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THE PULPIT,
A BRILLIANT SUNDAY SERMON BY
‘THE REV. J. H. MELISH.
Subject: Faith Once Delivered.
Brooklyn, N. Y.—The Rev. John
Howard Melish, rector of the Church
of the Holy Trinity. Clinton and Mon
tague. streets, Sunday morning
preached on ‘‘The Faith Once Deliv.
ered.”. The text was from Jude' 3:
‘“The faith which was once for all de
livered to the saints.” Mr. Melish
said:
A Pentecost seems to be taking
place in Korea. Forces, no doubt in
large part political and commercial,
but also supremely religious and edu
cational, are bringing that Rastern
nation to a new birth. Men every
where are inquiring ahout the “new
religion.” Churches are crowded
many times a day. Teachers and
preachers cannot meet the need, We
seem to be witnessing what has not
been seen for centuries, a nation
turn Christian.
What is of great significance in the
religious awakening and conversion
of Korea is the kind of Christian re
ligion which is receiving this over
whelming response. If the reports
ar> true, it is a religion with two
sides. Those who have received it
and who are extending it among their
fellow countrymen know only “The
Father” and “Our Elder Brother.”
The names which have been and are
to multitudes of us Western Chris
tians of value have no existenca to
those Eastern followers of Jesus. God
and Jesus they know, but *Christ”
and the doctrines of the Trinity, the
incarnation, the atonement, are not
even names. Their religion is with
out dogma.
Is this a sufficient statement of the
Christian faith? Tdo not mean Irn
is the sum total of the Christian
truths. Of course, it is not. Neither
do I mean if it is the “irreducible
minimum,” without which a man
can hardly be called a Christian. But
is this faith in God as Father, in
Jesus as Elder Brother, sufficient
for life and death? Can men live
by this? Are these the regulative
ideas of our religion, the fundamen
tal propositions of which all other
truths are corollaries?
Such questions can be answered
only by the deep experiences of life.
Life, the abundant life, is the test of
truth. There are times which try
men’s souls. Then it is that a man'’s
books are opened, his words are
weighed, his traditions are tested. At
- such moments the soul is concerned
not with word«® but with realities.
He demands real answers for real
questionings. Such was the experi
ence of Job when disaster befell him,
Under the fire and the whirlwind not
only Job’s property, but Job's the
ology, was swept away. Orthodoxy
proved too weak to lean upon. Such,
too, was the experience of Saul of
Tarsus, when he discovered that law
failed to make men righteous. He was
driven by new needs to revolutionize
his religivn and morals. St. Augus
"tlg_e, Luther, Wesley, also, were men
who™ face to face with new experi
ences, as few questions which ortho
doxy failed to answer. They were
driven to the fundamentals of faith
by the facts of life. - '
1f faith in GQod as Father and
Jesus as Elder Brother is sufficient
it must answer the deep questionings
which spring from the deep experi
ences of life. These questions are
three in number. Bzhind al] philoso
phies you will find them. To answer
them all religions have set them
selves,
The first question is: Is there a
God, and if there is what is He like?
It has its origin in man as a reason
ing and moral creature. What is the
origin of what we see and feel? lls
this universe self-evolved or is it the
expression of some power which
moves through it and presides over
it? If there is such a Power, what
is it like? Has it any of the attri
butes of personality, intelligence,
righteousness, love? Behind all hu
man douhts and questionings is this
mother of questions, Is there a God?
The second question is: When a
man sees upon his soul the blot of
‘a sin can it be removed? What theo
logians call sin is a universal ex
perience. When Herbert Spencer
came to America he was cntertained
at a banquet by the most learned
company which had probably as
' sembled here. At the end of the
program of speeches Henry Ward
Beecher was called upon. He praised
science and eulogized the debt which
religion owed :the men who toiled
80 painstakingly to ascertain truth,
And then suddenly turning aside, he
made an appefll to universal experi
ence. There was not a man there,
he said, who had not done something
“for which he was ashamed, who did
not wish he had not done it, who
would like to have men know it, who
would not if he could wash his soul
clear of it. Scientist, philosopher,
theologian, statesman in that learned
assembly rose tothatappeal to univer
sal experience. So say all men. There
have been times when sin weighed
80 heavily upon the consciences of
men that they have sacrificed their
children, thrown themseives underl
the car of Juggernaut, fied to mo- !
nastic penance. His as deep an ex-l
perience to-day as ever, but it is ex
pressed differently., Has my life beenl
of any use to others? is the question
upon man’s soul to-day. Not have!
I done wrong so much as have I done |
right? His the sense of failure in,
well-doing that weighs upon men.l
Bin, individual and social, is a uni
versal and tragic experience. }
The third question is: When a man g
dies shall he live again? The sight;
of a dead face is the mother of all
mysteries. It compelled him to ask
Whether that soul had gone, and in
80 asking it lifted man’s thoughts
from the temporal to the eternal, the
natural to the supernatural, the hu
man to the divine. Before the ex
perience of death man stands ques
tioning, eager to know, half beliey
ing, half afraid, wondering whither
his friend has gone and he himselfl
will go.
These are the decp questions
which spring from the deep experi
ences of life. How does faith in God
as Father, in Jesus as Elder Brother
give sufficient answers? |
Is there a God and what is Het
Wir? “Yes,” says Jesus, “thers is'
& God. He is my Father and your
Father.” Some men there are who
find it easy to believe on their own
: experience that God is Father. Others
can believe only when the sun is
bright and the sea is calm. When
the storm breaks their hearts faint
within them. But the multitude of
us men and women are glad that
Jesus is part of our life. Our bright
est moments of assurance get their
light from Him: our darkest mo
{ ments are not altogether black be
‘cause He is part of life. It is by
i faith in His experience, supported by
{ His character, His sanity, His truth,
His deeds that we keep faith in God.
I'aith in the Elder Brother makes us
His fellow children; keep faith in
| the Father through storm and sun
shine.”
When a man sees the cursed spot
upon his soul can he remove it? ‘A
man,” said Jesus, ‘“had two sons.”
One went into the far country and
painted his soul black with loose and
unworthy deeds. When his money
i was gone he felt his disgrace and
; Shame. He did not commit suicide:
he went straight home. No sooner
had he reached the road outside the
gate when he was hailed and his
father ran to meet him. ‘Whatever
{ the spot may be upon the soul if a
| man will take his disgrace and shame
to God he will find in Him a Father.
So with social failure. lls the time
short that remains? Waste it not
in vain regrets over it. The past is
irreparable, but the future is still
one’s own. ‘Come let us be going.,”
When a man dies shall he live
again? Knowledge gives no better
answen than in the days of Aristotle.
What seems to be scientific proof,
when examined, turns out to be
simply man’s hope expressed in scien
tific phrases. But man has trust
worthy evidence, not in the spiri
tualistic sense, but in the inference
as to what the other world is like
from what we know of this, in his
hopes and faith, in the testimony of
his poets and prophets. And of all
such witnesses to life that desires to
be eternal stands Jesus, our Eldesr
Brother. Betore the gate of aeath
He stands and holds the kev. It is
sight of Him, master of life and
death, that strengthens our faith in
immortality, quickens our hope for
the dead and casts about life here and
there the golden radiance which sur
i passes the sunset glow.
] For all these experiences of life, in
| answer to all these deep questionings,
{ faith in God as Father, in Jesus as
| Eider Brother is sufficient.
l In Korea the Christian Church has
learned to ask this faith of its con
verts and no more. When will the
church at home learn this much
needed lesson? There are questions
which this simple faith does not an
swer, Christianity no sooner had
reached the educated Greek than the
questions came: What is the relation
between Jesus and God? How is the
Elder Brother related to the other
brothers? What is the true idea of
incarnation and of atonement? Men
have a right to ask these questions,
That right was won long ago by Ori
gen, of Alexandria. But let it be
clearly understood that all such mat
ters of speculation, while legitimate,
are not the ‘“faith once delivered.”
The faith once delivered is related to
speculative faith, as it historically
has found expression in the creeds
‘and doctrines of the church, as.the
tree is related to its leaves. The
faith once delivered, trust in God as
Father, in Jesus as Elder Brother is
the tree. The creeds and doctrines
are the leaves. From season to sea
son they must change as new life
pushes off old forms, because the tree
itself abides.
I wish I could persuade men who
to-day reject all creeds, and with
{ them the faith, to see this distinction
' between faith and creeds. It is possi
| ble to reject the latter and live by
! the former. I 'wish that I could per
suade men who identify faith and
creeds to make this distinction. It
{ would do much to win the thinking
world to the religion of Jesus. It is
a real distinction. The faith once
delivered existed many generations
before the most venerable creeds of
Christendom were born. It will con
tinue to inspire and strengthen men
when all our creeds shall have passed
away. The faith is once for all de
livered,
Subtle{st] thought shall fail and learning
alter,
Churches change, forms perish, systems
0;
But ogr human needs—they will not alter,
Christ no after age shall e’er outgrow.
Yea, Amen! 00, changeless One, Thou only
Art life’s gaide and spiritual goal,
Thou, the light across the dark vale lonely,
| Thou, the eterna® heaven of the soul.
Giving is Getting.
The old proverb-writer uttered a
great truth when he said that there
was a giving that tended to increase
and a withholding that tended to
poverty. Giving and receiving are
not two different things; the one
means the other. There is, in the
divine eccnomy, a great principle of
exchange by which giving and receiv
ing are coincident, Especially is this
principle operative in the moral and
spiritual realm,
The most significant thing in life
and development is hospitality. We
open the doors of our heart and life
to ennobling and inspiring visitors.
We give of our capacity; but how
much more do we get. God asks
us to give our hearts. We do so and
how much more we get. Jesus
Christ asks us to give Him a place
in our life. We give it, but the re
sult is not a giving after all so much
as it is a getting.
Be hospitable then. Be hospitable
to all the divine influences of life,
and let it not be a narrow, grudging
hospitality, Be hospitable to God;
to Jesus Christ. Give Them your
best rooms. Let Them be your guests,
and They will give you Themselves
in return.
Giving is getting, and the greater
the investment the greater the re
turn.—Rev. C. 8. Macfarland, in
Christian Work and Evangelist,
Essential to Happiness,
Companionship is the one thing in
the world which is absolutely essen
tial to happiness. The human heart
needs fellowship more than anything
else, fellowship which is elevated and
enduring, stronger and purer than it
self, and centred in that which death
cannot change. All its springs are in
God. Without Him life is a failure,
and all beyond is a blank.e~Heory
Yan Dyke.
The
General Demand
of the Well-Informed of the World has
always been for a simple, pleasant and
efficient liquid laxative remedy of known
value; a laxative which physicians could
sanction for family use because its com
ponent parts are known to them to be
wholesome and truly beneficial in effect,
acceptable to the system and gentle, yet
prompt, in action.
In supplying that demand with its ex
cellent combination of Syrup of Figs and
Elixir of Senna, the California Fig Syrup
Co. proceeds along ethical lines and relies
on the merits of the laxative for its remark
able success.
That is one of many reasons why
Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senng is given
the preference by the Well-Informed.
To get its beneficial effects always buy
the genuine—manufactured by the Cali
fornia Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale
by all leading druggists. Price fifty cents
per bottle.
e ————————
One of the many things a conceited
youth is unable to understand is how
any sensible female can pass him up
for some other chap.,
A e e
25¢. WILL CURE YOUR CORNS
If you invest it in a bottle of ABBoTT’S EAST
INDIAN CORN PAINT, It removes hardorsoft
corns, bunions or sore, callous spots on the
feet) warts or indurations of the skin, No
pain, no cutting, no “‘cating’’ of the flesh,
no after soreness; quick, safe; sure, At
druggist or by mail from THE ABBOTT Co.,
Bavannah, Ga.
Did George Washington's school
mates dub him Figures because he
couldn't lie?
Lidies Can Wear Shoes
One size smaller after usin%l Allen’s Foot-
Ease,apowder. It makes tightornew shoes
easy. Cuaresswollen, 1 ot, sweating, a hm%
feet, ingrowing nails, cornsand bunions, A
alldraggistsand sho2stores, 25¢. Don'tac
ceptany substitute. Trial package FREE t{;r
mail, Address Allen S.Olmsted, LeRoy,N.Y,
Despite the discovery of wireless
communication, politicians continue to
pull the wires.
To Drive Out Malaria and Build Up
the System
Take the Old Standard GROVE'S TASTE
LESS CRILL ToNic. Yoa know what you
are ta.king. The formula is plainly ;irinted
on every bottle, showing it is simply Qui
nine ang Iron in a tasteless form, and the
most effectual form. For grown people
and child_ren. 50c.
Some men decline to look upon
the wine when it is red because they
prefer another color. -
Mrs, Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softens thegums, reducesinflamma
tion, allayq pain, cures \yipg colic, 25cabottle
No farmer has ever yet grown rich
growing crops from the government
seed,
DEATH TO RING Y FORM. ;.o
“‘Everywhere I go I speak for Terraams,
because it cured me of ringworm in its
waist was raw as beef; but *ETTERWNE cured
me. +lt also cured a bad case of piles.” 8o
says Mrs. M. F. Jones of 28 Tannehill St.,
Pittsburg, Pa. TerTRRINE, the great skin
remedy, is sold by druggists or sent by mail
for 69c. Wrtite J, T. SHUPTRINE, Dept, A,
Savannah, Ga.
At the age of 40 a man gets busy
and looks for some of the money he
threw away at the age of 21.
CUTICURA CURED FOUR.
Southern Woman Suffered With Itch®
ing, Burning Rash—Tbree Little
Babies Had Skin Troubles—Calls
Cuticura Her Old Stand-by.
“My baby had a running sore on his
neck and nothing that 1 did for it took
effect until I used Cuticura. My face was
nearly full of tetter or some similar skin
disease. It would itch and burn so that 1
could hardly sfand it. Two cakes of Cuti
cura Soap and a box of Cuticura Qintment
cured me. Two years after it broke out on
my hands and wrist. Sometimes I would
go nearly crazy for it itehed so badly. I
went back to amy old stand-by, that had
never failed me—one set of Cuticura Rem
edies did the work. One set also cured
my uncle’s baby, whose head was a cake of
sores, and another baby who was in the
same fix. Mrs. Lillie Wilcher, 770 Elev
enth St., Chattanooga, Tenn., Feb, 16, '07.%
Be broad; be liberal; remember it
is more blessed to give than to re
ceive; particularly if the commodity
be advice,
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.
BITTEN BY A HORSERADISH.
“And so Smithers died of hydropho.
bia?”
“Yes; poor chap!” g
“How did it happen?”
“He put too much horseradish on
his bologna and it bit his tongue.”—
Chicago News.
A TERRIBLE CONDITION.
Tortured by Sharp Twinges, Shooting
Pains and Dizziness,
Hiram Center, 518 South Oak
street, Lake City, Minn., says: “I was
o) 80 bad with kidney
7 \ trouble that I could
5 W Dot straighten up af
;a mfi ter stooping without
i © . vy sharp pains shooting
""”*fii 4‘ through my back. I
S ‘Qé, had dizzy spells, was
w 7 W) nervous and my eye-
A 8 A sight affected. The
'"r’/(';fi‘_ (TR kidney secretions
i‘% AR were irregular and
o too frequent. I was
in a terrible condition, but Doan’s
Kidney Pills have cured me and I
have enjgyed perfect health since.”
Sold by all dealers. 50cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
NOT QUITE ENOUGH,
Mooney—Faith, Oi cud die listenin’
to Tom Caliahan play th’ poipes.
Donohue—Fer meself, Oi'd prefer
a paceful ind.—Judge.
The Sphinx and Success.
The. WYWRK . Man ap
proached the Sphinx and said: “Oh,
tell me, learned one, What rule malkes
for Success’ " i
“I will sin” saig the Sphinx, with
a slight smile, “No man is a success
alone; he must have his associates,
his assistants. Select a capodle gen
eral manager and make him responsi
ble to you for everything; choose for
him a lieutenant, holding him respon
isible for your general manager. or the
ileutenant gel a division superinten
dent under command of the lieuten
‘ant; under him an assistant, and uan
dee him an assistant, and under the
assistant-assistant a helper, each in
turn responsible to the .one above.
Follow thig to the last and lowest
man. You yourself have no worry,
no frets and need only to draw the
dividends, You may even live in Eu
rope.”
“But,” asked the Anskitious Young
Man, puzzled, :‘;;':)w am I to be able
to select the right men?”
And then the Sphinx smiled broad.
ly.—Puck. .
R £ L R
LIKE SON, LIKE FATHER.
Millionaire (to tailor)—l'm told by
my son that you have permitted him
to run a bill for two years. I have
therefore come to——-
Tailor—Oh, sir, don't trouble. I'm
in no hurry,
Millionaire—l‘ gee that, and that's
why I've come' to tell you that for
the future I wish to get my clothes
fronr you, too!——Brooklyn Life.
FITS,St. Vitus'Dance:Nervous Diseases per
manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve
Restorer.. $2 trfi bottle and treatise frec.
Dr. H. R. Kline, Li&.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
-SOIME, OHANGES. =
“Her face is familfar.”
“Then why don't you speak?”
“Well, her hdir and her figure are
not familiar.” — Louisville Courser-
Journal. B
HAD ECZEMA 15 YEARS.
Mrs. Thomas Thompson, of Clarksville,
Ga., writes, under date of April 28, 1907: “I |
suffered 15 years with tormenting eczema;
had the best doetors to prescribe; but noth- |
ing did me any good until I got TrTTERINE,
It eured me, "I am 80 thankful.”
Thousands of-othérs can testify to similar
cures, TETTERINE is sold by druggists or
sent by mail for&oc. by J.T, SHUPTRINE,
Dept. A, Savannah, Ga,
Suburbery.
One of the henefits of living in the
suburbs is the fun you can have in
town when you miss the last train out.
—New York Press.
REMOVES CORNS WITHOUT PAIN.
ABBOTT’S EAST INDIAN CORN PAINT removes
corns, oot and all, without eutting or burn
ing and leaves mo soreness. It cures soft
corns between the toes, bunions or sore,
callous spots. It cures all quick and per
manent, Get it at your druggist or send
25¢, to Tae Asßort Co., Savannah, Ga.
No man is master of the entire
range of human knowledge—with the
possible exc\ep‘tion of a village justice
m peace, 3
Ametican Cotton College iyl
: 0 g Georgia.
For the education of Farmers, Clerks, Merchants, Warchousemen, Cottor
Buyers, Manufacturers, and all others, young or old, who are unable to classify
and put the correct valuation on 18 Grades of Cottoa. Thirty day scholarships in
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will complete you. Big demand for co'ton graders and cotton buyers. Session opens
Sept. Ist. Correspondence course year round. Writ» at once for further pa-ticulars,
BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA.
Ideal s2hool for Girls and Young Ladies, Boarding pupils limited to fifty. Refined
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sixtecnth, For catalog and full pnrtlcqlurg address
MISS LOULIE COMPTON, Principal, 1722 Fifth Ave,, Birmingham, Ala.
CHARTERED FEBRUARY 127 H, 1897, LINCOLN’S BIRTHDAY.
This unique and rapidly growing Institution,with grounds and buildings valued at 200,000
furnishes unequaled opportunities for young men and {mmu women, with or without means,
who desire an edugation. Tuitlon in the Literary Department is rree, just an incidental,
which ranses from sls to 818 per year. Board, incidentals and room rent range from SBS to SIOO
per year, and the student may work to pay one-half of this amount. Six large school build
ings: 600 acres of land; saw mill, grist mill, shingle machine. All College courses, including
Musle, Art and Elocution, are given. Over 600 students enrolled last year. Located at the
Historic Cumberland Gap, Tennessee, where the three states, Virginla, Kentucky and Tens
nessee join. First term begins August 81st. Address
y -
Wm. L. STOOKSBVRY, Ph.D., President.
L CUMBERLAND GAP, TENN.
SAWS, RIBS, Bristle Twine, Babbit, &c., foer any make
of Gin ENGINES, BOILERS and PRESSES
and Repairs for same. Shafting, Pulleys, Belting, In
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Cane Mills in stock. LOMBARD IRON WORKS AND SUPPLY
COMPANY. Augusta. Ga.
B I N An Exiremely Palalable Medicine For All
'
NU ’ -rAEA KINEY AND LVER TROUBLES
TRY A BOTTLE Ask your dealer for It
shR : FOR MEN
Den’t suffer from diseases of the feet, but
kug your feet in anatural, healthy condition by wearing
SKREEMER shoes. Thay do not crowd or pinch the feet. They
are made over natural foot-shape models. Look
= for the label. If you do not find these shoes
4 NAsE v readily, writg us for directions how to secure
e FREDEREIDOS| them. ' FRED. F. FIELD CO., Brockton, Mass
g “»'I; Ky 'llm
;flL v 8.4,
o B W emm a RO
Malaria Makes Pale Blood
The Old Standard GROVE’S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC, drives out Malaria and builds up the
system. You know what you are taking, ‘T'he 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.
e T A ATUL
THE SAMSON OF COFFEES
Double the Sirénjth of
the ordinary kinds---
goes twice as far and
thus is a great MONEY
SAVER.
25c¢ts |-Ib
Founded 123 years ago for the education of all the people.
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Over 6,000 Georgia alumni attest the value of its training, ~moen prominent in every
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Law, Pharmacy, Agriculture, Civil and Electrical En
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Faculty of 46 instructors; 927 students enrolled last year at Athens; 3375 students
enrolled in the University system. DBoard £9.0) a month; room &2 0) a month in dormi
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IT IS WORTHY OF THE TRUST. IT STANDS FOR
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eil 7 WOR BRYALE ASDRERS. ..
THE UNIVERSITY, Athens, Ga.
AVOIDING TAIK
She—"“lf we appear together 80
much people will talk about us.”
He—" Well, suppose we disappear
together."—Pick-Me-Up.
Hicks' Capudine Cures Women's
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MAKING A RECORD.
“lI know a young man very ambl
tious, who is anxious to make a rec
ord for himself. Could you suggest
a way?”
“Sure. Why doesn't he get a job
with a phonograph company.”—De
troit Free Press.
———————————————————————————————
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R e ]
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and Oollego courses; special courses in Business,
Domestic Science and Music. Superior advantnges.
Reasonable prices, For catalogue and further infor
mation address
11 e r
HENRY C. NEWELL, Acting President,
—— e ————————————————————————————————————
S CURED
o Gives
o Quick
W 0 Y Relief.
- ABELy Removes all swelling in Bto 2a
> ¥ days; cffects a permanent cure
\ in 20to 60 days, Trialtreatment
fl‘”“"‘: ul e given free. Nothingean be fairer
‘*\‘?\i PR Write Dr. B, H. Green’s Sons,
SN s¥:aSpeclalists, Box B Atlanta, G
e —————————————————————————
Take the Place of Calomel
Constipation sends {)oimnmm matter bounding
throngh the body. Dull headlache, Sour Btomach,
Fotod Breath, Bleared Eyes, Loss of Enorgy and A?.
petite are the surest signs of he atiliction., Young's
Liw-r Pills postively care constipation. They awaken
the sluggish liver to Letter action, cleanse the
bowels, utr(\mfth(‘u the woakened parts, induce appe
tite and aid digestion, They do not Salivate, no mat.
ter what you eat, drink or do. Prico2 cents from
your dealer or direct from
J. M. YOUNG, JR., WAYCROSS, GA.
BRI o Always swoet and
AN clean, Nevep
BEREARE Dreak; nover loak,
~(\, : Useful for many
; g other things, with
BRSPS onameled cover
PR O furnishod. Three
e B styles made,
e :‘“’ ENTERPRISE
e AR ENAMEL Cco.,
Y BELLAIRE, OKIO,
p ST R ] TTN v
@(7 el S L R R
G el\
vl N,
E ~£6~ I YR T
L 3 \! i i
i T
= "MULE TE py || €8
{ : ¥ "\!
/BORAX
P%' ‘ G x‘f 2!
b\ €0 4 A
I “ansEs o WHITENS ¢(8
. LornESs //y /A 8
; P sl L PO
IR % o 0 A 0 drd I 4 {
LY TR e
il sSRNs M 8 X Y bR L vyl |
All dealers, Sample, Booklet and Parlor Game, 10¢,
Pncific Const Borax Co., New York.
Local agents wanted. Writo for monay making plan,
j m
Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body
antiseptically clean and free from une
healthy germ-life and disagrecable odors,
which water, roap and tooth preparations
alone cannot do. A
germicidal, disin- %
fecting and deodor
izing toiletrequisite
of exceptional ex- BT m— )
cellence and econ- p XTINE i 77
omy. Invaluable [0 eantutd i i,
for inflamed eyes, B = stwpes =
throat and nasal and \ .
uterine catarrh. At ||l /2208 {77
drug end toilet I ) i :j
stores, 50 cents, or o 1L )' %
by mail postpaid, = J/
ey =
Large Trial Sample e
WITH ""HEALTH AND BEAUTY" BOOK BENT FREE
THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston, Mass.
——————————————————————————————
(At3l-08)
NLW ORLEANS, LA,