Charlton County herald. (Folkston, Ga.) 1898-current, May 07, 1908, Image 7

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THE PULPIT. A SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON BY DR, T. CALVIN M'CLELLAND, Theme: The Divinity of Christ. Brooklyr, N. Y.—Dr. T, Calvin Me- Clelland, pastor of the Memorial Pres byterian Church. Seventh avenue and St. John's place, preached Sunday morning on “The Divinity of Ghrist: Cne Way in Which a Man May Come to Believe. in It." The text was John ;14" “The word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we beheld His glory, glory as of an only begotten from a Father, full of srace and wruth.” Dr. McClelland said: My theme is “The Divinity of Christ: One Wav in Which a Man May Come to Believe in It.” What do we mean by the divinity of Christ? I would not be theologica! or meta p}lysicalz this is a sermon for prac tical men, for men who want to be- Heve in this fundamental truth of our religion. Do we mean by calling Jesus divine that He 15 God; that is, all of God? We could not mean that, for Jesus Himself said, “My Father is greater than 1.» Jesus stands for God, speaks for God, acts for God, His ideas are God’s, His feelings are God’s so much so that Jesus and God are one: we see nothing in Jesus but God. For al practical purposes for religion Jesus is God; for us He has the spiritual value of God. He is God. And yet in reality Jesus is not God; though He can say in a very true sense, “He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father.” He also says, “The Father is greater than I.” Does not the apostle exactly express it when he writes, “The word was made flesh and dwelt among us, and we beheld His glory,” not the Father’s glory, mark You, “but glory as of an only begotten of the Father, full of,” not the Fath er’'s omniprescence. omnipotence and omniscience, but tul] of the Fath er’s “grace and truth.” And so, though theologically Jesus is not all of God, vet practically T know that when I fall on my knees before Jesus and say, “My Lord and my God,” I am giving Him His true name. Do we mean by calling Jesus divine than He was something other than man, a foreigner from some alien life to the country of human nature? Were we tempted to think that, the sight of Him praying with plain men, “Our Father,” would bring us to our senses. We cannot think of Jesus as unhuman when we hear Him say to plain men, “Follow Me,” which means, “You can do what I do, you can be what I am.” Would you trans late the term “a human being” into Jesus’ language, yvou could find no better term than His favorite name for Himself, “Son of Man.” lln so calling Himself Jesus meant that we should know that He was blood of our blood, spirit of our spirit. He was like us not in middle life only, but in infancy, in death and after death. Jesus’ divinity makes Him not differ ent in kind, only different in degree; He is man, but more man than we. The likeness of Jesus to us is patent, but it is the difference we need to realize; the likness without the differ €nce were meaningless and useless, If He were just man, what gain? The world is full of men. It ig His differ ence from us that counts. It is the difference from us which makes it im bossible for us to call Him Jesus the Great, which makes Him Jesus the Only. Charles Lamb once said, “If Shakespeare was to come into thisl room, we should all rise up to meet him; but if that Person was to come into it, we should fall down and try to kiss the hem of Hig garment.” It is the difference between Jesus and us which makes us feel unworthy to put our lips to the fringe of His cloak, It is the difference which makes us call Jesus divine in a way in which we can use the word in ref €rence to no one else. And now what is that difference, what is this divinity of Jesus? Just this, that whatever Jesus said or did, He left on men the impression of God; like a telescope at or through Wwhich we cannot look without think ing of the heavens, Jesus always brought God near. Always in Jesus’ bresence there is this unavoidable feeling of God. When He spoke, con science heard in His voice the tones of its infinite author; when He looked at one, the soul felt its eternal judge searching its innermost secrets; when He acted, one knew that it was as the great God would act; when He died, men felt that they had seen all of God that human hearts could appre hend; henceforth they knew that there was nothing in God a human mind could grasp but Christ. For all purposes of living Jesus is all we know of God; in Him the soul meets God, God meets the soul. Now how can a man come to believe that? Believe not that Jesus is the Absolute God, breaking for the first time into a world from which up to this time He had existed apart in the inscrutable solitudes of infinity; be lieve not that Jesus is some unhuman wedge driven into natura! human life; but believe that in Jesus the un seen God looks out upon us, the moral character of the Deity becomes fiesh, and in that flesh is seen to be grace and truth. How can a man believe that? You will not think as I point out this way that it is the only way in which one can come to believe that Jesus is the image of the invisible God; I give 1t to you as only one practical way in which men built as T am may come to kneel at the manger and say: " Here was born my Lord and my God. First, then, the man who would b'o lieve in the divinity of our Lord will bring his reason to the study of the Gospel. He will want to know if pl‘fm record is the story of a real life. Here, as I have intimated, reason is | satisfled. Tested by the laws of evi-| dence the Gospeis are known to be a genuine record, and the facts the}'l account for are the best attested f:m,tvs in history. He can begin immedi- | ately with the Christ Himself. Put ting the sayings and doings together, we get some idea of Jesus'.characw;: And the first thing that strikes you is i His absolute stainlessness:; He (l.l'l uui sin; the narrative does not say this— | it goes without the saying, His life was lived in the open, but the spoilirg world left no spot on Him; He spent His time among the moral lepers, b“h‘ no contagion fastened on Him; broth erhood with the sinfullest He claimzed ! except in this, their sense of guilt; He, in the presence of whom others cried, “Depart from me, for I am guilty,” had no confession for Him self. Saints among men tell how they toil through repentance into sanctity; but here is One who looked into the face of the Almighty with no remorse under the shadow of that end where men most feel a shrinking from an in 'evitable sifting. He spake. “I have i finished the work Thou gavest Me to jdo." His case is without parallel. lThis sinlessness separates Him not only from the sinner, but also from ‘the saint; He stands alone. l But you have seen the least when you have found out He did no wrong; tHe always did the right. Every word and act outruns conscience; He made a new character. The first element was humility; the word was not new iin His time, the Greeks had an equiv ;alent for it meaning “coward:” Jesus | made the base-born word the Kkey word of Christian character. If ever there was a world-lord it was He, and vet He was among men as one that serveth. And since then service has been reckoned the crowning grace of character, and men have stretched out their lame hands to seize and wear it. Another element of Jesus’ character was love; this, too, He cre ated; not that none had loved till Jesus came, but none had loved all the time, under all circumstances, all men. With Jesus love was laying down one’s life in the way God gives the sun and rain, without stint, with out partiality, for good and bad. This was a new idea, and since Jesus lived His idea has been the standard meas ure of love; anything less than that which measures up to a cross is not love. Another element in Jesus’ charac ter was forgiveness. This virtue was not unknown; but they who practiced it aforetime did it under no sense of necessity. It was a work of superero gation. A man was not bound to for give; did he, he had a lien on the gods. Jesus said a man was bound to forgive, only so could he know God; and there rises before us the vision of One whose countenance was marred more than any man’s, who was led as a lamb to the slaughter, and while they butchered Him, He prayed, “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.” In this sort of character you have something that stands by itself. No other char acter is the match for it. The man who wears it is in a class by Himself. What shall we do with this Jesus? With Alexander the Great and Na poleon the Great, with Shakespeare and Michael Angelo; somehow our sense of fitness rebels; we cannot bring ourselves to call Him Jesus the Great; He is simply Jesus. Where did He come from? Somehow we find ourselves looking past Joseph, over Mary’s head, into the heavens. Ordinary fatherhood and motherhood never before or since brought forth this kind of life; here is a glory, not like Alexander's, or Napoleon’s, or Shakespeare’s, or Michael Angelo’s, it is not like the glory of all these rolled into one, it is another kind of glory, a still greater glory: it is a glory as of an only begotten of the divine; that fits the case; He is the Son of God. But we must go on, we are carried farther. It is like this: Here is an organ. Someone tells me that there is in this chest wonderful harmonies. Igoup to it. I examine its mechan ism. I see that it is an organ; I read the name-plate on the console and get this guarantee of its possibilities. I go inside the case and look into the great tubes and horns of wood and metal and I agree that it is good for all that is claimed for it. There may be unguessed harmonies in this mass of mechanism; there may be voices of thunder, moanings like those of the great deep, melodies like those birds sing at twilight. I allow that there ‘may be all these things in this organ. But, suddenly some one touches the keys, and the great thing springs into life; it sings itself and me away. I ‘hear in it the voices of the wind, the ‘murmurings of the little rivers, the ‘distant calls of the gathering clouds. The great chords run together, they rise and fall in waves of melody, they tremble away into whisperings of peace. The music has found me; the organ has touched my feelings; 1 know beyond the remotest shadow of doubt that this chest of pipes is what it claims to be. You, too, have bheen using your eyes, your reason is the eye of your soul, but your soul has an ear, and while you were watching Jesus, study ing Him to find out if indeed He ig divine, did your ear hear nothing, were there no voices from that Life which caught your spirit and led it to lean out of the window enraptured with sounds that were heavenly,songe immortal? What do I mean? That the divinity of Jesus is more than a fact for the intellect, it is a force for the conscience. Study Jesus and you find Him studying you; read the Gos-~ pels, and you discover that your souj is being read. Other men speak and you are interested. Jesus speaks and conscience takes notice. The great among men make you think of things, Cromwell makes you think of power, Raphael of beautiful lights, Mendels~ sohn of beautiful sounds and pauses, but Jesus—the very name is a chal lenge. Are you your better self of your worse self? You cannot get away from the challenge; a Life has clinched with you. The eye sees the organ and allows it is fit to make music; the ear hears the music and allows that it is an organ. The reason appraises the Man of the Gospel and says, “If this Man were not of God He could do noths ing;” the spirit kneels and whispers, “My Lord and my God.” The tota) manhood agrees, “The word waxs made flesh, and dwealt among us and we beheld His glory; glory as of an only begotten of a Father, full of grace and truth.” After all, brothers, we do all believe in the divinity o? Christ, do we not? It is not that wn all have the same words with whick to describe it; there are still creeds and creeds; but as under the fugue on the organ’s flutes there throbs thz undertone of the sixteen foot pedal diapason, so beneath the detail ct Unitarian and Trinitarian, underton ing the intricacies of new theology and old theology, throbs for the ear that will listen for it, the deep con senting faith in the divine Christ, “God was in Christ.” | The Well Springs of Life, The stream is clearest at the spring; ‘ and the life that is begun daily at; Calvary is seldom muddied. 1 F D Misleading. 3 This world could call full many a bluff And run more nearly right, If honest men were not so gruff / And crooks not so polite. A O e / Lesser Evil. 7 The Professor—*l want you chile dren to go to my lecture to-night.” Robert—*"Ceouldn’t you whip us ine stead, just this once, papa?"—Life, On the Contrary. Eph Green—*“Ah desires to pur chase ah razzer.” Clerk—*"Safety?” Eph Green—*"No, sah; dis am fo' social usage."—Harper's Weekly. It Gives Him a Rest. “Every year the Higgs have Mrs. Jones up to their country home for a long visit.” ; “Fond of her, are they?” “No—of him.”—Harper’s Bazar. Nobody Would. Newton had just discovered the law of gravitation. “But I wouldn't be a bit surprised if the Supreme Court declares it un constitutional,” he mused, soberly.— Puck. A Hard Job. She—*“l wish you would work and earn the money for the flowers you send me.” : He—*"lf you knew how hard it was to work the governor you would think I earned 'em.”—Wasp. New to the Game. “Waiter, is this supposed to be coffee?” inquired the diner in the Rapidity Case. “I couldn’t say,” replied the waiter. “I only started here this morning.” —Harper’'s Weekly. A Wise Daddy. ; Young Aspirant—*“Sir, may I count on your supporting me??” Practical Citizen—*“That depends, young man. Are you going to run for office or do you want to marry my daughter?"—Philadelphia Ledger. Family Pride. \4&5 = i) AR A\ MM, i | /\i\'éfif" 5 Y '%, i Y . A r | § ~—7' A, Ao N % o 0 =il - LR ” _;/ ‘ 1’""3 A »4’5-”‘(“1/') . R~ “My father once had his picter took.” “So did mine, but it took four copy to hold him.”—Brooklyn Life. A Good Man. “Your. dead hushand wor a good mon,” declared the sympathetic Mrs, 'Casey to the bereaved widow, “He wor!” exclaimed Mrs. Murphy, dashing the tears from her eyes. “No two polacemin cud handle him."— Judge. . Keeping His Word. Mrs. Fogarty (in fashionable res taurant) —*Now, fer goodness sake, Mike, don’t order Irish stew.” Mr. Fogarty—*“All right, I won't, dear. Waither, fetch me ayther some Hibernian Suey, or Celtic Goulash!¥ —~Puck. < Sufficient Reason. Bing—" Yes; that’s old Spriggings. Half a dozen doctors have given him up at various times during his life,” Wing—*“What was the matter with him?” Bing—*“He wouldn’t pay his bills.” —Tit-Bits. A Synonym. “Yes,” boasted a dissipated cosmo politan, “I've been in a good many tight places in my life.” “Tight places,” mused an acquaint ance. “'That’s a new name for them.” “A new name for what??” “Public houses.”’—T7Tit-Bits, When Adam Delved. Adam had just been condemned to live by the sweat of his brow. “Never mind,” he sneered. *“Wait till they come around for the labor vote.” Herewith they doubted whether they had taken him down a peg or not.—New York Sun. A Strong Bluff. First Stranger—*“Excuse me, but that's my umbrella you have.” Second - Stranger—*“l don't doubt it. Just wait here till I call a police man.” v First Stranger—*“What for?” Second Stranger—* Burglars broke into my house the other night and la% this umbrella.”—Chicago News, Cause IYor Anxiety, The baby was slow about talking, and his aunt was deploring that fact, Four-year-old Elizabeth listened anxe iously, *Oh, mother,” she ventured at length, “do you think he’ll grow up English? We couldn’t any of us un derstand him if he turned out to be French.” 1 ALMOST A MIRACLE, I Raised Up When Science Said There | Was No Hope. | ‘G. W. L. Nesbitt, Depot Street.! Marion, Ky., writes: “I was a chroaic | SH invalid with kiduey | troubles and often | ® Wished death might i, CN R end my awful suffer \Yw\ 28 ings. The secretions 4 r\\ were thick with sedi \’fi}f)‘y\ ment, my limbs swol- Y B len and my right side iy \\. 80 nearly paralyzed I TN could not raise my hand above my head. The doctor held out no hope of my recovery and I had given up, but at last started using Doan’s Kidney Pills and made a rapid gain. After three months’ use I was well and at work again.” Bold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Happiness and marriage, Cordelia, | .are mot always synonymous, Many peoplé look upon paint buy ing as a lottery and so it is, the way they do it. It is not necessarily so, however. Pure White Lead and lin seed oil are the essential elements of good paint. Adulterants in white lead| can be easily found by the use of a blowpipe. Adulterations in linseed oil can be detected with a fair degree of certainty. See that these two ele ments are pure and properly put on and the paint will stay put. National Lead Company, Wood bridge Building, New York City, will send a blowpipe outfit and instruc tions for testing both white lead and linseed oil, on request. \ et e ettt } It’s very easy to he happy; all you i have to do is to be foolish. A SPLENDID COFFEE. Im;ianne Possesses Fine Flavor, Su perior Quality, and Perfect Purity. We are pfieaaed to call the attention of our readers to the splendid merits of LuziANNE COFFEE, put us) by that enter glnsmg firm, the REiLy-TAyvor Co., of ew Orleans. This coffee is of fine flavor, superior quality, and perfect purity. It is blended and prepared according to the methods employed by the best Creole cooks for more than ffty years, and when you drink LUZIANNE, you are drinking a coffee that has made New Orleans famous the world over. What makes this the best coffee for the family of moderate means, 1s the fact that it has twice the strength of ordinary coffee, requiring only half the usual quantity in the making, and its price is very moderate, indeed; considering its uality, it is the most economical of any on fcfi;e market. IL.UZIANNE has a tremendous sale thrmx%h out the South. More than fifty orders for carload lots, averaging 30,000 lbs. each, have been filled \vit%n'n the past year. (offee being the most important article of food on the breakfast table, it is well to have the very best to be obtained. That is whv we commend to our readers this splendid and satisfying brand. - Notwithstanding its high grade quality, many beautiful presents are given away to purciasers of this splendid coffee simply to advertise it. The coupon, in every can, tells you all about it. . ~ Always call for LUZIANNE when you | l}u;( coffee. ~ Many a woman marries for money because she can’t think of any other excuse. Hicks' Capudine Cures Headache, Whethex; from Cold, Heat, Stomach. or g{rzngzal blttr;amb N.‘(’j A"?gnilid or dangerous S, s Liquid. Effects i di ' 10¢., 25¢., and 50c., at drug stox'g:ne sy An Apple Fifty Years 0!d. Mrs. Ellen Toothaker of South Harpswell has a keepsake, an apple that was thrown to her m a kindly _manner by a young man while she was returning from the Baptist church one Sunday afternoon fifty years ago. She picked up the ap ple took it home and filled it with cloves and today it is very small, but well preserved. That young man is seventy-five years of age, and had forgotten the incident until Mrs. Too thaker related it to him one evening, —Kennebee Journal. A cork carried to a depth of 200 feet below the surface of the sea will not rise again owing to the great pressure of water, | TETTERINE—-A RELIABLE CURE, TaTTERINE {8 a sure, safe and speedy oure for eczema, tetter, skin and soalp diseases and itehing piles. Endorsed by physiecians; gnlud by thousands who have used it, ragrant, soothintf, untise¥tlc. 600. at druggists or by mail from J. T. Bruerming, Dept. A, Bavannah, Ga. | If a skeleton had three feet would 1t a bone yard? i GARFIELD = Digestive Tablets, ‘ ¥rom your druggist, or the Garfield Tea Co.. Brooklyn, N.Y., 25c. per bottle, | Samples upon request, | IN MELODRAMA. Knightly Hero—l say, old chap, that lady’'s glove episode makes a great hit, Admiring Super—Yes, sir, you're al ways sure of a hand on that.—Balti more American. B oAk s s Free Cure for Rheu matism, Bone Pain . and Eczema Botanic Blood Balm (B B. B.) cures the worst cases of Rheumatism, bone pains. swollen muscles and joints, ly purifying the blood Thousands of cases cured by B. B. B. after all other treatments faled. Price SI.OO per large 'bollle at diug stores, with complete directions for home treatment _Large sample free by writing Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga. ‘60.000 Value Given A way%s — mEMCYCLE han?? % less pressure —rl fi onitscrank hanger, % . A 4 lo’lltuln on chalf, 1t runs end climbe 0‘ | Q bills easler than other bieycles, [s the -3:": W largest solling high-grade wheel in the s ." world, Wllll“tofxl’n‘tlme. Wemake no ¢L) ()} cheap RACYCLEE but you can get yours ‘i’) \; ‘&3 ATFACTORY PRICES 7&\ G loxnut‘lzfomphlat sent Yags. Itisiis sbout the Y RACYCLE and how te get the $60,000. Y/ mr FACTURERS OF THE RACYCLE, BAICDLETOWM, 0, IoT T £ b “10r more gnods brighter and faster eolors than any other dye. One lc. package colors all fibers. They dye in cold watel botter than any other dye. You 2t dye flflg garn:::{‘thvclrr:uut ripping apuart. Write for freg booklet—How to bye, Bleaca and Mix Colors. MONROE DI UG C,, Quincey, ll?inolb et ot e eTP SSR —— ; ! f FITS,Bt. Vitus'Dance:Nervous Diseases per- | manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr, H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. The inventor of the noiseless gun could further endear himself to city cwellers by inventing a noiseless fire cracker and a noiseless hand organ. REMOVES CORNS WITHOUT PAIN, ABBOTT'S EAST INDIAN CORN PAINT removes corns, root and all, without cutting or burn- | ing and leaves no soreness. It cures soft corns between the toes, bunions or sore, callous spots. It cures all quick and per manent. Get it at your ‘druggists or send 25¢, to Tue Assorr Co., Savannah, Ga. i If it wasn't for Sunday school liic-‘ nics ants apid bugs wouldn't (}m\'o_ much fun, CURES ALL ITCHING ERUPTIONS, Glencoe, Md., Nov. 21st, 1907: ‘I have had eczema on my hands for 12 years, and have tried evorything. I have been using TET- | TERINE 4 days and the results are great.” | Signed, Mra. M. Harvey. 'TEYrERINE is the surest, safest, speediest cure for eczema and all other skin diseases. Sold by drug- | glats or sent by mail for 50c. by J. 1. Saue- TRINE, Dept. A, Bavannah, Ga. ‘ There are alwayg a lot of people try-‘( ing to dodge the man who thinks he | can tell a funny story, | FIFTEEN YEARS OF SUFFERING. Burning, Painful Sores on Legs—Tor- | tured Day and Night—Tried Many “ Remedies to No Avail—Used | Cuticura; Is Well Again, “After an attack of rheumatism, running sores broke out on my husband’s legs, from below the knees to the ankles, There are no words to tell all the discomfort and - great suffering he had to endure night and | day. He used every kind of remedy and | three physicians treated him, one after the | other, without any good results whataver. | One day I ordered some Cuticura Soap, Cuticura Ointment, and Cuticura Resol | vent. Ie began to use them and in three | weeks all the sores were dried up. The | i : | burning fire stopped, and the pains became | bearable. After three months he was quite | well. 1 can prove this testimonial at any time. Mrs. V. V. Albert, Upper French | ville, Me., July 21, 1907."” | A sensible man attracts less atten. tion than one who hasn't any sense, The hands of the housewife will be kept soft and white and free from all chap, redness or roughness if borax is used. | There is a lot of extravagant lan guage in some brands of free speech, Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrnp for Children teething, softens thegums, reducesinflamma tion, allays pain,cures wind colic, 26ca bottla | Many an able seaman has found it ‘rough sailing on the sea of matrimo ny. B BoweL [ @l TROUBLES [ B CHILDREN o TEETHING [ It does mot make you sick fike N ; calomel, but is (grlck, thorough and UB lA“ gentle in its action, =TEA Putsthe Sluggish Liver so Work TRY A BOTTLE Ask your dealer for it oai A~ MADE \\}o\\ fi;') 4 e JEEN SERVICE \‘\}QL) and quaranteed A\ W . absolutely : k & W%TE’E.EROOF 1\ !,Qo-l \ sty pear® OILED SUITS, SLICKERS . AND HATS 2 -LA Duralls Suits #3202 Slickers 3329 N JOLD BY BEST DEALERS EVERYWHEIRE BENE S o iy tHeputen 3¢ & BOY PAINTER\ ), i&;* STANDS FOR Wg:,?«.’«& PAINT QUALITY &% ‘;% 1T 15 FOUND DNLY ON *":» s b PUREWHITE LEAD (/2 414 MADE BY = THE OLD DuTCH 4 D PROCESS, . DOVE-TAILED PUTTY LOCK SASH No bullder can afford to use the old kind when he oan get the Putty Lock Bash just ms cheap., For sale by M'f'g Bash, Doors Randall Bros., " i AN Rt oTN SRR S 2 ) SRS 9 | VEMEBT# PRICES, FOR EVERY VUi & SN | 4 : “{EMB!R or-m:mmv.k"‘" 2 ¢ iy 3 MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN. % G S g W. L. Bouglas malies and solis more o i AN\ /) Y BE5™ man‘e 84,80, 35.00 and 85 80 e ore "Gh %"o Na) W ~ Hhian any other manufact wrers tn tho G Y (A 0 Be™ world, hocauso they hold ¢iolp =0 e ,»‘x/ IS Fase ehape, it botter, woapr longer, and G \ @los 2y (ot Y= arc of fraatm- value thnn any olher-@a 1{ *fi;f Y Lyelets shocs In the world to-duy. R, ;«" llr.m[ W. L. Douglas 84 and 85 Gilt Edga Shoes Cannot Be Equalled At Any Price FEIel, qmrl'lt‘/\'l,"'l‘l(l}'\'. W.I L. ”unfll-’lfl}““”l(} and price i stamped on hmt‘mn. "l‘url’&:’l"';r '“""171"‘;'?1“’ Bold by the best shoe deale e here, Bhoe aled from factory to any part e world. tmlwl (‘:uta!ou ?. £ ‘t’u (A’l:y’ti;({‘?f’l’h;.lyw e W \Y‘. l'.l IDO l{fllulflz Brockmu: Mau?.‘ AND A WOMAN'S WORK DQ AQq 1 ,A\L,Q:' \A_“:\‘\‘} R ) v \f‘v e Y .m‘; IR \ & T € Sl QR \\\C}?\\\} I ‘54\% D { @/\&\ 4 SediP LYDIA E. PINKHAM Nature and a woman’s work com bined have produced the grandest remedy for woman’s ills that the world has ever known. In the good old-fashioned days of our grandmothers they relied upon the roots and herbs of the field to cure disease and mitigate suffering. The Indians on our Western Plains to-day can produce roots and herbs for every ailment, and cure diseases that baffle the most skilled physicians who have spent years in the study of drugs. s From the roots and herbs of the field Lydia E. Pinkham more than thirty years ago gave to the women of the world a remedy for their pe culiar ills, more potent and effica cious than any combination of drugs, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is now recognized as the standard remedy for woman’s ills. Mrs. Bertha Muff, of 515 N.C, St., Louisiana, Mo., writes: *Complete restoration to health means so much to me that for the sake of other suffering women I am willing to make my troubles public. ‘“For twelve years I had been suffer ing with the worst forms of female ills. During that time I had eleven different physicians without help. No tongue can tell what I suffered, and at times I could hardly walk. About two years ago I wrote Mrs. Pinkham for advice, I followed it, and can truly say that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound and Mrs. Pinkham’s advice re stored health and strength. It is - worth mountains of gold to suffering - women.” - What Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege table Compound did for Mrs. Muff, it will do for other suffering women.. ° 2 . ] Dr. Biggers Huckleberry Cordial Nevor fails to relieve at once. Tt is the favorite baby medicine of the best » rses and family doctors. h%ochars everywh?ro stick to it, and urge their friends to give it to Ohildron for Colio Dysentery Oramps, Diarrhoea, Flux, Ig‘(oulfimmnoh and all Btomach and Bowel: Ailmonts, You can depend on it. Don't worry, but take Dr. Biggers: Huckleberry Cordial. 2!5 conts ot drug stores, or by mail, Circulars fgcn. HALTIWANGER TAYLOR DRUG CO., Atlanta, G&; ~ SR ——— | Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body | antiseptically clean and free from un | healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, | which water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. A germicidal, disin« e fecting and deodor- f izing toiletrequisite fA 4 A i of exceptional ex- P ———— cellence and econ- pAXT'NE o omy. Invaluable “"‘fll!:mm.‘ for inflamed eyes, § ) throat and nasal and | . M 7 uterine catarrh, At u; TR Igt drug and toilet rl & ) I “"g stores, 50 cents, or W e 111112728 by mail postpaid. A J 871 y Large Trial Sample “SBEHERES WITH "HEALTH AND BEAUTY' BCOK BENT FRER THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston, Mass. soTRLR SR N NCHY. W WIS RTEIN R T T SEEl——————— CURED Gives Quick Q Relief. - 4 Removes all swelling in Bto 20 ) days; effects a permanent cure \ in3oto 6o days, Trialtreatment I given free, Nothingcan be fairer w’ Write Dr. H. H. Green’s Sons A W Speclalists, Box @ Atlanta, Ge- SAVE THE CARTON TOPS and Soap Wrappers from 7 “‘2O Mule Team Borax Produects and exchange them for VALUABLE PREMIUMS FREE n l/'ll‘i':n-"na:g.l v:!lllu::'v::: :' (I" lt'.l'fill"fi‘.ll‘x‘:l':r::u i f'A(II FICCOABT BORAX CO., New York, (Atl9-08) 4 ) @