The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, October 21, 1908, Image 3
.} rr. ;
MY OWN FAMILY USE
PE-RU-NA.
Hon. George \V. lloney, National Chaplain
I). V. U., ex-Chaplain Fourth Wisconsin
Cavalry, ex-Treasurer State of Wisconsin,
and ex-Quartermaster General State of
Texas G. A. R.. writes from 1700 First St.,
N. E., Washington, D. C., as follows:
"1 cannot too highly recommend your
preparation for the relief of catarrhal
troubles in their various forms.
Some members of my own faniilv have used
it with most gratifying results. Wrhen
other remedies failed. Peruua proved
most ejpcaciorts and 1 cheerfully certify
to its curative excellence."
Mr. Fred L. Hebard, for nine years a
leading photographer of Kansas City.
Mo., located at the northeast corner of
12th and Grind Ave*., cheerfully gives
the following testimony: "It is a proven
fact that Peruna will cure cararrn Him
la fjrtppe, and as a tonic it has no
equal. Druggists have tried to make me
take something else 'just a9 good,' but
i'eruria is good enough for me."
Pe-ru-na in Tablet Form.
For two years Dr. Hartman and bis assistants
have incessantly labored to create
Peruna in tablet form, and their strenuous ,
efforts have just been crowned with success.
People who object to liquid medicines
can now secure Peruna tablets, which
represent the solid medicinal ingredients
of Peruna.
jpl Sale
making Farms
14 States. Strout's mam
imoth illustrated catalog of bar ^fjSS0kjBgains
with Sate maps mailed /ret; we
Ipav r.r. fare. E. A. STROUT CO.,
World'* Luiett fun Dealer*, 150 Nuun St, New York*
Canine Intuition.
A railroad eating house in Southern Georgia,
which enjoys the reputation
of being one of the worst places of
its kind in the State, has an ancient
darky who announces dinner to the
incoming passengers by ringing a
huge bell.
One day the old negro was accom- '
panied by a sad-eyed, long-eared
hound, who at the first ringing of the
bell, lifted ud his voice in a most dis
mal howl.
The old darky stopped and gazed
at him for a moment, and with a
"Hush yer mouth!" started ringing
again.
Again the old hound with nose in
the air sent forth a long-drawn howl.
This was too much for the bellringer,
and, turning on the hound, he
remarked:
"Now, what in de worl* is you
makin' sech a fuss erbout? You don't
have ter eat here lessen yer wants
ter."?Harper's.
Not Pierre Loti.
Those who aspire to literary fame
or who are in anywise puffed up with
pride and vainglory because it has
come to them may be surprised to
find it is not a thing which is envied
and coveted by all men, for in a certain
French journal there appeared
recently the following announcement
inserted by a rat-trap maker of
Lyons: "To All Whom It May Concern:
M. Pierre Loti, of Lyons, sole
inventor of the automatic rat trap,
begs to state that he is not the same
nerson and that he has nothing in
common with one Pierre Loti, a writer
of romances." We should have
liked to have seen the face of "one
Pierre Loti" when he read this notice,
and hope that any tendency which he
may have shown toward sinful pride
may since it appeared have been
chastened to a becoming humility.?
The Tatler.
AWFUL GRAVEL ATTACKS
Cured by Doan's Kidney Pills After
lears or Ssunenng.
F. A. Rlppy, Depot Av6., Gallatin,
Term,. says: "Fifteen years ago kidtney
disease attacked
me. The pain in my
. back was su agonizing
I finally had to
give up work. Tben
came terrible attacks
of gravel with acute
pain and passages c"
blood. In all I
passed 25 stones,
some as large as a
bean. Nine yearsof this ran me down
to a state of continual weakness," and j
I thought 1 never would be better until
1 began using Doan's Kidney Pills.
The improvement was rapid, and
since using four boxes I am cured and
have never had any return of the
trouble."
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo. N. Y.
An Explanation.
"How long has this restaurant been
open?" asked the would-be diner.
"Two years," said the proprietor.
"I am sorry I did nott know it,"
said the guest. "I should be better
off if I had comc here then."
"Yes?" smiled the proprietor, v<*-y
much pleased. "How Is that?"
"I should probably have been
served by tnis time 11 1 naa, saia me
guest, and the entente cordiale vanished.?Harper's
Weekly.
Dogs' Toilet Saloon.
A "canine toilet saloon" is among
the latest of London's enterprises.
It is to be found in Prince's street,
Hanover Square, and here society
ladies may bring their pets to undergo
shampooing, hairdressing, nail cutting
of tooth scaling.
A splendid bathroom has been
fitted up, and a nursery adjoins, in
which Fido may spend a few hours
aT- ~ -1??? An V? i c? hoolfli hoc
Ol lilt; uajr YYUCU Uio uvaibu uu>} cut .
fered by reason of a morning spent)
in shopping with a mistress who has j
been too busy.?Home Notes. j
New York City.?The simple shirt
waist that ie made with long sleeves
Is one of the very latest to have
appeared and unquestionably will
he much worn throughout the coming
season. This one Is designed for
young girls and is made pretty and
dainty by the use of embroidery on
the wide box pleat which finishes the
front. There also are frills shown
in the illustration, but these can be
omitted if a plainer waist is wanted.
All the linen and cotton waistings,
the washable flannels and the silks
are appropriate, so that the waist can
be made available for all seasons and
in a great many different ways. As
f^jlj
illustrated, however, it is made from !
the linen that is fashionable at all
seasons of the year, and the box
pleats at the front and the cuffs are
hand embroidered and finished with
frills of linen lawn.
The waist is made with fronts and
back. There are tucks laid over the
shoulders, which give both breadth
and tapering lines, and there are also
tucks in tne front, whicn provide
becoming fulness. The closing is
made invisibly beneath the wide box
pleat. The sleeves are of the simple
shirt waist sort, and can be finished
with the straight cuffs, or with rollover
ones, as liked.
The quantity of material required
for the sixteen year size is three and
one-half yards twenty-one or twentyfour,
three yards thirty-two, or two
yards forty-four inches wide.
Puffs Not in Vogue.
The artificial hair puffs that have
so Jong been the craze are entirely out
of style. The long row of curls
placed around the back of the head
have been too common to be fashionable,
and even the three puffs just
oeiow me crown are avoiaea uy 11112
well-dressed woman. However, one
or two soft puffs of your own hair
arranged on the top of the head is
permissible.
Dotted Swiss Underwear.
Among the many smart trousseaus |
the prettiest sets are built of finely i
dotted swiss. This fabric makes up
into dainty garments, and is a change
from the regulation plain white muslin.
One set has a night gown and
chemise in Empire style, cut round at
the neck, full over the bust, with
beading around the figure under the
arms.
Dainty Sunshades.
Japanese sunshades have come in
again and are much used for motoring
and for informal morning promenades.
They are not expensive, and
the coloring tones in with almost any
costume. They are extraordinarily
pretty when carried by a dainty girl
clad all in white. J
Must Match.
For either house or street wear
frock and shoes match in correct costumes.
Crowns of Flowers.
Some of the new hats have straw
crowns with brims made entirely of
flowers. Geraniums and hydrangeas
are both used.
New Hosiery.
Two tone effects in stockings are
quite the latest thing in hosiery.
Brown and gold, gray and rose, blue
and green are some of the favorite
combinations.
Revival of Smocking.
That popular fancy work, smocking,
has returned into favor for house
gowns. It is also widely used for
china silk blouses. It is put on children's
frocks at the neck to form a
yoke and on the sleeves from waist
half way to elbow. It is often done
in colored thread on white and cream
foundations.
Nine Gored Skirt.
Fresh variations of the gored skirt
are constantly appearing, and it is
such a pronounced favorite that it is
likely to continue its popularity indefinitely.
This one is cut after the
later method to give a slender effect
to the figure and is absolutely without
fulness at the upper portion. It
can be made in walking length or,
round, and consequently it suits both
the street and the house and in either
style it is exceedingly charming and
graceful. As illustrated, serge is
trimmed with stitched bands of
broadcloth heid by buttons, but for
Jf !L
,J in
11 v|
immediate wear the model will foi
found admirable made of foulard,
linen and materials of the sort, as
well as of wool fabrics. In fact, it
suits all suiting And all skirting materials,
and is adapted both to the .1
present and the future. The trlmmiriK
is novel and effective, and the bands
can be of the same or contrasting material
or of braid, as liked.
The skirt is made in nine pores.
The front and side gores are laid in
underlying pleats to the depth of the
bands, and those at the sides am!
back are plain. Ttie iiuncss at tno
back is laid in inverted pleats and thn
trimming straps are arranged on indicated
lines. The pleats at the front
and side seams provide graceful flare
without undue fulness.
The quantity of material required
for the medium size is eleven and
three-fourth yards twenty-seven, six
yards forty-four, or four and threefourth
yards fifty-two inches wide
wnen material has figure or nap;
eight yards twenty-seven, four and
five-eighth yards forty-four, or four
yards fifty-two inches wide when material
has neither figure or nop. with
lllk
one-half yard fifty inches wicio ir
straps are made of cloth. If mad?j
from the material there will be found
ample in the quantities allowed.
t
.
THE PULPIT.
A. SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON ?Y
DR. C. S. MACFARLAND.
Theme: Jesus' Imperial Spirit.
Brooklyn, N. T.?In the Park Congregational
Church. Eighth avenue
and Second street. Sunday morning,
the Rev. Charles S. Macfarland, Ph.
t)., of the Congregational Church of
South Norwalk. Conn., author of
"The Infinite AfTection." and other
works, nreached on "The Imperial
Spirit of Jesus." The texts were
from John 14:27: "Peace I leave
with you: My peace I give unto you;
not as the world giveth. give I unto
you. Let not your h^art he troubled,
neither let it he afraid:" John 16:33:
"In the world ye shall have tribulation:
but be of good cheer. I have
overcome the world:" Matthew
10:34: "Think not that I am come
to send neace on earth: I came
not to send peace, hut a sword." Dr.
Ma<-farland said:
Jesus is reassuring His disclnles.
He says to them: Be courageous, he
bold, overcome the world. By the
world He m^ans the temporal life.
Be masters. He says ove^ that life;
let vour snirits overcome it.
What a sublime picture! There
He is, awaiting the end. He Is going
down to apnarent defeat, to human
eyes. His lifp seems nought. The
toss awaits Him. a cross between
the crosses of two thieves. Barabbas
is to be chosen instead of Himself.
He no longer has any followers, excent
those faithful fpw, and even they
are trembling, fearful and ready to
Iiee. vei tie Utters inese sirai>K?iy
contradictory words, "I am the Master
of the world."
We pee here also the moral erandeur
of Jesus, the translation of His
nersonality and His inner life into
terms of moral power. As He was
the great thinker, so He was the
noble liver of the race. As He eains
the mastery of lofty minds, so He is
th*> sovereign of all noble lives.
His splendid life is now centering
in the cross toward which it has been
leading. From the beginning He has
seen the end. Behind Him is a long
trail of moral strength. From Him
Eoes th* impression of a sovereign
personality. He is the supreme example
of noble livine, for the manhood
of our day, with Its alternating
bravery and cowardice, with its noble
resolve and weak compliance. Jesus
becomes, first, the sharaer and then
the insnlrer of human living.
Havins: in some measure apnrehended
the solendid mind of the Master
and gathered something of the
moral grandeur of His life, we seek
to discover the hidden secret of His
outward splendor. Let us try to look
into His soul and discover the meaning
of this majestic, brave, strong,
impelllngly attractive manhood.
Tjook again at our text, recall the situation
under which it was uttered,
remember that He is facing a cross,
listen to His words: "Peace I leave
unto you," "Be full of confidence,"
"I have connuered the world."
Another strange thine Is the contradlctoriness
of the Master. For
upon another occasion did He not
say, "Think not that I am come to
send peace on the earth; I came not
to send peace, but a sword?"
How are we to explain the paradox
of these two contradictory texts?
Shall we avail ourselves of the liberty
of criticism and say that one appears
in the Synoptic Gospels and is historical,
while the other appears in the
Fourth Gospei and is unhistorical?
Shall we decided that one of them
is an interpolation? This is altogether
too easy and ready a method.
Let us wait and see if we may not
bring them into harmony.
First of all let us look at the second
text and see how true it Is. He
Bent those disciples forth into the
world. Did not they find the sword?
Their story is a continuous one of
persecution, imprisonment, death. If
there was the one thing they did not
find it was peace. Peter and John
began at Jerusalem. They were told
that they must not speak or teach in
the name of Jesus. They went out,
prayed for courage and went to
preaching again. For it they were
beaten with stripes. They received
their hundredfold reward "with persecutions."
What mockery are Jesus' words to
Him! "Peace I leave with you."
How fortunate if the Fourth Gospel
were written very late and is unreliable!
Does it not mane our Lord
guilty of false prophecy?
The story goes on through succeeding
ages. The successors of these
disciples live and die in Roman catacombs
and caves. They are hunted,
hungered, despised, persecuted, suffering
unto death. How it must have
mocked them: "Peace I leave with
you." Jesus bequest was broken, or
at least this codicil revoked.
But even all this is less perplexing
than the utterance coming from the
lips of the man who spoke it. Was
it a mistaken prophecy of Jesus? Because
His own life was so calm and
peaceful did He suppose that His
aiscipies wouia oe aiso: juook. iur
a moment at the life of the man from
whose lips these words come. Follow
Him in His weariness, in His rejection,
in His disputes with carping
critics, with His misunderstanding
and quarreling disciples. Not a place
to lay His head. Go with Him on the
mountainside at night. Witness Him
in the Garden, where He sweat, as it
were, great drops of blood. Eehold
Him on Calvary between thieves.
Watch Him crowned with thorns,
buffeted, spat upon, mocked in disdain.
What a contrast and contradiction
are His words: "Peace I
leave with you; My peace I give unto
you." Evidently we must accept the
prophecy of our second text and deny
the truth of the first.
Before doing so let us go back and
look at those disciples again and behold
another aspect of their life.
Peter is there, it is true, in prison.
J3UL >ve ItJtlU (tuuui lilt? picacuwc KJk
an angel of the Lord and of a light in
the midst of the darkness. Think of
some of those little gatherings in the
upper rooms with the breaking of
bread and prayers. Look at Paul
with his visions all full of beauty.
Read his epistles, vibrant with joy
and hope and faith. On the sinking
ship he is the one buoyant spirit of
them all. He goes into the midnight
prison again where he sits thrust into
the inner ward with his feet fast in
the stocks, and you hear him, with
Silas, singing hymns.
Go back again and look at the life
of Jesus. Look beyond th,e outward
vicissitudes. Seek to penetrate to the
inner consciousness of the suffering
man. There is no thought of pessimism
in His Gospel. He is ever
lighted up by faith and hope and joy.
Behold Him before Pilate! His countenance
is untroubled. Pilate is the
disturbed and restless one; the troublesome
dreams were those of the
chamber of his household.
Our paradox is partly solved. Both
To insist on right is always to resist
the devil.
prophecies are true. He did send a
sword on earth. He did at the same
time leave His bequest of peace.
But our real question is not answered.
Is it true of human life in
general? When has come the finest
literature, the literature of peace, joy.
lignt, nope, inspiration, tnumpu:
Has it come from men whose lives
were free from suffering, pain and
disappointment? Sometimes, perhaps,
but not very often. It has not
come from those who lived in kings' J
palaces and wore soft raiment. Most i
of it has come out of the depths of
dungeon, from blind poets, from dis- [
ease-racked bodies.
Jesus' prophecy is true. The rea-*
son it did not seem to be true was because
we did not read it aright. Read j
it again: "Peace I leave with you;
My peace I give unto you." My peace.
"Not as the world."
It means that this outward life Id
not our realest life. It means that
our outward and inward life are in
large measure independent of each
other. It means that true peace does
not come from external situations,
but from something that Is witnm j
us; our inward sense of our Tightness |
with God, our consciousness of true
purpose and true heart.
It means the estimate of things by
a view from above. It means .that
Heaven is not a place to go to, but a
condition to attain. It means that a
man, within himself, may be like one
enfolded in the comfort of his home
while the storm rages outside. The
ultimate victory of human life is this
triumph of the inward spirit over the
outward life. I
I am trying to give to men a vital
meaning for the cross. Look at the
Master this morning, fresh from Gethsemane,
facing that cross, with not
one brave soul to stand by Him to the !
end. Hear again the calm, majestic j
utterance, "I have conquered the ,
world." Imagine yourself there with
the disciples, facing their life, and
hear Him as He says to you, "You
may suffer and yet dwell upon sublime
heights." "The storm of ruin
may come and yet there need never
be any truce of the spirit." It was
just what He had been saying all;
along to them, "I will give you rest." ;
He looked out on the city of His
day; He saw men as we see them today,
racing each other for wealth,;
looking upon each other with mutual1
suspicion. He was saying to them, j
"Do not be like the frail craft, like
the little steam yacht; be like the
great ocean steamer with her iron j
hull, as she moves on her way with
her ponderous throbs; do not let
yourself be tossed about upon the
ocean, but ride through her billows." j
He was bidding men as He bids 1
you men to-day to seek and possess
the great ultimate realities of life, j
He was saying, "Forget to watch your
little engines and look out upon the j
ocean and up into the sky."
Do not guard your business, your j
paltry pleasures and little Interests j
while you forget to think about the j
deep things of life. Try this morning |
to catch His spirit as did the great1
Apostle Paul, who learned how to
abound and also how to be abased, to I
rejoice in adversity and to let all th<
experiences of life give their lessonj
and their strength. Do not long foi j
some soft pine-laden balmy souther* j
air, but be made stronger by th? I
bleak winds of the rock-bourd coast I
Get hold of something that is be- !
yond the reach of men, some joj
which no man taketh from you. Be
like the rock unmoved by the surging
of the waters. When stricken down,
rise again mightier than before. Sucti
is the voice of these great gospels.
My dear men ^ana women;, iu?s
peace of Jesus Christ does not coma
through some mythical contemplation,
nor through some vague expertence.
It comes by our sharing of the
spirit of the Master, by the earnest
following of duty, the noble facing of
responsibility, the bold confronting
of difficulties, the patient bearing of
calumny, the quiet endurance of persecution,
the brave carrying of sor- ]
row and the prayerful sanctifying of
our joys. Gethsemane and Calvary
are the price of this spirit. Rest can
only follow labor. The overcoming
of outward things is the condition of j
inward peace.
You men here, you yomig men1
here, religion is not simply something
for women, or for you when you are j
sick or dying. In those closing days j
of Jesus they left this noble man to
be admired and worshiped by a few ';
faithful women. So you men have
done; but now I ask you, do It j
humbly, do it modestly, do it knowing
that you are not worthy to unloose
the latchet of His shoes, but be His
disciples, admire His character, do
things "for His sake," give Him a
great, manly affection.
The Vital Spark.
Go where you will, into whatever
branch of Christian enterprise,
whether the Sunday school, the class
meeting, the young people's service,
the open air appeal, the prayer meeting
or the preacher's platform, if
there is not a personality, fired with
the unquenchable energy of God's
spirit, and the heart sufficiently
warmed and enthused with self sac
riflcing love as to be all in the cause,
there is comparatively no life and
no success, Bays Ballington Booth.
It is not the costly marble or the j
carved granite, it Is not the .beauts
ful interiors or the wealthy members
that constitute the church a living
vital power, felt and known among
men. It is the living presence, the
divine fervor behind the sermon, the
testimony, the prayer and personal
appeal that make them attractive and
effective in the cause of evangeliza- j
tion. However poor in this world's
goods, however humble in thisj;
world's station, however illiterate
the representatives of the cause be,
if they have this presence in their
midst, they will have a personalis
and Individuality that will be "read
and known of all men."?Home Her
aid".
1 Objects For Prayer.
A man who stood out among men
as the embodiment of all that la
clean, noble, gentle, humble and
strong was Major Whittle, the Bible
teacher and evangelist. Written on
the fly-leaf of his Bible were these
objects of daily prayer for himself.
This may tell the secret of his noble
character.
To be kept from carnality and
lusts of the flesh.
To be delivered from a man-fearing
spirit.
To be delivered from vanity and
conceit.
To be mads pure in imaginatiou
and thought.
a onnviptinn nf cin
To love the Lord Jesus Christ
more devotedly.?Pacific Baptist.
Sustaining.
A man conscious of enthusiasm for
worthy aims is sustained under petty
hostilities by the memory of great
workers who had to fight their way,
not without wounds, and who hover
in his mind as patron saints, invisibly
helping.?George Eliot.
fj . x:: \~= '
DOCTOR PRESCRIBED CUTICORA
After Other Treatment Failed?Raw
Eczema on Baby's Face Had
Lasted Three Months.
"Our baby boy broke out with eczema on
his face when one month old. One place
on the side of his face the size of a nickel
was raw line Deersteas lor mreu iuum.ua,
and lie would cry out when 1 bathed ihe I
parts that were sore r.nd broken out. 1
gave him three months' treatment from a
good doctor, but nt the end of that time
the child was no better. Then my doctor
recommended Cuticura. After using a cake
of Cuticura Soap, a third of a box of Cuticura
Ointment, and half a bottle of Cuticura
Resolvent he was well and his face
was as smooth as any baby's. He is jow
two years and a half old and no eczema
has reappeared. Mrs. M. L. Harris, Alton,
Kan., May 14 anu June 12, 1907."
The Canadian farmer works from 12 to 16
hours a day in busy seasons. ]
~ # c
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softensthegums, reduces inflammation,
allays pain, cures wind colic,25c a bottle j
He Favored a Whistle.
A local church appointed a com- j
mittee to getsubscriptlonsfor a chime t
! of bells. They had seen nearly all T
the congregation. When they went j
to see a rather poor member they told i
him they would like a small amount 1
toward it. He promised to give as I
much as he could, but he said, "Don't j
you think it would be cheaper to put ]
a whistle in?"?Argonaut. 1
How's This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward I
for any case of Catarrh that cannot be
cured by. Hall's Catarrh Cure. i
. F. J. Cheney & (.Vj., Toledo, 0. j
We, the undersigned, have known F. J. J
Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe f
him perfectly honorable in all business ,
transactions and financially able to carry *
out any obligations made by his firm. 1
Walding, Kinnaw & AIarvik, Whole- <
sale Druggists, Toledo, O. |
Hal I's Catarrh Cure is taken internally,act- .
ing directly upon the blood and mucuoussur- J
faces of the system. Testimonials sent tree. 1
Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggints. j
Take Hail's Family Pills for constipation, i
Comparison of prices shows that
living expenses in New York City are i
twelve per cent, higher than three f
years ago. '
The week is five days long In 1
Thibet. N.Y.?-40 I
Habitual .
Constipation j
May be permanently overcome Improper
personal efforts witMbe assistance J
l>f fcheom? Trulybenejicial laxative
remedy, Syrup of rigs and B'uir cfSenntj 1
which enab left one to|orm regular '
habits daily So that assistance To nature
may be gradually dispensed with !
Ywben ho longer needed astbebestof
remedies,when required, are to assist '
nature and not to supplant the natur. ?
a!functions, vbicb must depend uUi? j
ihately upon proper nourishment, \
proper efforts,and ri^Kt living generally. ]
To get its beneficial ejects, always <
buy tbe genuine^
Svrub^Tigs^Elwir^Senna
manufacturedfcytil* |
California
Fig Syrup Co. only
SOLD EYALL LEADINC DRUGCISTS
one size only, regular price 504^ Bottle
PATENTS *25
We pay all expenses except Government fees?No i
sxtras. Our book shows savins to you?Write for It :
aow. THE INDUSTRIAL LA W LEAGUE,
Inc., 170 Bronriwav, New York.
SAFETY
AT LOW
SUPERIOR TO BEST Si
The smalil price is made possible by
great demand for this Razor. The si
profit on each aggregating as larg
sum as If we sold fewer at a greater pi
The benefit is the consumer's.
The Blade is of the finest st<
tifically made and tempered bj
prooess--and the blade, of course, is
tant part of any Razor. The frame is of
silver plated, and "angled3' correct
quick and clean shaving. The tough b
finds this Razor a boon! the soft b<
finds it a delight. These blades can I
Buy one and you will recommend I
' frienis. That is the best test ot any a
2 5 cts. is
Write I
[ BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE, 1.'
It is no use ad1
you have the Gohaving
the Goc
advertise.
fAIN IMITATION T
PATTERN THE I
JJ There was never an imitatio
vl> tators always counterfeit the get
$ what you ask for, because genuine
Imitations are not advertised, but <
} ability of the dealer to sell you sor
vj> good" when you ask for the genuin
ii> on the imitation. Why accept iralte
? nine by Insisting?
I REFUSE IMITAT
This woman says Lydia E. -%M
?inkham'? Vegetable Compound
laved her life. Bead her letter.
Mrs. T. C. Willadsen, of Manning^
Iowa, writes to Mrs, Pinkham:
441 can truly say that Lydia E. Pinklam's
Vegetable Compound saved my
ife, and'1 cannot express my gratitude
o you in words. For years I suffered -'-a
vith the worst forms of female complaints,
continually doctoring and
spending lots of money for medicine
without help. I wrote you for advice,
followed it as directed, and took Lydia ,>??
E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound and j
t has restored me to perfect health.
Sad it not been for you I should have .. 33
jeen in my grave to-aav. I wishevwy
suffering woman ^ould try it." '
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pinklam's
Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the jjg
standard remedy for female Ola.
ind Vioa Tv^oiH-TOlir/vnred fViniiaandarif
p/omen who have been troubled with
lisplacements, inflammation, ulcera- tfm
ion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, tnat bear.
ng-do wn feeling, flatulency, indices- ; r \ ^
ion,dizzmess,or nervous prostration.
Why don't you try it ? $||
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick
promen to write her for advice. &a?
She has guided thousands tm '$
lealth. Address, Lynn, Mass.
MENS EARN MONEY) |
If Yon Km* How to BandliTfaea Property^) ; ^
Whether you raise Chicksna
for fun or profit, you BHHH
want to do it intelligently SjJi^ J .;
ind get the best results. The :
way to do this is to profit hy W A
;he experience of others. We Hl A '
Dffer a book telling all you HL
ieed to know on the subject |BBV \ -
?A wwtton Kw a TOUT) 1' . 1/'
who made his living for 25 J
rears in raising Poultry, and 1 ,-AffiBt
in tnat time neces- ^Br I
OCa sarily had to ex- J . ;ft'iH
b JUi periment and spent I >f
much money to
ID learn the best way I SSflM
%r to conduct the f?K|
Stamps business?for the L ^V) I ^
small sum of 25 ' ; J
;entn in postage stamps. A* 'M
It tells you now to Detect
ind Cure Disease, how to
Feed for Eggs, and also for HUS -Ijj
Market, which Fowls to Save
"or Breeding Purposes, and
indeed about everything you . ..?s8
must know on tne subject ., -fix
to make a success. * B J
Sent postpaid on receipt oi HnBB
25 cents in stamps.
BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE, j ||
134 Leonard Street, * I : :
New York City. I* J >^|
^iT^Thompson's EyeWater
RAZOR 1
PRICE. I
OLD AT ANY PRIO^ p
eel, scien- jJi | ,
r a secret ^#] ,
tho impor- ?1? J
?n4inflnith I JSn
ly for safe, IP I
earded man liswj zf*l
larded man J
?.?ropp.d.
your ifj blades
ago stamps gWJ
h brings it J1 Wl/T 'f?3?
1 by mail in i&^fj f&a
al box.
name an< full address very plainly,
54 Leonard Street. N. Y. City,
- mI
^ertising unless
ods, and no use
ids unless you
i
-ft
_______vl
AKES FOR ITS ^
REAL ARTICLE ?
n made of an imitation, Imi- JjK
mine article. The genuine is 5
articles are the advertised oues. $
lepend for their business on the
uething claimed to be "Just as Se,
because he makes more profit $
itlons when you can get the gen- $
*
tdkltiq get what you $
lUJNlJ-" ask for t ^
eeeseeeeeeeeeeeseeeeeee*
/M