The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, March 26, 1905, Page 6, Image 6

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    -t ' , y; , . ; -; ' , ;: ; jhb . ' Oregon . Sunday, jour.:iAU ForrxAHiv.' sukday. nopjiino, iia? ta s:. . ,,.,y.
3 k to M
111 S il Umm HI ilil : ii
iS mmmimm i pwii pi y ji
HARVEST OF SOULS
.PALLS TO REAPERS
Already Very Manjr People Bear
, , Witness to the Efficacy
REVIVAL SPIRIT SWEEPS "' -:
I: 1 OVER THE ENTIRE CITY
At Meetings Today All WiU Have
-77 -y Chance to: Hear Evan-; . 'i
geliets.
,,4
, WHAT THE ' TTNION llEVI-
VAL. HAS ACCOMPLISHED IN
.'THRBtt DAYS.
Th rrtuma below lvi) repr-
nt ivportu from five out of the
nln Pnrtland dlstricti and
ecpt Ui the cmao of Dr. Chapman'
dUtrict do not include tha con- d
veralona of Friday il(ht: - d
4 Plrat' PrMbteiian. . J. Wilbur
Chapmaiv TS convrrta; Centenary d
Mrthodlst, John H. Klllott. 17
converta: Fourth Preabyterlan, ' d
' Daniel B. ' -Toy. 1 eonverta;
. 8unnyalde ConcrcKatlonal, R. A.
Walton. 15 converta; Flrat Con
'. "relational.-' Henry Ostrom, T 1
. eonverta. Total. 137 converta. -
. Not - yet heard from: Taylor d
treat-Met hod urt. Torb Preaby
, tertan. Calvary Baptint, People'
Inatltute. atreet meeting . and
mtocellaneoua work. , .-. .
w ' Preference expreaeed by con-,
verta:- . ' .
Preabyterlan .......... .. 4 1
MeUiodlaf it
Baptlal 27
CongTeicmUonal
Kvanr Ileal ...
Kpiaropat ....
Chrlatlan
Lrijmeran -... v. . . . .
Cumberland Presbyterian.....
No preference expresaed..
11
Total.
..137
. Wednesday. ' Tiiurndar, Friday -thro
day a of actual labor and the reen
tered converta of 'the? cruaade for Chriat
are- numbered by hundred.
In the hlatory t great revival Ilk
the present It han never been the cus
tom to lxilt for "convert "at thalntr-
ductory mcetinaa. 1 Rather theae
' 1
navs
been devoted to Interesting the people In
Mm preachers giving th curious to un
derstand that refreshment la really to
found In religious discourse genera
ating a power which; will, it la hoped,
draw them back again and again until
th loglo and eloquence of the speakers
liave brought them into th fold.
Hut something mighty and unexpected
ha happened.' Each of the revivalist
admits It. Here In Portland wicked
Portland, from a ministerial standpoint
five out of. nine districts report 127
registered converts and In four of the
district the effects of the multiple
sermon of Friday fid Saturday are not
Included. -'
V-unbe f OoaversloB.
'; Th most conservative estimate pluces
the actual number of soul won over to
the cause up to this hour at 100 Or up
ward of l a day. it la unprecedented
unheard of. , .
'And the revival ha not yetbegun.
This 1 the day when the spiritual
rwket ent skyward last week Is to
burst In all It magnificence. '
The accompanying table shows where
the many conversions were made, by
slwn ' awl -ahat r-hwrch each - of the
Toaverts -' preferred to1 olny It 1 an
Interest Ing study in figure. . but mors
instructive would be the aturirs of the
converted ones, each of whom no doubt
wsuld saf that one particular ' point
scored "by the preacher StrucK di-epest
to Ma or r heart. '
Th fact that the. greatest number of
conversion was had at the First Tre
byteiian church Is tntereatlng, , but
Vtoouht not b regarded In I he slightest
ssnn S)4 uncomplimentary to th otber
evangeliata. It must ba remembered
that lie. Chapman wa the most widely
advertised ft the visitors; ' that , th
churvlt Jw u cBcrmeus aeaUcg, ca-
TTV7 ATVrn.T7T TCT,: QOTTP : TnT?rTT. A TSin 3- 01MT? PT7.WTT7.P TH HT i? P.t T TV77? RT" F.WP.P; 7!-i i ci J : i ::VJh
"WO R L D-R E V I VA1 .
- IS NOW AT HAND"
Rev J. Wilbur Chapman Reads the Future In the Wonderful
t Awakening in Wales Which Has .Crossed the Sea. to -
'.'V'irrvi ; America and Is Spreading. s.
' 9. WUbar Oaapmaa) . ,
t have been more or leas In the evan
gelistic .work . for. the past 19 year.
Seven years of. that time 'I have been
without a special charge a a pastor.
For eight year I was. both pwator and
evangelist. For th past four year 1
have been a member of the Preabyterlan
evangelistic committee and I have served
as the Committee' aecrtary' Thl has
brought n In personal touch' with al
most every Presbyterian minister In the
L'nlted State. Because , of thl experi
ence for th past year I think I am In
position to judge aa to th present
condition of th country and the future
outlook for what may be properly
termed a marvelous work of grace.
There wa In the church, up to a few
year aien. m disposition to ' criticise
evangelistic work. .. to ' discredit evan
gelist and to depreciate the results of
such meeting a are now being held In
Portland. But the whole attitude of the
church seem to J changing. Evan
gellstte work Is heartily believed In by
the great ma of minister, evangelists
ar eagerly sought for and the result
of such meeting ar gratifying In th
extreme." ', - " .'' ., t
Between Xoa Angeles and Oakland I
spent a. few d&ys in Ksdlands In such
meeting as these and today th Congre
gational minister wrote me that he had
received 71 people Into hla church on a
single Sundsy. Rev. Robert F. Coyle
of Denver, told me the ether day that he
paclty and finally that It. I more cen
trally located than many 'of the other
and attracted the largest crowd aa a
matter of course. :',.'
. There Is slgntlcance, however. In the
table of preference. In th Teepect that
a dosen or more denomination are not
yet represented. ?; ' ' ;
v '' Oaly rrellatinar Betarm.
The central committee, a on an elec
tion night, ha received but the prelim
inary return. The result In full 1
not yet known. By ' th end of thl
week It Is confidently expected and
bravely predicted that the convert will
be numbered by th .thousand.
There will be ni excuse for man.
woman or child In Portland today who la
seeking feast for th soul If he doe not
find It. Tbi morning. the local pastors
will occupy their regular pulpits, with
one exception that of the First Pres-
. , . .... h. Tkr H I tHHT
.... . r u. a3ia h i.
give iimw tw v-n w . i .
boring men' vangollst,
At o'clock ' th Marquam will be
thrown, open to th men of Portlsnd.
who will heaf an address on "tne
White Life." by Rev. W. K. Blederwolf
end In effective singing under the direc
tion of Harry Maxwell. At the same
hour Dr. Henry Ostrom will speak to
women only at rthe , White - Temple.
Music will be a feature here also.
Rv. C. T. Bhaeffer Will address girl
only st the Flryt Congregational church
and one hour later, at ociqck. ne win
talk to boy at the T. M. C. A. room.
fcearlng; ths Kessags. ---
There will be three meetings at the
Men Resort and People . Institute.
Th firt will begin if 4 ociock. na
I for men only. The sermon will be
by Rev. Thomas Needham, the sub
ject 'Deliverance,'" and the text-trom
Cor. II. "But we have the sentence of
death In ourselves.?
The second meeting will be on the
street near the-Resort at :0 o'clock
In the Resort, at 7so o'clock, there
III be a mass meeting for both sexes.
st which Kev. J. E. Snyder will peak
on "Sowing and Reaping."
At :4 o'clock .the auto-truck will
start from ' the Taylor street cnurcn.
and In uccenlun street meetings will
be held by Rev. J. U McC'omb. at th
corners of Third and Alder streets and
Third and Tyler streeu. - At t o'clock.
In case of. an. overflow, atith -Taylor
Street church. Mr. MeCorab will address
meeting at Grace M. E. church.
At the Trinity Methodlt churcn Xr,
H: W. Stnugh will talk t women only
at 7 p. m.
The evangelists will resume their
usual stations for services at 7:10
o'clock. wllh the exception, of Dr. Chap-
mao. , He will talk to me only at th
'AS THE CAMERA CAUGHT REV. J. WILBUR CHAPMAN IN THE PULPIT
had .received into his church 160 people
as a result of ths meetings, and ex
pected quite aa many ' more. - Today I
have Juat heard from the eaat and was
informed that, there .1 a marvelously In
creasing Interest In evangelism In. that
part of -the country., A letter on my
table from London tells the same story
and the revival In Wales ha challenged
the attention of the Corletlan world, all
of which goea to prove that 'we are-at
the beginning of a werld-wldeTevrvai. V
' The American revtvsja differ from
those held In the old world. In Lon
don Dr. 'Torry speaks In a great central
building, like 'Albert hall. - with 10,000
people present "In. America the meet'
lngs are held In the churches, the cities
are divided Into district, and not only
I It possible to have a greater hear
ing than could be given In any - single
place, but the work la carried on through
the ohannel of the church and men are
converted In the church of Jesus Christ.
Thl work In Portland Impresses me
most favorably. 1 have a telegram from
Seattle asking If I would consent, to
the erection of a great tent structure
capable of seating -6,000 people. 'We go
to Seattle from here and the work there
1 to be sectional, th am aa In Port
land. We are grateful for the attention
given our meetings. In almost every
city the newspaper have treated us
most generously. . The editors have
come to see that we are seeking to do
a permanent work,- which will help make
th life of their city. - . -
White Temple at that hour. "HI-.subject
will be. "Chased Out of th World."
taken from Job 11:11: "He shall be
driven from light Into darkneas and
chaaed out of the world." . Fred Butler
will sing. ' . , . - v ' ...
Other Keettxur. .
The ether offerings will be ' fol
lows, , the name In parenthesis being
those of the singers: . . .
District No. 1 Taylor-atreet Metho
dist, Rev. W, E. Blederwolf, , on 'The
Highest Passion." Text, psalm 142:3:
"No man cared for my soul.' (Harry
U Maxwell.)
District No. 4 Fourth Preabyterlan
church. Rev. Daniel S. Toy 'on "Clod's
Sacrifice for Sin." Text. Zeph, 1:7, "The
Ixird hath prepared a sacrifice. He hath
bid His guests." (Frank Dickson.)
. District No. (People' Institute, BavJ
J. E. Snyder. . . . j
District No. t Forbes Presbyterian.
Rev.-Thomag-Needham; Text,-Oal.-t.
"But though we or an angel from heaven
preach any other gospel unto you than
that which we have preached unto you,
let him be accursed." C. N. D. Powers.)
District No. 7 Sunnyslde Congrega
tional. Rov. R. A. Walton on "A Good
Fellow." Text, Samuel II. "I the young
man safer (O. F. Pugh.)
District No. (-rCalvary Baptist, Rev.
Henry Ws S tough, a confidential talk to
men only.'" beginning' at 7:45. (W. H.
Colllsson. -'
District No. t Centenary Methodist,
Rev. John II. Elliott on "Foolish Ex-
ruses Answered." Text. Luke xlv:8-7.
"Come, for all thing ar now ready.
And they, all with one consent began to
mnke excuses." (Charles E. Rykert )
This make a grand total of 21 meet
ing to be held by the evangelist after
the regular pnator have performed their
morning's labor. ,
, ' " '
ARRANGING FOR COAST
- ; INDIAN INSTITUTE
- . Kperlal Illapstob U The Jasmtl.)
Chemawa, Or.. March -Superintendent
K. I-Chalcraft .was In Portland
today conferring with' ' the Lewis and
Clark management In reference to ar
rangements for holding the Pacific Coaat
Indian Institute, which will be held In
Portland In August. For the past five
yesrs two Institutes have been held, one
for 4he -west-and tHe "olher for the mid
dle west A the eastern Institute will
be held I his yesr at Ajbury Park and
th Pacific coast at Portland during
the fair,-from over all e United State
come the assursnce" that ! Jhe attend
ance at Portland will 'be. very large,
exceeding . that at Bl lentil last year,
when a record-breaking Institute . was
held. . : - - 1 .
WW MIEN GO
WEEPING TO ALTAR
Wave of Religious Enthusiasm
. Sweeps Over Crowd at Sal-
vation Army Meeting...
EVANGELIST J: L; M'COMB
CONDUCTS SERVICES
Many Give Experiences, and Not
i a Few Piof tss a Desire-4
tJ ' v ? v". fo Religion. ; v
Si)
.... , , . -...,.
In & crowded, dlna-v lim. ..'
it .
First1 street.1 Sal vktion 1 Army Pot No.
4, a Penteeostal meteor fell last ni.h .
There was no sermon; It was a wave
or, fervor from the beginning, m ex
change of experiences, mingled with
loud ahouta of Joy and hallelujah.
Evangelist J. I McComb waa to have
preached, but' quickly saw the Impend
ing victory and merely Joined a lne
iwuinwi rnm-ni. nowever. ne con
ducted the aervlcna . ,,...,
At the conelualnn nf IK.
worker and pleader went through the
crowd and a dosen or ' more men and
women want weeping and shouting to
the front aeeking forgivenea for their
In. r . v .
On .the platform' when the services
"rs" were ev, J. u JdcComb. the
evangelist to whom a murderer con
fessed at Oakland, last Monday), and
iiiui-o wnu uainiea mm Kev. M. M.
Bledsoe, of Immanuel Baptist church,
and Will M. lialM. Vertinn Vwb. a
L. Johnstone, of the Y. M. C A. There
were also the captain and other officers
oi me salvation- Army.
-.' Behind the nreahe mnA Wi
ants wa the Salvation Array band and
other musicians, attired In regulation
uniform. There waa a big baa drum,
cornet. - mandolins, gultara, cymbals
and lambourfnes. ' The walls were w.
ered with signs: "Be Sure Your Bins
Will Find You Out" "Remember Tour
Mother's Prayers" and others. The room
waa crowded. . - , .., .. '. . .,
Mr. McComb read a selection from the
Bible, then aekefl fnr MNAn.i .
enoe In th way of salvation. Ha won
the audience at once. Thn .mnA.'
by twos and threes, and at times there
were nan a a oxen on me rioor trying
to tell their stories.
There waa tntlmnnv from
Hons. A. Persian boy told of his Mo
hammedan father who had been con
verted to Christianity hv nl..lAh.,.
and had sent him to America. . He
reached Portland eight montha ago and
ws uDie to ten in good English what
the new fslth had don for him,
"I wa In Dublin a veae mifn .!.
baity led me to n evangellstlo service
wnere neara ut. toy, said a young
Irlihmin. In m atrnnv K-.. v,.-. ii..
more I listened the more uncomforta
ble I became. I said to myself, 'By Jin
go, he's telling the truth, and If he sk
me. If I'm fhrtMtlnn Ivln. .n'. jt n
m any good. He'll know I'm lying.' I
couian t stay away ana went the next
night.
"By that time the 'spotters' snd
... . u . v i - . wuwi. .ill; j
had me goin'. I confessed, became con,
vrtM4 AtiH Afnv here to teatlfv ia1 k n
Christianity haa done for me."'
"Ten years ago i waa a xianerman on
(he Columbia river." said another who
had found salvation, "and moat .of yoiS
Mill b nn-M Wh.l 4 h -1 MUM 1...
I. went home late, and found my mother
on ner snees prayina ior ner Doy. ,1
see thst sign over , there, 'Remember
Your Mother' Prayers.' and X remember
that night. Since then I have been a
Christian." My father had taught me to
put salt on fish to keep thm. If the
a.1 nf rellslnn rets on '.You. Vnn will
keep ss I have done.'.
A RusHlan n another part of "th
room told. In a broken way of hi con
version In a city In the csar's donTaln.
A real, living religion ls what his na
tive country needs, he ald. - -- . -.n
"Sixteen .yesrs ago I left the bonnl
1.111 "f - a r, , I n ,4 nnA n n. tn . . 1. 1
country, settling near Arleta, In Oregon,''
said a prominent cattleman "and I spent
thousands of dollars looking for what
they called happiness. A year , ago 1
vtsiieo-my nwinir in kuiihiio, anu men
I becamo converted.". - '
"I cgme 109 mile to attend the ,
meeting and- to give my testimony,''
said a rancher, who followed the Scotch
man, -"and after coming that distance
1 want to tell the world what religion
haa- done for- me. I- live- In a town 100
miles south of here, and there are other
there watching these meetings." .''..
"Thirty years Tgo I attended the re
vivals In Glasgow. Scotland, and heard
Mr. Moody preach,' piped the shrill
voice of an old woman, "and there I
became converted. And during all those
SO year I have known Christ, and I
owe my salvstlon to those service B0
year ago.".. ... -...;,
They tried to speak together,' o- In-"
tensely Interested did they become, and
when there seemed a medley of voice or
disorder the orchestra began and to Its
accompaniment the whole audience
Joined in a ' Bong, of hallelujah. , They
sang and prayed and testified.' 1
"A year ago: r 'came to Portland -to
study to become a mining engineer,'
said a handsome' yoortg man who rose,
and all' turned to hearv ."and - had
wh jt ia railed fin .prospect. I went te
the'Y. 'M. 'C. A., and there I became
converted. I learned what real religion
Evry day medical science become
mor simple and more certain, tsimpu
city and certainty go hand In hand. For
science baa learned that whll ther ar
many diseases, yet there are but few
real cause of disease. That Is, there
are many name by which ws know
aches and-, pain and disorders. . But
most of these ailments spring from a
common cauae. -
, For Instance, Indigestion, sour stom
ach, heartburn, dyspepsia-and all stom
ach troubles diabetes. Brtghfs disease
and other kidney disorders heart trou
bias, liver troubles, bowel troubles, ner
vousness, fretfulness, sleeplessness, lr.
rttablllty all of these ailment ar due
to a single cause. Painful, disagreeable
and dangerous, though they be. they are
not separate diseases and they are. not
to be treated a auoh. They ar merely
outward signs of inward trouble nerve
trouble. - -
Understand first that we have two en
tirely separate nerve systems. .. When
we walk, or talk, or act- we call into
play a certain set of nerve nerve
which obey our mental command. That
1 why -the arm tn be raised, or . the
mouth opened, or the eye, -shut, at ths
slightest desire. That ia why your fin
gers can delicately pick up a pin on
moment and hold a heavy hammer the
next r---- . -v ,
But these are not th nerve w are
to consider here. :
There Is another set of nerves which
manage and govern and actuates the
heart and 'the stomach, the kidneys and
the liver and all of the vital function.
You cannot control these nerves. By no
supreme effort of mind can yoa mako
your heart stop or start nor can you
even make it, vary by a single beat a
minute. And so with the stomach and
the liver and the kidney and th bowels
they ar automatic they do - their
work at a certain aet apeed whether you
are awake or asleep whether you- want.
them to or not
. ,lt J on 1 the Inside nerve ' that
lire ana neaun aepenaa. bo long aa these
nerve perform their proper dutiea we
are well and strong. When they fall.
we know It by the Inevitable symptoms
stomach, heart liver, kidney trouble.
And these trouble have no other origin,
ever, than in these same nerve, For
the stomach. the heart the liver, the
kidney, have no power of their own.
no self control. They owe their every
Impulse to th Inside nerve. Th nerve
ar the masters. Tbe organa , their
lave. .. --
The automatlo nerve are sometimes
called, the "sympathetic" nerves. Thl
name J given them because or the close
bond of sympathy which exists, between I
n.
.;..' ; .
ws and X .changed my views -on what
I will do in thl world. . I have decided
that t am needed. In the vineyard and
will devote my whole life and all my
strength to the service of the Ixird."'
Gray-haired men and women told th
story bf their live and their conver
sion. Young women and -yourvg men
spoke with no uncertainty. The preach
er clapped hla hands, and from the au
dience rose Joyful shout of- thanka
gtvlng. , . ... . .,..' ,:"',"'
t When the ' testimony .had subsided
somewhat Mr. McComb asked those to
raise their hand who had been con
verted 60 year or more. An aged man
held hi hand aloft Then -he. asked
for .those of 40 years'- religious experi
ence, and half a doxen . raised their
hands. Then Christians of JO. 20. 10
and five years' experience did llkewl,,
and in that way they learned who, lnj
the crowd did not jrof ess religion, r -Workers
began at once ' and -went
among the audience, finding many ..who
were repentant Young men, and women
talked earnestly with .the re sealant ones
for a time, and many went weepinfto
the altar. ;, ,.
all branches. This explain, why torn.-'
sen irouoie oiien -aeveiop into near?
trouble wby Indigestion bring on ner
vousness why disease become compli
cated. It explains, too, why ordinary
medical i treatments are wrong wby
medicine ao frequently falls.
For, despite the discoveries bf dence,
the common remedies of the day ar de
signed to treat the organ, not the nerv
the symptom Instead of the cause. . .
- Don't you, though you may not know
medlcne at all. see that thl I wrong?
That It I mere patchwork? That while
tbe suffering organ I enjoying it tern-
Hy Free Dollar Offer
Any sick one who has
not tried my remedy
Dr. Shoop's Restorative
may have a Full Dol
lar's Worth Free. I ask
no deposit; no reference,
hosecurlty7"There is
nothing to ; pay, either
now or liter. I wll send
you an order on your
druggist which he will
accept in full payment
for a regular, : standard
size Dollar bottle; And
he wilt send the bill to
,.V.f .
A'.- C I. Shoop. M. D.
porary relief, th nerv that 1 really
Ick may be getting wora and worse!
Doe thl not explain to you why re
lap o frequently follow a supposed
our?' Does this, not account, for the
uncertainties of medicine? . .,
' More thsn-thirty .year ' ago this
thought earn to met - , ,
"if life and health depend upon per
fect heart action, upon proper stomach
digestion. Upon correct kidney filtering.
why doe, not life Itael.t depend upon
mm s m
-if-:;
ROOSEVELT PRESENTS -
y DIPLOMAS TO MEDICS u
'; "Jeenl Bpedsl B-rrlce.) '
Washington. D. C, March S6. Presi
dent Rooevelt this morning presented i
diploma to 23 graduates of the United -State
naval . medical school, following
the ceremony with a 10-mtnute address.
ROJESTVEfilSKY SAILS"
x LEAVING MADAGASCAR
' . " IJflnnikr'Rnerlal grrvleal"-
... London, March 25; A dlKpaych to
Lloyd from Tans,' -Tav, " Madaaacar,
say' that' Rojeatvehsky' fleet ' nailed '
from there todsy. - Its destination I un "
known. . , ' ',...''..''.. '
; Colonct "Bu,tehr; of -- Baker ' Ctty.
staunch Democrat,' who hs been back "
to Washington, say Roosevelt Ms dur
ing all he can . to glv' everybody "a .
quar iaeal. ' ' . ' S. ' 1 " ' ' '
these life governing ; power nerve. ,
these inside nerve."
I realised, too, that all ailment which '
result from one cause may, of.courae. be
cured by one remedy. I resolved not
to doctor the organs but to treat the one
nerve system which operates them all.
For those who treat only the symp
toms need a different, remedy for each. .
Such, treatment are only palliative, the
reiut de- not last - A cure can neyer
come la disease- of Che stomach, heart,
liver or kidneys, until the Inside nerve
power is restored ; When that-la done,
Nature remove the symptom. - There
la no need of doctoring, them. .
My remedy now known by Druggist
everywhere aa Dr. Shoop' Restorative
I th result of a quarter century of en "
deavor along this very line. It doe not '
dose the organ or deaden the pain but
It doe go at one to th nerve the Ih
side nerve the power .nerve and bullds
lf up, and atrengthen it and make It "
well. . , . ' . - .
: Ther Is no mystery no miracle, t
can explain my treatment to you ax
easily aa I can tell you why cold freeies .
water and why heat melts lo.-- Nor do
I claim a discovery. For every detail
of my treatment la baaed on trutha ao
fundamental that none can deny them.
And every Ingredient of my medicine ia .
aa-ofdas the hlllait grow on. X simply
applied the trutha and combined tha In
gredients into a remedy .that 1 practi
cally certain.
In more than a million home my
-remedy Is now known, and relied upon,;
lei you may not oivt neara oi it. Ji'i .
I make this offer to you. a stranger,
that every possible excuse for doubt
may be removed. Send no money make''
no promise tske no risk. ' Htmplywrlte
and ask. If you have never tried my
remedy. I will send you aa Order on your
druggist for a full dollar bottle not a
sample; out the regular standard pottle '
he keen constantly on hi shelves. -The
druggist will require no conditions. He
will sccept my oruer as cneerruuy as
though your dollar lay before him, -H i
will send the bill to me, .
.. Will you socept thin opportunify to .
learn at ray expense absolutely how to '
be rid forever of all forma of nervous- .
ness to be rid not only nf the trouble,
but of the very cause which produced
It? Writ today. , - . i
for rre enter for
S fall dollar bottle .
Rook a Dyspepsias
. Honk X o. tn Heart.
yes siust Mrex Dr. Hook ( on th h laser.
RlMiop, Boa mx Bonk 4 for Wosws.
Haein. Wuu "' State 1 Bonk I for Mea. " '
which seek jou w.ot. Book as llbrss
Mil raoes ar sftes enred br I ln(l kottle.
Par Ml at forty Ibwaaad drug stores. -
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