Newspaper Page Text
THE PULPIT.
”
A SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON BY
DR. CURTIS LEE LAWS.
Sabject: Christianity and Business.
Brooklyn, N. Y.—The Rev. Dr.
Curtis Lee Laws, in the Greene Ave
nue Baptist Church, preached on
“Christianity and Business.”” The
text was from Deuteronomy 8:18:
“Thou shalt remember the Lord thy
God, for it is He that giveth thee
power to get wealth.” Dr. Laws said:
When a man becomes a Christian
he does not sever his relations to the
world in which he lives. He is given
to Christ by the Father as a personal
and perpetual possession, but instead
of translating him, Christ sends him
back into the very world from which
he has been saved. Christ said to
the Father: “As Thou hast sent Me
into the world, even so have I also
sent them into the world.” But when
Christ sends the saved man back into
the world, He sends him back as a
new man. “They are not of the world,
even as I am not of the world.” The
Christian is in the world, but in the
‘world with a new motive, a new pur
pose and a new power. Our Master
well knew that it would be difficult
for His disciples to be in the world
without being of the world, and so He
prayed: “I pray not that Thou
shouldst take them out of the world,
but that Thou shouldst keep them
from evil.” From the beginning,
therefore, the relation of the Chris
tian to the affairs of life has been al
problem worthy of the most serious
study. In the early times there were }
fanatics who felt that it was below
the dignity of a Christian to enter the
secular pursuits in which they had
formerly been engaged. They gave
up their business and brought dis
credit upon their profession by the
vagaries of their other worldism. The
Apostle Paul tried to correct this
abuse in his second letter to the Thes
salonians. In his first epistle, in view
of the second coming of Christ, he
had urged. the peopls to separate
themselves from the world. Misinter
preting his purpose, they had given
up their regular employments, and
had gotten into mischief. In the sec
ond epistle the apostle says: “For we
hear that there are some which walk
among you disorderly, working not at
all but spending their time as busy
bodies. Now, them that are such we
command and exhort by our Lord
Jesus Christ, that with quietness they
work and earn their own bread.”
The greatest problem for the Chris
tian man is to adjust himself to the
callings and pursuits of this life, that
he may best serve God, his fellow men
and the highest interests of his own
soul. Instead of translating us to
glory at our conversion, God leaves
us here that we may perfect personal
holiness, working c¢ut our own salva
tion with fear and trembling, and
that we may win the world to our
new-found King. These are the two
functions of the Christian. It is the
will of God for His people to engage
in the ordinary vocations of this
world, that they may earn an honest
living and at the same time show
forth to the world the saving and
keeping power of Jesus Christ.
‘Though it is the will of God for His
veople to engage in the business of
this world, i% can be readily seen that
there are certain limitafions which
arise from our rzlations to God.
But, again, the Christian man can
engage in no business which will
harm his fellow men, whom he has
been sent to win to Christ. If you
are in a business which is honest and
legitimate, others will share with you
the benefit of that business. If your
gain means loss to others, then vour
business is not the business in which a
Christian man ecan engage. If you
cannot conduct this business your
self, you cannot own stock in it and
share in the profits of.it without bar
tering your soul for gold. If you
can't conduct the business yourself,
You cannot rent your property for the
conduct of such a businesss without
adding hypocrisy to your other sins.
May God have mercy on the hypo
crites who will not seil their hands by
engaging in a wicked business, but
who will stuff their pockets full of the
dirty money received as dividends or
rent from the conduct of this same
wicked business.
Note now some of the incentives to
business activity. “Thou shalt re
member the Lord thy God, for He has
given thee power to get wealth.” The
money-making gift is from God. The
apostle urges us to be diligent in busi
ness, fervent in spirit, serving the
Lord. God Las no patience with in
dolence and sloth. All through the
Bible the stamp of God’s approval is
put upon industry, while His curse
ever rests upon idleness. It is God
like to work. Our Lord said, “The
Father worketh hitherto and I work.”
There is no place in God’s economy
for the idler., He cumbers the
ground.
Business activity brings wealth,
and this is an incentive which ought
to appeal to the generation in which
we are living. Wealth ought to be
desired by every man, because wealth
is a mighty factor in the world in
which we live.
Think of what wealth can do for
the individual. It can give oppor
tunity to acquire high and noble
tastes. It can give leisure for study
and research. These in turn will
cause the mind to grow stronger and
the character to grow nobler. Wealth
can purchase length of days, and it
can secure to us the atmosphere in
which human love can blossom and
bear fruit to perfection.
Think of what wealth can do for
the family, It can surround our
loved ones with hooks and paintings
and statuary, It can provide the
highest culture for our children. It
can enable us to dispense a generous
hospitality and to make our homesl
the centre of a delightful and en
nobling religious, social and intellec
tual circle. ‘
Think of what wealth can do for
society. It can lift up those shattered
and maimed vietims of vice and pov
erty, It can cleanse the augean sta
bles. It can send the brightness ‘«’I!
day into the loathsome, fetid haunts
of darkness. It can lay out and beau
tify parks. It can establish and per-
Petuate universities and libraries. It
can support artists and scientists that
they may devote their time to creat-|
ivg the beautiful and the uselful. It
can set the spindles and wheels of
manufacture in motion. It can give
the poor the chance to earn an hon
est living, that self-respect may not
be lost by receiving charity. Oh, the
value of wealth to society!
Think of what wealth can do for
the church. The cause of Christ is
languishing all over the world be
cause there is not money sufficient to
carry on Christ’s work to the glory of
God. Our local churches are suffer
ing because of poor equipment and
the lack of workers who can devote
their whole time_to the cause. Our
Christian colleges, orphanages and
hospitals could double their efficiency
if they had more money. Our mis
sionary societies are all poverty
stricken. The missionary force in
the great cities, on the frontiers and
in heathen lands could all be doubled
in twelve months if we had sufficient
means. This is true of all Christian
denominations. May God prosper the
people and then make them willing to
lay their gold at His feet!
Business men,»l exhort you in the
name of the King to be diligent and
self-denying and frugal that success
may crown your efforts; for no one
can estimate: the good that your
wealth can do to yourself, to your
family, to society, and to the kingdom
of God in the world.
Let us now consider the perils of
business success.
I have exhorted you to fidelity,
persistency, energy in your business
life. I have told you of the glory
which comes with wealth, but I would
be false to your highest interests if
I did not hold up before you some of
the awful perils which confront the
man who makes a great success in
business.
- “What shall it profit a man if he
gain the whole world and lose his own
soul?” No man can gain the whole
world, or a millionth part of the
world, but if he gained the whole of
it at the cost of his soul it would be a
jcalamitous bargain. The text means
simply that in the effort to gain
wealth many forfeit their own souls.
The temptation is te neglect the high
er for the lower, to give up the spir
itual for the temporal, to give up the
unseen for the seen. How pitiful the
thought that men spend a lifetime in
the vain effort to corral the world and
find themselwes at last without a soul.
What does it mean by losing one’s
soul? The expression is not equiva-
Ilent to being condemned, though of
course it leads to perdition. The soul
here spoken of by Jesus means the
faculty in man which apprehends God
and goodness. Jesus says that the
man who pays too much attention to
money getting is apt to lose the fac
ulty by which he apprehends God and
spiritual things. He loses the faculty
because he retuses to use it. His ear
is dull to the voice of God. His eye
is clouded so that he cannot see the
beauty of God, and by and by through
a process of deterioration death comses
’and the faculty is lost. Oh, men, do
not lose your souls! Keep your ear
open to the voice of God. Keep your
heart attuned to the will of God; but
alas, alas! some before me have al
most lost their souls. In seeking a
good thing they are giving up the
best thing. :
Jesus said: “It is easier for a
camel to go through the eye of a
needle than for a rich man to enter
into the kingdom of God,” and, “How
hardly shall a rich man enter the
kingdom of heaven.” There are many
perils about the gaining of wealth
and the using of it. We have all
seen the influence of wealth upon
character. Too often it makes the
humble man proud, the generous man
stingy, the charitable man suspicious,
and the honest man dishonest. Some
| times the man who makes the money
escapes the perils, but succeeding gen
erations are almost inevitably cursed
by the wealth which they inherited.
The Master knew human nature per
fectly, and so He said, “How hardly
shall a rich man enter into the king
dom of heaven.” There is one way
to escape from these perils, and I
! commend it to the rich, to those who
| would be rich, and to all Christian
| business men alike. Write the words
{of my text in the front of your ledgers
and on the tablets of your hearts:
“Thou shalt remember the Lord thy
God, for it is He that giveth thee
{ power to get wealth.” g
Unanswered Prayer.
An unanswered prayer is no proof
of an unhearing God. There may be
reasons in the great purposes of our
heavenly Father why a petition may
fail of a direct answer. The creature
may err, not understanding the will
of God; but the Creator cannot err.
| As many a child of God has looked
back over his life he has seen where
the goodness and benign wisdom of
God has been manifested in with«
holding the things asked for.
But if the-direct answer to the pe
tition has been withheld we believe
that in some way there will come a
blessing because of it, and that no
earnest, faithful prayer is ever lost to
‘the suppliant. “It may not be my
way; it may not be thy way; but yet
in His own way the answer will
|come. It may be years in coming; it
[may be in some wholly unexpected
way, through some channel we never
dreamed of, and which at the time
of the prayer we knew nothing of;
but it will come to us with blessing.
' Inde2d, we in our ohtuseness may
‘be living in the very atmosphere of
answered prayer and not be aware of
it. -If the answer does not eome in
ithe way we look for if, let us look
‘around and see if the flower we
longed for is not blooming elsewhere,
or if our life at some angle does not
touch God more intimately than be
fore. We may look for the answer in
a tally-ho, but it may come in the
form of some poor beggar on the
street.—United Presbyterian. -
Profitable Things.
The sooner we are impressed that
thig present life is uncertain and very
short, and that the future life is sure
and endless, the better it will be for
us. Also to learn that material
things cannot satisfy the soul, but
that a man must be rich toward God
before that aching void can ever be
filled, and that godliness is profitable
unto all things and we may add unto
all time.—The Rev. W. F. Bryan,
Methodist, Dallas, Texas. . :
e e e e e eil
Be a Soul Winner, ' .
It is easier to preach publicly to a
great congregaiion than t¢ w/n oze
qoul by private means, .. == = .
BRIDAL FADS AND FANCIES,
“You haven't half smoked that cig
ar. A newly-married man should mot
be so wasteful.”
“l leave the butts long to pleass
my wife. She likes to loop 'em with
ribbcns and hang ’em about the flat.”
—Washington Hera_lil. .
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.
How it jolts a man's self-conceit in
after years when he happens to come
across a love letter he once wrote to
his wife!
TWO CURES OF ECZEMA.
Baby Had Severe Attack—Grand
father Suffered Torments with
the Disease——Owe Recovery
to Cuticura.
“In 1884 my grandson, a babe, had an
attack of eczema, and after trying the doc
tors to the extent of heavy bills and an in
crease of the disease and suffering, I ree
ommended Cuticura and in a few weeks
the child was well. He is to-day a strong |
man and absolutely free from the disease.
A few years ago I contracted eczema, and
became an intense sufferer. A whole win
ter passed without once having on shoes,
nearly from the knees to the toes being
covered with virulent sores. I tried many
doctors to no purpose. Then 1 procured
the Cuticura Remedies and found immedi
ate improvement and final cure. M. W.
Laßue, 845 Seventh St., Louisville, Ky.,
April 23 and May 14, 1907.”
Never judge a man by the talk he
lets out in his own behalf.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrupfor Children
teething,softens thegums, reducesinflamma
tion, allays pgip,cur»eAsrwind colic, 25ca bottla
A dollar in your hand is better than
two in another’s pocket.
To Drive Out Malaria and Build Up
the System
Take the Old Standard GRrROvE'S TASTE
LEsS CHiLL Tonic, You know what you
are taking.o The formula is plainly printed
on every bottle, showing it is sim;fiy Qui
nine and Iron in a tasteless form, and the
most effectual form, Kor grown people
and children. 50c. z
A train of thought should not be
ailowed to run wild,
John R. Dicke;;.;fi—reliable eye water
cures sore eyes or granulated lids, Don’t
hurt, feels good; get the genuine in red box.,
About a vacation the most enjoya
ble thiag is the planning thereof.
Do Your Fect Ache and Bufin?
Shake into your shoes Allen’s Foot-Ease, &
powder for the feet. It makes tight or
new shoes feel easy. Cures Corns, Bunions
Swollen, Hot, Smarting and Sweating F:ee‘.
and Ingrowing Nails. Sold by all dru§glsts
and shoe stores, 25 cts. Sample sent FREE.
Address Allen S. Olinsted, Leßoy, N. Y,
| SPOILING THE FUN. =
| “But, Michael, can’t you possibly
“manage to live with your wife with
out fighting?”
“Well, mno, muvm. I can’t~mnot
‘appily.”—lLondon Opinion, .
L WANTED - v
Several small business and manufact
_uring enterprises—new town—inducements,
financial assistance, etc. y :
o we vaee o L.TiDMUNDSON, Raymond, Ga,
You can learn more about a people’s
ideas of what constitutes the virtues
by studying their epitaphs rather than
their lies.
. H. GREEX'Ss Soxs, of Atlanta, Ga., are
the only successful Dropsy Bpecialists in the
world. See their liberal offer in advertise
ment in anather column of this paper.
AND NQ- - CHARGE, EITHER.
“What business is Miss Gaddie in?”
“Oh, ghe’s in everybody’s business.”
“Wholesale, ¢h?” :
“Yes, except when it comes to a
bit of scandal; she retails that.'—
The Catholic Standard and Times.
PROOF FOR TWO CENTS.
If You Suffer With Your Kidneys and
Back Write to This Man.
G. W. Winney, Medina, N. Y., in
vites kidney sufferers to write to him.
FRA To all who enclose
/- postage he will re
‘/ -\ ply, telling how
1 e /Al Doan’s Kidney Pills
é?’@‘ cured him after he
4 74 had doctored and
a 7 had been in two dif
e ferent hospitals for
\ 7 eighteen months,
'7/4%3( B\ suffering intense
i g // pain in the back,
A\ ,/ J/IK" lameness, twinges
: when stooping or
lifting, languor, dizzyspells and rheu
matism. ‘‘Before I used Doan’s Kid
ney Pills,” says Mr. Winney, *I
weighed 143, After taking 10 or 12
boxes,l weighed 162 and was com
pletely cured.”
Sold by all dealers. 50cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
DON'T STARCH TABLE LINEN.
A well known authority says that
table linen should never be starched.
It is a common mistake that many
housekeepers make and nothing so
detraets from the appearance and life
of handsome Jinen as gtarch. “Elbow
grease” is all that one needs to make
the proper kind of linen stiff. It
should be ironed damp, to get the
fine dheen so characteristic of well
laundereq linen. If it is ironed when
it is dry, or nearly so, it gets fuzzy.
-—American Cultivator.
e ——— e —————————
American Cotton College
MILLEDGEYILLE, GA.
For the education of Farmers, Clerks, Merchants, Warehousemen, Cotton Buyers, Manufacturers, and all others,
young or old, who are unable to classify and put the correct valuation on 18 GRADES OF COTTON.
Thirty Day Scholarships in our Sample Rooms, or six weeks’ Correspondence Course under expert cotton men
will complete you. Big demand for cotton graders and cotton buyers. SESSION OPENS SEPT. Ist. Correspond
énce Course year round. Vrite at once for further particulars.
. MBENDING BROKEN CHINA.
~Buy 5 cents’ worth of thick white
ehellac and apply a coat to the brok
en parts. Let dry 15 minutes, then
apply a second cocat and press bron
en parts tozether. While shellac i:
moist wipe over mended parts with
piece of cloth wet with wood or pure
alcohol to remove surplus shellac.
I have mended a valuable oriental
globe, a hand painted cracker jar,
a Bohemian glass bonbon dish, be
sides several pieces of a dinner set
and after years of use all are in ex
cellent condition.—Boston Post,
|AM
A MOTHER
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How many American women in
lonely homes to-day long for this
blessing to come into their lives, and
to be able to utter these words, but
because of some organic derange
ment this happiness is denied them.
E_Very woman interested in this
subject should know that prepara
tion for healthy maternity is
accomplished by the wuse of
LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
Mrs. Maggie Gilmer, of West
Union, S. C,,writes to Mrs. Pinkham:
‘I was greatly run-down in health
from a weakness peculiar to my sex,
when Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound was recommended to me. Tt
not only restored me to perfect health,
but to my delight I am a mother.”
Mrs. Josephine Hall,of Bardstown,
Ky.i writes :
I was a very great sufferer from
female troubles, and my physician failed
tohelp me. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound not only restored me
to perfect health, but I.am now a proud
mother.”
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, fig,s been the
standard remedy for female illg
andhas positively cured thousands of
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera
ti' }, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
f&%od"c pains, backache, that bear
ing-down feeling, flatulericy, indiges
tion,dizziness or nervous prostration,
Why don’t you try it ?
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick
women to write her for advice,
She has guided thousands to
health. Address, Lynn, Mass.
et .~ e M A, 5. evt s
Some men walk as if they needed
glasses and some others walk as if
they had taken too many.
SOFT CORNS BETWEEN THE TOES
Are often more painful than the hard oneg
on top, ABBOTT’S EAST INDIAN CORN PAINT
will eure either kind,as well as bunions,sore,
callous, spots and indurations of the skin,
““It cures to stay cured.” 25c. at druggists
or by mail: Tue Aesort Co., Savannah, Ga,
Never borrow a crowbar for the
purpose of prying into the affairs of
others,
What a Poultry Man Says About 20-
Mule Team Borax.
As 1 am in the poultry business, I
had ten white chicks to wash and
prepare for a show. I used “20-Mule
Team” Soap for washing the birds,
and I can say from years of exper
ience washing white birds, never be
fore have 1 found a soap or Borax
that cleaned my birds so fine and
easy. I had a great deal of comment
on my birds being so white. J. A,
Dinwiddie, New Market, Tenn,
All dealers—l 4, 1 and 5 Ib. cartons.
Sample. ‘and booklet, sc. Pacifie
Coast Borax Co., New York.
RESORTS,
Mrs. Knicker—Where will you spond
the summer.”
Mrs. Bocker—Jack says 4t depends
on Chicago and Denver.—New York
Sun.
- Malaria Causes Loss of Appetit
The Old Standard CROVE’S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC, drives out Malaria and builds up the
system. You know what you are taking. The formula is plainly printed on every bottle, showing it
is simply Quinine and Iron in a tasteless, and the most effectual form. For adults and children. 50c¢,
s e TR
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Spliiae Wikt
AN ‘*t“\::\«;/"\ RRIEREL
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RS RRNAN
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Greater New York,
It is growing more and mcre ap
parent that New York is destined to
be the greatest city in the world, and
we might as well admit it. The only
question is now, won't it be a chore
for “the greatest city in the world”
to stay s 0? The American climate
conduces to fickleness, and incon
stancy. Having once reached the goal
nobody wanis anything more to da
with if. Therefore, let Manhattan go
a bit slow. It is getting to be ‘“beau
tiful” in the new sense, and its squal
or ard “early New York” look are
being pushed further and further out
of sight. That is a physical point
to itg credit.—Bosion-Herald.
l Getting rich quick is as difficult as
it is dangerous and exciting.
e ——————————————————————————————
Take the Place of Calomel
Constipation sends poisonous matter bounding
through the body. Dull headache, Sour Stomach
Feted Breath, Bleared Fyes, Loss of Energy and Ap
lwtito are the surest aignunf he affliction. Young
| Liver Pills ]poucl\'vly cure constipation, They awake:
| the sluggish liver to better action, cleanse th
| bowaels, ntremithen the weakened parts, induce app
! tite and aid digestion. They do not Salivate, no mal
| ter what you eat, drink or do. Price? 2 conts fro:
| your dealer or direct from
| J. M. YOUNG. JR., WAYCROSS, GA.
ST CURED
1 Giver
¢ Quick
b \ Relief.
\- &8 Removes all swelling in Bto 2o
4 days; effects a permanent cure
Al \ N in 30to 6o days. Trialtreatment
g \‘“ given free. Nothingcan be fairer
WISEsaY Write Dr. K. H. Green’s Sons.
SRR d7iSpeclalists, Box @ Atlanta. Ge
Ooe oe T R )
Of good health is a well ordered liver.
NUBIAN TEA brings immediate ;
relief. Cures tendency to constipation
and restores normal conditions. Pleasant to take, effective
and leaves none of the bad results of calomel and other
violent remedies. Proved by the experience of twenty years
to be a most valuable liver regulator. Thousands testify
to its efficiency. Read the following:
“‘Ludowici, Ga.—lt is the finest medicine I ever saw, and a
big seller. It takes the place of calomel and all
other purgatives, g, J. McDonald.”’
All dealers sell it, Manufactured by
SPENCER MEDICINE COMPANY ; .
U A Chattanooga, Tenn, v E '
A SCIENTIFIC TREATMENT FOR
Whiskey, Drugs, Cigarette and Tobacco Habits,
Also NEURASTHENIA or NERVE EXHAUSTION, Administered
by Specialists for thirty years, Correspondence confidential.
The Only Keeley Institute in Georgia.
229 Woodward Ave., ATLANTA, GA.
* RECIPE FOR HOMEOPATHIC COFFEE ¢
HA!\'G a stale coffee bean in the sunshine, letting its shadow
fall on a tub of water; then serve the waterin cups. Or,
make in the usual way, using cheap, low-grade, bulk or brand
offee. 'The result will be practically the same. But if you
are a porson of diseriminating taste with rich, red bloed in
your veins, only LUZIANNE COFFEE can st
8y you.
SOOLD EVERYWH:RE The Relly-Taylor Co,
| 26 CTS. 1-L 8. : NEW GRLLEANS,
A S SIS . U AL, NS ST TR T 5. AAT S 5, .OO eWY 7 FATE. -A O CAN
BOILERS TANKS
Pum}l)s, Heaters, Injectors, Engine
Supplies and Repairs for Millg,
Hotels, Public Works. Try
LOMBARD IRON WORKS,hugusta,6a.
BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA.
Ideal school for Girls and Young Ladies. Boarding pupils limited to fifty. Refloed
Ohristian home; every household comfert, Perfect health, out of door recreations, unex
celled city advantages. Standards high; faculty superior, Next resgion begins SBeptember
sixteenth. For catalog and full Wrtlcqlaru address : ¥
MISS LOULIE COMPTON, Principal, 1722 Fifth Ave., Birmingham, Ala.
L 3
FOR MEN The top of a shoe determines its style. It's the Yatt
® your foot rests upon that demands the Rro?r lines
to assure ease and comfort. The difference between SKREEMER shoes and
others lies in the fact that they are made on a special, natural foot-form
model. They fit exactly, and for that reason are absolutely comfortable.
Look for the label. If you do not find these shoes T
readily, write us for directions how to secure them. L MADE BY
FRED. F. FIELD CO., Brockton, Mass. FmnFFirinfa
V.5.A
(At 29-08
There isn't much hope for the young
man who feels sorry for himself every
time he -looks at his parents,
ANTIDOTE FOR SKIN DISEASES,
That’'s what TerreriNe is; and it i 8 more.
Itis an absolute cure for eczoma, tetter,
ringworm, erysipelas and all other itching
cutaneous diseases, In aggravated cases
of these afflictions its cures have bcmnflphe
nomenal, It gives instantrelief and effects
permanent cures, bo¢, at druggists or by
mail from J, T, SaverkiNg, Depl. A, Sae
vannah, Ga,
The man who quarrels with his
bread and butter should be made to
eat his words.
Hicks' Capudine Cures Women’s
Monthly Pains, Backache, Nervousness,
and Headache. It's Liquid. Effects imme
diately. Prescribed by physicians with best
results. 10c., 25c., and 50c., at drug stores,
A haunted house has shades instead
of curtains, 4
j’‘i éi i ;. ’é
Leeps the breatl, teeth, mouth and body
antiseptically clean and free from une
healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors,
which water, =oap and tooth preparations
alone cannot do. A
germicidal, disin
fecting and deodor
izing toiletrequisite
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
ANAAAN ) Y
PR
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]; {7 R !
I
! \ ) 495
1 \ I I 7
P X 748
THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston, Mass.
ANTED, WRITE T 0 US
regurding onur proposition 1o handle oup
articie called Perspirodor, You are nos
acanvasser or agent, & want you just
to give our samples 2way to your friends
to have them test the merits of the article
and for doing this we pay you liberally, Write to
us at onee, l’l’.llh‘l'l‘((;liun CO., Fifth Aveas
vue and Thirty-fourth Street, New York,