Newspaper Page Text
I HE PULPIT.
! : T s" s s sv
ie: Realizing the Pattern,
ln Keb.—The Rev. Merle A.
rh o recently entered upon the
his pastorate of the Con
'al Church at Monticello,
clU ,ied the pulpit of the First
Ltioual Church of this city
oorning. He spoke from He
r, • - See, saifh he, that thou
[ things according to the pat
{ shewed thee in the
taking the subject, “The
in the Mount, the Building
j a in.” Mr. Breed said in the
f his sermon:
, x t, which is a quotation from
05’40. sets before us a pic
nteresting as it is suggestive,
c Of Israel have been waiting
ore Mount Sinai. Their lead
?sj i8 hidden in the eloud
"fire-riven summit in com-
W itli Jehovah. While the
ue vsiting in the' plain, he
, forth to the mountain’s tow
,ak to be with God* to hear
for them and for himself, and
down a divine pattern of a
Ie for God’s worship and the
of men’s hearts and lives to
■ things. The people in gen
but earthly ambitions. While
as hidden in the clouds and
; of the mount, they were
with dancing and feasting,
ing and drinking, and rnak
en calves to worship, Moses is
g the pattern of that taber
out which the religious life
ation was to arise, and which
stamp its impress upon the
Moses is filling his soul with
n which he is to endeavor to
mong the rude, ignorant, su
us, half-wild Israelites in the
neath him. To one man came
mof heavenly things. The
■e to receive it through him.
work was to be that of bring
within tlieir reach and mak
al to them.
ision splendid came to him on
rhts. The details, measure-
of materials, labor
■action, were all to be wrought
he levels of common life upon
n. We may easily imagine
1 children of Israel and the
ribes about them greatly ad
ie completed tabernacle, with
ins of blue, purple and scar
its ark and altar, its candle
d cherubim, its pillars and
; canopies and courts, its holy
id holy of holies, its laver,
■at and mysterious separating
ut there was one who had 1
unething better, who knew
autiful and costly as it was,
of meeting but dimly fore
d forth the glory of that pat
wn him in the mount. The
aw only the tabernacle in the
Klain, but the eyes of Moses looked
Beyond and through that and saw
Hthe pattern he had beheld in the
!j. mount with God. And that is our
■ Brought together this morning, the
mmattcrn in the mount, the building in
plain, for life still has its Sinais,
Brhere we behold ideals, and it has
■ts plain, where these are to be real-
Bterf. Surely he is a sorry builder
m vho lias seen 110 pattern in the
I For the success of our building.
•Branch will depend upon our choice of
Hi pattern.
i 1 I The costliest building is manhood
Imd womanhood, that something we 1
all self, a life, character. Yet there !
i much haphazard building. With
he greatest variety of plans there is
ittlo attention to standards, and an
afiiiite variety of results, because the
pattern is not selected with the care
m architect draws liis designs upon
lis trestle board.
Vihat shall we build our lives —
ravel, or palace, or temple? It is an
ixhilarating reflection that every act
)r thought is building them into
iomething. What an infinite variety
ftpaUtcns. We can not build after
dram all—which shall we choose?
drat o must be unity in the design.
Ane eclectic method, pure and simple,
fi‘l hardly avail for this. What one
approved fails to win the appro-
r IOO the next. There must be
Immanence and real worth in the
P rain, if it i s to satisfy ourselves or
L ers as years pass. As we read
L ory an( t the great names of past
move before us, we often feel
hoL , sient they were - How like
u„J’ Midas, the Phrygian king of
ere, story ' How like a mold
-1,, nreme upon the shores of time
bompey the Great How Hke a
r onir cov ered ruin in the Roman
lOr > lm K Caesar.
.^, e may all be tabernacle
ju/f: . l!ke Moses, if we will.
Cot t i lUs me thod Moses followed Is
tlor ! J , thought of by us as excep
buiirtin l l s a ty P e f° r us each in our
too. are building,
iterX ev f y day - buildll >g tor
ioldnsM and our Scripture lesson
Ns t at OUr building must stand
lies win ', We have like opportuni
st he v,,' 1 , lae great Jewish lawgiver,
to hear" 1 ?' eyes to S€e Hod, and ears
Poose tn ° d ’ so have we - WiH we
Kites? !;J, ta bernacle pattern for our
Rrtfo-a- Very human soul,” wrote
bujji’to S greatest divine, “has a
nr it f, ud t )er fect plan, cherished
r%ar.u,. ‘ :e heart of God—a divine
hinrnV, raai ' ked out ’ which it en
[f hnfoirip i 6 t 0 live - This life, right-
Mautifui a complete and
Nby c A j' v “ ole ' an experience led
fret niA, and un f°lded by His se
pat ‘ le - in its conception,
phaiiM- - divine skill by which it
kentouß ’ i)ove a )l. great in the mo
kres.” T antl glorious issues it pre-
N r Poso<? Jl! ‘ , n] ay be used for other
h'l j I,’ I: houbt, but do they sat-
K till it r. , e insi Pid, unsatisfying,
Mweiii n „ s , a 1 wrou ght out a temple,
[ here Idace tor God most high?
on !? 6 win say . “But my life is
N&ion ,V‘ ir levels - It deals with
Nraenton i . nßs ’ the doing of
vht om r ? cta aud routine service,
rto act ? Uln!ty can there be for
Nts? [t iVe s uch large or worthy
l ray-cfliii, 'Editions were different,
Nht be °ther i.han it is, all this
ts 1 jus t thi R IT ?i^ rest to me - 1 ione to
Ht° o rpni * *nt° my living, but it is
It.” i? ? fr °m life as I have to
L eile befnr ere lies value of the
Palest of l L 3 ' T hi*ough Moses the
v • he people became part-
ners with him in building the taber
nacle. Moses did not rear it i.pon the
cloud-encircled mount, but in the
plain, that you and I might be encour
aged to realize the purpose of God
for us in the field of common daily re
lations and amid what will otherwise
be the drudgery of daily living. He
leaves us the same task. Merchant
and teacher, sailor and soldier, farm
er and workman, author and editor
housewife and clerk, mistress and
maid, lawyer and preacher, however
humble and obscure our lives seem,
we are to be fellow workmen with
God in bringing things divine into
these seemingly common and un
meaning activities and relations.
After the clouds and glory had with
drawn from Sinai, the humblest Is
raelite could point to the tabernacle
and say: “The glory of God still fol
lows us all through our wilderness
wanderings in that tabernacle yonder,
and without me it would never have
been complete.” Your life, where it
is, is needed for the rearing of some
thing greater and better than the
tabernacle in the world of to-day, and
without it the kingdom ©f God will
never oome in its fullness. Before
this all other needs of our time sink
into insignificance; for the truest
tabernacle for the showing forth of
God to the world is not a pattern
hidden in the majesty of unapproach
able heights, nor is it temple ©r
cathedral, helpful as these may be,
but a life simple outwardly, though
with luxuriant and divine furnishings
within; a life spent on the levels
where our fellow men live theirs,
filled not with such consecrated fur
nishings as adorned the tabernacle
Moses fashioned, but with the graces
and kindly deeds men need to see and
feel near at hand. This is our work,
as divinely appointed to us as it was
to Moses. It is the greater building,
in which all our common tasks and
humblest efforts may have an honored
place as truly as did the altar and
laver in the ancient tabernacle.
But for this successful building of
our lives into God’s purpose we, too,
must seek our pattern in the mount.
God Himself builds according to
plan. Even a casual glance at His
wonderful world this morning w r ill
disclose that. Purpose and plan are
everywhere. Not one grain of send
is a law unto itself. Not one flower
blooms, or withers, unbidden. Not
one. leaf drops before its time. Not a
bird note is unrelated; its music is
born from present conditions and
wakes its own echo. All things fall
into their place and carry out the di
vine purpose.
This is the method f the divine
building, whether in nature or in hu
man lives. And it may be so in your
life and mine. We may know God’s
purpose for us and follow it as truly
a3 the grain of sand, the flower, the
bird of the air. “If any man willeth
to do His will,” said the Master, “he
shall know.” God doe* not withhold
His plan from any maa. The mount
is ever ready for the revealing of the
pattern, but men must take the time
to learn, to withdraw to its retreat.
The pattern came not te Moses till he
had twice spent forty days and forty
nights in the mount alo*e with God.
After many years’ tuition in the
wilderness came John the Baptist,
herald of Christ. The wilderness was
his mount of vision. Handel had a
spiritual ear, and gave the world th*
oratorio of the Messiah, and when %e
hear it we must not forget the long
period of preparation. Michael Ae
gelo had the spiritual eye and hand
and painted the frescoes of the Paul
ine Chapel with the representations
of the martyrdom of St. Peter and
the conversion of St. Paul, and carvad
the statues of “David” and “Moses.”
If Paul spent three years in Arabia
to meditate upon the vision he had
had of the Christ, who had met him
on his way to Damascus; if Christ
Himself retired to solitary places for
quiet and prayer, you and I need time
for such a disclosure of God’s will for
us as He is waiting to give. Before
we can rightly rear the tabernacle
of our lives in the plain of daily ser
vice we must seek the pattern in the
mount, not Sinai, but the heaven
reaching life of Christ. The divine
pattern has come near men in Jesus
Christ. We have net to seek it amid
the perils, darkness and difficulties
of Sinai; it is here with us, built in
all its divine perfection on the levels
of our daily needs; supplying us with
all desirable inspirations, helps and
satisfying fellowship, opening the
very vail by which we enter into the
most holy place itself. It is not a
mount distant and removed, but a
presence near at hand, familiar with
our needs, to which we may with
draw in moments of discouragement
or temptation, full of divine comfort
and solace for the hours of sorrow,
full of divine strength and vitality in
our days of weakness when all other
help seems far away, full of gracious
warning when we are careless and
wayward. We need ever to be with
drawing into this mount, Jesus
Christ, if we are to realize the pattern
in the plain of our earthly living. Be
cause it is so accessible, so complete
in its ministry. “See, therefore, that
thou make all things according to the
pattern that was shewed thee in the
mount.”
Why?
Is there not something minutely
pathetic in the continual going back
of one generation after another to the
old, sad mystery of pain? There is,
I suppose, says the Rev. George Jack
son, nothing new to be said about
it; there is no fresh light to be cast
upon it; yet still men wait and watch
with hope, still the poor brain busies
itself and the torn heart cries aloud,
“My God, my God, why—?” Other
questions we answer, or they answer
themselves, or we are content that
they should remain unanswered; but
this question is always with us. And,
indeed, how should it be otherwise,
since on every man, soon or late, the
dark mystery thrusts itself? “Man
that is born of woman is of few days
and full of trouble.” The words are
very old, they are never obsolete. The
generations come and go, but sorrow
and pain and death abide.
-i,, - - •*
The Reason.
The saint loves truth because it is
true, and loves right because it is
right, and loves God because He is
God. —Rev. J. Ossian Davies.
The True Conqueror.
The greatest conqueror is he that
has mastered the world that lies ir
his own breast. —Scottish Reformer.
Habitual
Constipation
Nay ()e permanently overcome by proper
personal efforts vvtlKtKc assistance
t>ftheono truly beneficial laxative
remedy, Syrup cjligs and Elixir Senna.
wKicK enables one to form regular
UabiTs aaily So that assistance to na
ture may be gradually dispensed with
when no longer needed as the best cf
remedies, when required, are to assist
nature and not to supplant the natur
al functions, which must depend ulti*
mately/ upon propel nourishment,
proper efforts, and right living generally.
To get its beneficial effects, always
buy the genuine
Syrupffigs^Clwir'fScnna
_ . manufactured i>y tke
California
Fig Syrup Cos. only
SOLD GYALL LEADINC DRI/GCISTS
one size ©nly, regular price 50 $ r- Bottle
OUT OF DOOR WORKERS
Men who cannot slop v tj
lor a rainy day.- will' J '
find the greatest \
comfort and freedoms,
of bodity movement '/VJo y
“ sg& & {
fr l J\
WATERPROOF A
OILED CLOTHING, / ,\\
SUiTi ‘3®P M 1
Every garment bearing Ajj
Ihe sign of the fish*
guaranteed waterproof l
Catalog free
A j TOA/fR CO BOSTON u * A ~mV t
TQWCP CANADIAN CO LmiTCD TQPQnTQ CAN I
VERY EVASIVE.
Impatient American (after an hour’s
pause)—Say, guard, what in thunder
are we waiting for? What time do
we pull out, anyway?
Guard (who has survived two gen
erations of hustlers) —That all de
pends, sir.
American —Depends on what?
Guard (judicially)—Ah, sir, that
again depends!—Punch.
State of Ohio, City of Toledo, \ Kt?
Lucas County, i
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is
senior partner of the firm of F. J.Chf.ney &
Cos., doing business in the City of Toledo.
County and State aforesaid, and that said
firm will pay the sum of one hundred dol
lars for each and every case of catarrh
that cannot be cured hv the use of Hall’s
Catarrh Cure. F'rank J. Cheney.
Bworn to before me and subscribed in my
presence, this 6th day of December, A. J.,
1886. A. W. Gleason.
- (SEAL.) Notary Public.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, arid
acts directly on the blood and mucous sur
faces of the system. Send for testimonials,
free. F. J. Chf.ney & Cos., Toledo, O.
Sold by all Druggists. 75c.
Hall’s Family Pills are the best.
Tha cultivation of pepper is of
ftoi&lly reported to be continually
twidtag In the Province of
where it is said to be gradually re
plaehm coffee in abandoned areas.
ffo Drift Out Malaria and Build Uj
the System
Take the Old Standard Grovw’s Tastb
lm Chill Tonic. You know what you
are taking. The formula is plainly printed
cm rrery bottle, showing it is simply Qui
nine and Iron in a tasteless form, and the
most effectual form. For grown people
•ad children. 50c.
No man knows how fleet-footed he
can be until he starts out to get away
from something.
When Threatened
■witli a mishap, the safe way is to take Cardui and
prevent the trouble from occurring.
Weak women need Cardui before confinement,
to strengthen their system and help them through
this trying period. Thousands have tried it, and
found it of wonderful benefit, at that and otheivtry
ing times of their lives.
Mrs. Fannie Nichols, of MexilflO, Mo., writes:
41 Last year I was threatened with a mishap and
THE LADIES’ WAY.
“This shoe fits you perfectly,” said
the clerk.
“Then show me something half a
size smaller,” replied the lady.—Hous
ton Post.
KEEP YOUlt SKIN REALTnx.
Tetterine has done wonders for
ers from eczema, tetter, ground itch, ery
sipelas, infant sore head, chaps, chafes ami
other forms of skin diseases. In aggravat
ed eases of eczema its cures ™ 'J t g
velous and thousands of people sing its
praises. 50c. at druggists or by mail from
J. T. Bhoptrine, Dept. A, Savannah, G .
HIS EXPLANATION.
Mrs. Knicker: —I -heard you talking
In your sleep about setting them up
again.
Knicker—Yes, my dear; that is a
military exercise—New York Sun.
PART OF HIS BUSINESS.
Gyer—Hammerton, the blacksmith,
is an awful bore.’
Myer—lndeed?
Gyer—That’s what. Why, he can
even make a wagon wheel tired.
ANTII>OTK FOH SKIN UISEASES.
That’s what Tettbuins Is; and it is more.
It is an absolute cure for tetter,
ringworm, erysipelas and all other itching
cutaneous diseases. In aggravated cases
of these afflictions its cures have been phe
nomenal. It gives instant relief and effects
permanent cures. 50 i. at druggists or by
mail from J. T. Shuptbinb, Dept. A, Sa
vannah, Ga.
The men who are always punctual
to their appointments are the ones
who get there.
Good Thing to Know.
Those who traverse the alkali
plains of the West aud inhabit the
sand blown regions of Texas, find
daily need for a reliable eye salve.
They never drug the eye, but simply
apply eiternally the staple, Dr
Mitchell's Eye Salve. This Salve is
sold everywhere. Price 25c.
So long as justice remains blindfold
ed, sharpers will continue to get in
their work.
PERFECT HEALTH
After Years of Backache, Dizziness
and Kidney Disorders.
/ ■
Mrs. R. C. Richmond, of North
wood, lowa, says: “For years I was a
t martyr to kidney
trouble, backache,
spells, head
dfches and a terri
ble bearing down
pain. I used one
remedy after an
other without ben
efit. Finally 1
used a box of
Doan’s Kidney Pills
and the backache ceased. Encour
aged, I kept on and by the time I had
used three boxes not a sign of the
trouble remained. My health is per
fect.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Cos., Buffalo. N. Y.
It’s the fellow with the vaulting
ambition who should look before he
leaps.
Capudine Cures Indigestion Pains,
Belching, Sour Stomach, and Heartburn,
from whatever cause. It’s Liquid. Effects
immediately. Doctors prescribe it.
25c., and 50c., at drug stores.
The waste that comes from haste
is seldom utilized.
|ifegߣifJßs
1 It buys a Strictly I
llioh-Clasc M % FPTkmV ;
SERVING I Jfa
IMACHINE JQgfeggu
j "gH' ARAT?TEEP"To M YEA^
And has all th up-to-date improvements that
g every lady appreciates. It is splendidly built or
1 thorouirhiv dependable material and handsomely
0 5 finished. lias eleg-ant Osk Drop Leaf 6-Drawer Cab
-1B inet, complete Set of Attachments, full instruo
-3 8 tions how to use them, aud the outfit will be sens
59 you “Freight Free" on
jy^ggEsaea We sell DIRECT at ONE
~ /j, PROFIT, saving: you the
'PMgaBjM Jobber’s, Retailer’s and
R -v., B MB Agent's profits and sell
ing expenses, & exactly
8 iW. i.i 1 iTTiiik i~ the same machine they
8 .Bferrißr"T?>will ask you 83X00 fow
B Njf &I; L~l Bend at ONCE for OUR
1 Bia NEW FIIEE
I SEWING MACHINE
W ( Wt CATALOGUE
jfyVg r-Vn Most complete and in
structive book of ita
B character ever publish
-1 ed in the South. It piet-
■imi ■mu—iirinTiTrmmT'nT ures and describes every
part and particular of
B pi the greatest line of positively High-Grade Rowing
Ii Machines ever offered. We are the largest Sewing
w H Machine distributors in the South, and, at prices
B a Risked, for quality FuavanttecL our Machines are un-
S I match able. This catalogue describes and Prices
B I high-grade Pianos, Organs. Steel Ranges, Cocking
B 8 Stoves, Heating Stoves, Phonographs, Dinner ana
9 § Toilet Sets. Prompt shipments, safe delivery anO
R I satisfaction guaranteed, or your money back.
MALSBY, SHIPP & CO.,
II Dept B. 41 S. Forsyth Street, ATLANTA, GEORGIA
pUT NAM FADE LESS DYE S
tuLn l^S , Mls'^ri > ‘'MUXItUB Htt’JWCO., QH-cr,
■BISQiSi
Beware of the Cough
that hangs on persistently,
breaking your night’s rest and
exhausting you with the violence
of’he paroxysms. A few doses
oti iso’s Cure will relieve won
derfully any cough, no matter
how far advanced or serious.
It soothes and heals the irritated
surfaces, deers the clogged air
passages and the cough disap
pears.
At all druggists*. 25 cts.
25 ct-s.
An ingenious Yankee made a loco
motive run his toy factory not long
since when repairs were necessary in
the power plant, and there were
large number of rush orders on hand.
CONSTIPATION ANI) mL!(USXES.
Constipation sends poisonous matter
bounding through the body. Dull hea Uehe,
■ our JStomAeh, Feted Breath, Bleared Eves,
Loss of Energy and Appetite are the surest
signs of the affliction. Young’s Liter Pills
positively cure constipation. They awaken
the sluggish iiver to better activa, cleanse
the bowels, strengthen the weakened parts,
induce appetite and aid digestion. Price
25 cents from your dealer or direct from
the laboratcvy. Free sample by mail to any
address. J. a£. Ilouno, Jr., \N ayorosa. Ga.
OFTBNER THE CASE.
"Did you ever find a quarter that
you didn’t know you had?”
"Once or twice. But hundreds of
limes I have failed to find a quarter
that I thought I might have.”—
Louisville Courier-Journal.
LITTLE EOY KEPT SCRATCHING.
Eczema Lasted 7 Years—Face was All
It aw Skin Specialists Failed,
But Cuticura Effected Cure.
“When my little boy wa3 six weeks old
an eruption broke out on his face. 1 took
him to a doctor, but his face kept on get
ting worse until it got so bad that no one
could look at him. His whole face was one
crust and must have been very painful, lie
scratched day and night until his face was
raw. Then I took him to all the best
specialists in skin diseases, but they could
not do much for him. The eczema got v ;
his arms and legs and we cculd not get a
night’s sleep in months. 1 got a sec of
Cuticura Remedies and he felt relieved the
first time 1 used them. 1 gave the Cuti
cura Remedies a good trial and gradually
the eczema healed all up. He is now seveu
years old and I think the trouble will
never return. Mrs. John G. Ivlumpp, SO
Niagara St., Newark, N. J., Oct. 17 and
22, 1907.”
A man ipay be prosperous on very
little money if he lives in a commu
nity where everybody is poor.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma
tion. allavsDain. cures w r ind colic. 25c a bottle
It is against the law for one to
make money and yet that is what
everybody is striving to do.
/O\THE J. R. WATKINS MEDICAL CO.
In f 7 y* \ -WINONA, MINNESOTA.
f mu hl.li.ke" 70 Different Article": Hou.ehold Rented!?*, Flavoring
r Extract" all Kind", Toilet Preparation*. Fine Sohi>, Ele.
V'iiiySSr. -IC r Can-Vasser* Wanted in E'Oery County .
BEST PROPOSITION offered AGENTS
UCI P Insist on Having
por Dr. MAKTEL'S Preparation
WOMEN at druooists.
SSend lor book, “Reliel lor Women.”
* ttENCH DRUG CO., 30 W. 32d St., N. Y. City.
an average crop of cabbage removes from
Use from 1,000 to 2,000 pounds per acre of a 4-7-9 ]pplS|ljl|
* fertilizer. Insist on 9 % of Potash in your cabbage fer
tilizer—or to increase the Potash 9% add 22 pounds of
Muriate of Potash to each 100 pounds of fertilizer.
KAIIWORKS, Cndlerßldg.,A(lcn!a,Qa.
Wine of Cardui helped me more than jgg§Su
any other medicine. Now I have a fine SpP@&
healthy boy. I think Cardui the finest
medicine I know of, for female troubles, | ray?j# j.
afad I wish all suffering women would j||§|||g
is sold by all reliable drug
gists, with full directions for use, in six l
languages, inside the wrapper. ' “s- rAKHB BafMS>
"If A T TT APT TP Write for D4-parrs illustrated Book* "ITovti Troatment for
V /ILUrlDiui Wontn,” describing symptoms of Female Diseases end giv
*OOI\ yb% fCl€ for women. Sent free, postpaid. Address: JLadi*€ Advisory
The Chattanooga Medicine Co* Chattanooga, Tenn. ,
agk Hl# II w’lf fiL Ja .gs ff 4 18 „B Jf ip B
KS M |B B! Bl mm WK WmSEmm , BB
BB| |B Bj! Btf| Wjn jtjfgi tt BB
25 cts.
FOR MEN
A shoe that is too big may not pinch, but it is a bad fit j ust the same. I
What you want is a shoe that matches the shape of your foot at the B
place where your weight rests, — not too large or too small, but exactly JH
right. SKREEMERS are shoes like that, and MABf w*T~
the style is there, too. Look for the label. |PjyLhif fcmttkrtwfb
FRED. F. FIELD CO., Brockton, Mass. ?|§PP rEMrELBII
ggnaEiagBSSBIBBBBBBBBEBB .■> v.m.a. ~
Restored to Health by Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound.
Read What They Say.
Miss Lillian Ross. 530
East 84th Street, New
York, writes: "Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegcta
bio Conjpound over-
Became irregularities, pe-
r *°’‘* c suffering, and
fgZ j^Jnervous headaches,
after everything els©
had failed to help me,
and I feel it a duty to
* et others know of it.”
KatharineCraig,23ss
Lafayette St., Denver,
wr tes: "Thanks
raj ils* 0 Uydia E. Pinkham’s
VS J%"\ -*M Vegetable Com pound I
a } well, a 'ter suffering
f° r months from ner
Miss Marie Stoltz-
Js&Sjf 1 ' man, of Laurel, la.,
writes: "Iwasinarun
' and suf
-Is , Ip-: , from suppression,
yra&jfeffindigostion, and poor
i-'d hirculaliou. Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable
rrotTZ MArty Compound mado me
well and strong.”
Miss Ellen M. Olson,
tSrw iff&fff 417 N. East St., Ke-
™ 111., says: "Ly-
R JZL l ; ggdi*E.Pinkham’sVege
table Compound cured
mo °f backache, side
ache, and established
NjtutN m• oL my periods, after the
best local doc tot’s had
failed to help me.”
FACTS FOR SCCK WORSEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compoimd, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ills,
and has positively cured thousands 01
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera
tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, that bear
ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges
tion,dizziness,orneryous prostration.
Why don’t you try it ?
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick
women to write her for advice.
She has guided thousands to
health. Address, Lynn, Mass.
(At.4€-’08)
niiriiM ATIVU now curable; thousand-* cured; re-
KilLunlflllulu suits speoclv;guaranltve glverv.prlce
low. Write quick. The WRIGHT MED. CO., Peru In(l.
ThompscifsEye Water