The Fulton County news. (McConnellsburg, Pa.) 1899-current, October 19, 1911, Image 8

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Iff THE SIZE OF
THE WORLD
- i
By Rev. William Spiegel
ol the Old Firtl Cnurch,
Ciocmnili.
oca
l.iui the mnnii anneari to differ
ent people to be of various sizes, from
that of a dime to that of a wanlinib,
even physical qualities and quantities
of this world and the other material
worlds of the universe vary In their
apparent dimensions with the vary
ing rapacities of pi.y iul. mental and
I in: ginatlve eyeHlght.
A given Individual's world and all
there therein la will always vary In ac
cordance with that Individual' sublet"
live proportions.
In a very real and deep sense every
one builds his own world. Rome build
It exceedingly small and others, with
a better gmsp of the meaning of life
build It big. And 1 would that we
might all have that brond conception
which not enly means a big world for
us. but the doing of big things In It
by ourselves. We all dellfcht In the
matter minds that are doing the big
things In the material world, and they
are truly-great; but greater than thane
wntideKful feats of engineering skill
which can tunnel the Hudson or dam
the Ohio are thoite other deeds by mas
ter minds whe Jby this world Is made
the better the more nearly perfect.
It Is this aspect of Increasing the
size of our world, the moral and spir
itual, to which I would draw attention
Obviously, then-, our world varies In
size according to our knowledge. Any
thing that lies outside of our knowl
edge Is evidently no part of our con
scious world. We have widened the
boundaries of the lit'lu world of the
ancients and have accurately meas
ured and weighed It
We have found something of the
magnitude of the other worlda of the
universe and compute distances In In
terstellar space In years of light ve
locity. And this Inconceivably big
world of ours has a vast Influence
upon our thoughts and life. The great
er our knowledge the bigger our
world; and the Christian especially
should Keep tils mind aien ana anvo
to this growing world and ever strive
to build it on a lurger scale and fill
It with greater meaning.
Then, too our world grows with our
Intercsis. This Is even a closer rela
tion than knowledge. Implying care,
concern, participation. There are nec
essnrlly large areas cf knowledge
which lie outnlde of our Interest, but
as Interest lays hold of us and con
trols thought, motive and conduct our
world Is large or small according to
the area of our Interest. In this re
aped people differ tremendously,
i The Interest of a great many people
1n the material things Is so great that
1t absorbs their whole thought, ambi
tion and action; and a world whose
absorbing Interests are In material
things, however great Its business and
however Immense Its wealth, la ee
eeptially small and Insignificant The
ftan In the big world Is the one who Is
thoroughly Interested In his business
or profession, but whose Interests also
reach out Into the worlds of science,
literature, art, politics, social progress,
education and religion.
Then again our world enlarges with
our sympathies. Sympathy Is closer
still than interest, as It Involves our
hearts. People who lack sympathy live
In a small barren world, but those
who have wide and warm sympathies
melt easily Into (he lives of others and
thus enlarge and enrich their own
world. And In our sympathies we
ought to be bigger than the mere cir
cle of our own friends, our church or
our country Whoever cuts another
human being out of his sympathy by
so much narrows and Impoverishes his
own world, and by as much as we
make our sympathies broad and
tender we enlarge our world and make
It rich.
Finally let us ever remember with
the psalmist. "The earth Is the I-nrd'f
and the fullness thereof." That lifts
it Into divine relations and worth
From this point of view we see the
.nriri Tallin fresh from the creative
hand of God, developing under his
providence, ledeemed by his grace and
being rebuilt even In our day. Into a
universal kingdom of brotherhood
and love. We are co-workers with
hlra and are now building this new
and better world, however Insignifi
cant or dark, in the light of hla plan
and presence, and this fills our world
with divine purpose and grace.
Our world thus widens out until It
is lost In the full splendor of God and
Is great with his greatneBS.
Thus our world Is little or big. ac
cording to our knowledge, Interest,
sympathy and faith, and by Increas
ing these we enlarge and enrich our
world. A big soul will bu'.ld a big
world. One of large vision and wide
Interests, or tender sympathies and a
masterful ralth cannot be shut up with
in the narrow confines of personal self
interest and littleness of spirit, but
will ever build a large and richer
world. Then, too, a big world helps
tremendously make a bli; soul. Our
environment calls us out, as u were,
go that we stretch our powers to
match Its appeals. Soul and world thus
work together to widen each other out
Into larger relntlons. We should work
at both ends of the problem, striving
to build a bigger world and grow a
larger soul. '
The Life Beautiful.
"What Is your life? It is even a
yapor." James Iv: 14.
If our life is to be beautiful and
blessed, we must place It on a right
basis. Look at the vapor when II
trails along the earth cold, ashen,
drawn up Into heaven, see lt(glow
Ing with the colored brightness ol
gold and beryl, topaz, chrysolite and
snpphlre, and you might think It th
hoiy city that John saw, having the
glory of God, and whose light was
like a Jasper stone, clear as crystal.
Human life Is nothing until you lirt
It Into the sky. Our great fault la
that we live too near the ground, and
therefore la our life full of perplex
ity and sadness. Let us mounl
nearer ueaven, and the 'rich and
strange shall become familiar; our
souls shall be pure, our path lumin
ous, our hope sublime, our Joy full.
W. L. Watklnsgn, D. D.
HITCHCOCK
r . .. X mm
HOSTMASTER GENERAL HITCHUUUK recently snowea uis mierem iu-mo
r plane by making a flight from tha
U. S. A., and delivering a sack of mall
Attorney General Wlckersham walked
mle your peace with the publishers?"
I. more, there la no second-class mall
maintaining an aeroplane service Is an
FORGOTTEN IN JAIL
Ignorant Hungarian Serves Two
Years Before Discovered.
Divorced by Wife While Abroad on
Visit Unfortunate Foreigner Failed
to Pay Alimony and Wat
Sentenced for Contempt.
Chicago. Forgotten alike by family.
Irlends and lawyers. Pavel Macca, a
Hungarian, apent two yeara in me
Cook county Jail on a situp.e charge
ol contempt or court.
Attorney John A Mahoney, who ob
tained Macca s release ou a writ or
habeas corpus, declared the case of
Macca to be one of the most remark
able In tho history of thU or any other
country.
"Here la a poor, uneducated for
eigner." he said, "who has been made
to serve over two years for contempt
and kept In Jail without means or
Irlends to go to his aid '
Four years ago Macca and his wile
lived on the west side, where they
Lost Ear Is Replaced.
Now York. John .1. Grill of
Riwknwuv roiid. Jamaica, said
209
he
never would be able to reward sutti
clontly the Burgeona who had found
his right ear In a road and sewed It
on hla head.
Grill was returning to bin home the
other day. He heard trie and saw
two men robbing I'eter Casco. As
soon as they saw Grill the robbers
turned upon him. One of them had a
long-bladed knife and he amputated
Grill's right eur.
The victim Bent a call to the Ja
maica hospital. Dr. Flynn "d Dr.
Schneider responded. They searched
with lanterns and found the ear, and
lost no time in sewing it back in Its
place.
Toothache Brings $100.
Thomasion. Conn. Ruska Antilles,
employed at the Wigwam reservoir, Is
$100 richer as the result of a visit to
local dentist, who found a pink
pearl in a cavity of a tooth that ached
The pearl was removed and appraised
Antilles remembered he had been eat
ing oysters.
"STRADS" MADE
Cermany Turns Out "Priceless" Vio
lins by the Hundreds Daily Occa
sionally Genuine One Found.
London. Every now and again
there appears in the newspapers a
paragraph announcing the discovery
of a new work by an old master. Oc
casionally the Inquirer ascertains that
tbe find Is Indeed a genuine one, but
this is probably not more than once
In a thousand cases In some way or
other, however, the picture generally
leaves the possession of lis "dlscov
erer" with great profit to the latter,
while the pnrchuser proudly hugs the
belief that he has acquired a master
plec It Is not only In the matter of pic
tures tbnt this very remunerative In
dustry of faking Is rarrled on. but
epurlouB antique furniture, old silver
and Cremona violins are made tho
basis of various Ingenious schemes It
appears that a Sunderland mining vll
lage has within recent yearn been the
scene of the disposal of hundreds of
CARRIES MAIL THROUGH THE AIR
. . j - i i a l . I.
aviation field on Long Island In an aeroplane driven Dy captain uec.
to the postmaster at Mlneoia. jus oeiore me io...i.i B . -.-.
out on the field to bid hla associate cabinet member farewell. Have , you
asked Mr. Wlckersham. "No, I haven't." Mr. "'""P"' "d"h"
on this aeroplane It costs too much to carry It this way. The expense of
obstacle, but that will diminish." .
owned some property. They bad
in bank. He bad ."U0 In bis name and
she bad the remaining J5& In her
name The account was arranged ao
that one could draw from the other.
One day while Macca was at work he
says his wile went to tbe bank and
drew out all the money
- Macca says his wile made good the
amount later by signing over her
share of the property on the west
side, and he In turn signed it over to
a friend, who sold It for $3,700 There
was a mortgage for M.800. and with
the remainder ol the money Macca
said he Journeyed to his home in
Hungary to visit relatives . Then
Mrs Macca obtained a divorce, cbarg
Ing desertion.
Mrs. Macca represented before
Judge Arthur II Chetlnin. then or the
bench, that her husband was well to
do and the court ordered that Macca
pay her Jlou alimony. Macca sold
he spent all ol his money while ft boo d
and tbnt he was penniless when bo re
turned to Chicago.
On September L'2, 1909. he was cited
Millionaire to Be Farmer
George Westlnghouse, Jr., Buys Small
Place Not Far From Father's Es
tate in Berkthirea.
Lenox, Mass. Heir to $50,000,000
and an estate In the Herkshlrea scarce
ly rivaled by any country botne In
the land. George Westlnghousu, Jr.,
son of the air-brake Inventor, Is now
preparing to move, with his bride, to
a small farm, to enjoy the pleasures
of the simple life aa embodied In "scl
entiflc fanulr.fc."
Already he has bought an estate
that overlooks the golf links of the
Golf club of Lee, Just south of Lenox,
where his father's country borne Is
located, and with tbe departure of tbe
present occupant, the date of whose
mpvlng la expected to be the Brat of
next month, It la believed that he and
his English bride, who was Miss Vlo
let Evelyn Hrocklebank, daughter or
Sir Thomas and Lady Urocklebank.
will move from the estate of from 500
to fiOO acres, named Ersklne Park, to
the far humbler place some few miles
away In tho l!erkshes, and take up
IN A FACTORY
so-rnlled Stradlvarlus violins, the
chlei victims being tbe colliers of the
neighborhood, who paid gold for In
struments that had been sold In bulk
by the dealer, though in many cases
the "Strads" were sent further afield
and brought In much higher prices.
A violin expert Interviewed on the
srbjecl snld:
"I know several' violin factories,
two or three In Germany and one near
Uruseels. Planks of the requisite
thickness ore steamed for hours, cut
up, and stamped Into shape. There 1b
no time for the loving use of tool that
marked the old artists of Cremona.
Inslda Is pasted the Imitation parch
ment label of the ollcged maker, and
thsn all the parts are clamped and
pinned and glued together I must
suy they use the very best glue. It
pays them There follows a neces
sary period of drying; but the sun,
being a slow and uncertain old fol
low, gives way to the modern oven
Very clever Is the varnishing stage
We have loFf. the secret of the var
Un. f rn nannrtln t mnlla hv PTfV
iu -
lor contempt of court He said re
had no money, but his former wile Itr
slsted that be had either given It to
relatives or deposited It In Hungary.
He waa sentenced to serve three
months In the county Jail.
In January. 1910. he was again cited
and sentenced to serve another six
months On July 12. 1910. be was sent
back to the Jail and has been there
ever since, working In tbe laundiy.
"I didn't have a penny." Macca said
"and there was no way In which I
could give my wife 11,200. They
must have thought I bad bidden It
My attorney was Josepr Sabath. All
I know Is that one day be came to
me and said I waa a single man that
tuy wife bad gotten a divorce.
"I have no Idea of the whereabouts
of my former wife and our two cbll
dren."
"He worked hard every day. and
there never was a cum plain t from
him." said Mr. Jacobus 1
Yale Athlete Is Coalman.
New Haven. Conn. llernard 8. Tom
mera. Yale baseball pitcher, graduate
and Ml round athlete. Is driving a coal
team today, making deliveries as an
employe. He wishes to learn the cool
business "from the bottom up."
what will mean for hlra a simple life
Already he Is supposed, however, to
have laid plans to emulate on the few
acres of his new estate the gorgeous
gardens, the elaborate fruit und veg
etable growths that have featured the
parental estate, but on a smaller scale,
and without the wonderful fountains,
the great palace of a bouBe.and tbe
other evidences of luxury of which be
has been accuston ec.
The farm which Mr. Westlnghouse
has purebnsod Is a small one and has
been occupied this summer by resi
dents of New York It Is a typical
"summer resident" farm, beautifully
laid out, far enough from town to be
a real farm, and yet relying on the
"summer visitor Income" more than
on Its crops. It stands some CO yards
back from the highway, shaded by elm
and maple trees, and is more a bunga
low than either a farmhouse or a man
sion. A shady orchard screens most
of the house from view, while tbe
orchards and fields that comprise the
rest of the estate are scarcely dis
cernible. nlsh of the old Italian makers, have
we? Theso people have rediscovered
and improved upon It Instead of hav
ing to wait for years of resonance
with the bow to shake down tbe oil
Into the cells, leaving that Boft Bur
face color which sends connoisseurs
Into raptures, tbe modoru makers
turn out masterpieces by the hundred
per day, and the places where tbe
chin and the bands have worn the
surface bare are plain proofs of au
thentic old age."
Skips fropo at 81.
Ithaca, N. Y. To celebrate her
eighty-first birthday, Miss Sue Vor
heea, an inmate of the Old Ladles'
home In ibis city, skipped tbe rope 21
times and waa not fatigued when she
finished.
Miss Vorhees Is remarkably spry and
athletic tor her years. She told her
friends to come ou the lawn in front
of the home and, picking up an ordi
nary girl's Jumping rope, lightly skip
ped It 21 times. Last year her friends
say she Jumped it 40 times.
Miss Vorhees has been In '.be home
12 years. She Is a great pedestrian.
Second Temple's
Foundation Laid
Suwlay School Unoa for Oct. 22, 1911
Specially Arranged tor Thl Papor
I.EHHON TKXT-Kxra 4:1-4:0.
MEMORY VERSBS-3:11.
OULDKN TEXT "Kilter Into hln gates
with tliunksglvlntf, and Into hla court
with prulHo." I'bu. 100:4.
TIME The arrival at Jerusalem, w. u.
(37. Foundation of tho Tniple, U. C. C8.
Delays, B. C. 633-6). Bulldlnx of Temple
begun, 11. C. 5:0. Tempi completed, B. C.
llti. Period of the turnon, 20 yean.
PI-ACE Jerueiilein and vicinity.
PROPHETS. -llUKKal, B. C. 520. Zeehar-
lah. B. C. 6:'0-&ia. Dutilul the axed (Dan.
10:1).
RL'I.ERS Cyrus kin till B. C. 529.
Cumljye king B. C. 630-522. liurlua king
B. C. 6-1-tSti. Zeiubbubel governor ot
Judea.
The exiles found Jerusalem In ruins,
together with tbe surrounding cities
of residence and their orchards and
farms, much us they had been left by
Nebuchadnezzar's armies fifty years
before. Trees were growing wild on
tbe Mountain of the Mouse, and the
Jackals prowled among heaps of shat
tered masonry. Crumbling Blone-work
and charred timbers marked the site
of palaces and towers, and choked the
streeta. The city walla and gate!
were leveled with the ground. Tbe
first business of the returned exiles
was, of course, to provide some kind
of dwellings for themselves and their
families. They accordingly settled in
tbe small cities surrounding Jerusa
lem, perhaps repairing the houses and
walls that had been ruined by the be
Bleglng armies years before, or con
tenting themselves with huts or tents,
The territory they controlled wus of
course small, aud hemmed In on all
sides, "including only Bethlehem on
the south, whllo on tbe north their ter
ritory measured no more than twenty-.
five miles in length by twenty la
breadth," and even upon this en
croached tbe heathen or mongrel pop
uhitiun.
As soon as the returned exiles had
become settled lu their homes, and
hdd planned for the necessities of
life, within three or four months of
their arrival, they wisely arranged
for the religious life which was the
very heart of the natlou's exlBtence.
and the central motive and Inspiration
of the return. It would require yenra
to build the temple. It was not wise
to wait for that. It waa essential that
all needful helps to devotion and re
ligion and righteousness should be pro
vided Immediately, to sustain them In
the work to be done amid opposition
and temptations which were to try
their souls as gold is tried in the fire.
When the builders laid the founda
tion of the temple, there was a great
celebration. Tbe chaut of praise was
responded to with a great hurst of
chorus, vocal and Instrumental, the
substance of which was some well
known sacred refrain. There is a
wonderful power In music and every
atom of It should be used In God's
service. The church has scarcely be
gun to use this power In Its fulness.
Some object to responsive singing;
some have opposed putting an orches
tra In the Sunday school, as If these
were modern novelties, Instead of 3,
000 years old. These old saints used
every kind of InslrumenCevery meth
od of singing solos, responses, chor
uses, marching songs, refrains, every
thing that would give wings and In
spiration to the service of song.
ThoBe who had known only the exile
conditions Bang Hallelujahs, because
It was an unspeakable Joy to have
a temple at all. It meant the saving
of tbe nation; It meant the returning
favor of God. It was no limit to the
religious life and the blessings which
could grow out of it. It made possi
ble the greater glory, which fifteen
years later the prophet Ilaggal fore
told, when It should be fulfilled In tbe
Mehsiah,
We learn from Huggai that tho peo
ple were busy with building beautiful
houses, and cultivating their farm
They planted vineyards and orchnrds,
figs, pomegranutes and olives. Hut all
their efforts were failures. They
"looked for much, and lo It came to
little." For they cared more for their
own houHes and furms than for the
nouse of God.
Then arose the wise, aged prophet
preacher Haggal, who hod been watch
ing tbe course of affairs, and In the
name of God, urged the people to
arise and build the temple, for the
time had come. lie made four ad
dresses in the autumn of 620, tbe sum
maries of which are recorded In hla
book. He began at the religious fes
tival of the new moon when crowds
of people we no assembled, probably
In the temple area Itself, where the
altar was Biuoklng with sacrifices, and
the unflnlBbed foundations and the
desolation of the city were In full
view, while In the distance were the
homes and fields of the leaders.
While aged Haggal was urging the
people to rise up and build, a younger
prophet-preacher was Inspired to en
courage tbe people, and to remove
their difficulties and doubts, by a se
rlcs of emblematical visions, or ob
ject lessons.
He urged all high motives for re
newlng tbe work, and enforced them
by their own experiences. They had
tried to gain prosperity, while relig
ion waa neglected. They had sought
the fruits ot obedience to God, while
they neglected tbe tree that alon
could bear the fruit. They wanted
rich crops In their fields, while they
stopped up the springs that alone
could niako them fertile. Haggal said
to them, look at the results o( your
bad ' policy. Consider your ways,
Change your plan. Put God, and re
ligion first. Seek first the kingdom
of God and Its rlgl'teousness. Then
you will succeed In giving the nation
true prosperity, and Its place of use
fulness in the world.
Christ.
One reason why you should put
your belief in Jesus Christ Is that all
through the Bible axioms are scat
tered which reflect on the wonderful
ness of this man. ltev. B. H. Jonks,
Presbyterian, Omaha, Neb.
War and Christ.
The heart of Christianity and the
noble sldo of war are Identical-. Rev.
E. T. Root, Congrcgationallat, Provi
dence, R. I.
WILBUR D. NESB1T l
lAIXCTUEEr
'TWful Tots
TEN ' Of R'M t
r a f pwtcsr.
oatAT I it .
We've (tot our lecturn course arrnnxed.
The talent hae been hired:
Of course the program can be changed
If that should be ,lo1red.
But the nttrai-tlonn we have booked
Are foil of vim and force.
When we were done we vowed It looked
Like a great luclure course.
It opens with the Prize Qunrtet
Which nilej date lust year-
Most of our folks are talking yet
About when they were here.
Then we will have the Tuneful Tots,
A trnnoe of Klrls and boys
Who play on brooms and pans and pots
And add unto our Joys.
And after them we'll have the Marrs,
Who give a song and dunce
Upon thii horizontal bars
We've billed them In advance.
We've hooked Profesaor Ullimn't Trained
Seals,
Dame Nature's Own Display
They fire off guns and ride on wheels
In quite a wondrous wuy.
We've also goi Misnngln's Band
With moving nli'tures. too
Their music Is lust simply grand.
The pictures are all new.
What else? Well, we've The Missing
Link.
A marvelous baboon
That tries to talk and seems to think
And almost hums a tune.
And yet some folks nln't satisfied
With such a splendid list-
Some of the kicking ones have tried
To show us where we've missed.
Our lecture board has had a row
That made an awful breach-
One member urged that we, somehow,
Have some one make a speech I
A Little Fable.
Once upon a Time there was a Wise
Man who set up In Business as a Dis
tributing Center of Knowledge.
There came unto Him certain Smart
Alecks who thought to Confound htm
by Asking:
"Why does a Rabbit wiggle Its
Nose?"
But tbe Wise Man simply Collected
two Dollars and answered them thus:
"Because tbe Nose cannot Wiggle the
Rabbit."
Moral: Do not get Gay with Peo
ple who are Out for the Coin.
NEEDED A PAIR.
Sarcastic Sammy Kind lady, have
you got another batter cake like the
one you give me ylstlddy?
Kind Lady (flattered) Why, no.
But perhaps you would like for me
to make you another.
Sarcastic Sammy Yes, 1 wish you
would. 1 want to half sole my other
shoe.
The Limit.
"You bave no more sense than tbe
law allows," be sneered.
Then he added, a bitter after
thought, "and s prohlbltou law, at
that."
Whereupon the party to whom the
remarks were addressed begun frac
turiug a few statutes.
More tffecf
IB
-uet.
Mrb AfUem SmaRb tt-e '-noons?
Mrs Henpeck No, Indeed! I'd nail
qlm In tbe house.
A Slip of the Tongue.
"Bah!" said the villain, lighting an
other cigarette, "Bah!"
The heroine tittered gayly.
"You must be the black sheep of
your family," she Bald.
Feeling that he had Inadvertently
ttven ber an Insight Into his past life,
the villain left the Btage and refused
to further Interrupt the bero.
Recognizing People.
Data have been gathered in Oer
aany with reference to the distance
it which persons may be recognized
sy their faces and figures, if one
j as good eyes, the Germans claim,
ne cannot recognize a person whom
le has Been only once at a greater
llrtance than 82 feet, 'if tbe person
e well known to one, ond may recog
size him at 300 feet and If It Is
nember of one's family. evn at 50"
leet. Scientific American.
"1 offered to let him have a hun
Ired." "Tbnt would only be a drop In
Oie bucke.' shop." Life.
Course
ARE YOUR KIDNEYS WEAK?
There are two ways to tell If you
have weak kidneys. The first U
through pains In tie back. The sec
ond by examining the kidney eecre-
tlnna If VOU BUS-
t?"" nent vour kidneys.
a MVV B,-! i., "7 1 '
begin using uoan a
Kidney Pills at
once.
C. J. Shumaker,
Church St.. Tupelo,
Miss., says: "My
back wbb bo sore
and painful I
could not work.
I slept poorly, was
nervous and easily Bturtled. After
doctoring without benefit, I began us
ing Doan'a Kidney Pills and was soon
a veil man. I cannot recommend
Doan's Kidney Pills too highly."
"When Your Back Is Lame, Re
member the Nume DOAN'S." DOc. a
box at all stores. Foster-Mllburn Co.,
Buffalo, N. Y.
Not Modern.
"Why do you call It a fairy tale?"
"Because It ends: 'And they lived
happily ever after.' "
Whenever you hnv a pain think of
Hamlin Wizflrcl Oil. I'or Headache.
Toothache, Earache, Slomach aolie, ami
many other painful ailments there ie noth
ing better.
In London 900,000 persons are living
more thun two in a room and 20,000
persons are living six or more In a
single room.
CHANGE
'S
LIFE
Made Safe by Lydia E. Pinkbam's
Vegetable Compound.
Granitevillo, Vt "I was passing
throutrh theChanRuof LifeaiidsuU'ereJ
r r o ra nervousness
ami other annoying
symptoms, and i
can truly say that
Lydia is. ruiKiiam s
Vegetable Com
pound has proved
worth mountains of
gold to me, aa it
restored my health
and strength. I
never forget to tell
my friends what
Lvdia E. llnkham's
Vegetable Compound has done for ma
during this trying period. Complete
restoration to health means so much
to me that for tho sake of other suffer
ing women 1 am willing to make my
trouble public so you may publish
this letter." Mrs. Chas. JUkclay,
Ii.f.D., Oranlteville, Vt.
No other medicine for woman's ills
has received such wide-spread and un
qualified endorsement. Ko other med
lcine we know of has such a record
of cures as has Lydia E. llukhaui's
Vegetable Compound.
Tor more than 30 years It has been
curing woman's ills such as inflamma
tion, ulceration, tibroid tumors, irreg
ularities, periodic pains and nervous
prostration, and It is unequalled for
carrying women safely through the
period of change of life.
Mrs. Pinkbam, at Lynn, Mas-,
Invites all nick women to write
her for ad vice. Her advice Is free,
aud. always helpful
Cement Talk No. 9
If you want to
build something
of concrete and need
help and instruc
tions, write to us.
Our Information Bureau
is one of our departments
for the purpose of assist
ing our friends in using
cement in concrete work so
as to produce the best results.
We will be glad to give you
advice or assistance if you w 111
write tor it. ii'civ-
charge whatever the service is a so
lutelyfree. We make this offer pun
to encouraee the use of concrtU.
UNIVERSAL PORTLAND CEMENT CO'
TRICK BDILDINd. rtnM"'
.AnnnoOO BARI"
ANNUAL, uuiru v. -.-
ACTS LIKE MAGIC
J. J. P.tt.r. M.D.. .tV
In my practice I h-ve .k,
Jean Muiung Lin!m,:,'t,,n1lr JL
In one cum it cured im ol(' in tl"oca
OTTere atiacK 01 iuic
ml iboulilcrn."
1 25cWe.UbottIeatDru
Ml
if
IN WOMAN
I FREE
r ca ft help
S m f J , J