The Georgia enterprise. (Covington, Ga.) 1865-1905, August 25, 1905, Image 7

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THE (PULPIT. BRILLIANT SUNOAT sermon by THE REV. A. H. C, MORSE; Subject: rowerful Promises. Brooklyn. X. Y.-Sunday morning, in Itron- I Phlce Baptist A. ID C. Church, Morse, the bad pas ,[ ie Bev. as Ksubject "Powerful Promises.” The ' from II Peter 1:4: “Whereby u -as exceeding te given unto us great and recious promises; partakers that of the by divine these we -„ljf be escaped na having' the corruption Oik’ll I;- is in said: the world through lust.” Morse Bible At any rate the is frank. It fc.vs the plainest things about man’s But it also holds before liltn a inderful hope. To-morrow To-day ho lie is mired have la eruption. may .-iped from this and become like B od • The whole gospel is found in <e few words. We have here a statement of the fact .in and its origin. The fact is “cor IT “ •ion” and the origin “through Inst.” know that there are worldly-wise on who sneer at the third chapter of ‘SIS. But this I have noticed, that Ley [jnipler are solution uniformly of the unable mystery to give of us a [ouiewhere evil, and at some time the race mist have sinned. The stream of life i.is been poisoned, and this must have a lceii place at its fountain head, for e cannot find any divisions which do lot have the entire characteristics of lie whole. The Bible says the event ook place in the first man, before -a Hide sou was born, and lie lusted at er something which was forbidden to irn, and that by bis disobedience he Cl! Inched from a primal iunoceney, and the race, and entailed a eondi ion of corruption. And that we have ggrarated this calamity by repeating hi and deepening the.ruin. j put L am not so much concerned to Say about the origin of the condition, |Ve can leave that with a single word, jut there are certain facts that cannot brushed aside. A man may qnes ii the story as it is written in Scrip •e, but he cannot deny it, for i.t does jiot [’either come witlii.n he deny the the region of denial. can story as it is ’{‘produced in life to-day. Have you lever plucked forbidden fruit? Have rcn never lusted for pleasure which las been distinctly forbidden? And as i consequence of transgression, have rou never experienced a repulsive sick jess and an intolerable loathing, ’ so Lit yon have known wliaf is the ne,’tiling of this phrase, "the corrup inn which is in the world through list : l)o yon not know anythin" at 111 of the lashings of remorse? I Let me ask you another question. How does it happen that the heart- is o constantly “running down?” Why past it be Repeatedly wound up afid fastened with ratchets? Why do we have lash to make .and ipneyv resolves, and the will to the "sticking place?" jtVby It is it that a man 'cannot never backslides •> holiness? Why we take off j the brakes and find ourselyes gliding 1 Into the highest moral living? Every¬ thing. we are told, tends to move in the line of least resistance. Do we Sail that we are drifting tq.p-.i.rd char ity and holiness and benevolence and virtue?' Nay. but to all of us these traces are the fruit of serious toil, 1'iipy are magnificent possessions, more j I jrecicnis than gold and sparkling gems. hit they arc gotten only by. struggle I mil ha: word privation "self-denial" and self-denial. contains And j a fos ■il history of primal sin. It tells us of • in evil self that must he constantly do fhit 1. because its- desires arc wrong, j whence this evil self, and whence I I these wrong desires? k'j but let us comp a little closer to this k ‘Ct. Let me hint at The things that Ur cannot spread before the public, secret thoughts and faults which pre |nto hidden. The thoughts that creep the heart and nestle there. Can you tell me whence they comb? Tell n find o. for instance, whence Wm the enw jealousy and malice and evil de ttre. and the lust for gold that makes s tHe thief, and the thirst for blood A'iiitti crimsons the hand of murder? "of think these things arise in Dnmm life as malaria and pestilence from a death-dealing bog? Do tbev not bespeak what this Scrinture mm"\Sr£ c-iil’s through » "corruption which is lust?” I suppose that the an Pis before the throne of God would flmk from having their thoughts pro claimed with the trumpet of Gabriel, 1 know that Jesus lias m -n onpn His hpar t and flung out a challenge which no man can accent “Which of von convincetli Me of sin?” said He. But ^ hmffn cannot S do that. We hide our bh!sl, t0V 0m 'n ,lllltS wilh a J Br? but Si. S5, nd what has befallen man? If God linacle him innocent and nobody ques boas this—something must have Imp l to corrunt his thoughts and |Jk [■ ko them so black that he stands in . ■•aq of the day for which all other lays were made, when tins hidden his lory shall be revealed TlK> rp is something pathetic in man’s Dtcmpts to assert his worth. We Dnk. for instance, of the “Majesty of srr «.sr’., - ,d Tt,..;ss , the " Disnit ' v ' ° f ' 0 hu : - tr.au” n uthcifi as . 1s , if : r these ,, terms . true and meaningful. were and Take the first of these s ” e ’vhat comfort there is in it. “The majesty of conscience!” But do ’, 1!ot know that conscience almost • •? speaks in judgment? It seems aiv e Inst its authority to command , f ' v * r possessed that authority. It •'Hot insist upon obedience, but can iri ,' se Bs voice in remonstrance. I*.... l,fc O’L^ily overruled, and voted HIM then it can only record a n ‘’"’ V vote, and lapse into silence, mu ,, tlieie is more in this scripture ; a Matement of the fact of sin. •""e also “these great and pre IIS IU’omiscs whereby may be we " Partakers of the divine nature.” ! is. men may become ns God. And .*’7a»t inc-t of for correspondence tills promise is between found ?E i civinc and the human. The nat " man cannot discern spiritual -'. and it is no use to talk to him ' ‘hem. for there is no correspond ' • !•? basis of affinity, no ground of 'mp. But man was made in the ■ of A God, and it was possible for tnr 1,1 ‘ ; ike upon Himself man’s na evi aiul it is within the power o' 5 ; s n.rai, i> v the grace of God, to °fi also the divine nature, to be r ( ; " UK-e God. u ‘ 1S u’hat is said in the word he- f •X cr e ’ -''an fell, this we is are doi,e told, bj bv a single shMl/h ter tlle divine reaeh hub be God” attributes. “Ye ■ as was the lying promise of the tempter, and by listening that to But ut now non <?*\ God returns t0 thC level to us with th promise that after all fp Himself, sharers we shall be a :a in His nature and conformed to His image. It seems strange to you that for a single sin so serious consequences should be taned. j. his could only en - stream be because the was poisoned at its source and ! 10 ra ce sinned in its first man. ’ But here is something which is quite great. The ns Lord God is making to uimself a new creation. He has be gun if in one new Man. who kept His life without spot or blemish. And in His Jif e and federal headship we share by a single act of faith. The conse Quences of faith are quite as great as the consequences of disobedience. “He that believeth on Him hath everlasting *fo.” And that does not mean that 11S hfe is prolonged in endless time but that it is endowed with an immor tal nature. It is received the instant be believes, as by a new birth, and inis passed from death unto life. He hath been already delivered from the bond age and corruption of the kingdom of darkness and has been colonized in the kingdom of His Son. He is born of Hod, a son of the Most High, a citizen of beaven. a single sin has stained tlio race. We laid hold on death and s P j tc of tears and cries and struggle, ' ve have not been able to loose the band. One single act of faith takes bold on eternal life, and in spite of sins and falls and failure that prize can never be wrested from our grasp. And this is all by faith, H (, n have said to me that the scheme salvation is arbitrary. It is vain, they say, to shut the world up to faith, Hut. my friend, do you not know that is fbls nothing entire universe isarbitrary? There of more arbitrary than the laws mathematics, or of health or of gravitation. It is not strange that every son of Adam is shut' up to the multiplication table? Is it not strange that if a man wants to compute num bers in China lie must use the identical system that we use? That three axd two make five there as they do here? there is'but one law for light or beat or electricity or numbers, or grav button in all the earth. And there is but one way of salvation for ail the eari; h. Here it n said “through these Promises,” which only means that a man believes in Christ. A promise is I10 tliing except for the value of the person who makes it. Some men may Sem make their promises, and no man gives heed. But if one promises whose character you know, then you count on them as you count upon the shining of the sun. We hear a good deal in these days , ! about education into the kingdom of God. about the natural development of righteousness. But development is only unfolding, and that the race has jieen each doing in all the centuries, and age surpasses the last in the enormity of sin. Education is drawing ■ out;” but how can you draw holiness ffotn.a .heart that is “deceitful above all things and desperately wicked?” Education can never do the work. It is like- putting a new handle on the pump and leaving the dog in the well. You may wonder at the fancy of bringing in a new and supernatural life by bebef in precious promises. But all questions are answered by the experiences of history. Great men have been regenerated by single words of Scripture. This was true of Augustine and Luther and Spurgeon and scores of others whom time fails me to men tid'h. They were not only pew men, but mighty sons of God. Wonderful was this? As great as the wonder of all forms of life. Look into the acorn tear its halvesppart, and tell me lf you can sce thpre i n t he stalw art oak. Analyze the seed of wheat-and , tell me if you can see therein the aa.ia ,ng fields of » r{ im. ‘^ e11 ’ sald Jp 1’ the w ° rds wl, icli 1 8 P ea k ’ nit ° ynu thoy are - s Ph’it and they are , nto. Y'ou cannot see tllp s P int ’ yon cannot see theS.fe. l, ut can you say they are not there? I bold up to you these Sreiit and P™ C1 °* 8 promises, and there ate saints and mis charities sjonanes and aad mighty ?°, b / e i re■ obit ona; thore lheie are he.uei ‘ ” wrapped . that, weigEt of glory up in And our growth in grace and the nke of God is not a process of mend «» d improvement. But it iss a new creat And on now by which I have wjei finished. jecome I ‘^ know God I have borne down Laid on sin. I wish 1 did not have to no so. I wish "itli you that the word wene not m the , language because it vras not in tue ; heart. If one of those phantom friends | of the astronomers should wne to th s I isa bea^itiTul pkace but for one thing. -*1 | rebellion against the rule of God l I could .von have been I d nc \ sin - But I teii you lankly. S con pit? sny t0 >tis cowici aad P lty . fj 5 '’" . •> ]>,,♦ „ " Lw j also to him ; that sin n cannot M ot noiu us us say ^^timt -jT hi OT « ! yonder, d011 splp and " dor wiy ^. Do you sweetn^s seeJ^Jt ^ i^t“aSfSfe and £ AT1U , isn’t 1 u 1 that more than the ^ ^aet of sin? God’s Way. God’s promises are. ever on the as* cending scale. One leads up to anoth¬ er fuller and more blessed than itselt. In Mesopotamia God said: "I will show thee tlie land.” In Canaan: "I will give thee all tlieT.ind. and chihlien in¬ numerable as the grains of sand. It is thus that God allures us to saintliness. Not giving us anything till we have dared to act, that He rnaj tost us. Not giving everything at first, that He may overwhelm us. and al¬ ways keeping in hand an infinite te serve of blessing, Oh, ’ the unexplored remainders of God! Who ever saw His last star?—Rev. F. B. Mejer. What Christianity Is. Christianity is that historic religion founded by Jesus of Nazareth, and union . u.e , .c having its bond of in domption mediated by Him.vina the true relation between Goa ana iiun lias for the first time found compile and adequate expression, ana v men throughout all the changes ot niteiicct nal and social environment still wttlcu continues tue centuries have brought, to maintain itself as the telB-.on •< s worthy of the allegiance of tbougntfuJ and worthy men.—Sebleiernsacaei. ' v - v*- j | Gas Li ght for 1 Country Homes. i !ar Small country homes, be lighted as well by the as s S e ones, may < best light known— ACETYLENE S ? GAS —it is easier on the eyes than ai *y other illuminant. cheaper than $kerosene, brighter than as convenient electricity as and city safer gas, f^nn S any. f no A’o chimneys M-smelling lamps mantels to clean, to break. and J $ < or IFor *‘ght cooking it is convenient 5 * J antl cheap. # I «basement ACETYLENE is made in the $ | and piped .o all rooms J and out-buildlngs. Complete plant * s costs no more than a hot air furnace. # t * * ¥ f ¥ * « * t * 1 ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ; m ¥ m ¥ IBP* ■ 6 ™ » If * a * * ■ * li ¥ ' ¥ $ qN. I *3 3 * * a * * $T)TT I 1^1 / I I Automatic J « | 5 fienentors make the They perfect in } > gas. are sim-J * 5 construction, reliable, safe and 5 pic*. * V ? *-)ur booklet, “After Sunset,” J ?sent | t©lls free more on about request, ACETYLENE—J «• | |the Dealers sale of ACETYLENEappara- or others interested in J * ftus PILOT write us for selling plan on J j Generators and supplies J > -it is a paying proposition for re- * | 5 liable ACFTYI workers. FNF J iilhtL*!™. APPARATUS MFfi fft ? ? £ 15 . 7 Michigan Averu., rnirmn CHICAGO, ILL. 5 < wm»aaivv,vwwvvivi^vvv\,w\vwi FOOLING THE MOON MAN. As they sat out on the old lawn she looked away to the summer skies. ' * “Wouldn’t it be nice,’ she ventur¬ ed, “if the skies were “vw • le ” ' ’ “Of course not,” replied* the roman tic young man. "What chance woul 1 Cupid have if there were not clouds j to hide the moon man’s face occasion- j ally?” • ! And the maiden blushed and said ; she did not care if the whole sky was ! ! overcast.—Chicago News. -- ! IS LIVER AND BOWELS 1 I ’jte’ S i i vf:' 1 ION. » •j Malsby & Co. 4i South Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga. V-v i n mm & i I Portable and Stationary Engines, Boilers * Saw Mills AliD ALL KINDS OF MA jHINEHY Compute line Carried in flock for IMMEDIA TE DKI.l YEH He*., Macninery. Lowest Prices and Beat Termv NY . i c us for catalogue, prices, |c ^ (vf()r e buv in ff . "For over nine years I suffered with chronic eon Fti pat ion and during this time I had to take an injection I id have of warm action water once every 24 hours Happily before I coo an on my bowels. KrtnS uiVKSf veir. tt . 1 1 c-iimTi Thanks snfftrvd nntoid misery with intcnul pile*. V> 5-011 1 am free from all that thi* morniny. \oa o»ii ot* tu» in toiiaif of B. *::fferis.K hnmanitr.” F. Fisher. Hoenoke, Ill. Best For The Bowels y CAN0V CATMAimc Palatable, Potent. Taste Good. DoO<yyL Never Sicken, Weaken or Urip*s. 10c, 25c,60c. Never soM in bnlk. The genuine tat let stamped CCC. Guaranteed to euro or your money back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. f 73 ANNUAL SALE, TEfc MILLION BOXES THE ONLY WAY. Mama—Tommy, dear, you musn’t be so naughty. When mamma tells you not to touch the jam, you should obey her. What would you do if yeur mamma should te taken away from you? Tommy—Die? Mama—Yes, dear. Tommy—I’d eat that jam, you bet. —Cleveland Leader. Imi % m ilA’P ii* ■c ~ML UDD m v 1 -i -J t- M AC.— ! CO C/3 CD Cm ■. V A’ I iS rj 8 V d ‘ n t To cure, or money retundecf oy your mcrundriij ou vyibj nut tij itr r'f * u c ! Kunzite the New Jewel. Kunzite is a new, semi-precious mauve stone and a novelty in jewelry. There are zirsons that look like brown diamonds, and many varieties of green ! stones, including apple-green chryse phase, peri, tourmalines and olivines, pink sapphires, white topazes, Laba dor, jade and onyx, all of which are being made up in the most artistic fashion. Strangest of all, however, is the water stone of Uruguay; It is semi¬ transparent and white and in Its cen ter is water that moves about as the stone is moved. The fashion of wear ing inexpensive colored beads, imita¬ tions of semi-precious stones, or with no pretense of Imitating anything, is an artistic fad. There are both round and oval lilac and heliotrope beads of necklace length that are pretty with mauve gowns, and green ones for green gowns, and so on. A white lace pr mull blouse* over a lilac skirt and coat and hat trimmed with lilacs Is enhanced by a short string of lilac hued crystal beads. For those who object to imitations of jewels, but who haven’t th£ money for the costly real articles, real amber and coral and gold beads can be procured at low prices.—Philadelphia Record. QUITE HOPELESS. "Dear pop,” wrote the boy from the art school, “don’t send me any more money—I have saved half that which you sent me last month.” “Come home,” wired the old man, ‘you’ll never make an artist.”—Puck. An intelligent elephant is attracting attention in New York. Tills animal not on’<r bowls, but, with a piece of chalk, keeps record of the number of pins It knocks down. FITSpermanently cured. No fits ornervous. ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great NerveRestorer,?2trial Dr. R. bottleand treatise free H. Klixe, Ltd., 931 Arch St.,P hiIa.. Pa. Coal has been discovered near Adrian ovkva in the Transbaikal. Mrs.tVinslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teething, soften the gums,reduces inflamma¬ tion, allays pain,cureswind colic, 25c.a bottle The phosphate rock is found in poekets, not veins. /donot believe Piso’3 Cure for Consume* P.Boykr,T tionhasanequal for coughs and colds.—J ohv rinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15, 1900. The capital invested in electric lines of the United States is $2,167,634,000. Yellow Fever m.rt Malnvia Germ* ’ A j" ^ ’ n s t an 11 \ killed by the ,, use of sik drops , o. cans Liniment on a teaspoonful ot sugar. it is aiso an excelle nt ant iseptic. The fisheries of Japan annually yield »boui 3,000,000 tons of fish. A Frame House 100 Years Old. A flame house can be kept in good order j°d n p : a& C Martmez L P & M^Palnt ^It won’t need to be painted more than once in ten to fifteen years because the L. & Al. Zinc hardens the L. it M. Wh'te Lead, and gives it enormous life. Four gallons Longman &; Martinez L. <fc M. Paint mixed with three gallons .linseed oi) will paint a house. * W. B. Barr, Charleston. W. Va., writes: M.: “Painted stands FrafckenbUrg Block varnished.” with L. <C out as though gold. Wears and covers like Hold everywhere York. and by Longi Male man & Martinez, New Paint ers for Fifty Years. A serum for hay fever Heligoland. is used by physi¬ cians in the Island of FOLLOWS HIS NOSE. How a Blind Man Finds His Wa> About the Busy‘City. There is a blind man living In the heart of New York who walks nearly every day from his home to a little restaurant in Canal street. The dis tance each way is from eighteen to twenty blocks, according to his route, and to see him sauntering carelessly along one would never suspect his in¬ firmity. When some one asked him how he managed to find his way he said: "When a man has his sight the smell of the streets are all mixed up, hut when he is blind he learns to separate them. The odors of the shops when the dcors are open these fine days are almost as plain to my nose as t4ie signs used to be over the doors. Some of them you might never notice. Take a dry goods store, for instance. It smells of cloth. Iron and tin have smells of their own, an® I can tell a hardware store immedt- j ately. I pass two book stores nearly j every day, and I scent them yards off by the old hooks. Then there are a ^eat ™ ny other indescribable odors v, - v which I know « this place » and that. "Of fet principal ... Course, IUV ’ are mV guide, and ,, I ve been over the ground so often that 1 have learned every inequality Jiy heart. But I couldn't get along with either nose or feet alone. They work together, and when one fails the other helps cut. Be¬ tween them they make a very good substitute for eyes. “The secret of my stepping out is *.hat I’ve learned hew to step. People who can see hurl themselves forward like locomotives. That’s why the : shock is always so unexpectedly vio leal * hen >'°, u collide with another person. But I put no extra powei whatever in my movements, and if the tee of my shoe touches some un¬ known object I stop Mock still Ir>i aediatelv.”—New York Press. /, TOUGH QUESTION. Teacher—"What is the ruler of Russia called, Willie?” Willie Reed—"Gee. It’d be easier to tell you what he ain t called. Puck. - rrrnr THE TURN OF LIFE A Time When Women Are Susceptible to Many Dread Diseases—Intelligent Women Prepare for It. Two Relate their Experience. The “change of life”is I I the most critical period of a woman’s existence, | I and the anxiety felt by women as It draws near I 9 % is not without reason. » neglects Every the woman of who her | | r&i\'Msm® ‘M, care health at this time in- 9 I vites disease and pain. a or When deranged she is her predisposed system condition, is in to I || I m of apoplexy, or congestion |j I M’i\ any organ, the ten- R likely deacy is at this period 9 ■ "g to become active —and with a host of ner- I I.J A* | <e.\ vous irritations, make | 9 ■ life a burden. At this - time, also, cancers and irt’.’.-.-j ‘SJ i/t V H tumors are more liable e m ■b «. u§ to form and begin their ft destructive work. V,<1 Such warning symp¬ m'W toms as sense of suffo¬ cation, hot flashes, head¬ Vm. *» aches backaches, dread ,,, | j m of impending evil, timid¬ ...is*# ity, sounds in the ears, palpitation of the heart, sparks before the constipa¬ eyes, irregularities, oaoaoauflaCfe tion, variable appetite, weakness tude, promptly and heeded' dizziness, and inquie¬ by are in- o V ^ Mrs. AEGNyland s telligent women who are omo aauaiaa o Riionio aB*«c»ou bo □ approaching the period woman’s great may be expected. These symptoms are all just so many calls from nature for help. The nerves are crying out for assistance and the cry should be heeded in time. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com¬ pound was prepared to meet the needs of woman’s system at this trying period of her life. It invigorates and strengthens builds the female organism and up the weakened nervous system. It has carried thousands of women safely through this crisis. For special advice regarding this im¬ portant write period women are invited to to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., and it will be furnished absolutely free of charge. Read what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Com¬ pound did for Mrs. Hyland and Mrs. Hinkle: I had been p lnkha suffering '!; :_ r with ... , falling ... of , ,, the womb for rears and was passing through the Change of L ife. My womb was badlv swol len; my stomach was sore; I had dizzy spells, sa 'k headaches, and was very nervous. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Compound Succeeds Where Others Fail. 1 NO C U H E.I •N O This Is our OXIDINE. If you haveChills an d Fever, use Guaran tee on It and get well. Made in Regular and Tasteless Forms. Price 50 cts. i-anulaciurea by PATTON-WOHSHAhfl 0.4JG CO., * Y*or sale by ail Druggists. Dallas. Texas aud Memphis, Toaa. ; J w ’.T- w • fpr WHEN EXAMINE EVERY INCH YOU BUY A OF THE SHOE YOU PAIR OF k . ARE BUY. GOING TAKE TO . ^CLOVER BRAND NOTHING SHOES LESS THAN fr WRITE THE DATE YOUR y A IN THE LINING , in ink . i moneys CLOVER D^who WORTH BRAND f SHOES WONTSELL M Are LEA THER- THE 'EM TO YOU M BEST of It, too. ALL IS SIMPLY W 7 THROUGH they are REFUSING TO EVERYTHING that At GIVE YOU YOUR you demand. Good Shoe* Aar MONEY’S WORTH :criljrimn‘-&umrt5 §i]tir (Cu. LARGEST FINE SHOE EXCLUSIVISTS ST. LOUIS. U. S. A. W ATKIN’S k k BOY” HAY PRESS * " ■ “■ w w * '' C UE aP fey lJ . ' ,, — THE ■ MARVEL OF THE COUNTRY ^jnttnaa^m _ Cheap, Simple, Durable. Two boys can operate it no ntiiei power needed i and bale the crop right in th« field at les- than cost of hauling to lily press. iTTC It Does Dots of DtlierTliing* and Cost* Only S35. Write us at once for circular. 3 E. E, LOWE CO , Atlanta, Ga. HAY? Raynor—Have you any fear of the so-called yellow peril? Shyne—Bet your life! As socn as the first golden rod appears in bloom I rush right off to Petoskey.—Chica an Tribune, THERE IS MONEY, If. CORNSTALK. Write tor lie#* cam .0* i A Mii<i<ien.AnaiiiAAia. SHUTTLES.’••• needles, 1 ar»#p*23?*«a: bAlSck REPAIRS. MFG. CO., 913 Locual St.. ST. LOUIS. MO. B fe ” P I5Q*S CURE FOR o ■NtWSSffi Id time. Bold C*c by dn?gyi?tgL •* CONSUMPTION i wrote with vou treatment Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege¬ happy table Compound that as all you directed, and I am to say those distressing symp¬ toms left me and Life, I have passed safely through I the Change of a well woman. am recommending vour medicine to all my friends."—Mrs. AnnieE. G. Hyland, Chester town, Md. Another Woman’s Case. “ During change of life words cannot ex¬ press what I suffered. My physician said I had a canceroustondition of the womb. One day I read some of the testimonials of women who had been cured-by Lydia, E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and I decided to try it ana to write you for advice. Your medicine made me a well woman, and all my bad symp¬ toms “ soon disappeared. this period of Hfe I advise every woman at to take vour medicine and write you for ad¬ vice.”—Mi-s. Lizzie Hinkle, Salem, Ind. Compound' What Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable did for Mrs. Ilyland and Mrs. Hinkle it will do for any woman at this time of life. It has conquered pain, restored health, and prolonged life in cases that utterly baffled physicians. • - WMM U4 O ol*’: S — #. c FOR WOMEN troubled with ills peculiar to their sex, used as a douche is marvelously suc¬ cessful. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs, stops discharges, heels inflammation and local “™“' ISStSSSSSf” srwssswsgsssw - TOILET AND WOMEN’S SPECIAL USES For sale at druggists, 50 cents a box. Trial Box and Book of Instructions Free. Thi R. Paxton Company Boston, Mass. (At34-’05) If nfnirtpd Thompson's Eye Water with weak u»e