Newspaper Page Text
THE, PULPIT
AN ELCQUENT SUNDAY SERMON BY
THE REV. H. MARTIN, PH. D.
T ——
Subject: The Abundant Life.
Brooklyn, N. Y.—Sunday morning,
in the First Church of Christ (Disci-!
ples), the pastor, the Rev. Herbert
Martin, Ph. D., preached on “Religion
and Life.” The text was from John
10:10:“I came that they may have
life, and may have it abundantly.”
Dr. Martin said:
Christ came not to teach a theol
ogy primarily, if at all, but to give
life, more life. He came to give life
to others rather than live a self-cen
tered life. I came that they may have
life. He came to give life here ard
now. His emphasis was upon the
present life. He that hath the Son!
hath life. Life in the future is a |
coratlary to present life. To have life i
here and now is the only guarantee,
thejdnly possibility of future life.
The value and need of religion for
thespresent life are being emphasized
to-day as at no time since the early'
Christian era. This identification of
religion and life tends to make re-‘
ligion a normal phenomenon in hu
man experience. Religion bhas long
suffered because of its almost ex
clusive other-world emphasis. Its re
moval to the future as the proper
sphere of its activity, its other-world
adyantages caused men to regard it
as an abstract, vague and unreal, and
to treat it as having little practical
benefit for the present. Under such
conditions religion would be disre
garded, or, if accepted, it would be in
an almost altogether objective way as
a precautionary measure, and thus
never become a vital element in the
program of daily life. The normal
man is intensely interested in the
present, and in the sweet by-and-by.
only as it is related to his present
interest. .If religion is to cut any
real figure in this life it can do so only
as it links itself to and identifies rtself
with his present interests. And this
religion is capable of doing, and is
doing. The Master identified Himself
with the life of the people; in fact,
He came that He might give life to
the people. 3 o
The same hopeful sign is diszovera- :
ble in the educational world. Com-!
pare the curricula of the schools and
colleges of other days with those of
to-day and how evident is the differ
ence. Education as' preparation for
living in the far future, even of the
present life, does not and never did
appeal to the normal mind unless the
appeal was effected through a liberal
application of physical force. Since
the days of Rousseau education as
mere preparation has gradually and
beautifully fallen into disrepute. Ed
ucators have discovered the practical
1y complete absorption of the child in
the present. They have discovered,
furthermore, that even the young
child must live while being.educated,
and that as such it must enjoy certain
rights. As a result of these discov
eries education is no longer a mere
formal process whose goal is utterly
remote from the present life inter
ests. Education aims to equip the
student for present living since he
must live while he is in process of
being educated. You cannot take a
boy of fifteen yvears and educate him
for some position at thirty and ex
pect him to fill that position satisfac
torily if you wholly disregard the fact
that he lives and must live from
fifteen to thirty. Modern education
takes note of this and seeks, while
looking toward the future, to qualify
the student in the largest way to live
the fullest life in the present days and
by so living will he be able to realize
those future expectations. In addi
tion to form, education gives content,
or better, to-day minds are formed
and fashioned by giving them a con
tent. Education and religion seek to
vitalize the present and out of it to
make possible the future. Their aim
is one, inspired by the Master, to give
more life.
Jesus came with life for the peo
ple and brought it to the people. He
sought the people. He went out af
ter them instead of waiting for the
people to come to Him. His life was
one of faith in God and service to
and among men. He came to min
ister, and did minister. He came to
give life and He gave it every day.
The life of men was being enriched
and ennobled as He gave Himself,
His life to them each day. The giv
ing of His life on the cross was, from
this point of view, the final act of
that life which was, par excellence,
the life-giving life. Organized re
ligion is beginning to go out after
and to the people. Churches have
long since ceased to be built whose
entrances are guarded by iron gates
and padlocks. “Strangers welcome,”
that condescending phrase, does not
appear so frequently on our church
signs. Religion has girded herself
for service. She is working in the
Young “Men’s and Young Women’s
Christian Associations, and is found
in settlement and slum work. Her
voice ig heard in the factory noon-day
meetings, on the street corners, in
the theatres and in all the busy
haunts of men. Organized religion is
hearing the Master's voice, is cateh- |
ing His inspiration who said, “I came I
that they may have life.” 8o of edu
cation. It is being given to the peo
ple. It is no longer the peculiar
privilege of the few. The people are
being sought out and compelled to be
educated. Education is for the peo
ple and is being given to the people.
Education aims to give more life
te the individual, and more life for
more individuals. It is true that
knowledge enlarges one’s world and
contributes to his survival. His hori
zon is widened, his ideas and ideals
are enlarged, he discovers a deeper
meaning in things, life takes on other
and better aspects; in short, he pos
sesses a larger life. This larger life,
more life, is becoming possible for
more individuals. While this is true,
there remains yet much to be desired
in our public schools, high schools
and colleges. Let us remember that
in our system the higher the grade
the fewer the pupils; that out of one
hundred pupils who enter public
schools only twenty-five stay long
enough to read and write; that only
twenty out of one hundred stay longer
than the fifth grade; that less than
one out of one hundred who enter
eur public schools graduate from the |
high schools; that a small proportion |
of high school graduates enter col-|
lege, and that a small percentage of
those who enter college remain until
graduation; all this in the face of
the fact that our system is graded
largely toward the university. If ed
ucation gives life it should give more
life to a greater number of indi
viduals. Jesus taught that the ninety
and nine that were safe within the
told could not furnish an excuse for
the neglect cf the one that was away.
With these tiings in mind should we
rest content with that system which
saves the one to the neglect of the
ninety and nine? '
To preduce such a result, no one
cause is adequate. It has been fre
quently said, and with truth, that the
course of study does not have suf
ficient vital contact with the life and
interest of the pupil, and consejuent
ly, because of its lack of intervst for
him, fails to hold him. Rapid pro
gress, however, is being made in our
own city toward the correction of
such undesirable conditions. Anoth
er cause, more deep-seated and more
serious, is the growing commercial
spirit of the day. The dollar is the
circle of life. Men sell the.r own
souls and put under tribute their
children’s for dollars. There is great
need for resolute struggle against
the allurements of dollars. Too many
L altars are being builded to the god of
gold; too many souls are being sacri
ficed upen these altars. It is hard,
ves, well nigh impossible, to trans
mute commercial ideals, dollars and
cents into more abundant life. :
Our course of study may well neeld
revision, may require a radical change
in content. But our greatest need is
larger and truer ideals established
firmly in the hearts and minds of our
boys and girls. A greater emphasis
must be placed upoua moral and ideal
than upon material and commercial
values. The voice in defense of the
child’s inalienable rights, his heritage
of meral and religious ideals, should
ring deep into the hearts of parents,
Parents need to learn that the dollar
is not the goal of life, that the child
is more than the victim of a parent’s
base ideals; that he is more than a
money-making machine. They need
to learn that the child has a self-hood
to be developed, a soul to be cultured,
and a destiny to be achieved. To
take a child out of school and compel
him to earn money is to deny him his
rights, is ta degrade him. For
parents to do so is selfish, brutal, im
moral. I repeat that one of the great
est evils that threaten our nation is
iour too complete allegiance to com
mercial ideals. Our mad' rush for
gold makes us a nation of individuals
rather than a democracy. Christ
says, “No man liveth unto himself.”
In New York it sometimes seems as
though every man reversed that prin
ciple. Individualism is a menace to
the life of the republic. There is, as
never before, a crying need for
parents and teachers to exalt moral
and spiritual values; a need to de
throne the god of gold and to re
enthrone the God of old; a need to
engrave upon the very physical and
spiritual fiber of the child’s nature
the exceeding, the incomparable
worth of moral character. Parents
themselves need to possess and prop
erly estimate these ideals and then to
instill them and give them first place
in the hearts of their children. Such
ideals of truth and righteousness, im
plying as they do a profounder sense
| of social obligation, will contribute in
the highest degree to the enrichment
-.-i)t- human life, to a more abundant
ife. A - .
Mighty possibilities are resident in
the teacher’s vocation because of the:
material with which he works. Eter
nal consequences follow therefrom.
The true teacher spends little time
waiting for pay day to come. His is
a worthier work than that of a mere
wage earner. He is a maker for
social betterment, not a mere hire
ling. As with the preacher, right
eousness is his concern; with God he
is a co-worker. That our teachers
might feel that they are called of God
and are doing God’s work, there was
& Man sent from God who was named
Teacher. He Himself says His mis
sion was to give a more abundant
life. That was His mission, that was
His religion, that was His life. The
religious aspect of the teacher’s work,
tfirellglon of education, if you will,
is'a subject worthy of more thought
than it has received.
While there is an imperative need
for teachers with ideals, we must not
forget that the ideals must be of pos
sible attainment. We need, then,
sane teachers, teachers balanced by
perspective. False ideals, ideals he
yond the realm of the possible, held
up before the young, defeat the
teacher’s purpose. Hold up before a
boy an impossible ideal, making him
struggle toward its realization until
one day its utter absurdity dawns
upon him, and with what result? His
cherished idol falls and with it there
come tumbling down all his ideal con
‘structs. In this day when our college
presidents are little more than money
gatherers, when our school principals
are little more than clerical workers,
there is a positive need for teachers
with lofty ideals, but ideals within
the realm of possible achievement,
Impossible ideals'made for lawless
ness rather. than for righteousness
and the betterment of life.
We need, finally, to rediscover the
meaning of life, to learn that a man’s
life consisteth not in the abundance
of the things that he possesses. We
need to rediscover the fact of God,
and that in Him we live and move
and have our being. He is the source
of our life and to find Him is to find
fuller life. There is need to re-em
phasize the fact of Christ as the Re~
véaler of the true life which is the
life of service. The life of the world
has received a n2w impulse in Him.
His faith and practice were that the
only way to find life is to give life.
Christ gave His life in deeds of loving
service even unto death that the life
heritage of humanity might be en
riched. He thus emphasized in teach
ing and in life gocial obligation. For
Him every enriched life was an in
creased social asset. From Him we
learn that the inheritance of life into
which we have come must be gshared
with our fellows and passed on to
others enhanced in value by reason
of our participation. To give life is
to make life more abundant.
A Test,
If any of you should die to-day,
could you say to God, “Lord, here is
my Jife-work. Thou didst send me
into life with a handful of seeds, and
here is my heart, like a garden, full
of flowers!”—Henry Ward Beecher,
#.. ‘THREE HIS LIMIT. E 5
ot TR
“T want you to write a play tog‘fi*m |
immediately.” A
“I can’t do it until T get rid of some |
of my present oontracta,”A.deM lared |
the successful dramatist. “I already |
write on a typewriter with each hand |
and dlctate with my mopth."—;WQfgggh »
ington Herald.
%o Drive Out Malaria and Build Up |
the System e
Take the Old Standard Grove's Tasrs |
Less CriuL Tonte. You know what
are taking. The formule is plainly gfll{a
on ever fiotde, showing it is simply % :
nine am{ Iron in a tusteless form, and )
‘most affectual form. ior grown people
ead childrean. 50¢ o
S L eredlt
The man who waits for somethi:&,
to turn up, usually finds himself
crushed under it when it does turn.
CUES ALL ITCHING ERUPTIONS, |
Glencoe, Md., Nov. 21st, 1907: I have had |
eczema on my hands for 12 years, and have,
tried everything. I have been using TRTe
TERINE 4 days and the resuits are great,®
Bigned, Mrs. M, Harvey., TETTERINE is the |
surest, safest, speediest cure for eczema
and all other skin diseases. Sold by druge
gists or sent by mail for 50e. by J. fl?. BRUPe
TRINE, Dept. A, Savannah, Ga. S
WHAT WAS NEEDED FOR DINNER
Mrs. Gramercy—What do we need
for dinner?
Bridget—Shure, Mum, Of tripped
over the rug an' we need a new set
of dishes.—Puck. i
Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's
Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists.
A NEW BRANCH.
Tramp—l'm loccking for a job at me
trade, mum. i
Housekeeper—Well, what is your |
trade? S
Tramp—Dentistry, mum. Me spe
cialty is insertin’ teeth in minoe ptes.
—Boston Transcript. o '
Catarrh Cannot. Be Cured
with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they can |
not reach the seat of the disease. Ca
tarrh is a blood or constitutional disease,
end in order to cure it you must take inter
nal remedies. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken
internally, and acts directly on the blood
and mucous surfaces. Hali Catarrh Cure
is not a ?lack medicine. It was prescribed
by one of the best physicians in this coun
try for years and is a regular preseription.
It is composed of the best tonics known,
combined with the best blood purifiers, act
ing directly on the mucous surfaces. ihe
perfect combination of the two ingredients
18 what produces such wonderful results in
curing Catarrh. Send for testimonials free.
F. J. CneNxey & Co., Props., Toledo, Q.
Sold b{ Drufigista, grifi: 75¢. S
Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation,
S ON HER GUARD. :
“You see,” said the professor, “tha
science of chemistry depends on the
discovery of certain afinities—"
“Pardon me,” interrupted Misy
Prym, “I trust the conversation can
proceed without drifting into scandal.”
—Washington Star. :
ONE KIDNEY GONE, 3
But Cured After Doctors Said There
Was No Hope. '
Sylvanus O. Verrill, Milford, Me.,
says: “Five years ago a bad injury
e~ paralyzed me and
; ¥ affected my kid
,/ § neys. My back
) o tham 0 hurt me terribly,
%“&& ~ and the urine was
7.0 badly disordered.
RO BRI Doctors said® my
;\"l,_,_‘?-_;/{,/_ by, right kidney was
A ////4 g/ practically dead.
V/‘,’;/';Z&,'-'f They sald I could
= never walk again.
I read of Doan’s Kidney Pills and be
gan using them. One box made me
stronger and freer from pain. I kept
on using them, and in three months
was able to get out on crutches, and
the kidneys were acting better. I im
proved rapidly, discarded the crutches
and to the wonder of my friends was
soon completely cured.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
REAL EVIDENCE.
“l see that an English duke, by a
series of imaginary bets, haz demon
etrated that you can’t beat a gaming
table.” , t
“Huh! I've proven that many a
time with real money.”—Washington
Herald.
- _____—-—-——————___._________
Pimples, Itching Humors, Rheumatism, Blood
Poison, Eczema, Bone Pains.
8.8 B. (Botanie Blood Balm is the only Blood remedy that kill the polson in ST
the blood and then purifies it—sending a flood of Hm re rlci blood directtoth skin 4
glrtm Bones Joints and whereve th disease 18 ocated. In this way all Bores, N &
leers 'lerlu, Eruptions are healed an” cure pains and aches of Rheumatism 3 2
. . . Joease, swellin lubufde. 8.8.8 comyletoly changes the body into clean, healthy ‘
”ld{“&i"!’l. glv?:g’!t‘he ‘n‘un.fiiooréeh rehh\u l;,l &c:r&etflutlt&. B. 11"1'3‘. glurelithe v! 1
worst o b . at ores w tions
Cures Through the Blood for home cure. BAMPLE FRER by wiiiiog BLOOD BRI €O, briomie 4% PR
M*“—%*'_ T—— g —
_—— [P—— - ro— SR i et L
; THE J. R. WATKINS MEDICAL (0.
A B 9 wtier 30 DioverneßßES LR OY B: Se—
v o o P
DA BEST PROPOSITION EVEr OFrencs AGENTS
o 2 CURED
rn S Gives
: E Quick
A Relief.
\ ¢ Removes all swelling in Bto2o
, days; effects a permanent cure
4 \ 2 in3oto 6o days, Trialtreatment
by 4 given free, Nothingean be fairer
ol Write Dr. H. H, Green stona'
AR #Speclalists, Box B Atlanta,
———— i ———— A R
The best medicine for all ills is a
cheerful mind.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma
tion.allays pain. cures wind colic, 25¢ a bottle
Finish.
Mars was in great consternation. A
huge black bulk was observed to be
falling through space.
“What in the name of Saturn’s rings
do you call that?” asked Mars of Ve
nus. “Is it another moon cast off
by the earth?”
“No,” replied Venus, “that is the
battleship Dreadnaught the Seven
teenth. The last nation eclipsed all
the other nations by building a bat
tleship so big it toppled off the ocean
and tumbhled into space.”—Philadel
phia Record ;
'! \4‘ ¢ 9,
{TOWER'S FISH BRAND,
{WATERPROOF \{Q\
|OILED CLOTHING |\
looks better -wears longer -
ggd&gvcsmom R / ‘
ily comfort L3s\
{ because cut on 4. .
| lorge patterns, yet - \
| costs no more than SN
the Just as good ‘kinds\ \ 4 \
A SUITS*39O SLICKERS*3OO. @
SOLD EVERYWHERE | [R3% \
Cvery garment -‘OWER;y ; z.k:
SSnclinen | ofea | SET ¢
: B terpoot Fsupr® cansioo Frce
LIoR et aoien B 8 Ton 1 ¥ fomonto cani
e . T ke e, A .i S ———————
. TRAGEDY IN REATL LIFE.
She forgot to mention him in her will,
Did his unforgiving elderly aunt.
He had kept her house while sha
went abroad,
And forgot to water the rubbet
plant.—Chicago Tribune.
) A Cure for Hog Lholera.
Hog Cholera or Swine Plague as it
is sometimes called is a highly con
tagious disorder.
When a rog shows any symptoms of
this disease, he should be isolated at
once and the pen fumigated in order
to save the other hogs if possible.
. Mix one part Sloan’s Liniment with
‘two parts milk in a bottle and give
every sick hog a tablespoonful of this
mixture night and morning for three
_days. Sloan’s Liniment is a power
ful antiseptic, kills the disease germs,
soothes all inflammation and acts as
@ tonic to the animal.
A. J. McCarthy of Idaville, Ind,
says:— My hogs had hog cholera
‘three days before we got Sloan’s
Liniment, which was recommended to
- me by a neighbor who was using it
i with success. 1 have used it now for
three days and my hogs are almost
well. One hog died before I got the
Liniment, byt I have not lost any
since.”
Mr. G. W. Balsbaugh of Peru, Ind.,
“writes:—“l had four pigs that were
.coughing and wcre not doing well. I
gave them some of Sloan’s Liniment
and they got better at once.”
Sloan’s book on Horses, Cattle,
Hogs and Pouitry sent free. Address
Dr. Earl 8. Sloan, Boston, Mass,
i da) & RN ULY,
“What isß your idea of helping the
farmer?”
“Well,” answered Senator Sorghum,
L"the first and most important thing
is to give him some good advice about
_h_gw to vote.”—Washington Star.
A 0 BIS eI et e
Engines, Corn Shellers,
3 Bolers, Cotton Planters,
Mg&?fiummnmm
30 . sendforfreecataiogue. [
WLDOUGLAS
300 SHOES 5350
..’/ .."' ] £ ‘.-."" .—_‘Q
A by y N 1
&> %\
() 4 il 3
2/ : ] B/s l’%
; i Qo) AN
e ' / ] “
4 &5 ) (4
l '\ A “'/
R Nt
” N _-l“;; ’,' - 1
R e
W. L. Douglas makes and sells more
men’s u.og and $3.50 shoes than any
other manufacturer in the worid, he
ecnuse they hold theis shape, fit better,
and wear longer than any other make.
at Al Prices, for E of the
m,. Mea, loyu,'l'om:,.mou: Children
W.L.Deuglas .00 and $5.00 Giis Edge oannot
S T R et
.-'l‘afo N..‘uluug:l..: o Bonties
oot iy S 02 Solom, ol
w.‘c’ the world. Catalogue free, 7 0 *%7
. L. DOUGLAS, 157 Spark St., Brocktos, ‘Mass.
Malaria Makes Pale Sickiy Children
The Old Standard GROVE’S TASTELESS CHILI, TONIC, drives out Malaria and builds up the
system. You know what you are taking. ,The formula is plainly priated on every bottle, showing it
is simply Quinine and Iron in a tasteless, and the most effectual form, For adults and children, 50¢, f
B s voss righier Rout FDDIng apert- Write o tres.bonsie "%, Buckago colors ail fbers. Coiors. MON KO DILOG O Qatocy, Titingies
D e ettt ———— e e ORC ) 804 Mix Colors. MONKROK L}
-
Coughing Spells
are promptly relieved by a sin-
Al gle dose o(‘im’n Cure, The N
@ regular use of this famous re-
Bl medy will relieve the worst (6]
(&% form of Mll‘hl, colds, hoarse
» ness, bronchitis, asthma and die- O
K@) cases of the throat and lunr. pr
Absolutely free from harmful
' OV E drugs antfvo;;‘iatu. For half a Sf‘
centu7 the household remedy
in milfions of homes,
At all druggists’, 25 cts.
“loTTO.
Giotto, dipping his pencil in red
paint and using his elbow as a pivot,
had just drawn a perfect circle.
“See his fine Itallan hand!” ex
claimed the enthusiast'c bystanders.
Thereafter, as we learn from the
cyclopedias, Giotto, moved in the
most exclusive art circles.—Chicago
Tribune.
DOUBLE THE PROBLEM.
“T dem’t know whether to take up
an airship cr a submarine,said the
ametedr inventor, :
“Try the airship.” advised a friena.
“All you have to do is to get it up;
it is bound to come down. Now, ..e
submarine you have to get down and
then get it up again.”—Houston
Chronicld.
CONSTIPATION AND BILIOUSN ERS,
Constipation sends poisonous matter
bounding through the body. Dull headache,
sour Stomach, Feted Breath, Bleared Eves,
Loss of Energy and Appetite are the surest
signs of the afliction, &00!0" Liver PirLs
positively oure constipation. They awaken
the sluggish liver to better aetion, elennse
the bowaels, strengthen the weakened parts,
induce appetite and aid digestion. Price
25 cents from your dealer or direct from
the laboratory. Freo sample by mall to any
address. J. M. Youna, Jn., Waycross, (in.
* No killings are made by those who
alm too high, observes #%he Dallas
W o e
SEVERE BLEEDING HEMCRRHOIDS,
T \
Sores, and Ttching Kcezema-——Doctor
Thought an Operation Necessary
—=Cuticura's Hfficacy Proven.
“I am now eighty vears old. and three
years ago 1 was taken with an attack of
piles (hemorrhoids), bleeding and protrud
ing. The doctor said the only help for me
was to go to a hospilal and be operated on.
I tried several remedies for months but did
not get much help. During this time sores
appeared which chanced to a terrible itch
ing eczema. Then T began to use Cuticura
Soap. Ointment, and Pills, injecting n
quantity of Cuticura Ointment with a Cuti
cura Suppository Syringe. It {ook a month
of this treatment to get me in a fairly
healthy state and then T treated mysel!
once a day for three months and, afler
that, once or twice a week. The treat
ments T tried took a lot of money, and it
is fortunate that T used Cutieura. .7, 11
Henderson, Hopkinton, N. Y., Apr. 26, ’07.”
HAS TO PAD.
“Brevity is the soul of wit.”
“That may be. But a man who
has dally space to fill can’t afford too
many jokes to a column.”—Pittsburg
Post.
Hicks’ OCapudine Cures Women's
| Monthly Pains, Backache, Nervousness,
| and Headache. It's Liquid. Effects immo
| diately. Prescribed by physicians with best
| results. 10c., 25¢c., and 50¢., at drug stores.
Lucy Was Wise,
Mother—Lucy, did you tell God how
naughty you were last night?
Lucy—No, ma; for 1 was ashameld
to let it out of the family.—Judge.
RINTING oo
DESCRIP
OUTF|TB TION. For
formation write W, A, FOLE L
24 Hurt Street, 'Atlinu.%n. ;
Excellent Opportuniiies
—For Desirable Locations on the Line of the—
ATLANTA, BIRMINGHAM & ATLANTIC RAILROAD
TRAVERSING PRODUCTIVE GEORGIA AND ALABAMA.
m
There is no section in the country offering better op
portunities for farming, manufacturing plants, fruit grow
ing and stock raising.
The A. B. & A. furnishes unsurpassed transportation
facilities, operating from Birmingham and Atlanta to
Brunswick, Thomasville and Waycross, affording through
Brunswick, Steamship freight service on quick schedules
for New York, Boston and other eastern markets.
Should you desire to locate in this ‘‘Garden Spot of
the South,” it will pay you to communicate with either
of the undersigned.
J. R. ROWLAND, W. H. QUIGG,
Traffic Manager, General Freight Agent,
W. H. LEAHY, General Passenger Agent, Atlanta, Ga.
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The University and Commercial School, Abbeville, Ga,,
gives individual training preparing students thoroughly for eollege and untversity work.
Greatest care given to character building as well ag thorough training inteMectua ly.
Courses are complete and thorough. French, Greek, Latin and Engli<h Literature '..m{;
by able teachers. The Commercial Courses embrace Typewriting, Bookkeepin. Shorthand,
Arithmetie, Correspondence, writing, Banking Full ¢course in Telegrupby and allied work.
Ample grounds, good board, ten months’ tuition ;all for §l5O. Write for descriptive booklet to
C. M. GORDON, Prin. Commercial Dept JOHN A, MILLER, A B, Superintencent,
S
S FOR MEN
" : If the bettom of your
0 T shoe 18 different fromytho
bottom of your foot, it pushes t&le
4 PO ? bones out of place, straing the cords, i
Py k 2 O and (i?unm foot.ache and lnrxeneu. :
ol LA SEKREEMER shoes are Tn 3 like
AL e MADE BY human feet, and so really do fit.
P : AR Look for the label, 1f youwgo not
3 ¥ Fflfhflju ;\ndd'thn&a al‘oes {gadily. mu us
8%, 4P srockron Mass, | for dircetions how to secure them,
it R s U.B.A FRED. F., FIELD CO,, Brockton, Mass.
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A SURGICAL
OPERATION
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If there is any one thing that a
woman dreads more than anotheris
is a surgical operation.
We can_state without fear of a
contradiction that there are hun
dreds, yes, thousands, of operations
performed upon women in our hos
pitals which are entirely unneces
sary and many have been avoided by
LYDIA E.PINKHAM’S
For ]un()f of thig statement read
the following letters. .
Mrs. Barbara Dase, of Kingman,
Kansas, writes to Mrs. Pinkham :
* For eight years I suffered from the
- most severe form of female troubles and
was told that an oFemtion was my only
hope of recovery, I wrote Mrs, Pinkham
for advice, and took Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound, and it has saved
my life and made me a well woman.”
Mrs. Arthur R. House, of Church
Road, Moorestown. N. J., writes: .
‘I feel it is my duty to let people
know what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound has done for me. I
suffered from female troubles, and last
Mareh my physician decided that an
operation was necessary. My husband
objected, and urged me to try Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound,
and to-day I am well and strong.”
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
- remedy for female ills
and has positively cured thousands of
“women who have been troubled with
‘displacements, inflammation, ulcera
ltion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, and backache.
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick
women to write her for advice.
She has sulded thousands to
health. Address, Lynn, Mass.
- Wy ey HOW TO MAKE
Y MONEY 15ASY,
MONE Address envelopes
g and the money
comes in. Anybody ean doit. For particulars
Write Box 317, Clarksvilie, Tenn.
AKY man ean estimate Timber; oas'est, quickost and
Pranh By, Sand samp fof_particulars
‘——H'Ell-Pl Dr, inolaé ,5. fi.vlv;%"m
'WOMEN @ Thesiandard itemeds.
| sond for book, “Relief for Women,”
:RINCF DRUG CO., 30 W, 32dlt.,)l.¥.ct't_!:
. now curabie; thousands cured; re-
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