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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1902-2-6, Page 3LUTE SECURITY!' Cenuine Carter's Little Liver Pills. It Bear Signature of ^ I a See lilac...51mM Wrapper Below. Very email and as 43a2y lo take as sagas. 'FOR 0EADAORt", FOR DIZZINESSk. oluoustast., FOR „TORPID LIVER, FOR,CONSTIPATION. FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR TIM COMPLEXION oasrsion.rio MIJiT HAVG"),NAYL .V; VaitS I Purely eregettaiereneVerea CURE SI01( HEADACHE,. CARTER'S iTLE ran PILLS. Cures to St4y Cured• The most chronic diseases of the Stomach, Liver, bowels and Blood. Thousands of testimonials from those who have been permanent- ly cured by the use of Burdock !Blood Bitters speak of its unfail- ing efficacy in Dyspepsia, Bilious- ness, Sick Headache, Liver Com- plaint, Eczema, Erysipelas, Sero- fula, Sores, Ulcers, Boils, Pimples, Hives, Ringworms, and all blood laumors. If you want to be cured to stay cured, use only B.B.13. LAXA-LIVER ILL eT1Ri It will work while you sleep, without a gripe or pain, curing Constipation, Biliousness, Sick Head- ache and Dyspepsia, and make you feel better in „ GOO.D KING ClaRISTIAN. Reasons Why He Retains the Af- fections of Ms People. King Christian of Denmark is the most beloved of Etiropean menarche, A story is told which illustrates the affection of his people, and at the same tirae the freedom with which they approach him. The King was 'visiting a town in northern Jutland , when a peasant advanced to him on the street and asked him if he was the King. The monarch &ailed, as he answered af- iirmatively and inquired if he could elo anything for bins. No," said the peasant, bluntly. "I just wanted to tell you that you are a, good king—one of the hest we ever had." • The King laughed. • "Do you think so ?" he replied. e'Well, perhaps it's a matter of taste ; but then, I'm a poor judge In affairs of this sort." That the peasant, however, was not far wrong in his estinea,tion is evidenced by another story in which King Christian was the good angel. Millis story has been revived by- the action of the ,King in placing a Wreath on the grave of the wife of 'Jensen, the famous portrait -painter. Jensen veas,"a poor boy in whose career his Majesty took much inter- eSt. One day the King met the young man ort the street, and im- pressed by his sadness, asked vhat was the matter, The young man • confeesed that he was in love with the daughter of a Wealthy man, who • would not let her marry the Son of a • poor tt•aciesreart. "0-110 l" Wild the kieg. "Is that all ? We must See what we can no,". • The veregiekeet, dety he called on tem .WeaIthy eitfien, and argued the youeg Min's cese Se succeSsfully • tbat all opposition was Withdearern. IS, Icing is a hard man to Xesist, told • a king Who uses his power wisely •is a mighty inetrement .or geted,, NOTICES LITTLE TIIINGS, There Is No Emergency of Life Where Goa Is Not Willing to Help. [Entered Acipraing to ace et the rarliament ot Canada, in the year One Thousand be un tired and One, be Winkle Beee,eif Termite, at thf) Zinnia,* of egrieuiture, one") A. despatch from Washington • saysf —Rev. Dr. Tabnage preached frons the following text:—II. Kings vi, 6, "The iron did swine." A theological sernivary in the vale ley of Palms, near the river Jordan, had become so popular in the tune of Ensile, the prophet, that more accommodations wore needed for the students. The classrooms and dor- mitories must be enlarged or an en- tirely new nuilding constructed. What will they do? Will tney send hp to jortisalern and solicit contributions for this undertaking? Will they send out agents to raise the 'money for a new. theological seminary? Having raised the money, will they send for cedars of Lebanon and marble from the quarries where Ahab got the stones for the pillars and walls of eis palace?... No; the students pro-. pose to build it themselves. They were rugged boys, ' who had been brought up in the country and who had -never been weakened by the lux- uries of city life. All they -ask is that Ensila,. their professor and prophet, go along withtheta to the woods and boss tbe job. They start tor the everk, Elisha and kis stu- dents. Plenty' of lumber in these re- gions along the Jordan. The syca- more is a stout, strong tree and good. f or timber.. Mr. Gladstone ask- ed me if I had seen in Palestine any sycamore tree more beautiful tban the one we" stood under at. Haward- 'en. I told him I had net. The sycamores near ; the Jordan are now, attacked by Elislia's stu- dents, for they must have lumber for the new theological seminary. I suppose some of the students made an awkward !stroke, an.d they were extemporized axmen. STAND FROM UNDER! Crash goes one of the trees and another and ,another. But some- thing nose happens so wonderful that the occurrence NVill tax the credulity of the ages, so wonderful that many still think it never happened at all. One of the students, not able to osvn an ax, had borrowed one. You must remember that while the ax of olden thne was much like oar modern ax; it differed in the fact that instead el the helve or handle being thrust into a socket in the iron heed the head of the ax was fastened on the handle by a leather thong, and so it might slip the helve., A student of the sem- inary was swinging his ax against one of these treee. and whether it svas at the moment he made his first stroke and the chips flew br was af- ter he had cut- the tree from all sides SO deep that it was ready to fall we are not told, but the an head and the handle parted. Deing near the riverside, the ax /head dropped into the river and sank to the mud- dy bottom. Great was the student's dismay,. • If it. han been his own ax, it would have been bad enough, but the ax did not beleng to him. 'He had no means to buy another for the kind man who had loaned it to him, but God helps the helpless, and He generally helps through some good and sympathetic soul, and in this case it was Ensile, who was in the woods and on the river bank at the time. Pre did not see the ax head fly off, and so he asked the student where it dropped. Be was shown the place where it went down into the river. • Then Elisha broke off e branch of a tree and threw it into the wetter, and the ax. head rose from the depths of the river and floated to the bank, so that the student had just to stoop down and take up the restored property. Now you see the meaning of my text. "THE IRON DID SWIM." Furthermore, in that scene or the text God sanctions borrowing Emil sets forth the importance of return- ing.. I do not think 'there would have been any miracle performed • if the young man had owned the ax that slipped. the helve. The young man cried out in the hearing of the pro- phet, "Alas, master, for it was bor- rowed!" He had a right to borrow. There are times when we have not only a right to borrow, but it is a duty to borrow. • There are times when we ought to lend, fOr Christ in His sermon on the mount dechaed, "From him that would borrow of thee torn not thou away.", It is right that one borrow the means of getting an education, as the young student of my text borrowed the ax. It is right to • borrow means for • the forwarding of commercial ends. Most of the vast fortunes that now over- shadow the land were hatched- out of a borrowed dollar. We borrow time; we will borrow eternity, and that constant borrow- ing implies a return. For what we borrow fromeGed- we must, pay back in hearty thanks and C'hristian ser- vice, in improvenient oX ourselves and helpfulness for others. For what we borrow in the shape of protection from good government We must pay back in patriotic devhtion. For what We borrow front our •parents in their good example and their hard work wrought Ior us in nar journey from cradle to manhood or Womanhood for all the ages to come We ought to be paying back. The halleluiahs of heaven will be returned for . CRUCIFIXION AGONY. , Purtnermore, let us octet -lire these yobng men el Elieha,'S theological Seminary for the- fact that they were earning their own way. The most of those to -day who are successful hi the prfffessions, medicating the sick or advocating the lam or preaching the gospel, fought' their own wa,y oi end hp. , Those aro the kind 05 xnen who know What education is Werth and know hoer to use it. Many of Us remember that in college days the sons oe . affluent fathers, with plenty Of money to spend and horses to drive and libraries croevcled with hoolo never read and Wardrobes that kept them irt Perplexity as to evhieli of many garmente was ,oppropriate for•the weather that clay, were worth to the world nothing then and have been worth to the everld nothing since, while the young men in col- lege who had to economize three months ia order to get some book they needed and who could hardly raise money for their diploma, have since wrought mightily for God and the truth, 'turning the world upside down because it was wrong side, up, Those students in the valley of Palms by the Jorden had a physical strength and hardihood that would help them in their mental and spirit- ual achievements. We who are toil- ing for "the world's 'betterment need brawn as well as brain, strong bo- dies as well as illumined minds and consecrated souls. Many of these who are now doing the best work in church and state got muscle and power of endurance from the fact that in early life they were com- pelled to use ax or plow or flail or hammer, while many who were brought ep in luxuries of life give out BEFORE THE BATTLE IS WON.. They are keen and sharp of Mind, but have no physical endurance, They have the ax head, but not the handle. The body is the handle of the soul. Notice, also, how God is superior to every law that he" has made, • even the strongest law of nature, the Jaw of gravitation. The stick that Ensila threw into the Jordan float- ed, but the ax head sank. By in- exereble law, it must go down into the depths of the Jordan, yet without so nnich as a touch the hard, heavy metal sought the sur- face. There it is, the floating ax head. What a, rebuke to those who reject miracles on the ground that they are contrary to nature, as though the law were stronger than the God who made the law Agent and again in Bible times was that law revoked 1 Witness the scene on the banks of the same Jordan, where, in after time, the ax head sank and rose. Elijah stood there, wearing cape of sheepskin, when there was a mighty stir in the air and a flashing equipage descended. Elijah stepped into it, and on wheels of fire, drawn by horses of tire; he rose. Fifty men for three days searched the mountains to see if the body of Elijah had not been dropped atnong the rocks and picked at by the birds of prey, but the search was in vain. The law of gravitation had been defeated. DO NOT PEEL LONELY, because your nearest neighbor may be miles away, because the width of the continent may sepaatee you from the place where your cradle was rocked and your father's grave was • dug. Wakened though you may be by lion's roar dr pa.nther's scream, God. will help yen', whether at the time the forest around you raves in the midnight hurricane or you suf- fer front something quite insignifi- cant, like the loss of an ax head. Take your Bible out under the trees, if the weather will permit, and after you ha,vo listened to the solo of a bird in the treetops or the long meter psalm of the thunder, read those words of the Bible, which must have been written out of doors : "The trees of the Lord are full of sap. The cedars of Lebanon which he hath planted, where the birds make their nests ; as for the stork, the fir trees are her house. The high hills are a refuge for the wild goats and the rocks for the conies. Thou meekest darkness, and it is night, wherein all the beasts of the forest do creep forth. • The young lions roah after their prey and seek their meat from God. The sun ariseth, they gather themselves to- gether and lay them down in their dens. Man goeth forth ,unto his work and to his labor until the evening. 0 Lord, how manifold are thy works ! In wisdom hest thou made them all. The earth is full of riches:". How do -you like that importance of keeping our chief lea - element for work. • My subject also reminds us of the importance for work IN GOOD ORDER. I think that young theological stu- dent on the banks of the. Jordan was to blame for not examining the ax before he lifted it -that day against a. tree. He could in a moment have found out whether the helve and the head were tautly fas- tened. The simple fact was the ax was not in good order or the strong- est stroke that sent the edge into the hard sycamore would not have left the implement headless. So God has given every one of us an ase with which to hew. Let us keep it in good order, having been sharpened by Bible study and strengthened by prayer.. The reason we sometimes fail in our work is because we have dull ax or we do not know how aright to swing it. The head is not aright on the 'handle. , -the time we want the most skill for work and perfect equilibrium we lose our heed. We expend in uselese excitement the ftervoue energy that we' ought to have employed in direct, straight- forward work. Your ax may be a pen or a type or a yardstick or a scales or a tongue which in legisla- tive hall or business circles or Sab- bath class or pulpit is to speak for God and eighteottenese, but the ex will not be worth meth 'until it has been sharpened on .the grindstone of affliction, People who have had trouble do not amount to much for usefulness, bet God puts their axon the hard eirele of the grindstone, and betrayal gives it a turn, and pale, gives it a tern, andpoverty gives it a turn, and disappointment gives it a turn, and bereavement give e it a turn, and nett it is sharp enough 11011 SUCCESSFUL WORK, and how it cuts dowe evil and blinds schools and churches and theelogital eeminaries Alas, there Aro impossibles before thousands " of people—called to do Work that it iti ieeposenble for the= to elo, eallied to bear burdens that it is impossible for trim to tear, called to erniure suffering that it is imps. sible for titan to ender°, Read all the gospel promisee, rally all your faith, and, while you will always be (tailed to worsilip the God of hope, to -day, with all the concentrated an- ergies of my soul, I implore you to bew down and worship God who can turn the impossibies into pos- sibles, It was no trivial purpose, hut for grand and glorious uses 1 have spoken to you to -clay of the • borrowed, and lost and restored ax head. THE S. S. LESSON. INTERNATIONAL LESSON, FEB. 9. Tet of the Lesson, Acts iv,, 32 to to v., 11; Golden Text, Eph. iv„ 25. • 32, 33, "With great power g,ava the apostles witness of the resurrec- tion of the Lord Jesue, and great grace was upon them all." In these days we eats scarcely imagine several thousands of believers of one heart and one soal to serve the Lord, no one clinging to his own things, but each loving the other as himself and all having all things in common, If it was the power of His resurrection that did this, they must have known something that few know to -day. 84-37 . Possessors of latds and houses sold their property and put. the proceeds in the common fund that the need of each might be sup- plied and that no one might have tiny lack. There was no selfishness and no self-seeking. This seems all the -snore remarkable when we con- sider the strife for pre-eminence that was seen more tho.n, once among the twelve before Jesus died; yes, even at the passover on the night before His resurrection, but now they were all fined with the spirit, and hence this great difference. A Spirit Ailed people will ina,nifest the life of Christ and not the life of self. Jos - es, surnamed Barnabas, son of con- solatichn, a Levite, and evidently a true one, is mentioned as one of those who havine land sold it and laid LD the money athe apostles' feet. Levi signifies "joined," and he illus- trated the truth, "Eh that is joined to the Lord is one Spirit" (I. Cor. vi, 17). Our Lord Jesus not only gave up all His riches and became poor to melee no rich, but Be actual- ly gave Himself for us, taking the place of the guilty that we might be joined to Him (II. Cor. viii, 0; Gal. ii, 20). v„, 1, 2. "But • Ananias and Sap- phire." The tares and the wheat will grow together until thetharvest. Until Jesus comes again many a bird will lodge in ,the branches, but no bird ever becomes a branch. Tb.e commands, "Walk before Me, and be thou sincere" and "Thou shalt be sincere with the Lord thy God" (Gen xvii, A, margin; Deut. xviii, 13), are always binding and "Cursed he he that doeth the work of the Lord de- ceitfully" (Jer. xlviii, 10), seems to be always a necessary warning. When Abram and Sara agreed to net a lie and Isaac and Rebekah did the same "(Gen. xii, 11-13; xx, 2; xxeri, 7), which of us Call say that the eyes as a flame of fire may not se'. some - deceit in our inmost hearts?. We are not our own, but bought svith RiS precious blood. 8, 4. "Why hath Satan filled thine heart to lie to the Holy Ghost? Thou hast lied unto God." See the oneness of the Father and the Spirit, for in lying to the Spirit they lied unto God, See also the oneness of the Spirit and the believer, for in ly- ing to Peter and the others they lied unto the Spirit. Notice also that it was the work of the devil, the father of Hes, in Ananias, the same adver- sary who in the garden of Eden lied to Eve and has ever since been prac- ticing his ungodly wiles. Contrast Peter filled with the Spirit and An- anias filled with Satan and the high priest and others filled with indigna- tion or envy (chapters iv, 8, 31; v, 3, 17). 31 filled with the Spirit, evil cart find no place in us. The Spirit of Truth and the father of lies each desires us, but neither can fill us un- less we welcome them. 5, 6. Dead and buried in a few hours ; gone frorn the earth and from his possessions, but gone where ? To the true child of God death is gain and far better than sojourning here. But what of Ana- nias ? His name means. "Jehovah is gracious." But did he know the saving grace of Jehovah ? We know that there is such a thing as being saved as by fire, that Satan may destroy the flesh and yet the spirit be saved, that some of the members of the church were sickly and some dying because of sin and that we are told to judge nothing ,before the time until the Lord Conte (I Car. iii, 15; v, 5; xi. 30; iv, 5)„, yet Rev. xxi. 8, gives us little hope for Ananias. '7, 8, "It was about the space of three hours after when his wife, not knowing what was done, came in." Titre° hours a widow, but not aware of it. How long they had journeyed together in these mortal bodies We do not know, but his journey has ended, and hers is about to, though She is all uneonscious of it. Perhaps she had come `seeking him, wondering why he delayed to return home. It is a sad story and should teach us to be sincere With God, who desires truth in the inward parts "(Ps. ii, 6). lf we did not know that Peter was filled with the Spirit, we might feel like questioning his Way with her and might wish that be had sought to lead her to repentance, but per- hape leer heart was fully set 111 her to do evil (Pied. viii. 11),' 9, 10. "How is it that Ye have agreed together to tempt the Spirit of the Lord ?" So ono with • God are Hie people that when we tottch them see teeth Hint, and as we deal with them we &eel with Him (Zech. ii, 8; Acts ix, 4). There is unspeakable comfort and yet a. Sol- emft warning in. this peat truth, • How aeveut is this scene before lie 1 She is for the firet time told oi her husband's deethil and at the same time told that she MUM, die, and in a monurat ehe ler gone. In the neorn- lireri**4*-44144**4-4-**-4-4-4414444)*44.......**4 ing they are in nealth, bat Witted in a lie to God that they may appear before men to be Very religioes, bet before night they are toned , out (Num, xxxii, 23), and are dead and buried, Two licas 511 one graVe. But their eoulsa- It not safendans IV Are, then Luke eyi, 23, first, clause, Oils their fate. It was the hand of God, and the Judge .of all the earth clod!). righe (Gen. ,xviii, 25; TiSv. xsa See also Acts ii, 28; Jer: "Gen is Love" and "not te AR, si off 4. 16, 17, and yet believe Manly that • wilhig 181mitt vityt, triad) .perish" (X John iv, ,1210, ernar a e er, THE KING et04410101,40 THE QUEEN an QF DIEVC)N8111F;E. 11, "And great fear came upon all the church and upon as many as heard these things.", It was a need- ed lesson for the times, and, al- though He does not „ always thus swiftly polish sinners, Ile always hates sin and tells us that he that telleth lies shall not tarry in His sight (Pe, ci, 7), We cannot but think of the swift judgment upon Aaron's sons at the beginning of God's dealings with Israel (Lev. x, 1, 2). lf all liars in the church to -nay and all ministers who use strange fire were thus summarily dealt with, there would be no end of funerals, and a truest great fear upon malty. Although God seems to keen silence concerning the corrup- tions and abontinations in His pro- fessed people. He assures us that He will not always keep aneeee and that judgment must begin at the house of God (Ps. ii, 3; I Pet, iv, 17), WHAT IS CONSUMPTION ? SYNOPSIS OP ADDRESS DELIV- ERED, BY DR. S. A. KNOPF. of these beautiful !nee -ores. • You wane Ten EXETER TIMES for the local news, and You want that "Tuberculosis as a Disease of the • greatpaper the Family Herald for it's 21 pages of general news arid femily Here is the best offer ever made in this community, By a very exceneut er- 4/1, rengernent made with the Family Herald and Weekly Star.of Montreal we are enaelesd to offer Tun EXETER Trues and thet greet Family Paper, the • Family nenald and Weekly Star, for one year for the small sum of $1,75 and in- clude each treheceiber tbree beautiful premium pie tires, of which the follow. Mg is a brief descriptnnn "KING EDWIARD VII,—True to IN'a, a beautiful portrait size 18 x 24 inches, on beautiful heavy white satin finished paperfor framing. Tells portrait bas been taken since ins eccessiop to the throne, and is the very latest and best obtainable. It cannot be bad except through the Mugge Hruelin ia+Tu WEEKLY STAR; each picture bears the lning's autograph. Tide pictuee has the • great merit of being the first taken after the King's accession, and has theratore • en historical yalue: that no other picture cosi possess. QUEEN AI,EXA.NDRA.—An exquisitely beautiful picture of the remark- 's* ably beettiful and goc Queen Alexandra, also taken slime the Initsg's accession some pair of pictures tbat alohe would sell for ntany times the subseription price I to the throne. It is the same size as that of the King, the two fettling a hand- • ,. of paper and pictures. • ,4 Noportrait of the King and Consort, taken at the seciond or succeeding sit. ies tinge can have one fraetion of tne value of the first,. These go dowu to hietory. 4 THE DUCHESS OP DEVONSHIRE,—The Renowned Gainsboroupt • ture. Sold at auction sale in London twenty-five years ago for 410,6'00, stolen by clever thieves, hidden for over twenty-four years and delivered to its ; owner ou payment of $25,000 reward and since soldhse Mt Pierpent Morgan for This, in brief, is the litstrtry of one Of the. Invest= pictures, wbieb, by a • ()levet stroke of enterprise, the publishers of the Family Herald broavdeucseedeulreinde ffui tbneeir esotilobusgbrereso.kn'ilr'hvititttuhr: °gel In ctiri easel: u Copies -f :tiger! in tew York City, Montreal and /Xorouto for $12 eaoh,Pand 6a1114:rAnoopTiatsmore Family Herald subscribers are going to get absolutely free together with the e: pictures of the Ring and,Qteeen. : Is that nob big value? Call at THE 'Xmas Office end see saronles Masses and How to • Combat It " Two years ago a sum of 4,000 moths Ives donated by two mer- chants in Germany as a prize to be offered for the best essay 021 the sub- ject "Tuberculosis as a Disease of the Masses and How to Combat It." The conditions for judging were de- cided upon by the "International Con- gress for the study of the best way to combat Tubereulosis as a Dis- ease of the Masses" which convened at Berlin, May 24th to 27th, 1899. Some eighty-one essays were receiv- ed. After careful consideration the ,Conmeittee on Awards came to the th conclusion that the essay -widhad been prepared by S. A. Kempf, M.D., of New York, "so much surpassed all the others in excellence that it should be assrarded the Congress Prize." The International prize was duly awarded to it on July 31st, 1900. Tbe following is from that essay -which conies like a veritable gospel of 'encouragement, full of sim- ple, clear, helpful information:— WHAT IS CONSUMPTION? Pulmonary consumption, or tuber- culosis of the lungs, *is a chronic dis- ease caused by the presence of the tubercle bacillus, or germ of con- sumption, in the lungs. The' disease is locally characterized by coraitless tubercles, that is to say. small rounded bodies, visible to the na.ked eye. The bacilli can be found by the million in the affected organ. It is this little parasite, fungus, or -mush- room, belonging to the lowest scale of vegetable life, which must be con- sidered as a specific cause of all tub- erculous diseases. This parasite not only gradtally destroys the lung substance through ulcerative proces- ses, but gives off at tete same time certain poisonous substances called toxins which give rise to various, and often serious, symptoms. HOW MAY THE GERM ENTER THE HTJAIAN SYSTEM? '1. By being inhaled; that is breathed into the lungs. .2. By being ingested; that is, eat- en with tuberculous food. 3. By inocuiation; that is, the penetration of tuberculous substance through a, wound in the skin. Of these three ways in which the bacilli may Meter, the nrst one seems to .be the most' important. * VaTAT MUST BE DONE TO OTTP,OK SPREAD OP CONSUMPTION? A,• Destruction of Tuberculous Ex- pectoration. — Consumptives and those living with then must know that all precautionary measures are instituted in the interest of the in- valid as well as of his fellowmen. These measures protect the patient from reinfection and others from the danger of contracting the disease. A patient suffering from pulmonary consumption should know that, no matter in what stage of the disease he may be, his expectoration or spit- tle may spread the germ of the dis- ease if the matter expectorated is not destroyed before it has a chance to dry arid become pulverized. The patient should, therefore, always spit in some receptacle intended for the purpose. It is best to have this Ves- sel made of metal ' so as not' to break. It should be half filled with water or some disinfecting fluid, the mein thing being to make it Mapes- Sible for the expectoration to dry. The physicians, statesmen, and philanthropists interested in the so- lutiot of the tuberculosis problem have, besides working for the better housing of the poor and the erea- tion of special institutions for the -treatmeht of consumptives, -an addi- tional mission to perform. The tide of emigration from village to city should be reversed. If tuberculoeis has made its appearance in a family living in a large city, the physician Should exert all his influence to in- cluee especially the yottuger Menabers to migrate to the Country and seek outdoor occupations. Statesmen should pecitect -the intMests of the farmer, so that farming will helve More attraction to the rising gener- ation than it has had in the last feve decades, and philanthropists should aid the statesmen by endowing 111- stituti ons for instruetion ecientific and profitable agriculture, and also by providiug 'healthful ammo/IMO, geed libraries, and other education- al institutions in country districts. thus Making living outeide o1 large citic . more interesting wed attrae- 'aehiehetne 41' readin e are worth many times the su senlition g. Its a gricultural pages alon E • Abhag or send your subscription to THTIMES OFFICE. 4.0.4+44.4telhilitetrik+14+04:444.11140400 eiieveyeseeeeseareeseeeeseseeene440414-1)(th d CZLE r7. T ICTU No other disease is so prevaleut among men as Varicocele. As it ioterfores vrittrh the nutrition of the sexual organs it produces emissions, loss of semen throtighthei urine, decay of the organs, pains in the loins, aching in the back, nervottsnesadesi:j pondency, bashfulness, palptta.tion of the heart, constipation, and a comb.nation - theseresults in complete Loss of Manhood. Thousands of young -am' middle- aged men are troubled. with StrIettsre. If you have reason to bellow :ea 55 afflicted with it, don't neglect it. It will ruin you. D01.22 let doctors eaporLaten on you by cutting, stretching or tearinic it. Our New Method Treat:ass dissolves the stricture tissue hence it diseapeare, and can never return Wr cal Varicocele and Stricture vrithout operation or loss of time. The treating*. tut taken at home privately. Send for our rree Illustrated Book on Varicecolin 0:Stricture and Giece. Wo guarantee to Cure or No Py. All sexual complaints affect these organs, 'hence the kidneys area great souret of disease. Have you aching or weakness over the small of the back, tendenm- en urinate frequently, deposit in urine, coldness of hands or feet, a dreamy feeling EV,. e,he morning-. Don't neglect your kidneys. Oer New Method Ttreatrusintat Is guaranteed to care any disease of these organs or no pay. No Names Used Without Written Coneoaft. o. W. Rowe, of Saciteon, Mich., sayst—I hest varicocele in the secondary stage and two strictures of 0 years standing. .4 svas operated on twice, undergoing great stiff\,F,*trutonl3r e got temporary relief. I was finaI..dviseci to' try the New Method Treatr\ ..t of Drs. K. -,Se K. The enlarged veins disappeared in six weeks, the stricture tissue was removed in. eight *weeks and my sexual energy and vitality rettirned so I was a man in every mspect. I recommend you doctors with my whole heart." CURES GUARANTEED. NO CURE NO PAL Before Treatment. After Treaeseseis. We treat and cure Nervous Debility. Lost Manhood, Vr.ricocele, Stricture, ills, Gleet, Weak Parts, Gonorrhma and 'Unnatural Discharges. cones:nate:mane. liooks Free. Write for Question Last for Borne Treatment. -4•1' Urs. Konnedy !Organ 145 SHL1131f ET;.Teree7:25aMehles 1 KW:WIC IMElt 71&7:: IMOIRMIe ' tive to young people; in short. the love of nature a.nd life in the open air -should be more cultivated. In the proportion in which this is done tuberculosis will 'decrease. The creation of schools of forestry in connection with the preservation and cultivation of forests in many States where a, wasteful destruction of trees is now carried on. would give useful and healthful employment to a number of people, as well as render the region more healthful. It would offer attractive careers to young men seeking to overcome her- editary or acquired tendencies to tu- berculous diseases. EXPENSIVE TioRwrs. What axe perhaps the /nest expen- sive season tickets are issued by' the Congo Railway Company. The tast- eless single fare for a journey of about 250 miles is, $100. Latterly, this company has issued season tick- ets, available for one year, at the following rates: For four return journeys, $115; for eight return jour- neys, $665; and for twelve return KIDNEY DISEASE FOR TEN YEARS, A Glen Miller Man's Terrible Trial. Ho Found a Cure at Last In Doan's Kidney Pills. Mr, P. M. Burk, who is a well-knoWn, resident of Glen Miller, Hastings Co, Ont,, was afflicted With kidney trouble fin ten years. So pleased is he at having found in Doan's Kidney P'ills s, cure for his ail- ments, which he had begun to think 'wee incurable; that he wrote the fellowiug statement of his ease so that others sinus 'Italy inflicted may profit by his experience: 4° I have beet ai3lieted with kidney trouble for about ton years and have Wed several remedies bet never raireiered any real benefit until I started teking Deante Kichley Pills. My back used to eonstantly ache and toy urine woe high eoloted and milky looking at times. Slime I 'been finiehed the third bon of Dottn'e Kidney Pills I am happy to state that I am net bothered with backache at an and my urineis elear as crystal. I feel confident that these pills ara.,the best kidney speeilie in the eowitry.,, WOMEN WILL TALK. Can't Blame them for Tel. ling each other about burn's Heart and Nerve Pills. THE CHEAT NEEMIEKOT FOR WEAK( NERVOUS blitGIVIElla les only natural that when a weenan finde a remedy which cures her of nervousnees and weakness, relieves her pains ae'd achesSputs coior in her cheek and vitality iit her whole system, she shenld be anxioute to !et laer suffering sisters know of it. Mrs, Hannah Holmes, $t. James Street* St. John, N.B., relates her experience witb this remedy as follows •,:•—" For spme year I bave been troubled with fluttering of the heart and dizzigess, accompanied by a smothering feeling whin& prevented me from resting, My appetite Was poor and I was much run down and debilitated. "Since I started using Idilburn's Heart and Neve Pills, the Smothering feeling has gone, my heart beat is now ragulat the fluttering has diqappeared, and I hare been wonderfully built up through the 4ln14 effect of the pills. 1 noW feel stronger and better than for many years, and carm„ Q.* say too much in praise of the terriedy nthzen restored my long lost health." aereraaseesnuwasetraezttearoarateari journeys, $855. Natur tly, the is- sue of these tieleete is :Very iso far Only four having been delivers ed, but application for a fifth htie been Made. Thew are not printed, but Written out on a pieces of card- board, 4 in. by 6 in, foisted lit twey on one side the date and name of the holder axe inserted, and the other is divided in equaerea, where the begin- ning and end of each notancier is file led iet by the stiteeorageeetere at the three it is portoi ule.ob