University of South Carolina Libraries
' * v>'-'r'^-V " ." - V. ..yc- -iV'-V " .; "r? . " ' ' J ' t~7h& Puifo/t f lihl I ? y.7;, , ' A SERMON ' <?&?j8fib ?/ T/1e I*E'/~ fjaW//ir.NDE^N^^^Subject: Jesus the Teacher. Brooklj'n, N. Y.?Preaching at the Irving Square Presbyterian Church, I Hamburg avenue and Wierfield Btreet, on the theme "Jesus the Teacher," the Rev. Ira Wemmell Henderson, pastor, took a^ his text Matt. 5:2, "And He opened Hl?s mouth and taught them." He said: X From the days of His youth when He put the wise men of the temple to shame to those last hours among Hi^$ disciples Jesus was a teacher. The (o nno a'nnws 11 <3 how ICaV'HCl IC IUC UliV- nuu wui/ ... to do things, how to achieve, how to attain. Mere theorists may tell us what we ought to do and be; convincing talkers may tell us what the 'end of true effort is; strong preachers may tell why we should be thus and so; but to the teacher alone is given the task and the power to show to us how we may become what theorists, talkers and preachers declare we ought to be. Fundamentally no teacher is of good report save bis teaching comes from experience. The man who is to > teach us how to do and become must, first of all, have attained. We cannot impart to others what we do not know ourselves. Ignorance cannot enlighten. Jesus nad this rich personal experience in spiritual things, and in the teaching of eternal principles of the spiritual life He is unsumassed. This we will take for granted in our estimate of Jesus as a teacher. Let us/consider some of the minor qualities which inhered to the \ (preaching rf the Christ. Our Lord * taught simply, searchingly, realistically, purposefully, authoritatively. The teaching of Christ was simple. He did not try to mix matters or the mind of meij with complex statements. Deeper than the sea, houndless in their extent and scope, the truths which Jesus taught were yet simply told, were couched in the language of childhood, and understandable to all. The simplicity of i the teaching of Jesus is charming. The message of Christ does not hecome silly merely because it is simple. It is not a message for the weak-minded. Rather is it a stay for those of the finest and the broadest intellect. Strong and sensible in its simplicity the gospel of Christ reaches the hearts of all men. it ' The teaching of Christ was searching. How He burned through sham and cant and hyprocrisy, and hit at the very vitals of sin. How often He whipped the gates off at the whited sepulchres, and revealed the hidden iniquity within. No wolf under sheepskin was safe near Jesus. Jesus didn't take superficial glances; He probed deep and to the bottom to reveal the covered truth or error as j the case might be. With the water from the well Christ leads us to discern the everlasting springs of eter.v nal life. The good Samaritan is the example of mercy. The Pharisees and the scribes show us the folly of serving of the letter of the law for its own sake. The boy who grew faint, homesick, and went back into his father's arras, is the type of us all. What could search out truth , more finally than that story of a i misspent life? "Lord, lord," we hear men cry, and we know that the Christ life is not an affair of declaration so much as of doing. Jesus taught realistically. He did not go into metaphysics to explain His points, but out into the world. . He didn't pay much attention to philosophic language. He had little time for the impractical. But how ** " - "rT- J- + Gin 4c realistic ne ma.ue mo n uw. k/4U | exemplified in the erring son. Sel?c Ifishness is shown in the elder brother. The blowing wind is the illustration of the Spirit. The vine reveals the essential union of Christians with Christ. The two praying + in the temple mark sharply the difference between self-satisfaction and religious self-sufficiency, and the soul humble in its sense of guilt. That fellow who heaped money in his coffers and grain in his barns has a lesson for every one. What difference does it make to you who and how many are the sinners forgiven, i when once you grasp the import of! the parable of the paying off of the J men who labored in the vineyard? j fr These are enough to show us how j v realistic was the teaching of Christ. He forced His points home in the language of the fields, the temple, the streets, the firesides. His illustrations dealt not with impossible situations but with daily occurrences j which might easily be paralleled in the experience of each of His hearers. They knew how self-righteous & the leaders of the people were. They had more than once seen a woman sweep her house iu search of a coin. It was no new thing to learn that a shepherd would go out into the mountains leaving the flock behind to lend succor to some lost and loneiv is>mh There were tares enough and sufficient mixed ground in Judea to enable the farming element to see the point of the parables of the tares ? and the sower. They knew as well as we know the pervading principle of yeast. These and a multitude of other realistic illustrations in the teaching of Jesus gave charm -to His words and filled His messages with power. And the preaching of men .will lose all its freshness and efficiency just so soon as the element of the f realistic which holds personal inter ' est is left out. j Then, too, Jesus taught with purpose, with an end in view. He didn't / talk just to hear Himself talk. He did not engage in vocal gymnastics after the manner of so many speak- j ers of this day and generation. He j did not talk because there was "easy money" to be made that way, or in order that He might get notoriety. On the contrary, Jesus talked pur?" posefully. It meant danger for "Jesus to take the stand He did. He ran many and great risks in the speaking of the truth. But the Master had a purpose. He wanted men to see what sin is; how defiling it Is; how disintegrating rnd disgusting its ef% mSbS .y., . v $>>v * * ' " t fects are. He wished humanity to see and to know that sin is disobedience to God; that it stains and soils the souls of men; that it wrecks and destroys all that is best in man; how useless it is. On the other hand, He wanted men to know what is the nature of God and His character; what is the Kingdom of Heaven, its entrance?conaitionsandthe jcys to be attained therein; what is the glory of a godly life. Christ wanted to assure men that God is love; He wished them to know that the Kingdom of Heaven is pres-ti-oll as fntnrp a lfincdom of ViXty IAQ " V*? v?v?aa V?| ?? ? ? 0 ? the Spirit and over-ruling all material life. Jesus had a purpose. Therefore He pictured the new birth to men as the entrance requirement for the Heavenly Kingdom and the joys of eternal life with God. Jesus had a purpose to show men God, sin, redemption, the kingdom. Having a deep and fixed purpose, He taught convincingly from a convicted life. In the last place, Jesus taught as one having authority. Mark tells us that at the synagogue at Capernaum the Jews were astonished at the teaching of Jesus?that is to say, they were almost struck dumb. Contrary to the scribes, Jesus talked with authority. Speaking from his own intimate, personal knowledge of the -* -?J ? nf TJlr, moceooro TPCHIB iruiu (1UU punci Ui 11 IS uiw^?ev ,,~w asked the aid and witness of no man to prove His points. The scribes cited precedent as justification for their legalism. Jesus spoke truth under the influence of the Spirit of God. The scribes rested their case on external authorities; Jesus had the witness of the Spirit of His own' life. The Pharisees made tradition the test; Christ made the Spirit It is *o wonder that they were astonished. The gulf is wide between the sanctions of tradition and the sanction of the Spirit. Traditions choke the truth; the Spirit givpth life. The hope and strength of worn-out theories is tradition and it is the chief enemy of the Spirit. No man of sense will, of course, break with the past merely through perverseness. On the other hand, no one should allow the fallacies of the past to deaden a higher life now. To the past all honor; for the present the things of to-day, the hopes and visions of t6morrow. The application is easy. Our promulgation of the truth should be simple. The teachings of Jesus should be applied searchingly to all life in this day. Our method of pre- i sentation should be realistic, not abstruse, that men may feel and grasp and hold the truth. There ought to be no lack of purpose in our teaching of the way unto eternal life. We tell men, or we should, the Gospel ctorv not to amuse them, but to save their immortal souls. And lastly, and most important of all, we must J te?.ch with authority?not dogmat- ; ically or narrowly?but with the sureuess that comes from spiritual experience. Calm the Imagination. Tou will tell me that calmness of the imagination does not depend on ourselves. Pardon me, it depends very much on ourselves. When we cut off all the uneasy thoughts ! in which the will has a share, we greatly diminish those which are involuntary. God will watch over your imagination if you do not keep up the disturbance by your scrupulous reflections. Abide in peace. Do not listen to your imagination, which is too lively and too full of fancies. This ex- I cessive activity consumes your body, ' ' 1 ' life Vnil ana anes up jum mn^u ...... are preying upon yourseif uselessly. It is merely your restlessness which hinders peace and > interior grace. How can you expect God to speak in that gentle and inward voice which melts the soul, when you are mak- I ing so much voice with your rapid reflections. Be silent, and God will speak again.?Fenelon. The Living Hope. | "The risen Christ is the hope or I the believer?Christ, not in the | heavens, but in the heart. And this hope we have as an anchor of [ the soul, both sure and steadfast, and which entereth into that within the veil. There is saving power in this hope, for it is not a theory or j dogma or experience, but a Divine j Personality, even Jesus, the Fore- j runner, who has for us entered the j upper sanctuary, and there ever I liveth to make intercession for us,! and hath begotten us unto a living | hope by His resurrection from the dead."?Pittsburg Christian Advo* cate. The Spiritual Magnet. That great magnet, with its metal frame andpits coil of wire, and that strange magnetic power, reaches out and takes hold of' those little pieces of metal, between which and itself there is an affinity, and it gives them some of its power through the contact, Christ is the Great Spiritual Life Magnet, "And I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all men unto Me," and faith in Him puts us in spiritual affinity with Himself, and through it He holds us to Himself and gives us power of His power, and purity of His purity, and character of His character, and life of His i life. Fulfilling the Plan. The engineer of the Brooklyn i bridge was confined to his bed when it was in process of construction. Day after day, looking from his window, he saw its piers rise and the spider's web of cables cunningly formed. It had all been planned and held in his mind's eye; and when it was finished, being asked how it looked, he said, "It is precisely what I expected it to be." Oh, would that Christ might be able to say the same of us; that our life and character are according to His plans and pur* poses! We isciong to uou. We may throw ourselves away, but God will not throw us away. We belong to Him still, and He "gathereth up the fragments which remain, that nothing be lost." In order to become pure, we may need sharp suffering, and then God will not hesitate to inhict it. It is thus that God's love for the soul and its worth appear eminently, in that He will not let us destroy ourselves.? James Freeman Clarke. - " * ?-* - ' .v. s* * 7 MMMBWMMMMMH??BM?? SULPHUR BATHS AT HOME _ X They Heal the Skin and Take Away Its Impurities. Sulphur baths heal Skin Diseases, and give the body a wholesome glow. Now you don't have to go off to a high-priced resort to get them. Put a few spoonfuls of Hancock's Liquid Sulphur in the hot water, and you get a perfect Sulphur bath right in your own home. Apply Hancock's Liquid Sulphur to the affected parts, and Ezcema and other stubborn skin troubles are quickly cured. Dr. R. H. Thomas, of Valdosta, Ga., was cured of a painful skin trouble, and he praises it in the highest terms. Your druggist sells it. Hancock's Liquid Sulphur Ointment is the best cure for Sores, Pimples, Blackheads and all inflammation. Gives a soft, velvety skin. A company of settlers, in naming their new town called it Dictionary, because as they said1, "that's the only place where peace, prosperity and happiness are always found." a ft.i ? t. -i ? argo rteu ottiuiuu uemg jjilli m texture, and deep red in color, makes the most delicious salad. Several salad recipes are given in the Argo Cook Book. GENERATIONS OF EL/BOWS. Stella: "Don't they put on style?" Beila: "Yes; it Is only a generation from the elbow grease to elbow sleeves."?New York Sun. WHERE DOCTORS FAILED. An Interesting Caso From Salem, the Capital of Oregon. F. A. Sutton, R. F. D. No. 4, Salem; Oregon, says: "Acute attacks of kidaey disease and . rheumatism laid me up oft and on , $||?||k&. \ for ten years. Aw111111^? ful pains started fTOm ^e kidneys 'SSfc* coursed down through my limbs. I sought the best # medical treatment, ' but in vain, and wben I began using Doan's Kidney Pills I was walking with two canes and suffering continual pains, headaches and 6leepless nights. I improved quickly and after taking three boxes felt better than I had for 15 years. The effects have been lasting." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. -BEAT TO IT. Merchant: "Yes, w? are In need of a janitor. "Where were you employed last?" Applicant: "In a bank, sir." Merchant: "Bid you clean it out?" j " 1 *T*Via /vaC'Tllpr I Applicant.: i>u, bh. ? ? did -that."?Chicago Daily News. Argo Argo Argo Argo Argo Argo Argo Argo Argo Argo. Had Two Wive? and Two Hearts. A remarkable court decision in a bigamy, case has been handed dfltan at Perugia. Italy, where Charles Balliori, a tailor, was acquitted of a charge of having two wives on the ground that he has two hearts. Four physicians testified that Balliori (had two hearts, and .the court at once decided ! that this was ampJe reason for him to marry two women.?New York World. ALMOST A SOLID SORE. Skin Disease From Birth?Fortune Spent on Her Without Benefit? Doctor Cured Her With Cuticnra. "J have a cousin in Rockingham Co. who once had a skin disease from her birth until she was sis years of age. Her father had spent a fortune on her to get her cured and none of the treatments did her any good. Old Dr. 0 suggested that he try the Cuticura Remedies, which he did. When he commenced to use it the child was almost in a solid scab. He had used it about two months and the child was well and I could hardly believe she was the same child. Her skin was as soft as a baby's without a scar on it. I have not j seen her in seventeen years, but 1 have heard from her and the last time J heard j from her she was well. Mrs. W. P. ingle, | Burlington, N. C., June 16, 1905." j THE PARTY LIME, Hubby: "Why didn't you come to I the door and let me in?" j Wife: MI couldn't, George. Our neighbor was talking to somebody and I was at the 'phone."?Cleveland Plain Dealer. The Alaska Packers Association have taken the highest awards at every World's Fair where their goods j were shown. At St. Louis World's Fair the Red Salmon took the grand prize. The only grand prize ever given to Salmon at any World's Fair. The Argo Red Salmon is the best that is packed. NOT ROMAN-TIC. "And you refused Dr. Slasher? Such & future." "I know it, but always thinking of nothing but business. Why, while he was b-olding my hand, after he had proposed, he drew out his watch and began to count my pulse."?Chicago Journal. 6*c?us?_?f th< - * ' ' *? ?- " a/ ... *21 Washington College Girls Indlgnanni When Bishop Scadding of the dio-1 cese of Oregon, in the Episcop^ Church, said that western girls ar I cheaper to entertain than the eastern I variety,-. he was- unaware that he i touched a tender spot in the makeup j of the girls at the University of WashI ingtcn. The 'varsity young women say { j the Bishop does not know whereof .J j he speaks, or he would not make suchlj assertions. $ I The girls say that a gaze at Mount{ Rainier is not- a substitute for ice j I cream and that they demand other j articles of diet besides sea food, rney also intimate that the Bishop has not' been in the habit of entertaining the sweet girl graduates of the land or | he would not say they are cheap to J feed. The girls do not want the impression to get out, however, that they are expensive luxuries and that they "bleed" the .youthful swain6 of tho west. A happy medium is the keynote of their sentiments.?The Seattle Times. HIM. Ascum: "Did Shea actually ask old Roxley for his daughter's hand?" Wise: "Ye's, and he claims he compelled the old man to toe the mark." Ascum: "You don't say?" Wise: "Yes, but he was the mark." ?The Catholic Standard and Times. : FITS,St. Vitus'Dancc:Nervoas Diseases per. manently cured bv Dr. Kline's Great Nerve I Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. I UT. n. ti. iUiae, i^g.,soi arenji,., rutin ; ra. Mexicans as Railroad Laborers. "Mexicans are used to a large extent on railroad construction in the Southwest,'' said R. E. Marshall of Los Angeles,* Cal. "They are the most satisfactory labor the railroad men down there have found. The Mexican is inclined to drink and fight a little, but he is no worse in this respect than the average laborer of the railroad construction class. He will do more work and he is inclined to stick to his job pretty well. "The ordinary Mexican will stay at it about six months if he can hold his job that long. Then he wants to take a trip back home. He will give his foreman notice, perhaps a month beforehand, that he wants to leave for a month with the folks. He receives a nass and away he goes. As soon iie is broke he sends out word that he wants to go to work again, and if there ds anything for him to do .the railroad will haul him back."?Duluth Herald. Strained Eyes Quickly recover their strength if treated withLeonardi's Golden Eye-Lotion. Bloodshot,inflammation and soreness are relieved without pain in one day. Cools, heals and strengthens. Insist on having "Leonard!'s." It makes strong eyes. Guaranteed or money ! refunded. Druggists sell it at 25 cts. %r ! forwarded prepaid on receipt of price by b. B. Leonard! <t Co., Tampa. JFia. | CRUELTY TO FIDO. Mrs. Writuip: "Why did you dis- j charge that nurse girl?" Mrs. De Swell: "She kicked poor little Fido just for biting the baby." ?Utica Observer. Argo Red Salmon Is cleaned and packed entirely by machine, and not touched by hand. A River Wedding. A very pretty river wedding took place at Bray, near Maidenhead. The wedding party /proceeded to and from j Bray Church by electric and steam | i-onnches eailv decked in green and white. The bride's launch?an electric boat ?was lavishly decorated with cherry blossom, lilies and Sip'rea, and when occupied by 'the bride, wearing a lace dress of fhonlton applique trimmed with silver embroidery, and the bridesmaids, in pale mauve eolienne, and bouquets of pink roses, presented a very picturesque sight. Five other j launches followed.- The wedding party started by water from West Court, in Bray Beach, and disembarked and reembarked at the vicarage lawn. The contracting /parties were Miss -Mary rL-vw,t-. Ma vail and Lionel Forbes Bri-dges. The church was crowded I and hundreds of people watched' the bridal procession pass up and down the river.?London Daily Graphic. The milk pans are quickly cleaned and rid of all greasy "feel" when washed in borax and water in the following proportions?one tablespoonful of borax to a quart of water. THE RUSE. "How was it Dr. Knowit got such a big fee from Talkative?" "Because when he was called to attend to Mrs. Talkative for a -slight nervous trouble he told her she had an acute inflammatory verbosity." "Well?" "And recommended absolute quiet as the only means of averting paroxysms of cacaoethes loquendi. She's scared dumb."?Baltimore American. ' CAPUDINE I IMMEDIATELY CURES 3 J &1 TV HEADACHES ^^^BreaKsup C0LD5 IN 6 TO 12 HOURS I Bosk 10c. At Drtftte > ugty, crUily. gray haira* Uaa 4* I * r ; .'.. -,y.v , '>;" ." y.- ,'k:, . _<r,v ... w m #FIRED AND SIGK 1 YET MUST WORK t "Mail may work from sun to sun 1 but woman's work is never dene," f | In order to keep the home neat L I and pretty, the children well dressed | and tidy, women overdo and often I suffer in silence, drifting- along from y bad to worse, knowing well that I n they ought to have help to overcome I gj the pains and aches which daily 8 make life a burden. S It is to these women that Lydia a E. Pin^ham's Vegetable Compound, 1 made from native roots and herbs, 1 comes as a blessing. When the spir its are depressed, the head and back aches, there are dragging-down pain ? reluctance to go anywhere, these i heeded, are soon followed by "! e worj Lydia E. Pinkham's V keeps the feminine organism in a stro Inflammation, Ulceration, displacerc preparing for child-birth and to carry of Life it is most efficient. Mrs. Augustus Lyon, of East Eai ham:?"For a long time I suffered fro of aches and pains in the lower part sleep and had no appetite. Since tak Compound and following the advice ^ new woman and I cannot praise you i xv&rs. rin^nctiu d tuv i Women suffering1 from any form o 1 write Mrs Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. I perience she probably has the verv 3 case. Her advice is free and always h pj f /SxWinte LSAchil I Cures Chills ? "a'ar'a' ^0ver8 of Southern Female C j , , The Second Ol at the head of Souther S^-00 Piano free to tl pean-Americikn Conse For'beaatSuT catalogue address M. W. HAT1 Telegraphy Shorthand Bookkeepingfear main line ttikks run > Telegraph*. THROUGH BUILDING ^N3EWK4N. (3& Medical Department TULANE UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA Its advantages for practical instruction, both in . ample laboratories and abundant hospital mater- I ials, are unequal*d. Free access Is given tc the p Great Charity Hospital with 900 beds and 20,000 I patients annua!!/. Special instruction is ?iven daily I at tho bedside or the sick. The next cession begins I October 21. 1907. For catalogue and information, address PKOK. X. K. CHAILLE. H.l)..Uran, F, U. Drawer 261, NEW ORLEANS, La. TK /TTO IN REFERENCE TO / AV A. 0 JOHN K. DICKEY'S AM Dnliohla PVP WATPP V1U IVVIIUt/IV L4 * a-4 * T t m a. ??? -V It cures sore eye* and granulated lid*. It strengthens weak eye*. 1 Itycool* and soothes a core eje. I It refreshes and strengthens a tired eye. ^ It don't hurt when applied. t It feels good?children don't dread it. ' The genuine always enclosed in a red folding box. ? Avoid imitations or something recommended just as good. For chronic sore eye lids, sties and diseased , condition of roots of eye lathes, nse Dicker's Old Reliable Eye Salve. At all stores or by mail 2pcte. x DICKEY DRUG CO., Box 50, Iirletoi, Tenn. | VANDERBILT School1 | j J.T. ERWINj A B.,A.H?Prin? ElKTON, KY. j PBEPAREfi BOVS FOR BEST COD- I LEOE8 and UNIVERSITIES- Location I high and healtbftal. Large Campus, Equip- I meat best In the fioutl^ Strong Faculty, good town, no saloons In County, Athletics I encouraged. Send for catalogue giving In I detail what TH1S-EXCEI.DE.VT SCHOOL I OFFERS TOUR BOY. Opens Sept. 3, '4)7 1 WhTte i A fjK^^^^Reflects til tfce good BR points is vehicle bcild- ?| | k ^ io<. Ittey ?re jimnacn, teHHs I ; JP^WBBESUk aod ia a claaa strictly 52 ^F by tbamfclvea for du- 0 M rsbility. "A-Gratle" K i l^lsH ATCOHPAWI^M f ECLIPSE TIDY HOLDERS j | ft jf Hold tidies on your chairs : B H perfectly secure; you can | I HI) njjpJ^irl H aesisrn them several pret- i I wT\v!ai^^ I a & w*y?* W? 88n<i j m ^B8trUC^?n8 W*4k &id . ^1 ll Hn ~a SPECIAL Seven days a MiMliavWiiini8iVn?B Advertising Offer? 2 Mention this paper and send us an order for 3 a or more Tidy Holders and we will make you a *J (present of a set of fine Pillow Sham Holders. <s Order today and avoid the rush. Address? 9 TRIO NOViiTY CO. ATLANTA- GA. I A i 4 Side and Centra ? Atlas Engines |I LARGESTOCK LOMBARD J Fcundry, Machine and Boiler Works and Supply Store, | AUGUSTA, GA. lifWtapson'sEyeWater (At28-~'07) I TjrescEN GREATEST HEAL Ula $2? Noil Poisonous, Non Irri g3|a K X pain from any cause. As st IskL Cv? milk. Cures burns in V*/lv cures sores and inflammatii fowls?cures cholera, sore 1 cuaranteed. Pot gfti* bj All First-Class L>e&ier*. XtgdL bj CRESC1 s 4 ; j _* . .' ^ Vj.5 vViir", s, nervousness, sleeplessness, and .w ' .'J ire only symptoms which unless it forms of Female Complaints. M egetable Compound I | ng and healthy condition. It cures I icnts, and organic troubles. In. K. ' women safely through the Change 1, Pa., writes:? Dear Mrs. Pink- ~ m female troubles and had all kinds v* of back and sides, I could not ing Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable ?vhich you gave me I feel like a I r medicine too highly.'* , ]f itation to Women I f female weakness are invited to I Out of her vast volume of ex knowledge that will help your K r smith's | h TONIC Standard for 46 years: loam no tad effects a quinine; pleasant to take; children like It, ? Idom falls to make permanent core. fuaranteed under Food and Drags Act of lore . dig i, 1906. At your druggists; or sent prepaid ^3 THCURPp?TER 4C0 G 'i A i* Lo- ' ill K Ollege, LaORANOE. GA^ :'M dest Colleie for Women in America* egant home, Ceo climate summer and Trlnter. StaadC * n Colleges in health and sanitation! Fifteen schools. . ie beet music graduate. Faculty of ?yedaK8ta- .Enro. ? rvatory. J. H. KOBMAN, fits. Doc., (0*f^Uen#:v res conservatory teachers. All rooms taken last yeauc. ' _ gal ON, Pres., LaGrange, Georgtab . mai cdv rAMDA VV 1T1AL3U X ^TmrTTTTTJ?1 41 8. FORSYTH ST., ATLANTA, GA.. |j iaocfaetorvi of tnd Dealin ia IB M ?f %>' .'f^8 MACH INERY f AND SUPPLIES. Portable, Stationary and Traction Engine*. Boliewfc' ^'cla3l law Mills and Grist Mills. Wood-working and 8fcla? * - Ji le Mill Machinery. Complete line carried ia stoefc, ; jBB Trite for catalogue prices. Address ail commute*. ions to Atlanta. Ga. We hare no connection* 1? " #3 acksonrflie. Tim 5l witmmn 'M | aiaauAKUUi inrauv nig m IBB!: ! ^HOCLESS J j LARS 1 glUS-COVEGNHgrriNSPECTICTt 1^ 11 le-soimiSH^mTON-oiicaiS I 20 Mule Team . JS BORAX rill produce whiter, cleaner clothes from yea* 'ZH sundry than any other preparation and with leas' abcr. All Dealers. 5-10-lSc. packages. Booklet 'ree. Sample. 5c. PACIFIC COAST BORAX CO., New Yorfc^ || AHOLD S0MEK4. 1*9 DeK??> tftBR{| ftBEfJEJ convince any nrll m as woman that Pax Bin Bag fag Hw tine Antiseptic will ' .<5< Hf anra as improve her health A H So Espr Hn and do all we claim A H lt> We will send her absolutely free a large trial ' box of Pax tine with book of instruo- >' tions and genuine testimonials. Send f your name and address on a postal card. PAXTINEII fections, such as nasal catarrh, pelvic catarrh and inflammation caused dv feminine ills: sore eyes, sore throat and mouth, by direct local treatment. Its crar- B . % ative power over thcse-troubles is extra- W 3 ordinary and gives Immediate relief. B Thousands of women are using and reo- B ommending it every day. so cents atS druggists or bv mail. Remember, however, IT COSTS YOU NOTHING TO TRY IT. I TELE R. PAiTON CO., Boston, Mass. I mini , i iihimb j TANTISEPTIC .ER KNOWN TO SCIENCE. toting. Allays Inflammation and stop* rong as carbolic acid and as harmless a* 5? stantly: cures old and chronic soresjj on from any cause cn man or beast. !T?t bead and roup. Satisfaction poaitrrdfj <. -TV? ?NT CHEMICAL CO., I*t. Worth, Toxaaf