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16
PablUher’s Department
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SUBSCRIBERS’ COLUMN. We
are surprised that our subscribers dd
not more liberally patronize fhis depart
ment. The expense is trifling, and the
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etc., either by sale or exchange, is unsur
passed, Do not overlook it® advantages.
OUR PREMIUMS.
■
Never before has a magazine offered
such inducements as we do for our triends
to send us subscriptions. Nowhere can you
find a publication for which it is so easy
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Such a journal at only 50 cents a year
should be in every home where there is a
member who can read. The contents
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iest and most learned, the price places it
within the reach of all classes. It should
be worth ten times its cost in any family.
The only restriction on elub raisers is that
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man’s Work. Persons in small places
have sent us clubs of ten to fifty names.
You can do as well; in fact, there is no
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THEY ALWAYS PLEASE.
Dear Woman’s Work:
The berry-bowl was received safely. It is
lovely—well worth working for. I am
anxious now to get more subscribers, so as
to obtain another of your beautiful premi
ums. Very truly,
Mrs. M. A. W.
Atlanta, Ga.
We will print and mail 100 elegant
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or will send them to any subscriber who
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scription. Address,
Woman’s Work,
Athens, Georgia.
PERHAPS you have some article that
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vored with your subscription. Send our
magazine to some friend for a year; show
this copy to your wife, mother or sister,
and ask her if she wants it; we think she
will.
Pub. Woman’s Work, Athens, Ga:
Dear Sir; —Enclosed find postal note
for 50 cents to pay one year’s subscription
to Woman’s Work. A sample copy
reached me recently, and in perusing its
pages I was very much surprised to find
one magazine that is honest in all things,
telling the truth, and giving its patrons
gocd, wholesome reading at all times; a
paper that no family need be ashamed to
have in their home, and allew their
children to read. May it ever be kept up
to its present standard, is the wish of a
friend.
Mrs. J. H. Harrison.
Perry, 111.
Pub. Woman’s Work, Athens, Ga:—
Dear Sir:—
I received a specimen copy of your Sep
tember issue, and am so well pleased with
it, that I send 50c for one year’s subscrip
tion.
If every woman who reads your paper
would abide by its instructions, we would
have grand and noble women in our land.
Respectfully, Mrs. M. Reed,
Goodlettsville, Tenn.
YOU
May be reading Woman’s Work for
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send us fifty cents and have the name
of some friend entered for a year.
DRUNK-
enness, Morphine, Opium and Tobacco
habits, permanently cured by Dr. Har
greaves (Dr. Keeley’s former partner). The
original formula wonderfully improved.
No injurious effects whatever. The crav
ing for liqour stopped within 24 hours.
Local agents wanted; liberal inducements.
Send for circulars with testimonials, etc.
Address at once The Hargreaves Dtp
hocura Co., 114 Fifth Ave,, New York
City, N. Y,
WOMAN’S WORK.
For Woman’s Work.
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL.
“While thousands at His bidding speed
And post o’er land and ocean without rest,
They also serve, who only stand and wait.”
It is well known that Robert Raikes, of
London, was the founder of Sunday
Schools—the centenary of which was cele
brated a few years ago. Many thousands
are now engaged in the great work, and
with the growth of the same, there has
been an equally marvellous improvement
in the moral and religious condition of the
world. It may be possible that more good
is done by the simple lessons—given in the
Sunday Schools —than by learned dis
courses from the pulpit. The Sunday
School movement has given birth to Bible
Societies and Young Men’s Christian As
sociations. The idea of a Bible Society
was suggested by a Welsh Sunday School
teacher, who found some difficulty in ob
taining. a supply of Bibles for his pupils.
The founder of the Young Men’s Christian
Association of London, having observed
that many boys on growing into manhood,
quit the Sunday School, fell into vicious
ways, and were lost, thought that as a
means of saving them, a Society would be
beneficial.
More than three hundred years ago, a
body of Romish priests made a great fire in
Earl Street, London, and burned every
Bible that could be found, after which
they congratulated themselves that, at
last, the Bible was destroyed. To-day, on
the very spot where this fire was built,
stands the great building of the British
and Foreign Bible Society where the Bi
ble is printed in one hundred and seventy
languages.
Rose Heath.
Never speak evil of a man if you do
not know it for a certainty; then ask your
self, “Why should I tell it?”— Lavater.
I ■ Him I cure ail Female Die
nlllLV eases by a new per
il 1111 A fectPd scientific
LaiUJIBaV method. Price $5 a course.
Cures after all other treatments
have failed. Write, stating case and send 66
cents postage for two weeks trial treatment. Refer
ences given. Mrs. Dr. Marv A. Brannon, §8 M.
Pryor St., Atlanta, Ga.
ONE OF THE LATEST AND ONE OF THE BEST.
THE ROYAL
STAMPING OUTFIT..
FINE STANDARD PATTERNS IN GREAT VA- Vu
RIETY OF DESIGNS AND PERFECTION OF. Wx Y§k
WORKMANSHIP. The Patterns are made on
best Linen Bond Paper, and are all of useful and beau -
tiful designs, and embrace many new patterns for table
and bureau scarfs, tidies, doilies, towels, splashers, tray and <s—L<3»
carver cloths, table and piano covers, etc., etc., covering
fl s? the whole range of artistic tee- y diework.
it-- fYY Sz// i The patterns in this outnt are nearly all en-
\"* YYY /'rSy »/) (1 jtfwtlrely different front those contained In any
X. / ~SY\ nt/ outfit advertised, and will prove a valu-
—.. \ Y . A~S\ able addition to any collection of patterns,
. w ' -C. ifYY' whether added to the large stock of a proses-
. _\V .AA ~-L. -rvY sionai stamper, or to the smaller number used
TYs/YLY Y\Y~ by asingle family— being all dlfrerentirvuiuili-
YY'V .<\\ /“YU J /' ====: YT\ er outfits. No lady need fear finding in this outfit
--—7 l > S\\s Iz J / J a lot of patterns she already has. As will be seen
sfl YY Y Z SC /7 from the description, which can do but poor jus-
ticetomany beautiful designs, the patterns are
( Vl ' M '•Y? nearly all very large and fine, and suitable for the
x—'• ' best of work. At the lowest prices at which pat-
terns are sold at retail they amount to over dUjt d "W it¥ 1/011 m
Many ladies may not know why patterns V«F vvZ t QIU v«
can be sold so much cheaper In outfits than single. It Is simply this, the manufacturers are enabled to
make up many thousand outfits all alike and run no risk of loss, while a large stock of single patterns
means many on hand, perhaps never to be sold—a large amount of detail, and, even at high prices, only t
small profit. That Is why outfits are cheaper than single patterns. Every outfit contains all the following
1 Rose Bud Alphabet 2 In. high. 11 Border Wild Roses for Baby 11 Piney design for Head Cushion*
1 Handsome Border with Corner, I Carriage Cover, 6x12 In. 7x7 in.
4 In. wide. 11 Handsome Border for Plano Cov. Design Oak Leaves for fancy
1 Ribbon Bow Knot Border, Ixl6 In. er with Corner, 9x9 in. sideboard scarfs, etc., Bxßin.
1 Design for Carver’s , 1 Conventional Bow Knot
Cle' ’ 5x12 In. r£. design for Plano Covers,
fIL 1 Bow Knot Corner de- ZsVYA. aY-L _» etc., 10x22 inches.
sign, 9x9 Inches. L-YYV 1 Design of Pansies for Writ-
1 Spray Leaves. V5-' ing Pad, Bx 9 Inches.
,/?SW/ 1 Corner design Table vd'/’vT \-J s'" 1 Spray Peach Leaves, 4x6 in.
W ttcA Scarf, Bxlo Inches. VtX_2 Z|7 ~ YL 1 Pretty design for Lunch
1 Cat o’ Nine Tails de- 1/ ■*<- s' I Cloth, 10x10 inches.
Xsi/W sign. " / | 1 Handsome Spray Daisies,
(J VI 1 Tulip design. / ''L 3x6 Inches.
\J. 2 Clover designs. XT") / 2 1 Fruit design—Cherries.
\\ v* 1 Design Lily of the A 1 Spray Ferns.
Valley. rilff/ V Design Sweet Peas.
U 1 Conventional i Jl Spray Wheat.
Wjj der for Tablet /Kx -
)Vz cloth, very choice/ quin, 6xlf> inches.
4xlßlnches. 1 Pansy
(Oq 1 Design Forget-me-nots. WStZu i design. TJ
'SGr 1 Handsome Border of Or- wYifZ TY/Y l,’\ \\Wuz> Y‘ 1 Clover —>l
W chlds, Bxlß inches. s' A design. <
\l\ 1 Handsome Pillow Sham ZT ~Az 1 Design \\\/l//r
(Z'x design, 18x18 inches, Primrose ■XWW o
i('( 1 Border for Cut VYd MY 1 Carna- Yg-YT
\. with Corner, 7x13 In. tion Pink. Wzz)
\y-X-s 1 Shell Pattern for Lunch Cloth, 1 Pineapple design. wi
zZ?l'()7 7x7 inches. 1 Conventional Border, 4x15 In. YYz
W 1 Grecian Border for flannel em- 1 Set 6 Dolly Patterns, 5x5 inches, very
YfY broidery, 114x7 in. choice. 10
WPi.) 1 Pretty Bow Knot and Rosebud 1 Set Dolly designs—very handsome— i V\
/I'M: design, 3x4lnches. 4x4 Inches.
r XT 1 Beautiful Border of Popples, 6x 1 Design for small Dolly, 4x4 Inches,
11 (Ai 16 In. and 19 other handsome designs for
\\ 1 Pretty Daisy Border, 4x6 in. scattering and all over work, etc. i a n
\\ With each outfit we send one box op our Special Blue Powpkk, one \\\/r'
box or our Special White Powder (better than paint for all kinds of \U/7
V\ stamping), two Distributors, and our New - - jMV /v
y)Au Illußtrat p d Manual of Instructions in the a ~
aAJz Art of Stamping, the most complete book of
the kind ever published, giving such complete A o
Tf/f Instructions, all Illustrated, that any one can Wr, 'vifAekzY)
do the finest work at the very start.
A. The whole packed In a strong case and sent
\V postpaid, to any address for ml flrt x
1 s«M«fiu»tlon irtmrunteed or A I 1111 •— —x 77 A « >
money re landed. IgllVVl O- ° U
Offered Mt ipeoiftl premium to any subscriber who sends only four additidnal names.
Address, WOMAN’S WORK, Athene, Cr.
■ A If? s?* Wanted to earn $2.50 a day at
IU Aa UI C. home. Work light and profit
able. Outfit and instructions on receipt of 10 cents.
Globe M’f’g. Co., Lyme, Conn.
ftAr A- Week Guaranteed ladies for writing
V at home. Send addressed stamped envelope
V to Miss Ethel A. Sprague, South Bend, Ind.
a | I lllAtlF'll should read Manual of
All WI IM I" Hl Clhild Bed Nursing, to
MLL ■■ UIVILII -avoid complications. A
standard work. 50 cents. BAILEY & FAIBCHILD,
New York.
MOTHERS save your Babies. Use Woodbury’s
Isl Second Summer Powders for children. 25 cents
per box; $2 per dozen boxes. COLUMBIAN MED
ICINECO.. 207 EastEinzisSt.,Chicago.
gOITRE CONQUERED. i?S
W J. N. Klein, Beilviue, N. J.
fwIFwAIG? RiQHT 1 AWAY reliabkrl
I G* Mil I men in every section of America |
I to represent us, advertise and keep our show cards tacked g
■ up in towns, on trees and fences along public roads. Steady ■
J work in your own county. $75 A MONTH SALARY I
I and EXPENSES Advanced Every 15 Day a when I
| started. J. H. SCHAAF CO., Cincinnati, O. |
FORTUNE TELLING
Cards (patented.) Ibat reveal the HIDDEN MYS"
TERIES of the PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE,
also, L 0 VE MATTERS,’AC., with startling accuracy.
They are truly mysterious and prophetic. A pack of
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any address, postpaid, on receipt of 2SC.« silver
or stamps. Agents Wanted.
H. Attewell, Lansingburgh, N. Y.
iwANTEowre;i!
<for the “Curlette” Key Rin?.
1 E. R. WHITE, Vineland, N. J. ®
Mention this paper.
Ladies Guide AW and disease, (Girlhood,
Maidenhood, Wifehood, and Motherhood.)
By J. H. Kellogg, M. D.
This is an invaluable volume, filling a want
long recognized by intelligent people every
where, ana needs only to be properly intro
duced to effect a ready sale.
A young college student recently sold SIBOO
worth of these books in six weeks.
Another agent sold 21 copies in one day.
An agent in a southern state has sold in the
past five weeks, SIOSO worth of the books. Lib
eral Commission. Good Territory. Send for
terms, etc. Modern Medicine Pub. Co., Battle
Creek, Mich.
Mention this paper.