Newspaper Page Text
A SERMON " & i,
§3~/ THE REV~. ‘gl
'[RAW. AENDERSON Wl
; Subject: The Sustaining God,
Joshua 1:0~“Have T not commanded
thee? Be stmng and of a good courage;
be not afraid. Neither be thou dismayed;
for the Lord thy God is with thee wither
soever thou goest.”
Moses is dead. Joshua, the son of
Nun, the minister of Moses, leads.
For forty long, weary heart-trying
years Moses had led Israel; led her
in the face of discouragements and
disagreements, against the will of
the fickle multitude that with long
ing looked back to the leeks and gar
lics and onions of Egypt desiring to
serve a thousand years in the house
and under the bondage of Pharaoh
rather than to live for a day by faith
in God; in spite of machinations and
cabals, through the desert to the
bounds of Canaan. Moses’ work was
done. The task for which he was
particularly fitted was completed. A
vision from a mountain top. Canaan
to the west. ‘““And the children of
Israel wept for Moses.”
The old leader was dead. The new
leader is in command. Moses, the
cautious, relinquishes the rule to
Joshua, the captain. Moses had his
capacities, opportunities, talents.
Joshua is not Moses. But even as
Moses was the man of the hour, so
Joshua is the called of God in his.
Moses and Joshua are not struck from
.the same mold, but they both strike
for the same cause, serve the same
people, yield homage to the same
:God. Each is necessary to his age.
‘And the age that produced each is
prepared, by the wise providence that
broods upon the affairs of men, for
each.
i Differently, and yet nots altogether
Ootherwise, is it with us, as together
‘in this church we confront the larger
labors of another vear. The leader
is the same. The cause is the same,
The same Spirit moves within us.
The same Sovereign directs. But the
‘old year is dead. A new one lives.
The old year had its problem, difficul
ties, discouragements, perplegities,
delights. The experiences of the old
year are memory, history, vesterday’s
events. The new year, full of larger
tasks, mightier opportunities, more
searching joys, lies ahead. The old
year had its peculiarities that will for
ever differentiate it from any other
that shall ever be. The new vear
cannot be the old, any more than
Joshua could be Moses. The old Year
is dead. The new year—Alleluiah!
Moses is dead. But the God of
Moses persists. Joshua is the leader.
The promise of God to Abraham and
Isaac, Jacob and Moses, is the prom
ise of God, in its ripeness and effor
esence, to Joshua. The God of Abra
‘ham is Joshua’s guide. The Spirit
who made bright the way for Moses
is the evangel of Jehovah to Joshua.
*‘Be not afraid, neither be thou dis
mayed; for the Lord thy God is with
thee whithersoever thou goest.”
The promise that God gave to the
new leader He makes to use in a new
year. Joshua has no mortgage upon
the loving kindness of Jehovah. He
has no monopoly of the grace of God.
The arm of the sheltering God is not
shortened, His affection is not less
ened, His promises are not ceased,
His heart yearns toward us. God
speaks to us as much as He did to
Joshua. We shall not do damage to
the text to unduly strain it if we in
sist that. Cod advises us that which
He delivered to Israel through
Joshua. He mezkes covenant with us
as we face the work of the new year
in the language that He used to
Joshua. “Be not afraid, neither be
thou dismayed: for the Lord thy God
is with thee whithersoever thou
goest.”
Under the sway of the conscious
ness of the reality of the promise
‘lsrael took courage, received enthu
siasm, was enlarged with expectation.
Believing that God was with them the
people entered with heartiness, en
thusiasm and hopefulness into the la
bors of the Lord.
We need courage, enthusiasm, ex
pectation. That is to say, we need
heart, heat, hope.
Without these we cannot be effect
ive in the service of our Saviour.
These we may secure if we will accept
as words of comfort and encourage
ment from God to each of us, the text
of our discourse, “Be not afraid,
neither be thou dismayed: for the
Lord thy God is with thee whither
soever thou goest.”
We need courage. Heart! A Lao
dicean churth, neither hot nor cold,
lukewarm or warmed over, is as inef
ficient for real accomplishment as the
white of an egg to the satisfaction of
the taste. The people must be cour
ageous and the organization must
have the heart of the Master—kind,
robust, roborant—to attract the mul
titude and to uplift the mass. Only
by intrepidity and interest can we in
spire or command the men and wom
en to whom as the messengers we
come with a necessary and vitalizing
appeal.
We need enthusiasm. Heat! On
the day of Pentecost the disciples
were so enthused that the natives
said “These men are full of new
wine.” They were hot with a mighty
joy, thoroughly on fire. They acted
as though they were drunk. They
appeared to be fools. Fools for
Christ’s sake. But it seems that the
heat of Pentecost is the only force
that has kept and can keep alive the
force and power of the church.
Would God that we had more Pente
costal fools! Men and women who
could be as much on fire with enthu
siasm for Christ and His kingdom as |
they are ablaze with interest in poli
tics, fashions or art.
We need exvectation. Hope! Hope
that shall not be deferred. Faith
that there is life in God, value in His |
truth, salvation in His Saviour, use |
in our efforts, result in sight. Hoyei
is the breeze that fans the flame of |
enthusiasm. It is animative, A |
hopeless church is like a hopeless;
fight. - Lost! The hope-full eompany
of Christ's followers is gcintillant, vi- |
brant with energy in full, majestic |
play, invincible, '
What we need we may secure. And
as Joshua and the Jews! ‘‘The Lord
thy God is with thee whithersoever |
thou goest,” Believe it. Receive |
Him., Trust Him, 5
Let no man belittle the value of |
courage. They were a gloomy band
in blue who ran from Early at Cedar |
Creek. Vincible, discouraged, dis
gusted, fearful! But when Sheridan
gsped from Winchester to their head
rout became victorious frenzy. The |
courage of Sheridan infused hearti
into his men. Courage has written |
October, 'G4, large and lasting upon |
the tablets of valor. It was not an
easy matter for Lincoln to declare |
against the wisest counsel of his most 1
devoted friends that “A house divided |
against itself,” ‘““A nation half slave |
and half free,” could not endure. |
It lost him a legislative election. It |
made him President. Without trans- |
cendent courage a hero would have |
been undiscovered. IJeart in the |
martyr was the motive that sowed the |
blood seed of the ¢hurch. ‘
Let no man underrate enthusiasm, |
Israel was at Eben-ezer. The Philis- |
tines were pitched at Aphek. The
ark was at Shiloh. They met. Israel
was beaten. Thereafter the ark of
the eovenant was brought into their
midst. And the Scriptures tell us
“when the ark of the covenant of the
Lord came into the camp all Israel
shouted with a great shout, so that 3
the earth rang again.” It matters |
little for our purpose what was the |
outcome of the ensuing conflict. ‘““The |
earth rang again.” Enthusiasm |
reigned. The beaten hosts again !
took up their arms. Faithlessness[
gave place to hope. They were re- |
wvivified. What were the Crusades |
without enthusiasm, or the victories
of the church? }
Forget not expectation. In the |
hope of everlasting glory Paul en- |
dured stripes, buffetings and terrors.
Hildebrand planned the glories ofl
Romanism, that found expression in |
the reigns of Innocent 111. and Boni- 1
face VIII., in hope. Henry Wa.rd;
Beecher went to England in the dark- |
est days of civil strife to fight a quin
tuple, oratorical and moral battle for
his country and the right. He was
knocked, scoffed, threatened, mal
treated. But in hope he talked and
battled on. At last faith found its|
victory. Commercial England yielded |
to God Almighty as He spake through |
His latter-day evangel of truth. i
All these men, in their divers|
fields and under these divers condi- |
tions, were encouraged, enthused,
hopeful. They were enheartened, |
augmented in zeal, enlarged in their |
capacities through richest expecta- |
tions, because they heard, even as|
Joshua, the voice of the Lord saying;L
unto them, “The Lord thy God is |
with thee whithersoever thou goest.” |
There is no psychological impetusi
more profound than . this. This is the
mainspring of human power. It is |
the dynamic of human endeavor. The ;
consciousness and -certainty of the|
reality of a sustaining Cod is the su-!
pernal motive of all life. Shall we |
not realize its appeal and scope?‘
“The Lord thy God is with thee."l
‘“Be not afraid.” “Have not I com-|
manded thee?” Hear Him? This is|
comfort, joy, peace. Hear Him!|
Listen! ]
Irving Square Preshyterian Church, |
Brooklyn, New York. i
e e e %
The Triple Injury. . t
Talking people down behind their'
backs is about as ingenious and far
reaching a kind of sin as the Devil
has yet invented. For such a missila
kills three birds with one stone. It
injures the one talked about, the one
talking and the one talked to. A rep~
utation is' smirched every time we
pass on an unnecessary criticism of a
fellow-being. Our own character and
self-control are weakened with every
such word. And the mind of the|
listener is poisoned; he who ought to |
be helped to see and think about the |
best in others has been degraded, part |
way at least, toward the unworthiness |
of our own low level. Once in a
while an almost knock-out blow isf
given to this unworthy and unfair
kind of fighting by some one’s quietly
mentioning a good quality in the ab
sent person who is being criticised.
This will almost invariably bring gos- |
sip to an abrupt close. We shall do |
well to end others’ gossip by this|
means; and we shall do still better to |
end our own before it begins. {
“The Only Remedy For Sin.” i
We preach Jesus as the Lamb of
God, which taketh away the sin of the |
world. This is the old, old story; it
is a very simple story, but the telling
of it will save the people. Keep to
that Gospel. |
Many have lost faith in it. It is!
hoped that people will now be saved
by new socialistic arrangements, by |
moral precepts, by amusementg, by
societies, and what not. You that
are sent to preach Christ, if you take |
to deing something else, and become
philosophical, socialistic, philan- |
thropie, and all that, what is to be-!
come of the spiritual nature of men?
Keep you to your work, go and
preach Christ to the people,
I have not lost faith in the old
Gospel. No; my faith in it grows as
I see the speedy failure of all the
quackeries of succeeding years. The
methods of the modern school are a
bottle of smoke; Christ crucified is'
the only remedy fur sin.—Spurgeon, |
| God Knows Mec. ;
My life is not what I have chosen, |
I often long for quict, for reading and |
for thought. It secems to me to be a
very paradise to be able to read, to
think, to go into deeper things, gath
er the glorious riches of intellectual
culture. God has forbidden it in lis |
providence. I must spend hours in
receiving people who speak to m'e‘
about all manner of trifles, must re
ply to letters about nothing, must en- |
gage in public work on cverything,l
employ my life on what seems uncon
genial, vanithing, temporary waste, ’
Yet God knows me better than I}
know myself. He knows iny gifts, |
my powers, my failings and wcak- |
nesses, what I can,do and what I can- |
not do, So I desire to be led, zad |
not to lead—to follow Him. I am |
quite sure that He has thus enabled |
me to do a great deal more, in what
seemed to be almost a waste of life, |
in advancing His kingdom, than I |
would have done in any other way."
I am sure of that.—Norman McLeod. ‘.
True to One's Own.
No man can serve his Father by
neglecting his own children,
DECLINED.
Foreign Suftor—l would give wup
ten thousand milreis to win your
love.
Miss Pittsburg—How much is that
in United States money?
Suitor—Almost five dollars!—Puck.
it o G
ECZEMA CURED,
J. R. Maxwell, Atlanta, Ga., says: “I
guffered agony with a sovere case of ecze
ma. Tried six different remedies and was
in despair, when a neighbor told me to try
fhuptrine's TeErTERINE, After using &3
worth of your TerTERINE and soap lam
completely cured. I cannot saytoo much
in its praise.” TETTERINE at druggists or
by mail 50c, Soap 28e. J. T. BHUPTRINE,
Dept. A, Savannah, Ga.
A DOUBTFUL COMPLIMENT.
“The professor says my bathing
suit is rather exiguous.”
“Is that a compliment?”
“I don’t know. I'm going after the
dictionary now.”"—Kansas City Jour
nal,
Mu.\\'insiow’s Soothing{Syrup for Children
teething, softens the gumy, reduces inflamma:
tion.allavs pain. cures wind colic. 25c a bottle
The farmer who goes in debt to
make a crop is not working for him
self,
s'o Drive Out Malaria and Baild Up
the Bystem
Take the Old Standard Grove's Taste
Lrss CHILL Toxic. Yoa know what you
are takiug. The formula ig plainly grinted
on evurg ottle, showing it is simply Qui
nine and Iron in a tasteless torm, aad the
most effectual formn. For grown peopls
end oblidren. 30e. T - 7
The old expression, “Make one hand
wash another,” does not apply to the
farm hands,
IRRS M s 3ot
CONSTIPATION AND BILIOUSNESS,
Constipation sends poisonous matter
bounding through the body. Dull headache,
Sour Stomach, Feted Breath, Bleared Eyes,
Loss of Eueng and Appetite are the surest
signs of the afiiction. Youna’s Liver Pirus
positively cure constipation. They awaken
the sluggish liver to better aotion, cleanse
the bowels, strengthen the weakened parts,
induce appetite and aid digestion. Prica
25 cents from your dealer or direct from
the laboratory. Frec sample by mail to any
address. J. M. Youwa, Jr., Waycross, Ga,
The sultan’s brother, who "ag been
kept in confinement for the greater
part of his natural life, called on Ab
dul Hamid and passed the time of
day. Abdul probably remarked, sug
gests the Atlanta Journal, that he
was glad he was “able to be out.”
How's This? 3
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward
for any case of Catarrh that cannot be
cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
1. J, CuENEY & Co., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J.
Cheney for the last 15 vears, and believe
him perfectly honorable in all business
transactions and financially able to carry
out any obligations made by his firm.
WaLbiNa, ‘i{xNNAs & Marvin, Whole
sale Druggists, Toledo, O,
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act
ingdirectly upon the blood and mucuous sur
faces of the system. Testimonials sent free.
Price, 75¢. Fer bottle. Sold by all Drugiists.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation,
‘CAUSES A COLDNESS.
“How do you heat your house?”
“With a furnace.”
“And how do you cool it off?”
“Family misunderstandings.”—
Nashville American
i B‘OWER32 oy, ‘\\\‘\ \\\
@ T \\\ \\\\'T 3
sty pra® )! K
The deanest kghtest PANK |
and most comfortable J..% ASeR
POMMEL Mgk
SLICKER [9 o
e sams fme R
Ci S ¢ i
end because it ';/r’ f )\t
wears longest A Y, 7.8
*390 Everywhere(l| $\ Gl >
Every garment, { \ ‘
guaranteed )
v sonmara I
Nu BI AN Makes the LivereWell
O R YT W S i
W ' Restores Healthy Action to the
tEA Kidneys. Purifies the Blood.
TRY A BOTTLE Ask your dealer for it
& TliE . R. WATKINS MEDICAL CO.
g Y s WINONA, MINNEBOT A, sremcesmss
b. SV M nkes 70 Different Artioles: Houschold Remedies, Flavoring
X okt st 4, ::.’ A Extracts all Kinds, Tollet Preparations, Fine Soaps, Ete.
S 4 Canvassers Wanted in Every County.
-‘"‘,;;: 25 %‘i"y; 40 Years Experience, 88,000,060 Output.
i 45” BEST PROPOSITION EYER QFfEREC AGENTS
—— TR rr——m———
Color more goods brighter and faster colors than any other dye. One 10c package colors all fibers, They dye In cold water better than any other dye, You |
%an dve any garment without ripping apari. Write for free booklet—How to Lye, Bleash and Mix Colors, MONROE DRUG CO., Quincy, Htlinoiy, |
A
Lady’s
Words
e
1;5 ',_’—,' “’. A o p e, '?:1':.";‘1 prre A ‘M“-’ "—‘ "
Hiad PROTECT YOUR LUNGS
e It cough you catch ectiles on your lungs, you have weak lungs. J¥g)
&7 Don'm,tho ough hang on. A *“hang-on” cough is dlngm:?l’o J #
& b e : ous lo Wy
@ strong lungs- übl{ 10 to weak ones, rid of it in the boginning
B with Piso’s Cuwe. [t acts promptly and effectively ; allays tho irntation, [t
K@Y reduces the congestion, freés the throat of Ehlogm, clears the clogged air Fd
el p and stops the cough. For nearly half a century the unsurpassed Bg
¥ nmior the worst forms of coughs, coéa and chest complaints has been BE
PISO’S CURE |
AT R 00, b B Yo ie o]
CAN A >
'MEN AT THE SAME TIME &
Fove themboth squaly, but a 8 diferegt e
rs. Ru verett in her novel, *
’ MAN FROM WALL STREET" (the best forbid
| den love story published), claiins that a woman
l can. Whatdo you think aboutit ?
For the best letter, 500
| sl 50.00 words orless, showing
I the author right, I wil}
5 PRIZES FaySl’S. For the best
j etter which proves
| her in ermr.SlS‘.) For
the two, second best, one on eitherside, $lO each,
- Two, third best, one on either side, $5 each, Four,
fourth best, two on either side, $2.50 each. Forty,
fifth best, twentY on each side, $1.50 each, Con
testcloses Mch, 1,199, Awards paid Mch, 31, 'O9
Regular Price $1.50.-My PP:ice By Mall SI.OO
i L. “H. HAMMITT, 400 MANMATTAN AYE,, NEW YORK CITY
et A B ol bbb Lo S G .
{CLAesiFIED ADVERTISEMENTS
o OUREFORPILEN
SAMPLE TREATMENT of Red Cross Pile
and Fistula Cure and hook explaining Piles
sent free. REA (‘().,D'\HL.lN“Mane-n|mlls,;\lhm
THE VOTE GETTER.
Knicker—ls he a vote getter?
Bocker—Yes, he gets them all
against him.—New York Sun.
Cagpdlne Cures Indigestion Pains,
Bele mg, Sour Stomach, and ljeartbum,
from whatever cause. It's Liquid. Effecta
unmedut%&. Doctors prencr‘hm it. 10c.,
2c., and 80c., at drug stores.
The man who does not have to ac
count to some good woman for his
goings and comings never amounts to
much,
CURES ALL ITCHING ERUPTIONS,
Glencoe, Md., Nov. 21st, 1907: I have had
eczema on my, imnds for 18 years, and have
tried everything. I have been using TETe
TERINE 4 days and the results are great,*
Signed, Mrs, M. Harvey. TETTERINE is tho
surest, safest, speediest oure for eczema
and all other skin disoases, Sold }}y druge
gists or sent by mail for 50c. by J. T, Snure
TRINE, Dept. A, Bavannah, Ga.
A large Baptist church at Santa
Rosa, Cal, was built from the wood
of a single California redwood tree,
BABY'S AWFUL ITCHING HUMOR.
Nothing Would Help Him—>Mother
Almost in Despair—Owes Quick
- Cure to Cuticura.
“Several months ago, my little boy began
to break out with itching sores. I doctored
him, but as soon as I got them healed up
in one place they would break cut in an
other, I was almost in despair. 1 could
not get anything that would help him.
Then I began to use Cuticura Soap and
Cuticura Ointment, and after using them
three times the sores commenced to heal.
He is now well, and not a scar is left on
his body.' They have never returned nor
left. him with bad blood, as one avould
think. Cuticura Remedies are the best 1
have ever tried, and I shall highly recom
mend them to any one who is suffering
likewise. Mrs. William Geeding, 102 Wash. |
ington St., Attica, Ind., July 22, 1907.”
To the man who ;17;(‘11:1—1‘0; pleas
ure, the realization is never satistac
tory. |
Little Bright Eyes Again. 1
Not the Spirit Medium this time,
but a medium of far greater wonder,
one that brings back the brightness
and vigor to poor, sore, inflamed eyes
with but a few external applications.
Who is so ignorant not to know of
Dr. Mitchell’s famous eye salve? Sold
everywhere. Price 25 cents.
~ . THE INOPPORTUNIST.
He has had his joys and sorrows, b
Had his lendings and his borrows,
Had his yesterdays, to-morrows, ]
~ With their hopes that come and g 0;
Had a fair share of life's blessing,
Done a whole lot of wrong guessing
That knocked out his best finessing
With a sort of back-hand blow, ’
Though he knows he’s rather clever,
Yet somehow he can not sever
From bad luck, for never ever
Does he feel he's had a show.
—Puck. -
} THE HUNT.
Ursus Major—What's the matter? |
Ursus Minor—l see a shooting gtar 5
coming.—New York Sun. |
R =
It’s not so much what we say, but what other ladies say, about Cardui, as a cure for female ail
ments, that we ask you to believe.
Cardui has benefited so many ladies, that it should surely help you. Being prepared from harme
less, vegetable ingredients, it ig a safe, natural medicine, that can always be relied on. '
) Mrs. Verna Wallace, of Sanger, Tex., writes: “Cardui has done more for me than I
, ‘ “‘ - can describe. Tast spring I was taken with female inflammation and consulted a
: Q h doctor, but to no avail, so I took Cardus, and inside of three days, I was able to do my
A bousework. Since then my trouble has never returned.” Try i,
Seagulls of Auchmithie,
In the fishing village of Auchmithie
you may frequently witness seagulls
flying into the houses of the fisher
men and partaking of food from their
hands. One of these sea birds was
in the habit of staying in a fisher
man's house all the year round ex
cept at the breeding season, when it
left. About a fortnight ago, while
the gull was away, the fisherman re.
moved his home some three and a
half miles from the former place.
The fisherman never expected to
2e his old friend the gull again.
It was therefore, much to his aston
fshmént that he beheld on a reccit
Sunday the sea bird come walking
into his new residence with stately
steps to resume his old familiar‘ties
and honsehold wavs.—London Specta
tor
WANTED A WIFE.
“So this patent savings bank isn’t
complete enough for you?"
“No; I want something that will
take my pay envelope away from
me every Saturday and dole me out
money by the nickel.”
“Then you'd better get married.”—
Washington Herald,
SRR e
(. AN
e QAR A N
b NeOZ BN -
e oA
g i
. ¢
RO e
- N N T S
R A
‘ 1:?:}_;{;:::‘:5:" y:
72 R T+~ 2X i S
TS 5
Shrs = E o
Proof is inexhaustible that
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound carries women safely
through the Change of Life.
Read the letter Mrs. E. Hanson,
304 L. Long St., Columbus, Ohio,
writes to Mrs. Pinkham :
“I was passing through the Change
of Life, and suffered from nervous
ness, headaches, and other annoying
symptoms. My doctor told me that
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Co:n
pouynd was good for me, and since tak
ing\t I feel so much better, and I can
again do my own work. I never forget
to tell my friends what Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound did for me
during this trying period.”
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Com}')ouml, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ills,
and has positively cured thousands of
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera
tion, fibroid tumors, irregularitics,
periodic pains, backache, that bear
ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges
tion, dizziness or nervous prostration.
Why don’t you try it ? ( i
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick
women to write her for advice,
She has guided thousands to
‘health. Address, Lynn, Mass.,
&r 28~ Putboth in and mix
o) .1/ VI e
WL 00, 5 B '
Ve V2T St 2255 sfi} i (
“& /]szi cile 8 | )
AL e o\ "““-.7 (A i s o
.\ o= m"/)“"ffi//
PR T\
': _’:"."" '\' [ s ,'4'//4 .")-"‘_-i -
N 0 Y VR & The Last Call
B ‘ < —— ‘ ) -
i&& e A We have been telling you all
— Sl ‘g along to use not less than
T ! 6 per cent. of Potash in your
wheat fertilizer,
We have told you how to add 6 per cent. of Potash to bone or phos-
Phate, by mixing 100 Ibs. of either with 15 Ibs. of Muriate of Potash.
Have you arranged to do this! To increase your wheat crop at a
cost of lese than () cents per bushel?
It not, telephone to your dealer to get the Potash at once—or, to
furnish you with a 2-8-6 fertilizer for your wheat—equally good for rye.
Potash is profit, But next week we may be too late to get the goode
delivered iu time for use. Therefore, do it now,
mtaini ¢s about goi
Crope, ey Sy Sqataiaing acts abo P
UERMAN KALI WORKS, Candler Building, Atlanta, Georgia
New York—93 Nassau Street Chicago=Monadnock Bullding
i
SREENIR
SHOE
Quality
appeal to the Well-Informed in evemy
‘walk of life and are essential to permanent
success and creditable standing. Accor
ingly, it is not claimed that Syrup of Figs
and Elixir off Senna is the only remedy of
known value, but one of many reasons
why it is the best of personal and family
laxatives is the fact that it cleanses,
sweetens and relieves the internal organs
on which it acts without any debilitating
after effects and without having to increase
the quantity from time to time.
It acts pleasantly and naturally and
truly as a laxative, and its component
parts are known to and approved by
physicians, as it is free from all objeetion
able substances. To get its beneficial
cffects always purchase the genuine—-
manufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Co., only, and for sale by all leading drug
gists.
e —————————————————————————————————
The Philadelphia Record thinks
that there is a sympathetic re
lation between the matrimonial
market and the meat market. When
meat is cheap marriages increase;
when beef goes up the bonds of
matrimony are at a &scount. The
reason is obvious. But the closeness
of the relation between meat quota
tions and the number of marriages
has not heen noticed,
oo st it Ao
HELP Insist on Having
rorn D, MARTEL'S Preparation
WOMEN "™ Eiosmasd Shmedr,
send for book, “Reliet for Women.”
FRENCH DRUG CO., 30 W, 32d St., N. Y. City.
e ———————————————————— e
m‘:—“ TRV !t‘.‘l?.:'“‘},‘.“{ r:u::;‘ufl';::‘é:‘wm
AR fl making their own Steel fln: §
= 0 tGiuarantesd for 600 horse power ltn.
W = “ Catalogue and discounts. Address :
ZIMMERMANN STEEL CO., - Lone Tree, lowa.
RHEUMATISM ;v curable; thousands oured; ro
low. Write quick. DR. S. '{ ’{Vl(lull’l‘,i'cru, Ind.
PRI
| _AT THIS PRICE $ 85
i It buys a Strict W
i ;fl, h-Class 54 FREX
| SEWING REBAID
TOYoU
IMACHINE Srarion |
b GUARANTEED §O YEARS
f§ And hags all tho up-to-date improvements that
f every lady apprecintes, 1t is splendidly built of
i B thoroughly dependablo material and hnndsomely
44 finished, Has elegant Oak Drop Lens 6-Drawer Cabe
fl inct, completo Seteof Attachments, full inetruce
7 i tons how to use them, and the outfit will be sent
Wl you “Froight Free” on
i 0 AT LGP AU eA O
IBYS FREE TRIAL
T ————— e ————
L e s
\ .@ Agent's 'fxrum,s and sells
W e S S ing expenses, & exactly
| N U, i iz heg
{ \"fl"” i *Ng H Bend ot ()N('l'l‘for o%’fi
| R g\”lm,» | M BIG NEW FRER ,
d W/ \e SEWING MACHINE
& ‘.) \)\) 1o CATALOGUE
) N 6 compl
p e A Rrnotive vook o I 8
s MG R \ character ever publighe
\ 1 ed in the South, 1t pict
- - - ures and describes nofi
) test Jine of post: vmélryc flfl%&&%g‘:
gfi:flfi:. ever offored, go are the largest Bow}:s
i hine distributors in the louh!’:‘.:nd. at -giul
ed, for cult!{mranlad. our hines un
@gn lof inty Catniogio, describes wnd. prices
5 ‘Btove g Stoves, Phonographs Dinner
Ao e ]
m’tnotlonm'wmouwu&n '
MAILSEY, SHIPP & CO.,
Dopt, B, 41 8. Forsyth Sireet, ATLANTA, GEORGIA
T —————
ek Thompson's Eye Water
i A —
FOR MEN
The fonnda?ion of shoe
comfort Jn_unt 16 at the bot
tons, and if the butwl;l of
the figoe is different from
‘tlho ttom of vonr ‘l’oot k
oes not fit, HKKERME
shoes are Dbuilt from the
Yround u%eto FIT. Loop
or rhe label. If you don't
easi ’y flug theso shoes, write
us for directions how to
secure them,
FRED. F. FIELD CO.
BROCKTON, MASS,