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Exeter Times, 1901-7-4, Page 34. 4 1 "4.111111110111011111'• 1;‘.1 ee. :L1 With- out help, a ..;` bald spot grows smaller, It keeps sprcad ,9 ing, until at last your friends say, "How bald he is gettincr." Not easy to cure j: .• • , nes ma d impos sib! with --- • , , eptop iiig, pre:mot:7:es takes G-42 It:vs OM'S color to fatlz.1-.1 tLe 4 color of ' olay ••• hl.f Mt ° VAIN:r hen ' et you vv. 1111.1••"" , • 7. FOR Diarrinal Dysentery, Colic, Cramps, Pain in the Stomach AND ALL. Slimmer Complaints. 1TS EFFECTS ARE MARVELLOUS. IT ACTS LIKE A CHARM. BELIEF ALMOST INSTANTANEOUS. Pleasant, Rapid, Reliable, Effectual. Every Rouse should have it. Ask your Druggist for it. Take no other. PIRICEy 350. E ...,,..- Gen ui rte a - 47 arte Little Liver 'Pins. Wheat Bear filg,:tatt,tre of See nao.Sirnite wrapper Betow. very small and as easy to take as ort -r. 0- F READACligea CARTERS FOR DIZZINESS ron.;;BiLlousNit,s. 'IVER (of TORPIDII-VER! IPI L • ,...-Ntr!PATRN. • , FO VI:SKIN( FOR THE cot"- i.±:=147g7tadOltn4 CURE SICK HEADACHE. ANGRY 'WITHOUT SIN. BEV. PR. TALMAGE THROWS LieHT ON A STARTLING TEXT. A WHOLESOME INDIGNATION, Ito That reels Sinless. Anger .3#nst Dis- erhairtato Itet ti een the Offence and the Offender, the Sin and the Sinner, nod the Crime and the Criminet— oreat Curses Oettounceft. Washington, June 80.-4 delicate and difficulty duty is by Dr. Tai -' :nae in this discourse urged upon all. and especially upon those given to quiet temper; text, Ephesians iv 20 “Be ye angry and sin not." quipose of temper, kindness, pa, tience, fort:entrance. are extolled by nnost of tine radiant pens of inspire; tion, but iny text contains that which at heat sight is startling. A. certain hand of anger is approved— aye, 'we are commanded to indulge in It. The most of us have no need tet cultivate high temper, and how often we say things end do thing e under affronted impulse which we are sorry for when laerhaps It is too late to Untb,. effective apology: Why, then, ehotald the ainostle Paul dip his pen in the ink horn and trace upon. parch- ment, afterward to be printed upon paper for all ages, the inoinction. "Be Ye angry and sin not?" Illy text commends a wholesome in- dignation. discriminates between the offenee and the offender, the slo, nnd the • sinner, the crime anti the To illustrate: Alcoholism has ruined more fortunes, blasted more homes, destroyed more souls, than any evil that 1 think of. It pours ;t river of poison and fare through the net ious. 1ilflons have died be- eaue. of it, and millions are tieing now, and others will ffie. Intemper- once un old sin. The great Cyrus, writing to the Ieleetlemottians• of hint - self. Wasted of many of his quatlities, anima; others. Viet he could drink and bear more %vine than his distill - god brother. Louis X and Alex- antlit•r the Great died drunk. The Parliament of Edinburgh in 1061 is railed in history "die drunken par- lie:anent .'' Every inan or rightly eonstrueted. will with indignation at he national and in- ternational and hemispherie and pIanetarirse. It is good to be arousnd against it. You Conte out of that condition a better man or t better woman. Be ye angry at that abentinallon, and the more auger the mere exultation to character. But that aroused feeling beeoines sinful when it extends to the victim of this great evil. Drunkenness you are to Inete with a vivid hatred; but the drunkard you are to pity, to help to extricate. Just take into consideration that there are men and W0111011 AVII0 ouctt were as upright as yourself who have been prostrated by alcohollem. Per- haps it crone of t physicians pre- scription for the relief of pain, a re- carrence of the pain calling for continuance of the remedy; perhaps the grandfather was an inebriate and the temptation to inebriety, leaping over a generation, has swooped on this unfortunate; perhaps It was un- der an attempt to drown trouble that the benumbing and narcotic liquid was sought, after; perhaps it was a Very gradued chaining of the man With the beverage which was thought to be a servant, when one day it an- nouneed itself master. Be humble now, and Admit that there is a strong probability that under the Same circumstances you yourself might have been captured. The two appropriate emotions for you to al- low are indignation at the intoxi- cant rhich enthralled and sympathy for the victim. Try to get the suf- ferer out of his present environment; recommend any hygienic relief that you know of and, above all, implore the divine rescue for the struggle in which so many of the noblest and grandest have been worsted. There is another evil the abhor- rence of which you are all- called to, and it is oa the increase—the gam- bling practice. Recent developments show that, much of this devastation is being wrought in ladies' parlors. It is an evil which sometimes is as polite and gracious as it- is harmful. Indeed, there never were so many people trying to get money without earning it. But it is a haggard transgression that comes down to us from the past, blighting all its way. One of the ablest men of the cen- turies, Charles Fox, got ready for his speech against "The Petition of the Clergy", by spending 22 hours at -the grtening table. Irving's life of Oliver Goldsmith says that the great poet lost £30, all his, earnings, ,in a short tour to see, the world. Gibbon, the author of "The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire," came to his own decline and fall through gaming practices and in a letter in 1'776 said: “I have undone myself, • and it is to no purpose to goneeal. frona yon my abominable, madness and folly. I have never lest so intach in flee clays as 1 have to -night, and I am in debt to the house for the whole." Can Yen' hear the story of the un- principled manipulators of stocks and of the devices of the gambling saloon to entrap the -verdant and en - suspicious Without having your pulse tingle, and your :heart thump, and your entire nature shocked with the villainy? If so, you are not much of a man or much of a women. , You ought to be angry, for there is no sin M such vehement dislike. You ought to be so angry that you could not repress your feelings in the pres- ence of young men who are just formiog their life theories. In every possible way you -ought to denounce such stupendous robbery. Let it be known that the _ only successful game in which a man Inlays for mon- ey is the one in which he loses all' and stops. • But while you are hotly indignant against the crime, how do you feel about thoee who were fleeced and slam? They did not know that their small boat . was so near the 'mael- strom, Some of them were born 1, '1 t • , with a tendency to recklessness and experiment and hazard. They in- herited. a dispositiffn to tempt chance. Do net heap on them addi- tional eli r o d 3iOt d ride their losses. Help them to start again. Show them. that there are more fortunes to be gained than have yet been gathered and that with Ood for tinter friend, they will be provided for 11- re and through the Saviout's mercy they may reigneforaver in the land where there are no losses and infinite gains. While you luny red- den in theeface at the fact that gam- bling is the disgraceful mother of multitudinous crimes, of envies, jeal- ousies, revenges, -quarrels, cruelties, falsehoode, forgeries, suicides, mute 'tiers and despair, he careful what you say of the victim of the vice and what yon do. Ile needs more sym- pathy than the man who came. up front inebriety and debauch and as- sassination, fee many such reheat - and ate- an.ved, but confirmed gam - biers baldly ever rEforut. During the course of a prolonged ministry I have seen thousands re- deemed, rune oZ them who were clear gage he sin. by Almighty grace reseutal. In all parts of this land end in some parts of other lands I have seen who were given as incorrigible and lost recovered for Clod and Ile it. but how =AY eoralrmed g:iiithl,e's have I seen con- vert, d frent their evil ways? A thou- sand? No. Five hundred.? No. Fifty? No. Two? No. One? No. I read in a book of one such reseued. I have no doubt, that there have beenother hut to evil does its work so thoronghly and teernally as gambl- ing". Stith almost hopeless of refor. illation ought to call forth front you 'deeper sympathy than yule feel for any other unfortunate. Pity by all wears. for these wino, Shipwrecked and brithed among the tiMbers, have nevertheless clintlend up to the fisher - mall's cabin and found warmth and shelter, but more pity for these Who never reeeh shore, lint are dashed to death in the hrtakers. Be angry at the sin, inn sympathize with its vice ie atm*. ri4i that we ow oft' na huts cant al to ne angry with, and that is frame We ail like Lea. e%ty. and whin it is sacrifieed we are voluitient in denutriation. We hope that tir-k deterteves will soon cora° upon the track th the absconding lank olitelel. of thelturglar who blew up tile We, of the clerk who skill- fully changed the figures in the ac - cotter hook. of the falsifier who se- cured the loan on valueless proPertY, Of the agent who because of his per- centage wrongfully admits a man to the benefit of as life insurance poitey when his heart is ready to stop anu who comes front an ancestry cher- aeteristieally short lived. One act of fraud tele] In big bead - lines in the morning papers right- fully arouses the nation's wrath. It is the interest of every good man anu good woman who reads of the crime to have it exposed and punished. Let is go Unscathed, and you put a pre- mium on frand, you depress public. Morals, you induce those who are on the fence between right and wrong to gat down On the wrong side: and you put the businees of the world on a down grade. The constabulary and penitentiary must do their work. But while merciless and the godless cry: "Good for him! I am glad he Is within the prison doorsl" be it your work to find out if that man is worth saving and what were the causes of his moral overthrow. Per- haps he hos already repented and Is wasited in the blood of the Lamb, and is as sure of Melvin as you are, What an opportunity you have now for obeying my text. You were ail- gry at the misdemeanor, hut you are hopeful for the recovery of the recal- citrant. Bleeeed all prison reform- ers! Bios& ti eerrtore and presidents who are glad when thane have it. chance to pardon! lilt seed the forgiving father who welcomes home the prodigal! Blessed the de ing thief whom the Lord took teeth Wee to glory, saying, "This day shalt thou be with me in parailise!" There is another evil that we ought to abhor, while we try to help the victim, and that is inftdelity. It snatches the life preserver from the man afloat and affords not ao much as a spar or plank as substitute. It would extinguish the only light that has ever been kindled for the trou- bled and the lost. Let the spirit of infidelity take hold of a neighbor- hood, and in that town the marriage relation is a farce, and good morals give place to all styles of immorals. Let it take possession of this earth, and there would be no virtue lett in all the world's circumference. AU the sins rebuked in the Ten Command- ments would be daninetut. The torch that shall kindle the conflagration of the earth in its last catastrophe will not do as much damage as would ..htfidelity and agnosticism if they got the- chance. Be angry with such th:2ories of unbelief and hated of God. Never 'tangle at the witticisms of those who would be- little the Bible with theirlocularity. Heve a lightning in your eye and. a flush in your cheek and a frown on your brow for a dastarcly•that would blot out the sun anti moon and stare of Christianity and leave . all things in in _arctic night., the cold equal to the 'darkness. You, do well to be angry, but how -about those tohti have been flung of scepticism, and that there is more millions than you will ever know of until the judgment day reveals everything. Ah, here comes your opportunity for gentle- ness, kindness .and synapathy. The probability is that if you had been plied with the same influences as this unbeliever there "would not be a Bible in all your house, from cellar to attic. Perhaps he was in some important transaction swindled by a Member of the church whose taking of the • sacrament' was a 'sacrilege. Perhaps he read agnostic books and heard agnostic lectures and mingled an agnostic circles until he 'had been befogged and needs your Christian help more than any one that you know of. Do not get into any labor- ed argument about the truth of Christianity-. He may beet yoe at that., Ile has a whole' artillery of weapOire- ready to open fire. Remember that no one was ever re- formed ler this life orcaved foi- the parawstorm.Ftr" life to come by an argument, but in humblest and gentlest way, your voice subdued, ask him a few gins - - times. Ask him if he bad a Chris- tian parentage, and if he say yes ask him whether the old folks died happy, Ask 'eine if he has ever heard. Of any one going out of this life in raptures of infidelity wed agnostic, ism. Ask him if it is not it. some - whet remarkable fact that the Bible, after so many years, stieks together and that there are more copies of hi existence than ever before. As hint if he knows of any better eivilihe zation than Christian einilizatiOn and whether )2e thinks the teachings of Confucius or Christ are preferable. Ask him if he thinks it would be a fair thing in the Creator of all things to put in this world the human race , and give them no direct communica- tion for their guidance and, if they i did wrongtell thexn of no way of recovery. I think if t famous infl- del of our time, instead of being taken away instantaneously, had died in his bed after weeks and , months of illness lie would have re - yoked his teachings and left. for his beloved family consolations whkh they could not feed in obsequies nt Which not one word of Hedy Scrip-; tore tens rad, or et Fresh, Fond cre- matory, where no Christiutt benecile- tion was pronounced. I do riot pos- i itively say that in a prolonged ness there would htive been ri. retrac- tion, but I think there would. "Sovereign Sh by serinon that tle.rP is not an in- f junction in, the, tbLil more diflicule to obey than the words of the text. While it applauds it, wholesome in- ! FOR 821:1..F., llY it. H. SVVEET, EX ET digno.tion, it warns against sinful especial y who starx4 nurses, housewiVe on their feet. Can be worn air overshoes, $3.0o, $3.5o or women. Stamped on the sole, llut Jet me confess at this crisis oi ; anger. And there is in all the realm; of passion nothing more destructive f Thillfee keel of J. 5101Tett. (ir Stan - than indiscriminate hate. Firet of ley. has been in the hospital nod; n - all, it frenzies the nervous ganglia, gaing medical treatrneut for an injury A business man of our acquaintance which he will lore e.Ve. ',ud 1 cannot afford to get med. • ' It hurts me so." And if sinful an- GET ETTERJ) ger danuthes the body bow ninth more it rives the disposition. There , are thousands of men elerks in stores who would have been members of great business firms, and underme- ebonies who would have been boss • carpenters, and attorneys who would ' have been leading advocates. and', SAYS DR, SLOCUM Get Rid of the Cough, the ah re to congregations who :we „ nacking, the Spitting, starving them to death who might :I , have had appreciative snrroundings. the Wheezing who have been kept, back and knPt down by ungovernable tempers. The outbeealt lasted only a little while, but it impeded a lifethne. I say to all young men hoping to achieve financial, moral or religious Stleeess—control your tempers. Do ; not let criticism or defeat rebuff you. Verdi, the great musician, applied to beeonte it student in the Conserver tory of Xtusie at Afilan end he was rejected by the director. who said ho • could make nothing of the newcom- er, as he showed no disposition for music. But the critielsm did not, exasperate or defeat him. The most of those who have largely succeeded in all departments were characteriz- ed by eel! control. In battle they would calmly look at the bomb • thrown at their feet, wondering whether it would explode, In com- mercial life, when panics smote the city, these Men were placid, while others were yelling themselves hoarse at the Stock Exchange. While others nearly swooned because it. ccr- tain stock had gone 100 points I down, they calmly waited until it. would get 100 points up, 'While the opposing attorney in the courtroom! frothed at the mouth with rage be-, side, he of ectuipose put a glass of cause of something said on the other water to his lips in refreshment and proceeded with the remark, "As I 4, was saying when the gentleman in -1 terruptcd mo." Self control! What i a glorious thing! We want it in the doctor feeling the pulse of one des- perately ill. We want it in the en- ; gineer when the headlight of an- other train comes round the curve ' on the mune trark. We want it in Christian men and women in times when so much in church and state ig going to demolithon—self control! Surpassing all other character's in the world's biography stands Jesus Christ; wrathful against sin, merci- ful to the sinner. Witness his be- havior towards the .robed ruffians who demanded capital punishment for an offending woman—denuncia- tion for their sinful hypocrisy, Par- don for her sweet penitence. Ile did' not speak of lIerod as "his majes- ty" or "his royal highness," but dared to compare him to a cunning fox, saying, "Go ye and tell that fox." Defying the mightiest' govern- ment of the world, the Roman gov- ernment, yet rubbing his hand just - below the forehead of the blind mah until the optic nerve of him who was born sightlessis created, and the sunlight has two new paths to tread. Best illustration. the world ever saw of anger without sin — au- ger against the abominations which have mauled and blasted the earth from its deepest cavern to its high- est cliff, but so much pity for the sinning 'and suffering nations that he allowed them to transfix him upon two pieces of wood nailed across each other on a day that was dark as the night; the windows of heaven shut because the immortals could not bear to look down upon the assas- sinatioix of the loveliest being that ever Svalked the shore of the lakes or, without pillow or blanket, slept on the cold mountains. Like him, let its hate iniquity with complete hatred; but, like him, may we Help those ,who are overthrown and be willing to suffer for their re- storation. Then, although at the opening of this diecourse our text may have seemed to command us to do an impossible thing, we will at the close of this sermon, with a prayer to God for help, be more rigid and determined than ever be- fore against, that which is wrong, while iL the same time we shall feel so kindly toward all the erring and worlc so hard for their rescue that we will realize that we have Scale'd the Alpine, the Himalayan, height of ,my text, which enjoins, "Be ye, tivery teed sin not." Special Advantages Are Offered by Or. Slocum to- all 'Those Who Desire Positive ' and Permanent Cure 0 Canbunap. tion in any Form. Good, atteine ran tar. but low Can we dolt whet.. One remedy niter :mother ban b. en nen etelons iF1.14.17-r ci?;421:intfett'rrcelmIgni0inittis:ijaliC'r isTPtiettifatilei have Leen a murk for unucrutudeus atedical (011 vela win' never Intended to cure you. Dr.Slocura has made Um cure of Cot.: mption and Lune l'roubirs the study of hie life, awl thousands of met; and women in all parin of caunds. aro ready to testify to the ntarrel..m3 mantic° propeitisa o the Slocum ,stent. be. Clocmn ready wades to prove the emceay of his treatment. hits no heriMtIon In offering -it to you or so friends A3SOUUTEMY mina. elan, In er 3o 4...ottursmetneretuemeritigace eelta mearrniatsretem An a FREE TREATM These pills are a specil diseases arising from c' . andankles, nervousness, a nerves, -weak heart or wat They cure smothering faint and we shortness of breath, swell: ness, -ernia, hysteria, 1 paralysis, fe Ton er your sick friends can base aFREE of Treatment. Simply write to 'Tnt: T. A.. 61 emanate co, Limited, 173 Ring St. west, to, the glivrienag InTel V'2:et(l,"1cilfgrel';',:fa promptly sent! e Cure) When rattling for them always mention t psper. Persons In Canada, seeing see:aurae eree oar In American papers 1(111 please sena for samples to Lilo Toronto labors torten. cramamemomitamess Cresswell, March 28, 1901. The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. Dear Sirs,—I write to say th.i I have usedBurdock Blood Bittcl with excellent results. at spring my daughter got down and was very thin and weak, Her face was. covered with red spots and a large boil formed on her cheek. 1 procured 2 bottles Of B.B.S., and by ;the time she , had finished them the spots and boil disappeared and she has got strong and fleshy again. I consider B.B.B. the best blorod medicine known. MRS. I. DAVIDSON. 11 eeenoe renee eaeenne. lIie spray ing Sia son is here. Pu- s ons using pales green or other poi- sons should neon their supply under lock and key. 51* DOAN'S KIONLY PILLS CURE BACKACHE LAME BACK RHEUMATISM DIABETES BRIGHT'S DISEASE DIZZINESS AND ao. KIDNEY & URINARY DISEASES ARE CURED W lave s in seasotable suitio we'd like to close out. can save a, few clo1142 s well as not. J. IC Crie ItIERCHANT '1 • BROVVNINC rtur DMA tiff MRs. I. —TEVES,Ed, ett's Land- ing, N.B., writes on Jan. IS, Too': " In the fall of 1899 I was back.troui hled,11 SCHOOL Coo with aeseVere pain in the could scarcely get up out of a chair and it gave me great pain to move .. about. I too c one box o oan s Kidney Pills and was completely cured. I have not been troubled , with it since." .,,:,4 ,.. ,...,- , • .7