The Dallas new era. (Dallas, Paulding County, Ga.) 1898-current, September 09, 1898, Image 5

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mf DR. TALMAOE*8 SERMON The Eminent Divine'* Sunday Dieoouree. aonc.tr Enlogit.d—Unlnotu Mode* ... Getting Money-Why Polltlcc Hu Be- com© a Synonym For Trnculency and TurpUmle-Th© Moral* of the Gospel. •.™ E V;i" They , th,t wl11 be rloh i»u ln ‘° » jsmptatlon and a snare, and Into many oollsli and hurtful lusts, whloh drown men Jj destruction and perdition.”—1 Timothy , * he Niagara Falls over which rush 4 i mu .l tltude of souls, namely, the deter mination to have the money anyhow richt or wrong. Tell me how a man gets his money and what he does with it, and I will teU you hls character, and what’will be his destiny in this world aud the next, t pro pose to speak to-day about the ruinous modes of getting money. In all our city, state and national elec- cions large sums of money are usipd in brib ery. Politios, from being tho science of good government, has often beou be draggled into the synonym for truculency and turpitude. A monster sin, plausible, po-eut, pestiferous, has gone forth to do its dreadful work in all ages. Its two hands are rotten with leprosy. It keeps its right hand hidden in a deep pocket. The left hand is clonched, and with its ichorous knuckle it taps at the door of the court-room, the legislative hall, the con gress and the parliament. The door swings open and tho monster enters, and glides through tho aisle of the council ohamber a ? , 8l, PP e * e <l Pago. and then It takes its right hand from its deep pocket, and offers it in salutation to Judge or legislator. If that hand bo taken, and the palm of the Intruder cross tho palm of the official, tho loprosy crosses from palm to palm in a round blotch, round as n gold eag e, and tho virus spreads, and tho doom is fixed, and the victim perishes. Let bribery, accursed of God and man. stand up for trial. The Bible arraigns it again and again. Samuel save of his two sons, who beoamo judges, “They took bribes and perverted judgment.” David says of some of hls pursuers, "Their right hand is full of bribes.” Amos says of some men in his day, "They take a bribe, and turn aside the poor in the gate.” Ellphas fortells the crushing blows of God’s Indignation, de claring, "Fire shall consume the taber nacle of bribery.” It is no light temptation. The mightiest “ftve faUen under it.. Lord Bacon, Lord Chancellor of England, founder of our modern science, author of “Novum Organum,” aud a whole library of books, tho leading thinker of hls century, so precocious that when a little child he was asked bv Queen Elizabeth, “How old are you?” he responded, “I am two years younger than your Maajesty’s happy reign;” of whoso oratory Ben Jonson wrote, “The fear of every man that heard him was lest ho should make an end;” hav ing an Income which you would suppose would have put him beyond the temptation of bribery—thirty-six thousand dollnrs a year, and Twickenham Court, a gift, and princely estates in Hertfordshire—yet under this temptation to bribery, falling flat into ruin, and on bis confession of taking bribep, giving as exouse that all bis K redeoessors took them; he was fined two undrod thousand dollnrs—or what corre sponds with our two hundred thousand dollars—and imprisoued in London Tower. Even heathenism and the Dark Agos have furnished specimens of incorruptibility. A cadi of Smyrna had a case brought before him on trial. A man gave him five hundred ducats in bribery. The case came on. The briber had many witnesses. The poor man on the other side hud no witnesses. At the close of the case tho cadi said: “This poor man has no witnesses, he thinks; I shall produce in his behalf five hundred witness es against the other side.” Then pulling out the bag of ducats from under the otto man, he dashed it down at the foot of the briber, saying: “I give ray decision against you.” Epamlnondas offored a bribe, said: “I will do this thing if it be right, and if it be wrong, all your goods cannot persuade The President of the Amarloan Congress during tho American Revolution, General Reed, was offered ten thousand guineas by foreign commissioners if he wofcld betray this country. He replied: “Gentlemen, I am a very poor man, but tell your king ho is not rich enough to buy me.” But why g o ho far, when you or I, if wo move in ouorabie society, know men and women who by all the forces of eurth and Hell could not bo bribed. They would no more be bribed than you would think of tempt ing an augel of light to exchange Heaven for the pit. To offer a bribe Is villiany, but it is a very poor compliment to the man to whom it is offered. My oharge Is to you, In all departments of life, steer clear of bribery, all of you. Every man and woman will at some time be tempted to db wrong for compensation. •The bribe may not bo offered in money. It may be offered in social position. Let us remember that there Is a day coming when the most secret transaction of pri vate life, and of public life, will come up for public reprehension. We cannot bribe death, we cannot bribe sickness, we cannot bribe the grave, we cannot bribe the judginent # of that God who thunders agulnst tills sin. “Fie!” said Cardinal Beaufort, “lie! Can’t death be bribed? Is money nothing? Must I die, and so rick? If the owning of the whole realm would save me I could get it by policy or by purchase—by rmmey.” No, death would not be bribed then; he will not be bribed now. Men of the world often regret that they have to leave their mouey hero when taey go away from tho world. You can tell from what they say in their last hours that one of their chief sorrows is that they have to leave their money. I break -.hat delusion. I tell that • bribe-taker that he will take hls money with him. God will wrap it up in your shroud, or put it In tho palm of your hand in resurrection, aud there it will lie, not the cool, bright, shining gold as it was on the day when you sold your vote and your moral principle, but there it will lie, a hot metal, burning and consuming your hand forever. Or, If there be enough of it for a chain, then it will fall over the wrist, clank ing fetters of an eternal captivity. The bribe Is an everlasting possession. You take It for time, you take It for eternity. Home day in tho next world, when you are longing for sympathy, you will feel on your cheek a kiss. Looking up, you will And it to be Judas, who took thirty pieces of silver as a bribe, aud finished the bar gain by putting an infamous kiss on the pureohook of hls divine Master. Another wrong use of money is soon in the abuse of trust funds. Nearly every man during the course of hls life, on a largo or smaller scale, has the property of others committed to Ms keeping. He Is, so far, a safety deposit, he is an adminis trator, and bolds in hls hand the Interest of the furally of a deceased friend. Or he is an attorney, and through his custody goes the payment from debtor to creditor, or he is the collector of a business house, which compensates him for the responsi bility; or ho is treasurer for a charitable institution, and he holds aims contributed for the suffering; or he Is an official of tho city or the State or the natloD, and tuxes one* diionMln* whether they ean endure the temptation! Von give the boy plenty of money, and hare no aoooant Of ft, and make the way down become very easy and vou may put upon him a pressure that be esnnot stand. There are men who go into positions full of temptation, consid ering only that they are lucrative posi tions. An abbot wanted to buy a piece of ground, and the owner would not sell ft, but the owner finally oonsented to'let if to him nntll he could rnlse one crop, and the nbbot sowed aoorn9— a orop of 800 yearsl And I tell you young man. that the dis honesties whloh you plant In your heart and life will seem to be very Insignificant, but they will grow up until they over- shndow you with horrible dnrkness, over shadow all time and nil etorulty. It will not he a crop for 200 years, but a orop for everlasting ages. I address many who have trust funds. It Is a compliment to you that yon have boon so entrusted, hut I charge you, in the § reaction o( God and the world, be oareful; e ns oareful of the property of others ns >ou are careful of your own. Above all, keep your own private nocount nt the bank separate from your acoount as trustee of an estate, or trustee of an institution. That is the point nt whloh thousands of people mako shipwreck. They get the property of others mixed up with their own proporty, they put it into investment, and awny It all goes, and they cannot re turn that whloh they borrowed. Then comes the explosion, and tho money mar ket Is shaken, and the press denounced, nud the Ohnroh thunders expulsion. A blustering young man nrrlvod at a ho tel In the West, and he saw a man on tho sidewalk whom he supposed to be a labor er, and In a rough way, as no man has a right to address a laborer, said to him, “Garry this trunk upstairs.” The man oarrlea tho trutfc upstairs and name down, and then the young man gave him a quar ter of a dollar which was clipped, and in stead of being twenty-five cents it was worth only twenty cents. Then the yonng man gave hls oaru to the laborer and said, “You take this np to Governor Grimes; I want to ses him." “Ab,” said the laborer, “I am Oovernor Grimes." “Oh," said the R mua. "you—I—excuse me.” Then ivernor said: “I was muoh impressed by tho fetter you wrote me asking for a certain oflloe in my gift, and I had made up my mind yon should have it, hut a young man who will oheat a laborer out of. five oonts would swindle the government of the Hints if be got hls hands on it. I don’t want yon. Good morning, sir." I do not suppose there was ever a better specimen of honesty thnnwas found tn the Duke of Wellington. Be marched with hls army over the Fienob frontier, and the army was suffering and he aoareely knew how to get along. Plenty of plunder all about, but ho commanded none ol the plunder to betaken. Ho wrltw home these remarkable wordst ‘‘Wears overwhelmed with debts, and I can scorosly stir out of | my house ou acoout of oublfo oredltors, watting to demand what is duo to them.” Yet at tho very time the Prenoh peasantry were bringing their valuables to him to keep, A celebrated writer says of the transaction: "Nothing oan be grander or more nobly original than this admission. This old soldier, alter thirty years' service, this iron man and victorious general, es tablished In an enemy’s country at the head ot an Immense army, Is afraid of bis o.-edltors! This is a kind of fear that hoi seldom troubled conquerors and Invaders, and I doubt if the annals of war presen: anything comparablo to Its sublime sim pllotty." lists oi st War. PVosn Ac Chicago Timm Herald. Tue feelidg ot admiration for haroea ot war seems to be Inneteln the human benrt, and is brought to theaurfnoe as the oppor tunity end object (or eueb hero worship presents Itself. Among those who proved their heroism during our Civil War waa A. Schlffeneder, of 161 Sedg wick street, Chicago. He Is an Austrian by birth.came to America nt the n g e ot twenty and soon becume nn American cltlr. on. Il iyas living In M11 w a tt ke o when the call for volun teers came, early In 1R02, and ho „ , promptly on- "* roetifd « mmii listed In Company A, ol the Twenty-sixth Wisconsin Volunteers. In tho Army of the Potomac our horo saw much fighting, cam paigning tn the Khotmudouh Valley. In the first day's fighting at tho battle of Gettysburg, SohtlTeneder received a wound In tho right side, which afterward caused him much trouble. With a portion of hls regiment lie was captured aiRI Im prisoned at Bell Island anu Andcrsonvllle, and afterward exchanged. He returned to Ms regiment, whloh waa transferred to tho army of General Sherman, and marched with him through Oeorgla to the sea, ALLIGATORS PLAYINO PYRAMID: % Role* el the Os tat as They Afftit te an OatsMer Watching the Spert Did you ever see the alllgato* nt a Zoo play "pyramid” or afty other of their famous games? They wrestle like old-time Graeco-Roman boys, ami strain and struggle In all sorts of ways nt 1L When, finally, ono wlna by get ting the other on hls back, a funnier tiling occurs. The victor makes sound like escaping steam, then the otlmrs tnnke sounds like escaping steam—alligators' applause, If you Please. Then they all become still and watch the vanquished brother squirm to get off of hls hack and onto hls legs again. If he's longer In doing it than the gang think Is proper they mow up in single file and give him a Jah with their Jaw In hls upturned body. When finally he gets hmself righted all hands again set up the steam escap ing racket, cheering him long and as loud ns they did hls victor. Their monulng no fight Is shown by tlielr never hurting each other. A great midsummer pnstlmo of tin alligators In the Zoo nt Cincinnati Is pinytng pyramid. The 'gators piny pyramid several times a day. To sec In this 'oamliafg^Hiri'schlffeneder's old «'^ », *»»* things had been trained to It. But no. wound liogan to trouble him and he sent to the hospital and thon home. Ho It's Just one of the ways of flic spotty had nlso contracted catarrh of the stomach and found no relief for years. "1 happened to read an aoooant of Dr. Williams' rink Pills for Pale People about a year ago,” he said, "and thought that they might be good for my trouble. I con ceded to try them. I bought one boa and began totaketbem aooordtugtodlrenttons. They gave me great relief. After finishing that box I bought another, and when I had taken the pills I felt that I was onred. I recovered my appotlte and ate heartily. I oan testify to the good the pills did me.” Mr. Boblffeneder Is a prominent Grand Army man in Chicago, whither he moved some years ago with tils family. _ Olil Is It not high time, that wo preael ' ' - — • - boslai the morals ot the Gospel right hosldo thi faith ot the Oospel? Mr. Froude, tho cele brated English historian, has written ol bis own oountry these remarkable words: "From the groat house lu the oity of Lon don to.the village groeer, the oommorolU Ilfs of England has been saturated with fraud. So doep has It gone that a strictly honest tradesman oan hardly hold Lis round against competition. You oan so Jnger trust that any artlole you buy |9 the thing which It pretends to be. We hove false weights, false measures, cheating, and shoddy everywhere. And yet the clergy has seen all this grow up In absolute lnillf- feronoe. Many hundreds of sermons hsve I heard In England on the divine mission of tho olergy, on bishops, and ou Justification, and the theory of good works, aud verbal Inspiration, and the effloaqy ol the sacra ments; but during all these thirty wonder ful years, never one that I one recollect on common honesty." My hearer, what are you doing with that fraudulent document tn your pocket? My other hearer, how are you getting along with that winked scheme you have nov on foot? Is that a “pool ticket" you hare In your pooket? Why, O yount man, were you lost night prnotlolng In lopylng your employer’s signature? When were you last night? Are your habits/as good as when you left your father’s/ houso? You had a Christina anoestry, peraaps, auil yfiu have had too many prayers spont on you to go overboard. Dr. Llvlngst/ne, the famous explorer, was descended fAtn the High landers, and he said that oiu ot hls ances tors. one of the Hlghlandersone day jailed hls family around him. 'lie Highlander was dying; he had his ohlll'cn urou111 hls death-bed. He said: “Nommy lads, i have looked alt through our bldory as far bank as I dan find it, and I havisnover found a dishonest man fn alt. the life, and I want you to understand you Inllrlt good blood. You have no excuse for d lnds, be honest." Ah. my friends, be hones before dod, be honest before your fellontmen, be honest before your soul. If tho* be those who havo wandered away, clme back, corao home, oomo now, one anf all, come Into the Kingdom of God. I I am glad some one hasot to music that soene lu August, 1881, wlen a young girl saved from death a whole roll train of pas sengers. Home of you mmomber that out West In that year on a storm rloane blew dowa part ofla ml A freight train onme along adl It crashed Into the ruin, and the engln ir and con ductor perished. There was girl llvlni In her father's cabin, near tin disaster, nn she hoard the crash of the eight train, and she knew that in a few lomeuts an express was due. She llgt jd u lantern and clambered up on the oar beam ot the wrecked bridge od to the maltorldge,which was trestle work, and startedto cross amid the thunder and the llghtnlu of the tem pest,and tho racing of the tofrent beneath. One misstep and It would hae been death. Amid all that horror the lanprn went out. Crawling sometimes, and soietlinos walk ing over the slippery rails,And over the trestle work, she onme to tl» other side of the river. Hhe wanted to gt to the tele graph station, where the exkess train did not stop, so thnt the dagor might he telegraphed to the station ’ tore the train did stop. The train was di la a few min utes. She was ono mile oil :om tho tele graph station, but fortun^ely the train The Deacon's Ante-Nnptlil Compact X curious document was filed In the Hampshire county registry of deeds at Northampton, being nn agreement be tween Fordyce Whltmarsb of East- hampton and A. Minerva Cleveland of Plainfield, which records some pre- hymcncal arrangements concerning the rights of ownership of property after marriage. The conditions of the Intsrument ore as follows; “ATI real and personal estate shall remain the separate property of the party owning the same, to the same extent ns when married. 'Troporty acquired by either party shall remain the property ot the por- soa acquiring the Bame. "Each pnrty can manage or dispose of the property without consulting the other. "Tho said Whitmans!! will pay tho said Cleveland during the first five years of their marriage fifty oents per week for her personal use. "Five yenrs from the date of their marriage he will pny to hls wife tho sura of $500, or, In case of the death of either party, It will be payable from or to the estate of the deceased. “After five yenrs the husband is to pny hls wlfo $1,50 per week.” Mr. Whitmnrsh Is an old resident of Easthampton. He is seventy years aid und bns always lived a quiet life, ne Is deacon of tho First Ohiirch snd » man of considerable property, owing to frugnl habits- and loug years ot economy. He has baeii twko murrifd. hls second wlfo having been dead about two years.-Hprngliohl (Mass.) Republican. ovwv.vu, isml timuu oij luo tram wns lute. With eat and b ilseil feet she flew like the wind. Comln up to the tole- grnph station, panting wltl Umost deadly exhaustion, sue hail on strength to shout, “The bridge Is donl” when she dropped unconscious, and ould hardljr be resuscitated. The messaawas sent from that station to tae next ration, and the train halted, and that nlgr that brave girl saved tho lives of hundred of passengers, and savod many homes /roan desolation. nud subsidies und salaries and supplies \ But every street Isa trael)and every style are in hls keeping. * . * ‘ Another remark needs to be made, and that Is that people ought not to go Into places, iato business, or Into positions where the temptation Is mightier than their character. II there be large sums ol money to be liar.dled, and the man Is not sure of hls own integrity, you havo | of business is a track, anderery day Is a track, and every night is truck, nnd mul titudes uudor the powr ol temptation oome sweeping on and seeping down to ward perils raging and trrillc. God help us to go out and stop tp train! Let us throw some sigual. U. us give some warning. By the three of God let us right to run an unseawbrthy craft In n ; Hush some influence to fop the downward hurricane. A man ouq tell by the seuse of I progress. Beware! Bdare! The bridge weakness or strength in tbq presence of a ; is down, the chasm Is dip, and the Ught- l)i:d opportunity whether be Is In a sale . ulngs of God set all thiiigbt of sin on fire place. How muuy parents muke nil awful j with this warning: "Ilithat, being often mistake when they put their boys in bunk- < reproved, hardeneth m neck, shall sud- ing houses und stores nnd*“liops and fac- | denly be destroyed, au|tbat without rem- tories nud pluces of solemn trjst without The Value ol the Army Cook. Tlte value of a good cook Id camp Is tlius estimated by Lieutenant Henry J. Reilly, U. 8. A.: “If tile cooks know* their business the rations are well cooked and palatable; the men are con tented, the siek-report bns but few names on It, nnd their duty Is easily aud readily done. If there are no good cooks lu the company, underdone pork, soggy beans—covered with greasy wa ter for soup—and miserable coffee eauso discontent, a large slck-report, duty poorly doue, with much grum bling, nnd finally a small company, which the men arc anxious ho leave, and to which they never return If they can help It. In active field service, when three nnd five days' rations have to bo carried In the haversack ou long marches, or when strong pickets are sent out nnd each mnn has to cook hls own food, arises tho greatest difficulty. Those who have some knowledge of cooking get along very well and utilize anything eatable they can find, while those who have not this knowledge, unless helped by Ibelr more fortunate comrades, generally fall out nnd their narnus soon appear on the sick-list.” side of their life. The game conies on by ono of the bigger alligators utter ing tho steam hissing nelsc. This calls tho others to atteiRlon. Then the big ones says a lino or two of alligator talk and stretches himself full lehgth lu the center of the pen. No sooner Is this done than a Ittle bit smaller alli gator crawls on top of the other nnd stretches out lengthwise, but head to tall with tho other. The second one being settled, a third, a little smaller alligator, climbs on top of the second and settles down as the second one did. They kfcp this up nutll six or seven have budded themselves luto as strange a pyramid as ever nn eye bo- heliL After each ono has settled ou top of tbo other he lies perfectly mo tionless, so that when the pyramid Is completed It appears as same marvel ous curving. But this effect lasts only about two minutes after the pyramid la finished. Then comes n uow chapter of the act. Tho Snndow 'gator underneath all starts to crawling. Ho heads for up and down places In the pen, the game clearly being to boo how long It will take him to Jolt hls strange pyramid load to pieces. And right jioie devel ops what appenrs to he n strict rule of the game. 8ny there are seven lu the pyramid, and the sixth from tho bot tom Jostles off first, taking, of course, the seventh one with him. You'duutur- ally think the game done for that sixth aud seventh nlllgntor. But not at all. It seems that the sixth one Is In disgrace for having been shaken off before the seventh one, who wns top of the heap. Therefore, what does the seventh do hut cling to the back of tho sixth, after they have fallen off, nnd proceeds to ride Mr. Alligator No. (I • round tho pen until Mr. Snndow Alli gator has succeeded In dumping the whole shooting match. If tile fourth Is shaken off before the fifth, tho fifth like the seventh, proceeds to ride hls disgraced “next” until Handovv gem rid of nil hls load and another game Is started. Tree Cllnblsg Fish. India bns fishes which ellmb trees nnd migrate from stream to stream lu dry season. Florida can match her with a great snail which climbs trees snd feasts on the young birds, like hls fellow robber, tho bluo crab. The shell of this snail is opaline, nnd nl- most ns transparent ns glass. Its shape is odd aud handsome. This snail is edible and uot unlike those found on the coast ot Franco nud which ore so much in demand in the nnu’lscte of Paris. In some places they ure so nbundnut that a shake of a true will bring down a bushel of thom. mm m : a ■: V, Wv- \A-\ ■ The bath can be made an exhilarating pleasure by the use of Ivory Soap. It cleanses the pores of all impurities, leaving the skin soft, smooth, ruddy and healthy. Ivory Soap is made of pure, vegetable oils. The lather forms readily and abundantly. IT FLOATS. Climbing Up*Down Stairs C ARRYING heavy hardens, washing, Iron ing, scrubbing and othsr laborious dutlss are productive of an enormous amount of suffering among women wh# are already weak and prostrated by tbs revesrss of female dls- aasss. The perform sane ofthes# heavy labors is obligatory to man/womon, bnt tho suffer ing !• not. This feature of the household bur- dens meysoon be removed If woman wiU only take the trouble to leern how. A few bottles of * , WL will regulate an menstraal Irregularities, and restore the entire female omalemto Its proper condition. Take At. Jeeeeh'e Liver Regulator In email doaee If there to any tr-- danoy to constipation or Indigestion. ■v Got this medicine from yonr druggist. If he does not keen It. send ne $1.00 and wa will send you a bottle, all charges paid. P * L. QBR8TLB d CO., Props., Chattanooga, Tann. School Will Open Boe't Toll km Sait us Hook# tour Lilt hwij. To quit tobacco easily sad forever, bSknaf. netlo, full of 11(0, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Boo, Uw vender-worker, tint moknn mk men 8tron(. All druggists. (Co or II. Curegunnm- tcod. Booklet and ssmpto free. Address Sterile® Rcmody Co . Cliicsfo or New York and good Hhoon ar© cheaper than Doctors’ Rllle. Ask for these brands. and get your money's worth In service. ltob Roy, Kungo Gout, ColunibiiH nolle, Crnck Proof, Rod Heul. Sold everywhere, hut only made by The J. K. Orr Shoe Co., ATLANTA, GA. Greatest Healing Salve in the World. Many could do well if they could do any. thing. ioorM n T ,nH fl nw,H A? 00f ' h,ntf H rn«p for children toothing,Boftens the gum*, reduce* Inflamrno- tlon,allay* pain.curoH wind colic. ‘J5o. a bottle. Dcnatyr i© Dlood Deep. Clean blood means a clean akin. No beauty without it. Cascarcta, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all ira- •rarities from the body. Begin to-day to <urixies rrom the body. Begin to-day to aniab pimples, boila, Dbtchc*, blackhoads, apu that sickly bilious complexion by taking CascareU,—Iwuuty for ten cento. All drug- giata, satisfaction guaranteed, lOo, 25c,60cl School will Iwdl.HmlsHwl presently—rlo not go home without leave. II. II. Gkbin’8 Sons, of Atlanta. (In., are the only succeftHful Dropsy SpecialInta In the world, hen their liberal offer In advertisement In an other column of this paper. How’* This? W© offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any cnee of Catarrh that cannot be < ured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Y. J. Chunky A C’O , Prop*., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F J. Che- ney for the last 15 yearn, and believe him per- feelly honorabje in all biwlnowi transaction* anti financially able to carry out any obliga tion made by their firm. "oblo* Tkuax * Drugglete, Toledo, Wai.dino, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholoeale Drug- elute. Toledo, Ohio. Hair* Catarrh Cure 1* taker. Internally, act ing directly upon tho Mood and nimvu* sur face* of the uyHtem Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggist*. Testimonial* free. Hall's Family Pill* are the beet. LrnnWCo’. “Pick Lent “ Haul to. «... etto book for 10 cent.. Try It. ,, , ,, , Guro for Consumption Is tho only morllolnn for Coughs.— Pisokaiiii. Springfield, Ills., Oot. l, 18W. Thu Bible In words of one syllable—faith, lopo an.l love. To Cure Coneripatlnn Forever. Take Cn*-nrnte 1 'nnfiy Cathartla. - 10*i or 3.V-. If C. C. C. fall to iniro, drugglete refund money! Death Is purely speculative, life Is purely practical. WJJ WANT TO BURN Tbs WOf?l», "BOCK 11IT.L," Into your m-morr swwvvtoe, nwGih mi.b, inu> your m-morr so you will isver forgkt Ui.-m. Tb*v ttsnd for "Bsgglri"—boet "nff r»r Mslf—but nttgglei 'bet |V»? D *’!'.•• •'i' 1 "A Little Higher la Trios, Hu eo little It don't pay to run the risk. P°® * P»r big profile on cheep work. Bee oar agent In It dou t pay yonr town or write" " ” ROCK HILL BUGGY CO., Rock Hill, S. C. Place Your Money In a Rank until r. j secure you a paying situation. Wa pay railroad fkre. The larges*, beet and cheap- t business school* in the Bouth Massey’s Col am bus. Go. Birmingham, Ate* Montgomery, Al*. Jacksonville, Flh Write atonco for Cotalogue No. A. The wine of life burnt* many of Its bot- Edue-ist© Yonr Kow«l* With Cascaret*. Candy Cathartic, euro constipation forever. 10c,*«l*. If C. C. C. fall, druggist* refund money. To be unloving 1* to have life’s burden DROPSY 1 ™* DIBOO VERY; gi tee U 7..V ■ eulokr«U»f snd cu-«n worst op testimonial* nnd |() rfnyw* ’ ” H GREEK'S SONS. Atlanta, Da. FREE?3I2s3r •sprees M fo.Hse$ Sleb. WiasTO* without its benefit. the wan bound and miinpt' L r r to •“ybpdy sending to the Overland GROVES IS JUST AS GOOD FOR ADULTS. WARRANTKD. PRICE SOotS. YELLOW FEVER T7, I •‘"•Wee Co.. Lraia,’ia!*” WoT- **• w ftiir Natiuo Ltarho” ^ uui Ndiivti mm THE GREAT 1 KSW Bloed Pirilisr, Kldaiy aid Llvir Ri(ilator. ABXir.CARB A CO. 300 DAYS' TREATM1NT, S1.00. Containing a Registered Guarantee. T^^n'JilMWd S&Ty A B .M} THE ALONZO O.ILISS CO..Wa$faln£ton.D.C. AGENTSWANTED ■ 1 With Hpaim.” A complete hlstoi In overy county to »ell”WAK complete history of the w»r irom uegiumng to end. Most complete and authentic book published. Superbly Illus trated. Big commissions. Handsome pre- mlums. "Bonanza” for agent*. Outfit fre< receipt of 80 cts In postago to pay mailing • aud secure first choice of Order ontflt nt ter rl lory. Address D. K. I.TTTHKM PUB. CO., Atlanta, Oa. STOPPED FREE PermuMtly Cared taaaaH, FravMtoS ky M. SUM'* SHAT SERVE RESTORER ^aswsPfoeseee. As, JpUepew, Vmhtt. fonts or Nerveusees *“ Kline. Ltd. Relievos i Ut.. I'hlUdolDhU. Pa. QQ III Cash with order buy* this auto.Bslf Cocking Nickel Pia- 1 Ribbsr Hoadled 6 Shot Revol r.3i or 38 0. For send »c. A will Id C. 0. b. ftt.v9 and allow exami nes. Fire Arms Co. Winston,N.C. Ami vory LOW I’JtlCES. Large PIPE, VALVES and FITTINGS. EN GINES, BOILERS, MILLS and REPAIRS. Lombard Iron Works & Supply Oo*. AUCri/STA. OA. rr J n S' . ANDREWS GOLD TEA FOR THE LIVER—^ CURES INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA. For sale by dealers. For sample packagw Bond 8c. stamp to AMHIKWS MF(i. CO., Bristol, Tene. * Y will not benefit. Bend l cts. to Rlpans Chemical Co., NewYork, for to sample<and IDw teatlmonlala. -PATENTS- Pnxmred on cash, or easy Instalment a.VOWieES k Tata&i Attorney*. BT Broadway. N. Y. i A Users. And 9&-36