The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, August 01, 1907, Image 7
: -'V--, ' ;?
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THE TULT1T. I
AN ELOQUENT SUNDAY SERMON BY
THE REV. F. BOYD EDWARDS.
- Subject: Personality.
i v
Williamstown, Mass.?The Rev. F.
Boyd Edwards, assistant pastor of
the South Congregational Church.
Brooklyn, who graduated from the
college here seven years ago, was the
college preacher Sunday. His subject
was: "Personality?Its Influence
and Secret." The text was from
I Thessalonians. 5:23: "And the
very God of peace sanctify you
wholly; and I pray God your whole
spirit and soul and body be preserved
blameless unto the corning of
our Lord Jesus Christ." Mr. Edwards
said:
Huxley declared that if some great
power would guarantee to enable him
always to speak what is true and do
what is right, on condition of his being
turned into a sort of clock and
wound up every morning, he would
instantly close with the offer. Would
you? I think not one man in a hundred
would. Why not? Because we
have instinctive aversion to doing
VtrtlortOD f r? croofocr f Vi ir* cr i-n
? AVIVUVV W VUv VUtVCV WiliUQ 1 AX CJH
world. And what is that? Drummond
said "Love." Let us look at it
a little.
Consider Helen Kellar, horn to imprisonment
in the dungeon of her
own mere selfhood ? deaf, blind,
mute. Miss Sullivan, by patient and
inspired service, released her from
that imprisonment, led her slowly
out into the light and glory of life.
The something which made Miss Sullivan
eager and able to render this
beautiful service was love. But in
point of greatness even that high and
beneficent quality is absolutely incomparable
with Helen Kellar herself.
The greatest thing in the world
is personality. Love is but a part of
if, supplementing and crowning its
other phrts, all beauty and majesty
of physique, all vigor and grit and
i courage, all mental keenness, reach,
grasp and decision, all the subtle
graces of mind and heart, high spiritual
vision and deep insight, all purity,
dignity and serene poise of spirit.
These combine to make what we
name personality.
Look about you in a railway carriage,
a hotel lobby, a great college
grandstand. Your eve passes lightly
over 100 men. The one hundred and
first holds it. You may not know
who he is, nor ever have seen him before,
but straightway you say to
yourself, he is somebody. Something
about him distinguishes him, gives
him a manifest significance, like the
evident vajue of a gold coin.. That
something is personality and it is
self-revealing. Take Webster, for
* instance. They said when he walked
in Beacon street the houses looked
smaller. Sidney Smith called him
the greatest living lie, because nobody
could possibly be so great as he
looked. Edward Everett declared
that when he was earnestly speaking
sparks of fire leaped in his eyes. A
bust of him, exhibited by a European
sculptor, was mistaken for a head of
Jove. Or tfote how Emerson says
that "William of Orange won a subject
away from the King of France
every time he put off his hat," so noble
was his bearing. A Boston newspaper
reported that on a certain day
Washington street was dark and
v gloomy, until Phillips Brooks passed,
whereupon the brightness returned.
One might have profited almost as
much by a look into Emerson's face
as by-reading his books. Just a
glimpse of Napoleon at the hour of
battle doubled the fighting foixe of
those who saw him. Often one can
tell by the author's likeness in the
frontispiece of a book whether it's
worth while to.go any further. The
halo in art is far more than a mechanical
contrivance to denote sainthood.
It witnesses to the fact that
:true men carry an atmosphere; they
are fairly luminous. The captain of
an athletic team, if well chosen, takes
rank not by virtue of superior play,
ing or technical knowledge of the
game, but because there is about him
a quality which makes his vim and
spirit contagious.
Church committees looking for a
new minister pass by a score of possible
eligibles and choose the twenty1
first. The others were as good
preachers, as thorough scholars, as
faithful pastors, but the elect one
possesses this rare and compelling
something we call magnetism, which
;is but a vague term indicating personality.
The speaker who possesses
it often influences his audience al;most
as much, while he stands silent
before them for a moment, as during
. . the hour of his speaking. This is the
quality which accounts for the sa>>
ing: "You have to like Mr. Roosevelt
after you have met him." Personality!?no
other creation equals or
approaches it. Indeed, when Jehovah
accerdited Moses as His ambassador
to the court of Pharaoh, He
commanded as the chief authority:
"Tell him I Am sent you."
Now, then, since personality is the
greatest thing in the world, what is
the chief duty of man?' I answer,
deliberately: To honor, develop, express
and invest that personality.
This is not egotistic and selfish. God
gave man this personality as his tool,
the finest, noblest, chief implement
with which to make his mark on the
world, serve his kind and honor his
Maker. When the old bishop of the
Methodist Church was examining a
group of candidates for the ministry,
he asked them: "Are you willing to
be a nobody in Christ's service?"
And every last one of them piously
(as he thought) answered yes.
"Then you're a poor lot!" exclaimed
the bishop. And so they were. That
is a kind of humility which is not
t ^ Christian, because it is not only unproductive,
but contemptible. Christ's
man should be willing to take any
humble station, but wherever he may
be, always determined by God's grace
so to live, to labor, to fight, and to
pray that as the servant of the Most
High he shall weigh every ounce he
can, strike blows that hit hard, and
mean to his time all that he can possibly
signify.
Eeing a Christian man is being all
* a man can be. Holiness is near kin
to haleness, which means health, and
k haleness close kin to wholeness,
which means integrity, soundness,
completeness. Christian life is not]
giving np, but growing up; not lopping
off, but looming up. Its true
note is not ascetic, but athletic, and
when Christ announced that He came
that men might have life more abundantly,
He did not mean longer life,
but life overflowing, rich in content
and extent, with far horizons and ]
wide outlook. Just this Browning ]
emphasizes when he says: 1
God gives each man one life, like a lamp, ^
Then gives that lamp due measure of oil;
Lamp lighted, hold high, wave wide.
All very fine, you say, for the man
who happens to have been endowed
with personality! But how about the
hundred men who do not strike an
observer as being somebody, who
haven't _the gift of personal magne
tism? Well, my answer Is that per- I ,
sonality is not all endowment; it may |
be acquired, or more accurately yet, i
developed. When the spring comes
and the sun's rays fall more warmly,
the grass and leaves begin to grow.
There are seeds in the ground and |
life-dormant and waiting to be
stirred. The sun might shine a million
years, hot as midsummer, and
without those seeds lying there waiting,
no fair garment of verdure
would ever clothe the bare, brown
body of earth. And vice versa. Just
so, we notice now and again a former
stenographer and private secretary
to presidents becomes a Cabinet -officer.
Partly it is from native endowment,
and partly from the wakening
influence of association with great
men. Character is not taught, but
ratip'ht! not fnllv inborn, nor spring
ing, full armed, like Minerva from
Jove's head, but wakened, roused,
kindled by the contagious touch of
another of a little longer development,
and maybe, of larger growth.
Yet after all, this is the fine fundamental
truth of life. Every man is
of unique value, has a rare gleam of
virtue for his own, his point of view,
his individual work and message,
which no other man can have had.
His business in life is to live that
out, build it up, utter it, make it effective.
How shall he do it? By getting
out where the sun can strike down
to those seeds that are waiting in
him; that means: make helpful
friendships, listen to wise teachers,
keep high company with men who
have deeps and heights about them.
Read Paul's prayer written to the
men in Thessalonica: "The very God
of peace sanctify you wholly (set you
apart, distinguish you in every great
way), and I pray God your whole
body, soul and spirit be kept without
blemish even in the presence of
Christ. Faithful is he who hath
promised, who also will do it." Just
to this point was Emerson speaking
when he said: "Follow God, and
where you go men shall think they
walk in hallowed cathedrals." Phillips
Brooks puts it: "The influence of
a man whose heart God hath touched
is like a breeze of fresh air let into
a heated and stifling room." You are
a lamp of three wicks?body, soul
(mind) and spirit. Let God light
them (most likely He has already);
now you turn them up; keep them
trimmed, let them blaze wherever
you are, throwing out your cheer,
your light, your beacon message in
your time. Then, "as one flame-kindleth
another nor groweth less thereby,"
so shall your life kindle, waken,
rouse others.
In every-day terms, what does it
mean? My body; honor it, build it
up, keep it undishonored. By noble
uses, make it to become a sanctuary.
Build thee more stately mansions, oh my
soul,
While the swift seasons roll,
Leave thy low-vaulted past.
Let eaeh new temole nobler than the last,
Shut thee from heaven by a dome more
vast.
Till thou at length art free.
Leaving thine outgrown shell
By life's unresting sea.
My mind; meditate, store it with
true thoughts, pure thoughts,
thoughts fit to treasure up; let it
keep company with the noblest men
of the ages, whose wisdom, vision
and profitable experience may be
made my own by an hour's reading
every day; let me prepare myself to
recognize, appreciate, respond to and
succeed the truest, most devoted and
helpful spirits of all the days past .
and present, and finally keep my ^
eyes on the stainless peaks where ,
Christ is.
My spirit; how great a word it isL |
All generous impulses, all chivalrous
motives, all noble aspirations, all \
love of beauty and truth and good- \j
ness; every hatred of Weakness and t
wrong, every fine portrait of mem- i
ory and ideal! Oh, match this spirit <
with all the best about you; open it !
to Him who knows what is in man, j
and who alone has grace to bestow '
and loving power of mastery to de- I ,
velop your una wakened best. And
always remember how He reckons in I
the yearnings, the unuttered and un- 1
utterable aspirations there:
All instincts immature, all purposes unsure.
That weighed not as his work, yet swelled
the man's amount,
Thoughts hardly to be packed into a single
act;
Fancies that broke through language and
escaped,
All I could never be, all men ignored in
me,
This I was worth to him. ,/Whose
wheel the pitcher shaped.
Special Anointings.
If Jesus was anointed to preach
the gospel, how much more do we in
these modern times need a special
touch of the Spirit of God for this
work! I abelieve one ought, not to
teach a Sunday-school lesson, or sing
a song, much less preach a sermon,
without waiting for a special anointing
of the Holy Spirit of God. It is
this experience which has made men
and women great in the past. It was
the secret of Finney's power, and it
will be the secret of the power of
anyone who lives to-day. Each day's
needs, writes J. Wilbur Chapman, re
quire the daily infilling which the
quiet hour supplies.
When Every Man Must Stand Alone.
"Whosoever will go to heaven must
have faith of his own. In Gideon's
camp every soldier had his own pitcher;
among Solomon's men of valor
every one wore his own sword; and
these were they that got the victories.
The five wise virgins had every
one oi' in her lamp: and only these
went in with the bridegroom. Another's
eating of dainty meat makes
thee none the fatter.?T. Adams.
. .. - ... .
QUALIFIED.
"We want a man for our inquiry |
office," said the manager, "but he must |
be able to answer all sorts of ques- (
tions and not get irritated."
i
FITS.St.Vitus'Dance:Xervoas Diseases permanently
cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve
Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St.. Phila., Pa..
The birth rate of botn England and
Germany is decreasing. That of Ger-.
many is at present thirty-four a thous-;
and, while England's is twenty-eight,
a thousand.
__________
1
' T> Celiwftn ie, n n i r? 1 fnnd
gu I\CU Kjaiiuuu 10 au IUVM4 *. w-r -
Thompson's Dietetics, one of the i
standard works on foods, gives Scam- !
mell's tables as follows: The per ;
cent, of muscle building material in j
beef is 19 per cent., eggs 13 per cent., |
salmon 20 per cent. As a brain food, :
beef 2 per cent., eggs (white) 2V& I
per cent., (yolk) 2 per cent., salmon |
6 and 7 per cent.
IN THESE DAYS.
Old Nurse?"By low, ray baby."
Financier's Infant?"And sell higb. |
Give us a lullaby that's new in tho j
market."?Baltimore American.
Sewing Eyes
Are put to a fearfhl strain, get inflamed, '
biood-shot and sore. Leonardi's Golden j
Eye Lotion oools, heals and strengthens, j
Cures sore eyes without pain in one day. In- I
sist on having "Leonardi's"-it makes strong i
eyes. Guaranteed or money refunded. Drug- \
gists sell it at 25 cts. or forwarded prepaid :
on receipt of price by E. Leonardi A Co., (
Tampa, If la.
FULL OF WATER.
"Why do you call your company the j
Hydraulic Mining Company?"
"You ought to 6ee the stock we've :
issued."?Chicago Journal.
A WOMAN'S SUFFERINGS. A
Dreadful Operation Seemed to Be
the Only Outcome.
Mrs. Clvde Pixley. Bridge St., !
Belding, Mich., writes: "I had inSfiammation
of the
bladder, and the
trouble had gone
so far in five years
cians said nothing j
but an operation j
would cure me. j
Awful bearing;
down pains, back- j
aches and head-j
aches tortured me, there were spellsj
of dizziness and faintness, the kidney |
secretions were like blood and passed I
with intense pain. I had lost 30 J
pounds when I began using Doan's
Kidney Pills, and was dreadfully nervous.
In one week I felt better and
to-day I am a well woman and have,
? /? - 1 x: ?
ueeu ior a. lung uine.
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
RATS!
"Did I tell you the story of the ?
old church bell?"
",No. Let's hear It."
"Sorry, bpt it can't be tolled only j
on Sunday."?Cleveland Plain Dealer, j
I
The grocers are buying Argo Red j
Salmon because it takes no*argument i
to sell it and the customers come j
back for more.
" I
IDEAL WIFE FOR A POOR MAN. j
He?Marry me and you shall want j
for nothing. j
She?But I don't want to want for j
nothing. I want to want for something
I want.?Philadelphia Press.
UP-TO-DATE TEACHERS.
Since June 1, 1906, 236 letters have reacb!<i
President liraason at Athens, Ga., call
- -.11 i. u ~
ng for teachers ana oneriug salaries au me
vay from $-10 a month to $1200 a year. The
:ail is for well-trained teachers: they want
jraduatss of the School. This demand has
irought to the State Normal School a great
nany graduates of other schools.?124 last
rear. There were graduates of Emory Colcge,
Wesley an College, Lucy Cobb Insti:ute,
Brtn&u. Butler 31. ?t F. College, Fiednont
Institute, Chevy Chase College (,L).
L\), Peabody Normal College, and many j
nner schools, taking further courses in j
pedagogy, domestic arts and sciences, man- '
aai arts, elementary agriculture, uud other j
ourses, *hus preparing themselves for a f
Step upward and forward. Then. too. there
were Itid students who had already been
tea riling, but who felt the need of the j
splendid training offered there in the class- J
rooms, ihe laboratories, and the Practice
school. This Practice school building and
its handsome equipment were given to the
Echooi by George Foster Peabody. In the
Practice Scnooi tnero are cmiwcu, .
eight grades, eight teachers ami assistants.
There is no ampler range of training in any j
school in the South. In the Normal School
there are 186 students who earned the money
they spent there. There is not a more
earnest, faithful student-bodv in existence j
anywhere. Students of improper or un
worthy spirit arequic-tiy and quickly with- j
drawn from the school. The matrons and j
officers of the School live with the students, j
and the oversight is as kindly and constant i
as life in the home.
RETORT COURTEOUS.
German Lady (.living in Bayswater)
?"You cannot be German to play cut \
cf tune like that!"
Bandsman?"You cannot be English j
if you notice it!"?Punch.
' I
Argo Creamed Salmon, Scalloped I
Salmon, Cutlets, or Croquettes, are |
among the most tempting oi dishes. !
Argo at all grocers. |
HE WAS INELIGIBLE. !
Judge?"Have you formed any pre- J
vious opinion of the case?"
U<->nr?*r-l,-?"No. VOUr honor, but j
Maria has."?Harper's Eazar. ,
,v> fcf-'- J.'.' .'^ /fcvjL -a<% &
Poor Paint is Expensive i
If one is rich enough to repaint his ;
buildings every year for the pleasure j
r t * - ~1. ~ ~ > 1 /\T" CrllPTPP. i
j or naving & v* wiv? ?v?.
the quality of the paint used may cut
little figure. But if it is desirable to j
cut the painting bills down to the least {
amount possible per year, it is of the
utmost importance that the paint be
made of Pure Vvnite Lead and the
best of Linseed Oil. There are imitations
in the form of alleged White
Lead, and ther are substitutes in the
form t?f ready-prepared p.'ints.
We guarantee our White Lead to be
absolutely pure, and the Dutch Boy
on the side of every keg is your safeguard.
Look for I
/\M \ him*
???*. \ cT?xm pnD I
I ^i|\ \ x' vi\
( BOOK
' V - J -A Tulk on Paint." j
VLiwU| ~] ? q/ give. valuable infer\2^m&tiou
on the paint I
\Sir aubject. Sent tree I
^**22-*^ upon request.
NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY
in whichever of the following
cities is nearest you:
"Seem York. Boston. Buffalo. Clmliad,
Cincinnati. Chicago, St. Louis, Philadelphia
i John 7. Lewis A Bros. Co.I; Pittsburgh i
(National Load A Oil Oo.j
I
-???????? ?? |
Overheated Steel.
Microsopic study is adding much
to cur knowledge of the properties
of steel. It has recently been shown, !
for example, that there is an impor- ;
tant difference between steels rolled t
or annealed, below a temperature of j
about 750 degrees centigrade and j
those annealed at higher temperatures, i
which are thought to have been over- ,
heated. They do not endure "fatigue" ;
so well as those annealed at the low- j
er temperatures. The permanent and j
injurious microsopic strains are more i
minutely subdivided and more uni- 1
formly "distributed in the less heated j
steels, and this fact is regarded as !
explain ig their superior ability to j
endu.ro "fatigue."?Youth's Companion.
. I
EXTRAORDINARY FELLOW. j
"He looks like a very healthy and j
coolheaded fellow." [.
"Well, I should say. Why, he j
' ~ ~ * ? AWTTA11 P Of ^ Vl O 1
aoesn t even uei uckuuo at j
thought of being examined for life insurance."?Philadelphia
Press.
GIVES A PERFECT SKIN.
Sulphur in Liquid Form Adds to the i
:
Beauty of Women. 3
1
"Beauty is only skin deep/' but you can- I'
not be beautiful if you have any Skin Dis
ease or a bad complexion. Hancock's
Liquid Sulphur quickly cures Eczema, Tetter,
Sores, Eruptions, Blotches, and all
Skin Diseases. Apply Hancock's Liquid
Sulphur Ointment to the faco just as j*ou |
go to bed, and it will soon give you a
smooth, velvety skin.
Taken internally, Hancock's Liquid Sulphur
purifies the blood' and clears up the
complexion. A few spoonfuls in hot water
makes the finest of sulphur baths. All
druggists sell it. Sulphur Booklet free, if j
you write Hancock Liquid Sulphur Co.. i
Baltimore. ]
Dr. W. W. 'Leake, of Orlando, Fla., who ;'
was cured, says: "It is the most wonderful ' j
j
remedy for Eczema I have ever known/' i
i '
Self-confessed ignorance often Indl-J
ca:es wisdom.
The Argo Red Salmon of Alaska !
has the deepest red color, and the !
finest flavor of any Salmon packed. It
is packed entirely by machine, and
not touched by hand. One trial makes
a customer.
Loan sharks are anxious to meet people
who want to borrow trouble.
PHILIPPINE "DOBIE ITCH."
Itching Pimples Covered Bcdr?Discharged
For Disability?Found !
Cure in Cuticura Remedies.
<i,a Pi-iinnninp-; f he- i
\v line r*i(UiUii^u iu *. ?- ? ?
came subject to the M)obie Itch.' Small,
white, itching pimples formed under the j
skin, generally l>etween the toes, on the j
limbs, between the tingei-s and under the j
arms. 1 got *o bad that 1 was confined to
my quarters a week at a time. 1 was uis- |
charged from the Engineers by reason ot |
disability contracted in line of duty, and j
when 1 had the trouble again, my druggist
recommended Cutic-ura Remedies. The immediate
relief was manifest with mv first
purchase and the malady quickly yielded to
the Cuticura Remedies. Jt has never recurred
since J used the Cuticura Remedies,
.lohn S. Woods, 221 Sands St., Brooklyn,
N. \ Oct. 21 and 26, 1906."
Some people refuse to put their best
foot forward more than an inch.
Argo tiea baimon at an gruce.a.
Try it.
It doesn't matter how cheap a thing
is if you have no earthly use for it.
se ugly, grizzly, gray.halri.^Use M L4
fc -f a'/syMiM my H?
|
Order Today. Send Silver,
All Orders Pre
TRIO NOVELTY CO,,
Is the Gateway to
: Grain can't grow without food. It
farmer to see that his soil has enough of i
the kind of crops he grows.
The fertilizer for Wheat, Rye an
Potash. Rather than risk an under
fertilizer before applying. To increase
of Muriate of Potash to each too pounc
Send for our free books on growini
but facts on how the right use of Pota
and made good soil better soil.
? GERMAN KALI WORKS. 9
1 Mooadnock Building. Chicago
? Addresi office
Southern Female (
'nlno ffr^U to
pean-Amerlc*n Cor
11 i [^~Ly^ TgfrJ yacvwi. i
For be&uUTal catalogue address M. W? MAI
STATE UP
AND COLLEGE C
Higher training in Law, Agriculture, Engi
in Classical and Scientific studies. 46 instrr
Tuition FREE. $400,000 in recent improvei
Statesmanship, Education, Ministry, Indust
TERM OPENS SEPT. 13th. Send for Bullet
Telegraphy jg-pS1
A, ? )?ummerr*:ei
Shorthand The
Bookkeeping
wain line wikks bun > Telegraph*,
THROUGH BU1LJOINO (Nl?Wlul>. f\A .
PIEDMONT COLLEGE
DEMOREST, GA.
Healthful mountain location. Regular Preparatory
ind College courses; special courses in Business,
Domestic Science and Music. Suporior advantages.
Reasonable prices. For catalogue and further information
address
BENE! C. NEWELL, Acting President
VJtNDERBILT ST
J. I. EGVIN, A B.,A.M.,Prli., ELKIOH, AT.
PREPARES ROTS FOR BERT COLLE6E8
and TTXIYERSITIES. Location
high and healthfal. Large Campus, Equipment
best in the South, Strong Faculty,
good town, no saloons In County, Athletics
cncoriragcd. Send Tor catalogue giving In
detail what THIS EXCELLENT SCHOOL
OFl ER-) YOCK BOY. Opens Sept. 3, 'O?
~ I ? ??
Is the oldest and first basse** college in Va. to own it* buildng
?* fine ore. ' No vacation*. Ladies and Gentlemen.
Bookkeeping, Shorthond, Penm*n*bip. Typewriting. Telegraphy.
6cc. Three fiat taught by nail also.
Leading business college south of the Potomac
Elver."? Phila, Strncqraohtr. Address,
G. M. SMITHDEAL, President, Richmond.Va.
g WHITE STAR
| BUGGIES 7/SA
B from "tire to top" are hon- N
jfl estly made. Nothing but the
J best material goes in a White
11 Star." Send for our handsome
X7? 2S IN RKFEREXCK TO
JP JL O JOHN It. DICKEY'S
* ?-v. ?-_1_1? C\/C \\/ATCD
Uia Keiiauic C, I JU
It cnreu sore eyes ami granulated 11 da.
It strengthen* we.-;k eyes.
It coo!* and soothes a sore eye.
It refreshes and strengthens a tired eye.
It dor.'t hurt when applied.
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, eties and diseased
condition of roots of eye lashes, use Dickey's Old
Reliable Eye Salve. At all stores or by mail 25cta.
DICKEY DRUG CO., Bo*50, Bristol.Tenn.
Removes all swelling In S to oo
1 days; effects a permanent cure
tfflw in 30 to 60 days. Trial treatment
given free, Nothingcaa be fairer
Vv'rite Dr. H. H. Green's Son?, !
bSSSjecialists. _Box s Atlanta. G?
CRESCES
C GREATEST HE.
JSC Jfon Poisonous. Non I
&X pain from any cause. As
' fv*7 's^'eet milk. Cures burns
cures sores and inHamin;
fowls?cures cholera, sor
guaranteed.
For Sale by ail rirst-Cias* Deaiers. Hfgd. b7 CK32S
i CREOLE' HAIR RESTORER. PHc
I THE BEST PILLOW y,|
SHAM HOLDERS
Pleases the most particular housekeepers.
Cue lady writes: "Send
me two more sets of your 'Best
Pillow Sham Holders,' I never
realized they could be so useful."
They keep your beds neat and
pretty and save you time and
trouble. Can be used on wood
or Iron bedsteads.
PRICE POSTPAID 25C A
SET. 5 SETS FOR ?1.00. '
Stamps, or Money Ordor.
"nnllv Killed. ' ?$*?!
^ ' '
Big Grain Crops
must get it from the soil. It is for the
the right kind of plant food necessary to
d Barley should contain at least 6%'
supply, mix Potash liberally with the
Potash one per cent, add two pounds t
is of fertilizer.
Z grain. Thev won't give you theories,
sh has turned poor soil into good soil, j
3 Nassau Street, New York
Candler Building. Atlanta, Ga.
i nearest yon. K ,-^B
1oilftgft7t.aGR.ANGE, GA~
>ldest College for Women in America* ^
elegant home, fine climate rummer and winter. Stand*
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JIUFRSITYJ
VI V ! ! Wi
>F AGRICULTURE
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SUCCESSORS to
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fections, such as nasal catarrh, pelvic *
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| (At31'07)
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CENT CHEMICAL CO., Fu Worth, Texa^j
_ :?r