry, Joan
of Arc burned at Rouen.
Catholicism as well as Protestant -
lam has had its martyrs. It does
seem as if when any ono sect got
complete dor inatiou in any land
the devil of persecution and cruelty
took possession of that sect. Then
sae the Catholics after the Hugue-
nots. See the gentiles after the Jews
in Touraine, where a great pit was
dug and lire lighted at the bottom
of the pit, and 1610 Jewish victims
were consumed; See the Presbyterian
Parliament of England, more tyran-
nical in their treatment of opponents
than had been the 'criminal courts.
Persecution against the Baptists by
Paedo-Baptists. Persecution of the
Established church against the Me-
thodist church Persecution against
the Presbyterians. Under Emperor
Diocletian 144,000 Christians were
massacred, and 700,000 more of
Idem died from banishment and ex-
posure.
Witness the sufferings of the Wal-
,.
denses,
al-`densis, of the Albigenses, of the Nes-
torians. Witness at, Bartholomew's
massacre. Witness the Duke of Alva
driving out of life 1S,000 Christians.
Witness Herod and Nero and Decius
and Hildebrand
and Torquemada.and
Earl of Montfort and Lord Clever -
house, who, *when told that he must
gide account for his crueltiog, said :
:',"I have no need td account to man,
iind, as for God, 1 will take him in
ey own hands." A red line runs
'through the church history of 1,900
years, a line of blood. Not by the
hundreds of thousands, but by the
millions must we count those slain
for Christ's sake. No wonder
John Milton put the groans of the
martyrs to an immortal tune,
writing:
Avenge, 0 Lord, thy slaughtered
saints, whose bones
Lie scattered on the Alpine nxount
ains cold.
The smoke of martyrs' homes and
martyrs' bodies if rolling up all at
once would have eclipsed the noon-
day
oonday sun and turned the brightest day
pig' -the world ever saw into a midnight.
1 "Who is this that cometh up out of
the wilderness like pillars of smoke?"
Has peresecution, ceased? Ask that'.
young man who is trying to be ' a
Christian in a store or factory,
whore from morning to night heis
the butt' of all the mean _ witticisms
of unbelieving employes. Ask that
wife whose husband makes, her fond-
ness for the house of God and ,even
her kneeling prayer by the bedside a
derision and is, no more fit for her
holy companio.itship thab a filthy•co-v
would: be a fit -companion for a robin
or a golden . oriole. Compromise with
the world and surrender to its con-
ventionalities
onventionalities andit, may let yet
alone, but all who will live godly in
Jesus Christ must staffer persecution.
Be a ,theatre going,card
paying,
wino drinking,, round dancing Christ-
!,
ia:n, and yoti, inay escape criticism
and social pressure. Bit he an up
and clown, out' and out follower of
Christ, and Worldling will wink to
worldling as he speaks your name,
and you will be put in many a dog-
gerel' send snubbed by those not
worthy
to b
1
i<
a l eno from � oddest shoes, f rn batteries .of war and pouring
When the bridge at Ashtabula broke out from portholes of ships will van-
and let down the most of the carload lsh,
of passengersto instant death, Mr,
P. P. Bliss* was seated on one side
of the aisle of the car writing down
a Christian song which he was com-
posing, and oo the other side a group
of inen were playing oards. Whose
landing place in eternity would you
prefer—that of P. P. Bliss; the gos-
pel singer, or of the card players?
A distinguished general of our civil
war told me that Abraham Lincoln
proposed to avoid our civil Contlice
by. purchase of all the slavesof the
south and setting then free. He ea1-
culated what would be a reaeonahlo
price for theta, and, when the num,
ber of trillions of dollars thatwould
be required for such a purchase was
A, great complaint conies from the atom:tw,eed, the, proposition was
theatres e,bout the ladies' high hats, i scout>'•d, and the north would not
have trade the offer, and the south
would not have accepted ft if trade.
"13ut, said my military friend, "the
war went an, and just the number of
millions of dollars that Air. Lincoln
calculated would have been enough
to make a reasonable purchase of all
the slaves were spent in war, le -
sides all the precious lives that were
hurled away in the -':,0 battles." In
other words there ought; to be some
other way for rnen to settle their
controversies without butchery.
The church of God will yet become
the arbiter of nations. If the world l*
would allow it, it could to -day step'
in between Germany and France and
settle the troubles about Alsace and
Lorraine. and between England and
her antagonists, and between all the
other nations that are filing at each'
other's
dfs threats and command peace
andband armies and harness for
the plow the war horse now being
hitched to ammunition wagons or
saddled for cavalry charge. MA
time saint Come. or through the in-
creased feeiltty for shooting risen and
blotting up 011ie end whelming hosts' 19
to instant death, so that wo can Q3
kill a regiment easier than we could
once kill a eomeany and kill a. hrt-
gade easier then we could once hill E
a regiment, tije patent offices nt tiro,
world more '. e ee than ever in reco;,-'
nieiete new ee iueeiy of destruetiou,;
the ]tartan rave will attar= awhile go
fighting with one erne, and hob:dime
with one foot, and stumbling along
with one eye, and some ingenious in-
ventor, inspired of the erceangel of
all mischief, will contrive a machine
tient still bore a hale to the earth's
canter. and some de,t)terate nation
will throw into tieat hale enough de-;
nxtnite to blow this hulk of a• planet
Into fr.tt;nreuts, elrepeittg the nretear
ie atones on atirruuntlieg stellar liable
tat ions.
But this shall not be, for whatever
I let go 1 /tang on to my llii,le.
whieh tells me that the blacksmith's
shop shall aet come to its ftir,in+lust
because they obstruct the view of
the stage, and a, lady, reporter asked
ire whet 1 thought about it. and 1
told ber that it the indecent pieturee
of actresses in the show windows
were accurate pictures of what goes
on in many of titre theatres night by
night then it would be well if tate
ladies' hats were a anile high, so as
to completely obstruct the vision. If
professed Christians go to such t)lacee
during the week, no one will ever
persecute them for their religion, for
they have none, and • hey are the
joke of hell, But let them live a con
secrated and Christian life, and they
will soon run against sneering oppo-
sition.
For a compromise Christian chat.,
tetter an 'easy time now, but for con-
secrated
onsecrated behavior grimace and cari-
cature. Per the body, thanks to the
God of free 4unerlca, there are now
no swords or fiery stakes, but for
the souls of thousands of the good,
in a figurative sense. rack end giiibet
and Torqueniada. 'l'he eyaubol of the
domestic and social and private and
public suffering of a, great noatituda
of God's dear ehtidr•en, pillars of
smoke. What an exalting Beene in
Indira when during the Sepoy rebel-
lion a regiment of lit hlanders carie
UP : and found the dead beget;; of one
of General Wheeler's daughters, rho
had been insulted and mauled enol
slain, by the $e,eoys, :=o ;;ren wan
the wrath against these uutrderers
that the Ccoteh re::iwetit sat down,
and, cutting off the hair of this dead
daughter of General Wheeler, they
divided It among them, and each one
counted the ninnies of lesirs g;it+•n
hint, and etch took an e^:.tit. wiairh
was executed, that for s...<It hair ai
the murdered daughter ,:thee would
dash out the life of a lies .ial Sepoy.
But as we look over the Story of
those who in ail signs have sut7+•rtel
for the truth, while Nae leave ven-
geance to the Lord, h:t us !rand to
gether in one soleuan vow, one tret
niendous oath, after having counted
the host of urart;.rs, that for eite•b
ane of these
glorious
us mer and wo-
Luce who drl
for the truth an im-
mortal shall live --live with God and
live forever.
But, as 1 already hinted in the first
sentence of this sermon, nothing eau
be more beautiful than the figures of
smoke of a clear sky. You can see
what you will in the contour of this
volatile vapor, now enchanted cas-
tles, now troops of horsemen. note
bannered procesion, now winded
couriers, now a black angel of wrath
under a epear of the suusaine turned
to an angel of light, and now from
horizon to Horizon the air Is a pic-
ture gallery tiled with rirasterpieues
of which God is the artist, morning
clouds of stroke burn in the sunrise
and evening clouds of smoke laid in
the burnished sepulchers of the sun-
set.
unset.
The beauty of the transfigured
smoke is a divine sy mbul of the
beauty of the church. The fairest of
all the fair is he. Do not call those
To f ? f*-4,-*********6*-0WW****41, idlig
succeed* l -iter) y�aaniGasu"'
aoc trays. fpr ,a POA -i -Al �,
rir MONTHLY MAGAZINE, for y.
one year, to arty address.51,
N4tbin
Catching
IS EASIER TO US "f HAN-.—.
Ctching
use when the warrior and the hus-
bandman
shall enter it side
by side.
and the soldier shall tin'oca into its
bank of fires his sword, and the far-
nrer shall pick it up us a. plowshare,
and the straight+ at sirdar shall he
bent into a crook at each end and
then cut in two, and what was ono
spear shall be two pruning honks.
Down with Moloch anel up with
Christ! Let no .more war horses oat
out of the mauger avh, re Jesus was
born. "Glory- to God in the highest,
and on earth peace, good will to
men!"
°1t is detnonslrated to all honeet
men that it is not so certain that
Williem Cullen Bryant iwra:te) "Ths't-
atopsis or Longfellow wrote "Ilie-
watha" as that God, by the hand of
prophet and Apostle, wrote the 13i:,1e
AU tiro wise men in science and law
and medicine and literature and mer-
chandise are gradually coming to be-
lieve in Christianity, and soon there
will be no people who disbelieve in
it except those conspicuous for lack
persecutors of ahem I spoke the ` of brain or men a ith. euro families,
church. They are the parasites of who do not like the Bible hecause it
the church, not the church itself. Tier rebukes their swinish propensities.
mission is to cover the earth with a The time is hastening when i:hero
supernatural gladness, to open all will be no infidels left: except liber -
'prison doors, to balsam all the tines and huriets and murderers.
wounds, to moss all the graves, to Millions of cludstiaus eehere once
burn up the night in the fireplece of there were Ehousunds, and thousnads
a great m rat
tb, to change
iron t
d-
where onto utero were hundreds.
culls into dianeended wristlets, to What a bright evening this. the
turn the whole race around, and evening of the nineteenth cent ury!
whereas it faced death commanding And the twentieth century, which is
it, "Right about face for heaven!" about to dawn, will, in my opinion,
Accordiug to the number of the spires bring universal victory for Christ
of the churehes in all our cities, and the church that now is nta.rcli-
towns and neighborhoods, are the ing on with step double quick or, if
good homes, the worldly prosperities, you prefer the figure of the text, is
and the pure morals, and the happy being swept on in the mighty gales
souls. of blessing imposing and grand and
Meet me at any depot the world majestic and swift like pillars of
over, and with my eyes closed take smoke,
me by the hand and lead ,one so that
my feet will not stumble, and with-
out my once looking down or looking
on the level take me to some high
roof er tower and let me see the
tops of the churches, e and X will tell
p
you the proportion sof suicides, of
arsons, of mufdders, of thefts. Ac-
cording as the churches are numer-
ous are the crimes few. According
as the churches are few the crimes
are numerous. The most beautiful
organization the world ever saw or
ever will 'see is the much maligned
church, the friend of all good, the foe
of all evil, "fair as the moon and
clear as the suri," Beautiful in her
Author, beautiful in her mission,, the
heroine of the centuries, the bride of
Christ, the queen of the nations!
You lying and hypocritical world,
shut up those slanders about the
church of Christ, an 'institution
which, far' from being what it ought
to be, and never pretending to be
perfect, is 500 times better than any
other institution that the world ever
saw or ever dreamed of. The high-.
est honor I ever had, and the high-
est honor I shall ever receive, and
the highest honor I ever want Is to
have my name on her records as a
member. At her altars I repented.
At her sacraments I believed. ' .In her
service let me die.' From her doors
let me be buried. :0 church of God!
Thou home of the righteous! Thou
harbor from tempest) :'Thou 'refuge
for the weary! ' Thou 1ig,,hthouge of
many nations! Thou type di heaven!
I could kiss thyvery dust with
ah
ecstasy of :affection.
Victor Hugo in his book, entitled
"Ninety-three," says:; '`Nothing calm-
er than smoke,, but nothing more
startling: • There are peaceful s raokes,
and there areevil ones. The thick-
ness and color of a line of smoke
make the. Whole difference , between
war and peace,' between fratereity
and hatred. The 'WI) ole happiness of
man' or his complete misery is some-
times expressed in this thin vapor
which the mind• scatters at will:"
The great Frenchman was right, but
I go further and say that as the
kingdom of God advances like pillars
of smoke the black volumed belching
Oh, como into the church through
Christ the door, a door more glori-
ous than that of the temple of Her-
cules- which had two pillars, and one
was gold 'and the other emerald!
Come in t -da s world
O y ! The you
leave behind is a poor world. and it
will burn and pass off like pillars of
smoke. Whether the final conflagra-
tion will start in the coal mines of
Pennsylvania, tivhich, in some places,
have for many years been burning
and eating into the heart of the
mountains, or whether it shall' begin
near the California geysers or
whether from out the furnaces of
Cotopaxi and Vesuvius and Strom-
boli it shall burst forth upon the as-
tonished nations I make no pro-
phecy, but all geologists tell us that
wo stand on the lid of a world, the
heart of 'which` is a raging, roaring,
awful flame, and somo day God will
let the red monsters out of their im-
prisonment of centuries, and New
York on fire in 1835, and Charleston
on fire in 1865, and Chicago en fire',
in 1872, and Boston on fire in 1873
were only like one spark from a
blacksmith's forge as. compared with
that last universal blaze which will
be seen in other worlds: But gradu-
ally the flames'. will lessen, and the,
world will become -a great living
coal, and that will take on ashen
hue, and then our ruined planet will
begin to smoke, and the mountains
will smoke, and tho valleys`, will
smoke, and the islands will smoke,
and the seas will smoke, and the
cit -
i s will smoke, and
the v
1 fieco ti
n =
nents will be five: pillars of smoke.
But that will not Interfere with
your imve;tments if you have taken
your
Chri e asSaviour. s r. Securri
heaven as your eternal home, and
you can look down upon a disman-
tied, disrupted and demolished earth
without any perturbation.
When wrapped in ftro the realms of
ether glow,
And heaven's last thunders shake the
earth below,
Thou, unclismayed, shalt o'er the
ruins aniilo
And light thy torch at Nature's fun-
eral pile. a
SIMPLY BECAUSE WE KNOW HOW AND
HAVE SOMETHING 'I'O ,ATTEAQT THEM
Last week we offered a polar 'Magazine Alonthly for
zee per year. We bad such a rush of subscribers that the
November and December issues were quickly exhausted.
We made this extraordinary offer solely to reach a cer-
tain figure in circulation Lefore ibe end of the year, We
have reached that paint already. We now raise the price
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Tiote d .secure !be ,-et+,tt retie, or rYtb'l Tics Value* ui''4 $1,,51)
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iroitte of year fetter.
The 'JOURNAL. i RAlx€114��1
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pages, fashions I�eauti•fully illustrate
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stories, articles and pot:rxtsT-some-•
thing to interest every member of
the family.
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Offering in High -Class Reading
ntury
65
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°S &S4'
A ¶OBEHFUb FEAT
All Toronto is Talking of
a Most Remarkable
Occurrence..
Are the Days of Miracles With
Ifs Again `; —Recent Events in
Certain Directions Would
Seeun to Indicate That
They Are,
Toronto, Deo. 10. A few 'weeks ago
the press of this city gave the partic-
ulars of asuccessful case of skin -graft-
ing, a large number of patients in the
hospital voluntarily' permitting the
surgeons to take from their arms and
ehests small pieces of skin, which
were engrafted" on the back of a
young lad who had been terribly burn-
ed some time previously, and whose
back was entirely covered with these
engrafted pieces, which have "taken
root" so to speak, in the most satis-
factory manner.
Now comes the report of a still
more wonderful triumph of medical
skill—a man who was horribly mangl-
ed and broken by a fall of forty-five
fent, and who has been an almost tot-
ally helpless cripple in consequence,
having restored to him the compara-
tively full use of his limbs, and fully
all his wonted strength and health.
The narrative is a most interesting
one and shows clearly the wonderful
extent of modern medical resources.
The man who has had this rare ex-
perience is George 'Roberts, a well -
own bricklayer, who lives at E�
Armstrong Avenue. At the time of
the accident be was working on one
of the walls of the building now
known as the Toronto Opera House,
buthi h
was then w o
en the Adelaide
Street Roller Skating Rink. The
bones of both his legs were broken at
the ankles, the joints in itis left foot
were dislocated and other injuries
equally severe, were inflicted. For
six months the victim lay in the hos-
pital, his legs in splints, and his foot
in a plaster of Paris cast. The most
skilful medical men in Toronto attend -
eel him, and succeeded in setting the
fractured bones in the legs, but the
dislocated joints of the foot defied all
their skill It was found utterly im-
possible to 'keep the bones in their
places, and at the end of six months
Mr. Roberts left the hospital a help-
less cripple, with little prospects of
et'er recovering the use of the foot.
After a time, However, the bones grew
together and he was thus enabled to
move about, though there was not the
least semblance of movement in the
joints. Butwith this change uatue
new troubles. Rheumatism of the
most agonizing nature ser in, and his
nervous system because a source of
continual torture. Day after day, ex-
periments intended for his relief were
made, doctor after doctor treated him,
ono kind of medicine after another
was used, but all efforts were fruit-
less. For . two years he euilneod in-
creasing torment,` and, ass lin 1. cid the
reporter, had it not been for riles sin-
fulness of the petition, he would have
prayed that hemight die. This
piti-
able suffering continued until a few
weeks ago, when what many of his
neighbors look upon as a genuilie
miracle he was completely restored to
health. In a voice broken and quiver-
ing with emotion, he told the reporter
how this happened.
"Of late my ' sufferings had grown
almost unbearable. beasabl
o.. The lower portion
of my body was entirely without feel -
in c
g, except that of tlierburningagony
caused by my rheumatism, and my
quivering nerves I was at this time,
watching with interest the: case of a
:young girl, Laura Sheehan, who had
been brought home from St. Michael's
hospital to die, but who was steadily
getting better Since her realer beg=
giving Ie
r Dr. Anoldr
Ianfi lien rosin
Pills. So wouderf ul was her imp o:re-
ment that I thought I world try tiau
medicine niy.Felf. I did so, and Bonk
God, it made a new man of Inc. My
terrible, agonizing rheumatic pains
areof
i, le. My nerves are now as
sound, strong and steady as ever they
were, and I ata enjoying the best of
health and can eat and sleep naturally-,
and do a full day's work. :t have
used, I believe. every remedy you eau
none, but they did me not a particle
of good. Dr.."arn"ld's English Toxin
Pills alone benefit red me. They have
given me new life made moa new
pian in fact—and I earnestly and hon-
pstly urge every mean or woman who
sutlers from rhurnatism or broken
down nervous system to taire this
most eseellent medicine. When it
cured mcg. it will eure tulyoue."
Dr. Arnold's English Toxin Pills
are nunle to cure disease in the only
rational way—by ]tilling the germs
that cause it. They stand alone in
this respect, for no other medicine
made 'destroys the germs of disease in
the system.
Dr. Aruold'c English Toxin Pill'
are sold by all first-class druggists at
75 cents a box, sample box 25 cents,
or sent postpaid on receipt of price,
by The Arnold ("honied Co.; Limit-
ed, Canada Life Building, 42 King
West,Toronto.
o antU.-,�-
'Sot Worth H1+ Salt,
This is an expression that we often
hear, but few people realize its antiq-
uity or its original meaning. It is
handed down to as from ancient
Roman days when the soldiers used
to receive a portion of salt as part of
their pay. "Sal" is the Latin for
salt, and when in the course of time
the salt was commuted for money the
amount was called " salarium, " or
salt money. Hence our word salary,
and hence also the expression, "Not
worth his salt."
Canadian Fruit r it for Ari
Pe
The exhibit of Canadian fruit at
the Paris exposition promises to be
an attractive feature. Great care has
been shown in selecting the speci-
mens, and it will require fully 1,000
jars to hold them. More cargo is
being offered for the Albanian, the
first vessel to carry the evlhibits, than
had been counted on. Accordingly
a second shipment will be made by the
steamer Assyrian, which will leave
Portland on December 8. There is
some eminent that Portland has been
chosen for winter shipments, but it is
explained that the Leyland lisle has
the contract for carrying all the. Can-
adian exhibits. It is stated that good
rates have been secured over the rail-
ways from Antwerp to Paris, the com-
panies having made reduction to the
extent of 50 per cent. on the rates for
exhibits destined for Paris.
•
i'eat Breat: a< aw in
Can d:
• . bog of 40,0011 acres of peat 20 feet
thick bas been disrovt'red in Canada,
which, when compressed, maltee •
hotter Are than coal. The peat is cut
and dried and pulverized and put into
a hopper, and then :forced through ei
two-inch tube and formed into three-
inch tubes, and is then as heavy ar
anthracite. It is free from. eolplu r,
makes no soot, smoke, dust or clink-
ers, needs but little draft and bu ne
well in locomotives. The owners,
brink they have a bonanza.
where Deattetry !Rahe.
Patient—That sign of yours la not.
very encouraging.
Dentist—Why so? I guarantee to
extract teeth without pain.
Patient—Yes but I want the pais
extracted. I'd rather ]keep the tooth.
Sworn Testimony
Dominion of Canada. le thereafter of cure
• Province of Ontario, br ELECT! N E
County of lventwortb, KIDNEY BEANS
TO WIT:
or lattnek J. titil-
I
]iams,nf Dundas. On)t.
1. PATRIC11 JAMBS
WILLIAMS,af, heTown
of Dundae, in the County
of W utwerih, Shoe-
maker,'to solemnly de -
vivre and swear that the
atate meat I Lave made
this day is true and cor-
rect.
P J. WILLIAMS.
Boo, end \„ e Menefee -
timer. ,age le years.
I have Wen troubled
with kidney tad ban rider
d.seas far five years.,
,w +
gr.nng wrsc, mole
Malec to relieve
me givingup here of re-
lief. Antueti,th a sam-
ple or Erectile. Kiduey
C•"
.can wasIr atv
Beans ft m
place• of h'usfue•ss. I tool:
them. The burning, scalding. sensation which
was so painful when I made water began to • be
relieved, althnugh I had suffered in that way
fofa year, and the pain in my hall: that I could
at times scarcely turn over in had. I bouset
four boxes of tine Kidney Beans from the Dun-
dee Drug Company, and now feel that I am
cured—no haekaehe, no pales when I urinate,
I cheerfully recommend .Eleetine Kidney Beans
to all sufferers of kidney and bladder disease
which prevails among.men „f my age. Your
remedy is a sure, a quick and great cure.
Deetared before me at tine Towtt of Dundas, "
in the County of Wentworth, this SCh day
of Nov., A. D. 1598. A. Id, WAR'DELL,
Electine kidney Beaus for sale at all drug-
gists, 255e. per box. If your druggist has not got
them in stock, take no other. Send case direct,
Ile.' per box, or five boxes one dollar.
The Eleoti ie Medicine Company
(Limited)
186 Adelaide' Street West, Toronto.
To cure a cold in three hours use Eleotine
Pneumo Broncho Tablets. All Druggists, or by
mall eSc. abox. ,
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