Newspaper Page Text
4 USE riX
A sermon
Theme: The Bible#
i,i vn m Y.—Preaching at the
_ B TSquare'
S Presbyterian Church,
h„i e avenue andWeirfield street,
^he' above Henderson, theme, pastor, the Rev. took Ira as
flirimell ?«t “The Word of our
Sail Is 40:8: forever.” He said:
’Ijs d stand of criticism
has been an age
the Scriptures. There has never
ken a time in the history of Chns
nity when the Bible was more
nrrhinglv examined and the trutli
i„pss of its facts as presented through more
lestioned than in the days
,i, h we have passed and are pass
The written truth of the divine
| - has been put to severe
/elation foundations have been un¬
sts. Its superstructure has been
yzed. its have been
Its conclusions
■garived and its very fabric has
emingly been destroyed. Some of
have feared that its permanence
Is been threatened, contents in its some influence measure cur
iled nnn’eed. its been stren
Criticism has
ms in its handling of the Bible,
hr more strenuous than some of us
[ve thought advisable, Far more
henuous than many of us have
ought justifiable, necessary or wise.
U e r the combined influence of a
kw science, a larger view of history,
[ m0 re comprehensive geography, the
Ists of the validity and value of the
’riptures have been changed and the
intent of the Word of than God has custom- been
fferently considered
■iiy. It has shocked many a soul,
is process. It has brought many a
yman and many a minister to the
ie of the ocean of doubt and dis
ust and of spiritual uncertainty,
ut it has been done. Whether we
ive liked it or no the light has bce.i
rned on. It has incidentally been
rned on much that was the foolish
ess of immature scholarship mas
lerading under the guise of wisdom.
[The [rated criticism of the Scriptures has
a widespread distrust of the
[hole [oology. Book It of has God. removed It has upset of
[e many
old foundations for our belief
[ f the divinity inspiration of Jesus of the Christ. Word Sadly and
the
i many quarters it has undermined
kith. imse But that has been rather be
men have lacked the power to
Ifferentiate and because they have
[istaken facts for human statement
nd interpretation of the same, than
bcause the Scriptures have been
iientifically studied and the light of
ie spirit honestly and helpfully
irned on.
I In- Actually there has been little cause
alarm. Because we test the water
I r;o guarantee that it is contam
lated. Because we put acid to our
liver is no surety that it is only
[lated. fition of Because the Almighty we take and the try invi- Him
[ncl [hould His fear Word that is either no reason both why we
or are
rands. Because we study the Word
larefully invites no presumption that
I will not be able fully to meet all
iur questions and successfully to
lucidate all our perplexities and to
ustify itself. The Bible is not ~
ook for dummies. It is the mechan
pally ['ho through preserved the Word long of a has living spoken God
ages
o living men and who yet speaks. It
p for men of intelligence who are
[live. ive and And intelligent it invites the inquiry of
men.
There is and has been no cause
[or [ve alarm. not the For theology thing. and A religion
same very re
pgious heology. man And may have while a very it is atrocious always
pst to express our religious knowl
Mse [ogical and experiences in the best theo
formulae that we may be able
p devise, it is always possible, hu
panity P°t he being what it is, that we may
able to express in words the
pa t consciousness of our minds and
Fiiis. A man’s theology will change,
p he be a live and intelligent man,
Fith the maturing and magnifying
P‘ his religious exp eriences. And if
P ur theology is ineffective to relate
[ P l,ir our spiritual creeds and do not moral correctly experiences, reveal
F [he r thoughts, there is no reason in
world why we should not do as
Nr fathers before us have done and
paiige our creeds, our formulated
theologies. Creeds are necessary as
N expression of a religious conscious¬
ness. It were folly to scoff them,
put phonic! they should be plastic. They
grow with our growth and ex¬
pand I And with so our if expansion. investigation of the
pci’ipture lias relaid the ground for
fur belief in the inspiration of the
rtord of God we should not be fear
F ul For it has made the foundation
ra pie intelligible and truthful to
pe minds of men of to-day. It has
pot destroyed the fact of inspiration,
it lias simply changed our major
pound L s inspired of belief therein. The Word
as as it ever was. No theo
°s«’ a l statement,however learned or
‘a:' fully worded, can alter the fact,
t [he examination of the Scripture
as restated the grounds for our be
ot in the divinity of Christ, it has
r pu -on simply to intensify our intellec
div !> “ooness. acceptance For He of who the fact the of full- His
I was
o - of grace and truth depends not
an. theological foi-mula for dem
ioi- fration or justification. For He
d ivine ere men began to prove
pun p so.
Wo °ught to be thankful that the
h as come. For out of the fire
has i me rged a stronger faith in the
.
'-i ired Word of God, a clearer com
Prehension faith. of the reasons for our
?° And it w r ere worth while to
th r °ugh fire aud through flood to
seciiip F that.
C itic ! sm 11355 eliminated a
nor. , many
tho obscurity has clarified much of
ord of the Scripture rec
. I four 1 *' as brought the testimony
Cl] ends of the earth to the
e V f ntiation of the accuracy in
He Word. essential part of God’s most
v It has given
km, e ^ us a larger
kn mi •’uge. ' as siven us a surer
w c Rarest Except for those who
to the events that are
n eel in Scripture there has been
more accurately informed, so
fa ve concerning the
i i ® L ' r ipture . than are we to-day.
t, more I read of the
researches
and results achieved by critical stu¬
dents of the Bible and of the lands
with which it intimately associates
Itself the more am I convinced that
the investigation is worth whatever it
may cost and that it is providential.
And I am also convinced that we
would do well to go slow about dis¬
counting the opinions concerning the
Scripture and the facts therein re
cited that have been held true in days
long past. It is a good thing that we
should remember that the sum of
human wisdom is not resident in us
and that our forefathers were not
fools. This is au intensely critical
and scientific age. It demands proof
and evidence that heretofore was not
deemed necessary or reverent. But
the more we read and hear the more
we are led to believe that the fathers,
in not so informed and scientific an
age, were not so deluded when they
accepted on faith that for which we
demand proof. For we get the proof
when we ask for it, so it would seem,
and it is very largely confirmatory
of the past.
The gates of hell cannot prevail
against the Bible. For it is the truth¬
ful record of the largest lougiugs, the
wickedest sins, the most delightful
religious exaltations of individuals
and a people. Its human interest is
superb. It meets our lives at every
point. It has comfort for the sorrow¬
ing, peace for the afflicted, inspiration
for the heavy-hearted, enthusiasm for
the discouraged, admonition for the
wicked, salvation for the penitent.
The farmer feels its vitality, the
shepherd acknowledges its appeal,
the rich man learns’Tts lessons, the
poor man thanks God for its democ¬
racy. It is the book of the people,
for it is redolent with the life of the
people. And wherever there is a soul
in torment, wherever there is a man
who mourns, wherever there is a
woman with a broken heart, wherever
there is a mind in gloom, or a body
that racked with pain, there will
the Bible be and be enjoyed. For it
radiates good cheer, it speaks to us
honestly of the deepest things of life,
it warns us of the consequences of
evil and the satisfactions of right¬
eousness. The Bible Is as intelligible
to youth as to old age. It has a mes¬
sage for all. It can charm a boy with
its heroes as a man with its profound
philosophy. It can animate a girl as
it can inspire and intensify a woman’s
love for God. And it does these
things.
And because it does it will never
grow stale or profitless or valueless.
It will ever stand. “The Word of our
God shall stand forever.” It is eter¬
nal. It is not the creature of time.
It is the child of eternity.
And it would stand forever if for
no other reason than that it unfolds
the earthly history of the incarnate
God. So long as the Bible speaks of
Christ it will live. For He is its in¬
spiration. The revelation of Him is
its mission. And so long as men shall
sin and need salvation, so long as
souls shall turn to God in Christ for
aid, so long will men love the Scrip¬
ture and magnify its force.
Shallow thinkers may enlarge the
difficulties that inhere within the
Scripture. Bad men may quote it
for their evil ends. Foolish men may
twist its meanings and assure us of
Its fallibility. But the Bible will
stand. It will stand forever. And
when we are gone and the countless
generations that shall follow us have
come and gone the long way in our
steps the Bible will be here. For it is
the Word of the Lord. Let us never
forget it’ And it shall endlessly per¬
du re.
A Rise by Self-Sacrifice.
Enough has been said of the fall
by self-will to show us that man must
rise by self-sacrifice. To grow this
passion within him were all the sac¬
rifices to which God led him in hi£
weary history. More and more near¬
ly did God reveal Himself unto man,
until in the self-sacrifice of Calvary
the heart of man was taken and God s
self-sacrifice began the life of self
sacrifice in humanity. "The glory of
God and of the Lamb is light there¬
of.”
Enough has been said of the city—
its divine socialism—to show that to
reach it each man must begin to live
for others, that his whole life must
be a life of meekness and burden¬
bearing. God through the ages re¬
vealed Himself as the bearer of man's
burdens and by this revelation lifted
men slowly to a life of mutual help¬
fulness, until at last in the sin
bea.er He disclosed Himself as the
victim of Calvary. The future social
organization after that could have
no other light but that of the glory
of God In the slain Lamb.
Enough has been said of holiness
in man—of sainthood—to show that
the city of God will be inhabited—if
it is the Holy City—by those whb
have met with foes and vanquished
them, by those who have known the
cross before they saw the crown. I
look into John’s vision and hear the
unuttered philosophy of spiritual
power, as the redeemed come home.
First, the new heavens, then the new
earth. Vision, then action. Men
are like colonists who have now and
then granted unto them a vision of
how things ought to be in the land
ideal, in the land of which they hear
from beyond. By and by they^ get
thereto the reality comes out of them
to meet the reality which ever hath
been there. So by His spirit we put
into our hearts the idea of the broth¬
erhood of man, under God, in Christ
Jesus.—Dr. F. A. Gunsaulus.
“Poor, Yet Making Many Rich.”
The Church Times gives an in¬
teresting little account of a poor girl,
blind and deaf, an inmate of a North
Devon workhouse, who “lives a life
of prayer in her darkness and soli¬
tude.” To this afflicted one the in¬
itiative of the organization of of the the
Missionary Candidates’ Fund
S. P. G. may be traced. That fund
now has reached the sum of over
£3000, subscribed in a comparatively
short time, the first item being the
three shillings saved by the blind
girl. The writer of the notice says:
“She was in a little bare ward in
the w’orkhouse when I saw her, look¬
ing very sad because her Braille copy
of the Mission Field had been torn.
* * * She asked me to pray for
her, and then told us not only to pray
for missions, but also for the parish,
for Sunday-schools and Bands of
Hope, etc.; and one felt rebuked as
one thought of her life of prayer, al
j ways thinking of and interceding for
others iu her darkness and silence,
! -»Loudon Christian.
Father’s Sacrifice in Vain.
Despite the heroic sacrifice of near¬
ly 100 square inches of skin by Geo.
Klotzenbucher, his four-year-old son,
Emil, died today of burns received a
year ago while playing with a toy
street car with a lighted candle in¬
side. The father, after submitting to
the ordeal of having the large section
of epidermis removed from his limbs
to be grafted on the injured child’s
flesh, was taken violently ill and near¬
ly died, being in a serious condition
for months.
The case aroused much interest,
and many people offered to contribute,
but the father insisted on doing it all
himself. The skin taken from his
limbs covered the child's right side
and right arm, but the wounds did not
heal properly.—Lafayette (Ind.) Dis¬
patch to Cincinnati Enquirer.
HAS HELP.
Bardlets: “Married life affords me
no inspiration for song. How do you
find I V Does it give you any im¬
petus in your work?”
Rhymeit: "I should say so. My
wife makes $6 a week doing wash¬
ing.”—-Chicago News.
State of Ohio, City of Toledo,
Lucas County, 88 .
Frank J. Cueney makes oath that he is
senior partner of the firm of F.J. ClJENEY &
County Co., doing business in the City of Toledo. said
and State atoresaid, and that
firm will pay theeum of one hundred dol¬
lars for each and every case of catarrh
that cannot be cured by the use of Hall’B
Catarrh,Cure. Frank d. Cheney.
fciworn to before me and subscribed in my
presence, this 6lh day of December, A. D. t
1886. A. VV. Gleason,
llall'g (SEAL.) Ca Notary Public,
tarrh Cure is taken internally, and
acts faces directly on the blood and mucous sur¬
of the system. Send lor testimonials,
tree. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.
Hold by all Druggists, 75c.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation.
Jewel for Child Heroine.
Ethel Johnson, a child heroine of
the Columbia disaster, has received a
magnificent butterfly of gold and dia¬
monds from an unknown admirer.
It was taken to the home of R. R.
Dingle, where the little girl is stop¬
ping, on Saturday, by a jewelry store
employee. There was no note of ex¬
planation, no signature, telling who
was the sender of bo magnificent a
gift, merely the words “From a Port¬
land admirer.”
Little Ethel Johnson saved two
lives in the Columbia disaster. She
rescued her child companion, Effle
Gordon and held her above water un¬
til taken aboard a lifeboat.
While struggling with her compan¬
ion a man who could scarcely swim
was also saved by her. He seized
hold upon her and was also held
above the water by her childish ef
forts. Perhaps this man sent the
present. — Portland correspondence
Seattle Times.
Taylor’n Cherokee Remedy of Sweet
Gnm and Mullen is Nature’s great reme¬
dy—oures Coughs, Colds, Croup and Con¬
sumption, and all throat and lung troubles.
At druggists. 25c., 60c. and $1.00 per bottle.
The "lid” hat will not be greatly
different from the lid of other seasons
—a plain, flat rain-shield like a buck¬
wheat cake, with little pretense of
ornamentation, and stuck on at any
angle whatever.
Embroidery of all descriptions will
play au Important part in coming
modes.
Even the stout figure can wear the
Empire, hence its general popularity.
Exquisite scarfs are in mousseline
or other delicate fabrics, edged with a
border pf marabout feathers. They
match the evening gown.
A toque of purple velvet with wide
spreading wings of the same shade
has a band of handworked embroid¬
ery in shades of orange and green
round the brim.
A shooting suit Is of green and red
homespun, the coat of which has
three expanding pleats on each side,
and a long basque fitted Into a waist¬
band.
Tailored collars are often embroid¬
ered in braid or decorated with vel¬
vet hems.
SUFFERED TWENTY-FIVE YEARS
With Eczema—Her Limb Peeled and
Foot Was Raw—Thought Amputa¬
tion Necessary—Believes Her
Life Saved by Cuticura.
“I have been treated by doctors for
twenty-five years for a bad case of ecxema
on my leg. They did their beat, but
failed to cure it. My doctor had advised
me to have my leg cut off. At this time
my leg was peeled from the knee, my foot
was like a piece of raw flesh, and I had to
walk on crutches. I bought a set of Cuti- ,
cura Remedies. After the first two treat- 1
ments the swelling went down, and in two
months my leg was cured and the new skin
came on. The doctor was surprised and
said that he would use Cuticura for his
own patients. I have now been cured over
seven years, and but for the Cuticura Rem
edies I might have lost my life. Mr*. J, B. j
Renaud, 277 Mentana St., Montreal, Que., i
Feb. 20, 1907.”
ONE METHOD.
"I can take one drink and stop.”
"Um.”
“In fact, I invariably do.”
"Don’t you ever buy in return?”—
Washington Herald.
DODGES.
Tommy—Pa, what is a hypochon¬
driac?
Pa—Johnny, how often have I told
you not to use bad words?—Somer¬
ville Journal.,
rS*- ffi;
HIS VACATION.
"I'd like to see the cashier,” said
the bank depositor.
‘iSo would I,” replied the president
of the bank, ‘‘.but he’s out of town.”
"Ah, gone for a rest, I presume?”
said the bank depositor.
"No,” answered the bank president;
’ he went to avoid arrest.”—Chicago
News.
FITS, St.'Vitus' Dance-.Nervous Diseascsper.
manently Restorer. cured by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve
$2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Dr- H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St., P hila., Pa.
A KIND WORD.
"So you don’t share the general In¬
dignation toward the railways?”
“No,” answfered ,Farmer Corntos*
sell; "I have always felt that a lo¬
comotive was entitled to a great deal
of credit for sticking to the track In¬
stead of snorting up and down the
country roads like an automobile.”—
Washington Star,
Only One “Bromo Quinine"
Th&t is Laxative Bromj Quinine. Look
for th® signature Cure of E. W. Grove. Used the
World over to a Cold iu Ono Day. 25c.
Calls Men Food Faddists.
Men who say women are inclined to
spend their leisure hours discussing
clothes and scandal are now being “got
back at” by an Englishwoman. Mrs.
J. D. Hay Shaw says that to the aver
nge man the question as to what form
of nourishment will best meet the ap¬
proval of his digestive apparatus la
a source of never-falling interest and
anx i e ty, and as a topic of conversation
It never fails to enthrall his attention.
There are few men who have not pet
theories on the subject of food in
general, and their own food in par¬
ticular, Mrs. Shaw says. It is among
his own sex that the food faddist finds
his most enthusiastic disciples.—New
York Press.
tvy
38r
BY ha .jlaiJl
Cures Constipation, Diarrhoea, Convulsions,
Colic, Sour Stomach, etc. It Destroys Worms,
Allays Feverishness and Colds. It Aids Diges¬
tion. It MakesTEETHiNG Easv, Promotes Cheer¬
fulness and Produces Natural Sleep.
Avery & Company
SUCCESSORS TO
AVERY & McMILLAN,
51-53 South Forsyth St.., Atlanta, Ga,
—ALL KINDS OF—
MACHINERY
; mm
Reliable Frick Engines. Boilers, all
Sizes. Wheat Separators.
BEST IMPROVED SAW MILL ON EARTH.
Large Engines and Boilers supplied
promptly. Shingle Mills, Corn Mills,
Circular Saws,Saw Teeth,Patent Dogs,
Steam Governors. Full line Engines 4
Mill Supplies. Send for free Catalogue.
■ ** good dinner, 11133 or wonyl n who, losing npp«Uta * Kg Kf
g mu*t curb their
I ; H through fear of after consequence*. I *‘.s
Parsons’Pills
H are an aid to digestion, inrure aseiimla- g
B tioa of food, and make hearty eatiug Sj|
. B possible without distress or regrets. |jri
E Price 25c., five bottles $1. All druggiste. I
I. S. JOHHSCK & CO., Baton, Has*. g|
u) VL -A. | V/ | |jf| V }< I I ^ X
• V V
The most complete Saw Mill
built in the Southern State*.
Gainesville Iron Works,
aainesville, G»*
INTELLIGENT.
"Let us see. Private Girelini, If
you have quite understood what are
the four points of the compass. Now
the Is In front of you, at your
left the north, at your right the south;
what ia behind you?”
MMy knapsack, captain.”—Trans¬
lated from II Motto per Ridere.
k POSTIL
FROM YOU
And We Will Send Free, to Prove
That it is the Most Effective
External Cure for Rheumatic
Pains and Aches, a Large
BOTTLE OF
4
i KING OF PAIN ft
Confident that it will do for you
what it has done for others, and that
to writer use it the is following to praise grateful it, as does letter: the
of —■
“With muscular rheumatism 1 suf¬
fered to the extent that even to control
the pen held in my right hand such was
impossible I first at times. Minard’s On Liniment. one day No
used
indorsement could come from a worse
Bufferer or more grateful Cambridge, heart Mass.” than
mine. G. W. D’Vys, Liniment Co.,
Send a postal to Minard’s
So. Framingham, Mass.
T
/we 1 the If so, S. you C. exhibit, no doubt given received you free, by the one N. of H. these Blitch buttons Co., from the
largest Vegetable and Plant farm com'Dined in the world .
We willbeelad to have your orders for cabbage and garden W
plants of all kinds, raised In the open air. Special express W
L rates. Pricei as follows:—1,000 to 5,000 at $1.50 per 1,000; 5,000
ylBI tol0,000at $1.25 per 1,000; over 10 000 at $1.00 per 1,000, f. o.b. | r
express office Meggetl, S. C. We guarentee count, make good all bona-fide I
ahort* kge, and give prompt ehlpmenta. All feeds purchased from the moil
h»». eltrs Mrly lares 1 -™
reliab___________ leS»ed«men. «u»r»nte«d succession true to type. and Wo flat Dutch varietiM or of cab
type Wakeflald, the Benderaon C.
4 I, bat* plants. Send all ord«r. to N. H. BLITCH CO., Mejoett, 8.
|/V- Vi
'
2? m H 'v P° § (J Cl TO n 30- Ut LJ
The Ferguson Colleges ar« the fined
equipped buii
nese college* la
America. A
desk for each amt pupil. FERGUSON be learned in SHORT; half
ft Pm .Id systems, It can one
e time. EVERY GRADUATE IN A GOOD POSITION. Send us the names an4
addresses o I those interested iu a b uslness education and we will send you a nice present.
Address THE FERGUSON COLLEGES,
COLUMBUS, GA. or WAYCItOSS, GA.
THAT WILL MAKE OABUA&I]
KG J u vfl
BAv
- •-» K
Ear’y Jersey Charleston Largs Henderson’s Early Early
Wakefield Type Wakefield Succession Winning Statdt Summer
I am located on one of the Sea Islands of South Carolina, our climate is mild,
just sufficient cold to harden and cause plants to stand severe freezing after
getting out in the colde r sections. I guarantee satisfaction or money refunded. Express rates to alt
points very low. Prices: 1.000 to 5,000 at $1.50; 5,000 to 9,000 at $1.25; 10,00(5 Rod over at $1 00.
Special price* on large lots. Send your orders to
2F*. -V*y. TOWLES, Pioneer Plant Grower
Tilipijl Office, Tsui's Island, S. C. Martin's Point, S. C. tong Distinct Plane, Martin's Point, S. C.
r WILL BOTTLE A BREAK 1 iWin ter smith’s
% CHIU* tonic
wUr@S Standard for 46 years: leaves no bad elfecfs
like quinine; pleasant to take; children like It,
< ASP seldom falls to make permanent cure.
VOUR Mcllaricll , , . _ Fsvers Guaranteed under Food and Drugs Aci of June
v 30, 1906. At vour druggists: or sent prepaid
CHILLS * 50c and $ I ARTHUR on receipt PETER of price. & CO.. Gen’l
Agts, Louisville, Ky.
| ml * . \ mc, WAKEFIELD Chariest^ Large Typa - •’ WAKEFIELD Early Jersay' SUCCESSION The Flat Earliest
The Earliest Head
Second Cabbaga Variety
Earliest Grown,
CABBAGE PLANTS fOR
SALE!
I AM OX MY ANNUAL TOUR s/ound the world with any of the best D c
etles of Open Air Grown Cabbage Flants at the following prices, vl N 1,000 to
___ fl.25; 10,000 at 90c. F. O. B.
4,000 at #1.50 per thousand; 5,000 to 9,000 at or more Ask for
Meggett, 8. C. All order* promptly filled and satisfaction guaranteed. C. O. D.
prices on 60,000 or 100.000. Cash accompanying all order* or they will go
Address B. L. COX, Ethel S. C., Box 8.
TEAM MULE BORAX
FOR THE TOILET
Not only softens the water* but cleans the skin thoroughly,
removes and prevents the odor of perspiration, soothes
irritation and renders the skin fresh, soft and velvety.
Soap clogs the pores—Borax removes the soap and freshens the 6kin—Try It.
All dealers. 10-lie pk«». sail 5 lb. boxes. Sample, Booklet and Parlor Card Game, 10c.
PACIFIC COAST BORAX CO., New York.
CABBAGE | PLANTStSSS
I I I .1 BEET PLANTS.
V/OF Cur Plants are *11 GROWN FROM THE SAME GRAD*
SEED WE SET OUR CROP FROM. We have all of the
Leading Varieties-EARLY JERSEY WAKEFIELD, very early,
CHARLESTON WAKEFIELD, about ten days later. Iu fiat
varieties we bnve Succession, a Medium Early, and Short-Stem
Late Flat Dutch. Prices a< follows: l.OilO to 5,000, $1.50i
5,000 to 9 OOO, $1.25; 10,000 and upward* $1.00 These
plants are all gr wn near salt water and will stand severe ool4
without Injury. HIE CAKR-CAKI.TON < O , Meggett,S.0
*
►
I
Oh! Papa don’t forget to buy m
bottle of CHENEY’S EXPECTO¬
RANT for your little girl.
You can buy it at any Drug
Store and you know it never failJ
to cure my Croup and Cough.
To convince any
gfll Isa n woman tine Antiseptic that Tax- will
HK ■v W™ improve her health
■ S K *for S'— and do It. all We we claim will
send her absolutely free a large trial
box of Paxtlne with book of Instruc¬
tions and genuine testimonials. Bend
your name and address on a postal card.
PAXTINE m brane and mucous cleanses e heals m af¬ -
fections, catarrh such inflammation as nasal catarrh, by pelvic
and caused femi¬
j nine ills; sore eyes, sore throat and
mouth, by direct local treatment. Its cur¬
ative power over these troubles ls extra¬
ordinary Thousands and of gives Immediate -elief.
ommending It women day. are using CO cents and reo- at
druggists by mail. every Remember, however,
or
IT COSTS YOU NOTHING TO TRY IT.
THE It. PAXTON CO., Poston, Maas.
(At1-'08)