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A SERMON FOR SUNDAY AN ELOQUENT DISCOURSE ENTITLED "A CHANCED NAME." The Itev. Or. .J. Wilbur Clmpmnn Draw* : Some Comfortb; I.pasoua I'rom the Story of the Angrl ami Jacob?Krery Act Shape* Our Character ucd Name. Xr.w Vc.uk City. The folinwing sermon. entit'ed "A Changed Name." lias been furnished for pibMr-ation by the distinguished and ?'o<pient evangelist, the Kcv. l.V. .1. Wilbur Chapman. It was preached from the text: "And he said unto V- ?v e,i(l Jlim. llll 'i. I> lll? Jimnv . ...... ..? ( Jacob." Genesis .'*2: 27. This is an angel's question to a man from whose embrace he was trying in every possih'e manner to break away. Locked together alter the manner of ancient wrestiers they bend first this way and then thai, and tlie ansel cries, "Let me po, for the day breaketh." Jacob responds. "I will not let thee po except thou bless me." and then the words of the text were spoken. "And he said unto him, What is thy name? And he said Jacob." Jacob mieht have answered the question in different ways at different times. He raipht well have said at one time, my name is Jacob, for he had deceived his father and sunnlanted his brother, but he rnipht have said at another time, my name is Revealer. for he has piven u* a vision of the open heaven. In his dream we have heard the voice of God. He mipht have said on etiil another occasion, my name is Teacher, for under his tuition we have made a pil * c n j . _ j Krima?e into the deep tninirs ot vtou, anu re could truly have said as he came to the end of his career, my name is Israel, for 8 a pnnce he had power with God and with men hail prevailed. You will notice' the divine order, power with God first and %vith men afterward. Oli that we might 'soon learn that the way to influence earth is by the wav of heaven. It is a singular question in the text, for in the olden davs a name was given not merely to gratify the passing whim of the parents, nor for the sake of eunhony. hut because of character; a man's character was his name and his name was his character. A changed name indicates a changed character. Abram in t{ie Old Testament is changed to Abraham as he steps into closer fellowship with God. Saul, of Tarsus, became Paul, the apostle after the heaven'v vision. Thou shalt cell His name Jesus because He shall save His lieon'e from their sins, and He is Inimanuel, which signifies God with us. It is a most singular question, "what is thy name?" in the sight of God. He certainly / knows what it is. It is said that our names are written on the palms of His "V hands; that they arc also written in the T<amh's Pool; of Life, but what name? Hardly the name given to you by your mother, but rather the name that you have made for yourself under the direction of God. by your patience, bv your meekness. your brotherly kindness. It is a sol-1 emn thought that even* act as well as every word in shaping the character and the nrir.e by which we shall be known throughout eternity. This storv of the change of Jacob's name i j- . js interesting. i uu im> ... lived 1800 years before Christ, hut ?ti!l it is interesting for the reason that human nature has always been tlie same. Interesting. too. because he was a typical .lew. His life was the life of Israel in epitome: that people found in every country and belonging to none: that people whieh have supplied to us the liveliest religious literature and r.re themselves a by-word, whieh have given to us the liveliest ideals in life and are themselves an object of ridicule: that people which have supplied the world's greatest character*, for Paul was a "Jew and Jesu< was a Jew. If you understand Jacob you will understand the Jew nlwav% but while he began r.s a supplanter bis character was purified at the last. The furnace was heated seven times hotter than it was wont to be heated, hut he comes purified. He is very much like ourselves, too. and for that reason is interesting. Abraham was a hero. Moses a crent leader of men, Elijah was a pronhet. David was a king. All of these men discourage us with their greatness, hut Jacob was a plain man dwelling in tents. We find our likeness in Peter in the New Testament, and in th:8 man Jacob in the Old Testament. His feelings appeal to us. for whether ve ' will acknowledge it or not his sins are in us in germ whether we have permitted them to develop or not: his aspirations appeal to us. Where is there the man who has n :>t had his Bethel, giving him views of heaven and permitting him to heir the voice of ftod. Ilis sorrows appeal to us; in his limping away from Jabbok's ford, in his sorrow at the lonely grave where hi< beloved Kachel was buried, and in his ngonv over his lost Joseph many of us have the deepest sympathy because we ourselves have suffered, but it is a great comfort at - the end to see him coming fortli more ^ toan conqueror. wnicu jeaas me co sav that there is hope fo- every one. T "What is thy name, and he -aid Jacob." Look at him by his father's side as he deceives the old man in his blindness, telling himjhat he is Esau when he is .Jacob, and the o',<i father saying to him the voice is the voice of Esau, hut the hands do not belong to him. How lie must have trembled. I can see his face get white and hear his heart beat quickly. What if God should strike lnm dead as lie stands in the presence of the old patriarch? In this I part of his history J learn that one sin leads to another. We eamdt commit a ingle &in and stop with-that. Jlv. Spurgeon used to tell of the king who commanded his subject to make a chain of three links, and thea told hint to Jnake it longer and still longer, and with the chain bound him ana .cast him into prison. How like unto .Savta? that is. iGraces and vice go with linked hands. Xojtice in Paul's Epistle to the G^latuns concerning the works of the fesii, Galatians 5'. 19-21, "X'ow the works of the .flesh are puuiiest, which are these: Adultery, iornim.'on. nncleaniicss. Ja*eiviousnes?, idolatr.C withcraft. lutrca. variance, emulations. wrath, fitvife. sedition;, heresies, envying*. gnu^crs. drunkenness. reveling* and such like, of rite wiiich J tell you before, is 1 have also told you in time past, that they which do such things rhall not inherit the kingdom of God." And also notice his description p/ 1 he fruti ^>t' the spirit. Galatiaus 5; 22-23, "Put the fruit of tll'j Spirit w Jove, joy. peace. long ,^uicriog. gentlpncs*. goodness, faith. ir.c<?k:^><, temperance; agaiust such there is no lawN Yet this man who deceived his father and defrended his brother became a prince. What is thy name? I put the question to you, and if vou answer correctly some would say. ''My name is impatience," or mine is unkindness. or mine is selfishness, or mine is pride, for these are the domin ant factors our character. I bid yon ? take hope this morning because your name may be changed? > . - 11. 1 What is thy name? and he might liaf? said Bevealcr. I can see him as he hurries t away from his old home when his mother 1 told /iim of the just ribger of Esau, and I behold him fleeing to the north. The night comes quickly uuon him. and he lands upon a certain pface and tarries there all night, and this place is Bethel. It is bleak and barren. His only pillow is the stones about him, and as he falls upon the ground he sleeps and as he sleeps he dreams, and in this dream he beholds the ladder which leads me to say that earth has always been linked to heaven, not wWi a golden chain a? the poet sings, not witFrthe silken cords of gravitation as the scientist de- 1 clares, these certainly, hut before all of ' these heaven united in Him who became | incarnate 190G years ago. The interesting I thing to me about this ladder is that it j reaches down just where we are. It may be we are in poverty, possibly in suffering, j perhaps in despair, but the ladder is just before us. Bring your burdens to the foot | of it, and let the ascending angels bear, them away and then wait until the descending angels being heaven's blessing upon you. You will notice that when liewas asleep that lie had his revelation of heaven. His eyes were closed. !?is fever had cooled. Ids e: . dement had subsided. ! <i i .1 i? I In other worrls lie m*. nr.usc i ;um men nC . beheld heaven. When we lose ourseives ! this weary, srtfish. busy, self-life o: ours, J we shail see Hini. The lark never si:ig< when it is on the | ground. The moment it leaves the ground j it bursts into song, hut just tlie instant i that it folds its wings it liogius to drop to i the earth. So let us mount tip this morn- | ing. and as we mount let us rejoice that our names, which in the olden time stood for sufferings and sin mav stand for power. III. ' What is thy name? and he might well have said Teacher, for he teaches what discipline really is. and tlie story of how this man was chanced from Jacob to Israel is helpful to us all. It was real spiritual education, but education means to draw out, and you might draw out from something which has been implanted, and that something must be the divine nature. Discipline for the man who is not a Christian is a failure. You will remember when Jacob was at Haran be began to be discontented with his lot. and the craftiness oF his nature was constantly growing, so God sent him away from the place. He had everything a man could want, but he must become a wanderer if he would go on to the Israel nature. We doubtless all of us have learned that that which is loss for us has been gain for Christ, and suffering is a good thing, but it is comforting to know that the hand that stirs the rest is the hand of Christ and the hand that leads out is the one that is pierced by the nails, while the one that goes before us is . 1 TT: if 7T? ?.;il | the good Miepnera nuns , m ..... lead us too far nor suffer us to be tcmnted above that we are able to bear. The leva of God often means disciDline._ People ordinarily* have low thoughts of lo\'e; they* only* count that love which caresses and sooths and makes of itself a shield that no rough wind may* blow upon us. They have no notion of a love that ran say* no. a love that can u<e the rod and the scourge and j call the object of its power to pass through the fire, and it is interesting to hear the I ScripfUre declare concerning God and Jacob. "Thou are Jacob whom I have loved." vet his life was one long struggle filled with constant disappointment. Howc-er. it is true that every trial and everv dis.apnointment was a step nearer his princelv nature. I myself would take everv trial lie had and every disappointment lie met. would endure every heart ache it only T might become a prince having power with God and with men. IV. We are 'tearing the time when his name is to be changed. Kehind him is Laban. before hint Ksau. for he is coming nearer to hint constantb*. and he is afraid. Above hiin i? God. He lias come to J abb ok *s Cord, the loneliest place in the Holv Land. One could not casiiy remain there the night through. He lias reached the loneliest hotti* of tit" night: across the Jahhok is his property, his children, his beloved l?ach*>\ and Jacob was left a'one Around him the profound silence of the desert phme. beside liitn the murmur of the brook as it hurries on to the sea. above hint the heavens studded with stars. 'I his is not an illustration of Jacob's earnestness in pravir. but rather the earnestness of the angel of t'ng Lord, who would take from Jacob that whHi is between hint ami power. Notice first, how Jacob holds on to the angel It is a marvelous thing how long a man can hold out against God. Some of us ha'-e been doing it for years. Notice, second, t hat the angel touched the hollow of his thigh. Whatever enables a soul to hold out against God fie will touch. It may he nride, wealth, affection, it may be something natural, as a sinew and as small as a sinew, but He will touch it. 1 can see Jacob struggle in the angel's embrace, and then I behold him coming away with a new name: he is Israel, the prince. The way to nrinceliness is the way of sure surrender. We must yield ourselves to God for power afterward. It is said he called the *dace Pcnicl. for said he. "I have seen God face to face." and as he crossed over Jabhok the sun rose. Doubtless he felt as if lie had never seen it rise before. My dear friend. Mr. S. H. Hndlcv. the morning after his conversion said as he opened his eyes end looked out of the window. "Why. is this heaven? I have rover seen the gun shine like this, act! arc those the trees of life? for I have never s~en trees like these." and yet they were the same trees and it was the same sun that was shining yesterday, hut he was looking with the power of .1 new visior. Oh. may God help us to come to the same cspcriono** tftwlnv. V. And Jacob went down and met Esau. and then we are told he went over to Shcchem. Somebody has said that doubtless his wife might have said to him. "It is far better for us to live in the city rrther than the plain; it will be better for our children. they will become more cultured."' and they went to Slncheni onlv to make t lie greatest shipwreck of their home, and tliev turned away from it after a while with broken hearts, and God said 'o him. "Arise, and go up to Bethel and dwell there."' Christians suffer spiritual declination for vcrv many reasons, but in this expression to-day f have the secret of a renewed consecration. It is necessary in these davs if Christians are to be as they would like to be for them to pray as they used to pray, read the Bible as they tiwd to read it. yield themselves to God as tiny did in former times and the old ioy will come bade with increasing force. If we are to have times of blessing in the days to come the individual who is the leader of a home must go back to Bethel and live in his home ns^he used to live, and the church must go back to Bethel and he filled with the Spirit of God as she was in other das s, BuJ the end has come at last, ihe .- /??ft/.Minrr ia tnl.-pn <lo?-n from ahnufthis 1 wonderful character, life has been a Ion.; i struggle with him. the last word is snoken. I the last command is riven, the Jacob look is leaving his face, the Israel nature has ! gained control. He was a prince indeed. A Discovery Worth Making. A prisoner in one of our State penitentiaries writes that he "thoroughly comprehends the kindness of his unkind condition." He has learned to trust "the light against inhospitable surroundings" to be the means of developing in him power to resist the adversities which he is likely to encounter after he is released. How fortunate would the world be if all men could learn' to see the kindness in unkindness. Not only would the rigor of the law then ahvayJ work out its purposed object of reclamation and restoration, as it seems to l*?.doing in this case, but under the infinitely juster government of God sinners would always turd hack to Him from His beneficent punishments. Yea, even Christians would forbear to' murmur at afflictions and necessities until thev saw what quality of character their I^ord desired to strengthen in them by His* loving discipline.?Chicago Interior. ^ ~? v V Energy 1* Eternal. . j Who is there'who dares to say that when j old age is reached there is not as rau.-h | laid by in that soul wrapped m its v.cary j body as there was in the infant full of latent power? We know not where the infant s forces come from, nor where the dying man's energy goes to, bat it nature leaches us anything it teaches us that forces such as these are eternal in the same sense that matter is eternal and space endless.?Frank Boiler. The Needed Guide. Christ is the needed guide through ?hc j devious paths and temptations of this life. He is a King in the purest and be^t t>e.;sc, to whom we can with gladness yield ourselves. He is the hope of glory for iha plain man, and he who possesses that hope is the strong man.?Rev. M. F. Johnsou. II Iff S\TV! |l|l fKe-bc-st' V" M ;,ji II |f!| || It is pure. % ti! I It is gentle. % li yi It is pleasant. '?*. II :*#. y & | It is efficacious. ^ 11 | I I It is not expensive. p j;''!| 1 It is good for child: Vi'il ijj! &| ii: f excellent fcr 1; ? I1 It is convenient for I I ijj jj| It is petfectly safe ' % ^ 1) It is used by millic $ rl It stands highest, 2 % nil ^ in If ycu use it you h & IH produces. I sp I ^ I (sesbhss I FOB GRADUATES. k I SOUTHERN MADE j for SOUTHERN MAIDS The Best Ladies' Shoes In America for $1.5 D TAKE HO SUBSTITUTE, ; IF yolr dka lkr does not ( AKRY Tlltn, A POSTAL CARD TO IS WILL TELI, VOL WHERE YOU CAN GET THEM. O 0 O 0 CRADDOCK-TERRY CO., /TAKERS. LYNCHBURG, VA. u r It . (SHOE CO} Send for Catalog mm Zion German Evangelical Lutheran Church, in Jersey City, has a choir, the members of which are pledged not to marry for a year. The penalty for violating the agreement will be the forfeiture of $100 to Zion Choral | Union, the members of which will de-1 < cide the guilt or innocence of any singer who may be accused. The trus tees of the church have been forced to take this action as a protection against having the choir disrupted by Cupid. The preceding choir achieved widespread notoriety when several a members became engaged and after- * ward married. h . c j Which? II I A lean and potash-hungry soil, ^ I wasted seed, wasted labor and idle ? I i MnDTninc n. _i - r I tJ I ?1113 A A* ?VI\ I UAUbi vr, picmy B %J Potash |< in the fertilizer, many bales and a 1 F busy gin-A BANK ACCOUNT. fl f J i i / . * . j is family laxative i ren. adies. business men. under all circumstances ms of families the world over, is a laxative, with physicians, ave the best laxative the world fare. 12t(UigrHduat4*a in Wrile for .v,*tUI CuLLKGI?k Hlchiuoa i,Va.-Iiiruitn^hum. a la. Gcncine stamped C C C. Never sold ia balk. Beware of the dealer who tries to sell "something jnst as good." School of Johnccn and Garrick. The old King Edward VI Grammar School at Lichfield, England, which has been sold recently at public auction. has many interesting literary associations, says the Westminster Gazette. It Is the school where Addison gained distinction as leader in a "barring out" enterprise, and where Dr. Johnson had Latin "whipped into him," and so far won the respectful regard of his school!?llows that they used to call for him in the morning at his house and carry him to the school on their shoulders. Garrick, of course, was one of Johnson's fellow scholars there, and Ashmole the antiquary, whose monument at Oxford Js the museum bearing hlfl name, was also a Lichfield scholar. In Utah and Washington, in the ' Pacific group of" States, the percentage | of illiteracy is less than 4 per cent.; j in Colorado, Oregon and Wyoming less 1 than 5. * I 'tic Creations in Stylish Shapes 1 ? j YAL WORCESTER / DCpTQ STRAIGHT KjL I J FPf/\T Sag s the embodiment oi perfection * a STYLE, FIT, and FINISH. / ur dealer. Accept no substitute. V V V> B il Worcester Corset Co. \ WORCESTER, MASS. % f \ i ^DROPSY & Si ?f 10 0AT3' TREATMENT FREE. R "" Esroinado Dropsy and it3 com* BSftk, ^ plications a specialty for twenty <W?3J}? T vears with tBe most wonderftD A . i sucocss, Havo cured many thout- j cases. I . Rffr^Pv SI. &. S. G?2?17'3 SONS, *W^Tia''k Sox B Atlanta, 0a. j IV Til Trn)C Ask your dni0<lt i iVALltK b tt POWDERS te&s:"?K5 " l,"u every s-ectlon. Sold it all drug nores-3 powd. rs. 10 cents. Bo ure to eet \V a BTKKS. Hefuse ull others "our druggist will get them for you. They are ure to give leliet it they don't cure. Send 10 cuts tor package to 'I'llII WA1.TY1K HKJ1K A1, < <?., AVAMII\(. rON,D.<'. pREECATALOGlJE~S~ I Bargains- Loading varieties thoroughbred farm | aised poultry and eggs, white guinea*. pe* | fowls, turxeyr, gee**, ducks, wild and domeetlc I bropubire sheep, pigs, caltes. M*lteee and Ango- | i cats. Belgian hares, cui ary birds; best breeds of og-c shepherd, rat. watch, painters, seper*. hounds. lo<>d, coon, wolf and last fox; red fox cubi I. <J. MASOI, V. V. Naiitumi Stock Aaaoclatlon embers Auerican Shropshire Ass'n, Klrksri le.Mo | WIFT CRfccK Stock and Dairy Farm.; q ^?~?Hm for mtoalnrge number of I . 'fl, .1 fr'\tilceyouneregistere<I A.J.C C. j Jer?ey liull* and ?!elfrr*. \ . I iff.Vjw None bet terbreu in the South. I " f \J Combining closoly the in*.?t ' tt VflU noted nna up-to-date bl'?t> t ! a i \\ lit th America. Bull* 10 to u p * lunuth* old. ?25.(?. Hclfe-*. ' i mie age. gailH PoI.aND CHiNa PIO-s, $ j.10 each. : u slid check and get what you want. I ' T. I*. DKAHWoLL, Prop . Ilnttleboro. X. V. 0 MlliiP:: ttlder. ( Btalusup Fr?*r. 4 K AOV. , /> LTYCINPAXI.illlBTIMTOR. IKOIAAA I dftsaEspsgasiEE^ If 5TCUKESViitfit ALL tlSE FA1S. ~ Ej |i i>jd Beat Cough byrup. Taste* Good. Geo 1>S f \ LJ In tiree. Fold by druggist*. *} \ A. V / &jdM " 0 ? C Its component parts are all wholes? It acts gently without unpleasant: It is wholly free from objectionabh It contaitis the laxative principles It contains the carminative princip It contains wholesome aromatic li agreeable and refreshing to the 1 All are pure. . All ^rp HpHratelv blended. All are skillfully and scientifically Its value is due to our method of m<' the orginality and simplicity of i To get its beneficial effects ? buy 1 Manufactured by ^uforKIA San Francisco. Ce Louisville, Ky. N< FOP SALE BY ALL LEADING D When men feel that every child has , a right to be educated, and when every , child's right becomes every man's duty, i when education comes to be the first ! and chiefest concern of a people, then ] the door of the general public welfare ] is thrown wide open. We will not for- ' get, of course that better than heaping | ] up gold Is the making of men that are | finer than gold.?E. C. Branson. I Do we believe in Industrial Educa- j tion? As profoundly as we believe that i men must work, so profoundly do we j believe that they should prepare to j work intelligently.?Biblical Recorder, j [ j Caret Sinzttita tad Sciiiiu by stttrallslsf tie Kit / h fi: better tbaa tie beit bbci pariic:. All bit: v In the full-winter of 10001 was uftilctet / that 1 bad to uso a cane to assist mo In v ( 110 ease to my thigh, uud the only positi J straight out in front of mo, while la u iei I of the disease, I began treatment at once, I J Mr. J. T. Doatcr, of Greenville, of the d J " ttHECMACioE." I purchased a bottle fi ^ D?>s?er that if 8 bottles did not cure me \ '*>ttl'j rcl'eved me, and I have nad no touc / * Pjlmcr, who lived herout tho tin ' .1 NVunie'ltfi, and torsi* weeks bad to 1 ) us.'ot7^?J bottles of iilfklfMACIDK, . ^IJftfl' si iwiK'verint! % .I.V nnysn inn, 9 1* 'f'lnu Dxf! V / You .-a truly, "* ^ S All Druggists, c. **&'-?* ' ? Ccubilt Chemical Co., f SfeK-?fe _ .TV y ^MERSONS /i ^||j . RBKHIZR ??v I ID CENTS. Hi . i HIRES All [J*? tefflB. rj$ SOLD ?FL Cr Capsicum Vaseline L Put up in Collapsible Tubes. ' A Substitute for and Superior to Mustard or ny other plaster, and will not blister the most I elicate skin. The pain allaying and curative ualitles of this article are wonderful. It will ; I top the toothache at once and relieve head- . ehe and sciatTJS. We reco'mmend It as the best and safest ex?rnal counter-irritant known, also as an ex- J ernal remedy for pains in the chest and stomeh and all rheumatie.neuralgic and gouty com- y taints. A trial will prove what we claim for It, nd it will be found to be Invaluable in the y ousehold. Many people say "It Is the best of ; , 11 your preparations." I'rice 1"? cents, at all druggists, or other deal- | rs, or by sending this amount to lis in postage tamps we will send you a tube by mall. No article should be accepted by the public J nless the same carries our label, as otherwise . ; Is not genuine. HESEBROUGH MANUFACTIRING C0? ? 17 State Street, NewTork City. ^ lIKIftllilE? V'l.DS ?fc MALARIA j i'slnSfiraflr 1 *"?-<?'' ?? <u ium, IVinillb IMLLh><K.\i i dM'.PAII) ldre?. A. W. IVAH?0.1 LOX^bPaVoV.'.y'V. 1 cVk'V/iT^^Tfcompson's Eye Water \ - Ik-,-, ; -gjjg ??-? ?? 5e II iTne* l f lip after-effects, |||| # i substances. j |j || i: f>. r\( n'lonts !| Jji'l! j H |;!| fa , les of plants. I iquids which are | || ;aste. I!]' || ; ;i M II ? compounded. t 1 ij j|| inufacture and to | pj the combination. , ij ij j|l the genuine. -.ij pf I; bw York. N- Y- H Q ? RU0Q18T8. p | p| ? V ' ? ? ?2? Piles or ilemorrhoids whether itching, bleeding or protruding, promptly relieved and permanenty cured by my method without knife or operative measures. Write, me fu!U regarding your case and I will adviie you honestly in the matter. Consultation free. Price of treatment complete, only fi.oo. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. Write today. Dr. H. N. TANNER. East Aurora.. N. V. J WHY SUFFER HEADACHE OR LA GRIPPE? CURE YOURSELF WITH CAPUDINE s NO BAD EFFECTS. Sold at all Drugstores made, 1 U la the blood tad drirfag tbta eat ef tie tyttea. S d dlmiti yield prtaptly to this great reaedy. f 1 with Sciatic Rheumatism, so uuoh so / ralking. Upon sitting down, there was \ on In which 1 could bear my leg was C dining position. Realizing the nature ? but received no relief until induced by r rug Arm of liruce & Doater. to take ) rom them under the guarantee of 3fr. f the money would l?o refunded. One } th of rheumatism slnco t hat time. C .10 (1001). was down with a sever* attack / be turned in bod on a sheet. After the S ho whs pronounced well by the attend- C so eflicacv ?'f your modfetne. r Editor Pickett* Sentinel. Pickens. S. C. r <r; prepaid, Price ?i.oo. r * Baltimore, fid. ) j ^ H11CUU1W tti ^ 4 ojC. CKLY CURED BY jEGE^ill 'PYWf/EPE. MW ' ) Portable Saw Bills V with Engines and Boiler* Complete. ti u /) Made In seven sizes, frietion feed, cable I /] llgniilinB p?, Juiou cumn Mfi ui u a jii /\| fl lmproeed dogj. A J A X CENTER [| I CRANK ENGINES are ronstmeted I iST* vrit!l reforenee to Cio iwctUtar /SLjiTV fork required of item. TliU <omFHuerL f ^juation cf engine and milt ciakeatlie beat tawmlU outflt on earili.' 1 A. B. Farquhar Co., Ltd. York, Pe. BM!? i ii_?j So. 40. RH^fSj For four years I had been fl troubled with constipation, which brought on piles. I H >vas inducecf to try Ripans^B rabules. The results were^B setter than I expected. As]? i regulator of the bowels I i B relieve Ripans are without 1 in equal, and I am never | ' vithout them no v. " j At druggists^ j he Five-Cent packet is enough for an f ordinary occasion. The family bottle, j jA 60 cenu, contains a supply lor a ysrJL^M