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Show THE G LORIES , OF TUB rKBFECT MLETCB.RE' Salt Lake City's Three Hundred Hund-red Graduates. Depart! your way is clear; you are restored re-stored to manhood. This is the feeling of all who leave the institute in-stitute after taking the course of Keeley's wonderful and perfect cure. They have been reclaimed in a scicutilic manner from the very verge of the dread precipice of the the lost, and have been snatched in time from the cursed grasp of a disease that must have ended in moral.' social, mental and physical wreck. They have kneeled in sorrow, silence and sincerity at tho earthly throne of grace and received the blessing of their lives. They have been redeemed and granted another space of happy existence, exis-tence, another chance to face the world aud battle with its ups and downs, clothed in their right minds aud in full possession of their faculties. . With every opportunity words of praise and blessing-pour forth from the Keeley graduate for the discoverer of this marvelous marvel-ous cure, and nothing could be more sincere. They are prompted by pure gratitude, which flows from the true hear"t of the cured. Mr. C. S. Clark of Milwaukee says: "No gentleman will insult a Keely graduate for li is great enthusiasm and devotion to the alma mater of his new life and regenerated being, and no loafer or coarse person can. When the persons who know nothing of lr. Keeley, hiB cure and methods used, or the true state of gratitude of the graduate, will decry the one or denounce the other, such person stamps upon his or her utterance one of three painfully apparent facts: Ignorance, lack of true humanity, or sour jealousy. Beware of such persons; they arc the enemies ene-mies of humanity; they arc snakes in the grabs, watching for an opportunity to strike at the unsuspecting. Not all the eloquence of the silver-tongued orator of the present or past aeres would prove adequate to the task of portraying to perfection the blessings bless-ings of this discovery to the drunkard and his family. The scenes of love, prayers and thauksgiving that can be seen and heard niirhtly in hundreds of American homes once dark, desolate and doomed, now bright, happy and prosperous, speak volumes for the grand work accomplished in so short time by the Salt Lake Keeley Institute. II. W. Baktels. |