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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1900-9-13, Page 7I ()Ye of ,ine ieoe ust ow hat .. re aHE. hc ... a or' the , ed st lad eat at II1( to ae is 1 NOT The, Rev BORROW TROUBLE Dr. Talmage Gives Reasons for Dispensing With a Common Sin A despatch from Washington says:1 all the days and years of our life, teem .Dr. Talmage preached from the never look at ray memorandum -book follotving text:—"Suffacient unto the to see what erigageenen.ts aud duties day is the evil thereof."—Matt vi. 34. The life of every mall, woman, and child, is as closely uaaer the divine valve ae though such person were the only man, woman, or child, There are tioe accidents. Aa there is a law of etornee in the natural world, so there ie a law of troable,la law of dis- aster, a lawof neisfortun,e ; but the 'majority of the troubles of life are imaginary, arid the Mast of those anticipated never come. At any rate, there is no cause of complaint against Gaal. See haw much he hath done to make.thee happy: -hie Sunshine fiUing tile earth,with glory', making rainbow fart,he storm and halo for the moun- , . „tweet greenneee for the mass, saffron tor ilea cloud, and cryetal for the bil- low, and procession of bannered lame through the opening gates of bhe'Morning, chaffinchee to sing, 'rivers to glitter, seas to chant, and tpringe to blossom, and overpowering tit oth.er sounds with its song, and everarching all other splendour with -Itetritioepli, Covering up all other bealtity avian its garland's, and out- . flashing all other thrones with its dainiaion—deliverauce for a last, world throug,h.the Great Iiedeemer. I ditsco,urse this morning of the sin ef borrowing trouble. Iamb: Such a haieit of mind and beare is wrong, because it puts one into ea deaponclencythat ill lite him for cluty. How poorly prepared for religious aduty is a man who sits clown under the gloom, of expected misfortune! If he pray, he says, "I do not think I shall be answered." If he give, he, says, "I expect they will steal the Money.", You will have nothing but misfor- tuae. in the future if you sedulously watch for it. How shall a man •catede the right kind of fish if he ar- ranges his line, and hook, ,and bait, to catchelezards and water -serpents? Hunt for. bats and hawks, and bats and hawks, you. will find. Hunt for robin -redbreasts, and you will find roleitaredbreasts. One night an eagle 'and an owl got into fierce bat - tie; the eagle, unused to the night, was no match for an owl, which is most at home in the dasilmess, and the ,king of the 'air fell helpless; but the neornen,g rose, and with it rase tile eagle; and the (AVIS, and the night- hawks, and the 'bats came a seemed time to, the combat; noev the eagle, In thaluilight, with a stroke of his talons- nd 'a great cry, cleared the ti.r, and his 'eneniies, with torn fea- • taSris and splashed with bleed, tum- bled 'into the thickets. Ye are the eh/Laren of light. In the night of de- spondency you will have no chance ,against your esemees that flock up Croon beneath, but, truatin,g in God end standing in the sunshine of the geronaises, you. shall "renew your youth like the eagle." Again: The habit of borrowing trouble is wrong, because it has a • tendency to make us overlook pres- ent blessings. Lo slake manes thirst, ,the rock is pleft, a,nd cool waters leap into his brimming cup. To feed his hunger, tlue fields bow down. with bending wheat, and the cattle come down with full widens from the clover pas- tures to givehira milk, a.na the' orch- come in, Pays them. So God will not ards yellow. and ripen,' casting their give you grace all at once for the juicy fruits into his. lap., Alac!. that future, but will meet alt your exi- amidleaca exuberance of blessing, genefes ae they come- Put every- .. . man should growl as though he, were thing in God's hand, and leave it real,riler on half rations, or e sailor there. Large interests. money to on samet allowanoe; that a man pay will soon set up afarm, a store, ,sleauld stand neele-deep in harvests an estate, andthe interest on bor- looking forward to famine; that one rowed troubles will swamp anybedy. 1 are far ahead. Let every week bear its oeva burdens. Go to -morrow and write on your clay book, or an Your ledger, or your money -Safe. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof." Do not worry about natee that are far from due. leo not pile up on your counting -desk 'the financial anxieties of the next twenty years. 'The God who has tak- en care of your worldly occupation, guarding your store from the torch ef the incendiary and the key of the burglar er the red arm of the revolu- tion will be 'faithful to the last. burglar. So there are persons here in feeble health, and they are el/carted about the future. They make out very well now, but they are bothering the,ne- eelvas about future pleurises, and rheumatiam.e, and neuralgias, and fev- ers; Their eyesight is feeble and they are worried lest they entirely lase it. Their hearing is indistinct, and they are alarmed lest they become entirely deaf. They felt chilly to -day, and are expecting an attack of typhaid. They leave been troubled for weeks with some perplexing malady, and dread be- coming iife-long invalids. Take oa.re of your health now, and trust God for the future. Be not guilty of the blase phoney of asking him to take care of you while you sleep with ,your win- dows teglat down, or eat chicken -salad at eleven o'clock at night, or sit down • on a cake of ice to cool off. Be prudent and then be confident. Again: The habit of burrowing raise fartarne is weenie, because it unfits as for it when it actaally doee come. We cannot always have smooth ,sailing. Life's path will often tumble among declivities, and mount a steep, and be thorn -pierced. Judas will kiss our cheek, and than sell us for thirty pieces of silve,r. Human scam will try lo crucify us between two thieves. We will lierar the iron gate , of the sepulehae creak and grind as it shuts in our kindred. But we cannot get felady fox these things by forebodings. They wholought imaginary woes will. conee out of breath into conflict with the armed diesastere of the future. Their ammanition 'Will have been wasted long before they came under the guns 'Of real raiefortune. Finally; The habit of borrowing trouble is wrong, because it is unbea leef. God has promised to take care of as. The Bible blooms with as- surances. Your hanger will be fed; your sickness will be alleviated; your sorrows will be healed. The summer clouds that sewn thunder -charged really carry in their bosom harvests of wheat, and shocks of corn, and vineyards purpling for the wine- press. "Let Pleasure chant her syren song, 'Tis not the song for me; To weeping it will tarn ere long, For this is Heaven's decree. But there's a song the ransoneedsing To Jesus their exalted King, With joyful heart and tongue, Oh, that's the song for me I" Courage, my broLherl The father does net give to his sen at school enough money to last hula several years, but, as the bills for tuition, and board, and clothing, and books Ahmed feel the strong pulses of health "Sufficient unto the day Us the evil marching with regular eread through thereof." all tho avenues of life, and yea trem- ble. at the ex-pectecl assault of sick - nese; teipaa. a man should sit in his pleasan home, fearfiel that rail - leas want will same day rattle the broken. NVithdow-saah with tempest, and pear buage,r into t.l'ea t•readtray; lea-teeeta man.. fed by Him who o.vvias all the lairve,ate should expect, to starve; hat one evieem. God lovas and sur rounde with benediction, and at- endwith an,gelio escort, and hovers overawith mere than motherly 1on,c1- , ness, should be leaking for a heritage of tears! IIas God 133BEL hard with thee, that thou ehoulast be forebode 'Has he stintea thy board? Has 'illa`covereel thee with rage? flee he • datraps for thy feet, and galled k• cup, and rasped thy soul, and wreaked thee with storm, and thu.nd- ed upon thee with a life full of alernity ? It is high timo you began etnee God for present blessings. Him far your children, happy, eitint, and bounding, • Praise for your home, with its fountain nd laughter. Adore Him ining light and evening she - in: The habit of borrowing troll - Wrong, because the present is ttly taeteel with trial. '13°d at we ell need, a certain amount 'tteetable, an,d ea he' appoetions It for , FILIAL PRESCIENCE. Fond, Mother—You say Mr. Willing objects to my presence in the draw- ing room when he calls? Daughter -ales, ate/nine. Fond Mother—! wonder why? Daughter—Pm sure I don't know unless it is because he loves me for myself alone. SITIMME1.1, The ileitis are all alive, There's a leuzzin' aeound the hive— For the bees ere nuglity busy xnakin' hailey The Maple leaves are blinkine And the water lilies cirinkine Till they stagger where the river rip- ples sunny I lilelt REMARK. usban,d—Didne you tell that. cook ,wanted my breakfaet right on the Malaita Wife—I did. And what did Moe say? She said that we all have polatmente." our d ap- PERFECT-IN SAVE, Ouetomere-Your safety matches are horrid; they won't strike whatever you do. Chandler—Ee:aetly, you can't have anything safer than that. WHIRLWIND 0 ArATER, THAT IS WHAT A WATERSPOUT REALLY IS. eeetelettic teem:tea:mu or the tatereeting r hal .anetia eupetantlene awe Timor - tee oft:vetoes ttegaratee IL The watemepoue tit performed near JOB Ileclorees landing, St. Clair Mae, recently, was oae 01 those rare phenomena that are only infre- quently heard of on the great hikes. Coming unannounced as it did, a TIC1 staying only a fe,w minutes, ineteoro- lo,aists heel no opportunity to reaeh ih se,ene enet add to their ecientifie, k now led ge • of .sve t er -epee. ts gen er- a I ly. The obaervers of it, however, say thee it did not diefea in any ma- teriel respect, frail). the Water -spouts they have read about, 801118 Ot which have manife,ste,d, a More energetic th,ough hardly less awe-inspiring ten- dency. The teem water -spout LS really a miteno,naer, a more accurate title would be air-en:out, for the phenomen- on le an effect coming 'frohn a cause operating equally on land and sea. It is nothing but a revolving column' of air—a small tlas same family \vita thes,e, mete -ors seen in de- se,rts and known as sand -spouts, awl which, in India are known asl adevies." Aocordirtg to the best scie,ntific authority, water-spoutse sand-s,pouts and "devils" are but speoirie names by watch different members of the class whirlwind are kna,evn. They heve a conanon but display the.nieeelves in dilferene ways. They 'are not under the same law as the, greateat of whirlwinds, the ailDn• A eiateat lavaelably eviaer above (hail, below, and Was sometlinee LbO Loren CA on Inverted eozie, 8otae11niee01 a funnel and Hoinetimee oe a eorne what t wee tot horn. 'The ened cl e part cantmonly mucle mere war, is fre- quently ben t, a are eteine im CS OXhibi it oppoalte einue8itiO8. The lower peel is a ppa rem ly niucb eat e u et', but pro- bably oely app.mently 50, OWling LO the pare:ions of NVOter and earal hurled round ieself by the vortex, A heigh' o from 1,500 to 2,000 feet has been assigned to most water- spouts; but some have bean seen at saab diste.nces that the height cannot have been lesa then 5,000 to 6,000 feet. The diemeter of water -spouts vaxie,s greatly, The lower ,por Lion bee generelly a diameter of some lean= dyed, acenetiaies above a thoasand, feet. The vortex of drops, or solid particles, whicei the water -spout hurls along with it has, however, been some- times incand,ed in the macs formiug the lower partian. The color most frequently assigned to watereepouts is gray, (leak blue, dark browa and fire red; from which it would 'seem that tbe celore are the; same ethical the elands aseurne ha their differertt states of illumination. The meddle partien, of water -spouts is of- ten t,raneparent, but this holde good only in eho.se Whiell OCCIlr over water. One water-sporat was noticed whose middle partie,a was, opaque while it - traversed the land, but became trane- parent., waen it proceeded oaer a river. eVater-spouta last longer the larger they are. They, rarely con- tinue for half an hour and there. is hardly awe example' of an hour's dare cyclones and the hurricanes, for they -r leso atracePheele disturbancee are do not always revolve in the ea.m.e di- °'ften aceemPielleal by a violent noise, ,g rection, but they partalee of their bit the roar of a great wa- caaracter safer as to exhibit the same t,erfall, and a whistling Or piping inclination la travel with the wind at the wind's veleeity, and. over a much einallee space to work with equal fury. The eddies frequently seen whirling around leaves or dust gathered froni roads in. tale country axe, akin to. those -which effect water, though it is suggested that the.ele- vatio,n o,f the leaves and dust is due lo" an operation purely eenechanidal; Whereas in the larger manifestation of the same influence the friction caused by the rubbing together ofl many particles of air ba rapid revo- lutiom evolves an electrical power which lentl,s its aid to heighten the and contain toarents af water. They effect of the cause that has set it in. motion. see the clouds swellen,g and bulging It was Largely maintained at one outwibhthe water Pullelled out a'rld . . destributed amongst them, and that is time that electrieltY was -eolelY re- sound is not infrequently heard. They oftea leave behind an unpleas- ant sulphurous smell. They are more abundant an eea than on land, more frequent an coasts than far out at eea, and more often noticed in warm regionthan lie cold -ones. ' WILLI THEORIES. • The optical illusions accompanying veaterespauts often produce the wild- est kind of theories. Many naviga- tors inea,gine it is the water o.f the sea,that rises in the spout, which, they believe, pumps it up and peure it inta the clouds. They never pause ted in- quire haw a tube (if vapor can Lola sponsible for these pherion3.ena. While 6us(taillatiholea have rain lea their supereti- it is true that the electrical entail- lions' ;with, watsr_s;ocats:* when the time of the air is dieturbed by the treenenclous Mechanical action set ap,1 schhicPsistoopfherleecoadliunnianbdus, Cawerlone, asssaanneothf. so that la even vents itself in the by a water-sacnet off th'e Zorobe o • shape of "balls of fire" and "flashes ientLe, the craw fell ta repeater; rg the of ligat" frequently seen by observe a ers, and while it is possible SOMe. of s7,:rat t'hlreSt Job it, 1(11,--0.11m' whith they believed destroztion. They have often . passed over small vese salts with, little harm, and the records of disaster to oraft, from this source ie not great. Fisb ponds have been emptied and the fish scattexecl around their margins. The, spouts that oper- on land have greater opportunity for working destruction. Objects of weight are carried a great dis- tance, it bein,g a /natter of record that a letter was blown through the air a distance of twenty miles. Chickens have bean stripped oa their feathers, cattle impaled by flying boards, and men carried far ittbco the air and killed. aVhele towns have been practically wiped call by the destructive and death -dealing tornaa do. These are more frequent in' the Miasiesippi valley and in certain sec- tione of the southern states, though they have been reported in all the state,s east of the great plains, and are known in less frequent occu.re rences in Europe and ,in other parts of the world. the, effect produced may lee ascribed to electricity acting upan the objects drawn up, it is now believed that the electrical display is rather accidental than otherwise—an incident growing out of a cause independent of it: A SCIENTIFIC EXPLA.NA'TION. The general law governing water- eptalte is thus stated by an authority an the subject: "When there exist, in a current of water, differences of yea -reciter between tev,o adjacent threads of fluid, a regular gyratory move- ment around a vertical axis—in oth- er words, a whirlpool—is the conse- quence. The spirals described by each molecule of fluid are virtually cir- cular, witee the axis for their eentree Mare exactly, they are -the spirals of a slightly conical and descending screw, so that, in following the com•se of any one molecule, you find that it rapidly re,volves in a circle round tin axis which it insensibly approach- es, descending all the while with a velocity very much inferibr to jt a ro- le tio,n. The game thing occurs in gaseous masses that are traversed by horizontal curxente, unequal velo- cities isa which will engender whirl- ing movements with vertical axes, whoehe, figure is an inverted cone, which becomes visible if anything teoubles the transparency of the air. Exectiehas lin water, the revolution of a molecule will be all the, moxe'rapid as it Ls nearer the centre. The me- chanical identiey oe whirlpools and evtairlWenees, in liquide or in gases', is manifested by such details as the de- cending DIDV&Illent of water-spoeses whose, point gradually approaches the soil, and by the ravages they cause on reaching it by throwing down, wha te,ver obstr eels their rotary ' The tradewinde and their re- turn curre,nts are a proof that we lame, veritable riVers of air above our 'weds. When a water-apout appears we leave only to leak at the clouds to peac.eive that, in spite of the calm beloW, there are powerful horizontal currante alofe, blowing at different rates, an„d therefore caneing rotary motions in the atmosphere. stream of water the temperature ite nearly tem earns from the surface to the, bottom; in the atmospbere the up - pea trata are notably oolder. Carried downwards by the spiral revolution, they conelense the motel:are in the lower trata and render the spout visible by easing its interior with eheath of miele" Cala RACTERfSTTCS, The upper pom ot a water epout; is e,wa_t _tee eteetweatateweetwaaaegageeee FOR ,CITOLERA laTEA.Nel.TTM, Make a poultice by boiling the leaves andstems of the small leaved variety of sinartweece; when telater thicken • with lima) or bran ansi place between two layers of th.in cleah, Bind this poultice acros.s thea bowels, changing the poultices frequeritly. Tea fiom smartweecl is also excelle,ne for dysen- tery. In all, eases of inflaminetion smareweeci is a good remedy. CONVINCING :EVIDENCE. ,Well, yer evurehip, the peisaner was canein,g a disturbance outside 0'- Ftyan'8 pablie house, and I told him to desist. Ana did hoe asked the S. P. No, yer evarehip; he did not e but immedia Lel y turnedaround and the bandageLhe gave me a black ed. which Oi now produce. le -- AFFECTED HER DIGNITY. Aoquaintance—liow did you enjoy One trip an the lake? ' ' Mrs. Upjohn, who hed been violent- ly eaaelek—Not at all. It Is such, an undignified way to travel. Only one Chinaman haa been regu- larly ordained a minister of the Gos- pel. His name is ,Tam he, and lie lives in San Franciscer. ITIE S. S. LESS liaTERNATIONAL LESSON SEP. 16. itoott reoi. I115C 12, 1o51, Golaoto "Toxt-- "What Siren It Praiit it1/on lf 11e be 1111014; 1Vorid and ,B11 iPirioLa I." P a AC TIC A L NOTES. Verse 13, One at the compauy, One oe Lhe bystanders. Master, speak to ray trother, that he divide the in- heritance with me. The Jews free queatly sought' the arbitration of their rabbis in questions of disputed ownership; bet the ,ablest and holiest of the rabbis aeclinea tans to act. 14. Man, who made rile a j'udge or a divider over , yoa. Who so appointed or constituted me? Oar Lord speaks witb some allusion to the came of Muses, .Exod. 2. 14. ,As in the ques- lean about the tribute money, Matt. 22. 21, he deelines all jarisdietion in temporal matters. His kingdom was not of this world. But why might not Christ act as judge? 1, Only a few weeks of life remained to him. He had herdly any teme even for nairaeles, and. seems to have spent entire days preaehing,. 2, His woric,,evae not. to deterneine particular eases, but to es- tablish univeraal ,principles. Christ does speak to every man concerning his conduct eeoward his' brother, but it is to change his heart rather than to flirect his specifics actions. 15. Take heed.. Forethought. Beware of covetoasness. Gilead yourselves • against tlie grasping. tendency. Per- ceiving that it was covetousness which prompted .this man's appeal to him. Jesus turns his discourse to a warn- ing against that sin. Covetousness is not necessarily coveting; it is net merely tlie wicked desire to possess that which already belongs to anoth- er ; it is an inordinate desire for wealth. The line between the lawful and the artlawful .wesla must be drawn by eaele man's conscience un- der God'a eye. Ile whose chief aim in tete is to get iich is a sinner, whe- ther lee be fraudulent or hcinese. Cov- etousness is more 'nearly universal than o.ny other sin, and, if one breach af God's law can be worse than an- other this is morally the worst. " The love of money is the root of disease and death were, Grad's mes- all _evil!" Forgeries, swindlings, op- sengeas summaning the man's soul. premien of the poor; strikes, and 'law- Then whose shall those thengs be, suits will be no mar,e when all elasses which thau hast provided? When the take heed and beware of covetousness., rich man eanteraplated hes wealth he Aeman's life coasisteth not. His rich- 'regarded it as "my fruits and my 15 e mid itoaed ,ine grains not uice thee. Grain etared graw,e musty. Monc lookesi up pluy ,$irapiy in gaining • knowledE, may stolen., goo o without Klis,,,oanivating it grow -nar- row and pedatitleBbs lunete fareeie r4 nature are ia harmony withi„tecela ' le Of+ in aliao,st foreleg us, eybether we, will or not, to work for othera." My fruita The repetition of the pronaune "my" and "1" In this pat - able, as indicative of selfishness, is nottce.d elsewhere. Tao rah an.an seems to be represented as speaking oe. them as his own, forgetting, thatl they were the gift of Goel, Pea. 49, 11, 12. • 19. Say to my eual. Aei if his :mull could feed on grain. One might as well attempi 1 atisfy hunger by roaden.g a daily paper as to, setis- s by m: Yo iru go „hell:g:a os:clahello aiaisdn :Ufa 11111:01::: loaflnoalit ygmeielal.gr How hard ie ia far Men to believe they are uot to live forever! There may he a waelaitie; in the language here elem., he speaks to his "seal," while he seems to, 11,ave '.no thought, but of pampering ansi hadttlging his body. Goode- 1- is odd that in nearly every (language secular possessions leave been called "goods." So aroma ai:e we to forget the intainsie worthlessness of wealth and the genuine evatetla of ehai-aater. Take • thine ease, eat, drink, and be merry. That) is, Be lazy, gluttoinous, ,drunleen, and liceatioue. Plea,su.re is always in the future, never quite 'realized. • 20. God ,said. God's voice is an un- welcome interruption to every atede- vout reverie. God speaks oftener than men hear. Thou fool. Or, "Thou senseless wee." The' word in 'the meginal is equivalent to "Ielabal" 1 Sam. 25. 25; eee Psa, 49, 20; Janice 4. 13, 14. lat tha Bible the foot is al- ways th,e mien who laoks moral sense. lies tally appeara, isa fargatiang God; 2 in falee estimates of life; 3 in hivIng far self; 4 in forgetting death. The man whom the warld ca.Lls wise and prudent is ofren the man whom God ealls.a fool. This night. Any man's soul may be summoned at aay instant, and how foolish not to make peeper/Jaime for the call. Thy soul shall be raquered of thee, means, literally, "Is xequired of thee," as if , , I es cannot lengthen hlis life; much less goods." God does not say, "the things is his true life, blessedness, and the hope of inentarta.lity, to he found isa riches, as if they were conducive to it. but rathee are they destructive of the life of Gad ia the seal, as May beeeen from the following parable. And yet even Christians sometimes ask, when a ena.n dies, "Wiaab was be warthl" forgetting that hes worth is not to be reckoned by dollars, but in virtues. Not what a man has, but what he is, constitutes his true life. 16, 17. A paemble. A story erefolde in,g a great moral principle. The around . . . . brought forth plenti- fully. This man neither forged a check nor wracked a bank; he simply gathered isa a rich harvest. Where was his ,gile ? ' Thought. Iletre is wham hie sin. begins. Literally, he "dialogued" with himself, as if two, e,lenients within leis nature were ene gaged in discussion. What shall I do? "Other men are perplexed to get wea lth thee man is perplexed to know how to &vase 91 his."—Whe- don- a ,have. no ,roam. Ambro,s,e cen- turies ago beautifully 'aerate, "Yes, thoa hest; the bosome of the poor, the - homes of widows, the ,mouths of in- fante, Lhes,cs are thy barns." Bestow, Gather together. Fruits. Produce , af all saxes particularly grain, 18. 1 will pull down my barns. In oriental countries harvests are often stored in caves; sometimes pile like coal vaults are us,ed; but this ricle farmer woral,ct appear, to have pose, - eased builciengs 'erected for the pur- pose, There will I beetow. He thou poesessest, thy possessions;" he says, "the things thou least provided." 21. So is he. Everybody Who lays up treasure for himself in place of laying up far God Ls sucla a fool as was this man. The sin is not in having, or in Laying up the treaeure, but in dcang thea for self. Nat rich toward Gad. He is each toeva.rd. God who has thos-e things which God esteems value able--erue character and earnest benevolence. 22. 'Therefore 1 so.y unto you. The following discourse is thus connected with the precedeng parable. 'When tbe Bible WaS turned into English th,e Word ''thought" was used where "anxiety" or "care' would be new, 1 Pet. 5.7. Not against foresight or reaeonable piovision for the future does Jesus warn leis disciples, but againsb "worry" and vexation. Ons of the best ways to "take no thought" far the future in the Bible sense is to "take thought" fax it, in our preseht keee of that phrase; Christians must work and eat'their own bread, and "provide for their oven, and specially those of their ONY/1 house," 2 Thess. 3, 12; 1 Tim. 5. 8. • 23. Lite. The same word is in other passages translated "soul." It in- cludes all sides and phases of °w- aves. Ile et -ho gave us life and the body will not refuse to give us what is need- ful far them, when we „seek it- The grea bee benefit es our pledge and earnese far the less. Meat. Food of all eorta. "We bear the words of one who spe.u.ks to peasants, with simple yeb • pressing wantsea-Plumptre. God has* pledged himeelf to care for our eoul and body; if you believe in him, anxiety is ineo,nsistent. Im Pains of Kidney isease Warta You Against. the Most Ore dfully Fatal of More. ders. You Can be Cured by Promptly Using • Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills. Pain is nature's signal whegeher she warneman of approacheng clenger, Few diseases are so dreadfully fatal as dieorders of the kidneys end few arm accompanied 1)y more severe pains and e. tee() en fel eta, One' of tile most common symptoms at kidney disease is the smarting, ee,tading sensation when peaeing WO ter, which a likely to come very flatulently . arid at ineonvenient times. 'Then there is the diill, heayy, aehing in t.,ae small of the back end down the one suffering from irregularities of these organs. Don't imagine, that you are experie Memeing when you use Dr.Chaseal KicI- ney-Liver Pille. They are almost as well known as his great Beoipe Pook, • have made some af the most surpris- ing ant -es of klaney disenee on ,record ante have conie to be considered the only ebsolute mete foe kidney disease. Mr. James Simpson, Newnomb Mills, Northumberland County, Onto writes ; --a"fhis is to certify that T was sick in bed the inbst of the time fon three years Fv,itb kidnox dieqm*, boxeg 'et:Pals—cc ffereet 'and. it .great, me ny ot her kinds of pat- rit medicates e besides thee I was lin- den: treetment by eater aiff,eeeata doe - tors' during the time aad net able to work.t began to take Dr. Chase's [(id tioy-Lii%or PHIS and since thee time have been working every day, although a, Dean nitlrt 70 years ne age. Or Cemeeee leildney-Liver Pals laree care ed. me." Do Chase's Kitiney-Lives JL11s ora it dose, 25 cents FI hoe, .at all deal, era. or learnaneau, Batesae Too _ , route. 'When those pains are emicaapanie,d lty eepoeit,s_ in the urine after it ho8 60,1 ler eaapty-fher 110orS pay bt sure Letil. yeti are o victitn 01 kidney cltseirese and should not lase a i rigle day in 4ieellring he wort d's g re a test le aney cue e—ler Chase's Ki (limy -Liver Pi I Is. Take one pill at, 41. dose, and an °e, sur- prisingly Miort, time you ooill be far on the road to recovery, for Dr. Chase's Elicit -ley -Liver Pals at directly and promptly on the kidneys, and are cer- tain to prove of eateat benefit to any- e'''ef`eaeleifiletielleteea 1