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? ?__1 ? Be not indifferent H^R. CHAPMAN'S MEEKLY SERMON. Noted Pastor Evangelist Arjju--' We Should Combine Our. Fnltl j Know ledge. ^H^B^BTork City.?The following sonrton "Stoning Jesus/' was preached BH^^^^Bgreat evangelist, the Rev. Or. J. ^^^Bafl^nChapman. from the text: "Then BB^^^^^n took up stones again to stone o'n n of the sun produces two the world, one exactly the opthe other. In one place it en autifies and strengthens; in the deadens, mars and decays. So th6 Gospel of Christ. It is unto javor oi life unto life;" unto oth"a savor of death unto death." i with the coming oi Christ into . He brought to light the truest affection and the deepest hatred. Men loved darkness rather than light, so Christ's coming into the world could only disturb them. . If you go into the woods on a summer's day, and if it he possible, turn over one of the log.-: which may be near to you. von will find underneath hundreds of little insects: the moment the light strikes them they ran in every direction. Darkness is their life; they hate the light. But if you journey a little further and lift a , 6tone. which for a little lime has been covering the grass or the little flowers, the moment you would lift the obstruction these things would begin to grow. The light is their life; they die in the darkness. Christ's coming into the world provoked the bitterest prejudice and called forih the deepest devotion. Simeon, a devout man. was in the temple when the young child Jesus was brought in. and he took Him tin m his hands and hles?ed God. and said, "Lord, !ette*t now Thy servant depart in peace, according to Tiiy word, -for now my etes have seen Thy salva? tion." It was just the opposite with jKew>d. When the king heard concerning he sent the wise men that h?* u.ight out through thein where He was. !tnd when they did not return, he was exceeding wroth, and sent forth and ?lew "" all. the children that were m Jieinienem aud in all the coa^t thereof two years and under, according to the time v.-hich he had diligently inquired of the wise men. These are the two extremes. John's posrcl is the gospel of love, but in it we iir.d ilie same great differences. Where can you find such sweetness as is contained in these words?'"For Cod so loved the world that He gave Hi* only begotten h'nu. that whomever helicveth in Hitn should not perish but have everlasting life?" Where is there tueh tcuderne-s as in this expression--"Jesus wept?" Only two words, and yit o:\ them the sorrowing world tests, taking comfort and consolation! But where can vou find such hatred ?s expressed in -lohn viii.: "Then took they up stones to cast at Him?" and again in the text. "Then the lews took up stones again to sinne Him?" When yon remember whom they were stoning, the Son of Man and fhe Son of Cod. the One who was going about doing good, the sin is something awful to think about. This tekt and the verse that follows is a beautiful illustration of hate and love, brutality and tenderness. He had just said. "I and mv Father are one." words which snould have made the hearts of the ucople leap for joy; that He was one with lehovah. who had led their forefathers from Egypt to Caanan; who had 6pokcn the worlds into existence; had held the winds in Hi9 fists: in whose bunds the seas washed to and fro. You would have thought at these expressions of the Master every knee would have been bowed in loving devotion; but not so. The Jews took un the stones again with nrkinK in H!m. and He save them one of the tenderest answers His heart could dictate?"Many good works have 1 hown you from Mv Father, for which 01 the^e do you stone Me?" , The text is an illustration of the fact that those who were models in fairness of their treatment of men,are most unfair in their treatment of Jesus Christ. If you are familiar with the mode of stoning offenders in the early days, you will be ab'e to see how true thit- was of the Jew?, i crier marched before the man who 0 was to die, proclaiming the man's sins and the name of the witnesses appearing against him. This was for the humane purnose of enabling any one who was acquainted with the circumstances ia the case to. go forward and speak for him, and the prisoner was held until the new evidence was given. But the Jews were not so considerate of Jesus; when He said. "I and My Father are one," immediately they began to stone Him. All that is asked for our religion, for Christ and for the Bible is just a fair consideration of their claims. The B ble, we claim. i.s the word of God. not because it is old only, but because it is both old and tiue. It seems as if it were written for us as individuals: it is my present answer to tny present need. We simply present the Book in evidence. Suppose you try to find its equal; suppose you try to produce its simplest parable; failure would be the result. Our religion is the same; we only ask for it a fair consideration. For Christ it is just the same. In England not long ago a woman was lecturing against our religion, and after she had closed, one of fue mill-hands said. 4'I would like to ask the lecturer this one question: Thirty years ago I was the curse of this towu and everybody, in it. I tried to do better and failed. The teetotaler 1./0/1 nt >> >?> fin(i T sienrd the nledcrc and broke it. The noiice took me and sent me to prison, and the wardens tried to make me better, and I began to drink as soon as I left my cell. When all had failed. I tool; Christ as my Savior, and He made a r.cw man of me. I am a member of the church, a class-leader and sujHwintendent of the Sunday-school. If Christ is a myth and religion is untrue, how could I be so helped by them ?" Men are still stoning Jesus Christ. Perhaps you shrink from the conduct of the Jews and cry. "For shame!" but there is a worse way to stone Him than that. Men can hurt you far more than by striking you in the face or beating you with stripes. Do you imagine that Christ's worst suffering was when they cast stones at Him. or scourged Him. or put nails ' through His hands? I am sure not. but it was rather when He came unto His own. and His own received Him not: when they called Him "this fellow;" when He was in Gethsemane in an agony; when He was on the cross and He felt so forsaken that His heart broke. If He were here to-day in the flesh as He is in the Spirit. I am sure there ore ways we could hurt Him more than by taking up stones from the verv streets ' and casting them in His blessed face until ^Jis eyes were blinded by the blood drops ( oown. ^ J IXCOSSISTEXCV. I. Have you ever noticed the sadness which throbbed in the words of our fc'nvior at the Last Supper, ''One of you shall betray me?" or when He was walking with them toward the garden, "All j of you shall be offended this night because of Me?" or when He way in the garden and we hear Him saying: "What, could yon not watch with Me one hour?" The stor.e that hurts Christ most is not tlie ; one that is cart by the unbelieving world; i Tie expects that; it is the one that is 1 cast by llis own people, and there is only 1 i o ie Ktone that they can cast a: Him, ?+nd j I that is the one of inconsistency to talk j I <> . way and live another, confessing wiiUi i k the lips and denying in the walk. You i never took a step in the wrong direotioA i it was a stone cast at Christ. I have! ' H|^^brd of a young lady who was engaged* j greatest amount of pleasure and1 ; r i ' frivolity, nearly forgetful of her loyalty to Christ. One day being asked by her companions to go to V certain place, she refused on the grounp that it was Communion Sunday in the church. In amazement her friends asrfed her. "Are you a communicant?" If Ahe world docs not know it, if our frier#!* do not know it. we ar- taking up with which to stone Him. hAthed. U. On the part of these who are rot His followers, with some it is absolute hatred; certainly it was so wilii the .Jews. You read in tin* text that they took up stones again. The first time we road of their stoning Christ is in the eighth chapter of John, and it is supposed that thev were near a place where stones abounded, and it was very easy to pick them up. 'rL" 5 *"? ~ nottr Snlft. i nr scconu iimr- urei >?.?<= mnn's porch; and it is a question if thero were any stones tliere to be found. So it. is thought that thev carried thcrn all the way. perhaps only drooping then as they listened tc# His speech, by which thev were so enraged that they stooped and picked them tip and hurled them at Him. Are you casting these stones at Christ? Hemcmbcr that He said, "He that is not with Me is against Me." IN DIFFERENCE. III. With many it is the stone of indifference. It was one of the first cast at Him in the wor'd. It began at the manger. going to the cross, and it is still being thrown. With curling lips and insolent contempt men said. "Js this not the carpenter's sop.?" When He was 011 the cross, they said, in derision. "He saved others; now let Him save Himself." It is row ike ninth hour and darkness is settled about the place. Listen! His lips are moving: "Eloi! Eloil" Surely this will move them: but some one says, "lie is railing for KHas; let us see if he will come to Him." This is all like the gathering of a sto'm to me: first the cloud was the size of a man't hand, that is. at Bethlehem; it is larger at Egypt; heavier at Nazareth; darker in Jerusalem; then He comes up to the Mount of Olives, and the c'oiul ?een!-s to break as He erics out, "OV Jerusalem, Jenisa'em!" Have you been indifferent to Christ? Anvthing is better linn that: better outspoken opposition to Him than to be theoretic.. Uv a believer and to be practically ilepving Him. How can you be indifferent to Him? A man working on one o'" the railroads in the State of Indiana discovered, one morning, that (be bridge had fallen, rod he remembered that tb? train was due. He started down the track to meet her. saw her comb"-, and. raising his hr.r.d-. pointed to the b-idro. but 0:1 sh" came, having no time to !o-r. Ho threw himself across (lie track, and th? engineer, tbinki"" him a madman. ?!c-m?d the train. The man jv-o-c and 'old h;s ?torv and saved the lives of hnndr?(iF. Cnn^t did this fo- you; He pi""h->ecd your redemption liv the giving of Hi'pself vbethc'' "p't have accepted t:>is ra'vption or not. Will vou stone rum lor that* rXTJKUEK. IV. Yc'hen He raid: "I and Mv Father e,ec one." thov fast another stone at Hint. That was unbelief. Indifference was hard to hear: h-tred cut 'ike a knife, hut unbelief was the crowniuc sin of the Jews. Many are hurling it at Him to-day. Tie has promised to save us if We oniv believe, and wc ne?d onlv to trust Him .to he saved. A little girl in Glasgow who had just fcurd pence was heard counseling one of her plavmptes in this way: "I say. lassie. do as t did. grip a promise and hold on to it. and you will he saved." and there is salvation in the child's words. Now read the verse that immediately follows the text: "Many good works have I shewed you from My Father: for which of those works do you stone Me?" It is supposed that some of the Jews had actually struck Him with a stone, and this dr:w forth from Him words tender enough, pathetic enough to turn aside the hatred of one who had a heart of stone. DO NOT STONE IIIM. 1. Because of what He was, they called Him the bright and morning star; the fairest of all the children 01 men; the cliiefest among ten thousand. Oh. that we might have our eyes open to behold Him! 2. Fifty years ago there was a war in India with England. On one occasion'several English officers were taken prisoners; among thom was one man named Baird. On? of the Indian officers brought fetters to put on thcnuall. Baivd had been sorelv * v:. 1." wouticea ana was suncring irum m> c.nvne.?e. A gray-haired officer said. '"You Avili not put chains on that man. surely?"' The answer was, "I have just as'many fetters as prisoners, and they must all he worn." Then said the old hero. 'Tut two pair* on me" Baird lived to gaiu his freedom, hut the other man went down to his death doubly chained. But what .if he had worn the fetters of all in the prison, and what if volutarily he had left a palace to wear chains, to suffer the stripes and endure the agony?" That would be a poor illustration of all'that Christ has done for you and for me. Will you stone Him for that? 3. Because of what He is to-day. In 1517 there was a great riot in London, in which houses were sacked and a general insurrection reigned; guns in the tower were thundering against the insurgents and armed hands were assailing them on every side. Three hundred were arrested, tried and hanged; five hundred were cast into prison, and were to be tried before the king, Henry VIII. As he sat in state on the throne the door opened and in they came, every man with a rope about his neck. Before sentence could he passed on them three queens entered. Cntherine of Aragon. wife of the king; Margaret of Scotland, sister of the king, and Mary of France. They approached the throne, knelt at the feet of His Majesty and there remained pleading until the king forgave the five hundred trembling men. But thcie is a better intercession than that .going on for you and for me at this moment. Will you stone Him for that? Looking out from the windows of heaven the !Son of God beheld people heavily burdened, bearing the weight of their sins, groping about in their blindness, crying. peace: ana mere was no (icucc. And He said, '"I will go down and become hone of their bone and flesh of their flesh; I will open their eyes and bear their burdens, foreive their sins and give them peace." Between man and the Father's house was a groat gulf, wider than the distance from east to west, deeper than the distance from north to south, but Christ's coming bridged the gulf over. Across the chasm He cast His cross, and on the other side I see Him standing. His arms ouienrend Hia attitude nnc of nleadinf. Us ten! you will hear Him saving. "Come unto Me. come unto Me, whosoever will, let him come." Will you stone Him for that? A Will Power. It is the written law of Cod that man Rhall receive accordins to his gifts. The law Isolds in every relation in life, as we ileal with men so will men deal with us. Every action in life has its measured consequences. The law of reciprocity holds on all occasions. A man is not entirely subject to his environment. We often hrar men complain that they are victims of circumstances, but God has given us a will power which if we but pronerly exert if will prevail over the evil influences of our surroundings.?The Rev. II. E. Cobb, Xcw j York City. What * 3Ian Really Is. What a man intends to be is wha* he really is. He may, indeed, realize that be aught r.ot to be that, but to be something better. He may, perhaps, wish, at tii.-v. Lo rise above his chosen course, but. th s amounts to little while he really, in In-. 1 heart of hearts, intends to pursue the jther path. God knows what we intend to be, and He judge? us accordingly. This is the idea of the inspired declaration: 'As he thinketh within himself (as a man purposeth in his inner self), so is lit."? ?unday-School Times. C"- ,w- ^ y. , - mymaj I r?T. !*?&? ^W"ort^fiio?wj In Sicily machines are v.t.l for extracting essence from lemon peels. ICacli machine has a cnpariiy of HI.tMiii half-peels a day. The women and boys who (V) the v.'ork ;; *t sixtc u cents for ten hours. There is n species of large Mack ant which steals rubber from Para trees after they are tapped. liecs also find use for India rubber, and some species in South America actually cut the bar!: of trees that produce resinous substances iu order to cause a flow of the sap. The gum is employed by the bees as a ready-made wax for their nests. That glass can be diseased is one of the latest und most startling of discoveries. It has been found iu Kuglaud that some of the glass iu the windows of York Cathedral, which is more than 500 years old. is perforated aud yields to the slightest touch. In the hope of arresting this "disease." which is ascribed to a fungus, portions of the glass have been removed. A coroner's jury in Ireland gave this verdict on the sudden death of a merchant who had fniled in business: "We. the jury. Ilnd from the new doctor's statement that the deceased came to his dentil from heart failure, superinduced by business failure, which was caused by speculation failure, which was the result of failure fo see far enough ahaad.'' A single blast furnace in a Wostc-n State, which captures the smoke of its charcoal pits and conveys it into still*, has been able to realize enough from this source to pay a large share of Its running expenses. It has been demon strated tunt eaen com oi woou contains 28,000 cubic foot of smoke, and that 2.800,000 cubic foot of siuoko produces 12.000 pounds of acetate of lime. 200 gallons of alcohol and twenty-live pounds of tar. In the eighteenth century the lives of highwaymen who had fallen within the clutches of the law. or were likely to do so, were frequently insured at Lloyd's. One Insurance is' still recorded of the possibilities of the execution of two Jacobite Scotch peers, after the 1745 risiuV. at a premium of one and one-half per cent.: the life of JHm Wilkes was insured at a premium or five per cent.: that of Alderman Bond at seven per cent. The return of Wilkes to Parliament whs Insured at premiums varying from five to fifty guineas, and on his election to Middlesex at a premium of from twenty to seventy guineas. The risk of war with France was insured against at a premium of ten guineas, the dissolution of Parliament at a premium of fifteen guineas. Travelers might insure their return from foreign coun- j tries at various rates. Clean Newspaper* Pro?pcrIoc. There are encouraging indications of a revival of clean Journalism. It is not coming through the establishment of "endowed newspapers." Few practical newspaper men believe in that agency for the reform of deploraoie newspaper tendencies. The very fact that a newspaper was endowed would so far detatch it from.ordinary conditions of publication as to make it use less as an example. Moreover, the [ existence of such a newspaper would imply a coufession that a really clean and moral journal was unprofitable; ' else why the endowment? It Is not philanthropy that is wanted I so much as business sagacity and a pood newspaper sense joined with a high purpose. A newspaper is not a moral tract, and cannot he displaefd by tracts. A man who should spend millions In endowing newspapers that were too good to stand alone would not be nearly so great a benefactor as the man who demonstrated that a clean newspaper can bo made to pay. This demonstration is now being made in several American cities. Some of the most successful newspapers repudiate altogether the methods of the "new journalism." They do ljot disfigure their pages with cheap pictures, nor with huge blotches of red ink, nor with headings in type four inches high. They do not pad three lines of actual i news transmitted by cable with half n column of lurid details' manufactured in the office, precetled by a lying date line. They have no drag-net out for scandals; they show some respects for rights of privacy. Yet their news \ service is of the best. They are well ' written and well edited; they appeal . to healthy minds; their circulation is large and increasing.?Youtfi's Coml,an,on w.r. . The Many-Siiled Koiaer. Kmperor William of Germany can talk fluently In six languages. He has written a play and conducted its rehearsal. No man lives a busier life than he. but ou the discovery of the Rontgen rays he telegraphed for Professor Rontgeu and talked with liivn for hours. Ho has written a public prayer and conducted a choir. lie can cook his own dinner, can tplay chess, paint pictures or draw eariqnturos. He has learned engineering and studied electricity. Though he can use ouly one arm, he can tfmot game for four hours at the rate of two a minute. He has over a 1 hundred titles, and is an admiral in i ihree of the biggest navies. In twenty- J ( ve years lie has shot 23.000 head of , game. lie sometimes Changes his dress a dozen times a day, has a dozen valets and his wardrobe is said to. be worth $023,000. > fc * - 'fv u for American Hammeri Excel. Of the hammers made in America today there is no end, says The American Importer. There is the tiny lit- ! tie tack hammer which weighs only a few ounces, and is indispensable in | house, store, or factory. Then there | is the twenty and thirty ton hammer driven by steam and used for making 1 immense forgings. The numberless J effects which are due to its remark- I able force of impact have made the j hammer a necessity in all trades. Im- I mense manufactories, employing thousands of men. are grinding year in and year out making hammers, while ten times as many wholesale houses are busy putting the product on the market. The industry has advanced to^ such a stage that many general hard-' ware firms in the United States have thrown out the hammer, leaving it to ihe houses that deal in tools exclusively. In the South Sea Islands treefelling contests are of such importance that specially made axes are imported for the work from Amerira. So skilled are these woodmen of the South Seas in felling timber that a dozen blows on the trunk of a tree will show but the one gash, as though done by a single blow of mighty power. j I"*i Biecaitiia ud Sciatica by c?ntrilida| tie id J It fir Utter this tie bed blood pcdler. All bloc ^ ^ In the fall-whiter of 19001 vu affltcte< ; lUHk L UBU W U8D m W?UC tw U.V IU . C no ease to my thigh, and the only poeitJ ) straight out in front of me, while in a re I of the diaeasc. I began treatment at once, J Mr. J. T. Doater, of Greenville, of the d } " Rhkcmacide." I purchased a bottle f ) Dosrer that if 3 bottles did not curt* me \ bottle relieved me, and I have had no tout / W. A. Palmer, who lived hereat the tit ( of rheumatism, and for alz weeks bad to 1 f use of several bottles of RH CUMACIDE, 1 ing' t sJclan, who is a great believer in tl J . ,jrs truly, J. L. O. THOMPSON. S A!! Druggists, or exprcssai 2 Bobbitt Chemical Co., SWIFT CREEK Stock and Dairy Farm. C v fit Has for aalealargt numberot Ll v ** , n^olosroancreglitared A.J.C c. V\4 < , wJ^O Jemy HoiI* aad Helfera. 1L Yjr None better breti in the Sooth. VI >iaiX*S cJ Comblnta* clotely the rr,:i: I'TCv A/ noted and up-to-date blood HI \\ In In America. Bulla 10 to li moutha old, #25.00. Helfera. ace. #53.00- POLAND-CHINA PIQS. #100 each, tend check and get whai. you want T. P. BKAfiWtLL, Prop. Battlabore. 31. C. Which? J A lean and potash-hungry soil, I wasted seed, wasted labor and idle M gins?A MORTGAGE. Or, plenty of | Potash I in the fertilizer, many bales and a S busy gin?A BANK ACCOUNT. K f Ll / _./v ?W Jk> ^ots P j;\I {\cts till / (Us truly iff/ <1/ swwgS tions. as it is wholly ti PSSquality or si manufactuni *S8l?$y pleasant to t MIS' virtues of RS&V /$&f' from an exc< ]?) r"'#^/ WnoWL'n tn !Wf^ act most ber /;&' To get its m ^ww genuine~m? r^iroRrftAfM S&.r\'F"rekr\ci??co. C >viisville., Ky. <l, by all dru^i-ata. Price- ' < ipBf^ yGCSS^^'^ Southern made PAiiTurDW wimr run o'JUincivFJ ruui/o Ttie Best Ladies' Sboes Id America for )|.5C TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE.. IF 1AI II DEALER DOES NOT I AHRY THEH, A POSTAL CARD TO I N WILL TELL TOE WHERE YOl'CANUETTUKn. O 0 O 0 j CRADDOCK-TERRY CO., | flAKhRS. LYNCMBURQ, VA. ii la til blood tsi Irlriaf ties est c! tie spites. S id diieasn yield prosptly to tils pat riseip. I 1 with Sciatic Khcumatisin, so much so / j ralklng. Upon sitting: down, there was S on In which 1 could boar mv leg was C ol 1 nincr twwiif lf?n YLpiiIlzlnff th? natur? r but received no relief until Induced by ? Irug flrru of llruoo A Doater, to take ) rom them under the guarantee of Mr. f the money would be refunded. One ) :b of rheumatism since that time. C ne(1001), w&sdowg with a severe attack / be turned in bed on a sheet. After the S he was pronounced well by the attend- C be efficacy of your medicine. c Editor PleUent Sentinel. Pickens. 3. C. f [je prepaid, Price $1.00. r Baltimore, /Id. ) Capsicum Vaseline Put up in Collapsible Tubes. A Substitute for and Superior to Mustard or I any other plaster, and will not blister th? most [ delicate akin. The pain allaying and curatlTe i qualities of this article ara wonderful. It will top the toothache at once and relieve headache and sciatica. We recommend it as the best and safest external pnnnt#?r-irritant known, also as an ex ternai remedy for pains In the chest and stomach and all rheumatie.neuralglc and gouty complaints. A trial will prorewhat we claim for It, and It will be found to be Invaluable In the household. Manv people say "It Is the best of all your preparations. Price lo cents, at all druggists, or other dealers, or by sending this amount to us In postage stamps we will send you a tube by mall. No article should be accepted by the pnbllo unless the same carries our label, as otherwise It Is not genuine. CHESEBROUGH MANUFACTURING CO, 17 State 8treet> New York City. Piles or Hemorrhoids whether itching, bleeding or protruding,' promptly relieved and permantnty cured by my method without knife or operative measures. Write me fully regarding your case and I will advise you honestly in the matter. Consultation free. Price of treatment complete, only fr.oo. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. Write today. Dr. H. N. TANNTR. East Aurora.. N. Y. So. 1. I PAY SPOT CASH FOR, ! MILBOO1nty LAND WARRANTS ] itsped to soldiers of any war. Also Soldiers' Additional Homestead h/ghts. Write ice atpnee. PRANK H. REGEB, P. 0. Box V% Denver, Colo. Thompson's EyeWgter ^l 4v I * 1 V* - -f 1 \tl/: leasarvtlyj Ber\eficially? as a Laxative-. als to the cultured and the ' he healthy, because its comiple and wholesome and belisturbing the natural func- ^ j3 ree from every objectionable jbstance. In the process of ag figs are used, as they are he taste, but the medicinal iyrup of Figs are obtained client combination of plants medicinally laxative and to leficially. beneficial effects?buy thet tnufactured by the . &S i)YRIJP(? t>l. new York,/1.Y. fifty-cents per bottle* To Cotton Gionero. j We MiNfaeteri) the Most Complete Ike of Cotton 6ln Machinery of Any Geoi&i x ^ In the WorH, namely, the (71? PRATV WINSW1P, "MONGER, EAGLE, SMITH. We also make Lintsrs for Oil Mills, | Engines and Boilers. . I Wa also tall everything necessary ta cocplala r I Modern Ginning Outfit and furaish our e:s- I tomera with full def iled plans andm- I terial bills for construction of aeeessatf I houses for our plants without ectra charge. 1 The CohtineRtel Gin Company*. I Birmingham, ilia. V WRITS FOR OIR I.ATEST CJLTALOOUK. * mmm I suffered from indigestion for a long time. My symptoms were swelling of the abdomen, with pain and t i _ i i i , most lerriuie neauucucs, i also a coated tongue. Since taking Ripans Tabules I ha.e grown better ana am new nearly well. At druggists. The Five-Cent packet is enough for ordinary occasion. The favtiiy bottle. 60 cents, contains a supply for a year. ? . mmmmammmmmmm?mmmm BROMO-"! SELTZER CURES ALL HeadacHes | 10 CENTS--EVERYWHERE | j* DROPSY > JL ^ W 10 0AT8* TREATKir FSEL aad casei. ***' ** * CEfeS^fSU, anauorw: ' Box B Atln iw ; < K? Good for the Sole M$ 5 Red Seal Shoes '