Newspaper Page Text
THE pulpit.
N ELOQUENT SUNDAY SERMON BY
A NEHEM1AH BOYNTON.
dr.
Subject: The Will and the Work.
Brooklyn, N. Y.—Dr. Neliemiah
Rovnton, pastor of the Clinton Ave
° ’ Congregational Church, having
nue from his European trip, was
returned pulpit Sunday. In the morn
in his large audience, he
n!? greeted by a
preached on ‘‘The Will and the
Work.” The text was from John
4:34: -My meat is to do the will of
Him that sent Me and to finish His
work.” Among other things, Dr.
Bovnton said:
The very essence of a rational faith
in Jesus is dependent upon His being
permitted to make His own impres¬
sion upon one's soul as a being who
met and mastered life in normal re¬
lations. permit fancy to dress
If you your
Him in the light fluffy and ethereal
garments of an airy mysticism you
add to your imagination but subtract
from His reality. If you array Him
in the blue and sometimes navy blue
homespun of a provincial theology
your philosophy aspiring to do the
task of sympathy takes ffway bait'
His birthright. He recedes from the
heart and mind of the world! But
if you allow Him to be an actual resi¬
dent in life and to live in the world
to which He came, to work, to won
dor, to minister, to suffer, to joy and
to love, you restore Him to men.
Again He lives in power, and by His
very mastery of life indicates His
elaim to be the chiefest among ten
thousand.
The supreme divinity of Christ, His
individual and unique relation to the
Father are best apprehended by set¬
ting His life ia its ordinary and usual
human relations, permitting it to
tell its own story and make its own
impression. Whether you compare
•taist with the Samaritan woman
with the astoaished disciples His
mnseendant greatness is in distinct
evidence.
Here is a travel-stained, weary and
thirsty pilgrim sitting by a well;
there a common water carrier comes
to fill his pitcher. Tlieir interview
shows at once that they are not upon
the same level; they do not see life
from the same angle. The traveler
is evidently in full possession of
something for which the Samaritan
woman has only heart hunger, some¬
thing very high, noble, soul satisfy
png.
The disciples who come as she
eaves are not much above her level,
io far as appreciating Christ is con
:erned. They wonder that He is will
ng to stoop to speak to such a per
ion! They offer Him food. Hospi
tality is the only grace they can at
present afford. “Master, eat!” How
flight an appreciation they have of
lw really nutritive forces of life! “I
lave eaten. I have been refreshed,”
[ays la:i offered Christ. Him “Can lunch it be that in anyone ab
knee?” our
I they inquire.
“Mv meat,” says Christ, “is to do
lie will of Him that sent Me and to
luish His work.”
I Here is strong meat, indeed! Here
P |nd spiritual manna, indeed! The will
the work are the staples of that
fcrpetual feast which alone will sat
the higher soul-life of mankind,
I first great teaching of this incident
I the personal nature of real religion,
I One of the pathetic visions of our
P'ii I day is that of multitudes trying
find a place to trust their souls.
I Religions which the world has out
►wn are galvanized into life again
i>d are made the depositories of rest
|ss ►ve spirits. for New forms of religion
| many mighty attractions and
r a time seem to satisfy the soul de
'e. There must be some one thing
out the faith of Jesus which gives
pre-eminence over all other forms
faith, however much of fragmen
U trust they embrace. And that
thing is the sense of personal re
. 11 with God. “My meat is to do
« will of Him that sent Me! ” This
Ul ; Steal; Christian contribution to
, ugioii. God is Father
of all spir
!' connect with His will is to re
oneself with Him and satisfy the
ugings of one’s deepest soul. “I
»°w Jesus Christ,” said Bushaell,
eber tba n I know any man in the
^ art ^ ord an( l if He should be
»Hug ’
along the street and see me,
would say, ‘There goes a friend
Mine.’ ”
Tlle iov, the assurance, the cer
; > of a Christian faith, root thern
'cs in the sense of personal rela
!" “otween tbe the soul and God, which
r ';f comfort, security and in
. pation
of living.
Jesus again is insistent in His
1] hg that a loyal will always ex
® lt f elf in work: “To finish His
ivi A personal relation God
l ' with
l ss es itself through a social ap
fvpi , .
an< ^ e tf°rt- Nobody ever
L r ’ *° Heaven alone. Everybody
uld P carry somebody else who
mount the shining pinnacles of
rb ., 0lir God. ,The greatest
n 16 world is to get one’s will
r] to establish goodwill
■ among
i n ,
6 race fl ue stion, for ex
E L How u ;| of different
’ i’c men
, be treated
in free America?
dish U0 longer a question of the
niai1 a lone, but of the Indian,
t
lepu pa n ? se > the Chinese as well,
lt; ,
n m, .. ls no longer a mere Araer
!stinn IOn ’ ^ is an international
, tound to become and
’ more
rp . >e 5 at ve ^
ivs * an( vital in coming
lutin? a of V s social the solution? Is it in in
I ^tlements? sympathy like clubs
L is it in laws drastic
1 ° r oed? These do
[n”tv- Ut can some
tbe rea i solution waits
Hion f 1 ,, ! 1 of tbe People, upon dis
L niH au< ^ a ttitude. The deeper
Dan fshir f«° ! ns a , are t bat bl or ^or, The “A man’s
kit?nn.V ■ due ' - nobler fel
e ' The wil1 of God
1 inst . b tor a larger expression over
passion, pride and prejudice!
ariH„ COU ' d bnd in an ordinary
thv TT" ater cai 'i'ier a soul
batbJ rtt- k5ndl disposition,
His y His
1 ,,. T,: ■ ’ ar bound solicitude, then His
e to find in every
ai a ir itual
it-iin aa s P relative and
in toward all made in the im
°f God a brother's
regard and
ij n ~ tv . of God
f a l wa J' s
r . m some form of social
° U wil1 601
v e social problems only
adequate expression.
thi rd nd flnal teaching of the
Master in - this 4 u incident concerns spir
itual accomplishments.
disHnfi isciple, We is results! want ’ says Indeed, the impatient here
nrav^> tr 1 th bUt is a
’ What klnd of result S,
PT the ay indices .' ,. Are apparent returns always
of a true Christian pro
t fhnw-' o"ly S ” S blind n0t 6 poEsib,e ’’ “ S “to ” lridness make a
,en '
. to a really deplorable
state of affairs?
Cheap method, superficial endeavor
and questionable procedure are, to
be sure, dazzling temptations, Ap
parently they take the kingdom of
Heaven by violence and bring it in.
Really they are sorry apologies for
a accomplishment, which is, first
01 . all, in
the implanting of a will, a
disposition.
He that believeth shall not make
haste! “The sower and the reaper
shall rejoice together.” The man
who sows a spirit and the man who
reaps a , harvest fellow
a joy! are sharers in
common
If Jesus is judged by the harvest¬
ing of His life, He has small tally!
hundred souls, only, embraced
His faith when He gave His life for
the world. But if any true measure¬
ment attempts to estimate the real¬
ization of His life, and He is judged
by the sowing of His life, then, in¬
deed, does He appear as a master
workman. He buried a spirit in the
heart of the world which has been in
the world ever since, with its ever
recurring seedtime and harvest. He
is known among men by the splendor
of His will, which abides, rather than
by the incidents of His work, which j
are glorious memories of the past.
The will and the work, these two;
but the greatest, the most harvesting
of these is will, for, after all, “it is
not what a man does, but would do,
which exalts him;” and mighty are
the spiritual accomplishments of
those, no matter for apparent figures,
whose hearts are staved on Him and
through Him reach loving arms to
the world,
The Blood «f Christ.
Have we outlived the efficacy of the
blood of Christ, and is the tale of His
Cross a sound from which all the
music has gone forever?
\\ e need the sun to-day, as we have
ever needed it; the wind is still the
breath of health to our dying bodies;
still we find In the earth the bread
without which we cannot live; these
are our friends of whom we never
tire; can it be that the only thing of
which we are weary is God’s answer
to our soul's deepest need? Shall we
keep everything but the blood of
Christ? Shall the Cross go, and the
sun be left? Verily, as the sun with
drew at the sight of that Cross, and
for the moment fled away, he would
shine never more were that sacred
tree hewn down by furious man.
The blood of Christ is the foun
tain of immortality! The blood of
Christ, it makes the soul’s summer
warm and beauteous! The blood of
Christ, it binds all Heaven, with its
many mansions and throngs without
number, in holy and indissoluble se
curity! My soul, seek no other
stream in which to drown thy
rosy! My lips, speak no other song
with which to charge your music! My
hands, seek no other task with which
to prove your energy! I would be
swallowed np in Christ. I would bo
nailed to His Cross. I would be bap
tized with His baptism. I would
quail under the agony of His pain :
that I might triumph with Him in
the glory of His resurrection.
O my Jesus! my Saviour! Thine
heart did burst for me, and all its
sacred blood flowed for all. the cleansing I need it j
of my sin. I need it
every day. I need it more and more. ;
I search out the inmost recesses of
my poor wild heart and let Thy blood
remove every stain of evil. I
E’er since by faith I saw the stream
Thy flowing love wounds supply, theme,
Redeeming lias been my
And shall be till 1 die.
Mighty Saviour! Repeat all Thy
miracles by taking away the guilt
and torment of my infinite sin.—By
the late Joseph Parker, D. D., in Lon*
don Christian.
The Joy of the Dol'd.
Some of the most precious lessons
of love and trust were taught me by
a poor invalid upon one of the first
charges to which I was sent. She
was dependent upon her friends; was
a constant rheumatic sufferer, and a
confirmed consumptive. She was a l
sanctified Scotch Presbyterian, and a ,
monument of the power of Christ’s
love to soothe and cheer in suffering.
While disease stuck envenomed
fangs into her flesh her soul was ever |
in a transport of joy. “Oh!” said
she “I have not a pain or a priva- i
tiou, I have no suffering or sorrow
bU J ure?y hatlTborne griefs
“S He our
ana , n j farmed carriea our OUl boriuwo, sorrows' yet J we did
esteem Him stricken, smitten of God,
•lnd afflicted. But He was wounded i
for our transgressions, He was
hrni bruised .„4 fm ioi . our n „ r ininnities' iniquities, the euc clias- !
Uim, :
tisement of our peace was upon
ana an,i with WlUl ±11S His strines siripcs we UV are oi'' healed.
-W S., in the Vanguard. 1
A Prayer From the Heart.
The prayer that James Murdock, 1
the noted elocutionist, overheard
President Lincoln offer in the \\ lute
House, amid the dark hours of the ;
night, was a -------- reliable criterion u “’' ,nn of n his s
. the most.
o rqpfpr It was during Lin- ,
fearful time of the Rebellion
coin was on his knees before before the the open open
Bible, in the agony 1 J=oi^
He cried out, “Oh, so Thou p 1 eading God y^ana that heard , j
Solomon in the night, when he prayed
for this wisdom, people, I hear cannot me. guide I caan the 0 affairs L®f r , j
of this nation, ,without without Thy Thy help. help, I i
’
am poor and weak and sinful. O G . ,
who didst hear Solomon when he 1
cried for wisdom, hear me, ana save
this nation.” —Prayer Advocate.
What Talniagc Said.
The Rev. T. De Witt Taimage once
said: “You cannot find a great evan
gelistic preacher that m accon who -
ing any great good for Christ,
is not backed up b> a P ia *
secrated band of earnest cauren
workers.”
UNSAFE.
Yacht Owner— So the commodore
let his skipper go, did he?
His Captain—Yep; he was too
b ame reckless. He’d think nothin’
of goin out with only ten cases of
champagne aboard, an' the commo¬
dore says as hew twenty is the limit
if safety.—Puck.
manenRvniilwuf FT-rq vr * n r? ^i" Uiseasesper
: VOlls
JtestorerT br.H.R. !fe W tjJu Ti;g SttKnd t ^SS!S.S Si!?*
THE ZEBRA.
A teacher showed his small pupils
. a zebra, saying, “Now, what is this?”
“A horse, in a bathing suit,” was
the prompt reply.—La Caricaturists.
Itch cured in 30 minutes by Wool ford’s
Sanitary Lotion, Kever fails. At druggists#
Bathing in the Dead Sea.
“No sooner has one plunged into
the water than one is whipped off
«** '«* .*»*
ly about like a wretched cork,” says
Rev. Haskett Smith of bathing in 1
the Dead Sea. j |
in the effort to regain one’s foot-,
ing and to get back to shore one’s i
fret icet and and chiix* shins are ere v,-,ri- barken 0 e by the; :
jagged stones and pcoblos, and when'
at length one does emerge from *H its
!S?r kos T, w,t " «*
limbs bleeding v and torn, one oecomes
aware of a horrible tingling and burn
in & sensation in eyes, ears, nostrils,
mouth and almost every pore of the
skin from the brine and bitumen
which have penetrated everywhere.
“Unless great care is taken the
bather in the Dead Sea is liable to
an eruption which breaks out all over
his body and which is commonly
known as the T)ead Sea rash.’ The
best antidote to this is to hurry across
as quickly as possible to the River
Jordan and take a second plunge
therein. The soft ahtd muddy waters
of that sacred but dirty stream will
effectually remove the salt that has
In crusted the body.”—Detroit Free
Press.
Mrs. Winslow’sSoothing Svrupfor Children
teething, softens thegumB,reducesinfiamma
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, SScabottle
TO BE SEARCHED.
“Policeman, that ruffian took my
wife’s -arm!”
“All right, sir. We’ll search ’im at
the station.”—Puck.
The Ferguson Colleges are the finest
equipped busi¬
ness colleges in
SBKffrttj America. A
Smith Premier typewriter and flue anyof roll-top old desk for each pupil. FERGUSON SHORT¬ half
HAND is 100 per cent ahead of the srstems, and it cun be learned in one
She tune. EVERY GRADUATE iN A GOOD POSITION. Send us the names and
addresses of those interested it) a business education and we will send you a nice present'.
Address THE FERGUSON CROSS, COLLEGES,
COLUMBUS, GA. or WAX GA.
: None “For one year," writes Ruby Farley, of Middletown, Calif., mmm' “I was troubled with n
& w. suppression. I tried other medicines and doctors, but nothing helped me. At last I
took Cardui, and now l am well and strong.” For the various ills of woman’s life,
f I no medicine will be found to excel
% ’4 to Wine of Care ui i &
.ft ’ Excel It operates upon the womanly functions, regulating their action and condition, heals m
; K and builds up the womanly organs. It is a woman’s medicine. Try it. Sold ss
ev- N
& erywhere, in $1 bottles, with full directions for use inside the wrapper. .vv
WRITE IS 4 LETTER Write today for a free copy of valuable 64-page illustrated Book for Women. If yon need Medical Advim (4
f B U Advisory describe your Dept., symptoms, The Chattanooga stating age, Medicine and reply Co.. will Chattanooga. be sent in Tenn. plain sealed envelope. e *°Pe. Address- . Ladies LadS
THE MONEY.
“An artist,” said the man
pointed whiskers, “must not
about money.”
“I suppose not,” answered
Cumrox. “Every time I buy a
ure fee artist wants enough to
him from thinking about money
the rest of his
Star.
ECZEMA COVERED BABY.
Worst Case Doctors Ever Saw—Suf¬
fered Untold Misery — Perfect
Cure by Cuticura Remedies.
“My son, who is now twenty-two year*
0 f ag e, when four months old began to
have eczema on his face, spreading quite
rapidly until he was nearly covered. The
eczema was something terrible, and the
doctors said it was the worst case they ever
At times his whole body ami face
were covered, all but Ins feet. 1 used many
“ ?eddS my boy
was three years and four months old, hav
• ,i *,,flrprin<r
mg had eczema all ,, that t nme an ai i m ,
untold misery. 1 began to use all three
of the Cuticura Remedies. lie i.as bc.te,
j n two months; m six months he was well.
Mrs. R. . L. Ivi P„1„. .ej, i Ptormont ’ \ H Oct
24, _» 1005.
— --—
GOOD JUDGE.
“You’re .a geed judge of horseflesh,
aren’t you, sir?
“I ought to he. I ate in Paris res
taurants all summer.”—Cleveland
Leader.
? 73 r *me
u ™ "^" ou7hs, Golds, Croup and Con
u C
......
At druggists, Loc
PLEASURE.
Yankee Jingo: “I’m afraid we’re
sroing to have trouble with you Japs.”
guave j ap: “Oh! no trouble at all,
my friend. It will be a pleasure.”—
•j
5>J
He Wasn't,
Fitzgerald The late RHh O J r ?“ Newbury
in nn DP svimiath" S L ° UiS
once declared that P f far more ’
than eloquence or learning, made for
success m . the ministry. "Too many
0 us,^through lack of sympathy,” he
said, say the worst, the most inap¬
propriate things. Thus a young Bap
ISt er ‘ d of Eline condoling with a
hoas >
ebreaker , in jail, droned:
a ‘Ah,
^ ^ US reraemb er that we
?o„r.l * ou may be; oda I I am an ‘!. t, gone the housebreak¬
er answered shortly.”—The Sketch.
THE WIFE'S SYMPATHY.
Officers: “We have sad news to
bring you. Your husband fell after
the first shot of the enemy, and died
without a sound.”
Wife: “Yes; the man was always
very taciturn.”—Lustiger Blaetter.
Deafness Cannot Be Cured
d,seased bylocal applications Potion of as theveannotreach ear." There tli#
the is only cm#
inflamed condition of the mucous lining of
flamed t he E 5 stac!kiau have Tube rumbling - Wheuthistubeisin- sound orimper
j-ou a
root Deafness hearing, is the and when it is entirely closed
hou result, and unless the inflam¬
ma caa be taken out and this tube re
stored to its normal condition, hearing will
be destroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten
are caused bycatarrh, which is nothin gbut an
h^ined «SS!& condition , S353S28$852g of the mucous surfaces.
notbecuredbyHall’s circulars free. F.J.Chkkkv Catarrh Cure. Send for
Sold & Co.,Toledo, O.
bv Druggists, 75c.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation.
THE CORRECT TIME.
“Speaking of myself,” said the elig¬
ible bachelor, “I do not believe in
early marriages.”
“Nor do I,” replied the fair maid.
“High noon is the correct time.”—
Chicago News.
Cau’tfl
Work
/
Peel blllousl Gol fa*
« splitting headache!
Pulna all over your
body* Try &
HICKS’ © tutu
ITS IIQCTO ecrni
9 and Qlipelg all ache* 10c
O palna immediately.
&ei.’ular Sites, 23c and Wc.
All Druggists.
1 L ll
i 6 J » I
VdiXX 7/A 1 III* i
! V v
jp '
•••SkN: sflifei wm ■i * 11 »
,y v -
h*N
IA '
Fine Excellent Earliest Medium Header. Shipper. Size. laterthan A About full size ten E. larger. Jersey days Cabbage. yielderand Earliest A Flat good large I I I
a
Delicious for Table. A Money Maker. shipper.
a — sy*
U
C. M. GIBSON, YotJiiig’s Island, South Carolina
||f AHTED^ t " p SJoS^.im n S5
pay. our representatives making *i50 to
■■ per month, selling our Cereal product, bxclu
give territory given energetic workers, write for prop
osi tion. saies Hein., n»- cvre -.u< wi-. »nwi». ««■
I JJfj «■ GP « au Woo) Panama Skirt,
LUUIUO )3ian Jam! Tailored. wimueeppnms
J two-lach told; black, blue, gooS
Jo cesi&t SKIRT Jquaaty brown* broa.idoit,&3.-2S. also same style in
T j veu
_ on take m risk. We puaraniee satis
’ ) faction back. Take
5 . 3 _ 29 or money
-
CHAUCER.
“Mrs. Fallansbee tells me that she
is studying Chaucer,” said Mrs. Old
castle.
“Indeed,” replied the hostess. “She
always was crazy over fancy work.”
—Chicago Record-Herald.
THE CRITICS.
“Was there anything really humor
ous about your show?”
“Yes,” answered the manager, “the
critics said some things about it next
day that were really funny.”—Wash
,
ineton Star.
^DOYOUKNOW; V THE WET WEATHER i
\ \; \v \ COMFORT AND
, PROTECTION
afforded by a
\ \l f, Hl
V Slicker?
\
L l \ Clean Durable -Light
SSI* - L Waterproof Guaranteed
\ VTU
fWr'W-' "*0^ Everywhere 1300
v'* . V
» J TOWER CO BOSTON v A A
Tfiwf * 4 ( 4 MAOIRN CO UH'TfO, TO«*OwTt 3 , <* H.
MOTHERS
and grrandmothers all over this country say
you will rarely need a doctor if you
have at Uaud a bottle of
Johnsons AnodF-ejiniinent ,
Applied promptly it pets right down to
work and cures cuts, burns, bruises, b»tes,
sprains, lameness and soreness.
ESTABLISHED 1810.
25c., three times as much 50c. All dealers.
I. S. JOHNSON & CO., Boston, Mass.
i
1
DROPSY
If you havo it, or know of a sufferer,
Write for particulars of our valuable remedy,
which is GUARANTEED.
EAGLE REMEDY CO •*
eoi KUar iiuiidiiiu. Atlanta, <I»
(At48-’07)
NO MORE MUSTARD PLASTERS TO BLISTER
THE SCIENTIFIC AND MODERN EXTERNAL COUNTER-IRRITANT.
Capsicum-Vaseline. i
3! EXTRACT OF THE CAYENNE i
=ESs PEPPER PLANT TAKEN i j
DIRECTLY IN VASEUNE !
.nlOVi #>au*a»aaua
DON’T WAIT TELL THE PAIN
COMES-KEEP A TUBE HANDY
A QUICK, SURE, SAFE AND ALWAYS READY CURE FOR PAIN—PRICE lEc.
—IN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES MADE OF PURE TIN—AT ALL DRUGGISTS AND i
DEALERS. OR BY MAIL ON RECEIPT OF 15c. IN POSTAGE STAMPS.
A substitute for and superior to mustard or any other plaster and will not jj I
blister the most delicate skin. The pain-allaying and curative qualities of the
article are wonderful, it will stop the toothache at once, and relieve Head¬
ache and Sciatica. We repommend it as the best and safest external counter
irritant known, also as an external remedy for pains in the chest and stomach
and all Rheumatic, Neuralgic and Gouty complaints . 1 A trial will prove what
we claim for it, and it will be found to be invaluable in the household and for
children. Once used no family will be without it. Many people say “ it is j
the best of all your preparations.” Accept no preparation of vaseline unless
the same carries our label, as otherwise it is not genuine.
Send your address and we will mail our Vaseline Booklet describing i
our preparations which will Interest you.
I 17 State St. CHESEBROUGH MFG. GO. New York City i
>«#MT
' STIW— HB —1
! 1
m
t
i m * .*.i . A
; i ' SHOES AT ALL V 1 ?-.__ let ' „• &
PRICES, FOR EVERY XJ &
MEMBER OF THE FAMILY,
MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN.
iggys IV. L floriFfatmafc;)* sells more
___ than any other manufacture* In the
gfeU shape, world, fit bacauso hotter, they langcr, hold thefr and y Fast
wesr Color
arc of creator value than any Other EvCttt
shoes in the world la-day. Exrlusirelv. Used
W.L.Douglas $4 and $H Blit Fdflc Shoes cannot be ogualled at any price.
tV“ CAUTION. — W. L. Dongla* nr.rne and price is stamped on bottom. Take No Sub¬
stitute. Sold bv the best slioe dealers everyrrhere. Shoes mailed from factory to any part
of the world. Illustrated catalog free. IV. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass.
CRESCENT ANTISEPTIC
CREATEST HEALER KNOWN TO SCIENCE.
Non Poisonous, Non Irritating. Allays Inflammation and stops
pain from any cause. As strong as carbolic acid and as harmless as
J cures sweet sores milk. and Cures inflammation burns instantly; from any cures cause old on and chronic beast. sorea; For
1 man or
fowls—eures cholera, sore head and roup. Satisfaction positively
guaranteed.
Tor Sal# by all KlrM-Clooe Dea.ers. Jtfjrt. by CRESCENT CUEMICAb CO., Ft. Worth, Tex*«
:
MALSBY COMPANY,
41 I. FORSYTH ST., ATLANTA, 64*
S3
Hanufsciurer* tf and Otalin in 111 Kindi if
MAC HINERY
AND SUPPLIES.
Portable. Stationary and Traction Engines. Boiler*,
Saw Mills and Grist Mills. Wood working and Shin¬
gle Mill Machinery. Complete line carried in stook.
Write for catalogue prices. Addi tes all communica¬
tion* to Atlanta, Qa. We have mo connections ia
Jacksonville. Fla.
To convince any &
woman that Pas- ■
tine Antiseptic will ■ ft
improve and do all her health B
we claim
send , f o r 11. AV e will H.
her absolutely free a large trial
box of Paxtine with hook of mst rue
tions and genuine testimonials. Send
your name and address on a postal card.
PAXTINE and ni brane cleanses mucous e heals in af¬ -
fections, , catarrh . and sueh Inflammation as nasal Catarrh, pelvic
caused by femi¬
nine ills; sore eyes, sore throat and
mouth, by direct local treatment. Its cur¬
ative power over these troubles is extra¬
ordinary Thousands and of gives Immediate •elicf.
ommending it women day. aro using cents ana rec¬ at
every so
druggists or by mail. Remember, however,
IT COSTS YOU NOTH ING TO TRY IT.
TfIK It. PAXTON CO., Boston, Mass.
If nflllrlcil UiGiiipson’s Eye Water
with weak
eves, use