Charlton County herald. (Folkston, Ga.) 1898-current, July 02, 1908, Image 7

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Syrup of figs “Eling o hxh\r of S%nnu uses the Dyste ect ‘E}fi; Dispels %}lfis“;ndflilead aclies due to Constipation: Acts nafut'a!l)(, acls tltiu‘l)/ as a Laxative. Best forMenWomen and Child: ven-Young and Old, A’li{) et fitsg%]enéj’ iciql Efi'figf‘s has she fill name of the Com l]fl["y CALIFORNIA Ho Srrup Co. by whom \; (;:‘n:’m:tf((’xsfurfiguarggt'ed on the SOLD BYALL LEl}fil?\!G DRUGGISTS, one size ounly, regular price 50¢per bottle, An Ohio Pie Makes, Mrs. Frank Fox, of this city has been a pastry cook for thirty-three vears and baked on an average forty pies a day. : A calculation shows that this would be 14,600 pies in a year, or 481,800 pies to the thirty-three years. The pies Mrs. Fox bakes are eight inches in diameter and if laid side by side would make & line of pies over sixty miles long. The pies she baked were sold at five cents auarter sectlon, which makes & total sum of $83,36- realized for the pies.—Bellefontaine correspendence Columbus Dispatch, JIAD ECZEMA 15 YEARS, Mrs. Thomas Thompson, of Clarksville, Ga., writes, under date of April 23, 1907: ‘I suffered 15 yea~s with tormenting eczema; had the best doctors to preseribe; but noth ing did me any good until I got TETTERINE, It cured me. I am so thankful.” Thousands of others can testify to similar cures, TETTERINE is sold by druggists or sent by mail for 50c. by J, T, SHUPTRINE, Dept. A, Savannah, Ga. Uses of a London Church. The church of All Hallows, London ‘Wall, presents a strange appearance every morning. The building is open ed early for the accommodation of girls and women who arrive in the city by the “workmen’s” trains, which frequently are run at such an hour as to compel the passengers to make a long wait after arriving in the city for their places of business to open. A short service is conducted and then ithe congregation is permitted and even encouraged to employ themselves with neediework or with reading. The women and girls are provided with reading matter, though care is taken that it “shail not be too narrow in its range.—London Globe, To Drive Out Malaria and Build Up oo Take the Old Standard Grove's Taste LEss CHILL Toxic. Yoa know what you are taking. The formula is plainly printed on every bottle, showing it i§ simlfiy Qui wassad e 0 Daifom ot i e !:;d children. 50c. o eeei LTR S R An Chio Pie Maker, Mrs. Frank Fox, of this city has been a pastry cook for thirty-three years and baked on an average forty pies a day. A calenlation shows that this would be 14,600 pies in a year, or 481,800 pies to the thirty-three years. The pies ‘Mrs. Fox bakes are eight inches in diameter and if laid side by side would make a line of pies over sixty miles long. The pies she baked were sold at five cents quarter section, which makes a total sum of $96.36¢ realized for the pies.—Bellefontaine correspendence Columbus Dispatch, REMOVES CORNS WITHOUT PAIY. ABBOTT'S EASTINDIAN CORN PAINT removes corns, root and all, without eutting or burn ing and leaves no soreness. It cures soft corns hetween the toes, bunions or sore, callous spots. It cures all quick and per manent, Get it at your druggist or send 25c. to Tae Aesorr Co., Savannsh, Ga. Those expecting to be bothered with the boll weevil sooner or later eshould do a little toward getting ready fer it, by raising turkeys. They are good weevil-catchers, Young chicks can stand consider able cold if they do not get damp, and if they can run back to a hen or to a brooder to warm up after they run cut and air off. Hicks’ Capudine Cures Women's Monthly Pains, Backache, Nervousness, and Headache. It's Liquid. Effects imme diately. Prescribed by physicians with best results. 10c., 23c., and 50c., at drug stores. A Reformed Zulu. A new church has recently been dedicated at Umzumbi, in Zululand, which isß remarkable as being the best ever constructed by natives them selves without any aid whatever from missionaries or any white persons. This sanctuary has been erected by Ndunge, the esteemed chief of Quabi, near Umzumbi, who became convert ed to the Christian faith in his youth before becoming a chief. Ndunge is a splendid exception among the Zulu chiefs. This remarkable man is a fine (Christian leader, greatly re sembling Khama, of Bechuanaland. He is utterly unlike the average Zulu in his delight in industrial undertak ings and in his economic habits. He has buiit for himself a fine farm resi dence which might well. satisfy any civilized farmer. It is a substantial and commodicus edifice of brick. On his great farm he has had from the first year after he became chief both & church angd a school.—Pall Mall THE PULPIT. i i v AN ELCOQOUENT SUNDAY SERMON BY DR. ROBERT .. KENT. e Theme: AN Fullness in Christ. R Brooklyn, N. Y.—ln the Lewis Ave nue Congregational Church, Sunday morning, the pastor, the Rev. Dr. Robert J. Kent, preached on “All Fullness in Christ.” The text was from Colossians 1:19: “For it pleased the Father that in Him should all fullness dwell.” Dy, Kent said: Jesus Christ is being better under stood and better appreciated all the time. Paul had a truer and more glorious conception of Him thirty-five years after the crucifixion than the disciples who had lived in intimate fellowship with Him during His min istry. Under the tuition of the Spirit the beauty and grandeur of His char acter, the magnitude and inestimable value of His service to God and hu manity grew upon men. The language of eulogy is taxed to its uttermost in describing the glory of His person and position. In the four verses im mediately preceding the the text three statements of sublime signifi cance are made. He is the image of the invisible God! The universe was created by Him and for Him! He is the head of the church! Therefore in all things He has pre-eminence. That pre-eminence has not been changed as the centuries have passed. ] While doctrines and theologies have | held and lost the attention of men,| their interest has been increasingly centred on the person of Jesus. -Chris tian experience is verifying the state ment of the text that all fullness dwells in Jesus Christ. The word “fullness” by itself is an empty word; the “fullness of God” is glorious, but misty. It is when we take up one by one the qualities with which Christ was so richly endowed by the Father that we begin to appreciate the mean ing of the text. In Him is the fullness of power, It was the power of Christ that at first gained the eager attention of men. We may not fully understand the mighty deeds He periormed; in the confusion of thought at the pres ent time regarding the miracles of the Gospels we may feel utterly per plexed. But that a deep and abiding impression of power was made by the Master on the people of His day there cannot be the slightest doubt. That impression was voiced by the two sad hearted disciples who journeyed to Emmaus and when the unrecognized Jesus asked them what things had come to pass that so deeply moved them replied: “Concerning Jesus of Nazareth, which was ‘a prophet mighty in deed and word before God and all the people.” The story that Mark has written aims to present Christ as the mighiy worker; and Joha tells us that his purpose in writ ing was to picture Christ as the Son of God. The early Christian cburch was conscious of the possession of power, of power which it derived from its in visible but ever-present Lord. I¢saw it working in the regeneration of -men’s hearts, in the reformation of ~their lives, in the transformation of _communities. Christianity was not ~merely a new philosopuy, a new form ~of worship; it was the power of God unto salvation to every one who ac : cepted it. That power has not waned during the centuriez. Carist has peen the conqueror. He has been tha most magnetic personality in the world’s history. Men of all classes and con citions, the rich and poor, the prince and peasant, the learned and illiter ate, the .aint and sinner, have been drawn to Him. They have conse crated heart and life to Him. In spite of the most determianed and mahig nant opposition, the gospel of His kingdom has peen preached through out the world. Nothing could stop it. He has erecied His judgment seat among men, and more and more the words, thoughts, deeds, the lives and cnaracters of men and nations are being brought to judgment before Christ. There was a time when men supposed that by violence they could stamp out Christianity; Herod tried it and failed; the Jewish rulers tried it when they crucified Jesus .and failed; Saul of Tarsus tried it and failed. Who would dream that it} couid be done to-day? Surely the Years have demonstrated that the fullness of power resides in Jesus. \ There is in Christ the fullness of wisdom. We do notsclass Christ | among the learned men of the world, He was not a writer of many books. He wrote nothing. We do not in clude Him among the great philoso phers of the ages. There is a philoso phy of Christianity, but Christianity is not a philosophy. We do not find a wonderful versatility of knowledge in the discourses of Jesus. He did not talk of many things, vet the men of the early days, and the thoughtful men of subsequent generations, have been profoundly impressed with His wisdom. He knew the things of greatest concern to men; He knew them with a clear, searching intui tion. He knew God, His character, His purpose, His plans. The Father had revealed Himself to His Son. He knew man, his joys and sorrows, his aspirations and temptations, his sin fulness and his glorious possibilities. He knew the secrets of peace, of joy. He knew the things that give despest and most enduring satisfaction: the bread of life, and the water of life. Jesus is the world’'s teacher. One of His most precious titles is Master, Not only in the truth He taught, but in the way He taught it, He was peer legss. By precept and parable and ex ample He had taught the principles that lie at the foundation of hurman ity's progress. Men who want to know what is best for themselves and for the world still sit reverently at Jesus' feet. In the discussion of the vital problems of the present age, men ask, \What did Jesus gay? ¥For He dealt with the things that most corcern the heart and life, and, there- i fore, He dealt with the questions of | perennial interes.. | The fuliness ol Jove is in Jesus. | Love divine is a tree that haz man;:i branches. One i 3 compassion, anp-! other pity, another pelisnce, ;:::r):}'.-':."i pardon, another sacrifice, %Hha in-! finite pity and ecompaszion of Godi iockd cut thiough the exes of Jeais | iron defornind aud unisriunate ten, | tig heart went out 19 thosz who na " et the sprivng and joy of iife, or wito | bad never kuowa then. 2 saw the darkened home, the saddened heart, | and His tears of tender sympathy flowed. A wise and wise-hearted man who is constantly dealing with youth ful culprits has said that his own aim is to -call forth what is Dbest in the boys; to awaken a sense of honor, manliness, a noble ambition in them. This is.what Jesus did. Love divine in Him reached down to sinful, bro ken men in order to lift them up'and heal them. MHe awakened hope and resolute endeavor. He made men feel that they could be pardoned and begin a new life. He took them by the hand, as He did the girl who the neighbors said was dcad, but Jesus declared was asleep, and said, ! “Arise.” And this fullness of love found its crowning proof and glory in the cross; so that, when you speak of great love, you naturally point to Calvary. Now all these and many other qual-: ities were united in Christ. Other men have been great because of some one rare quality of personality; Jesus possessed them all. Therefore, He has never ceased to interest the world. From the day He returned after the soul-struggle in the wilderness to the ‘banks of Jordan until He died on Cal~ vary, He lived without seeking it in the public eye. After His death, in stead of forgetting Him, men became more interested in Him. The eyes of the world have never ceased to look ' upon Him. Theologies have come and gone; the church has had its ups and downs; but Jesus is always the )centre of interest. There stand on' my library shelf two large volumes: fresh from the press. They are a dictionary of Jesus, what He said and did. And they happen to stand along-: side of a volume on “Jesus Christ and the Social Question.” It suggests the unfailing interest of thoughtful men in Jesus. They are never satisfied with what has been said and written regarding Him. There will be other !dictionari:s, other lives of Christ, in' the eoming years. And when great social problems are discussed, the question of the home, of work and* wages, of capital and labor, of human brotherhood, men will turn as thgg do now to the Gospels to study afre; what Jesus said. Let there be dis- | covered the merest fragment of some ancient manuscript containing in mu tilated form some saying of Jesus and the news of the discovery is tele graphed around the world, and the fragment becomes priceless. How are we to explain this undying interest in Jesus? Not in any of the outward circumstances or conditions of His life. How limited and meager it was! A life of poverty; a brief life; begin= ning in a manger, ending on a Cross, A life outside the circles of libraries 1 and great thinkers, outside the circles of wealth and social position, The secret of its unique command upon - the interest of men is given in the text: "It pleased the Father that'in Him should all fullness dwell.” % The hope of the world is in Him. To Him we brifg our burdens and perplexities. To Him we come for comfort and strength. To be in vital relation to Him is our highest p‘rtvi-"% lege. Having Him as our personal, Lord and Master we have life’s high est prize. He is God’s richest gift | G the world. He is the clearest inter ; pretation to humanity of the infinjs’ wealth of love and wisdom-and po 4 of God. The divine heart beats "&f ). bosom of Jesus; the divine voich speaks—through—His e ::,,; Vi help is giveirthrough His servicefyt e divine life is imparted through el lowship with Him. e The leadership of the world Dbe longs to Jesus. The fullness of God dwells in Him to accomplish the eter nal purpose of God; the establishment of the kingdom of love in b}uman@ hearts. He has been equipped for the service of leadership. To Him has been given fullness of vision that He may see the way; fullness of power that He may overcome every obstacle; fullness of love that He may win msn and make them follow Him. He who died on the cross will occupy the throne; the despised and rejected of men will receive universal praise and love. To hasten the day when all shall know Him, when the eternal purpose of redeeming love shall be fulfilled in the kingdom of Christ is our supreme duty. “To that work we should consecrate our lives. It should kindle our enthusiasm. Jesus should be supreme in our thought and speech, our affection and devo tion. May He be our leader! May we gladly, enthusiastically follow | | Him! & | ““The Men Did the Work Faithfully.” You cannot set the world right, or the times, but you can do something for the truth, and all you can do will certainly tell if the work you do is for the Master, who gives you your share. And so the burden of respon sibility is lifted. This assurance makes peace, satis faction and repose possible, even in the partial work done upon earth. Go to the man who is carving a stone for a building. Ask him where that stone is going, to what part of the temple, aitd how he is going to get it into place, and what does he do? He points you to the builder’'s plans. This is only one stone of many. So, when men shall ask where and how your little achievement is going into God’s plan, point them to vour Mas ter, who keeps the plans, and then go on doing your little service as faith fully as if the whole temple were yours to build.—Phillips Brooks. e —— . ~————— God Watches Us Lovingly. The thought of God's eye upon us is usually leoked upon as a thought to strain and bridie us in the hour of temptation and carelesgness; and o it is. But with our selfish love of forbidden things we mizs what is meant not merely to restrain us, but to be the greatest and most uniailing of our comforts. The thougut tuat God sees us alwaye is His great en couragement and he!p to His ehildren in doing righl. His eye is not the eye of a judge and ruler ounly, hut of a shepherd and father, the lover of the souls of men, these poor soulg of onurs arnd of ouwr brethren, net sparing even Jtis own 8o for them. We are hzing waiched by an eye of tendery 22 and sympatby deeper and traer tia) evew that of sy man on earis for his 3.i1- sering fricad. - Chungl, Tho Congd 1.a7-, A :n,,.; Jifd i 3 Imvungaiiie At pre Kaosa that 16202 §8 evey gotimshing meve dssieglls (hpu Jiing, [ MR. GROCER SAW A CHANCE ) V{(?w'\},fg" RS T -‘%-Al...._:‘\'. et ) SRRt FioepoußE B @ s SoA e RS S ..\ R L 3 REeRa RSN GRS - PRI TS eS - R s O S R SR R e A “ ;:. I P A S to work eff some cheap coffee he had long had on hand,— | told his customers times were hard (1) and 15¢ts a pound ’ was enough to ‘my for coffee. "They followed his adviee - and got a tasteless, dyspepsia-breeding avticle requiring a - double quantity to make any showing for strength. Before ke realized it ks customers were going elsewhere so bu | delicious, dounblestrength, last-twice-as-long I,IYZIANNé COFFEE, whose &vl'icc-—%cls—~is really only!imll' asexpen sive as the 15ets kind, : LUZ' ANNE GOFFEE The Reily-Taylor Ce. NEW ORLEANS, l SOLD EVERYWHERE. m The Englishman’s ardent admira- | ticn for the Jap is met appreciated by the Canuk, notes the Sacramento Unicn. The misiress of the seas made a mistake when she ok the Mikado into her political family. FITS,St. 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. It is a mean woman, inzis's the Philadelphia Inquirer, who says that the Merry Widow hats which are the . rage juzt now are smaller than the | panamas men sported a few years 2go. But the men admitted they were ridiculous and socm gave them up, which is more than the women will do. | Hicks’' Capudine Cures Headache, Whether from Cold, - Heat, Stomach, or Mental Strain. No Acetanilid or dangerous drugs. It's Liquid. Effects immediately. 10c., 25¢., and 58«:., at drug stores Expert are now able to di%nguish the writing of any particular type writing machine, just as they recog nize the penmanship of an individual. Surely that's discouraging, observes the New York Herald, to the writers of anonymous letters. 25¢. WILL CURE YOUR CORNS If you invest it in a bottle of ABBOTT’S EAST INDIAN CORN PAINT., It removes hard orsoft .eorns, bunions or sore, callous spots on the feet, warts or indurations of the skin, No pain, no cutting, no ‘‘eating” of the flesh, no after sorenoss; quick, safe, sure. At druggist or by mail from Taz Assorr Co., Bavannah, Ga. - Relates the San Framcisco Chron dcle; At a banquet in New York Hud -Bon, Maxim, the explosives expert, and ~Alexander Graham Bell, expert flying machines, predicted the possibility of. _an aenial pavy in the next war. Pre dicting is an entertaining and more or less harmless form of diversion, ~and sometimes the prediciions come _true. In the meantime there is no necessity to regard the battle ships ~as obsolete types, B s SUFFERED TWENTY-FIVE YEARS With Eczema—Her Limb Peeled aud ¥ goi Was Raw—Thought Amputa.- ' “gion Necessary—Believes Her " " Life Saved by Cuticura. q!‘xh;flbnen treatc{)i dby doctors for _fwenty-five years for aba e elmit 1 ;;g ?fi;dfidtlfi% gxe:,zel‘;?u failed to cure it. My doctor had advised me tp have my leg cut off. At this time rw‘gxml peeled from the knee, iy foot “was like a piece of law flesh, and 1 had to walk on crutches. 1 bought a set of Luti cura Remediés. After the first two {reat _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 1 might have lost my life. Mys. J. 13, Renand, 277 Mentana St., Montreal, Que., Feb. 29, 1907.” ' The Methodists have found = nanie for the American, divorce habit, de clares the Haverhil] Gazeite. They ‘call it “consecutive polygamy” and, in view of the centinmious performance, that isn’t half bad. John R. Dickey’s old reliable eye water cures sore eyes or granulated lids, Don't hurt, feels good; get the genuine in red hox, A Boston pastor says that the only way a man could juctify the use of tobacco would be to consent to let his wife share its use with him. But suppose his better half should insist on selecting the brand? asks the Springfield Undon. BOWEL TROUBLES CHILDREN TEETHING NU B lAN ™ LIVER TROUBLES ~I'EA MILD BUT EFFECTIVE IN ITS ACTION TRY A BOTTLE STIMULATES THE LIVER TO NORMAL ACTION ABK YOUR DEALER FORm IT 0 &R TOVR VEAL FOR MEN A shoe that is too big may not pinch, but it is a bad fit just the same, What you want is a shoe that matches the shape of your foot at the place where your weight rests,— not too large or too small, but exactly right. SKREEMERS are shoes like that, and o 2 the style is there, too, Look for the label, g 00l FRED. F. FIELD CO., Brockton, Mass. FrenFFienfe R A S W ]| T v BRI MAss. Malaria Makes Pale Sickly Children The Old Standard GROVE’S TASTELESS CHILT, TONIC, drives out Malaria and builds up the system. Vou know what you are taking, ,‘l'hc formula is plainly printed on every bottle, showing it is simply Quinine and Tron in a tasteless, and the moct eficctual form. ~ For adults and children. 50, m—_——.‘A i Says the Baltimore American: A sound Iwind in a sound body is stilt the coliege ideal, and there never will | be a return to the days of cadaverous scholarships, when the student weint through Ihe) dull round of study with out appeal to his physical nature, at the age when the demands of the latter are closely linked to health and success in the battle of life. Ask Your Dealer For Allen's Foot-Ease. A powder. It rests the fest. Cures Corns, Bunions,Swollen, Sore, Hot,Callous, Aching Sweating Feet and Ingrow.ng Nails, Allen’s Foot-Ease makesnew ortightshoessasy. At all D.uggists and Shoe stores, 25 cents. Ac cept no substitute. Sample mailed Freg. A&dress Allen 8. Olmst e(j. Leßoy, N. Y. If we have fewer ministers, the tendency will be to make more of thege we have, and by a natural law to improve the quality of the work done. The incompetent minister who is siliy and pretentious brings the whole profession into disrepuie, as serts the Christlan Resgistor. © The ~sconer he is weedcd ou! the better. ;' Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrupfor Children tecthing,softens thegums, reducesinflammu tion, allays pain,cures wind colic, 25¢ a bottla i Why should the maple tree produce ten thousand seeds a year when one - seed in ten years would more than ' perpeluate its kind? ashs The Dial. .Of course the naturalist’s explanation is obvious enough; but the truth re - mains that nature is the very type - eand example of exaggeration, of a lavish’ exuberance that is the very . opposite of restralnt and reserve. In . a sort of frolic superabundance of | vital energy not even the superlatives ?ot the up-to-date journalist can vie | with her. | J. B. Maxwell, Atlanta, Ga., says: “I suffered agony with a severe case of ecze | ma, Tried six different remedies and was | In despair, when a neighbor told me to try ' Shuptrine’s TETTERINE. After using #3 | worth of your TErTERINE and soup% am | completely cured, I cannotsaytoo mueh tin its praise.” TerTERINE at druggists or 'by mail 50c. Soap 25e. J. T. BHUPTRINE, . Dept. A, Savannah, Ga. The Oldest E-Congressman. | “The oldest living ex-member of ' the Congress of the United States | ig" the Hon. James C. McGrew, of ; Kingswood, in my State,” said Rep | resentative Sturgess, of the Second iWest Virginia District, at the Ren- HROEE, o e ey e | “Mr. McGrew is now ninety-elght ¢ years of age. He is in full posses ¢lon of his mental faculties and would ' be in good physical condition but | for injuries sustained in an aceldent |in Florida some little while ago. He | was thrown out of a carriage, the - horses of which had bolted, and both - legs were broken. The surgical work, | it i claimed, was faulty and Mr. Me- Grew has since been forced to walk . With a cane. Otherwise for a man so closely verging upon a century ho is in good shape.”—Baltimore Ameri can, CURED Givesr Qulck { Relief. W Removes all swelling in 8 to 20 3 days; effects a permanent cure in joto 6o days. Trialtreatment ‘,”(..;" given free. Nothingcan be fairer e Write Dr. K. H. Green’s Song AR WiSpeclalists, Box @ Atlanta. 67 Take the Place of Calomel Constipation sends poisonous matter bounding through the body. Duil headache, Sour Stomach, Foted Breath, Bleared Uyes, Loss of Energy and Ap etite nre the surest signs of he affliction.” Yeung's },ir(-r Pills Kmtwely cure constipation, They awaken the sluggls liver to better action, ¢lennse the bowels, llrunsr.hml the weakened parts, \nduce appe tite and aid digestion. They do not Balivate, no mat ter what you eat. drink or do, Price? conts from your dealer or direct from J. M. YOUNG, JR., WAYCROSS, GA. B —————————————————— . . Dr. Biggers Huckleberry Cordial Novor fails to relieve at once. It is the faverite haby medicine of the bost nurses and family doctors. I{nthnru everywhere stick to it, nd urge their friends to give it to Jhildren for Colie, Dysentery, arlmpl, Diarrhoea, Flux, #m»\xl-mrunm'h and all Stomach and l}nw«) Ailmonts, You can de pend on it. Don't worry, but take Dr, Biggers Huckleberry Cordial. %}u'antu at drug stores, or by mail. Circulars #(m. | HALTIWANGER TAYLOR DRUG Co,, Atlanta, Ga, No Use Bothering. e An engineer from Sunderland was spending a few days in London with a friend, and after a busy morning sight-seeing the Londoner chose & large restaurant for luncheon, think ing it would be a novel experience for the man from the north. ' The visitor appeared to enjoy his luncheon, but kept looking in the di rection of the dcor. “What are you watching?” asked his friend, rather annoyed. “Well,” was the quiet reply, “A'® keepin’ an eye on ma topcoat.” “Oh, don't bother about that,” said the other. “You dont see me watch ing mine.” ' “No,” observed the gulleless engl neer, ‘thee has no call to. It's ten minutes sin thine went.”"——Philadel phia ILedger. ) AR 95 ¢ B \ i o p‘ s ((7 ‘{:\\ 'll\ ¢ B\ &D@ g ""k“';»\'\ {Qfl LYDIA E. PINKHAM No other medicine has been so successful in relieving the suffering of women or received so many gen uine testimonials as has Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. In every community you will find women who have been restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg etable Compound, Almost every one you meet has either been bene fited b{l it, or has friends who have. In the Pinkham laboratory at Lynn,Mass.,anywomunanydaymt:{ see the files containing over one mil lion one hundred thousand letters from women seeking health, and ‘here are the letters in which they ~openly state over their own signa tures that they were cured by Lydia - E. Pinkham’s Vefiable Compound. . Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable - Compound has saved many women from surgical operations. | Lydia E. Pmkham’s Vegetable Compound is made from roots and | herbs, without drugs, and is whole some and harmless, - 3 ' The reason why Lydia E. Pink-. iham’s Vegetable Compound is so successful is because it contains in gredients which act dirvectly upon the feminine or%;mism, egtoring it to a healthy norinal eon(fitvlon. A - Women who are suffering fromy’ those distressing ills peculiar to their sex should not lose sight of these facts or doubt the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to restore their hiealth, PR s H l.afo.gcn!erpim - QN:é‘_l:JTH_% 16x16 INCHES FREE DB g g Send dealer’'s name and top from pound carton of *“2O-Mule-Team’’ Borax with 40, stamps and we will mail illustrated booke let, giving many ases for “Borax in the Home, Farm nand Dairy,” aino this luce dee sigu, 15 by 16 inches, on cloth ready for working. l‘hl’;fl. Address, PACIKFIC COANT BORAX CO., Now York, Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body antiseptically clean and free from une healthy germ-life and disagrecable odors, which water, coap and tooth preparations SR il LR R L » alone cannot do. A germicidal, disin fecting and deodor izing toilet requisite of exceptional ex cellence and econ omy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and nasal and uterine catarrh. At drug and toilet stores, 50 cents, or by mail postpaid. Large Trial Sample PAXTINE £ N fl ’lr.\:i’ J!l[ t’ !‘fl e 73'"‘-'"""'"5“':':",- / THE PAXTON TOILET GOO, Boston, Mags, ——