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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1911-06-30, Page 3Sunday Se °cif, LESSON 1 -JULY 2, 19i1. Isaiah's Prophecy Concerning Ben- ri(icherib.—Isa, "e 14-38. Colnmemtar,y.--I,, Hezeldiah's prayer (veli 14-20), oho officers of Sennaehurib tailed in their attempt to imbeds [ eze- .kiah to surrender, and at letter was scut to the king of Judah in which Seunach- erib eaugnc Co frigltto;a Win into scth- inibsion, by telling of the xuo esses of the Aseyxian army, and speaking slight- ingly of tine God of Israel. It was at this point the 1lezekiah took Sennarher- ib's ' letter to the house of God. and spread before theLord.. In the e 1 taJ er are adoration,confession of need, argu- ment and petition. The king was jeal- ous for the honor of the true God and could not bear to hear his name re- proached. He oeknow1edged that the As- eyraans has subdued'other nations and had destroyed their gods, "the work of men's hands," and he prayed for deliv- erance that the kingdoms of the earth might know that the God of Israel was the true God. 11; The Load's answer (vs. 21-35). 21. Isaiah—The great prophet of Judah. See the Introduction of the seventh les- son of the preceding quarter. Thus saith the Lord —Through the prophet the Lord assured Hezekialh that his prayer was heard and would be' answer- ed, 22, Concerning him—Sennachcrib. The virgin, the daughter of Zion —The unconquered capital- of Judah, .J`erusa- lem. Laughed thea to scorn As the Assyrian King had scorned and re- proached Jerusalem, so that city scorn- ed him, 23. Against whop—"The holy One of Israel" was not 'to be classed with the gods of the heathen. 24. By the multitude of my chariots--6enua- .0 eberib had boasted of hie great army and of hie success in conquering the nation of Israel. Carmel — lleed here for fruitfulness. I have diggecl, and drunk water In 2 Hinge 19, 24, it is "strange waters." I have, marched into foreign lands where I had to dig wells far the. supply' of my armies; even the natural destitution of water there did not im- pede nay march. --J., F. & B. dried up all the rivers—The rivers were no ob- stl'uctions to the progress of his armies against his enemies. 26. I1astethon not heard long ago -- This and the three following verses from God's reply to t;ennacherib, who ha.l boasted of his strength and his great achievements. I have done its The Aa- Byrian had suet with great suceees, but that success had come to him simply as the unconscious agent in carrying out God's purpose. '27. Of small power—Tie- cause I so ordered it the people were of small power. before thiie. Whedan..;, n- naeherib thought :he of himself had achieved great, victories, while, in fact, Jehovah had. brought diemey and ,eon - fusion to those whose territory he in- vaded. nvaded. As the grass, ete A figure to dhow how quickly and easily God is able to make the strong weak. 28. 1 know thy abode, ete.—God declareel that he kuew the entire course of Sennaeherib's life, even . to hits "rage against" him. "All the acts of the As- syrian are under the strict surveillance of Jehovah, who will show His power over him by dragging him back, like a 'wild beast, to his place."—Cam. Bible, 20. Thy rage— Thy violence in tarrying out thine Own purposes. nine - tilt --Arrogant self•confidenre. ply hook in thy nose:—This is the first of the nose ring for lesding unruly animals. :1;1 This shall be a sign. An ashur- ancc of the cxrtainty ef what had been prom aped. God's word is he direct'' to Heeeki ls. Such lie groweth of itself. etc. Beeause of the invasion of the Ari- syri are the ground had remained total- ed. that year, vanyedtoso l the tvrtfor was then too far a hn;•tr•.;r for the paining ycme but the yen!' fol- lowing the n uiil cultivation of the i U WOW., be resumed. as the invader% woatld be entitrrly gone, 3i. The rem- nant.. Arkeording to "San neellrk-We Cylinder." he ilea taken into eall'sivity frena Alden 20't,lt0 pereeme. in that it wee literally' a. rc nl10nt that fent..' c l 'leaks, laot. 11owatWard, a*:d Mx. t• 611 j; lip. ward.. :\. fignt•e ef ctttvillt • •ewltl era fruitful:acme 3.2 The real of the Lord of hosts. (;ears intense interest in Je- dali s ,welfare. :i3. Shall not eunle into this city. itis laud boasting was utterly vain•. He tvonlil not even make ata at- ta<dc upon J*.ru a1en1, Nor ca,1t a hank against it. No mounds would be ee.n: strneted against the wale, from wb:ielt the battering rime; and other bistro menu of war could be weed. 34.. By the xntme shad he return. Ilia route would tie near the ;ee forty miles west of •Jeru=alean, 3e. 1 will defend. Ar, (led had defended his people for eenturies, as they turned to hint' eo amearding to his faithful promise tar David he would continue to defend them, IIT. Sennacherib's ,defeat (vs. 2d-88). S6. The angel.. smote. N'o infornation is givens as to haw the destruction of 188.000 glen was accomplished. It may have been ay a fierce storm or more li'.ae• ly by a deadly plague.. It wawa emeden, for, "It came to pass that night" (2 Kings, 19:35). When they arose. ',Mat is, the survivors. `Che revieted veiro10T3 is better: "When igen arose early in the zn81-n1ng, ballot d. these were all deed bod- ies," oli-ies" 37, 38. The scripture retards do not tell res IOW long bennatdhel•ib lived after returning to Nineveh., but from in- eoriptions upon monument.; it is found that he lived attwenty years and carried on five campaigns, none of which were in Palestine. Qunstiol .—\' ho was Senna oherib? Who WAS king of Judah? T TI1 r dad Sen- nsnherib Invade Judah.? What was the nature of the letter which the king of ,Atesyria sent to Tlezakieli? What Ne. ISiveekiah do with the letter? What lege- Mr; john Scratdied. 1 : nti Ilorehellcs4 "It was in the latter end of the 'year 190e that a nasty itch came through my shin, and I scratched it until 1 tore the flesh. .I tried several ointments to no effect. I went to a ,skin hospital. They advised »e to -'go to the 'Hospital, but I•re- fused. I could not sleep with the constant itch. I was that way until on o. about the month of January. One .lay I chanced to see in the papers a Mg/3 like mine, but I gave it no credence. At last I said, I will try the Cutioura Remedies: With the fire's wash and Cutieura Ointment I used I found their e9'eots. I got one box of the Ointment more, and in less than one week the skin was all right, and left no traces after it. I have not had a return of the same since, and I shall always praise the Cuticura Remedies as being the means of my cure." (Signed) Joarr Tzrsszr to 94, Sootland Road, Liverpool. In a further letter Mr. Tyrrell adds: "The first appearance of my skin eczema was a burning itch which I tore and left my body legs and arras one mess of sores. I caused sleep- less nights, but now 1 can sleep as III well as ever. utic Soap and Ointment are sold by druggists everyRbere. Potter Drug At Chem. Corp., Solo Props., Bangui, liars. Milled tree, Clinourr Book ore akin diseases. .glide lam at mere lrititrureet ipr tee take cutioct oL iills purposes, In tee amitiist et all calamitieb U•od presences a faithful. remnant for .ti:imse11 who shall worship Him and Spread abroad J,ifs name. time euvlaerib and liabshakeh stand` in sharp eontrast to ILezeldath and, Isaiah, 'They, Felted un their o,wn, human power and. alight. They recognized nothing super- ior to thesnselvee. They ehtank Irma Ino means of gratifying their tunhition for at:hievement, They insulted staid scoffed et, 'Gtod until Hie judgment fell ween thein. The Assyrian arn'ty`perished with- • out a battle. In a siagle night 'Judah was delivered out of the Kanaof its mighty enemy. Isaiah Stam' anti plainly :declared the hand of hod in that event, i(?Ide , extraordinary calamity befell the Assyrian array by a dispesation of Pro- vidente.at a great crisis in the history of Judah. By it we are shown divine vengeance arl"age S eunae erb , w ba night had boosted. of his great might in that he had smitten whole, kingdoms and 'peo-. tiles, was made to retarc, in defeat, and later to suffer death at the hands of his own sons. ltiert'et mistakes ea ha God do cant alter the realities' of their relation to Him. T..13. A. PB.(ICTICAL APPLICATIONS. S. "llasel•:iah received the letter ane epl'ead it bei'ore. the Lord" (v, 14). "This is the right treatmca t for books, letters, editorials and paragraphs which :aatari owse the truth and slur•boliness. Spread theta before' the Ileal instead •0f' before the people. ITeatklih"s recourse to, Aseyria. made? What did the Lctrd promise to da for 1{ezekiadt and hie peo- ple? What eign was given that it would come to pass? What calamity befell the Aleutian ' army?Ihi of fate aid Sennaaher6b Meet? How is Iieaekiah as example for us? ' PRA(.J?XCAL SURVEY. Topis-Impending ealamity, T. Removed from Judah. IL Visited upon Assyria.. 1, Removed from Judah. .Jerusalem and the kingdom of Judah were in peril such as had never before befallen them. The' destruction of the city was con- templated and seemed rapidly approach- ing. The greatest power on earth stood in hostility to the Iittle kingdom of Judah. which was reduced to two smo3l tribes. Its destruetion seemed inevitable. Assyria stood at the summit of its power as a •world-inona.rchy. In- toxicated with success, ennaelterib Counted that there was no power equal to him either in earth or heaven. 1te tweeted that he had devoted all the conquered lands to destruction and had caused nations to perish. It was a try- ing position for Bezekiah, From a hu- man standpoint there was little hope with his handful of igen of rolling bark the mighty tide of eongnest. Front early life ileznkiah's great afro had been to please the Lord, and his trust in. God had made him the noble:.t king of ,Tu - doh; but there came a day of trouble, of deep distress and humiliation. It was a day of chastisement. from Cod. The policy of relying on Egypt was Hezekiah's great mistake. This time of peril from the Assyrians was a time of trial and discipline. lent the moment he realized hie own helplessness, he realized the return of Clods favor to him. Thus by leading him to feel his own weakness God brought TTezeloia.h to rely fully upon .him for help. Ile threw himself 3n his utter wen.knese up- in God's strength. Ile prayed. He sent a statement of the situation to the prophet. All tide he did before receiv- ing the letter from Sennacherib. Then he prayed again. Judah was in utter national helplessness and in a terrible national calamity. In spreading all their difficulties before the Lord Hese- kiah evidenced hie confidence in (,"rod's interest in the affairs of his suffering people. Prayer was his only key to un- lock a door of escape. Prayer was his soul's best resort in a time of extrem- ity. Distress and threatened , danger exercised him in acceptable prayer. Sen. naeherib's letter was an echo of the speech of Rabshakeh. The voice of that king was raised in exultation at his prospective victory over the people of God. llezekiah was not so much alarmed for bis throne and his own glory as he viers for the name of God, that it be not blasphemed. In the midst of all this Isaiah stood firm and un- shaken, He proclaimed in the name of the Lord deliverance to Judah and destruction to the Assyrian army: A definite assurance was given that the city of ,Jerusalem would not be harm- ed, Faith triumphed beforehand over all the powers of the enemy. 11. Visited upon Assyria. (,lod is mer- ciful and gracious, but TTe will not 'be scorned or blasphemed. Va:stly.different from Senacherib's view of himself was the view which Goa took of him. :Pte silage did Ieeaitlh. beat to the lung of brought to pass a complete reversal of prayer is a rebuke to diose whose rues reliance is on knowledge; shill "gad abil- ity in debate. Many who ley eresit store by their guns of logic or squibs of satire and think they beve. dciuolishcti the cm rent infidelity sestet oblivious to the tact that their own sons and others are being poisoned still by the, evil they eda;ini to have wiped out. Let us enquire facility in the Holy art of spreading things before the Loren" Prayer brings men to God. Prayer does not change the uncttange- a.1,ie One. Pryer puts us in a condition to prove God's promises and receive His gifts. Would you learn how to pray? 1. Have regular times for prayer (Pse. 55, 17; Dan. 0, 10). 2. Have a place of prayer (Matt. 6, 6). 3. Be sure you have no wadi -giving spirit (Matt. 5, 23, 24). 4. Confess every known sin and take the blood to eover•it (1. John 1, 7). 5. Ask for definite things. 'Talk over everything that interests or troubles you, with minute details to God, as a child to its father: 'Nothing that con- cerns you is foreign to Him (Phil. 4, 6, 7). 6. Have faith ,irt God, not faith in prayer (Mark 11, 23i.. "Whereas thou hast prayed" (v. 21.) The prayer of the upright is God's de- Iight. He bears the prayer of the righteous (Prov. 15,:.8, 29). Hesekiah lived so that God 4ould hear. "A telegra- phie operator who ' eonld sit by his in- strument and rattle away by, the hour, never sending a message or getting an answer because the.: ;wires were daseon- uected,, wouldd' be independent of thnn- (ler storms, eleetrii ,r {rents, induction and all whit fou °v i erfeite sV'Ith lira work, but if'bis-instruutents' were con- nected with the"wires he -would need to exercise care to eeCnre insulation, see. that his batteries were in order, and at- tend to alt the details necessary for the transmission of intelligence by electri- city, or eommuuicationawould be inter- rupted. Sa the man who is to have cont- lnunica.ton with God and present peti- tions which shall ,be aeepted must see that his prayers be not•hindered (1 feet. 3, 7.) He must keep contmunicataon open with 'leaven; walk in the fear of God; adorn the doctrine of God our Saviour in all things; learn to heed. the Holy Spirit's voice, xenaenniiering abet we know not what we should pray for es we ought; except ',the Spirit help our infirmities; keep himself in the love :tf God. building up himself in 'the most holy faith, and praying always in the Holy Spirit (Jude 20, 21.) "Then the angel of the' Lord..srnote" (v. 30.) Ilerskiab was a. man of God. His victory was complete. All that the Lord had spoken (ams to pass .Jerusa- lem was defended, the besiegers did not come into it nor before it, but were de- stroyed before they could begin the siege (ve. 33-36.) But God did.not save Judah to starve them. Their land was more than oedi'naaaly fruitful for the first year and algin for the entlemtle year, when they could neither sow nor resp. They 4uiffrreal no ill effects from the eentni(s wasting their country nor their being unable • to attend to binellonelry. The earth, as at the first, brontrht forts of itself (Gen. 1: 11) and they Lived plentifully on spnntaueous prodeteian5. The blending of the Lord made theta rich and their toil added nethiu:r thereto (Prey. 10: 22, R. V.. margin.) e nnseee- rib returned to his own tete in 00011161011 became his confident :boasting tame to naw itt.---A. C. M. . Jaadsth? What mistake had the kieg of aefaaeherib a bloat and expectations, %nd ,'/sem' /-40?f%moi'"'=?s' ���y� �f�i�.% � %� • ee v�.i•`st are-. .1.r.m*Sreel! v 5 erd refefi eag enovordyfaikre cyylisagiombieedath reede 'L en- ege rser areearegme 4's Tel NO MO_ RE THAfi ME"�., MADE IN CANADA � 71�r.Sl .�l. . � - - . aea'dre w..e.aea sgeee:eeera e rr eegeeaeed..— TEST YOUR COVARD COWS r Department of Agriculture—Office of the Dairy and Gold Storage Com- missioner. Records of dairy COWS are always cat interest, not only to the owner wire is anxious to increase Inc yield, but arise to neighboring dairymen who desire some standard whereby to cheek 'the produc- tion of their cows. In April the yield of 10 cows near Birnam, Ont., was 383 pounda of butter fat; but from records to hand from the eow testing assoeietlon near iiobcaygeon, Ont., it is seen that it took 21 cows, more than twice as many, to produce just as much butter fat. in a year or two the Haan with these poor cows will probably have got his, herd up to nearly double their preseut capacity, because he will know for ver- taiu which cows are not worth keeping. Dairy farmers in all Provinces lzrive done this. Some are now getting nearly three times as much milk and fat as they used to obtain before they deter- mined to gather information as to what poor cows were sheltering themselves, coward fashion, behind either a fair herd average or a heavy yield from one or two extra good cows in the herd; such, for instance, as a seven-year-old grade cow near Woodstock, Ont.. that gave last month 2,161 pounds of milk, test ing 3,S per cent, of fat, thus giving over 73 pounds of butter fat in one month, almost double the good average yield above noted at Birnamn. Are your rows good, profitable dairy cows, or are they cowards? It will pay you to keep records of each one anti so find DEAD FISH, Milliens Dead and Dying in Quebec and Gatineau District Lakes. ant: C. F. U. NEW HEA .TII AND Ottawa, June 2G.—Y In several Can- adian lakes the fish are dying by millions. Government Fishery Do- portment men are being Gent t0 in- vestigate. On the suxfa.cre of Promo Lake in Quebec and several lakes in the Gatineeu ' region izotzr Ottawa, millions of dead fish are reported to be floating and ' great winerows of them are piled yup on the shores in some places. )31g fish and small fish of all breeds are reported to be plead and the quantity` le se great as to indicate total extermination in these lakes, The Fisheries Department is sending out, experts to investigate. 4s 0' Sufficient unto the day is the evil of y'estteclay, NEW STRENGTH FOR SUFFERING WOMEN Aching Backs, Tired Limbs and Splitting Headaches Teed Not be Endured, In silent patience nearly every woman endures suffering that casts u shadow over half her existence. An aching back, tired limbs, attacks of faintness, and headaches, and backaches. need. not be part of a woman's life. Such trials• in- dicate plainly that the system requires the new blood that le supplied through the use of The Williams' .Pink Pills. These Pills are valued by suffering wom- en who have used them above all other medicines. because they give the rich, red blood that makes women well, bright and at their best. Mn'. Fred. Collard, Poplar Pohl), Man,. says: "1 can give you but a very sinal eetimele of the suf- fering I have endured before I began using Dr. Williams' 1'ink Pills. After the birth of my first t'hild T suffered fnteneely from aiinlCnts that foo often afflict any see. 'fits tca1 r.:amplieated 11 .1; to ria/.c fli.ly geed art Sas, to :,: c by an attack of bletkeing piles and the fir at a stye ;1 ,•, c;'ne I^nnln,u•1 or a r agony of the days duct nights. I endeared t} ' + Il is almost past comprthensinn, T tried t." 4'4e per pound. Cave 1110.102 from ninny reme.dirr., but tlle7. raid net: help ,1dii to -1%(' liter pouacL 1'0104 brought nae ie my teoulele, :sed (real e healthy 1641611 4.46 to 5eee and 1jiiits from 4?A, to canna woman as^ci 'Islas 140 poltilds I ' % a' peep pound, '.('brie ems no import - ^ant a'hali P' an thecondition of the mar - fell away in 1a eelet le t l lau de 1 grew• so weak I could hardly walk ,across the het: fee hags. price' being fairly z;tenaly, floor, and t.lao;',' .were 111114s T hardly • not,1•1 hstos,din0 the 1l1P1' a4Pa1 offerings. knew what. 1 Was doing ea) greet wale my '.l'hr alrutatt i trcm, packers ivuv gnoal, agony. T went to Brandon emit consult- end ,gale. of Bele ted lots were made n.t ed a doctor who laid that nothingctruld ST tri 1^c1 iii „ `!1.40r1 ,'wthNI ff the rnre.. , u11,1 heave weig1t�l at 11L50 1.. ivrl„;n help nae but an ol.,rrl•rit ins+ for bath any t 1 trembles, a1:+1 that 1 wekral have in II,* T110. n1µ1•°{P1 for lambs wee 11113011 strong - nude in the hospital fur et least eight er nn,l Purim, seared a sharp advance weeks; 'Beam a foyer .r' -wife 1 telt that nmelrg :n tit' ':anal dirnan'l, and area were made Id from $15 to .$7 6116116. elbeep 1r,•P1'I ileelkertg 1i. ...an a fail' 1i"r3laa6J ,at Treat M+.30 to 135 eta h. A tardy agave t l'alt1( \,'A,: Jntte i,1 t It Pit nI ill161" t'anrt- ini' 111196 63 to $$ (u6'111 ae tt1 si :e at;2i tl,ial ty, N E'i 1 f i?X ('.V l .l'LF. M L11.P 13T. Ne v 1`n1 k. heel es. re ee .p161, 9841 heart. No 1, . Bag; fee Bair m e el.h, fe11vc'S Tic ,et S. 330 h011,3, :efarket t toady. Vat's. *8.311 t. $9,211: e•utlis, Seek.% to $6; Tnaliee ealteee $4.25 to *450. r91(•rp en'l Jslnils---P,Psclnts, 4,iefte head; ebee11. Ile to 13o higher: sheen. 'h^.'• to eten0 pulls, $1 to $1.50; latlilra, e3 to e7.6t1 mills, $4 to lir ga.-•1.cveipts. 1..140 ),Paea market. 104 ;higher ; heady to light, $t),'lO to $6,75, From the ulydernt'ed edition of Lcn•tl Chesterfield'' ~Letters. to Hie Son": "In my fil'at letter to von on that !Common Courtesies' ;•01i will remeniller that k cents a box or six' boxee for :62,50 tram told yew to be polite to Democrats. And. 1"ho'Dr, .Medicine Co., Brock- waw see tivltat's h;:pprated r"_-Cleve1n11d vine, Ont. Plain Dealer, TORONTO MARKETS. FARMERS? MARKET. Dressed hogs .. $ 0 75 Butter, choice, dairy .. .. 0 20 1)o., inferior .. .. . , . 0 17 Egsm, doz. a .. .. 020 Chickens, lb. .. , . , . 0 I8 Spring ehiekens .. .. , - 0 30 Turkeys, lb. .. .. , . 0 21 A pplts, babe, sends .. , , 3 00 Potatoes, bag .. .. , . 1 00 Beef, hindquarters .. , . 11 50 Do., forequarters .. .. 7 00 Do:, choice, carcase .. 9 50 Do., medium, carcase .. 8 04 Mutton, prime, per, cwt. 7 00 Veal, prime, per cwt..... 10 00 Tau1:b, cwt. .. .. , .. 17. 50 Spring lambs, each . - , . 4 00 • $10 25 O 23 O 18 0 24 O 0 O 00 0 23 5 00 1 10 1.250 800 10 255 9 50 9 00 11 00 12 60 7 00 SUGAR MARKET. ' Sugar was quoted in Toronto, in bags, per cwt., as follows: Extra granulated, Redpath's .,.. $4 70 Do., St. Lawrence 4 70 Do,. Acadia 4 65 Irnperiai granulated: 4 55 Beaver, granulated. 4 55 No. 1, yellow, Redpath's 4 30 Do., St. Lawrence 4 30 CEIEESE /JABi I'. Vankleek, Hill. --One thousand nine hundred and thirty boxes of. cheese boarded to -day. AI'i sold at 1135c. Kingston.—At b.e Frontenac Oheeee Batley to -day there were 487 boxes of white and 577 colored boarded. Sales were made at 11 1-1,6c to 11314c. Wiranheeter, 4t the meeting of the Cheese Board here to -night 1,056 boxes were registered, of which 296 were white rind the, balance" <:olored; lleee was of- fered and: 1911 teritehre d oe *aboard. 1iadoe, Ont.—At to-dsy'e cheese mar- ket 945 boxes were boarded; 400 sold at 11 5-180, 370 at lli4c. Tho balance was resfueeed at Ili/4c. 1?eterboro, Ont.—At the cheese market to -day 3,286 boxes were boarded. Board cleared, price being 11 6.16e. OTHER MARKETS WINNIPEG WHEAT MARKET. . Prev. Close. Open. High. Low. CIose. Wheat.— Tuly ., .. 973e 07% 97% 97% 9;14 Oct. .. .. 90% 91 91914 01314 91% Oats— ,7u]y .. .. 26% 37% 383 :"37314 3794 • Oet. , . ...:37% 30% 37% 36% 3754 MONTREAL LIVE STOCK. Montreal— At the Canadian Parifie Live Stork Market the offerings this morning were 500 rattle, 600 sheep and lambs. 1,800 hogs and 000 valves. The Lone of the market for cattle was stranger and price; for top quality steers ruled higher, owing to the fart that tiro supply of such tsar somewhat Iimited, het the offering of other grades were ample to fill all require- tnents. The demand WAN fairly mead and a holes 1lt ly active track' was done. (lobe. steel,; •."!1 at ea,14 in fleece good this Wee im.poesibl0, and while in Bran- don I meta 111011a1 who stroegly urged Inc to try Dr. Wi;liau.e'Pink Pills, 1el1- ing me that they hod oared her t1outee similar to aline. after an operation had Moved of lin benefit She had ,such strong faith 10 them that she gave me the first box. anal 1 began lysing them. It Wan net Iowa before 1 i'cuni 1130(16 relief. I continued to tea the Pills all the rest of that eunercer. and the rceult was they restored tee to ye1'fce•t. bea.ith. I told the dector Heist 1)r, Williams' Pink Pills lied chyle fair nine, aiwl his re- ply was that he enul,ldered what they had done for me little lass than a mir- acle. I have since recommended.. the Pills to many others who have suffered from woman's ta'nn,hloc. and They alwara pro - dewed beneficial results, I bops; that this stetelnen1 will be of bnuaSit to some other suffering per8033.3 These Pills a 8.0 re 10 by all 11)edicine dealers or may he had 1:y mail at 50