Loading...
The Exeter Times, 1890-11-13, Page 6I'M MODERN PULPIT... VIE PRODIGAL SON—HIS FAT,T, AND PENITENON. Ey Archdeacon Farrar. • St.f uke XV. 11th. to 32. "A certain man had twosome., cat. The b'essed pxlrtble of Christ—in itself a theology and gospel—which I have chosen for our instruction an these sernions sets be- fore us each in a few vivid teaches five dis- tinct scenes. We have seen the home. of the prodigal and his departure from his home ;we hare seen him at tht• light banquet, in the brief, delirious glare and ;reedinees of his guilty sell'-ilidul.,e area to -day we shall look upon hint in his fail and m lids • I #enSe. He is yet strong and young, and what has he gained'; What has he Ianrelamed for him- self frith the portion of goods which his father f;-tve Rini" He had- sought for mere - enjoyment—he had gained (musks and de- grraaQlation; he hard sought :.e limitless umdependenee---he b adge:net' akIect slavery, he had sought for frit -aids and pcoularity-•- he was left to the companionsinp of swine ; he bad sought for ung..-nded pleasure—he had found Imager, rags, a runlet! life, an aching heart- :alight we not well eehirese Iainx rtt the pustule %verds of the English poet :— Tensile. bright bay. tell me my golden had. "Whither away so fro; e why rot tel p' With all thy i, ea lth In coma -el. to P ray - t tte®- 1 re husks so dear to ma .: t11ie ntig ate rttte And ,yet we all know too well how Som. Meet tilts tragedy is, in which a FM (see- ing s+gtnauderetl ell that (led has given hila, .for flee tire of his blood. for time we4a11,11 of his ne\ , , s ,r possibilities, for the beauty and mercy of hash man a xistenec, has nothing to give heels to Him .who made Iwo, Inst the dust of Iris mortal body anti the shipwreck of his immortal soul, How like a souni;er or a prodigal. Tht Feaarfed nark punt-( from her native bay, iia d.alairsubrtu'rtihy-thestrumpetwind! How like the prodigal doth she return. With over•weatitt•red rites and ragged trails, Lean, rent, and beggar'd by the strumpet wind. There inthe sacrarium hangs the picture of a young English kin;;, the son of the victorious Brach. Prince, the grandson of the greatest of the Plantaenets as he sat in the chair of England in his gilded and jewelled robes au (lie etarortaation day. IOD you recall his end and misery. and how the whirlwind over- whelmed that glided bark of life ! The pro- digal belongs not to one alae or country, or one set of conditions, but to all ares, and every country, mad d onditions of every kind and rawly night say, with the sorrowing English poet. When flat my youthful. sinful ago fova' nmeter of my \ray s at:p ewee a rrOr for my =page And d ar l,t1I - fie* me days lilting awes. an+; wish full cry (It sviid:Meet kink. rid In Post for pleasure.% brut to tt� Ail g i. ter• Haat would btu.I played with tire, did coons(•;r: spurn. :Haile life My 4201011101104.14t. ; Ent never thought !Ire would burn. or t meson! would ache. a .. .......... . not a demoniac possession of all a man's noblest faculties which has made a man say that if a glass of brandy were there, and be. tween him and it surged up the very fires of hell,• so horrible is•his enslavement • that he trust still thrust out his hand and seize it ? Or when in some Wild outburst of passion, stirred by strong temptation, a man -who has perhaps fought, and fought hon- orably, the battle of life, suddenly flings to the winds every band of morality, and hazards his eternal and temporal welfare on the east of a die, does it not mean that another spirit—not God's Spirit, not his own true spirit—has seized possession of that n en's soul, and he has yielded himself so that the ruler of the house of his life is a demon and not himself ? And then the true repentance is indeed the coming to himself, and be is like that demoniac of (iadtdarea dee no longer haunts the tombs ; he no longer rends his garments and goes about naked and furious; ire has listened to the words o. Jesus ; he sits at the feet of Jesus, calm and clouted, and in his right mint(. And when be eanne to himself, he said : "How many hired servants o' my father have bread enough and to spare f' To conte to one's self is the same thing as to come to E;cti, for God has merle is for Himself, and .our heart is restless until it tiin-ls rest in Him. Nankin else eau g=ave us peace --not the world, with its hollow emptiness ; not plea- , sere, with its maddening sorcery ; not man 'with his impotent seltis:encs—notlrin;; but (sod. Not man nor Nature satisfies Whoonly tied created. • And God laavit g laved His own l' vexh therm to the eLad, Why should that 1 tr youth sit l3unrr"y among the swine? , Ile was mac,,t to di E txt4td slave l,8te , . he was an erring son. It I8d seen the love of Inc F >. f,tt.3t provide r t1 E E\erS for his Ft•m\ flea, for these who stood to him in a far lower anti ne. re distant relation to him than himeeif ; he Fees the (sappy peace and beauty of inanimate nature ; he eees the q"riet inns cenee of all the harmless creatures of dead and field ; he sees the heathen world to whom God hath not left Himself without witness, sending "rain from heaven and fruitful seasons, tilling our hearts with food and gladness." All these, if they have not manna, which is angel's food, at least have the bread whieh Full -ins; for their natural or human life ; they arc not the down - , trodden negro Flares of unruly lusty anti pas,ious, whieh have toned to them the seers swinish heats of satiety and retribu- tion If they never enjoyed the prodi- gal's privileges, *either have they souk to iters dei•r ed.et.on, if the: Wye never been ad - witted into his sanctuary, neither have they (teen guilty of his e t rilete. They are then bind servants t4 Ins tattier, and yet have 1.1read eumtgli and to spare: and what hasbe• Re has lost the uranna; he has forfeitedeven the bread ; eveutlte honks no mala gave mato (menu. (-uu1.I he driuh el thit;lifefromthosefoul a and broken eisteeti>; ? Could he eat to the last fr'm that feeding trough 1 No. " My father's hired servant lots plenty antihero' ant perishing, of watts," Da why should l he perish of wind.? Is not his home where it w,ty? He ha- forsaken hes father, but has hisfather forsaken no Were not those yer'. stirr.n ,:.mot let lull a•eanitrsefulauguish in his heart the e ,gats that his father was still drawing him by that golden cord of which one link w.ts still left unseen in hits heart, and he knew tliat time other was in his father's hand ? Like the first streak of rosy dawn upon the darknees, it cane home to hive that, thauhlt ss, ignoble, ragged ruin- i ed, among the yr:melting swine, he could 1 still be forgiven, he restored, be received j Imam again, be aadear and happy son once more and the ery went forth from the depth of his tadsery.-g Though waves and storms go o'er nn head Though strength and health and friends be gone : • Tho n titoy-- be withered all, and dead ; Though every coutfor4 be withdrawn ; On this me steadfast soul relies;-- Fatiu'r, thy nteny never die•, Aattl so at last he started from his stupor ; he shook off his paralysis ; he gathered up Ids prostrate ener'"ies. Why should Ire sit thus, hopeless, objeetiess, degraded, all things daily growing worse, the swine more foul, the husks more loathly, the hunger more excruciating? And he said the words, thrive bieesecl, awakening the most thrilling mntdodfes of angel harps, " Twill arise and go to my father, and say unto him, Father, though I have sinned, though I am &gra.l- ed, yet father still—father, I have sinned against leaven and before thee; against thee, thee only have I sinned and done this evil in thy sight ; but 0 nay father, my father, for- give tine errin g son ! I atm no more worthy —I was worthy once, but, no longeraln Iwor- thytobecalledthv son;but lam perishiugwith hnn:4er-0 make me as one of thy hired ser- vants !" It is the anguish whieh makes the guilty and remorsefid man envy even the animals which have not sinned as be has sin- ned. It is poor John Bunyan crying in his hour of agony he was sorry that God had made him a pian, and blessing the condition of the birds, beasts, fishes, for they had not a sinful nature, they were not obnoxious to the wrath of (mod. I blessed the dog and the toad and counted the condition of every- thing Clod had made far better than the hateful state that I was in ; they had no souls to perish as mine was like to do." "and he arose and went to his father." There was the proof that leis repentance was genuine—that it was hatred of sin, and not mere remorse causedbypunishment. Misery, 1 degradation, ruin, bring bitter experience, but you are mistaken, my friend, if you think that they always bring repentance. They do not. ,sometimes they only call out despair. Woe unto him who says, "I will have my fling, and I will repent when re- tribution falls on me " ! Woe unto him who insolently says to God, " Thou shalt abide my time," to him who thus blasphem- ously challenges the heavy wrath of God ! The scourge sometimes only brutalises the criminal, the fire that melts the gold does not harden the clay. Many are brought by anguish.to say, "I have sinned," but with many the thought is not followed by a re- solve nor the resolve by. an action ; there is procrastination, there is dallying with the past—a looking back to the doomed, glitter- ing city, a going over the old sins under a plea of penitence. They. say, "I have sin- ned," but, like Pharaoh, they ,do the same again ; they say, " I have sinned," but, like )salaam, they proceed from bac( to worse ; they say, "I havo sinned," but, like Judas, the confession only makes themplunge into despair. But not so to this hapless prodigal. He arose, and went to his father.. He feels that the flash of remorse is not enough—a journey must he taken, no exouses must be. made, nothing must be concealed, everything must be confessed, the back must .be turned at once and finally •on that far land, the reproving faces must be'met, the hard abandoned ditties, all the harder from abandonment,. must ' be resumed. To many a man in this Abbey at this Mo- ment the path Lack to the tinific rectitude of a righteous life can . be -only through a seorclring past, a darkened future; and many a prodigal sitting among the swine has lost time energy to face 'the future, and does not arise, but sits still in his shame and sin, and dies hunger stricken in the famished land. On whom may the Merciful have mercy! But, ah I may it not be so with you? Not long ago a rough, unruly boy, who had met with all love and kindness, ran away from a London reformatory, and they lest sight of him, and knew not where he was ; but they had east their bread faithfully on the waters, and they found it after many days. The poor bay had ran away to sea, ; he had suffered many a hardship, and had passed through matt a storm; but all the While the grace of Gocl had been secret- ly stirriug in his heart, and one day they received from him, no letter, but just aserap of paper with this text of germ tune written on it—nothing more than this one text of Jeremiah, "Wilt thou not cry unto me from this time, My Father, thou art the guide of my youth ?" and they knew that in heart this poor yotmg prodigal also had repented and had said, " 1 will arise and go unto my Father, and will say mom him, Father, I have sinned." 0 my friends, is there no prodigal sitting here among all of yea 1 Is there no soul, young or old, which feats that it is in rags and hunger, and pitting an mg the swine of evil passions, and exiled from the Father's love t If there be, 0 prodigal 1 who unknown to all, knowest that my words are meant for thee, and feelest in thy beset that they fere the very voice and call of God . to thee, arise from thy shame, arise front thy misery t Whether yoube lost or slaved may depend upon your use of this very er:- 1 ' sis ; it mn'iy i:eed Gaut one strong e;ii.rt Of r the will to make you (kd"s for ever, " To- day if ye will hear His voice harden not • your hearts." Only one word more. It has been said, my friends, that 1Repeutance is a younger brother of Innocence itself. 1 picture tomy- \ -brothers. 1 nil n "^iJ R f til a t., n c Ei the eider brother, is an angel in his loveliness ; on his tlsE.e.,,1. is the blush of InnilE•sty, and the 110018 of sympathy is in his heart ; he has , taken up into time powers of nmaultoc d the purity of childhood ; his hair is crowned j with lilies whieh breath a fragranee of heaven, and when he speaks ho speaks t in music, and he wears still the white robes of his 1 aptlan ; and if ever there be a tear upon his cluck it is as the dew upon the vernal rose—the t tear whieh glorifies, not status. But how t different is theyoung brother --Repentance ! His face is bent downwards, his eyes are t vague and fretful, the pl:.ughshare of evi passions has left its furrows on Ms brow and on hi ebeck, his heart is full of hunger, his voice is broken with sobs, and though he has Itorn away from his forehead the roses of the banquet, their withered leaves and mitered blossoms are still amid hit tangled hair ;yet a Repentance, that poor strieken younger son, 1 is atilt his father's eco. Is he, friend, apleas- ant child to have ? "Through I spoke against him, 1 do earnestly remember hint still; I therefore, my ineart yearns fur him; I will surely have mercy on him, saith the Lord." 1 es ; he is still hie Father's son : dearer than the other 1 -that cannot be—but still redeemed and still very dear to the heart of his Father ; and when (sod has onee more shed abroad in inc heart the spirit of His Son, then he, too, will ery, "Abba, Father," I and (sod will send forth Merey, the dearest of all His angels, to support his tottering footsteps and to wipe his tear -stained cheeks. Oh, doubt hot—not one of you—that he will be accepted, and doubt not, thou pater sit.- - ner it.- ner anti poor sufferer ! Say thou- also, *• I will arise and r) to my Father and, lo! Faith shall shed on thv darkness the glory of her silver store; anti Hope shall smile en- chanted upon thee, and wave her golden hair; ante Charity shall help thee ft,rwartd with her strong arms, and shall fold thee in her robe which covereth a multitude of slne and will hide thy shame, and will see the, once more forgiven, reelothed, happy after all the soreness of thy misery, with a clean heart again ami a true spirit renewed with- in thee—a dear son, and once more very welcome to thy Father's home. Myall1 • - "0R 1 frse,n 1 what air awful a'*� ,-tragedy d� •8 this would be if this were all and ended here ! Ami to the eye of than it tines end here. 'Vim bias not read abundantly in history and biography, and who bels not known even in l the narrow limits of his own earthy experi- emee, such imstauees of moral and spiritual shipwreek--sltipwrcek of ererythimg? And stra*n a of all the wreck,: noon the shore And alt that he ;ales. drift .11t.ut the sea, We never think that s1t h our lives may be, Non 1•hrink fronnn life whlelt may be ene wreck more. I think nigxelf of the ratan "f letters whom I knew, a man of learning, his books still fans" • nus, who weut down to the grave his grey hairs dishonoured, a pauper and a shame, I think of the brilliant your Universitysollo. lar and public school bay, destined apparent• ly to the highest honors, straek down. by the fiery clutch of the fury of drink, blasted by its aecnrsed breath, writing lettere in elm quent l m - fluent Latin to beg money of his old seined - fellows, dying blighted and pemmiless in a London hospital. There are many such at this very moment in the common lodging - houses of London, of great cities, and in the backwoods and ranches of America, and in the diamond fields of Africa, rind in the gold fields of our Colonies, and scattered all . over the world, who are like that picture of the " Castaway," dismantled, helpless, beaten by tine stormy waters, desolate wreeks upon the lonely shore. Thank God this is not all ! 'We see the poor self -ruined life sitting in rags and hunger amoug the swine, but they are still God's children, and Clod is their . Father still. "Hath Goll forgotten to be gracious?" Will he be no more entreated? Will He shut up His loving kindness and His pleasure? Is His mercy clean gone for- ever? And is His promise come utterly to an end for evermore ? I for one have dared ' to hope that if not here, yet somewhere, perhaps far off, God's unseen hand will ! beckon back His lost sons, even as it beckon- ed home this prodigal of Christ. For we must needs the, but we are not as water spilt upon the giou d, which cannot be gathered up again ; and even God doth not take a goal away, but He deviseth means to .call hack His banished ones. "And it came to pass when he. carne to himself." This expression is remarkable. It implies that all this while, when lie rode away from his father's house, when he abode in the "far country," when he devoured his substance in riotous living, when the narrow and impure horizon of the flesh s anued all Isis hopes, and he threw the reins loose upon the neck of every loose desire, he had not been his true self, but the stupid, changeling of him• self, the evil cotuiterpart of himself. " He calve to himself." The child who had play- ed iu the sunlight of his father's love, the clear-brotved lar(, with no taint of evil in his thoughts, the favorite son, se dear, so happy, so full of generous purpose and unselfish life—that was- himself ; mid when to think of Irina called up no blush of shame, when the roses in the garden still bloomed around hint in the dear old home, when a mother's kiss was not sulliedupon his cheek, nor the 1lancl of a father ieidin blessing upon an unworthy hear(—that wad himself ; but the loveless, thankless, graceless boy, the corrupt, dis- solnte youth, the companion of rioters and harlots, the fool that had laid waste the in- ner sanctities of his own being and squalid - el ed the most precious., heritage of bit life -- that was not himself ;. it was a guilty - sem- blance of himself; -it was a hideous dream • of himself which he now despised. His hour of luxurious and forbidden pleasure was an hour of delusion, of brief insanity. • But you must not fancy that t his is a valid excuse for bim or for any man. : The delusion is self -chosen ; • the miulness is self-induced. It is in very truth a demoniac ,possession, but one which the sinner hineself invites. Scieuce denies the reality of demoniac pos- session, but do we not see something like it every day ? Is not the ease of the drunkard a Ott -ionise possession, who for the sake of his accursed temptation sees his. children famine- stricken, and hie wife in rags, his whole existence a curse—a curse to his country, to his family, and to himself ? Is it A Romance of Burned Gold. The magic fascination of the idea of buried treasure is as strong to -day as ever it was. The Knight expedition, which was to re- cover the bidden treasures of Lima Cathe- dral, has come to nothing but the shock will have no effect on the sanguine people who expect King Solomon's mines to he re- opened m the heart of Africa and Mr. Iiialer Haggard to be translated into sober fact. Many theories more or less fanciful have front time to time been putforward concern- insz the celebrated treasures of Montezuma, and their alleged hitting places have been as numerous as the birthplaces of the author of the Odyssey. According to the Mexican local press, a curious discovery has lately been made in the $tate of Chiapas, which, whilst doing something to clear up the mys- tery, will also prove the immense antiquity of gold mining in Mexico. For a long time the superintendent of the great Santa Te Copper Mine was perfectly satisfied that the mune was absolutely virgin, since none of the immense masses of copper ore cropping out in all directions showed the slightest trace of having been touched. True, there was one shallow bole near by, which, however, might easily have been sunk by some wandering prospector during the last few years. Lately, however, it was found necessary to grade out a hillside, some 200 yards from the mine. The hill was densely wooded, but, after feeling the timber and excavating two feet of black vegetable mould, traces of ancient workings were discovered, resulting in over ,inmetres cf an ancient dump being unearthed. This clump was fount( to con- tain blocks of rich gold -bearing copper ore thrown away as useless. The shaft of an old mine was also found. The whole work- ings appear to be entirely separetefromn the Santa Fe mine, and in lower formation. (hose following on this intorestin z discovery comes news from the V ietoria mine, half -a- mile aonth-west of the Santa Fe. Here, also, there was not the slightest trace of any human being haring worked on .the moue- tail—not a dump,not a -loose stone, and the ground covered with immense forest trues. A tunnel was being driven to cross -cut• the ore body, and had gone through over 70 feet of ore, when snddonly an ancient work- ing was blasted into. Three small broken grinding -stories, which might well have been used for maize, were foand. The explora- tion of these old mines will he a most inter- esting work, and is expected by authorities to throw fresh light on the methods as well as the sources of ancient gold mining., • The Express Train of the Future, Dr. Loins Bell says the electric express train of the near future will in all probabil- ityieontain one or more powerful motors on the axis of its drivers, and aggregating per- haps 1000 horse -power as a normal output. It will be lighted and heated by electricity. The track over which it will run will be straight and smooth, like the great trunk linesof to -day.' The train will start snlo- ly in to motion, fly along the track at the rate of 100 miles an hour or more, and stop quickly and easily by applying its electric brakes. An automatic block systeni will be used that well secure perfect control of the traius and almost absolute immunity from collisions. 301 -IN LABATT'S TT'S Indian Pale e Ale and LYX8rown819ut Highest awards anct Medals for Purityund Excel- lence at Centennial irxllillition, Philadelphia, 1870; Canada, 1870; Australia, 1877 ; and Paris, France, 1878. TESTI3IONIALS SELECTED: Prof.$ H Croft, Pablie Analyst, Toronto, says:—"1 audit to beperfectly sound containing no impurities or adulter- atior.s, and can strougly reeornmendit as perfectly pure and a very superior malt liquor,,, John Bewares, professor of Chemistry, Biontreal, says:on '1 semi eller, brews(] from *•odthem to be remarkably pure malt and hops Il Irov. P. J. Rd. Pago,Professor of Chemistry Laval Haver- slty, Quebec), says :—"I have analyzed the Indian Pate Ale manufactured by John Labatt, London, Ontario, and have found it a lightale, containing but little alcohol, or a deli- cious flavor, and of a very agreeable taste and sunorior quality, and compares with the best imported ales. ]? 11 We also analyzed the Porter XXX Stout, of the sante brewery, whieh it fs a tiosnon oeu•.coerIeioennterueaictyt • elute hEnaorovtoe vole", faogrreietaibslea; little richer in alcohol, and can be compared advantage- ously with any imported article, ASK YOTJR *ROVE.i i I"OR LT. • 1 -MANUFACTURERS MANUFAC .#, URERS OF rek s Squaro pry ht The Oldest Manufacture's in the Dominion, Seven Thousand P'ianios Now in Use. The Heldman Pianos are noted for: Their Full, Rich, Pure Singing Tone, Their Finely Regulated Delicate Touch, Their Perfectly Even Well Balanced Berrie. The Whole Composed of the Choicest Material and of the Most Thorough Workmanship Send For Illustrated Catalogue. Factory :-West Toronto Junotio111Warerooms and Offices 117 King-St.West r 'ORO TrO. TUB EX '2E11 TIw1ES. Ie publlsned ovary Thursday morn ng, at TI MES STEAM PRINTING HOUSE !fain-stroot,nearlyopposito Fitton's Jewelory Hun e,Exoter,Qnt.,byJohn White dm Sons,Pro- arietors. RATES Op ADVI•rnTESDia First insertion , per line 10 cents tach sabsoqucutinsertion,por lino Scents, To insure insertion, advertisements should o sentin notiatorthan Wednesday morning OurJOB PRINTING DEP.LRTMENT is one t the largest and best equipped in the County f Huron, All work entrusted to us will receiv or prompt attention. Decisions Regarding News- papers. Any person whotakesa papal-regularly/rem ho post.oMee, whether directed in his name or another's, or whether he has subscribed or not to responsible for payment. 2 If v. person orders his paper discontinued hemnstpay all atrears or the publisher may continuo to send it until the payment is made, and then collect the whole amount, whether the paper is taken from the office or not. 9 in suits for subscriptions, the suit maybe nstituted in the pence where the paper is pub. ished, although tho subscriber may reside hundreds of miles away-. 4 The courts have decided that refusing to "alto newspapots or peiiodicalsfront the poste office ,erramming and leaving them uncalled or is prime facie evidence of inteutionalfran'. a • WILL POSITIVELY CURE COyii1PS, Pi11C tri THE STO4PCIi l3awel Complaints, Diarrhoea —AND SUMMER COMPLAINTS KEEP A BOTTLE IN - I '"1~.1E HOUSE. 1 SOLD Ft se" /?.9 t eerree el^.$ s. Aiind wandering mired. (moils learned in one reaomg. T0'stimenials from all parts of the globn. Protpeetus Pest 1•111••.E, sent on nnplieation to Prof, A. Loiset.e, 237 Path Ave. New York. R. d. • A YY LEIS 'S eEXT.,Od' �,���,ww�� yp�,�{� �,pT TY 11 W BERR CURES� p®rte S E :. A hotea'a Morbus RAMPS IAA YSE T 't AND ALL SUMMER COMPLAINTS AND FLUXES Of' THE BOWELS IT IS SAFE /AND RELIABLE FOR CHILDREN OR ADULTS,. PUREST. STRONGEST, BEST, CONTAINS NO ALUM, AMMONIA, LIME, PHOSPHATES, or any injurious materials. E. W. G I LLETT, TORONTO, ONT. cxn .too, ILL. itaa'fr albs GILEBItA"_'EDROYALYEAs'I'r AXES. KAN SAS, _TEXAS, OKLAHO A COL® RAYJO, UTAH, NEW MEXICO GA-LIPOR NIA, AR,IZONA., OREGON, And all points west of the Missour Riva via the Sairta Fe Route FROM CHICAGO. For particulars autl ticke s s e your Barest ticket agent, or address GEO. E. GILMAN, Passenger Agent, 74 Grstwolct at, Detroir., Mich. GEO. T. NICHOLSON', Ge neral I'asa. i nc Ticket Agent, Topeka, Kansas. • HEVER FAILS 1'0 OWE SA'iiSFk911213 FCg SALE O'F •°tt,i, OE4::A1:R MAT IS GOING GN FOP SONY MILES OP 110 Alk TO��II Ii nee.eio4 t)u a arrescopes i n ,,: the world. Our tin:dines aro unequaled, and to introduce our nods we will sr dlrf s to Ogg 1 n s ' to OSB 1'Safiei in each loenlity, ^n k -Y as above. Only those who write tt 'yr. to us at once can make sure of C,.• ;x:' the chnnoo. All you lave to do in m,' re11,turn o 1 tuho0 show our goods t0 "P C 8 g �' v n£ i-,p%�� �_ and those cell—year you neighborshe e AYE fr.': . ,. and ingsomr this you. 'isement shginningows the of small nd ofrthemon. ah 0 nppe a ane ofd or the tele. o scope. Tho:eh?Nittg oat ,^'•:emthc appearnnco of it reduced to :c Minot the fiftieth part of Its bulk. 1t 1s n grand, double size tele- scope, as large as 1a en sy turnery- 11'c will also shots you.huwynu ' ran make fcnrn se to 5110 a day at lenst from the start with Oat experirn0e, Better write et cure. We pay all express ohnrgn, Addruss.X.ISALLti'1T 3 co„ sax 2 so, i'oarznllar, Untrue, How Lost, How Restored Just published, a' new edition of - Dr. falser \t'ell's Celebrated Essay on hr radical cure or SrslutArosautse or incapacity inducdd by excess or early Indiscretion. The celebrated author, in this admirable essay, clearly demonstrates from a thirty years' succeeeful practice, that the alarmingconsequences of self" abuse may be radically cure; pointing out a mode of cure at once simple, certain and effectual, by means of which every sufferer, no matter what hie condition inay be, may cure himself cheaply, pre. vatoly and radically. re. This lecture should be in tho hands of every youth and every man in theland Sent under seal, in a plain envelope, to any ad dress, post-paid, on receipt of four cents, or two postage statnps. tramples of Ate Ileine free. Address THE CULVERWELL MEDICAL CO 41 Ann Street New York Post Otid,ma 13ax 450 4x36 1 y WiLL CU iE k?f=:»EVE ;:iLIOUSNESS, DIZZINESS, DYSPEPSIA, DROPSY, INDIGESTION) FLUTTERING JAUNDICE OF THE HEAT,. ERYSIPELAS, ACIDITY OF SALT RHEUM, THE STOMACH, HEARTBURN, DRYNESS THE SKIN, , �at2 ovary snscies of disease ar"isinr>' from disoxdered LIVER, SLU.BiEEY. , STOMACH, BOWELS OR .BLOOD. Ta MILBURN ,ez00., P10'ri000;ozzTQf MANY PAANEmr4=7. who is Weak, Nervous, Elebt!ililaited, whoin his Folly and Ignorance lois Tri- fled away his Vis_;'or of Body, !Anand and fiit, eling xhtinn abslarFounhoodtains aueof eLifeausng. t-ieadnche,draisupo °lciokaChe,DreadfulDreams, Weakness It Mornay, Bashfulness in Society, ?irnpl ea upon the FACE and all the �ffeota ceding to Early FPecay, Gonsumptlon r Intaanity will find in our speoiffo No, 29 a )ositive Pure. 2t imparts Youthful Igor restores the Vital Power in old anti oung, strengthens and invigorates the Brain lnd P�tal•vos, builds npaction trio muscular systom nd s into the whole physical energy ofarousethe human frame, With our spociflo No. 29 the most obstinate case can bo cured in three months, and recent ones in less than thirty days. Each package contains two weeks treat- wec ntNo24is. Prcean S2. Oureee Guaranteed.Cureforall Our spPrivate ec- infallibl Diseases noreatterof how tong stand- ing. Sold under our written Cuarantee to Co effect ..ToraonOurs° to.OntPrice 53. Toronto Medicint , 1- LADIES ONLY, i FRENCH REGULATION PILLS. . Far superior to. Ergot, Tansy, Pennyroyal a Oxide. Endorsed by the thousands of ladiel' who nse them MONTHLY. Never fail. Helier pain, INSURE REGULARITY, Pleasant and Ei'ectual. Price, $2, Toronto Medicine Co, Toronto. Ont. OF AN HE EYE T EF TJMEF,,