Exeter Times, 1902-5-29, Page 6Cenuine
art r'S
Little Liver ins.
Ter
Must Sear Signature of
See Face5itnife Wrapper Below.
Y Small mod as easy
to take as sugana
FON NEADACHge
FOG DIZZINESS6
FOfl Blumusratt.,
Tonins
Fen CONOTIPATION.
FOR 5ALLOW SKIN.
FON THE COMPLEXION
0?=ev,..zror4 MUSTHAVC„ TURK,
'gas I Ptiteasy Tegetalysee.gereseg ;re,
gertiogreseasseerage-----
CURE SICK HEADACHE,
CARTEFit
TIME
PILLS.
011
HE IT ACHES!
Kervous
Bilious
Sick
Periodical
Spasmodic
HEADACHES.
Headache is not of itself a
disease but is genet -illy caused by
some disorder of the stomach, liver
or bowels. -
Before you can be cured you
must remove the cause.
BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS
will do it for you.
It regulates the stornaa, liver
and bowels, purifies the blood and
tones up the whole system to frill
Lealth and vigor.
ASER °AIRY UNG
Rev. Frank De Witt Talmage Soun
A Note of Warning.
Caro neat:eine to Aat of MO retie:mem of
seems m the year One Thoupted sfine gee-
dredand.awo, by Wiliam noey„ of soot:Ito. at
tee Digertutoet ot gerioultem, Ottinft0
A. despatch from Chicago eays
Frank De, Witt Talmage,
preached from the fella:m.111g text eg.
Luke xv, 13, "The younger.
gathered all together and took his
journey- into a 'fax country."
The old homestead 1$ turned up-
side down. One of the two boys,
the youagek, is about to leave the
parental roof.. The eaglet is tire4
of being warmed by the protecting
breasts of the old lairds. With ruf-
fled feathers he stands upou the edge
of the eyrio ready to fly off. Sad is
the disruption of a home. When the
children, say "Goodby,'' the fanalies
talk and laugh and joke. But they
are only laughieg to sustain their
dourage. The wedding bells Weep aa
well as sings At the Marriage the
vests may eongtatulate the parents
of the beide upon having gained a
son. But the daughter is never the
same after the wedding. On that
day the bride goes torth to make
her own home, build her own nest,
rear her own young and live her
ONSIll life. Instead of belonging to
the parent she becomes another's.
Instead of the mother being first
now she is second.
great distance away from the fire -
Some years ego I attended the
wedding of a, very dear friend. The side of a Christian home. As soon
slipper haa been thrown, the rice as the younger son determined to
tossed, the farewells shouted. I fol- revel an sin he wanted to get away
fig= the presence .of his aged Chrise
lowed the old gray haired father
down to the gardea gate. while we teen father, He practically said :
"Father, give me the share of .inciae,y
stood there in the moonlight he winch will come to md when you are
g
turned to me and said : "Frank I
dead. and I will leave hoine and live
know she has married a good 1E6.
, independently I do not want to
Id I I bshappy.
is hard, awfully hard, to give her see Year loving eye and feel the kiss
up. She was itY baby girl. she of "holy affection upon my nog. I
want to go with evil companions am:1
1113,7 Youngest. It breaks the heart.
it breakthe h art " Qhildren are1 not associate with you, even though
horn. They pass boyhood and girl -1 you are my father." „ The Christian
hood days under the parental roof. theme ought to be the happiest place
They grow up into manhood and on earth to a child. , It is a happy
womanhood. They begin to scatter.I Place n the child wishes and tries to
Death knocks at the front door and do right. But the _Christian home is
summons some. Love hovers among a repulsive place to live when the
the spring flowers and breathes boy wants to do those things which
through the orange blossoms and should be left undone. When a boy
woos others. Business and orofes- I or a girl does not wish to stay at
signal duties beckon to others. At home at night with the rest ot the
last the old nursery is vacasts family or finds other companionship
Father and mother sit again alone more desirable than that of mother
at the dining table as they onee didor father, leek out—beware!
when they themselves were bride and i MISTAKEN K:1-1S-DNEESS
rock tIin in a country town, .J110.ny
a letter have 1 received Which went
thus eau a farmer's wife. I
have a bey in the great, wicked city
of Chicago.. I fear he is not doing
right.. You May be able to save
him. He has written Me that he .has
attended your church. Will' you
pray for him ?". The far country of
sin is sometimes found among the
evils, of political life, in the legisla-
tive . halls of the state and the na-
tional capital. Sometitees :Sin is
intrenched in a puneit of the land
where a. minister has become 0.13
apostate and, judaslike, has sold
his Christ for thirty pieees of silver.
Wherever the far country of Sia may
be there is the Place Where the
nobler and purer .alid better parts Of
a man's life aro being Strangled. :
The far coentry is the land of sin,
where the inhabitants are dead to
God. They are dead in their desire
to make out of themselves what
Christ would have made them. They
are dead to spiaithal love. They
are so dead that they will not hear
the divine :Father's voice caning
them . back to the bea,oeniy :home-
stead.
• A WORD TO SNOUNCt MEN.
Though the far country of sia may
be anywhere, yet it. is always
have am essnge Ler you. I see the'
ithsS1CS : of an:sive:tine open your
brOW, X See that you ha- e been erY-
Mg (hiring thie sermon, I fear you
are the younger son of nay text, As
I Catch one Of your faniug tears I
should like to ideserlbe a vision which
came to Inc last winter about you.
Where was the scene? No, it was
not in ...Chicago; not in that low
loon or eheap theatae or in that hall
.where You spent -last night plaYlog
billiards and gambling away your
soul. The. scene was way back in
the getintry. You remember the old
Miens the white house, the pilleved
porch, the big- barn in the rear, the
woodpile to the left of the kitehen
door, The hens were reoning aroond
elamerieg for food because the earth
was a frozen tomb. The worms had
gone to sleep for their whiter hap.
it was about evening. An old gray
haired woman was cooking over the
kitchen stove. She looked thinner
than when you saw her last. , h e
neighbors 'say she is aging very
rapidly and will not live long. s
Just then an old man came in. He
Stamped the snow oft his great
boats.- This gray hairecl woman
looked up and said: "Pa, have you
brought a letter? Have you been to
the posigstlice? Is it not strangehe
has ,not w3'itten. Elo has been gone
now five long years'. Do you. think
God will - bet me live' long enotigh
•to seo' him jest once -before I„ go?"
The old man ectid n.othing. Ile 'went
to the doer and looked dewn the
road. He 'shaded his •eyes as though
he could ' "see a great Way off.''
Then he said: "Mother, that is, a
fine cab: we have there in the barns
yard. She is getting fatter each
day. We Must kill her soon. Pere
haps we can have a big feast .when
oor boy comes home." They sat by
the fire a little While after the dishes
were Wiped. The olcl folks were too
tired to Stay -up late. They were
too tired to sleep.
They took clown the old Bible. The
mother said: "Pa, won't you read
that :story of the prodigal son?
Somehow I never can hear it en-
ough, You read it last night. It
is in the fifteenth cliapter of Toltec.
Read about the younger ,son that
went away and starved and was too
proud to come home." Then the old
folks knelt. As they prayed the
little candlelight began to flesh sym-
pathy. The tears trickled through
the four withered hands. There the
: tsgo tired, heart sick parents Stayed
-upon :their knees, pleading with God
for the return of their wayward boy,
until an angel in heaven could hear
I their grief no longer. He fluttered
away and whispered to 1110 the secret
that I ani now telling. My son, will
you not go home? Before the old
folks are dead do go home. Leave
this far country of sin.
•
, groom. The old homestead is de-: The far coentry of sin generally
. serted save by the old folks. The has a broader and smoother high-
way for the younger members of the Fr II c
•
text is a. tragedy. E s
) LESSON
"
INTO A FAR COUNTRY. family than for the older sons and la. • 4 s
The father is giving his host daughters. Easy it is for every one
struetions. He is handiag the tia go to destruction unless sustained) INTERNATIONAL LESSON,
young traveller some letters of in- e by the grace of God. The old as
troduction to a prominent nsetchant well as the young can have a sa-JUNE 1.1
, with whom the son will lodge to the • tonic guide lead theni into the valley
. next town. A noise is at the gate.. of death if they are willing to be led, Text of
1 ekrvants are bringing out the horses -13.tet it is especially easy for the . 22.
i and strapping the baggage upon the younger members of a family to fling
` rack mules. They tails in subdued' themselves over the prempace of eter-
8-10. A man lame fromhis birth,
1
1 whspers. Even they feel strryth
. The E nal death. When e otheachildren having.
ith'
I gosng -master" was a happy, folly • were young. in all probability the never walked, hears Paul
I preach the gospel, and„ having faith
go lucky boy. Ile always had a 'father was having hard work to
Ito be healed, Paul commands him to.
kind word for the hostiere. The Make financial ends meet. Ile had;
I cagy happy creature this morning ' to work day and night and night and stand upright, evhieh he immediately
' is the dog. He frisns and barks day. Ile economized svherever possi- does, leaping and walking. Such is
about, expecting to follow the ble. But after awhile the father got briefly the story is these three
.
verses.
sportemen for a week' ii haet. His ' a foothold in a business or a pro* .Being expelled from Antioch
hilarity is stopper'. Some one shies feseional career. Then the money in Pisidia, the apostles came to
i .1counina and, notwithstanding 01)-
a one at the brute and shouts, ' conmaenced to flow into the gunny 1
i
'Go back to the barn." Slowly the 'treasury. Then servants were able speaking: boldly in the .Lorci, who
position abode there a long tinies
Lesson, Acts xiv., 8-
G -olden Text, II.
Tim. ii., 3.
16, 17. Who. in times past suffered
all nations to walk in their own
wage.
Since pod placed :mail on moth
he has been trying hian :In egevy pies
-
One way—in Eden' one!: mit or Eden,
without law and under law, under
grace and the special ministry Of the
Spirit—and he shall :have ono trial
More touter the personal reign Of the
Lora Jeens. In due time it shall be
fully Proved that .inan apart from
God is may failure, I. Aran, 20;
21, it is made plain that la all ages
all ere without excuse.
18. With those sayings scarce re-,
streined they' the people that , they
had not done sacrifice to them.
, Having seen the impOtent mao
healed thamigh. Paul and Boroabas,
it was hard to convinee. them that
the work was 'not done by these
oseu, but by One -unseen Whom these
men represented. The natural . man
Walks. by sight, and it "is aiftieult to
persuade him that anything is differe
ent from . :what his eyes see. Cone'.
Sider Cor..iv, 18; .v, '7; Heb. xi,
27.
19. 1 -laving - stoned Paul, they
drew hith out of the city, supposing
he had. been. dead, .
Rote.' fickle is man! The seevaiits
of the devil hadefollaNd. Paul and
Barmsbae :from the other cities and
were sie suceessttil that these people
Who were ready to worship Paul' are
nese just as ready to stone hum, :and
they aid.stOne hina and left him for
'dead.
20. Fle rose Up 'I:Sod came into , the
elty
While the helpless to -pro-
tect him, stood areurid his appar-
ently dead :body God gave him back
to them to their great eurpaise :and
joy, for his' work was not yet acCom-
Wished. It may be that while .his
enemies were bruising and ae ill
treating his poet, body he was enloy-,.
ing that of which he tells in, II Cole
xii, 14, and, haying keel the glory,
was strengthened' for future service,
21. The clay after the., stoning
Paul. and 33areabas set forth to Der -
be, where they also pteached the gos-
pel and made Many,. disciples, and
then instead or going on to Paul's
home at Tarees, to Which 'they were
new quite near, they turn about, ae-
traco. their steps and visit again the
very places where they had been so
persecuted.
22. Here are great words for IS.
By His Word and Spirit we Must be:
established and contimie (Luke viii„
15; John viii,. 33411 Obron. atteS 20)
and learn to endure patiently for HIS
sake (Jas. 1, 12; Rev. 10; John
xvi, 33). • May the grace of God and
the word of God and the hiegdont of
God be 110 11S what It was to these
apostles, and may we be Spirit fill-
ed and Christ Oecepled .people, mani-
festly set apart for ITUnself,' a people
for His 'own possession (Fs. iv, 8;
Tit. ii, 14, 11,
s
dog turns. His lowered head and to be hired to do the work of the
tail are the canine signs of abject mother and sisters. Then the young -
woe. Ile stops now and then, ex ° er son was able to have his spend-
, pecting to hear the familiar hunts- inn inciney and drive a horse and go
l man's halloo. Perhaps he realizes , with the young scions of the wealth-
: for the first time he is taising a last . families: Then it was easy for
i look. of farewell. I alwas-s dicl think him to buy a through ticket and go
1 that a bright dog was smarter than . by the fast express to the far come;
granted signs a.nd wondel s to be
done -by them. They so spoke that
a great multitude, 'both of Jews and
Greeks, believed, but the opposi-
tion became -so great that they in -
ally lied to Lystra, where we now
find them preaching and healing.
) a stupid man. try of sin. They not only preached the gospel,
..ggegssanse,
but they lived it in their , daily life
The farewell words are isow. being Parents, your very kindnesses and so
said. The father gives his benedic-f 10), and this is always
I tion. We must tuself sacrifices may be the cause othe
rn our heads away. your younger ghildren's destruction. great need, (II Cor. iv, 10, la).
The mother is having her last con- have no right to give your to 11, 12. The godd
s- are come own
vulsive clasp. These are the snap- You
youngest son plenty of money and us in the likeness ,of men, and
ping of the heartstrings. A mother
they called Bar
liberty to do wrong. ' It is Your nnd
rarelaba$ Jupiter. a
grow business to know how your children Paul Mercuigus., '
y roan:2es that the baby she
once rocked in 0 cradle can
spend their money. . It is your duty the. niceness of man, for God was in
God had truly come to earth in
into a man. He is I:I:ism:vs her boy.
Suddenly the young man orealse to know where your younger son Christ, and Jesus Christ was God
away. He leaps into the saddle. Passes his :hights• manifest in the flesh (II (tor. v, 19 ;
The spurs cut deep. Parents and A HOMELY ILLUSTRATION. I Tim. lit, 16). But these blind
friends shout their farewell to the The far country is the place where -heathen knew nothing' of ' the true
cavalcade. Then they wave and the younger son spent his all, We God and worshiped issanY fanciful
These pills are a specific for all throw hisses. The old father wipes cangeachly pieture this young man gods which had no existence. They
diseases arisino• from disordered 1118 gave to the servants of God these
f ace vigorously with. a handker- when he first left home. He had
, chief. He scolds the servants. Ile plenty of money. The 'tavern. keep- heathen. names, jest as the. heathen
nerves, weak heart or watery blood. bids them to Ise off. He does mit ers bowed and. smiled at his o did :to Daniel and his friends in
They cure palpitation, dizziness, want them to see him cry.
The preach, They regretted when ‘13; '
smothering, faint and weak spells, mother has no such pride. As the party left. The gay young folks of
shortness of breath, swellings of feet . horses disappear over the last hill' the region to which he went felt
and ankles, nervousness, sleepless- the aged svife buries her head upon proud to be seen in public by his
: her husband's breast; She sobs as ad gs bachelor apartments were
nese, ar,thf el 11:
mmia, hysteria, St. Vitus' 'ough her heart would break. Tsl he .e'.she'PI.
d in the most expensive
husband gutslii$ arm about the saci style. The hanks would honor any
dance, partial paralysis, brain fag,
female complaints, general debility,
and lack of vitality. Price soc. a box.
TOE ORIGINATOR OP
DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS1
heart. 1Io draws her toward the
house.
Slowly. they walk up the tree
arched path. They stop a moment
on the porch to glance dome the
road. Slowly the sighing father
opens the front door. Tht men go
baelt to the -fields, the fetuale ser-
vants to the kitchen. The domestic
machinery is started. The eeighbors
returning to their homes, say, "Is
it not too bad that the younger son
should gather all together and take
his journey into a Inc country- ?"
The origins.' kidney specific for
the cure of Backache Diabetes$
Bright's Disease and all 'Urinary
Troubles.
Don't accept soinething just as
good. SEie you get the gsulti16
TIAE LAND OF
The far country Of nay text is the
10.13(1, of sin. Where it is we do net
geographically knovt. The far coun-
try may be in the rural regions,
among the farmhouses. PeoPie malse
a. great mistake in supposing that
the ontsr place 111 which sin thrives
is a large city. Sin loves to smell
the Wild flowers and lie down in the
haymow' as well as to tramp in the
streets of a busy nietropolis 1 Sege
preached in the country and know
of what I speak. There :le loathsome
clrunkentese 111 a, erossread tavern
as well as in a corner eoloon. Many
a, young country girl hog disgraced
the Pamily. Farmers' 'boys and
girls do not all attend the revivals
in order to heal the preaehing, Tho
ha located in
woo ortio 1)111137
city than in
heter tsbie to
svi 1 der n ess of
far country af'sit
the city, Sin is
more pt'0V111013t
the vil 1 e ge, bIr
epneeal its trc.,„
drafts he made upon them, He was
a hail fellow well met. He was as
much iatoxicated with flattery as
with wine. The gold which he held
in his open hand was just as yellow
and hard as if he Was living off of
his intetest instead of the principal.
His health wa.f. robust and strong.
Pie had 'tot yet undermined his phy-
sical constitution by excesses. But
now the rosy cheek pale's. The
stet-gly nerve trembles. The mort-
gage is placed upon the furniture.
He sells some of his diamonds, There
are but two horses now in the sta-
ble instead of ten, After awhile he
begins to run up bine. Not being
abie 10 90.31- his bills, as of yore, the
creditor become . anxious and de-
mand payment and full payment at
once. What happens? Why, the
Story of the prodigal son then tells
us that there Weis 0 famine in that
land. As soon as a sinner's Money
is gone his siefut friends immediate-
ly leave him, The bright winged
Inunininss birds have 'little use /Or
the rosebesh when the flowers are
gooe. This youhger son began to he
In want. 1th became helpless and
friendless, To earn food enough to
sustain life he tended a, herd of
swine. This secial conditioe was the
Worst to which a Joe conid ever
51011 ITt was flat upon his back in
the lowest pit of': despair.
MI118 S ALI 14 FOR DOYS.
Boy, Sitting before ine to=night,
Babylon. We inust not be offended
if people give us false names, for
they called Jesus Beelzebub, glutton,
wine bibber and told Him he had a
13 Then the priest of Jupiter
which wag before their city brought
oxen and garlands unto the gates
and Wetild have done sacrifice with
the people.
They were about to worship Paul
and Barnabas, believing them to. be
more than men.. It suggests the
question as to whether in the lives
of most Oh:Ostler:a there is anything
to catifte people to say : gThht is
not natural. There . 'is something
supernatural about that person.
That meekness or patience or wis-
dom or power is of God."
14. They rent their clothes.
Are we as horrified to her given
to us'the praise which ought to be
given to ,God only, Or are we apt to
covet' this very thing and lovo to
have it given coat that, WO ourSaVeS
are some great people ? (Chapter
yin, 9.) The Lora Jesus soeglit
neither His own Will nor :Ms own'
eloty, but aStetty$ glerifieci the
Father (John vi, 38; viii, 50; :evil,
15. Turn from thee vanities unto
the living God which made heaven
and earth and the sea and all
things that are therein:
With great earnestness did the
apostles seek to turn the peopie.'s
thoughts from themselves to 'Clod,
as when the ansi,e1 501(1 to John.
"See thou, do 11 301; worship, God"
(Rev. xxii, 0). The tendency to -day
Is to think more of mon than of
God, aed the great trouble ie.that
ninny men do mot feel troubled
about it, but love to have it So.
BRANDON JACKET.
4.4"*"......440.0.4-04.404+.44...4tooittstwoRielsiges.
THE KING
THE UEE
•
J
This stylish blouse jacket is made
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white collar enfistoidered with a de-
sign in a deeper shade of blue or
green or appliqued medallions will
do as well....The jacket blouses
slightly around the waist and is
confined in a belt of white cloth. The
chemisette effect,which te very
dressy indeed, is made of cream -col-
ored silk laid ie. quarter -inch tucks.
Crease along the lines of perforatious
and stitch bank one-quester of an
inch.
Quantities of Material Required:
82 and 34 bust measore will require
oue. and one-half yards Of goods
fifty inehe.s wide, one-half of plain
or tucked silk for chemisette, and
three-fourths of a yard of white
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10 bust measure will reriiiire two
yards of goods fifty inches wide, one-
half yard tucked silk? and one yard
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E.Ind
E DUC ESS
OF DEVONSHIRE.
Remarkabk Offer.
1.
Here is the best offer ever made in this community. By a very excellent ar-
3?a13g9113en11 matte with the Irarnily Herald and Weekly Star of Montreal we are *4
elltiu...a to offer Tele Morrell 'ruins and that great Family. Panqr, the
Family r'1,r,^ald and Weekly Star, for one yeer for the small sum of $1.76 and in -
elude to each s...4,scriber three eeautiful premium pictures, of which the follow-
ing is a brief desoripOoe,
silt
KING EDWARD VIL—True to 11141, a beautiful portragt size 18 x en
24 hieing, ten beautiful heavy white satin finished paper fo•r framing. This portrait '
has been taken since his accession to tlie throne, and is t 0 very latest and best, ,
the
t. -WEEKLY $TAR; eae,h picture bears the King's antogreph. This picture has tile
obtainable. It cannot be had eecept through, AldfX.Y Omura) Arm
flfAlitaerkepnicatuft.rerctabnepiCosisneq""saim' and has ther44°In
finrellaitsintoerricitaiofyabieuiet
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I
QUEEN ALBXANDRA.—An exquisitely beautiful picture pg the rsinark.
ably beautiful and goe S. Queee Alexaudra, ease takee slew) the /.11)403. acenagan --
4' to the throne. It is the sante size as that of the Kb% 1 the tWO fOrillil4 R hand-
/ some pair of pictures that alone would sell for many tunes the subscription pride
a paper and pictures.
INo portrait of the Ining and Coosort taken at the second or succeeding ,s1t-
tings can have one fraction of tne value sit the then Thige go down 1,0 hietoay.
t THE DUCHESS OF DEVONSIIIRE.—The Renowned Gainsherougle Pie-
* tura. Sold at auction sale in Louden tv-Senty-iive years ago for I1OL5QO,
, stolen by clever thievea hidden for over bwenfeefteur yeas and delivered to 1115
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of SOS 000 reward and inee sold to M. J. Plerpont Morgan for
::: 115,01:Tris, in brief, is the Isistery of one of the Premium pictures, which, by a
4.. clevei stroke of enterprise, the publishers of the Flunily Flere,1(1 have aeetwed tv
0 Weir subscribers. The picture is 22x26 in ten colouett, and is seprodaced line gr
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`g in New- York City 3 Montreal and Toronto fo3
for i2 eech Arid this le tho picture
& .
g. Family Herald subs:31'11mill are to get absolutely free together with the
. pictures of the King and Queen.
.Ileseb
sthaetatitfaniotibpligotill,r-aelau.o 1 Call at THE TIMES Office and see samples
: 01
. You want THE EXETER Truss for the local news, end you want. that
t• great paper the Fatally Herald for it's 21 pages of general news and fam'gy
iipgraiedeing. Its agricultural pages alone are worth many times the subscription
ee lariege or sencl your subscription to .
41* THE TIIVIES OFFICE. ,
•
POINTED P ARA.° '
Whon a man feels mean it's his cue
to keep silent
Charity coVerS 0 inaltitucle of so -
drilled $aerdd concerts.
Some mon wasie a. lot of tinie
wishing it were. tognorr ow.
Truth never dodges up an alley, no
matter whous it meets.
Ti you want your wife to act like
a1 angel treat her lilce one.
A bachelor SEWS women can talk
twice as fast as they can think..
As a comfortable seat a good. rock-
ing ,chair beats a throne all hollow.
Fortunate is the man who is on
the long side of the collar -button
maieset.
As a mettter of eonvenience 'turn-
ing doge an alley beats teaving up
a street.
JuStiee' May be blind, but she is
able to judge people hy their con-
versation.
Many a man's pessimistic views of
life are due to his ttentittiotanee with
Iginsaf.•
All women are net: devoid of tese
801180 of loutior, if este may judge
by the way some wivea mail:ego theft
husbands,
teas
ARIC CELE et STRICTURZ
to other disease is so prevalent among men as Varicocele, As it interferes with
the nutrition of the sexual organs it produces emissions, loss of seinen through the
urine, decay of the organs, pains in the loins, aching in the back, nervousness, des-
pondency, bashfulness, palpitation of the heart, constipation, and a combnation cl
these remits in complete Loos of Manhood. Thousands of young ane midOle-
agod are troubled with. 1tricture. If yen have reason to believ.i ,-on are
afflicted with it, don't neglect it. It will roan you. Don't let doctors exptaiaent
on you by cutting, stretching Ar tearing it. Our New Method 'Tr esitaa
, ot
dissolves the stricture tissue lumce it disappears and can never return W• cure
Varicoce.le and Stricture without operation or loss of time. The treatmen ma.- be
taken at home privately. Send for our Free illustrated Book on Varleocele,
Gtricture and elect. We cs=eirantera to Cure or No Pay.
Ei
ne s
All sexual complaints affect those organs, hence the kidneys are a great source
1 of disease. Eo.ve you aching or weakness over the small of the back, tendency to
I urinate frequently, deposit In urine, coldness of hands or feet, a drowsy feeling, in
hhe morning'. Don't neglect your kidneys. Our New Method Trce.tnnent,
Es guerauteed to cure any disease .of these organs ot no pay.
.go -No Mimes Used. Without Written Consent.
o. W. ROM, of Jackson, Mich., sayst—I had
vericocele in the secondary stage and two
strictures of s years standing, I was operated
on twice, undergoing great suffering, but only
got temporary relief. I was finally advised to
• ..0 try the New Method Treatment of Drs.
K. & IC. The enlarged veins disappeared in
"X(e six -weeks, the stricture tissue was removed in
eight weeksland my sexual energy and vitality
b returned so I was a man in every respect. I
keie
3.ser -. recommend you doctors with my whole heart."
.
/ CURES GUARANTEED. NO CURE NO PAY.
Before Treatment
After Treatment.
........0-
.........
We treat and cure Nervous Debility. Lost Manhood, Varicocele, Stricture, Syph•
ilis,Gleet, Weak Parts, Gonorrhcea and Unnatural Discharges. Consultation gree.
BooksPree. Write for Question Dist for Home Treatment.
Drs. unhedy.erengte 148 SHELBY STREET.
Wagull DETReti , Mem.
o
LEBANONS OLD TREES.
Some .of the Cedars Standing Af-
ter Thousands of Years.
At an elevation of about 6,000
feet abovo the sea, on the left of the
road to Baalbek, is a group of the
noblest specimens of the vegetable
kingdom in the east, which aro boo
lieved to be thousands of years old
and the remnant of the far famed
cedars of Lebanon, of which David
and Solomon sang, and from which
came the timbers of the temple.
Djelsel-el-Ars (the mountain of the
cedars), which rises 7,770 feet, is
generally coveted with snow, says
William E. Curtis in the Chicago
Record-Heraid. As I have explained
before, the term. Mount Lebanon _is
misleading. There is no peak of
that name which is applied to a lofty
range with several conepieuees sum-
mits extending about 100 miles front
the neighborhood of Damascus to the
sea . and being about -twenty-five
miles broad from base to
base. The most elevated
Peaks are those that I have
just mentioned, Mount Hermon, 0,-
383 feet; Dahtuae1-Kudhlb, 10,020
feet: Jebel-Maim:Cal, 10,016; El
Miskych, 10,087; Fum-el-Mizab, 0,-
000; Saunin, 8,000 feet. These
peaks are broken by rtigged ridges,
grecipitoes cliffs and (leen gorges. A
parallel range, which deep not reach
so great a height, is known as Anti-
Lebanon.
When the Word Lebanon is used the
higher range is ieleant, and it is re-
ferred to frequently in the Bible.
YOU WILL REIVIEMBER
that Moses begged earnestly to Je-
hovah, "Let me go over,. I pray
thee, and SOO the good land that is
beYond ' Jordan aud that goodly
Mountain Lebaoon," of winds he had
doubtless heard in 'Egypt, for its
gi ory extended o ver the on ti N. world.
The patriarehs and the poets of the
Bible praised Lebaeon and eang of
its forests, the snoWs thert, crowned
its senimits and the streams that
bathe its feet, The nomens and the
Geeelts never tired of describing its
beauties, its climate and its for-
ests. The Arab poets use it as au il-
lustration ..of grandeur', sYnuiletsg
and strength. It IS a proverb that
Lebanoe beets winter upon ite head;
spring upon its shoulders, nettinin in
its lap an(1 that summer lies always
ite foot.
Of all the mighty forests which
Sormeriy covered the slopes of Leb-
anononly five remain to -clay, and
Those who have used Lasa -Liver Pills
say they have no equal for relieving and
curing Constipation, Sick Head-
ache, Biliousness, Dyspepsia,
Coated Tongue, Foul Breath,
Heart Burn, Water Brash or
diseasebowels,
Mrs.
or disorder of the stet-noel:1,
liveraY
or
Mrs. George Williams, Fairfield Plalbs,
Ont., writes as follows t " As there are so
many other medicines offered for sale in
substitutiou for Laxa-Liver Pills I am par-
ticular to get the genuine'as they far eine
pass are/thing elsefo r regulating the bowels
and correcting stomach disorders."
Laxa-Liver Pills are. purely vegetable I
neither gripe, weaken nor sicken, are easy
to take and peornot to act:
UllErXedleti522193a0,21611V.111X. 1:32:412,01,
they are limited in area. The lofti-
est trees and those most celebrated
for their antiquity ore fouha near
the town of 33e011e11-e at an altitside ot
6,800 feet and are- known as -The
Cedars of God" s-- sThe Cedars of
Lebanon which he bath planted;''
ci according th the botanists, wl
count 'their ago by the circles 111
their trunke, they are 2,000 or
000 years old, Like the imm tal
cliffs that tower above thene.,
have watched the passage of` -rt
iro-
cesian of kings dosvn the eeiria ies,
1 ed by David, S o 1 email aull :III ram,
with a rear guard comma.nded hy
IC -Lido: William II, of Cern-luny.
They are not, so large nor so logy
as the great trees of California, but
their antiquity and associations
make them, the most sacred and the
most interestieg groves in the world,
and pilgriess come here to worship
them. '
In' TO DATE,
"What's the 8ecrot ,ef success?"
"Saxe the millions and tbe Winona
will take o'ore of thetneeives."