The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, May 30, 1907, Image 7
v . - V'
v pp -- ' > - ??? ????nan?za
I 77?g Pui/o/t 1
? 1 n.rnr-fTiMji. " *"' """J
A SERMON' #f?a
S/TAerevC \ggfc*?
< '[JRA. V/kNDE^^^^F"
Subject: The Church a:ul the World.
Brooklyn, N. Y.?Preaching at the
Irving Square Presbyterian Church,
o nH hp I
v/ll IUC lUClliC, JL ac VUU1 VII U**u V..W
World,'' the Rev. Ira Wemmell Henderson,
pastor, took as his text Is.
2:3, "Come ye, to the house of the
God of Jacob." He said:
. The "work of the church is properly
definable in universal terms alone.
The church has no partial mission.
It has no restricted message. Its
fi#!d is the world, and its opportunities
are as wide as the universe and
as diversified as nature. The wide
expanse of the earth as it stretches
eastward and westward, from frozen
j land to frozen land, is the sphere of
the church's activities. Only as the
church of Jesus Christ accepts her
universal responsibilities and honestly
engages to transform the world is
she true to the commission that she
has received- under God through
Jesus Christ. Just in the measure
that her message is partial the
I church is a partial failure. For the
universal concepts of Christian truth
are the strength of the church. Her
universals constitute her compelling
appeal. It is only because Jesus had
a world wide, an eternal vision of the
needs and the possibilities of humanity
under the providence of God that
He has any claim upon the world at
large. And it is only because the
church has a treasury of truth preserved
to her through Jesus that today
she has a claim to universal attention
and to a universal hearing.
The moment that /he church ceases
to declare truth that^is universal in
IIS application liiau luumeui. tec;
church ceases to be a universal fac
tor. We must be unconfined by na
tional boundaries or by geographical
divisions or by ecclesiastical distinctions
if the church of Jesus Christ is
to do Christ's work. We are capable
of securing and of retaining universal
sway over the lives of humanity because
of our universals. For they
appeal to men in every age and in
every land regardless of their color,
their creed, their caste.
The Christian church has a universal
revelation, a universal message,
a universal mission, a universal
opportunity, a universal responsibility.
The church has in Jesus Christ a
universal revelation that is the fundamental
upon which all else in the
Christian system is upreared. Everywhere
and always, men have recognized
that there are limits to the
comprehension of divinity by the
finite mind when unaided by a reve- <
lation from on high. Men have been
conscious that while they were able to
know God partially through the
media of the senses and to formulate j
in some measure ideas of divinity 1
through the power of human intelli/
gence, they have been finitely unable
to know God to the entire satisfac- *;
/ tion of their souls until God has re.vealed
Himself to them. There has
always been a desire upon the part
of humanity for a revelation of Himself
to them. And the desire has
been met. Humanity has not recog- ,
nized always the full content of the
divine self-revelation, but it has ;
never been without a revelation from i
God. Before the days of Jesus men
had only a partial consciousness of <
the character, of the personality of i
divinity. Multitudes have no full i
/mmnrohensinn nf flod tn-dav. And it
Is to the world that has the light of
half the truth to which the church today
must address herself. For the
revelation of God in Jesus Christ is
a universal revelation. The truth
that is revealed in Jesus is supplemental
to all that humanity outside
of Him now kno*\*s. Wherever there
is a soul that is longing for a knowl- <
^edge of the truth concerning God
1 thpre is the field of the church. The
revelation of God in Jesus Christ .is
universal in its outreach because it
meets a universal need, is universally i
satisfying, is universally intelligible, i
is universally the culmination of revealed
truth. i
The church has a universal mes- ,
sage. The sense of sin is a universal
consciousness. Likewise the realization
of human incapacity to deliver <
self from the bondage of sin is universal.
Everywhere men acknowl- ;
edge the need of a Saviour. The
longing of every heart is that it shall ,
experience a salvation from sin that
is satisfying, sufficient and eternal. ;
/ The church of Jesus offers just that. ,
Its message is that of the universality 1
and the reality of sin, its consequences
and its woe. The church .
declares that humanity cannot un0
'' aided from above free itself from sin.
17s proclaims the necessity of a Re- .
,fc ceemer. It offers a sure, a comfort- j
ing, an everlasting salvation by the (
gift of God in the personality of Jesus .
Christ. And this salvation is not ;
restricted. It is not conditioned by
any captious commands. It is not
. confined to any class. Whosoever
will may come. It is for all men.
'And if the church will declare this
.. universal message the church will
" receive a universal hearing. We cannot
do God's work with any less message.
It is useless to trim it or to ;
pare it or to endeavor to change it in
- any essential manner. It is God's
message in Christ. It is universal. '
The universal mission of the church
is to carry this universal message to
LilC ? I1U1C V\ UHU. JL JLIC VUU1VU umu w
national mission to the land to which
it goes and to the land in which it is;
but it has more than this. It has a
mission to all lands, a mission that
shall lead it to fit the Gospel to the
peculiar necessities of the peoples to
whom it is declared. But it.has a
larger mission even than this. It has
a mission to all lands and to every
people to declare unto the nations the
truth of God that we are all of one
flesh and blood and that the interest
of each man is the interest of the i
world; that the welfare of one people
is the concern of all the peoples; that
individual and national lives are to
be transformed by the grace of God
not for the mere sake of individual
and national salvation, but for th?.
> f
. ' ~
larger purpose that a racial salvation
may become effective. All of which
is to say simply this, that the mission
of the church in the world is to lead j
individuals and nations everywhere j
and in all times to a proper under- \
standing of the truth that salvation j
is in the last analysis racial and universal.
The Lord Jesus Christ died j
for the salvation of the world, and a j
gospel that does not declare the plan
of God to save the race* as the ultimate
in Christian truth has fallen
short of the whole counsel of God
to the world. The church has a divine
call to spread this message to
tho whnlp world This is the uni
versal mission of the church.
The opportunity of the church is i
universal. The church has a chance
to do the work for Christ at home.
It has a chance also to do valiant |
service for the Master abroad as well. J
The influx of aliens into America pre- j
sent a foreign mission problem and |
opportunity to the church in the
homeland. To our shores there are
rushing millions of men and women
and children from, the four corners
of the earth. The list of the nationalities
that have come to make their
abode with us is startling. They are
of all classes and adherents to a multitude
of creeds. The languages that
are spoken round about us remind us
of the confusion of tongues at the
tower of Babel. The nationalities of
the peoples remind us of the famous
congregation that heard Peter at
Pentecost. And all these peoples
flocking to our shores provide the
greatest opportunity that any church
can conceive or that any church has
had forced upon it. If we can so
mould these diverse peoples into the
unity of the Christian fellowship and
suffuse their minds and hearts and
souls with the Gospel of the Lord
Jesus Christ so that they shall seek
righteousness before all else in life,
then shall we have accomplished the
mightiest work that any church ever
undertook. The. opportunity of the
church at home is sublime. It is no
less stupendous abroad. The very
evils that in an economic way are
afflicting the peoples on the other
side of the world are the opportunity
of the church of Jesus Christ. The
awful famine in China and the like
catastrophes in Russia and in other
parts of the world are the opportunity
of the church. Heretofore altogether
too largely in the heathen (socalled)
mind Christianity has been j
inseparably associated and linked
with opium and whisky and beer and
infidelity and aggression and aggrandizement.
The nations of the East
have felt the curse of the Christian
civilizations of the Occident. And
mistaking the wickedness of civilization's
representatives for the simple
truth of Jesus Christ they have had
very little sympathy ^vith Christianity.
And we cannot be too harsh in our
judgment of them. But happily this
feeling of antagonism is passing slowly
away. And if in this hour of their
need America and the Christian nations
of the West shall show the Chinese
the spirit of helpfulness and of
disinterested service in the name and
under the ministry of Jesus Christ
we may open the way to the conquering
of China for Jesus. And what ;
is true of China is true of 6ther lands.
The conditions may be different,'but
the opportunity Is the same. The
whole world is awaking. We are on
the threshold of a universal awakening
the like of which the world has
never seen before. It is the opportunity
of the church and it is universal.
In the face of this opportunity the
church has universal responsibilities.
It is impossible for us to fold our
hands in selfish ease and be true to
the command of our Master. The re- j
sponsibility of the church at home is ;
so to transform America that it shall
be a safe haven for the oppressed,
the ambitious of every land. We
must make America fit to do the
work that God has destined her to
perform. The church is under a divinely
imposed obligation to transform
the world. And first of all we
must transform the individuals in |
the world. We need also a social j
transformation. But no social trans- i
formation is at all possible until we !
shall have gotten the individuals J
right with God. No man will have a
realizing sense of his social obligations
until he has had his soul thrilled
with the salvation of God in Jesus
Christ. Contrariwise, while we are
saving individuals we ought not to
relax our efforts to reform society so
that we shall ha^e no evil economic
or political conditions. This transformation
must be not only moral;
it must be also religious. No mere
system of ethics will ever keep the
world straight. Men must have a
firm grip on the religious verities before
than can be sure of themselves
or the world be sure of them. The
universal responsibility of the church
Is under the guidance and the Gospel
of the Lord Jesus Christ to effect
these transformations.
The church must accept these
responsibilities. She cannot do other
wise. Fossessea or ner vision ui mo |
Lord and blessed with an experimental
realization of the effectiveness
f His Gospel it is her duty as it
ought' to be her joy to accept the opportunities
for eternal service that
the Lord has prepared for her and
measure up to them.
"Knowledge PnfTelh Up; Love Buildeth
Up."
We may be able to tell how many
stars are in the Milky Way; we may
be able to count the petals of every
flower, and number the bones of
every bird; but unless faith leads us
to a deeper understanding, a more
reverent comprehension of the significance
of the universe, God can
no more be pleased with our knowledge
than the painter is pleased with
the fly which touches his picture with i
its feelers, and sips the varnish from j
the surface, and dies without dreaming
of the meaning, thought, feeling, J
embodied in the colors.?Van Dyke.
Man's Chief End.
The older I grow?and now I stand I
on the brink of eternity?the more j
comes back to me that sentence in the j
Catechism which I learned when a
child, and the fuller and deeper its '
meaning becomes, "What is the chief i
end of man? To glorify God and i
enjoy Him forever."?Thomas CarJyie.
V.; V .. - j. ,;s '. .
. ' ' ' ' . */v " .'"T" .
V.
A Lazy Liver
May be only a tired liver, or a starved
liver. It would be a stupid as well as |
savage thing to beat a weary or starved !
man because he lagged in his work. So !
in treating the lagging, torpid liver it is i
a great mistake to lash it with strong !
drastic drags. A torpid liver is but an j
indication of an ill-nourished, enfeebled
body whose organs are weary with over j
work. Start with t?u: stomach and allied
* 9-9 - - T\.. X
organs of digestion una nuir.uon. nit
them in working order and see how
quickly your liver will become active.
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery
has made many marvelous cures of "liver
trouble'' by its wonderful control of the
organs of digestion and nutrition. It restores
the normal activity of the stomach,
increases the secretions of the blood-making
glands, cleanses the system from poisonous
accumulations, and so relieves the ,
liver of the burdens imposed upon it by j
the defection of other organs.
If you have bitter or bad taste in the morn- j
Ing, poor or/Cariable appetite, coated tongue, j
foul breath, constipated or Irregular bowels, j
feel weak, easil* tired, despondent, frequent j
headaches, pain ?r distress^ "small of back." ;
gnawing or distressed feenog In stomach,
perhaps nausea"risings" in j
throat after eating, and symptoms j
of weak stomach and torpid lira^ no medicine
will relieve you more promptly or cure
yyij more, permanently than Doctor Pierce'?
Golden Medical Discovery. Perhaps only
a part of the above symptom's will be present
at one time and yet point to torpid liver or
biliousness and weak stomach. Avoid all
hot bread and biscuits, griddle cakes and
other indigestible food and take the "Golden j
-1
.Medical inscovery rey ui?i i_> aim 3111 iv iv/ 1u?
use until you are -vigorous and strong.
The " Discovery ? is non-secret. non-alco-?
holic. is a glyceric extract of native medicinal
roots with a full list of its ingredients
printed on each bottle-wrapper and attested
under oath. Its ingredients are endorsed
and extolled by the most eminent medical
writers of the age and are recommended to
cure the diseases for which it is advised.
Don't accept a substitute of unknown
composition for this non-secret medicine
of known composition.
It is hopeless to get a woman to
think about saving her soul if she believes
her hat is not on straight.
? I
Every grocery store should carry
Argo Red Salmon. If th? salesmen
have not yet called on you, drop a
card to the Alaska Packers Association,
Atlanta, Ga., where our temporary
advertising offices are located.
A STEPPING STONE.
"Couldn't the president give you a
job?"
"Well, he offered to make me chieh
engineer of the Panama Canal until
I could get something better."?Washington
Herald.
ECZEMA COVERED BABY.,.
Worst Case Doctors Ever Saw?Suf~
** A
lerecl UniOlll .nisery ? rcncvi,
Cure by Cuticura Remedies.
"My son, -who is now twenty-two years I
of age, when four months old began to
have eczerna on his face, spreading quite
rapidly until he was nearly covered. The
eczema was something terrible, and the
doctors said it was the worst case they ever
saw. At times his whole body arid face
were covered, all but his feet. I used many
kinds of patent medicines to no avail. At
last 1 decided to try Cuticura, when my boy
was three years and four months old, having
had eczema all that time and suffering
untold misery. I began to use all three
of ihe Cuticura Remedies. He was better
in two months; in six months he was well.
Mrs. R. L. Risley, Piermont, X. H., Oct.
24, 1905."
It is mighty hard to convince a
man that there is a hell if his life
has been such as to make it certain
he is going there.
BORAX IS NATURE'S
MINE OF PURITY FOR
JJAIRY UTENSILS.
Eorax is first, a cleanser that removes
dirt and grease with surprising
ease; second, it is a sweetener that
makes fragrant any surface that has
grown musty or stale from neglect;
third, it is an antiseptic or destroyer
of germs. It prevents the development
of bacteria or mouldy growths.
With all this it is perfectly free from
uai ill IU uo i COU111U5 CUCVLO.
The farm churn is kept free from
that stale odor if it is washed with
borax in the following proportions?
one tablespoonful of borax to a quart
of water.
The dairy room has nothing about
it but the pleasant aroma of fresh
milk and cream and sweet butter if it
is kept clean with borax. There will
be no soapy smell and no lurking hint
of something gone wrong.
The cream crocks take on an extra
freshness when washed with borax
and water in the following proportions?one
tablespoonful of borax to
o n 11 o rt n f tit itnr TMifo riTOaorroo i V* a
a 4uai t vi naici. i uio pi vavi v vo cuv
fresh flavor of the cream.
The farm cream separator can be
kept thoroughly sweet and'cleanly a
wash of borax and water in the following
proportions?one tablespoonful
of borax to a quart of water. i
Be sure that you get pure borax.
To be sure, you must get "20 Mule
Team Borax.If you are unable to
get "20 Mule Team" brand send us
your dealer's name and we will arrange
to supply you. Booklet free.
Pacific Coast Borax Company, 100
William street, New York. %
ALtL HE KNEW ABOUT IT.
Knicker?You can't paint the lily.
Subbubs?Never got a seed catalogue.
did you??New York Sun.
Because of t'n
'
Needed His Horse Chestnut.
J. G. Simpson, v.ho had been arrested
yesterday as an alleged book-,
maker, tearfully begged Lieut. Wheeler.
after he hau been released for
want of evidence against him. to re
-t- - t_ ? i? 1;
turn a iiorse (nest nut wnicu u;e ueutenani
had taken from him. ' ;
"Please let me have it." he pleaded,
i "I might just as well try to play the
races without money as without that,
horse chestnut. I can't lose if I carry :
; it." When it was restored to him he
j seemed more glad to get it back than
j he was to obtain his discharge from
1 custody.
| Simpson and W. G. Martin, a sailor ;
j on the cruiser Washington, at League
i Island, were arrested at Twelfth and .
i Commerce streets. Simpson had a
i racing book in his hand, in which he
had made a record of a $3 bet on a
horse running at the Bennings track.'
As the police had seen no exchange of
money between the men. Magistrate,
Gallagher allowed Simpson to go with j
a warning.?Philadelphia Ledger.
I
Worth the Price, i
An English jury has awarded $1,230 j
damages to a woman who before an j
accident could reach high C when she j
sang, but after it, could get no fyr- j
- - - - .vi. i. ?~..i J !
ther than B liat. f rom mis n wuum i
seem as if they though: :he poor girl {
had been damaged. But this is doubt- I
ful. As a general thing reaching i
high C is much- like what Dr. John- I
son said about a dog's walking on
his hind legs: "It is not done well, !
but you are surprised to find it done j
at all."?Boston Herald.
(
DOMESTIC ORGANIZATION.
'*Every household should be organ*
ized, the same as a business," declared
the" serious-looking man.
"Right you are. Ours is organized
on the lines of the national House of
Representatives." !
"How is that possible?"
I "My wife's the speaker and I'm the
appropriation committee."?Chicago
Journal. . I
I Dr.
IMozley'
/
Lemon
Elixir
"Oi
The force of dynamite is about
eight times that of gunpowder.
Argo Red Salmon is standard in
Quality, quantity, color and price.
Misunderstood.
Islington Coroner?Was tne deceased
in the habit of taking drugs?
Witness?Yes, sir.
The Coroner?What kind of drugs?
Witness?Oh, I thought you said
grubs.?London Globe.
To be on good terms with human nature,
Be Well! Garfield Tea purifies the blood,
eradicates disease, regulates the digestive
| organs and brings Good Health! Manufacj
tured by Garlield Tea Co., Brooklyn, N. Y.
j Sold by druggists.
TOO MUCH OF AN ADVANTAGE.
"Why don't you invite Mrs. Spiggins
to your bridge whist parties? I
understand she plays remarkably
well."
"Yes," answered Miss Cayenne.
"She does play remarkably well. That
is the reason we don't want her."?
Washington Star.
BACKACHE IS KIDXEYACHE. I
Cure the Kidneys and the Pain Will
Never Return.
I
I Only one way to cure an aching
I back. Cure the cause, the kidneys.
jtrgtfr. Thousands tell of
gsfrj cures made by Doan's
2* Kidney Pills. John C.
Coleman, a prominent
\ merchant of Swainsjboro.
Ga., says: "For j
b^b^bIp raff severa* >'ears m>* kid- j
BSkJSeBbRJ&W neys were affected, I
' and my back . ached j
day and night. I was j
I laneuid. nervous and ;
lame in the morning, Doan's Kidney j
Pills helped me. right away, and the i
great relief that followed has been
permanent."
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. i
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
THE OLD GAG.
Fred: "I hear you have taken up j
the study of palmistry. Do you really i
believe jin it?"
Jack: "Not on your life! But it j
gives a mighty good excuse for hold- j
iug hands."?Somervilie Journal.
03b ugly, grizzly, cray hairc. Use " L
*
Nothing I Ate
HAMER.
Mrs. Lenora Bodenbamer, R. F. D. 1, i
Box 99. Kernersvillo, N. C., writes:
"I suffered with stomach trouble and !
indigestion for some time, and nothing 1
that I ate agreed with me. I was very !
nervous and experienced ^ continual J
feeling of uneasiness and year. 1 took
medicine from the doctor, but it did me no
good.
"I found in one of your Peruna books
a description of my symptoms. I then
wrote to Dr. Hartman for advice. He
said I had catarrh of the stomach. I took
Peruna and Manalin and followed his directions
and can now say that 1 feel as
well as I ever did.
"I hope that all who are afflicted with
the same symptoms will take Peruna, as it
has certainly cured me."
The above is only one of hundreds who
have written similar letters to Dr. Hartman.
Just one such case as this entitles
Peruna to the candid consideration of
every. one similarly afflicted. If this be
| true^of the testimony of one person what
i ontrh't to be the testimony of hundreds,
! ves thousands, of honest, sincere people?
[ "We have in our files a great many other
' testimonials.
Dr. Mozley
a new a
More than 1-3
and health-givinj
* that it has no eq
iousness, Indigest
arising from
s tor
Being strictly
harmful effects,
cleansing the stoi
and toning up the
?leaving the peri
gan is made to pe
50c and $1.00 6
Mozl<
736 E. As 111*
. I have been using I
for the past seventeei
find nothing equal to
stipation. I ch.erfu
Tonic and Liver Regt
Le Dose Will Conviu
THE BIG HEAD.
"What's this exaggerated ego?"
"It's a new name for that, morning
after feeling."?Cleveland Plain Dealed.
I YOU CAN KEEP DRY
COMFORTABLEl-^^
IN THE ,
HARDEST STORM
BY WEAR I NO \ ^1#/ / A' '
rW/'T\
f^Mi
*>mv0 MiM hi*WATERPROOF
Mil
OILED 7 fl r/7f
CLOTHING / //>/7
WAC* M VCLLOW / If' p
Clean Light Durable fyf\l .1 /
Guaranteed Waterproof,/' / j ,
Low In Price _/7 / I 1
WRITE TODAY FOR FRCC / I L JfOtm
DOC H LET OESCRIDINQ MANY f lr i/M| tTf .
KINDS OF WATERPROOF IT ?WTl >f
OAKMCNTt ?* Z?4|
I ? J Tcwf (O B04T0M, US*- I ?,WW* Vft?
I towti To knaVco toAO*^o caw. oOi
20 Mule Team
BORAX
[ will prevent peets when sprinkled about In pans
and wten applied to open drains, eesspoolu or sines;
KILLS all germs and wards oft disease. All Dealers.
5-10-15c. Booklet Free. Sample, 5r.
PACIFIC COAST BOllAX CO., New York.
(glfL) Aggies, R
| SHIPPED Dl
PRICE $40. At Wh
"We have vehicles
* "* ? We Guarante
irunj up ?
TEN DAY FR
ODR TWELVE MONTHS GDARANTE:
It is to your advantage to investigate the ir
Send for our 1P07, complete!}* illustrated. F:
Save you from S20.00 to S40.C0 on the put
ABOUT or SUKKEY. a w c? n>-m.r
MALSdY
4.1 s. FORSYTH ST.,
CRESCEI
?W GREATEST HE/
Non Poisonous. Non I:
^ A Pa'n ^fom any cause. As
raSgk ft,-3 sweet 111 ilk. Cures burns
V <f 1a cures sores and inf'ainm;
^gr fowls?cures cholera, son
guaranteed,
for Sale by all First-C?aA> Dealer*. itfgd. by (,'R St*
MALSBY COMPANY,
41 8. FORSYTH ST., ATLANTA, GA..
Ihnufadurws of ind Dealm in ill Kinds of
MACHINERY 1
AND SUPPLIES.
Portable, Stationary and Traction Engine*, Boiler*,
8aw Mill* and Grist Mill*. Wood-working and Shingle
Mill Machinery. Complete line carried in etook.
Write fcr catalogue price*. Ad drees all communications
to Atlanta. Ga. We hare no connection* Ig
J*/*W*onville. Yin. a ?
.= ! I
Boston's 'I
Old Home Week j J
July 28 to Aug. 3
Reduced fare on all railways for
trip to Boston and return.
Family, School, College and So|
oiety Reunions, Historical Pilgrim- ag6S,
Military and Naval Demon- i
strations, Monster Parades,
Electrical Displays, Tournaments,
Races, Carnivals, Receptions, Free
Exhibitions, Concerts and Entertainments.
* A series of mid-summer festivities
such as no city in the world - j
i has ever offered its guests. Write
to OLD HOME WEEK COMMITr 1 4|
! TEE, BOSTON, MASS. ' off
"'Something Doing'
' i Every Minute for 7 Days " '
IH^Thoinpson'sEyeWiiter |
's Lemon Elixir is not
ind imtried remedy. -; 'M
of a century attests its curative
g properties and serves to 'show
ual as a cure for Constipation, Bilion,
Sick Headache and ail other ills
PID LIVER , m
a vegetable compound, it has no
Its action is gentle but thorough?
nachand bowels of all impurities, '.".jh
entire system to a healthy condition
son feeling good, because every or- , : :r%
rform its part perfect.
it all drug stores. /
;y Lemon Elixir Co., Atlanta, Ga
:y St., Jacksonville, Fla., April22, 1907. .
)r. Mozley's Lesion Elixir in my family?
a years: and do not hesitate to say that I . ~
it for Indigestion, Sick Headache and Can- fJm
lly recommend it to any who are in need of a
dator. MRS. JWO. H. GEE. V^l
ice" > I
, ;?" |
:[ SIMDARDoFTHlSOVniB M
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i THE DAJSY FLY KILLER destroy* *11 the
I flies ana affords comfort to every Home -in dining room, -vgj
,i sleeping-roots ' ij
ao(1 aQ PI?cm "JS
-ti. vSsCj^iffvVTBl wliere flies sirs
troublesome. .
| Clenn, neat, and 1
; RSmtll^n&^UZ^HPJa will not soil or -;i
\ MaWW^MKyTWialMJ injure anything,
j Try them one* '::"t
I HKT^a>Jj^WOCTl83 *od you will ner- ' -i
er be without
KjUmJE9Kvyt^|nBHScH them. If not kept
by oealera. sent rj
XMHeMlltrh Isfif rtiiMWw prepaid for 20c.
HABOLD SOMEJls. 140 DoSilb *??,, BrsOlyn. M. T. ^
| Telegraphy jg^asg 1
! Shorthand fcZ*f|
| Bookkeeping ffiSflr 1
I main link wikes kun 5 TekpipliT, 5a
I I?uumt/iu KlvilJitMiJ OwnPK.iv !at,
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GUARANTEED
unabsuts and Surreys J
irect from factory to you
LOlesale Prices
e Safe Delivery to Tour Freight Station.
t7tt tp tat to thoroughly examine
jlej in.1/11^ and test our vehicles.
E COVERS EACH AND EVERY PART.
lerirs of our vehicles before buying elsewhere. _-<_
ree Catalogue, which fullv explains how we
chase or a H1GH-GBADE BUGGY, KCN- ig||
, SHIPP & CO., Dept. B,
atlanta. ga.
UTANTISfcKI IV
\LER KNOWN TO SCIENCE.
imitating. Allays Inflammation and stops
strong as carbolic acid and as harmless as
instantly; cures old and chronic sores;, ^
ition from any cause on man or beast. For
2 head and roup. Satisfaction positively
CENT CHEMICAL CO.. Ft. Worth, Texas
/