Newspaper Page Text
TALMAGE'S SE-RMOTS.
Tha Eminent Divine’s Sunday'
Dscourse.
Subject: “Moral Expansion”—Our Duty to
th Heathens In the Philippine Islands
—Suggestions as to What We Should
Do For Their Religious Welfare.
[Copyright. Louis Klopsch, 1899.]
Washwoton. D. C.-In this discourse
Dr. ialmage steers clear of the political
entanglements of our time and‘reoom
mends that which will meet the approval
of al wno hope for the perpetuity of our
repubae aud the welfare of other lands: text
Genesis xxviii.. 14, “Thou shait spread
abroad to the west and to the east ”
Since the Americano-Hispauic war is con
cluded and the United States Embassador
Is on the way to Madrid and the Spanish
Embassador is on the wav to Washington
the people of our country are divided into
expansionists and anti-expansionists. From
a different standpoint than that usually
taken I discuss this all-absorbing theme.
1 leave the political aspect of this subject
to statesmen anc warriors and pray Al
-s?hf tljey may b 0 enabled
lightly to settle the question whether the
islands in controversy shall be finally an
nexed or held under protectorate or re
signed to themselves, while 1 call attention
to the fact that a campaign of moral and
religious expansion ought to be immedia
tely opened on widest aud grandest scale.
At the close of this war God has put into
the of thi3 country the key to the
world’s redemption. Heretofore the re
ligious movement in pagan lands had to
precede the educational. After in China
and India and the islands of the sea the
missionaries have labored over fifty or
seventy-five years the printing press and
the secular school came in. Now to better
advantage than ever before religious and
secular enlighteumeut may go side by side,
and so the work be accomplished in short
time and more thoroughly. Starting with
the fact that in Cuba and Porto Eico and
the Philippine Islands at least three-fourtlis
of the people can neither read nor write,
What an opportunity for school and print
ing press! Within five years every man in
those islands may be taught to read not
only the Bible, hut the Declaration of In
dependence and the Constitution of the
United .States and the biography of George
Washington and of Abraham Lincoln.
It seems to me that the Government of
the United States ought by vote of Con
gress afford common schools and printing
presses to those benighted regions. Our
National_ Legislature by one vote appro
priated $50,000,000 to give bread and med
icine to Cuba. Why not by a similar gen'er
osity give $50,000,000 for feeding and heal
ing the minds and souls of those ignorant
and besotted archipelagoes. In the name
of God I nominate a school for every neigh
borhood of Cuba, Porto Eico and the Phil
ippines. As soon as the gavel falls at 12
o’clock of next December 4 on the table of
Senate and House of Eepresentatives and
the roll has been called and the prelimin
aries observed let some member of our Na
tional Legislature, with mind and soul and
voice strong enough to be heard not only
through those halls, nut through Christen
dom, propose a measure for the mental and
moral disecthrallment of the islands in
controversy.
What has made American civilization the
highest civilization the world has ever
seen? Next to the Bible and the church,
schools, common schools, schools reaching
from the Atlantic to the Pacific and from
British America to Gulf of Mexico. Five
years under such educational advantage,
and this whole subject that keeps our pub
lic men agitated, some of them to frothing
at the mouth, will settle itself. Give those
islands readers, spellers, arithmetics, his
tories, blackboards, maps, geographies,
globes. Let the State Legislatures at their
next meeting, some of them assembling in
early autumn, take parts of those islands
under their especial educational patron
age. What is needed is State and National
action-in this matter of schools.
Then let the editorial associations of the
United States, as many of such organiza
tions as there are States, resolve at the
next convocation to establish in every re
gion of those islands a printing press, sup
ported by people of this country until it
can become self-supporting. Each of these
State Editorial Associations sending out
to those islands at least one editor and two
reporters and enough typesetters, down
will go the ignorance and superstition of
those islands as certainly as the Spanish
fleet under Ceryera sank under the pound
ing of our American battleships, and into
their every port will go intelligence and
love of free institutions as certainly as into
the harbor of Manila went Admiral Dewey
on that famous night when he was not ex
pected. Hoe’s printing press! Nothing
can stand before its bombardment. Ed
itors of American newspapers and pub
lishers of American hooks! Take the or
dination for such a magnificent service.
Eloquence on yonder Capitol hitl cannot
meet the exigency. Epigrams of political
Elatforms or in State Legislatures will not
asteu the desired consummation one
week or one hour or one moment.
When Cubans and Porto Eican and Fili
pinos see the morning and evening news
papers thrown into the doorways and
hawked along the streets of Havana and
Santiago and Manila, those who cannot
read by the force of curiosity will learn to
read, so that they may know what infor
mation is being scattered, and that which
may be missionary effort at the start and
carried on by Americans sent forth to do
the work will soon be done by educated na
tives. Porto Eicans editors! Porto Eican
reporters! Porto Eican typesetters! Porto
Eiean publishers! It was a great mercy to
take these islauds from under the heels of
despotism, but it will be a mightier mercy
to emancipate them from ignorance and
degradation. The expansion of the knowl
edge and intellectual qualification of all
those islandy regions isthe desire of all in
telligent Americans. Awake, all you schools
and colleges and universities and printing
presses, to your opportunity!
Still further, here is a wide open door for
Christianity. First of all, we have the at
tention of those people. The heathen
nations are for the most part soporific.
The American missionaries heretofore had
great difficulty in gettiDg heathendom to
listen. They excited some comment by
their attire, so different was the parting of
the hair and the shape of the hat and the
cut of the coat and the formation of the
shoe of the evangelizers, hut the questions
constantly arose in regard to the mission
ary: “Who is he?” “What is he here for?”
And then the interrogator would relax into
the previous stupid indifference. But that
condition of things has passed. The guns
of our American navy have awakened
those populations. They do not ask who
we are. They have found out. They are
now listening to what Amerioan civiliza
tion and our Christian religion have to say
on any subject. Now is tho time, while
their ears and eyes are wide open, to tell
them of the rescuing aud salvable and in
spiriting power of the Gospel of Jesu3
Christ, the Saviour of the world. The
steam printing press which secular educa
tion plants there may be used and will be
used to print religious newspapers and
traots and sermons and mighty discussions
of questions temporal and eternal.
The comfortable homes of those popula
tions, when Christianized, standing side by
side with the degraded huts of those who
remain pagans will be revolutionary for
good. The Porto Eican and the Filipino
will come out from this uncleaned and low
roofed and uninviting kennel and say to
-his neighbor o 2 beautiful household, “Why
cannot I have things as you have them?”
And when he finds that it is the Bible, with
its teachings on family life and persoual
purity and exalted principle, and the
ehureh of God that proposes the rectifica
tion of all evil and the implantation of all
good, he will cry out, “Give me the Bible,
and the church, and the earthly allevia
tions, and the eternal hope which have
wrought for you such transfiguration.”
Now, church of God, now, all S
philanthropists, is your
Nothing like it has occurred since HH
came. Perhaps there may be nothlm>lH
it till His second coming. Here is a
iteness of aim that is most helpful
spiring. The millions of dollars given fqH
the redemption of the world and the thomß
sands of glorious missionaries who havS
gone forth among barbaric nations werei
given and 0 llisted under a great and im
measurable Idea. But when they come to
add to the great and immeasurable idea
the idea of definiteness we will infinitely
augment the work. More than three hun
dred million of heathen in India, more than
three hundred million of people in China
and more millions of heathens than can be
guessed outside of those countries some
times stagger and oonfouud and defeat our
faith. But here in these islands of present
controversy we can farm out the work
among the churches aud in five years, undor
the blessing of God, not only fit the peo
ple for the right of suffrage, but pre
pare them for usefulness aud heaven.
The difference between the general ■
idea of the world’s evangeliza
tion and some particularized field of
evangelization is the difference between
the improvement of agriculture a moug all
nations and the improvement of seventy
five acres put under one’s especial care
and industry. By all means let the gen
eral work go on. But here is the specific
field for religious concentration aud de
velopment. This is not chimerical or im
practical. I read this morning that the
American Missionary Association of the
Congregational Cliuroh has already begun
the work at San Juan, Utuado and Aibon
ito, and all denominations of Christians in
six months will be in those islandy fields,
and we all need with our prayers and
contributions to cheer them on to take for
God and righteousness those regions
which our American navy has captured
from Spanish perfidy.
It has been estimated that this Americo-
Spanish war cost us $3(0,000,000. It would
not cost half of that to proclaim and oarry
on and consummate a holy war that will
rescue those archipelagoes from satanio
domination. Who will volunteer? I beat
the drum of a recruiting station. Who will
enlist under the one sparred, blood striped
banner of Immanuel? Cuba and Porto
Eico and the Philippines are stepping
stones for our American Christianity to
cross over and take the round world for
God. We need anew evangelical alliance
organized for this one purpose. In all de
nominations there are those with large
enough hearts and who have been thor
oughly enough converted to join in
such an advanced movement—men who,
putting aside all the minor differences of
opinion, “believe in God the Father
Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth,
aud in Jesus Christ His only begotten
Son,” and who would march shoulder to
shoulder in such a Gospel campaign. The
result would be that those islands, after
such a scene of gospelization, would assort
thomselves into denominations to suit
themselves, and some would he sprinkled
in holy baptism and others would be im
mersed in those warm rivers and some
would worship in religious assemblage
silent as the Quaker meeting house, and
others would have as many jubilant ejacu
lations as a backwoods camp meeting, and
some of those who preached would be
gowned and surpliced for the work, and
others would stand in citizen’s apparel or
In their shirtsleeves preaching that Gospel
which is to save the world. >
Mark you well that statesmanship, how
ever grand it is, and wise men of the world,
however noble, cannot do this work. Mere
secular education does not moralize; Some
of the most thoroughly educated men in
all the world have been the worst men.
Quicken a man’s intellect.while at the same
time you do not make his morals good, and
you only augment his power for evil. Geo
graphy and mathematics and metaphysics
and philosophy will never qualify a people
to govern themselves. A corrupt printing
press is worse than no printing press at
till, hut let loose an open Bible upon those
Islands and let the apocalyptic angei'once
fiy over them, and you will prepare them
to become either colonies of the United
States Gjvernmont, or, as I hopo will he
the case, independent republics.
God did not exhaust Himself when He
built this nation. The islauds will yet have
their Thomos Jeffersons, qualified to write
for them declarations of independence; and
George Washingtons, capable of achieving
their liberties; and Abraham Lincolns,
strong enough to emancipate their serf
doms, and Longfellows and Bryants, cap
able of putting their hills and thoir rivers
and their landscapes into poems; hnd the
Bancrofts and Prescotts, to make their his
tories; and their Irvings, to write their
Sketch Books; and their Charles O’Conors
and Rufus Choates, to plead in their court
rooms; and their Daniel Wehsters and John
J. Crittendens, to move their Senates.
The day cometh—hear it all ye who have
no hope for those islands of be-dwarfed
and diseased illiterates—the day cometh
when those regions will have a Christian
civilization equal to that which this coun
try now enjoys, while I hope by that time
this country will be as superior to what it
now is as to-day Washington and New
York are better than Manila and Santiago.
Do you see in this process of gospelized
intelligence those archipelagoes will as
a nation be protected from the two woes
prophecised in regard to this country—the
one woe prophecised by the expansionists
and the other wbe prophecised by the
anti-expansionists? It is said by those who
would have us take all we can lay our
hands on as a nation that, unless we enter
the door now open for the enlargement of
our national domain, we will decline the
mission which God in His providence has
assigned us. But surely no woe will
come upon us or upon them if we
Christianize them as we now have the
opportunity of doing. The political tech
nicalities are nothing as compared with
the importance of this movement. I im
plore all political expansionists to aftg
ment us in this work of moral and relig
ious expansion, for unless those islands
are moralized and elevated in intelligence
and habits we do not want them, and their
annexation would be political damnation.
On the other hand, I implore all anti
expansionists to take a hand in the gos
pelization of Cuba, Porto Eico and the
Philippine Islands. The only way to pre
pare them to take care of themselves is to
give them the Ten Commandments that
were published on Mount Sinai and let
them hear the groan of sacrifice that was
breathed out on the heights of Golgotha.*
What they most want is the Gospel, the
pure Gospel, the omnipotent Gospel, the
Gospel that helps heal the wounds of the
body and irradiates the darkness of the
mind and achieves the ransom of the soul.
But on this platform the so called ex
pansionists and so called anti-expansionists
will yet stand side by side. Though I am
not a prophet or the son of a prophet,
within five years, if this religio-educational
work is properly attended to, there will be
a Cuban republic, a Porto Eican republic
and a Philippine republic, one of them on
a large scale, but they will all have their
schools and printing presses and evangeli
cal churches, their Presidents, their Senates
and House of Representatives, their Mayors
and.their constabularies, aud as good or
der "will he observed in their cities as now
reigns on Pennsylvania avenue, Washing
ton, or Broadway, New Y’ork.
Christ has started for the conquest of the
nations, and nothing on earth or in hell can
stop it. The continents are rapidly rolling
into His dominion, and why not these Isl
ands, which for the most part are only
fragments broken off from continents, the
interval lands having been sunk by earth
quakes, allowing the ocean to take raas
| tery over them. Each mother continent
has around it a whole family of little conti
nents. If the continents are being so
rapidly evangelized, why not the islands?
If America, why not Cuba and the Baha
mas? If Asia, whv not the Philippines and
the Moluccas? If Europe, why not the
I Azores and the Orkneys? If Africa, why
i not Madagascar and St. Helena. The
■ same power that broke them off the maia
| land can lift them into evangelization.
TnjP_
' - • -' .
t i
Hi fM’
'' '
111
1 r 0 (i >' 1 ' : ■- 1 ■ : • v
const Ip.'it
shape pimples,
children people. Talten
it f,-i/
Greatest
cine. It enriches the blood.
'J&iflK^SaUapavffq
“I torture* of tJio damned
with brought on by constipa
tion with was afflicted for twenty
V’-trs. I your CASCAKHTS in the
town of and never found un> thing
1 am entirely free from
H. Jones St., Sioux City, la
Pleasant. Pailatab'e. Potent. Toste Good. Do
Good, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 2oc. OUc
... CURS CONSTIPATION. ...
Sterling Remedy fonpuny, CUlroffo, Montreal. New York. 812
OJA Tfll B5A?* Sold and guaranteed by all drug
re U" 5 gists to CUKE Tobacco Ilablt.
$3,000 DEPOSIT
' TO KEDKKM OUR
GUARANTEE OF POSITIONS.
K. I*. Fare Paid. Actual Buaineae. Free
Tuition tooneof each sex in every county of
your state. WRITE QUICK to
UA.-ALA. BUS. COLLEGE, flacon,Ga.
For INDIGESTION and DYSPEPSIA.
“I have found immediate relief In evory in.
stunce.”—P. B. LOCDEN, Philadelphia
A cure for a try. 26e. a box. Ask your drug
gist, or write ior free sample to
TIZAKUKE CO., Tarpon Springs, Fla.
MODI? Gonernl Agents wanted In yonr state. We
luvlllJ payaUexpe n se9audslSttweek salary an 1 lib
eral commission. No eunvassing.tt'rire.KivlnK referen
ce*. LYONS IIItOK CO.. Perm b ldg, cluclunuU.O.
WANTED— Case of bad health that RTP AN 8
will not benefit. Send 6 cte. to ltlpane Chemical
Cos.. NewYork, for it) -ample, and lota) testimonials.
CAT FSMFN WOporweMc and expenses gtiaran
\ t-hJiiiui teed; good men. Stamp for reply.
Zero Machine Cos., 98 Nelson St., Atlanta, (Sa
The Bnmboalmen of the Orient.
There is probably not a port at
which ships ever touch where the busi
ness of bumboating docs not exist. In
China it is especially active as well as
at the various ports of Indo-Cliina and
British India. The bumboatmen of
Alexandria, Egypt, are said to he the
laziest of thoir profession. Too indo
lent to make an effort to got alongside
a ship, they sail aimlessly up and
down among vessels In the harbor,
crying monotonously, “Ebryting! ebry
ting!” This is Intended to describe the
extensiveness of their wares, but it is
deceptive, for they usually have next
to nothing to sell. Sometimes they
rouse themselves just before a ship is
about to depart, and come alongside,
offering pigeons and other birds and
animals, which the sailors often buy
for pets. In far-away Madagascar the
natives are enthusiastic bumboat trad
ers, and frequently swarm about the
ship In great numbers.—New York Tri
bune.
Mule, for tlie FIJI I.land..
Forty mules have been sent to the
Fiji Islands from San Francisco, Cal.
They will he used on a large sugar
plantation. This is the first shipment
of the kind, and is regarded as an ex
periment. which, if successful, will re
sult in many others of the animals be
ing sent to the South Sea Islands.
Plantation Chill Cure is Guaranteed
■Pn>a.•;!!:.
PfflMffaTi all the
■jgpPrMnnbmps uml scourges of the
Even since the few
■tiff years since Koch's discovery
PJer 2,000,000 persons on this eonti
| nont have succumbed to Its fatal infec
tion. The annual tribute of the United
States to this scourge is over 100,000
of its Inhabitants.
“Each year tlie World yields up 1,-
095,000; each day, 0,000; each minute,
2, of Its people as a sacrifice of this
plague. Of tlie 70,000,000 individuals
now peopling these United States 10,-
000,000 must Inevitably die of this dis
ease if the present ratio is kept up.
“The underlying principle in any
warfare against tuberculosis must be
the universal knowledge and recogni
tion of the fact that we are to deal
with a disease that is communicated
from one individual to another, and
where there are no germs of the dis
ease there it can never originate de
novo. A house, a neighborhood, a conn,
try, in fact, can become Infected with
this disease, and tills fact has been re
peatedly established by historical
data.
“That meat from the tuberculosis
animals Is capable of producing tuber
culosis has been demonstrated by
scientific experiments. We cook our
meat, but the lovers of rare roast beef
and rare steak, or even Bologna sau
sage, will probably orten take into
their stomachs many tubercle bacilli
whose vitality has becu unimpaired.
“But what are we to say of the thou
sands of infants that die annually
from tubercular lesions as a result of
taking milk from tuberculous cows?
Whose is the responsibility for feeding
them upon a diet whose results are as
surely fatal as slow poison if they be
long to the large majority of the sus
ceptible? Milk is one of the chief in
fected foods which we obtain from the
lower animals, and it is the only ani
mal food which we consume uncooked.
The milk supply of a municipality
should he as carefully watched as its
water supply.
“The people must know just what
this disease is and just how it is con
tracted. They must be taught that
the chief agent of contamination in
tlie human family is tlie sputum. llow
important, then, are those newer ordi
nances which many cities are now
making, prohibiting spitting in public
places, public buildings and public
conveyances?
“Consumption is an Indoor disease.
Where sunlight and pure air are boun
tifully enjoyed there tuberculosis can
find but little lodgment.”
Confusion In Telepathy.
Avery 1 remarkable occurrence lias
been brought to my notice. Recently
a well known lady, who shall be called
Jones, dreamed a ridiculous dream, as
inconsequential as most dreams are.
Mrs. Jones dreamed that a dog of hers
had died and that sue received an offi
cial communication ordering her either
to cremate the remains or to herself
skin the animal and throw the body
into tlie river. Mrs. Jones chose the
latter alternative, but having half
skinned the body and becoming tired
threw it as it was into tlie water. ’Tlie
dog disappeared for an instant and
then reappeared on tne surface alive
and, swimming across to the opposite
bank, trotted off, evidently in groat
suffering. There ends the dream. The
next morning the postman brought sev
eral letters. The first one was ad
dressed to Lewis Jones, Esq.—there
being no such person—and ran as fol
lows; "Sir. your dog crossed the riv
er last night on to my property, hut
being very severely injured It was
found necessary to kill it.* Should ymu
wish to have the collar, which hears
your name and address, I shall he hap
py to send it to you.” No dog belong
ing to Mrs. Jones had died nor had
she lost one!—London Truth.
Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Sway.
To quit tobacco easily ami forever, bo mag
netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take N'o-To
iiac. the wonder worker, that makes weak men
strong. All druggists. 50c or *l. Cure guaran
teed. Booklet and sample free. Address
sterling Remedy Cos., Chicago or New York.
Fear is the deadly foe of success in every
legitimate undertaking.
I could not get nlong without Plan's Cure
for Consumption. It always cures.—Mrs. E C.
Moulton, Needham, Mass., October 22, 1894
J S Parker. Fred on'a, N.Y., says: "Shall
not ca l on you for the SIOO reward, for I be
lieve Hall’s Catarrh < tire will pure any case of
catarrh. Was very bad.” Write him for par
ticulars. Sold by Druggists, 75c.
.Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
eething.softens the gums, reduces inflamma
tion, allays pain.cures wind colic. 2oc. a pottle.
Kits permanently cured. No firs or nervous
ness after first day s use of Dr. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer. *2 trial bottleand treatise free
I>k. H. ii. Kune. Ltd.. 931 Arch St.. I’hlln.. I’a.
“A drop of ink makes millions think.” but
don’t be afraid of getting a drop too much.
No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak
men strong, blood pure. 50c, sl. All druggists.
While exaggerated statements may make a
sale, the: never makea regular customer.
To cure, or money refunded by your merchant, so why not try it? Price oOc.
■ c EttscKi
■L foM tpr
■He
■ iht'l
Hr like a demesne
■r -*
_ • . Wlttil he should
l qj the happy
$ he tv mid led
but would give it
4 !:<itself—he would set it free.
he thon opened the place in which
it had been kept, and brought it to the
back green. How he was astonished!
It walked about, feeling as if this
were rather bigger than his ordinary
run, but that was all. He was disap
pointed, and taking the big bird in his
arms, he lifted it up and set it up on
his garden wall. It turned and looked
down at him! The sun had been ob
scured behind a cloud, but just then
tlie cloud passed away, and the bright,
warm beams poured out. The eagle
lifted its eyes and pulled Itself up. I
wonder what it was thinking? Gan an
eagle recollect the cliffs and crags, the
reveling in the tempests of long ago,
the Joyous thunder and the flashing
lightnings? Pulling itself up, it lifted
one wing and stretched it out and it
lifted the other wing and outstretched
it. Then it gave a scream, and soon
was a vanishing speck in the blue of
heaven.—Presbyterian Banner.
Are You Using Allen’s Foot Ease?
It is the only cure for Swollen, Smarting,
Tired, Aching, Burning, Sweating Feet,
Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen’s Foot-
Ease, a powder to be shaken into the shoes.
Sold by all Druggists, Grocers and Shoe
Stores, 25;. Sample sent FREE- Address
Allen S. Olmsted, Leßoy, N. Y.
Antwerp i* the principal market of Bel
gium for paints and colors.
To Cure Constipation Forever.
Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c,
if C. C. G. fail to cure, druggists refund mousy.
Silence may be golden but gossip gains
currency.
H Does Your
col Atiie ?
Are your nerves weakP
Can’t you sleep well? Pain
in your back? Lack energy?
Appetite poor? Digestion
bad? Boils or pimples?
Theke arc sure signs of
poisoning.
From what poisons?
From poisons that are al
ways found in constipated
bowels.
If the contents of tho
bowels are not removed from
the body each day, as nature
intended, these poisonous
substancas are sure to be
absorbed into the blood, al
ways causing suffering and
frequently causing severe
disease.
There is a common sense
cure.
They dailv insure an easy
and natural movement of
the bowels.
You will find thatthe use of
S Ayer’s
arsapariua
with the pills will hasten
recovery. It cleanses the
blood from all Impurities and
is a great tonic to the nerves.
Wrko the Doctor.
Our Mtidical Dopartn*nt has on*
of tho most sminent physician* In
the Unitd But**. Tell th* dootor
Jut ho*? you *ne suffering. ¥oa
will reoelve ih* best medical adrico
Without cost. AddrOMS,
DR. J. C. AVER,
Lowell, Mat*.
BR. MOFFETT’S fi "SLt
wiiiEEimN A
gjpcC JS tel" ■ ■■lll Children of Any Age.
feBI Mm “ TEETHING POWDERS ABk°Tow%anSt for It
jpT SHOOTERSSJTOOT
mJzm WINCHESTER
MJxSr •V/mI Rifles, Repeating Shotguns, Ammunition and
mKT / I' oa< k Shotgun Shells. Winchester guns and
IjV- &*[ 'jTK V ammunition are the standard of the world, but
a do not cost any more than poorer makes.
All reliable dealers sell Winchester goods.
nHHH FREE : Send name and address on a postal for 156
\*B Pal?e describing all the guns and
"""winchester ‘repeating ARMS CO.,
W.nlii 176 WINCHESTER AYE., MEW HAVEN, CONH,
SUFFEtPO AND TM
[letter to urb. riNEHAU o. 69,(86|^^H
11 Dear Mbs. Pinkham —Two yeur*;
ago I began having such dull, heavyS
dragging pains in my back, mensesq
were profuse and painful, and was
troubled was leuebrrhoea. I took
patent medicines and consulted a phy
sician, but received no benefit and
could not become pregnant. Seeing
one of your books, I wrote to you tell
ing you my troubles and asking for
advice. You answered my letter
promptly and I followed the directions
faithfully, and derived so much benefit
that I cannot praise Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound enough-
I now find myself pregnant and have
begun its use again. I cannot praise
it enough.”— Mbs. Coba Gilson, Yates,
Manistee, Mich.
“Your Medtclno Worked Wonders.**
“ I had been sick ever since my mar
riage, seven years ago; have given
birth to four children, and had two
miscarriages. I had falling of womb,
leuoorrhoea, pains in back and legs;
dyspepsia and a nervous trembling of
the stomach. Now I have none of these
troubles and can enjoy my life. Your
medicine has worked wonders for
me.”—Mbs. S. Baunhart, New Castle,
Pa-
GOLDEN CROWN
LAMP CHIMNEYS
Are tl>n bent. Ask for them. Colt no more
than common chimneys. All tlenler*.
FITTS BURG GLASS CO., Allegheny, Fn.
Malsby & Company,
39 S. llrond St., Atlanta, Oa.
Engines and Boilers
Strain Water Heater*, Steam Pump* and
Penberthy Injector*.
Manufacturers and Dealers la
SAW MIXbXbS,
Corn Mill*, Feed Mill*,Cotton Gin Machin
ery and Grain Separators.
SOLID ami INSERTED Saw*, Saw Tenth and
Locks, Knight's Patent Dog*, Itlrdsall Saw
Mill and Engine Repair*, Governors, Giate
ltar* ami a full line of Mljl Supplies. Price
and quality of goods guaranteed. Catalogue
free by mentioning this paper.
The Greatest Railway Systems of
the United States
Use CARTER’S INK
They wouldn’t use it if it wanr‘c goou.
Costs you no more than r or ink.
Insist upon having it.
SALESMEN WANTED.
CHAM’S MAGNIFICENT TWENTIETH
CENTI/C, M AP OF UNITED STATES all.t
WORLD JiiHt comp)tiled. Laracst,latest and
most accurate map over printed on one sheet
in tho world Shows all recent changes. Sells
at, slttlit Price low. Exclusive territory civon.
Blx profit to salesmen. Also Handsomest Lino of
Low-Priced, Qnlok-Selllnx Hook* and Family
Itll.tcH over offered Address HDDCINSPIIII
LJSHING CO., Kiser Building, Atlanta, Ga.
‘ELF’ REFRIGERANT
I A ov**r 20 degrees colder than B
I O ,n gerntort Just like fj fl■ l*
a perfect Nubntttute tor "'*■■
SEND FOR CIRCULARS. AGENTS WANTED.
UNIVERSAL REFRIGERATING GO., 4
21)2 Flushing Avenue, BROOKLYN, N. It.
nPOPCVNEWMSCOVERY; siv,„
•L# * I qtiiok relief and cures worst
oasen. Rook of testimont&lnaud I O tin v*’ treatment
Free. Dr. H. H. OKEIH'S sons, box I). Atlxntx, 0.
imm mill* and Whiskey Habits
Ihm R H B RaJ| cured at home with
al D S BBS IWI outpuin. 1t..0k of pur-
BILiMIH tlcukrs sent IK EE.
MHBHIVaBi B.M.WOOLLKY, M.D.
w Atlanta, UA. Office 104 N. I’ryor St.
la burlswhTßeall tg
U Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use JH
m in time. Bold by druggtsts. f*l
USE CERTAIN CHILL CURE.
MENTION THIS PflPEßrr^o to