The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, January 20, 1915, Image 3
CALOMEL IS MEBGUI
STOP!
Don't Lose a Day's Work! If 1
Constipated Take "Dodsoi
You're bilious! Your liver is sluggish!
You feel lazy, dizzy and all
> knocked out. Your head is dull, your
tongue is coated; breath bad; stomach
sour and bowels constipated. But don't
take salivating calomel. It makes you
sick, you may lose a day's work.
Calomel Is mercury or quicksilver
which causes necrosis of the bones.
Calomel crashes into sour bile like
dynamite, breaking it up. That's when
you feel that awful nausea and cramp
ing.
If you want to enjoy the nicest, gen
tlest liver and bowel cleansing you
ever experienced just take a spoonful
of harmless Dodson's Liver Tone. Youi
. druggist or dealer sells you a 50-cent
bottle of Dod'son's Liver Tone under
my personal money-back guarantee
that each spoonful will clean your
... CLASSED THEM WITH DONKEY
Remark of Humorous Auctioneer
Something of a Reflection on
the Gathering.
It was an open-air sale of farm
Btock. The auctioneer bad been expatiating
with his usual eloquence
on thfe merits of the Various lots.
There was practically "nothing doing,"
not a single bid being forthcoming
for a fine lot of sheep. Just
. . as the knight of the hammer was
about to declare the animals with*
drawn a donkey near by brayed loudly.
"Thank heavens!" muttered the
actioneer. "We've got a start at
last."
This put the Cfowtf in a, good humor,
and bidding became brisk. A
good price having been reached, bring
lug down his hammer, the auctioneer
cx claimed:
T told you It was only necessary
for one of yot* to set the ball a-roll*
tog."
& ^ ;
RUB-MY-TISM
Will cure your Rheumatism and all
kinds of aches and pains?Neuralgia,
Cramps, Colic, Sprains, Bruises, Cuts,
Old Sores, Burns, etc. Antlseptie
Anodyne. Price 25c.?Adr.
' J*
Valuable Ovens..
W By the use of improved ovens which
collected the by-products, the, coke industry
of the United States saved |16,070,000
last year, which would have
been wasted by old methods of manufacture.
wr*<'/"fc-fk-H. M ,< v. ,y.-,V: ..v"
Take# Work.
"The world owes every man a living."
"Maybe. But you've got to be persistent
if you want to collect"
What Do YOU Pay?
Some men, thinking
to economize, pay 5
cents for cigarettes.
They might enjoy real
oualitv. if thev real
ized that 20 FAT1MAS
would cost them only
i 15 cents.
'
Fine Farai Lands in
Virginia!!
f~ -Good Roads,' Good Hornet, Good. School*.
Write to Jffall tt Co* Boydfon, Va.
KODAKS & SUPPLIES
lHllW We also do highest class of finishing.
rjwtfjL- Prices and Catalogue upon request.
S. GiieiU Optical Co., Rickaoad, Ya.
lAf'kHTCfl Men to learn barber trade.
VAN I nil ?ew^TT'elt.*, rc3ulred
*7 *""" OICOUJ puBlllvu lur uvur
p^tentgradaatea. Wonderful demand for barbe
re. W a jrea vrhlle learning; free catalog; writ*
RICHMOND BARBER COLLEGE. Richmond, Vl
j. To Cleanse ^
/r and Heal TBfo
Deep Cut^gB >
i HaveUoahani '
I ' HANFORD'8
I paisiuii ui ivijfini
| For Cuts, Burns,
I Bruises, Sprain*,
Strains, Stiff Neck,
Chilblains, Lame Back/^fck
Old Sores, Open Wounds,
and all External Irguries. ^
Made Sines 1848. $?&
price 25c, 50c antJ $1.00
All Dealers e-s^s?v^
;K. ; <!; '
'.* '; ?'.V, ; ;
If II SICKENS!
I SALIVATING DRUG
four Liver Is Sluggish or Bowels
tfs_Liver Tone."?It's Finel
sluggish liver better than a dose of
nasty calomel and that it won't make
' you sick. t
Dodson's Liver Tone is real liver
medicine. You'll know it next morn1
ing because you will wake up feeling
fine, your liver will be working, your
headache and dizziness gone, your v
stomach will be sweet and your bowels
' regular. You will feel like working;
| you'll" be cheerful; full of vigor and B
ambition. c
Dodson's Liver Tone is entirely j
l vegetable, therefore harmless and can1
not salivate. Give It to your children! t
. Millions of people are using Dodson's s
; Liver Tone Instead of dangerous cal- i
omel now. Your druggist will tell you
i that the sale of calomel is almost I
stopped entirely here. a
The Gnats and the Beetle. ^
Some Gnats gathered together in a j
congeries and fell to darting about in
so very bustling and intricate a manner
as to move the curiosity of a c
Beetle. , ^
"Er?what's the game?" inquired
the Beetle civilly. ' *
"Game? This Is no game. We're *
very much in earnest We're a city,"
replied the Gnats.
"And what, if I may ask, is a city?"
"A city is a device for intensifying
discontent" 1
"What is discontent, then?"
"Discontent is the mainspring of 4
progress." , jj
"But what is progress?"
Here the Gnats of the congeries 1
burst out laughing. "You don't know 1
what progress is? You must be froir {
the country!" they scoffed. 1
/ ; i
ViupA Ar?- naimnoirr *
lAKts uit UANutiurr ;
HAIR STOPS FALLING;
' ' " c
Girls! Try This! Makes Hair Thick, ,
Glossy, Fluffy, Beautiful?No e
More Itching Scalp. \
Within ten minutes after an appll- i
cation of Danderlne you cannot find a 1
single trace of dandruff or falling hair >
and your scalp will not Itch, but what <
will please you most will be after a *
few weeks' use, when you see new >
hair, fine and downy at first?yeB?but c
really new hair?growing ail over the I
scalp. /
A little Danderlne Immediately dou- ?
bles the beauty of your hair. No dif- ?
ference how dull, afaded, brittle and J
scraggy, just moisten a cloth with <
Danderlne and carefully draw it 1
through your hair, taking one small 1
strand at a time. The effect Is amaz* 1
lug?your hair will be light, fluffy and 1
wavy, and have an appearance of
abundance; an Incomparable luster,
softness and luxuriance." ,
Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's
Danderine from any store, and prove
that your hair 1b as pretty and soft
as any?that it has been neglected or
injured by careless treatment?that's
all?you surely can have beautiful hair
and lots of it if you will just try a little
Danderine. A?v. ,
Activities of Women.
Female mill operators in the Bom?
bay cotton mills earn about ninety dollars
a year in wages.
Sixty new trades, heretofore mainly
German industries, are now being
taught to women in England.
The latest wealthy American worn
an to estaDiisn a nospuai in rrance v
is Mrs. Cbauncey M. Depew.
- Miss Elizabeth Kille has been appointed
chief clerk to the secretary of
state in Kansas.
New York has a woman insurance
broker who has customers in far-off
Turkey and Australia.
The novelty of woman police officers
is beginning to wear off in many
cities of the United States.
. ? J
SALTS IF BACKACHY OR
KIDNEYS TROUBLE YOU
Eat Less Meat If Your Kidneys Arent
i Acting Right or If Back Hurts or
' Bladder Bothers You.
When yon wake up with backache
and dull misery in the kidney region
it generally means you have been bating
too much meat, says a well-known
authority. Meat forms uric add which
overworks the kidneys in their effort
to filter it from the blood and they become
sort of paralyzed and loggy.
When your kidneys get sluggish and
clog you must relieve them like you
relieve your bowels; removing all the
body's urinous waste, else you have
backache, sick headache, dizzy spells;
your stomach sours, tongue is coated,
and when the weather is bad you have
rheumatic twinges. The urine is
cloudy, full of sediment, channels often
get sore, water scalds and you are
obliged to seek relief two or three
times during the night
Either consult a good, reliable physician
at once or get from your pharmacist
about four ounces of Jad Salts;
take a tablespoonful in a glass of
water before breakfast for a few days
and your kidneys will then act fine.
This famous salts is made from the
acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined
with llthia, and has been used
for generations to clean and stimulate
sluggish kidneys, also to neutralize
acids in the urine so it no longer irritates,
thus ending bladder weakness.
Jad Salts is a life saver for regular
meat eaters. It is inexpensive, cannot
Injure and makes a delightful, effervescent
litfiia-water drink.?Adv.
The Sleepy Plact.
"Please, sir," said the beggar on a
Philadelphia street to a New York
man over there on business, "give me
25 cents; I have no place to sleep."
"No place to sleep!" replied the
New Yorker. "Why, man, you're in
Philadelphia, and there isn't any better
place to sleep In the world!''
! _T?? I
suits of the woman folks. All thtt
stuff Is cut out by the dozen 'at one
time with a big knife?literally feawed
out The making is done *in the same
manner. If you could only see the
dirt and filth of these foreign slaves
who cut and sew the garments I sold
you would shudder with horror at the
prospect of placing the garments on
your back.
Your own tailor or dressmaker,
right in your home town, will make
you a suit or a coat much better than
the Bweatshop workers and you can
be sure that you are not going, to
catch any disease froni it. Ton will
find that It is sewed butter, that It
won't rip, that the buttons won't fall
off, and that your pockets won't turn
| Into gaping holes. Again you will find
that the material Is better and dependable,
that the style Is better, etc. In
every way it will be more desirable.
It will be the same wuj' -with your
hats and shirts and shoeu. In fact
; you will discover that with everything
I sold there will be something lacking.
j; W
? _ Atl/iJ A.
Confessions gf a
Mail Order Man
By* Mr. M. O. X.
Revelation* by One Who*e Experience in
the Busine** Cover* - Ranee Prom
Office Boy to General Manager
40W ENORMOUS PROFITS ARE
MADE.
I bought where I could get thingB
he cheapest and where our money
vould go the farthest Not satisfied
dth doubling on the cost of an artisle:
in other words making 100 per
:ent on your money, I began to
icratch and dig for the little profits
>n the side, in addition to the big
irofits I made on the price.
For instance, I would advertise an
irticle for sale in our catalogue at
tlx dollars. This article would cost
is, in the house of the wholesale deal>r,
for example, $2.60. By paying cash
would make two per cent additional
ind for quantity (I agreeing to take,
:ay 1,000 of this particular thing) I
rould obtain a discount of say five
le^ cent
This is how I would figure it out:
tost of article .$150
rash discount at 2 per cent....05
iuanttty discount at 6 per cent. 12%
Discounts 17% .17M
'let cost : 2.32M
Selling price to,YOU.,'. $>.00
Our profit . $2.67^
.You can see for yourself that when
was making such profits it was but
katural that I should deem it proper
o spend the money on trips to Europe
111 MM ,<|4A A# 1
klAU up IUO l^-UC, lwlv< Vi WUIO'VI J
tad plenty of money to spend. Even
v&y back when the concern was In
tB infancy I always made big money,
ind It made no difference what the
In&noial barometer said about the
noney market I was not bothered by
tank failures nor by financial stringenlies.'
I did not fcave to borrow any
noney. Of course not. Yon fur
liahed it
Good gracious, if you had fur
tished your local merchants with the
ash you sent to me, in advance, they
vould all be millionaires, now, in'
itead of plodding along trying to make
>oth ends meet
Take it, tor instance, that you sent
ne an order for a lot of things ihclud
ng hardware. Did you ever wondei
vhy the hatchets and hammers and
>ther tools broke so easily or would
tot; keep an edge? Did you wondei
vhy the locks became broken and out
>f order? Did you wonder why noth
ng would work just as it shpuld?
Tour dealer in your own town buy*
roods, that he feels sure will give
sugar, mat nau Decome vet, ana
vhlch I had to .bre^k up with an ax,
lalt the same, p ruffes full of worms,
torn meal alive with roaches, salt
lsh strong enough to float a ship,
lour and crackers filled with verminres,
I bought all sorts of stuff and
told it et a great profit.
And clothing?there's where I made
lome of my greatest profits, for the
slothing I sold, in a majority of initances,
was made by half-grown Jew>
sh girls and boys in what are known
- ? J - -~ + ?
u mo 11 out; uo pncaiouvpo.
The rest I Bold as a part of youi
rait was probably cut by a sweating
roung Jew from Russia, who cannol
<peak more than a half dozen wordn
rf our language. He cuts them out hi
ots, a pile of cloth a foot deep and hm
:uts them with a big knife that look<i
ftore like a straw or hay knife?the
dnd you use to cut hay out of a' stack
vith. It's the same way with the
soats and trousers.
Then these pieces of cloth are sewed
ogether by perspiring young Jew
isses. They get a few cents for sewng
a vest. Another gets a few penlies
for putting in the pockets. An
>ther gets a similar amount for sew
ng on a collar, etc. All this work 1e
lone by the dozen. So many cents
per dozen.
The coatmakers are generally men,
>ut some shops have women because
hey are cheaper. Most of the work is
lone right there in the shop so an
nspector can watch the poor sweat
ng men and girls at work and keep
hem speeded up. The poor slaves
art 3 sew the garments I sold have
lever placed a hand on a wellrdressed
man nor worn a. well-fitting garment
.hem selves. '
It's the same with the cloaks and
lervlce and be satisfactory. If rial
rou can make him give 70a a dupli
?ite that will fill the bill. But he
s a different proposition. He has to
>e right there in his store to meet 310c
ace to face while my concern Ifi a
ong ways off. ^
In groceries, coo. Ft was my cas
om to buy uu xvfeat we iiall "Job lotsT
)f ar.v rrfn-uaiviiS'- whatever. If a
nercbc.ru -von 1 bro?:o ?mu went Intc
?an3TC'Ji.?f:v f aSrf! tO foil! OR h:3 SrtCCk
tr> nm <t cli * %? nil < Vi r
; :*aj ;if lacin *./! <xi\ i.uc
*rt.\ frijj;; ii:;o< ;i o-^nts (o for*;/ or fifty
ser.is tin th<? doi'.ar Ho nHF:?y,\ wantid
ras'i r.iui was willing f.o sacrifice
l.p f-'Ofjs us any price?. Then I vyouid
tKO -bis and parcel It out. Al]
v&s :.in tV-ot came to my not. I wot Id
)ffe: sorr.o old Junk that lie hud kepi
>n his shelves for many, years, as ape
tial bargains, and wou.'d ^uote descr.pions
as though the stuff were new,
md yet lr.ake a price that sounded
ow.' I would call an article "valued
it" say- $5, and price it at $3.50. II
vould have cost us about half a doll it
ir perhaps lesa;
Cases of tomaroas, corn, fruit and
>ther canned goods *?.: ? my speciall y.
Hany and many a time have I dag up
rom the cellar or froxp th?s back ol
lie shelves of some old - jr rchant
vhom I bought out for cash at a very
tmall price, a lot of old cans, bulged
>ut, and rusted and looking as if thisy
iad' been there for years. And ttity
md, probably. I would set a boy to
vork cleaning and Ipolishing thecie
sans and then I would paste new Ja>els
on them. Sometimes there were
10 labels and then I could have a lot
>f fun deciding what labels to put on
h'em. There were many surprises In
itore <or those who bought such stufl
it a "bargain." 1 would paste new
abel8 on such .cans as I could not tell
he contents ofr and ship them out 4c
>ur Customers.
j stanceknown as tylose In more gener>
ous quantities. Tylpjse is the material
' which fills the pores of the wood and'
resists the entrance or action of de>
' cay. For Instance, white oalk Is well
suited and much used for barrel staves,
' where barrels are to contain liquid,
1 whilfi, on the'other hand, red oak,
wkict'is apparently of the same 8truc*
' ture, Is not at all suited for the pur1
pose,
A clDse examination ol' the white
: oak rep eals the presence of the tylose
- which seals all the little pores of the
wood. Red oak has hone ol! the ty1
lose. , For this reason a fence post of
f white oak will last much longer in
service than one of red. Tiinber ens
gineers who inject creosote and'other
' substances into wood to retaird deijay
long ago made lists of / species thai
1 were hjird to treat, a ad othein which
' were easy. v
.The preservative fluids, we are told,
* penetrate certain woods to a consider1
able depths when moderate pressure is
' applied; while others are aftjoost :tm1
pervioUB, no* matter how gieat. the
1 pressure. Those hardest to penetrate
by preservative fluids are those hest
- supplied with tylose. *
' 1
' _ 1. i 'X t,
1 Eulogy on the. Bob White.
' The following is the eulogy on the
Bob White, by William T. Homaday,
1 once director of the Now York ::cologl->
cal pari;: . . , . >
To . my friend the!, eplcu/e: The)
' next tim.e you' regale a good appe1
tite wil:h bluepoints, terrapin stew,
ftlet of sole and saddle of, mutton,
touched up here and there with, the
: high lights of rare old 'sherry,, rich
claret and dry monopofe>>piusb as the
dead qi.ail is laid before you on a
; funeral pyre of toaaii and consider
i this; " i
| "Here lie the chaired remains of
; the fanner's ally and friend, poor
Bob White. In: life He devoured no
different kinds of bad Insectojaad the
seeds of 129 iuklous weeds! S*or the
smaller pests of the farm' hewaatlie
) most marvelous, engine of destruction
; that God ever put together of fieiih
; and blood.' He was good; beautiful
, and true; and ,his small life wua
blameless. And here he Ilea dead,
| snatched away from his field of labor
and destroyed, in order that I may be
1 tempted .to (line three minutes longer
\ after. I have already eaten tp satiety."
Then go on and finish Bob White.
__ r? ,
For Homesickness.
At' 5; 80 the. city saieBmaq wanted to
; go home, but ?.18 friend insisted
; staying -around 'lower Broadway till
six o'clock. ./ : '
' "Until the big wholesale houses
close for the night," he explained, "so
I can hear the, roar of those in>n shutters
coming down." V:
The city salesman seemed; really
alarmed;
"Heavens, man," he gasped, "gan t
you find noise enough in other parts
i of the town without waiting for that?"
"I can get noise enough, but it isn't
( the right kind. The cianking of these
, shutters just fills the bill. It reminds
' me of home. I was brought up in a
tropical country where 1 was rocked to
sleep every few nights by an earth
quake. Since coming to New York IVe
, been homesick for it. When I get
. homesickness good and bad, all I have
! to do ia to stand here in the evening
,* and listen to that delectable noise, and
I feel better right away."?New York
, Evening Post.
i
, How to Get the Mazzuma.
We have scnools of finance here, but
, the latest In that line is a course in
education on how to get the long
I green. Mrs. Genevieve A. Swlnk, sole
. teacher of the School of Builders, says
. if you want plenty of the mazzuma all
. you have to do is to apply the natural
. law right. There's no use of wishing,
. hoping or longing for the worldly stuff
i | to come your way because it won't. In
i the first placii, it is pretty well weighted
down, and in the second place it
, has no wings. If you care to be in the
i Rockefeller and Carnegie set this is
i the way to gat' your roll; In the first
t place, you must learn how to find! both
. mental and physical quiet. And after
i you?have found both you justf say to
i yourself, "I will"?this must be domi>
>. nant. Then you reach out for the
[ elusive yellow and green fellows and
; they are soon within your grasp.
8oundB easy, doesn't it??New York I
I Sua. ' I
it may iook gooa ior uie unsi mw
I times. Then it will fade, the rain
will pun it out of shape, the warns
will rip wherever there is an ordinary
strain, and you will find out that it
looks cheap and shoddy. It is.)}} >
Buy at home. Get the tbingB that
are dependable and worth having.
Buy from your local dealers.' - It'a
cheapest for you in the long Tun, and.
you are not sending your money out'
t of town. Be patriotic and spend ]toar
i money at home. It's a good investment
for you'. It will advance ,your
own interests.
I . *
' 't
WOODS OF VARIOUS STRENGTH
' lnve8tigat:on Has 8hownThat Pren'
erice or Absence >of TylOne Make*
i Great Difference.
The reason why one kind of wood
is mpr* durable than a&ptitor Is owing
' to ttie fact that one contain* the sub
Mbmonal
SUNDAYSdlOOL
Lesson
(By E. O. SELLERS, Acting Director of
Sunday School Course Moody Bible Institute,
^Chicago.)
*WVWWWS(VW^<VWWWV\A/WW
'LESSON FOB JANUARY 24
GlDEON AND THE THREE HUNOREO.
LESSOR TEXT?Judges 7:1-8,' 16-28.
GOLDEN TEXT-Not by might, nor by
power, but by my Spirit, saith Jehovah of
hosts.?Zech. 4:6, R. V.
This was the period of Israel's
transition from a nomadic to an agricultural
life. The record we have
is jm alternate succession ef idolatry
and subjugation with a return to Jehovah
and to liberty.
I.- "Gideon and All tba People," yv.
1-8. Rallying about him his clansmen
Gideon chose a position at the spring
of Harod near Jezreel, his back to Mt
Gilboa and the Midianltes to the north
next to Mt Moreh. He thuf^ controlled
the fords of the Jordan and
could prevent the enemy from retufning
to their homes In the desert country.
Outwardly the great discrepancy
of numbers made the situation look
dubious for Israel, but in reality the
danger was that the army was too
large, since when the. victory was
gained they might "vaunt themselves."
Tn^irMnola r%r>A ntitlii/illDa llftllflllv
auui t tuuuig . uuu vuutvuww
count their strength according to numr
bers. (See n Cor. 12:9.) If we desire
God'8 strength it most be as we ourselves
are weak (Isa.40:29). God is
sometimes limited by. having too many
and not enough of the right sort
When God delivers he leaves no room
for hoaatlhg (Eph. 2:8, 9; Rom. 3:27).
God can save as well by the few as
by the many (I Samuel 14:,6), and frequently
uses the weak and despised
things to confound this mfrhty (I Cot.
1:27-, 28), that "no flesh s'.^uld gloiy
in his presence" (I Cor. i:29J. These
j were two' tests, whereby Gideon was
to select 'his warriors: (1).' "Go to,
1 - - ' W ' . ? '
proclaim ... whosoever is iearciu
. let blmreturn" (v. 3). It is
I not well to-<crltlclse too severely the
122,000 who returned; even in the Oarden
not only Peter, but all the disclpleaforsook
the Master and fled. God
does not choose men because they are
heroes, but to make heroes of th'em
l>y the power of his might. (2) There
Is yet another sifting, God gives, Gideon
the clue (v. 4), viz., to,decide by
their method of drinking; Those who
drank "as a dog lappeth," were those
not to be taken off guard even While
drinking. An ox glues his eyes uppn
thef water and is oblivious 'to all else,
not so a dog. God cares more fbir
Quality than for Quantity and there
were too manjj cowards, too miny
who thought most of self-comfort, to
allow them to- enter this battle. ; It
was also a strange equipment God
l gave this army. All they took was
I food and trumpets (v. -8). The allessential
things for the followers of
! Christ are the word .of God for food
:.(I Pet. 2:2) and the voice,of prayer
for a trumpet (Nam. 10:9, 10; II
Chron. 13:14; Rev. 42:in.
I!. Gideon's Second Assurance, vv.
9-15. It was aflsurd, humanly speaking,
for 300 men to expect to defeat
136,000*.,. God "strengthened" Gideon
(y. 11). Gideon and Pfennig, at God's
command, ente^ the valley and drew
near the MidJanite host Avoiding the
guard, If any, they drew near enoiigh
to hear a man telling his dream, to
"his fellow." The latter interprets
this as nothing else than the "sword
of Gideon" (v. 14). Gideon worshiped
God and at once returned to arouse
the camp of Israel.
i:1 Ilk The (iword ofvthe. Lord-and of
Gideon, w. 16-23. In -fell probability
these men wore their, usual weapons
as soldiers and carried food-for their
Uge in pursuing the enemy. However,
for this midnight-attack they- needed
only, three weapons, lamps, pitchers
and trumpets,. Each of these have a
spiritual suggestion for the Christian.
(See Matt. 25:4; Ps. 119:105; also n
Cor. 4 f 6. "7, and Bzek. 33:3, 6; I. Cor.
14:8.) Gideon's stratagem of dividing
hia men into three companies and
then as the pitchers are broken to
blow tbe trumpet caused a lively panic
among the Midlanltes. That Gideon
had faith and courage in himself, and
ta the word of Jehovah, is suggested
tn his words, "Look on. me and do
likewise." We are to look to the "captaih
of our salvation*' (Heb. 13:2) and
by our lives of obedience prove the
devotion of' our life {John 15:14,
14:21). As already suggested, there
were probably no defenses surrounding
the enemy and in the darkness
Gideon and his men easily approached
the camp. It is easy to imagine the
scene?the midnight hour, the army
suddenly awakened by. a deafening
shout, the blasts of trumpets, the 300
torches flashing forth amid the crash
of earthenware, and all of this in
dense darkness. The Midlanltes in
the confusion turned their weapons
against each other and fled toward
the Jordan and Into the regions beyond
toward the desert. Others fol
lowed by tbe ten thousand, fleeing toward.
Succoth and Penuel. Wo of
this day have our wars and battle*
against the wrongs, the principalities
and powers of evil, which are around
us and within us. Such battles require
the same courage, and skill, sd4
consecration of ourselves, as did the
wars of those ancients against the
enemies that threatened the very existence
of the people of God. (See
Bph. 6:10-18; I Tim. 6:12.) The
trumpets were a call to God and a
type of prayer; the pitchers (earthen
vessels) a type of our frail bodies In
wh'ch we have the treasure of tau
gospel truth (2 Cor. 4:6, 7, Watt.
5:16). uur DusinesB is co diow long
and loud the trumpet and hold forth
the light, which' 18 the Word (Phil.
2:1G), and being broken ourselves
(John 12:24, Gal. 2:20 R. V.). expect
to see the enemies of God overthrown.
As every man stood in his appointed
place (v. 21), God did the fighting and
brought confusion to the enemy (r.
M). .
IS CHILD CROS|
Look, Mother! If tongue it
coated, give "California
Syrup of Figs."
Children love this "fruit laxative,"
and nothing else cleanses the tender
stomach, liver and bowels so nicely.,
A child simply wlli not stop playing
to empty the bowels, and the result it
they become, tightly clogged with
waste* liver gets sluggish; stoxnnK \
sours, then your little one becomes
cross, half-sick, feverish, ..don'? eat
sleep or act naturally, breath is.bad;
system full of cold, has sore throat,
stomach-ache or -diarrhoe*.Listen,
Mother! See if tongue is coated, then
give a teaspoonful of "California
Syrup of Figs," and In a few houraal]'.
the constipated waste, sour bile and'
undigested food passes out ofrthe sys- '
tem, and you have a -wall child igain.
Millions of mothers give "California
Syrup of Figs" because it is perfectly
harmless; Children love jit, and It treV*,
I er falls to'act on the stomach, liver ,.j
I and bowels.:
Ask at the store for a 50-cent bottle
of "California Syrup of FigdT *bfc6 i
has full directions for babies, children (
of all ages and for grown-up# plainly (
printed on the bottle. Adv.
T~?' '
Appears as Counsel for Husband.
Mrs, Louise Nelson appealed before .
Judge Ryan as counsel'for her bus- j
band, George Nelson. She won the
case, and received a "fee1' of $1.10
from the judge. Nelson and five others , ,
weixte arrested in a raid on a dice
game. All but'Nelson' were fined one'
dollar each, with costs- of three dollars.
' "My husband^ Is a good man, and
works steadily," Mrs. Nelson pleaded;
v?.V *?j -Ivi ~ ~!i fovn -
.tie 9 not; a gainDier.
' You have won your case," Judge
Ryan said. "As a fee, Mrs. Nelson,
you can have.jthis."
The judge thenhanded Mrs. Nelson .
41-jlO seised when the dice game- was
raided.?Chicago Tribune. 'I > v'
????'
A TREATMENT THAT HEALS
MOST SKIN-DISEASES
. ' '
JDon't sUnd that itching akin humor
one day longer. Go to the naareat
drugglBt and, for about 76e, get A Jar
of resincd ointment and a cake ,of reainol
soap. Bathe the eczema patches
with realnol soap and hot water, diy
and apply a little *esinol ointment. ...
It's almost too good .to be troe>, The
'torturing, itching and horning stop instantly,
you no longer bti?e to dltf and
scratch, sleep becomes poaeible,andT
healing begins, floon the ugly, tor;
ttnring eruptions disappear completely
and for gflod-r-Adv.
See That Work l?. Done Properly.
Trained nurses In -Boston have
agreed; through one ot their organizations,
;to give instructions' as to how
, to prepare bandages, "sponges" and
first-aid packages for shipment and
use by the hospital and field surgeons
with \he armies of all the nations Involved
in the European war. , When- '
e^er women iare preparing these
things for the bpepitar they may telephone
for a nurse to come and seetf
the work is done properly;
: ' ,
? ">
Quito, Ecuador, recently bought
3,000 schooi deska from tneiUmte<t|>
States.
Praise Lydia E Pinkhan
Women from the Atlantic tc
of this great country, no city
but that some woman has w
health restored by Lydia E.
pound. No woman who is su
to her sex should rest until she!
a trial. Is it not reasonable* t<
these women it will do for an}
Wonderful Case
of Bushi
BusroncLL, III.?" I think all th
marriage was caused by exposure v
been housework of all Kinds, and I
snow when I -was too young to reau
suffered very much with bearish d
miserable'pains across me, and wa*
down in health, but since I have tal
Compound my back never hurts it
am gaining in health every day.
have received from your medicine, j
fering women I will be glad for you
Bushnell, Tllinnifc
/
A Grateful Atlanti
Hodgdon, Me.?" I feel it a dut5
- ? i i t_jj. "hi ti:-.!.!.?^
TCU wnat JLYOia su. x imwiitui o r cgo<
year ago I found myself a terrible si
and such a soreness I could scarc
back ached. I had no appetite and i
then I would be so tired mornings
It seemed almost impossible to n
thought I never would be any bett
tion. I commenced taking Lydia E
and soon felt like a new woman. I
appetite and was fat and could do a
ily of four. I shall always feel th
medicine."?Mrs. Hatwabd Soweb
For 30 rears Lydia E. Pinkha
Compound has been the standard
t >le ills. No one sick with woo
c S justice to herself if she does i
m is medicine made from roots
haii restored so many suffering wc
ngypteWrite to LYDIA E.PIF~HA J
W (CONFIDENTIAL) LYNN, MA!
Your letter will be opened, read i
by a woman and held in strict coi
f sick woman t j
? veiy^eryoua and
Ml Lydia K Rnkham's Vegetable ; :j?
ie, my nerves are stronger, and I if
Z thank you fortl?gre^help * and
if my letter wilT benfcfltf'jwifc cMlaB
to print ikVMis. Jiicsa Csnswl, .j
c Coast Woman. I
' I owe to all suffering womffltift * >1
able Compound did for me. One J
ifferer. I had pains in both, sides ; J|
ely straighten up at times, My
vas so nervous I could not sleep* j
that I could scarcelv get around. I
love or do a bit of work and I J
er until I submitted to an opera- I
. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I
had no pains, slept well, had good I
Imost all my own work for a tain- ~$j
at I owe my good health to your r^f|a
s, Hodgdon, Maine.
m's Vegetable < :JM
remedy for foaan's
ailments W! vji
not try this fa- ]/ f A ^ T?f \\ 0&
and herbs, it || |X^ Zr.|l1
men to health* W np JL JL
(medicixhco. (a ?mdltj(h
SS., for advice. [ft 0
And answered i
ifidence.