THE 'PULPIT. A iCHOLAm.Y SUNDAY SERMON BY THE REV. W- R. RAMSAY. B a «|c« > Tfc* K*U«to« «C Jwaa.
TxaldUlc, Ky. — Ttoe Her.- W. n. fUniwy eo Sanday prcacbed ful »:nzKiB entitled Tfco R< _ Jecss." ;He took tor kl« text*: Her (■lot. which ore many, are forgiven; for *he loved mock.—laike YlL, 47. I«vc took vp the harp «r Ufe, ami m-Otc eo all the cborua with
loiltht;
Bmotr the chord of Sr It. that, tromh laucd la dusk out vf slghL In the midst of as much coofotlon and perplexity a bom questloiia - relating rvligluc. nothing it more helffol tb to turn to the words of Jesus and find what He taught and believed- We ahaII Cud Ntfe d!0CUlt> In doing this If «e confine ourafilvaa to the first three Gospels. If we .Include the fourth Gospel, we shall introduce element of difficulty =od confuaion. The Kenrtb Gotprl sets a wonderful philosophy about Jesus and Hia mission, and It relates Incidentally some of the events in the life of Jesus. But for a simple statement of the words of Jesns Himself apart from any theological theory about Jesus, we moat turn to the other Gospels. There ungues!iomtbiy cinch in these narratives besides the words of Jesus, much that betokens misapprehension and misconstruction on the part of those that heard Him. and an attempt to Interpret Hia words and deeds as a eon “ —‘ is and
religion are ao exalted and so self-evi-dent that we shall find, no difficulty In discovering them. What does Jcs about Man. about Bln and Righteousness, about ■ Redemption, about the kingdom of God upon -efirthT We anight include other questions, such as
What does Jesus teach about God? Strange to say, Jesus has nothing to state about God, after the manner of the theologians and creeds. He entered upon no mets physical discussion about the nature of God. He never mentions the doctrine of a Trinity. “He had unquestioned faith 1C God ns a living, conscious, intelligent agent. This faith came to Him by Inheritance, and wire received by Him as the IndispenSafcl* and indisputable presupposition of all religion.'' Jesus took the highest thought shoot God in the Hebrew religion, the conception of God as the Eternal rather of men, and expanded and purified It He Interpreted shls idea by His own aubllmc and spot-
He ai
nth of, the DivineJPathcrhood through i'e 'medium nC His own loving and righteous soul. The thought of God aa the ew-prexent Spirit of right eon*nesh and lore was a constantly besetting thought with Jesus. He' lived and moved and had Bis being-in this consciousness of the -Father's presence. He saw the crasetess operation of the father's lore and goodness and care for all things. The whole universe was enearn pasted by -the Father’s Jove. He loves and pities and provides for all. Era His wicked and unibankful and prodigal children are provldqd-for. His rain descends and His suu mufces for the evil and the good alike. Jesus did not think of the Father ns a far-off and inaccessible Deity, but as s near and Indwelling Presence- He did not offer any explanation pf- the mystery of this wonderful truth; He ■Imply believed it, and lived and .wrought and taught with this thought perpetually ifi His mind, with its inspiration in His souL God was a living reality to Jesus. What did Jesus teach about man? The thought of Jesus about man and fcoman nature might he summarised in the words, "Mao is the child of God.” This truth had been expressed by others before Jesus, but it had never been taught in the way that Jesus taught it No prophet or teacb•r before Jesus had ever drawn such inferences .from the belief, or made it (he basis of such on appeal to man's faith In his own spiritual and moral possibilities. Jesus shows everywhere
faith in fhe esses _ ■worth of all men, whatever character might be, whatever the outward and accidental deformity of the Ufe. No nutter how 'taKThe prodigal might have wandered from bis father's home, be was still his father's child. Hr might deny his birthright and sat with the swiae. but tbs father's h»ve never cemata and never
of all men, especially of the outcast and the sinner. He loved the outcast, the fallen, "the lost sheep of the house of IwasJ." He had compassion upon them, because He knew how they bad been tempted, how they had been taught and brought up, how they bad been pesierted and left to wander "like abeep without a shepherd." losing
Jesns ererywhrre and slwsfe assumes the esscnilnl Clvtoeness of the human soul. The -lost <*eep Jjoicng* to the fold of the Good Shepherd; the tort rain, though battsrrd and bruised, is of precious mete), and bears the Image and superscription of the king; the lost boy—the prodlgal-ls bis fathOr'e child, no matter how far he ha* wandered-or how derp his moral degradation. "What did Jesus teach about "Snlva. tlon?” How Is the lost restored?' How ■s the prodigal brought back to his father's Ijome? What does Jesus say about this? la thefr any elaborate creed, or any creed, to,be-accepted? Docs He tell ns of any scbouie»of Kilvatton or of any atoning sacrifice? Not a single word. Thw whole thing is simple and natural, and true to the fnodamvr.tal fact* and laws of the moral and spiritual constitution ot man. Take the parable of the 'Tost sheep" and the “prodigal son." Hour does the Good Shepherd aeek His lost sheep? How dors the Father restore the lost child? The Divine mercy and lore seeks and Inflnencca the children of men In countleaa-ways. God seeks man In ibe very fact that alu itself la foreign to man's higher nature, nie ilfe ot sin. of alienation from goodness. Is a disappointment. II* pleasure* are apple* of Sodom. The evil course, in the end. exhaust* Itsslf. The prodigal gets to the end of his resources; then he recalls that he is his father's child. It 1* so with all kinds of sin. In the laws of man’* moral and spiritual being, it is ordained that there shall be n reaction of the divine, the good In man, against the evil within and around him. I do cot know how far men may go toward destroying the possibilities otfiood In tliemselvra. No finite mind can dogmatise on sneb a question. 1 only know that Jeens never despaired, and that He tetches os to despair of no
man.
king and restoring sinful men to their true lives, the ministry of a
loving and sympathetic humanity has the largest place of any other Instrumentality. It Is a continuation of the ministry of Jesns. HU ministry was
not In His words alone: It was chiefly in His wonderful personality. His
gentleness. His faith In man, Inspired
faith and hope and courage in those
He ministered to. Men arc aonght and
through good net* and knre and pity in their fellow-men. Jesus said:
“Do good, despairing of no man;" “Be merciful, even as your Father In heaven is merciful;" “If ye forgive men their trespasses, yonr heavenly Father will forgive yon." Make the heavenly Father real to men by being Incarna-
tions of HU lore and goodness. The love of God is seen chiefly In love and pity In the heart of man. In the ancient liturgy of the Church
there U a phrase that taya, “God bath given power and commandment to F‘*
ministers to declare and pronounce
HU people,,being penitent, the abso-
lution and remission of their sins.”
There U a wonderful truth In those
ancient words. God hath given such
power, not to ordained clergymen alone, but to every sympathetic and
ministering soul. The Uw of divine
forgiveness and spiritual renewal U the
: central Uw of the evangel of Jeans. I stand by the side of a man In the
spiritual agony of remorse. He has drunk the horrible cup of Iniquity. He
U sin-sick. He feeU the crushing bur-
den of his own wrong-doing., He longs for deliverance, for ease of conscience, for a sense of divine forgiveness. He is
sorry for hU sin. The inwarit^ dark-
iirar d di ness of his soul has projects Itself upon the heavrns. He thinks InabGod is angry with him.' He Is afiyid of
hU Father.
Dove re-creates -the . soul, apd. the lan becomes “a new creation.” He begins to live a new life and to,fight n winning battle with sin and temptation. He knows and feels that a power U in him that Is all sufficient for every need and every emergeacy of hia life. Alt this U of the free grace and Joyc of the Father. “Not by work* of righteousness that we have done, but according to His mercy He saves us.”. The seUtlonof a child to a father'does not stand upon any legal formality; it is not conditioned upon any service that may be done by the child. This is pre-eminently true of the relation between Hie Heavenly Father and HU human children. ~ The love and grace of God come through no contract St Paul tells of those who live as servants In the Father's house. Their spirit is one of bdndage, not of joyous trust and spiritual freedom. The effort to obtain the of forgiveness and spiritual peace and Joy by a diligent discharge of duty leav/s the tender conscience in donht
r. the eternal love
deep-veined humanity, fb
mt the Father brefilinf and looking Mt UmmghJiU purr (Tea! It is this fast that has made HU name forever blessed, and turned the hearts Of the lost and fallen bobs of cdsb to Him as ihr dearest pledge sad symbol
and fear, because “the commandment Is so exceeding broad” that at best man’s endeavors must be imperfect, or else it leads to Pharisaic self-com-placency. It turns the moral life into a legal routine of duty- Between that kind of . legal servici which we may render under hope of winning God’s favor, and the free service to which we are constrained by the sense of dlvme sonablp and love, the dUtanev Is imlesxurablc. It Is to Jesus that the ..arid Is Indebted for showing us this, and enabling us to pass from the state of servile obedience to s God whom wo fear, « * * ~ **-‘*-—
whom
the relation between . upon the authority of Jesus aa our great Master and Deader la the things of the spirit, as from one who stands supremely above ns in spiritual insight Love creates a loving and obedlerft life. It destroys selfishness from tbo heart. It makes character; and character is salvation, in tbU and In all worlds. The kingdom of heaven on earth U •the kingdom of love, a society ot aea and woman who live tke loving end Christ-like fife; who btllevo that tbU U God’s world, sad who live apoo this
r, to the joyous service of a Father imVelove. We accept IhU view of
THE [(PBEE FLEECED Paul Morton Makes Astonishing Revelations of Fund JiigElinff. ORDERS SUIT FOR RECOVER*
irrn National Ubd) Braure Society On
S71S.:a* end Held For aiMS.-SOO. New York City.—Revelations so as founding that they staggered even thi most unscrupulous expert* in the art af high finance in Wall Street wen made by Paul Morton, prerident of tb< Equitable Life Assurance Society, in a statement Usued to the director*. In which be showed that the policy holder* of the society bad been fleeced out Df $718,264.90 by a deal in worthless and partly worthless securities originally taken by the Western National Bank on collateral loans made by the
,3,07 Me eelo
bank to John W. Young, of . Ing Trust notoriety; the Kentucky Mineral and Timber Company and tbo Amity Land and Irrigation Company,
of Colorado.
Mr. Morton in announcing the ioss of this $71&2G(.9C add* that $100,009 more in cash was paid out for something that he hat not discovered in connection with the same deal; that Driglnaily this was a private transaction among certain directors of the Equitable and the Mercantile Trust Oompany. Involving in the beginning the purchase of doubtful stocks at a tost of $661,491: that about one-fifth ot these were absolutely valueless In the beginning, and that for the fourfifths the Equitable Society has wrongfully paid out in meeting notes and the interest thereon. $718,264.90, but find* now that the original loan, plus interest. stafida for' $1,270,478.49. Therefore, despite the payment of more than three-quarters of a million on the original note for $661,491. the note still lives with a value of $1,276,478.49. Mr. Morton, after explaining that the Equitable never bad any connection with this except to pay out the money and save certain directors, furnishes the further Information that be has discovered In respect of the mysterious $685,000 tranactions, some time called the “yellow dog” fund, that the Equitable Society actually paid on this in the last few years $265.000 in cash awl that, therefore, the mysterious persons who took up this loan In the Mercantile Trust Oompany six weeks ago really only paid the diff ere fire between $685,000 and $205,000. Mr. Morton further finds that the oollatersl held on a loan of $86,488 to John E. Harles Is worthless. He Inti-
mates that worse, is to come.
The new deal exposed by Morton Is years old, and was engineered and guaranteed by Henry B. Hyde, foundof the society; Mar eel I us Hartley. ? of its millionaire directors; John E. 8carles, former “Sugar King;" General Louis Mtagerald. Hyde’s 'president of -^he Mercantile Trust Oompany. and W. N. Coler. Jr. The deal war due to the refusal of a national bank examiner to permit the securities to remain on the books of the Western National Bank aa assets, and was based am a note tor $661.491. made by George Y. Turner, secretary to. General Fitrgerold, guaranteed by the jnen mentioned above and accepted by the
Mercantile Trust-Company.
Since November 15. 1894, this nocalled “Turner loan” has been In existence. but seemingly it never has been discovered by State Superintendent of Banks Kilbnrn or State Supeiintendent of Insurance Hendricks oK|,
their predecessors. -
But what is regarded , as one of the lost astoundlngvfeiiftirea of the revelations made by Mr. Morton U the fact that after the Equitable Society, which really had nothing to do with the deal primarily, had been protected from loss by the guarantee* of Hyde, Hartley and their associates, James W. Alexander, who succeeded Hyde as president ,of the Equitable, gave to these guarantors In the name of the society a release from their guarantees, and saddled upon the Equitable Society the sole responsibility for the bad investment This included $1!3,055 of absolutely worthless bonds and stocks taken from Young by the Western National Bank; In which the Equitable Society owned less than a two-fifths
interest
Mr. Morton, while disclosing only part facts and concealing the remainder, announced, be had Instructed Wallace MacFarlane. special counsel for the society, to Insist that the $718,264.90 paid by the society Into the scheme without seeming authority should be refunded by the Mercantile Trust Company, with interest. Mr. MacFarlane waa Instructed also to bring suit tb recover the money If the trust company should refuse to make restitution voluntarily, and to take steps to protect the society against further loss because of the Alexander
URGES COMPULSORY INSURANCE Queen of Holland Would Make Every One a Policy Holder. The Hague, Holland. — The States General were reopened. Queen W1S'lelmlna’s speech, after expressing her ileasure at the end of the Far Kaatern war, dealt with Internal matters, proC id the uulverssi preliminary train* of the youth of the nation In order to make the whole people available for
WASHINGTON. Bfcretary of the Nsvy Bpoaparr will become Attorney-General Bs sUee*-**or to Moody, who will retire from the Cabinet next aprlng. The United Slates Attorney-Gener-al's office refused the offer of G. IV. Beavers, charged with complicity in the postal frauds, to eon fen* and thus obtain a light sentence. The eonnt ot the cash, notes, bonds and other securities in the United States Treasury, incident to the transfer of the office from Bill* U. Roberts to Charles H. Treat, was found to aggregate exactly with the Treasury book*. The total, as of July 1. UKJ. was fonnd to $1.259,598AS 2-3. Wade 8. Ethufield has been appointed United Staten District Attorney for the Northern Dlstriet of Indian Territory in place of P. L. Soper, resigned. OUR ADOPTED ISLANDS. First Lieutenant Sydney 8. Burbank, Sixth Infantry, U. 8. A., is to be courtmartialled. Lieutenant Burbank, who Is now in the Philippines, Is the officer Who brought suit In the District Court, Leavenworth, Kan., to annul an alleged marriage with Mrs. Concepcion Vasqoex, a Filipino woman. The suit is still pending, and after many delays, covering a period of nearly two years. Is set for trial io October.
DOMESTIC.
. If was charged that a gang of New ■ York City wire-tappers robbed the Edison Company of $75,000 worth of electricity. ' A fourth tunnel has been planned to connect Manhattan. New York City, and Jersey under the North River. Witnesses In the suit of Vcnreuela to recover $11,000,000 from the New York and Bermuda Asphalt Company testified that the company afstaled the Venesuelan revolutionists. Colonel Back Hulhall, ranchman and railroad live stock agent, convicted'of' shooting and wounding Ernest Morgan, in the World’s Fair Pike, on June 18, 1904, was sentenced In St. Lools. to serve the three years' penitentiary term specified by the trial Jury. Enroute to a church lecture In New York City a Bronx Zoo moccasin gave birib to seventeen little ones in an ele-
vated train.
United States District Attorney Morrison annonneed that the next step In the Beef Trust emsea woold be the prosecution of ibe railroads for giving
.rebates to packers.
Homer L. Castle declared in Pittaburg, Pa., that State fund* were depos ited in a bank oh condition that onehalt the sum should be loaned to United States Senator Boise Penrose. Prance asked the. United States to co-operate in preveptlng ocean steamships from crowing the Newfoundland Banks during the fishing season in order to protect the lives of fishermen The Citlaens'- Colon asked .Borough President Utile Ion, of Brooklyn, to be in readlneks - to accept a possible Fusion nomination for Mayor of the
city of New York.
The price of all grades of crude . except Raglan, was. advanced' again by the- Standard Oil Company, making the third advance in quotations in two weeks. As usual, the higher grades of oil were raised three cents and the
lower grades two cents.
State officials In Chicago look action toward recovering land worth $4,000,000 said to have been unlawfully oc-
cupied by g steel company.
Thomas H. McManus defeated Geo. ,W. Plunkitt in the fight for leadership in the Fifteenth District, New York
fCHy.
Charles A. Seton and Harrison H. McBlhiney, claiming to be brokers, ' were arrested In New York on a charge of swindling. By the Mayor's order Borough President Ahearn .revoked the permit the “Steinway tunnel" from Long and City to the Grand Central Station, New York City. By the formation of the Metropolitan News Company, of Louisville, poolroom keepers throughout the country received full returns of the races from the Gravesend track. Representatives of subordinate councils of the Royal Arcanum took measures to test the new
courts.
Hotel men of Richmond, Va., are angry because the committee appointed to arraage a reception for President Roosevelt, who visits there next month, have obtained the services of a Wash-
ington caterer.
' • FOREIGN.
The Caban Government apologised for the defilement of the escutcheon of the American Consubtte at Clenfuegos. Togo's flagship was destroyed as the ' J • •--MrtroS In Toklo,
Maine wag, it tt Aow belli
More troops have been, ordered to Bakn and a quantity of arms Intended for the transcancaslan w —
has been found in Betoum.
Frederic Flores Galindo, a noted Peruvian poet died at Lima. He was the son of the celebrated English, engineer, James Watson Eggleston, and of the Inca Princess Pineal, a descendant of
the conqueror of Peru.
The Ontario Fisheries Department will make a rigid Investigation Into alleged Illegal fishing by American firms .In Georgian Bay and Lake Erie. It is bald that thousand* of tona of fish lilc- - ■ • I to the United
NEW JERSEnp NEWS ’ Aecuiet. tpe. Freeholder^., ^ , Obr-rges of graft wtr* made'following the opculug Of the primary elections by President Jobe P. Dullard, of the CUy Board.Of Assr-fiKor*. of Treii; ton, Bltt}hg"u8>' mptober of the County Board of Aafci-Ssor*. The charge ia that the Board qf Chosen Freutioldera had .Illegally expanded Iuei year $47.282.26, and because of graft the UoatIng Indebtedness, which*should heve been reduced to $112.224, was now $270,500. Mr. Dullard, who is a Demoeral, In eharglug graft against the Republican Board of Freeholder*, called fqr a full investigation, and Mtid the blame should be placed of keeping the taxes of Trenton at uri abnormal figure, while money was being illegally spent. City As«r*«ir Edward M Reading, also a Democrat, who wn» chairman of the meeting, ruled Mr. Dulinrd out of order, but not before Mr Dullard had put hi* protest on the record. It Is believed thlrt the Democrat* will make their tight this fall on three disclosure* Wrong Body to Cemetery. A new complication ha* arisen In the ea»e of the man found dead end mutilated on a trolley track In Hi Mrs. Grave, ot 375 Main street. East Orange, Identified the body aa that of her burhnnd John by tattoo mark*. family, is alive rind worUng tn Poughkeepsie The body wt? piaerd nr a coffin and taken to the Cemetery of the Holy Sepnlehn. The other night Mrs. Grove decided that the was no: that of lire husband. It apidrntity when they lift Kuna's morgue in Orange, on the previous morning They received Information that Grovi wm in Poughkeepsie. N. Y. They sen word to the address given there anc received a message from him saying he war well end had a goed Job. The body was brought back to the morgue. . Rounding Up Burglar Gang. fYre police of Millville are still trying to round up Ibe burglar gang which has been terrorizing residents for several month*, and arrested William Bales a: ooe of the gang, which, it was chargnj, was led by Charles Corson. who was previously arrested. There are more than a dozen charges against the prisoner*, and. although Corson has almost admitted his guilt, he and Batrs pleaded "not guilty” at a hearing before Mayor Payne. Of the wagonload of plunder recovered at the home of Corson, most of it has been identified by residents whose properties have’ been entered. The authorities tried to iuduce one of the prisoners to confess and divulge the names of the remainder of the gang, and the place where the rest of the booty was stored. Counsel for Bales said be would show that the prisoner wa
To Ask Recount of Votes. The supporters of Everett Colby Bloomfield are to apply to the courts in a few days to demand a recount of the votes cast in the First District of the First Ward, -where Harry L. Okborne, a candidate, was declared elected a member of (be Republican County Committee by two majority. Lauckin Sutton, the Colby candidate, aided by many prominent politicians, will make the application for the recount on the ground that all of the votes in the box were not counted, due to the failure of the election officers to properly register all the voters. The Colbyltes have every reason to believe that the ballots In the box are for Sutton and if counted woo’d give Sutton a major ity of one. Express Delays to Save Life. The life of James Stereos, of Arden, Orange County, N. Y., was saved by the action of the Erie Railroad officials, who ordered the Chicago express to stop and carry Stevens, who was Injured in a runaway accident, to Paterson of treatment. Stevens was driving a two-horse mowing machine, when the horses ran away end-he fell into the machine. The lower part cf his body- was badly lacerated and he would have died from the loss of blood bad not tbe train hurried him to SL Joseph’s Hospital. His right leg was amputated. Tries to Wreck a Train. The police of Trenton arrested William Peters, a newsboy, of 107 West Hanover afreet, who was accused of throwing switches on, the Pennsylvania Railroad. PcUnflfewas seen throwing a switch NT’ the Goal port yard, and tbe yhrdmen made a rush for him. The boy fled bnt rah Into the arms of a policeman. A train was due, and had the .turned switch not been discovered when Jt was the train would hare, been thrown over Into the ranal. Peters said he "was doing it !or fun."' Engineer Killed Under Wheels. Lurry Westerflcid," engineer ot a freight train on the Central Railroad at New Jersey, was killed at Annaniale. He walked along tbe ranning board of the engine while the train ■ran in motion to reach for-a train yrder which a telegraph operator on the station platform waa about to xand him. In making a grab for tire yaper Westcrfirld lost his balance and lell under the wheels.
Former Teacher's Little'Mine. B. Howell Tice, formerly fcperrlstng principal of schools at Williamstown, but now a scientific fruit grower, ms produced a new variety ot strawMrry, which produces a tall bearing, •ren after yielding a full crop In tbe ipring. Mr. Tice now has berries which bring him fifty cents a quart. In An Parts of tbe Statu. Martin J. O'Brien waa reappointed * Camden County by
annual United Towns , ha* been fixed for
America ha* accustomed u* to bear tug of the bodily removal of 4it>u*e«. bu but if bn* ‘been left •for Rursla to pro Vide thi- spe<-tr.cfe (f a wboiei town oi ftorne 5006 Iriliiibitnnt* changing It* In rstkorv TliHI, however. Is-tbo ruse will Lepsltii*. a town' in life'djnirlrt oi Scmlrclach'f. in ItUkolaii Tnran. Twenty-two year* ago LepKlimk war foumh-d on Hind provider] for the pur pose by the Governor General of tin provim-r. This land had. however horde of Comuiol;*, who strongly ob jected IO Hie transfer. For twenty tw< year* tbe dispute bn* continued, am now at Inst the inhabitants of Lop five kilometre* to the northwest o their presen! quarters, have decided 1<
Rome of those who are fond of speak ing of Kiissia as an uncivilized country should turn to the Tunes. They will find there a summary of a Sbopi Early Closing hill, drawn up by the Russian Minister of Finance, which
It i
stage
blgher than we h» peoially Important is the provl lor-al committee* for carrying act—representing employers r ployes in equal proportions
It would Uf 1) of government i
to it In the American Republic, whi. the Journalist trot* out as the liapi hrnd In contrast to terrible Russia London Saturday Review DISFIGURING HUMOR
came out. 1 bad tried three ooctor*, but did not get any better, l.then went to another doctor. He thought my face would be marked for life, but my brother in-law told me to get Cutieura. 1 washed mrnt, and took Cutieura Resolvent ai directed. 1 could bni*ti tbe rcaies ofl r»y
Iowa is one of the five States that have more than 1000 newspapers, its companions on this roll of honor being Ohio. Illinois, Pennsylvania and New York. Illinois has a newspaper for every 2928 of its population. Ohlx for every 3000: New York for every 3800 and Pennsylvania for every 4661.
The earth weighs, according to scientific estimates, 4.043,000,000,000.000 tons. N.Y.—39. ‘
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Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teething ao (tens thegnm* .reduces inflammation .allays pain,cures wind oollo^he. a bottle
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Mothers ^re Helped THEIR HEALTH RESTORED Happiness of Thousands of Homos Dm to Lydia E. Flo thaw's Vegetable Cuapoond and Mrs. Pinkhaa’t Adrioe. A devoted mother seems to listen tc every call of duty eicepting the supreme one that tells her to guard her health, and before oh'e realizes it some derangement of the female organs boa manifested itself, and nervousness and irritability take the place of happiness and amiability.
""SOU) BY GOOD DEALERS ElBlYWESfT
Tired, nervoua and irritable, tbe mother is unfit to care for bar children, and her condition ruins the child's disposition and reacta upon berwelf. The mother should not he blamed, as the no doubt is stir
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