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A Pioneer’s Danger.
THE FEARFUL STRUGGLE UF AN EARLY
SETTLER.
How One of the Early Farmers in Michigan Over*
came a Serious Difficulty-His Life
of Hardships.
flash of tho Holy Ghost we see our own .back, invites vertigo, but to drop tho Christ bndly alt our"' lives and expeot |lir A1 « J A<i«t tC «
foibles and defects nurt depravities, we chin in greeting is accompanied with ,him to treat us lovingly. I was read- J W OUUU!lUl lliUlUvlllv *
Promptly Sent to Every Man Who Needs a
General Bracing Up. *
IT BRINGS PERFECT MANHOOD TO ALL
if the Famons * PHYSICIAN INSTITUTE, Chicago, hi*
Gratuitously, Gladly Sent to all moo who need it and will write for it
Frank Long who lire, near Lennon,Mich.,
it oue of the pioneer farmer, of Venire town-
•hip, Shiawassee county, ami by bis industry
ana thrift in which many hardships were en
dured, lie now lias ouo of the best farms in that
■action. , .
lie tells au Interesting story of when hi*
life wns in danger during his pioneer day*.
He soys:
"About November 1, 1891. on starting to
get up from the dinner (able, I was taken
with a pain in mv back, ami found myself
unable to move. The pain increased and
spread over iut entire body. I was obliged
to take to my bed. The physician who was
immediately summoned pronounced mycaee
muscular rheumatism accompanied l»y lum
bago. He gave me remedies and iiyectcd
morphine into mf arm to ease tho pain.
"My disease, however, gradually became
worae'uutil I thought that death would be a
welcome release from my sufferings. 1 could
not sleep but would lie awake all night and
rub my leg.
“This continued for about four months.
Betides ray regular physician I also con
suited another doctor but he gave ine no en
couragetnent and said his medicine could do
me no good.
“I was finally induced through reading
some acconnls in the newspapers regarding
♦he wonderful cures wrought by l)r. Wil
liams'Pink Pills forPale People, to try them
which I did as a last resort.
From the Obierver, Fluehing, Mich.
" I took the pills according to directions
and soon began to notice an improvsmsnt In
my condition. Before the first not was used
I could get about the house, though with
great difficulty, but alter using five boxes 1
was eutirely cured.
“Since that time I have felt no return of
the rheumatic pains. I am confident that
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People
saved my life and 1 try to induce my friends
who arc sick to try the same remedy.
“I will gladly answer any question con
cerning my sickness and wonderful cure,
provided those who write enclose stamp for
reply. " Frank Long."
Sworn to before me at Venice, Mich., this
lfith day of April, 1898.
O. B. Goldsmith, Jnetict«/ the Peem.
The cure of the aeverest cates of rheuma
tism by Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pals
People baa occurred all over the land, and
ita power in ordinary casea ia proportionately
greater. These marvelous vegetable pills
go directly to the seat of the trouble and
exert a powerful influence In purifying and
enriching the blood by eliminating poison
ous elements and reiiewiug health-giving
force*. ...
Many diseases long supposed by the medi
cal profession to be incurable, have suc
cumbed to the potent influence of these pills.
This universal remedy is prescribed by
physicians, recommended by druggists, ana
•verywhere used by a grateful pubbo.
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foihlos nud defects nurt depravities, we
will be very lonient aud very easy with
others. Wo will look into their charac
ters for things commendatory and not
damnatory. If you would rub your own
eye a littlo moro vigorously, you would
find a mote in it, the extraction of
whioh would keep yon so busy you
would not hnve much time to shoulder
broadax and go forth to split np
be beam in your neighbor’s eye. In a
Christian spirit keep on exploring the
characters of those you moot, and I am
sure yon will iiud something in them
fit for a foundation of friendliness.
Yon invite me to come to your coun
try scat and spend a few days. Thank
yon! I arrive about noon of a beautiful
summer day. What do you do? As soon
as I arrive yon take me out under the
shadow of the great AKns. Yon take me
down to the artificial lake, the (potted
trout floating in and out among the
white pillars of the pond lilies. You
take me to the stalls and kennels where
you keep your fine stock, and h«re are
the Durham oattle and the Gordon set
ters, und the high stepping steeds, by
pawing and neighing, tho only language
they can speak, asking for harness or
saddle aud a short tnrn down the road.
Then we go book to the house, and yon
get me in the right light and show me
the Kensetts and the fiiorwtadta on the
wall and take me into the music room
and show mo the birdcages, the cana
ries in tho bay window answering the
robins in the tree tops. Thank yon 1 I
never onjoyed myself more in the same
length of time. Now, why do we not
do so with the characters of others, and
show the bloom and tbe musio and tbe
bright fountains? No. We say: “Come
along, and let me show yon that man's
oharacter. Hero is a green scummed
frog pond, and there’s a filthy collar,
and I guess nnder that hedge thore must
be a black snake. Come and let ns for
an honr or two regale ourselves with the
nuisances.”
Extol the Virtue*.
Oh, my friends, better cover np the
faults and extol the virtues, and this
habit once established of universal
friendliness will become as easy as it is
for a syringa to flood the air with
sweetness, as easy as it will be further
on in the season for a qnail to whistle
up from the grass. When we hear some
thing bad about somebody whom we
always supposed to be good, take ont
your lead pencil and say: “Let me seel
Before I accept that baleful story against
that man's character I will take off
from it 25 per cent for tbe habit of ex
aggeration which belongs to the man
who first told the story. Then I will
take otf 86 per cent for the additions
which the spirit of gossip in every com
muuity has put upon the original story.
Then I will take off 26 per cent from
tho faot that tho man may have been
put into circumstances of overpowering
temptation. 8o I have taken off 76 pur
cent. But I have not hoard his side of
tbe story at all, and for that reason I
take off tho remaining 26 per cent. Ex
cuse me, sir, I don’t believo a word of
it.’
But here comes in a defective maxim,
so often quoted, “Where there is i
much smoko there must be some fire.
Look at all tbe smoke for years around
Jenner, the introdneer of vacoination,
aud the smoke around Colnmbns, the
discoverer, and the smoke around Mar
tin Luther, aud Savonarola, and Galilei
aud Paul, and John, and tell mo Whore
was the fire. That is ono of the satauio
arts to make smoke without fire. Slan
der, like the world, may be made ont
of nothing. If the Christian, fair mind'
ed, commonsensical spirit in regard to
others predominated in the world, we
should have tbe millennium in about
six weeks, for would uot that be lamb
and lion, cow aud leopard, lyiug down
together? Nothing but the grace of God
can ever put us into such a habit of
mind and heart as that. The tendency
is in the opposite direotion. This Is the
way tho world talks: I put my name on
the back of a man’s note, and I had to
pay it, end I will never again put my
name on the liqok of ftuy map'A note, J
gave a beggar lQcouts, and five minutes
after I saw him entering a liquor store
to spend it. I will never ngain give
cent to a beggar. J helped that young
mnu start in business, and, lo, after
awhile he came aud opened a store al
most next door to mo and stole my cos'
turners. I will never again help a young
man to start in business. I trusted in
what my neighbor promised tq do, and
ho broke his word, and the psalmist
was right before he corrected himself,
for “all men are liars. ’’ Somen become
suspicious ‘and saturnine and selfish
and at every additional wrong done
them they put another layet on the
wall of their exclusiveness and another
bolt to the door that shuts them out
from sympathy with the world. They
get cheated out of $1,000, or misinter
preted, or disappointed, or betrayed,
and higher goes the wall, and faster
goes another bolt, not realizing that
while they lock others out they lock
themselves in, and some day they wake
np to find themselves imprisoned in a
dastardly habit. No friends to others,
others are po friends to them- There’s
an island half way between England,
Scotland and Ireland, called the Isle of
Man, and tbe seas dash against all sides
of it, and I am told there is no more
lovely place than that Isle of Man, but
when a man becomes insular in his dis
position and outs himself off from the
main laud of the world’s sympathies he
is despicable, aud all around him is an
Atlantio ooean of selfishness. Behold
that Isle of Man!
Sermons In Health? Hand*.
Now, supposing that yon have, by a
divine regeneration, got right toward
God and humanity, aud you start out
to praotioe my text. "A man that hath
friends must show himself friendly.”
Fulfill this by all forms of appropriate
salutation. Have yon noticed that the
head is so poised that the easiest thing
on earth is ti> give a nod of recognition?
To swing the-head from side to side, as
when it is wagged in derision, is un
natural and unpleasant; to throw it
chin in greeting is accompanied with , him to treat us lovingly. I was read'
little exertion that all day Jong nud , ing of a sea fight in whioh Lord Nelson
ary day, you might practice it with- j captured a French officer, uud when the
out the least, semblance of fatigue. So j Freuoh officer offered Lord Nelson his
also the structure of the hand indicates hand Nelson replied, “First give me
handshaking; tho knuckles not made so | your sword and theu give me yonv
that the fingers can turn out, but so.hnnd.” Surrender of our resistance to
made that tbe fingers can turn in, as in I God must, precedo God’s proffer of par-
claBpibg hands, and the thumb divided
from and set aloof from tho fingers, so
that while the fingers take your neigh
bor’s hand on one side, the tbnmb takes
it on the other and pressed together, all
the faculties of the hand give emphasis
to the salutation. Five sermouB in every
hoaltby hand urge us to handshaking.
Besides this, overy day when yon
start ont, lond yourself up with kind miunto blot out tbis universe, and in
thoughts, kind words, kind expressions another miunto make a better universe,
and kind greetings. When a mnu or I have no idea that God tried hnrd
woman does well, tell him so, tell ber when he made all things. Tbe most
If yon meet some one who is im
proved in health and it is demonstrated I and for the creation of
in girth and color, say, “How well yon used a word of oommaud.
look!” But if, ou the other hand, un- flint a frontiersman strikes a spark, so
der the wear and tear of lifo he appears | out of one word God struck the noon-
palo and exhausted, do uot iutroduoe day sun. For the making of the present
sanitary subjects, or say anything nt universe I do uot rend that God lifted
ail about physical condition. Iu the so much as a finger. The Biblo fre*
oase of improved health, yon have by queutly sponks of God’s hand aud God’s
your words given nuotber impulse to- arm and God’s shouldor and God's foot
ward the robust und the joound, while Then suppose lie should put hand and
in tho oase of the failing health you arm and 6boulder and foot to utmost
have Arrested tho decline by your si- tension, what could ho uot make? That
lencc, by which he concludes, “If I God of such demonstrated and nndem-
were really so badly off, ho would have uustruted strength yon 'may have for
said something about it” We are all, I your present and everlasting friend, not
especially those of a nervons tempera- a stately end reticent friend, hard to
ment, snsoeptible to kind words and got nt, but ns nppronclinblo as a conn'
discouraging words. Form a conspiracy try mansion ou a summer day, when
against us, and let ten men meet ns nt | all tbe doors nnd windows are wido
certain points on our way over to busi
ness and let each oue say, “How sick
yon look!” though we should start out I palace door, nn always opon door.
well, after meeting the first and hear
ing his depressing salute, we would be-1
gin to examine our symptoms. After
meeting the second gloomy aooosting,
we would conclude we did not feel ]uto weeplngi a nd ’some of tbe domes
quite as well as usual. After meetiug
the third, onr sensations would be
dreadful and after meeting tbe fourth,
unless we suspected a conspiracy, we
would go home and go to bed, and tho
b0 • uselcs6 | scut divine sympathy is always access!-
” bio. Give God your love and get fait
surplus of discouragement.
Brightness Not Gloom.
My dear sir, my dear madam, what your repentance nnd have his pardon,
do yvu mean by going about this world God a friondr Why, that means all
don to us. Repentance boforo forgive-
ness. You must give up your rebellious
sword before you can get a grasp of the
Divine bund.
Oh, wkat a glorious state of things
to have the friendship of Godl Why,
we could afford to have all the world
against us nnd all other worlds agaiuBt
us if wo had God for us. He oould in a
brilliant thing kuown to ns 1b light,
that he only
As ont of a
open. Christ snid, "I am the door."
And ho is a wide door, a high door, a
A large percentage of the men of today are sadly in need of the right kind of •» a.
cal treatment for the weakness peculiar to men. Many cates are due to esrlv «i *
others to exoesses, while many of the oaaea are due to overwork, worry and Biostai *
voos debility. It matters not. however, what the cause mav have been, the tact it n
mains that they ell require proper mediot) attention IMMEDIATELY. 1 **•
Write us at once, giving a description of your oase, and we will prepare you a con.,
of treatment apeetaliy adapted to your condition, and send it to you AB80LUTVI»
FBEE, in plain sealed paekage. We ean give toll atrengtb, development and i OB . ,1
every portion and organ of tho body, stop all dralos and losses, and restore .
PERFECT S'AN HOOD. Failure ie impossible with our method. We have thouae** 4
of testimonial* from all over the world.
Bead What Thefla Patients Say:
Phyaioians' Institute, Obieago: Bltaohsrd, Wash , Maroh 98 igon
Dsar Sirs—I heve nearly finished my course of treatment, and find myself a dnr»
ant man. I oanuot find words enough to praise and exprese the deep gratitude I fast
wards you. Your treatment ia almply wonderful. I am perfeotly oured, and ih.Jt
you a hundred limes and will help you eli I possibly oan. May God blaea you aud rnat
work. Yours truly, q g
Phyaioians’ Institute Ohioago: Lotex, La.. June, 19, 1896
My Dear Friends.— Please aooept my heartfelt thinks for the kindness you ham
a me. Losses have entirely stooped and vigor has rstorned. I am 0. A. I am w
tar than I hsva been tor 16 years. I.donot feel like the same man. AU my friends whZ
thsy meet me, eay, "What have you been doing? Never saw a man eome out Ilka Voa"
Ever your friend. yg p *•
Physicians’ Institute; Havana, N. D., Jan.’99,' 1996.
Gentlemen.-I wish to txpresa my beartMt thanks for the lesult of my tintmeal
During the lest two weeks list I took jour treatment the improvement was remarkable.
I have bad no emissions or other ajmptema since taking jour medlolne. My IrlsnM
til surprised el tbe imprcTf metu in tuy general AppeaiHtice. floplog tb*t mb Bint
““r prosper. I remain. Yonre alnoersly.
Hundreds of similar U-ttere are tow on file in ontbndnres* office, and all ar* bent
fids expressions of peimnnenilv cured mtr. Do not delay writing to ns, and remembw
that we are not only a responsible institution in everv way, but ours ia the largest mtd.
alol institute in America that mtkoa a Hxcialtv of BKxtTal. AND NERVQDH DIHEmrji
Inclose 6 centa lor postage on medioine, v hich Is slwava plainly sealed.
Physician’s Institute, Chicago, 111,
One to Cry To,
My 4-year-old child got hurt and did
not cry until hours after, when her
mother came homo, aud thou ehe burst
tics, uot uudorKtauding human uature,
said to her, “Why did yon uot cry be
fore?” Sho answered, “There was no
one to cry to.” Now, I have to tell you
that while human sympathy maybe ab
love, your service nnd securo his help,
with disheartenments? Is not tho sup
ply of gloom aud trouble aud misfor-
tune enough to meet the demaud with
out your running a factory of pins and I
spikoa? Why should you plant blnck|
and blue iu the world when God so sel
dom plants them? Plenty of scarlet col
ors, plenty of yellow, plenty of green,
plenty of pink, hut very seldom a plant |
black or blue. I never saw a black flow-
aud there’s only here und there a I
bluebell or a violet, but the blue is for
tbo most part reserved for tho sky, aud
we have to look up to see that, nnd
when wo look up no color can do us
your wounds medicated, all your sor
rows soothed, and if some sudden catas
trophe should hurl you out of earth it
would only hurl you into heaveu.
If God is your frieud, you cannot go
out of the world too quickly or sudden
ly so far ns your own happiness is con
oerued. There were two Christians who
entored heaveu. The one was standing
at u window iu perfeot health, watch
ing n shower, nnd the lightning in
stuntly slew him, but tbe lightning did
uot flush down the sk.v ns swiftly as his
spirit flashed upward. Tho Christian
mnu who died ou tho snme day next
hnrui. Why not plant along the paths door had been for a year or two failing
of others the brightnesses instead of the |
glooms?
Do not prophesy misfortune. If you I
must be n prophet at all, be an Ezekiel
aud not a Jeremiah. In ancient times
prophets who foretold evil were doing
right, for they were divinely directed,
but the prophets of evil in onr time are
generally falso prophets. Some of our|
in health, nud for tbe Inst three months
bad suffered from a disease that made
tho nights sleepless and tho days an
anguish. Do you not really think thnt
the cane of tho ono who went instantly
was more desirable than the one who
entered tho shining guto through a long
lane of insomnia and congestion? In
tbo one case it was liko your standing
weatherwise people prophesied we wearily nt a door, knookiug and wait
would have a summer of unparalleled ing and wondering if it will ever open
beat. It has beon a very comfortable and knocking und wuiting again, while
summer. Last fall all the weather
irophets agreed in saying wo should
ave a winter of extraordinary severity,
blizzard on tbe heels of blizzard. It 1
wns tho mildest winter lever remember
to have passed. Indeed, the autumn
aud the spring almost shoved winter
out of tbe procossion. Real troubles
have no heralds running ahead of their
somber obariots, and no one has any
authority iu onr time to announce their
coming. Load yourself np with hope
ful words aud deeds. The hymn once
sung in our churches is unfit to be
sung, for it says:
We should suspect some danger near
Where wo possess delight.
In other words, manage to keep mis
erable all the time. The old song sung
at the piapos a quarter of a oentury ago
was right, “Rind words can never die. ”
Such kind words have their nests iu
kind hearts, and when they are liatcbod
iu tbe other case it was a swinging
opon of the door at the first touch of
your knucklo. Give your friendship to
God and hnve God’s friendship for you,
nud oven tbe worst accident will be a
victory.
Value of Divine Friendship,
' How refreshing is human friendship,
aud trno friends, what priceless treus
uresl When sickness oomos and trouble
comes and death oomos, we send for our
friends first of ull, and thoir appearance
in our doorway in nuy crisis is re-en
forcemeat, and when they havo enter
ed, we sny, “Now it is all right!” Oh,
what would we do without personal
friends, business friends, family friends?
But wo want something mightier
than human friendship iu tho great
exigencies. When Jonathan Edwards,
in liis final hour, had glveu the last
goodby to nil his earthly friends, he
turned on iiis pillow and olosed bis
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The Repnblio Sunday Magazine was the newspaper ancoess of 1897. A bom*
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| THE REPUBLIC, St. Louis, Mo.
laiotaaoCTOigsgaigaCTCgCT^sgPfaiPtsaggggidaaoPDeaj
out and take jving they circle round in eyes, confidently suying, “Now where
flights that never cease, aud sportsman’s
gun cannot shoot them, and storms can
not ruffle their wings, and when they
cease flight in these lower skies of
earth they sweep around amid the high
er altitudes of heaven- At Baltimore 1
tulked into a phonograph. The cylin
der containing the words waB sent ou
is Josus of Nazareth, my true and never
failing Friend?" Yes, I admire human
friendship as seen iu the caso of David
aud Jonathan, of Paul and Onesiphorus,
of Herder and Goethe, of Goldsmith
nud Reynolds, of Beaumont and Fletch
er, of C'ruwluy and Harvey, of Erasmus
and Thomas More, of Lessing and Men-
to Washington, and the next day that delssohn, of Lady Churohill and Prin
oylinder from another pbouographJo in-1
strument, when turned, gave baok to I
me tbe vory words 1 had uttered the
day before and with the same intonn-
eess Auue, of Orestes and Pylades, each
requesting that himself might take the
point of the dagger, so tho other might
be spared; of Epaminondas and Pelopi-
tiops. Scold Into a phonograph, and it d aB) w ho looked their shields in battle,
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LAKE AND HAL8TED AND FULTON 8T8. CHICAGO
will scold back. Pour mild word* into
a phonograph, and it will return the
gentleness. Society and the world and
determined to die together, but the
grandest, the mightiest, the tenderest
friendship in all tho universe is the
the ohuroh are phonographs. Give them I friendship between Jesus Christ and a
acerbity and rough treatment, and acer
bity and rongh treatment you will get
back. Give them practical friendliness,
and they will give baok practical frieud
iiness. A father asked his little daugk
bolieving soul. Yet, after all I have
said, I feel I have only done what
.Tames Marshall, the miner, did in 1848
iu California, before its gold mines
were known. He reached in and put
ter, “Mary, why is it that everybody upou the table of his employer, Captain
loves you?” She answered, “I don’t
know unless it is because I love every
body.” “A man that hath friends must
show himself friendly.”
First Rave My Friend,
We want something like that spirit
of sacrifice for others which was seen
in the English ohannel, where in the
storm a boat containing three men was
upset, and all throe were in the water
struggling for their lives. A boat came
to their relief, and a rope was thrown
to oue of them, and ho refused to take
it, saying: "First fling it to Tom. He
is just ready to go down. I oan last
some time longer.” A man like that,
be he sailor or landsman, be he in up
per ranks of sooiety or lower ranks, will
always have plenty of friends. What
is true mauward is true Godward. We
must be the friends of God if we want
him to be our friend. We cannot treat
Sutter, a thimbleful of gold dust
“Where did you get that?” suid his em
ployer. Tbe reply was, “I got it this
morning from a mill race from whioh
tho water had been drawn off.” But
that gold dust, which could have been
taken up between tbe linger and the
thumb, was the prophecy and specimen
that revealed California’s wealth to all
nations. And today 1 have only put be
fore you a specimen of tho value of di
vine friendship, only a thimbleful of
mines inexhuustible and infinite, though
all time and all eternity go ou with the
exploration.
Natural Irritation.
Charlie—May I hold your hand?
Lucy—VeB, if you like (short pause).
Charlie—May I have a kiss?
Lucy—It strikes me that you live
from hand to mouth —Town Topics.
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