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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1901-1-17, Page 7E ROMANCE OF CRIME Addresses the Young Men. A despatch from Washington says; -fliv. Dr. Talmage preached from tlie following text; "He hall be buried .arith the''hurital of an a,ss."--4erentiala , rich.. 19. '„Tehosiakinaa sat for ten years on a throne., "I_Dlenty of nOld-plenty .of sycophants --plenty of chaidots. 'When he, rode, I think he 'rode With four horaes; and when he wore dianionda, I think he wore them as big as a wal- nut. If there had been a railroad so early in the history of the world he would have stolen it, • He wallowed in sin until a 'auciden Change in pule.- Tas-. lic,affairs, and then he died in shame, and was leiclied out of public con- tempt; "Buried with'the burial of an ,ass.' addreals young men to -night upon the romance ofcrime, and I want .to show them, that thought crime may be gilded 'and fascinating, the" end is ruin here' and damnation hereafter. • L There ie the roma/lee of 'fraud. The heroes of this country are fast , getting to be; those Who have most .„ skill in swallowing "trust -funds," banks, stocks, and moneyed institu tions. Our youn,g men are dazzled by the quick s.aeoess, and say, "That ' LS the waytaa do it. ale was a coun- try peddler a few years ago',' now see .what a gorgeous .turn -out !" .1Ie who.- steals a yest :from a second.- , - , hind clothing -store gets a ride in the city van withoutan opportunity af lobying out of the window, but he. who swallows a moneyed institution , as,tonishes the Park• with .his equip- . , I thank God when fortune a thus . gathered go t� smash:• - They are, , plague -struck, and _ , l3LAST A NATION. like to have them go to pieces, in athch a wreck that they cart, never 'againbe gathered up.' I like to have them niacin 1,oaths,o1ae and: -,nn inatiff,eitable stench,' so that honest Young men may take warning. If God 'should put 'suddenly into meney, or its representatiVe; the power to return to its rightful OW11- . • er, there Luot a bank ora safety deposit that would not -have its sides , --blown, out; ,and parchments' _would 'rirgaande gold. would shioot, and mort- gagesfheelitid 'rein', and beggars would-, get latoraes, and stock -gamblers would . go to ,L3*,3alnishouse. How natich' tiis honesty in the 'inakin.g' of invoices, and in the oath.s at the 'Custom -house, .tintL,in plastering of labels, and in filediiiig of easterners of rival houses, and 'in false samples, andin the ariak-, ing and -breaking of 'contraetsl Uun- dredsnf young men are laeing' indoc- rinated in the idea that, mene3r nithst be dead cniickly, and that the larger the scale 'en which they take it, the more admirable' the .smartness arid „legerdemain.: public Mind Ls; utte,rly poisoned' and diseased on the stabject of Money- making, and_ no wonder that God, apake „to all the cities of, the world, Saying, "Look out Itow'yeu get your money. BY the hand of death or - judgment it shalt bet wrenched frora Tour grasp. If you get riches by fraud, you will leave them in the. midst of your days, and at the end you shall' be a fool." - II. Next, I speak of the, romance of libertiniena. E'.ociety.has severest re- tribution for the impurity that lurks' about the cellars and -.alleys of the . , cit -y. It cries out against it. , It learla the lad igloo tion of the la w at • . But societY becomemore ent as impurity ,rises toward afflu- ence' and high Social pOsition, until , finally, it is silent, or diSposed tole Where, is the ,judge, or the y Fdireriff, or the police? who . dare ar- a, raign fo'n indecency the wealthy vita we aim ? May he, not walk the streets, h and ride ethe parks', and sail the f steaMers, flaunting his vices in the u eyes of the pn,re,? Doe* not the 'ane ,13 hag of 'uncleanness look: out from t tapestried „windoav, and „walk richest e carpet,, and rustlefinest Psiillta and roll :meat suempinaUS carriage? but e Wbere iS the law to take these bl'olzen b wretches, of "high life and put their, L faces, in "the droll ttehMe of the State Prisormayignd'On; ' a as A,t, what time the Lord God willrt into pu,rge our.-eities I know not, oLi hether it shall be by flood, or, by le forms of murder. way !mine at, nig slain by a robber, fa citizen, on his , is waylaid and ve are all anx- ious for his arraignment and ',exec tion. Eel ?garroting, or the beatin out of life with a club, or axe, o alung-slort, the law has a quick sprin and a heavy stroke. I3ut let a ma come to wealth or social pretensio and than attempt to avenge his wrong by aiming a Pistol at the head o heart of another, and immediate] there are .sympathies aroused.; an the lawyera plead, and the ladle weep, and the juries are bribed, an the judge halt's; a new. trial is gran ed, and the case is postponed to witneases that never come.; and a ter a number of months in prison, th door is opened and the murderer 1 out, I call_ this the romance of ass sassination. If capital punishment 1. -Le right, the let the life' of the polished murd.ere go with the life of the ignorant an vulgar assassin: Let there be no par tiality of hemp, nearistocracy of th gallows. We are, in our cities, on th march back, toward that state of bar batrisna, where every man is jadge jury and executive officer -a atate o society in which that man has th .supremacy who has the sharpest knife and strongest arm and stealthiest re venge and quickeet spring. • My adviee to all young men is teesel their pistols, and take. the knife ou Qt t.he top of their cane, and depen &n God axad tflreirown stout arm to clefemee. A man' who doe s not tee himself safe withciut deadly weapon iss in the wrong kind of association and companionship, and yea had bet ter . get out of it; for • the probabil iti'y is that either they will kill' you or you wit11a kill hem --which latter thing, far your soul in eternity,"wil be k • THE GREATEST DISASTER of the tvvo ; for "no murderer bath eternal life ;" and in the future life there is no romance of assb.ssina- tion., 011 young "man take not"the man- ners, and cu,stoins, and habits of what is wrongly called "high life" for your example. Po, not think sin is less to bh. hated because it is epauleted and adorned. The brown, -stone front can no more keep back. the judgments of G.od t‘han can the cellar door. B luold how God blowup the naagni- fideent Avickedness of high places! - There may. be some here who have ventured into sinful courses who would like to return. You came in :here to -might discouraged, and feel seesteerettteleaswit.aataa- TIIE S Ptittuag a queatiOn ark after the S LESSON' word "hour"---"Shail I say, Father, save me froni this hour or thia Cause came 1 lt/itCY tbiS1 hour. "The INTERNATIONAL LESSON JAN. 20. cause or the purpose must not be "Grfelni Seeking ;es -us.," John 13,. 20'33. frustrated ±11)a:11-?^Idilgi'h thth--- 0oN,Iv1,kL4111esds Qfam work 01 Coldeu l'ext. John 11. 21. life." PEAC1'1CAli NOTES. 28. loather, glorify thy name. "This Vere 20. °erten,. Greene, Not .70111s iS what I twill say." Words of abso- .epeaking Greek, Who are called Ifel- ilertaidb et‘6eify-stlihroresnadveil-:;u1,a1 vIc'iceht'aveelebaortlYh leniatati, "G'reciane," but Helleries. h "Greeks" by language if not also by ,glorified it and will glorify it again race, Gentile* who reverened, the Gecl 1"The Father had glorified his name in u- of the JeWS., J.1./et how fax their re- s the, incarnation of his Son, 'in his '''r" gliaresgi'c)'s". ell'filIttlerye had gone4verenwefullainePdrorsoe-t IdbaoePttrisinnie.anildinut ilit'awclae'h ssto blistiiflled furatnh- g lYtes. AS Dr. Comner Gray says, . 1 er glorified in his passion and after, n "Thay may have been easygoing Gen- 1has Passion, when death should have lit tilo trave era who were accutcmed sro moro dominion over him, when he e to worahsip the gods of the place in- SllOUld be exalted above the heaven ✓ to which they came, as the manner of y some in our day is -to do at Roble 29. The, people . . . . said that it a as Rome cloo,a without considering thundered. That is, the crowd Of bY- s wthet her or not Rome (lees right." We sianders, among whom • doubtless' d may without naueh risk, however, re- there were believe -s anal unbelievere. t_ gard these Men aa worshipers of the What they heard May have been an ✓ one God revealed in the Old Testa- indietinct noise. Others,' however, f- ment, like the , devout Greeks men- with clearer physical and spiritual e tionecl in Acts 17. 4. The feast was e the annual fehat of the paesover, the An angel sake to him. _ grearteet oe all Hebrew religious cere- 30. Compare John 11. 42. monies, and in this special year it 31. Naw i, the judgment of ibis n was made of prime importance to the world; now shall the prETICe of thie ✓ world by the death of Jesus Christ. world be oast out. The time for the separation of the evil and the good has' begun; the time for the deliver- ance of mankind from him who Ls here and el,sewhere Called "the prince of this -world," John 14. 30;.‘16. , may readily .ba.ve atttra.ested the Greek 11,. the tisurper of God's right, Ezek. f evisitora. Of Betlisaida. of Galilee. The 21. 27. He whoae rebellious pride ex - e residence of Philip was also the resi- pelted him from heavex . ehall now no , dence of Andrew. We avonld see more .prevail on earth, Luke 10. 18. - Jesus The tour words are a marvel -32, 33, Abu 3, 11, 15; 8. 28. The ausly fit starting point for a heart- Lifting up .fro'm the earth has refer - 1 to -heart talk with pupils., No ence both to the crucifixion and the' , . t thesughtfal, devout, sympathetio- glorification which was to follow it, d teacher needs anY'Suggestitons here. tTrhaeNavotorrds. "Things,"mainieauplied:,foblcets,,he, ✓ 22. Philip doineth and telleth, Ana msi I drew. Corystilting, in hie hesitancy would do aS well or better. Every s the friend and asaociate 'of his boy- agency and government, the- ingen- hoOd. Andrew and' Philip tell Jesus:, hity, thrift, nobility of 'human ,nah. - Wiliatt was the Caii.se. eof the delay in ture aS well as its turbulences, the - bringing the Greeks to jesos?, Per- Industry of ,man and the wrath of haps we may find it in our Lord's re •- man alike, arc drawn into the king, • peated statement that, he -was sent, dam of god: 1 auly-to taile lost sheep of the house of Israel. The beautiful old legend of the messengers -of Abgaru.S, though without historia basis, can hardly be - Overlooked in the study of thislesson. According to this tradition'or legend that good Gentile king, on hearing that TeSue wasscorne.d by his coun- trymen, sent: aniba.ssaders to him to invite hbal to 'his home. mese 1 Greeks were those amhassadors. Th replY of verse 23 aviould fit Such ahness age aa_Abgarus is known to have sent 1 and in any ea.se Lifts do he inferred that 'Jesus received t,hese Greeks... and his glory above all the earth.", hearing, identified -the veice and eaid, •d .21.e 'The -same came therefore to PhiiiP. 'The, natneS'of Philip and An- e• drewtare both Greek, though the men e the,raselves were'. 'doubtless full- - b1,6,oded Hebrews. A Greek name that there Ls but little hope. I will tell you of a daughter who went from home into the paths of sin. „Af- ter many months of wanderings she resolved one night to go home to her m.other?is house. It was after mid- nighi when -She arrived at the house. She supposed tnat the door. Would,he locked; but, putting her hand on th Latch, the door opened. Shaskede laer mother why it was that the. door after midnight, was untocked. Said the mother,. ".1:11af door has never beeia La:eked since you went „away. 'I _have given orders that, by day and night, it should be unfastened, for 1 was sure that you would come back, and when you came I did not want you to he 'hindered a minute." • So I have to, tell you that the door of God's mercy is ever unlocked. By day and by •night it stands open for your (;oria.ing. Though your sins were as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though they were red Like rimison, they shall be as wool. Though cu may be polluted with all crimes, 'nd smitten of all leprosies, and fired the .most depraved passions, and aye -Trot heard the .Go,spel invitation or twenty years, you may have set pan your brow, hot with infamous rootless and besaveated with exhaus- ive indulgences, "the flashing coronet f a Saviour's forgiveness. - Who is it that eometh yonder? Me - blinks I know his steps. Methinks clove this - I have seen ihe rags. 'ook, all ye people of God! Out of 11 ttha winclews of heavcn. let the ngels watch! A prodigal returniogl us go out and meet him. Wel- me laa.ck again to thy long -forsaken ome and- to thy lanaw,forsaken God. he dead is alive again! The lost is uxidl fire, or bY hurrioaale; but 1 do not m %eelieve the holy God will stand it 11,11,1CI-I LONGER, _think tha,t ,the thiunderbolte of his indignation are hissing hot, and that when he riaes up to. ,seourge these crimea, against which he hath titter - erect more bitter curses than against any' other, the', fate of Sodara and, Gomorrah' will be found to -have been more tolerable thap that of our mod- rn eitie,s, which knew better' ',but ishotwed disposition to do , worse. III. Next, I speak of the ronaa,nce of assasSinatien. God gives life, and he only has a 'right to take -it away and that man who aasarnes thiS divine pre- egative has touched to last depth et crime, Society 14 alert'for eekta,in NATURALLY. `Dashaway-11-ote comes Cawkerly. He says that you: and he swere thrown together quite •a good deal last sum- mer. ' CleVerton-Yes, We we e both en- gaged to the same girl. CLASSIFICAl'ION CAI4LED FOR, Say, ma 1 What is it, Freddy Are these told -storage eggs of hetie' eggs/ , 23. The hbar la 'corae,'that , the Son -of Man Should .be glorified. Until aohe laa.ci-saicl, "It is coining." "Did he..mean that he was glorified in the desire expressed by these Greeks to see him No; but he foresaw the tilae alter -his resurrection and ascen- stela when Greeks and Gentiles from all nations should believe in his name." 24. Verily, verily. A call of atten- tion to the excePtional importance Of what. is to follow. Except a corn of wheat fall into, the ground and die, it abicleth alone. This is true of every grain of wheat; except it shrivels and -come,s te its end the harveat cannot come to it, beginning and grow. The whole verse is a parable`of the death Of GU): Lord and its holy consequences. (See verse 32.) 25,. See Matt, 10. 39; 16. 25; Luke 17: 33. • 26. If. any Man serve me, let him follow me. \Voids have strange his- tories. The Greek might be literal- ly translated; "11 any ra,ans is a deacon La me." Deacons and ministers are .servants el: the claurchea, and church members are servants of Christ. In this sense we are all deacons. The Master's, servanls are to fellow him; he is on a journey. By the thorny path of holiness, suffering, and toil hemmocteecis to glory, and constantly hi§ 4ervanIts must be with him. Where I am, there shall also my servant be. This is a promise, of heaven hereafter, but it ,includes. much mere. "tgla the time of .his passion drew near our Lerd repeated his assurances of his abiding protection, and future re- ception of his servants to share his ✓ ictory, to live and reign with him." 27. ;NOW as nay soul troaoled. He foresaw the grief and anguish of soul which should shortly come alien him in the Garden, of Gethsemane. Compare Luke 22. 42. On reading this St. Augustine composed this , prayer; "0 Lord, our Mediator, God abeire the, yet for ua made man, I acknowledge thy naercy; for in that thouwho art so great, yet in thy Love to man west willingly tx °tabled, hew many members of thy body, troubled in their own infirmity against their will, haat thou comforted that they should not perish ityy deapair." Christ evidentlY had a thoroughly human clinging to life, as,natural as hunger and sleep, and not mere sin- ulc than either, 'What shall a say ? Jeaue recognized that. he is to be the pattern of all good men in coming gen-, erationa. How shall he meet this trouble Vr Fathers eave me from this hour. u better idganing is made by MIGHT HAVE BEEN KING, A PEER OF THE REAT:111 ALMOST • OUR SOVEREIGN. Duke or conineirlagni glad Ie lxeea Born Three Days Sarfler, Von1,1 Rave As- cended the Throne of Great Britain. • How many people knot that there is still living a peer ,of ±1 realm, who •had born three' days earlier would at this moment be the King of "England; aaks London Tit -Bits. There is nothing more romantic in the history of tha throne of England, going batel:: more than a thousand years, th:in the story of how this mighty sceptre was placed in the hands 'of the girlQueen who now reigns ever one-qUarter of the human rade. Had the Queen been horn four days latar the -Crictocrian- Era would never have dawned, and the Duke of Cumberland, wh,o is still entitled to airt tin the House of Lords, would have been reigning in England as George V. The Duke is a great-grandson of George III., and, therefore, cousin of the Queen. lals' father, who lies buri- ed at Winclaor, was the late King George V. of Hanover, grandson of George III., and was' born on May 27th, 1819. Three days 'before Queen Victoria had been born, and, be- ing the eldest fin the line of sucdession, ahe \vas destined for the throne which her boy cousin had missed by three days. It is interesting to reflect on what might have happened if the Queen had been born a week later. She Ili -Paid have doubtless been one -of the many Royalties of whom hislory kn,ows nothing more than that they sabre born, and in the Di tnes.s of time bovind in the family vault. re -95 IS`Oplila of Hanover and her de-, acendants Were kicteriulued by the Committee of the blouse of ,Commons, The Ant Ott Settlement oraused little enthusiasm, and there was rarely an attendance of more than fifty mem- bers in the lionae, The name of the intended heir was proposed by a naember al rer:i little weLght in Par- liament, svho was regarded as an ec- centric, and kiied madl a f years later. This laek dI interest an the proceed- ings came within an ace of depriving George I. of his throne. The resolu- tion was put on the 14th of May, 1701 and, thotagh the figures' oannot be ac- curately tract -A, there is good reason to baheve that it was passed., by a Ingle vote xis a late hour of tile night. 'Two stories are „•told showing on what a trifle this morrientons change depended. According to one, Six _Arthur Owen, the baronet who ,gave the deciding vote, was only able to vote by travelling as fast as numer- ous relays of horses could �ARRY HIM FROM WALES; and the other version is that Sir rthur Owen was talking' with Mr. Griffiths Rice in the lobby, when an opponent of the Bill rushed up to rally hia friends, to prevent' the Govern. ment 'passing the Bill through by a ankiteh vote. Mistaking the views of the two 'members in the 1,ololoy, he call- ed theri in in the kniok of time, and • they cast their votes' for the propos- al. Had the member kept his seat, the 6t0ry runs, Sir Arthur Owen and Mr. Rice would have been unable to vote, and the Aot a Settlement would never have been passed. There have been Kings of England who have pawned their crowns to pay their debts; and an early English Queen de aaid to have begged in the streeta for bread; but none of these things surpass in romantic interest the .story of Richard Cromwell, who occupied the throne of England for seven inexths, and stepped down from it to go into voluntary exile for wenty years'. • ' When Queen Anne was engaged in same State ceremony in 1710, sur- rounded by a laoet of courtier, some attention was attracted by a plain- ly -dressed old Man', who had mingled with the gaily-dreSsed throng. Think- ingtryinathiel imfallesd sbieninotfeasreatiminPg1,G act)gtalen: tleman asked the old man if he had ever before beheld torch a pageant. "Never, since I at in her chair," sa.acl the rustle, pointing to the Queen. It was Riehard Cromwell. The man who had been for seven brief mouths mater of the, palaces of Whitehall and Hampton ourt, to' wham Parliament had voted 110,000 a year, was then living in lodgings at Cheshunt 'at 10s. a week. IRISH FUN. .- S enic Instances of Wtb and llInntoe In the 'Iris!' Court ItoOtit. ' The quaintest repartee and whim- sical buiLitor of an Irish witness give a fillip' of excitement to the 'dullest court -room. Quite recently, says a writer, a womari-asleed for a warrant against a man for using abusive lan- guage in the street. t What did he say asked the mag- , istrate. " • , "Ile wentforeninst the whole world at 114 corner of Capel atreet and called me, yes; he did, yer warship, an ould enconaraunicated gasometer." " He called me out of me name;" said a witnesss, in a Case of assu,alt. The judge trying to preserve the relevancy of the witness's testimony, said: That's a civil action, my good wo- m-an." The witness's eyes flashed fire as • she looked up at the judge, and retort- ed., ".111ualia, then, if ye call' that a ',civil action,' 'tis a bad bla'gard ye must be yerself !" 4112th:tf111,3 it noe'S'"1IV:3'° 3IIICArde a 13. asked, •" Me gross income, is It 1" he anew ed. "Sure, an' ye know I've pa 'groagig income. I'm a fieherman, and me in. oame is all net." "lo man," said a wealthy but za.th, er weak-hettcled barrister, "should bat admitted to the bar wit° has net independent landed property," "May I ask, sir," said a witty an eminent Irish lawyer, "how many) acres make a wiseacre ?" The element of the unexpectd which, charauterizea Irih fun crops out in other places beside the court -room. It may be an `old atory, but it is as per- ennial as its subject, of the priest who preached a sermon on "Grace." An' me brethren," he eat?, in conclusion, "if ye have Wan spark av heavenly, graee wather it, wather it continua ally!" Another priest who had delivered what seemed to him an excellent and striking sermon was anxious to egg - certain its effect on his flock: "Was the sermon to -day to y'r Pat ?" be inquired of one of them. " Throth, y'r riverence, it was at grand sermon entirely," said Pat,witli such genuine admiration that his iteva erence felt moved to investigate tura them "Was there any one part of it more than another that seemed to take hold of ye ?" he inquired. " Well, new, as ye ape for akin' me, begorra, I'll tell ye. What tuk hoult av Me most was y'r riverenee's parse- verence-the way ye wint over the' same thing 'agin and agin and aginat NIAGARA NOT THE HIGHEST. Of Elfieen Important Waterfalls, 1 Irolds the Lowest "Place. Niagara is by no means the highest fall; in,deed, in a list of the fifteeri most important waterfalls it holds the loweist place in point of height, falling only 160 feet in its deepest leap on the Americana side, and only. about 150 feet at the Horseshoe Falls. The highest witire fall, aecording to our present -knowledge, is the Yose- mite, California., where a stream 2 feet wide descends 2,650 feet in three leaps,±14first and longest being 1,505 feet in height. The Grand Faits, in Labrador, have a ,single plunge of about 2,000 feet, believed to be the highest of thiS sort in the world. In breadth Niagara ie rivalled by the Vic- toria Falls on the Zambesi, 1,000 yards broad, while the Canadian side of the Niagara is 2,6l40 feet and the American side 1,000 feet in breadth. The volume of Niagara, which reach- es the stupendous quantity of fifteen fe,et' per minute isse almost certainly unequalledwelatif-t-c- curate calculations have not yet beeii made of some of the less known cat- aracts.' As to which is the finest fall, it is generally conceded that Niagara offers a peerless spectacle to the tourist; bat it is questionable, if the Victoria .Falls of the Zambesi, de- scribed by a great traveller as sub- limely terrible, are at all inferior, though few have the good fortune to he able to make the comparison. Nar- rowed suddenly into a rooky channel eighty yards wide, this river plunges into a. chasm 400 feet deep, throwing up huge aolugoans of spray, visible at ei distance of ten miles, with a thun- tious roar, whkh is easily heard ten miles away; then, turning at an angle it pursues its seaward ehurse for P00. miles, The. native name for this grand cataract is in English "Smoke Sounds Here." The Fall of -Foyers, at the ealt side af LoehNess, is .one of the finest' cascades in Britain, with two leaps 'in ,205 feet. A STITCH IN TIME. g He -Miss Beaty ie awfo.11ynid, isn't she ? She -She is jut my age. Re--Well--oh,1 beg your pardon, CREA.TE'f) A S'ENTSAT LON. hen The Duke would have ascended the throne as George V.:and as he died on -Jane lath, 1878, there would have be.en no Diamond Jubilee and no long - eat reign. • The preaent Duke Ernest of Ouanberland, would have succeeded his father, and would now have reign- ed ex.ao.tly, twenty-one yeange As it is, tha i/ulte has not fiet foot in England sincie the death of his father. He is in his ,fifty-foua th year', and, is inaried to a sister -of no ,Princess 01 W, and. 'the Czarnia of Russia.. 11 was Duke Ernest, who had lost the throne by t,laree days', wliocreated a great senaation at the time of the Queen's accession by threatening [ler Majesty with a law -milt, The Queen hall worn at her coronation morale of the famous Cumberland jewels, which the duke claimed as direet male heir. Her Majesty clung to the jewel', which had been handed to. her ,on ber succession, but eventually the preci- ous gents were given Alp, and they are now worn by the proud wife of Duke Freest. They are but poor curapensa-- tsions, however, for the lose of hrome. Another triflc which ):11.glit easily hive preVented the aceession of the Queen -and, Indeed, the accession of the Haase a Hanover. --oecurred in 1701, 4106ti the succeeioe. of the Elec- urn oura r rovisuar,....m.,orsucnsturtaartosar.guar.....x.s. He Cures Every Case of Piles Thoroug Expense anti Pain It ns surprising what a large number of raen and women suffer from tile wretched uneaainess and texturing itching of piles. 'You may be among those,w,ho, through modesty or fear of the surgeon's knife, have been pre- yented from appealing to your phys- ician for a cure You have tried the hundred and one thinga that friends have recommended, and have become discouraged: EYiou say,' as many have said befoxe YcLut, that there is no cure , Now is the time for you to tarn to Dr. Chase, whose famous ointment 19 recognized the World over as 1 -he only ac,tual care fox- every form of piles. The real substantial value of Dr. Chase's Ointment has given it a' unique posation among medicines. It is used in nearly every rieighborlabod 4 s , 41 this continent, and has become known by word' of month from friend to friend and neighbor to neighbor. Ask your friends about it, ask svour druggist, alt your d,octor. Others have been discouraged, and after years .naiaery .have been eared' by, Dr. 0 mstine t. T ter otae ' ja in OS fir own, Iflivt enlittrg, near Ot- tawa, san e haVe ben -a .000- ' gian t. sufferer; from a, sally evry forni hly and Well Without the Danger of an Operation. of piles foe the last twenty years, and during that time both here and' jai the old country have tried riaCI6t every remedy. , ht am only doing . ju.stine to Dr. 'Chase's pentinetnt when. I say that I believe it to. be the best remedy ob- tainable for bleeelhhig and protrud'n 1,[ air oxig,ly re:commend Dr. Chase's Ditn,tasenit to mothers or in- ' deed to any .person suffering front . that drea, tornaerit-pilea." • Mr. George T.haensirann 5 lead'aig , merchant of 13-1,enlie,ini, Ont., eta tesn Lor -'el \ye": Ptl they .were so had I could scarcely walk. 1 tried a great nikenyremerlia, , .es but :never to,utn,dt anything tile Chase'Dinttnaent. • After the.third applicatictii, I oba ain,ea and. Nyasa. conanlete‘ly corel by using one bo:+,a'' Ask .your neigh,bors 'about Dia Chese's Ointine, at, the cJhIy abSolote cure- for Yetican obtains', Dr. Chaae's Dint - vanes': or 60 cents a hot i u i ate* dealer. - 1 you: . prefer, encleac thi$ scly will 1 hEe denelnai'll1,p 30os., I ri ,)13,a(1,04A:.y Co.,.)40ozc thes- ffte,s la, 1 the rem,