The Dallas new era. (Dallas, Paulding County, Ga.) 1898-current, October 07, 1898, Image 5

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Fright In Streak*. “Were yon frightened, Willard!" asked Mr. Orimes of hi* little boy, whom he had sent on errand after dark. “Well, I should soy sol” an swered the little fellow. “The streaks of scoreduess just run up and down my legs.” Proposed Alliance with England. It the Unitod States* and England should form an alllanSo, the comblnod strength would bo so great that there would be little chance tor enemies to overcome us. In a ltko manner, when men and women keep up their bodily strength with Hostetter's Stomach Hitters, there Is little ctaan'eo of attacks from disease. The old time remedy enrlchos the blood, builds up the muscles, steadies tho , nerves and Increases the appetite. Try It. American apples have already, in a large measure, conquered tho markets of England. To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Cascarots Candy Cathartic. 40c or 25o. IfC. C. C. fnll .tocuro, druggists rotund money. Ether drunkenness has become almost epi- domio In Lithuania. Every Action And every thought requires on expenditure of vitality whloh must be restored by means of the blood flowing to the brain and other organs. This blood must be Pure, rich and nourishing. It Is made to by Hood’s Sarsaparilla which Is thus the great strength-giving medlotne, the ours for weak nerves, that tired feeling and all diseases caused by poor, Impure blood. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is America's Greatest Medicine. $1; six for |6. Mood's Pills cure indigestion. 86 cents. The Scntiael'i Orders. When Professor Simon Newcomb, the distinguished astronomer, was at Gibraltar, • he tvns one morning “tak ing the sun’’ In order to test tho run ning of his chronometer, when a sen tinel speedily Informed him .that no sights were allowed to be taken on the fortification. Professor NeweomD explained that he was taking sights on the sun, not on the fortifications. But he was Inexorable; the rule was that no sights of any Bort should be taken without a permit. Whon Professor Newcomb met Sir Fenwick Williams, of Ivarks, then military governor of Gibraltar, they laughed together over the lucldeut, and Sir Fenwick said It reminded lilm of tho case of an old lady In Punch who had to pass a sur veyor In the street behind a theodolite, and begged: “Please, sir, don’t shoot till I get past!”—New York World. A Large Cargo.' The largest cargo ever carried on the great lakes was loaded Into tho Su perior Glty at South Chicago recently. It consisted of 266,550 bushels corn, weighing 7,462 tons and was loaded In seven hours. TO MRS. PINKHAM * From Mrs. Walter B. Budd, of Pat* ohogue, New York. Mrs. Budd, In tho following letter, tells a familiar story of weakness and suffering, and thanks Mrs. Flnkham for complete relief; “ Dear Mas. Pinkiiam:—I think it is ’ duty to write o you and tell yon what Lydia ) E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has done for me. I feel like another woman. I had such dread ful headaches through my temples and on top of my head, that I nearly went crazy;wasalso troubled with chills, was very weak; my left I side from my I shoulders to my waist pain ed me terribly. I could not sleep for tho pain. Plasters would help for a while, but as soon as taken off, tho pain would bo just as bad as ever. Doctors prescribed medicine, but it gave me no relief. “ Now I feel so well and strong, have no more headaches, and no pain in side, and it is all owing to your Compound. I catfnot praise it enough. It is a wonderful medicine. I recommend It to every woman I know." PILES *•1 suffered the tortures of the damned with protruding piles brought on by constipa tion with which I was afflicted for twenty years. I ran across your CASCARETS In the town of Newell, la., and never found anything to equal them. To-day I am entirely free from piles and feel like a new maa ” C. H. Keitz, 1411 Jones St., Sioux CUy, la pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. .Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Grfi>e, 10c, lie, fiOe. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Bt*Hln« Remedy Compup, Ckleifo, ■—ImI, >*w T«*. tit 2 Tobacco Habit. And very LOW PRICES. Largo stock. Also PI PH VALVES nml FITTINGS. KN- GINftK IiO I LlOItS, MILLS and IIEP AIKS. Lombard Iron Works & Supply Co., DR. TALMAGE’S SERMON The Eminent Divine’s Sunday Disoourse. Subject: “Enough Mta Than Too MneV —Certain Super, fettle,, Both Physical . wait. Mental. Are n Hlndrwic. Bather Than a Help In Text: “A man of great stature, whose fingers and toes were four and twenty, six on eaoh hand, and six on each foot; and he also was the son of a giant. But when ho defied Israel, Jonathan, tho son of Shlmea, David’s brother, slew him.’’—I Chron. xx., 6, 7. Malformation photographed, and for what reason? Did not this passage slip In by mistake Into tho sacred Sorl.tures, os sometimes a paragraph utterly obnoxious to the editor gets Into hts newspaper dur ing his absence? Is not this Scriptural er rata? No, no; there 1b nothing haphazard about the Bible. This passage of Scripture was as certainly Intended to be put In tho Blblo as the verso, "Ih the beginning God created tho heavens and tho earth,” or, "God so loved the world that He gave His only bogotton Son." , And I seleot It for my text to-day beoause It Is charged with practloal and tremendous meaulug. By tho people of God the Philis tines had been conquered, with the excep tion of a few giants. Tho race of giants Is mostly extinct, I am glad to say. There Is no use for giants now except to enlarge the Income of museums. But there were many of them In olden times. Goliath Was, no- cordiug to the Bible, eleven feet four and a half Inches high. Or, If you doubt this, the famous Pliny, declares that .at Crete, by an earthquake, n monument was broken open, discovering the remains of a giant forty-six cubits long, or stxty-ntne feet high. So, whether you take sacred or pro fane history, you must come to th. conclu sion that there were In those times cases.of human nltitude monstrous and appalling. David had smashed the skull of one of these giants, but there wore other'glnnts that the Davldean wars bad not yet sub dued, and one of them stands lu my text. He was not only of Alpine stature, but had a’surplus of digits. To thoordlnnry fingers was annexed an additional finger, and the foot had also a superfluous addendum. Ho had twenty-four terminations to hands and feet, where others have twenty. It was not tho only lnstanoo of tho kind. Taver nier, the laarned writer, says that the Em peror of Java had a son endowed with the same number of extremities. Voleatlus, the poet, had six Ungers on each hand. Maupertuls, In his oelebrated letters,speaks of two families near Berlin similarly equipped of hand and toot. All of whloh I can believe,for I have seen two oases of tho same physical superabundance. But thlj giant of tho text Is In battle, and ns David, tho Btrtpllng warrior, had despatched one giant, tho nephew of David slays this mon ster of my text, and tboro he lies alter the battle In Gnth, n delta giant. His stature did not save him, and his superfluous ap pendices of hand and foot did not save him. The probability was that lu th« battle his sixth Unger on his hand made him olumsy In the use of his weapon, and hts sixth toe ortppled his gnlt. Behold tho prostrate and malformed giant of the text.- “A mas of great stature, whose Unger* and toes were four and twenty, six oo eaoh band and six on enoh foot; and ho also was tho son of a giant. But when he dolled Israel, Jonathan, tho son of Shlmea, David’s brother, slew him.” Behold how superfluities are a .hin drance rather than a help! In all the bat tle at Gath that day there was not a man with ordinary hand and ordinary foot and ordinary staturo that was not bettor off than this physical ourioslty of my text. A dwarf on the right side Is stronger than a giant on tho wrong sido. and all the body and mind and estate ami opportunity that you cannot use for God and the better ment of tho world Is a sixth Unger and a sixth toe, and a terrible hindrance. The most of the good done In' tho world, and tho most of those who win the battle for the right are ordinary people. Count th* fingers of tbolr right hand, and tbev have Just live—no more and no less. One Doo- tor Duff among missionaries, but three thousand mlsslunarles that would tell you they hove only common ondowment. One Florence Nlghtlngalo to nurse the slok In conspicuous plnces, but ten thousand women who aro Just os good nurses, though never heard of. The "Swamp Angel” was a big gun that during the Clvlj wur modo a big noiso, but muskets of ordi nary calibre and shells of ordinary heft did the execution. Fresldent Tyler and ftnd his Cabinet go ddwn the Potomao one day to experiment with the “Pence- HJfkar," a great Iron gun that .was to affright with Its thunder foreign navies. The gunner touches It off, and It explodes, and leaves Cabluet Ministers dead on tho dock, while at that time, all up and down our coast, were cannon of ordinary bore, able to be the defense of the nation, ana ready at the first touoh to waken to duty. The curse of the world is big guns. After the politicians, who have made all tho noise, go homo hoarse from angry discus sion on the evening of the first Monday In November, the noxt day the people, with the silent ballots, will settle everything, and settle It right, a million of the white slips of paper they drop making about as much noise as the fall of an apple-blossom. Cleur baok in tho country to-day there are mothers in plain aprons, and shoes fashioned on a rough last by a shoemaker at tho end of the lane, rooking babies that are to be the Martin Luthers and the Fara days and the Edisons and the Dlsmarcks and tho Gladstones and tho Washingtons mu , tho Geor 8° Whltefleldk of tho future. The longer I live the more I like common folks. They do the world’s work, bearing the world’s burdens, weeping the world’s sympathies, carrying the world’s consola tion. Among lawyers we see rise up a Rufus Choate, or a William Wirt, or a Sam uel L. Southard, but society would go to pieces to-morrow if there were not thou sands of common lawyers to see that men andiwomen get their rights. A Valentine Mott or a Willard Parker rises up eminent u i 9 me( ^ ca l profession; but wnat an un limited sweep would pneumonia and diph theria and scarlet fever have In the world If it were not for ten thousand common doctoral The old physician In his gig, _s U P *ke laifls of the farmhouse, or “ding on horseback, his medicines In the saddle-bags, arriving on the ninth day of the fever, and coming In to take hold of the pulse of the patient, while the family, pale with nnxlety, und looking on and waiting for his decision in rogard to tho patient, and hearing him say, “Thank God, I have mastered tne case, he is getting well!” ex cites In me an admiration quite equal to the mention of the names of the great metropolitan doctors of tho post or the Il lustrious living men of the present. Yet what do we see in all departments? People not satisfied with ordinary spheres of work and ordinary duties. Instead of trying to see what they can do with a hand of five fingers, they want six. Instead of usual endowment of twenty manual and pedal addenda, they want twenty-four. A certain amount of money for livelihood, and for’tho supply of those whom we leave behind us after we have departed this life, is important, tor we have the best authority for saying, “Ho that provideth not for his own, ana especially those of his own house hold, is worse than an Infidel;” but tho large and fabulous sums for which many struggle, If obtained, would be ahlndr&ice rather than an advantage. The anxieties and annoyances of those whose estates have become plethoric can only be told by those who possess them. It will be a good thing whon, through your industry and prosperity, you can own the house in which you live. But suppose you own fifty houses, and you have all those rents to collect, and all those tenants to E lease. Suppose you have branched out in usiness successes until in almost every di rection you have Investments. The fire bell rings at night, you rush upstair to look out of the window, to see It tt Is any of your mills. Epidemic of crime comes, and there are embwczlements and absoonding in all directions, and you wonder whether any of your bookkepers will prove re creant. A panic-strikes tho financial world, and you are like a hen under a sky full of hawks, and trying with anxious cluck to get your ovorgrown chickens safely under wing. After i\ certain stage of success has been reached, you have to trust so many you had on your brow whon you were earn ing your first thousand dollars is not equal to tho anxiety on your .brow now that you have won your three hundred thousand. Disraeli says that a king of Poland abdicated his throne and joined tho pooplo and became a porter to carry burdens. And some one asked him why ho did so, and he roplled: “Upon my honor, gentlemen, the load which I cost off was by far heavier than tho ono you see’rae carry. The weighti est Is but a straw when edmpared to that weight under which I labored. I have slept moroin four nights thau I have dur ing all my reign, I begin to live and to bo u king myself. Elect whom you chooso. As for mo, I am so well It would bo madness to return to oourt.” “Well,” says soraobody,“8uch overloaded persons ought to bo pitied, for their worrl- meuts are real and their lusomnlaand their nervous prostration are genuine.” I reply that they could get rid of tho bothersome surplus by glvlug it away. If a man has moro houses than ho can carry without vexatidn, lot hinf drop a fow of them. If his estate Is so great he cannot manage It without getting nervous dyspepsia from having too muoh, lot him divide with those who have nervous dysnopsla bocnq&e thoy cannot get onough. No! they guard their sixth linger with moro care than thoy did the original five. They go limping with wHat they call gout and know not that, like tho giant of my text, they nee lamed by a superfluous too. A few of them by charities blood themselves of this financial obesity and monetary plethora, but many of them hang on to tho hindering super fluity till death; and then, as*they are com pelled to give the money up anyhow, In thqlr last will and testament thoy gener ously give some of It to the Lord, expoot- ing, no doubt, that He will feel very muoh obliged to them. Thank Got) that once la a while we have ft Poter Cooper, who, own ing an interest in tho iron works at Tren- tonf said to Mr, Lester: “I do not feel quite ensv about tho amount wo aro making. Working under one of our patents, we have it monopoly, whloh seems to mo something wrong. Everybody has to come to us for ic, and wo are making money too fast.” 80 they reduced the prl rt e, and this whllo our philanthropist was building Cooper In stitute. which mothers a hundred Institutes of kindness and moroy all over tho land. But tho world had to wait five thousand eight hundred years for Peter Cooper! I am glad for benevolent Institutions that got a legacy from men who during their life were as stingy as death, but who lu their last will nnatestamont bestowed monev on hospitals and missionary socie ties; but tor saoh testators I have no re spect. They would have taken overy cent of It with thorn If thoy oould, ana ’.bought up half of heaven and let It out at ruinous rentier loaned the money to oelestlul citi zens at two per oent. a month, and got a “oorner” on harps and trumpets. They lived luthls world fifty and sixty year# in tho presence of appalling suffering and want, and made no efforts Tor their relief. Tho charities of such people aro In the “Paulopost.futuro” tense, tnoy are going to do them* T4<3 probability Is that If suoh a one In hls last will by a donation id benevolent societies tries to atbne for' hls Iifo-timo olo9e-fistedness, Uio heirs-at-law wllltry to broak the will by proving that the old man was senllo or craey, and Hie expense of tho litigation will about leave In tlio lawyer’s hands what was meant for tho Bible Society, 0 ye over-Weighted .suc cessful businessmen, whether this sermon roach you ear or your eyes, let me say that if you are prostrutod with anxieties about keeping or Investing theso tremendous fortunes, I can tell you bow you can do moro to got your health back and your spirits raised than by drinking gallons of bad tasting water at Saratoga, Homburg, Carlsbad: Give to God, humanity and the Bible ten per cent, of your income and It will make a new man of you, and from restless walking of tho floor you shall have eight hours’ sleep, without tho help .of bromido of potassium, and from no appe tite you will hardly be able to await your regular meals, uml your wan cheek will fill up, and whon you die the blessings of thoso who but for you would have perished will bloom all over your grave. Perhaps some of you will take this ad vice, but tbe most of you will not. And you will try to cure your swollen hand by getting on it moro fingers, and your rheu- inatlo foot by goctlng on It more toes, and there will be a sigh of relief when you are gone out of tho world; and when over your romulns the minister recites tho words: “Blessed are tho dead who die In tbe Lord,” f iersons who have keen appreciation of the udlcrous will hardly be able to keep their faces straight. But whether in that direc tion my words do good or not, I am anx ious that all who have only ordlnnry equip ment be thankful for what thoy have and rightly employ It. I think you all have, figuratively as well as literally, fingers enough. Do not long for hindering super fluities. Standing in tho presence of this fallen glnnt of my text, and In this post mortem examination of him, let us learn how much bettor off wo aro with jdst the usual hand, the usual foot. You have thanked God for a thousand things, but I warrant you never thanked Him for those two Implements of work and locomotion, that no ono but tbe Intlnitonnd Omnipotent God could have ever planned or made—the hand and tho foot. Only that soldier or that mechanic who In a battle, or through machinery, has lost them knows anything adequately about their value, and only the Christian scientist cun have any apprecia tion of what divine masterpieces they are. Sir Charles Bell was bo .-impressed with the wondrous construction of the human hand that when tho Earl of Bridgewater gave forty thousand dollars for essays on tho wisdom and goodness of God, and eight books were written, Sir Charles Bell wrote his entire book on tho wisdom and goodness of God ns displayed In tbe human hand. Tho twenty-seven bones In the hand and wrist with cartilages and liga ments and phalanges of tbe fingers all make just* ready to knit, to sew, to build up, to pull down, to weave, to write, to plow, to pound, to wheel, to battle, to give friondiy salutation. Tho tips of Its lingers are so many telegraph offices bv reason of their sensitiveness oftduch. The bridges, the tunnels, the cities of tho whole earth aro tho victories of tho hand. The hands are not dumb, but often speak ns distinctly as the lips. With our bands we invite, we repel, wo Invoke, we entroat, we wring them In grief, or clap them In joy, or spread them abroad la bonedlction. The malformation of the giant’s hand In the text glorifies the usual hand. Fashioned of God more exquisitely and wondrously 'than any human mechanism that was ever con trived, I charge you to use It for God and the lifting of the world out of its moral predicament. Employ it In the sublime work of Gospel handshaking. You oaQ see tho band Is just made for that. Four fingers just set right to touch your neighbor's hand on one side, and your thumb set so as to clench it on tho other side. Ely all Its bones and joints and muscles and cartilages and ligaments the voice of Nature joins with the voice of God commanding you to shake hand9. The custom Is as old as the Bible, anyhow. Jehu said toJehonadab: “Is thine heart right as my heart is with thine heart? If it bo, give me thine hnad.” When hands join in Christian salutation a Gospel eloc- triclty thrills across the palm from heart to heart, and from the shoulder of ono to tho shouldor of the other. A Dig Shrinkage in Common Stock- It Is reported that there has been a shrink age of over *5,000,000 In the value of Ameri can Tobueco Company’s common stock. A AUslIeitstl.* tl Bullish FrtoflOMr Can America ever forget the part the English have taken In this war! If one can forget kindness, then we can forget the English; otherwise, w# must hold them In mind as steadfast friends, who have done everything to nid us without grossly violating tho neutrality laws. Our Bhlps have not been supposed to coal and provision at Kingston, Jnmnlca, but they have done so nil the same. Here Is n story showing how a friend mny be blinded to our limits nt times. An American cruiser wns coaling nt Kingston. A British cruiser wns lying In port. “Whnt Is that bont doing over there!” Inquired the English cnptntn. “I suppbse It Is conllng, sir,” replied the tirst officer. “Coming!” repeated the English enptnln. “That cannot be. Send a man nt once to see what that boat Is doing.” So a sailor wns dlspntchcd. He watches tho American boat for half an hour or so, understanding n thing or twe* lilmself, and then returns, lie presents himself to hls captain to make n report "Well, sir, whnt Is that American cruiser doing?" asks the enptnln. “Coaling, sir, I bcllovp," replies the Bailor. “Believe! Don’t you know whnt tho bont Is doing? You are stupid, sir. Send me a' man who knows some thing,” turning to nn officer. So an other sailor Is called up. He Is In structed to go nt once and find out what the American boat Is doing In tho harbor. The second sailor goes away ami does not hurry himself about getting back. During this lime thu American boat Is coale# up. mul when he flnnhy makes hls roport, It Is too late. He tries <o And hls cap tain. but the latter !b burled Bomc- wbero In the recesses of hls cabin. Whon the captain finally docs come on dock tho American Is far out at sea. That ciosc* tbe Incident—Chicago Tribune. , , , - Bounty Is Blood Deep. (’loan blood titans a clean *kln. No beauty without It. Cascarots, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all Im purities from tho body. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotchos, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarots,—bonuty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 86c, 60c. „ . - Sudden Jerks of a horse Are prevented from yanking riders in a carriage by tho use of a Rprlng back rest hinged to the neat at bottom, the top being supported by coll6d springs on rods in cylinders at tbe ends of tbe seat To Cure a Cold In One Day, Take Laxative Hrnmo Quinine Tablet* All Druggists refun<1 money if It falls too u re. 86c. Walter Ralston, who travels for the Smith sonian Institution, has made a snoclal study of poisonous Insects and rontiles. and has boou fnnged over two hundred tlmos. How's This? Wo offer One Hundred Dollars Howard for any enso 6t Catarrh that aannot bo cured by Ball's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CniNIT A CO., Toledo, O. We, tho undorslgned, have known F. J. Che. ney for the last 16 years, and believe him per fectly honorable In all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obliga tion made by their firm. Wert * Thu ax, Wholosalo Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Waldino, Kinnan * Marvin, Wholosalo Drug- fi lHtH, Toledo. Ohio. all’s Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, act ing directly upon tho blood and mucous sur faces of tho system. Testimonials sont froo. I’rlco, 75o. per bottle. Sold by all Drugglpte. Hall’s Family nils aro tho host. No-To-Hae for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit euro makes weak men strong, blood puro. 60c, f 1. All druggists. Tho United States pays enough for pensions annually to pay the expenses or Mexico fl years JUST AS GOOD as the J. K. Orr Shoe Is the way cheaper brands are often worked off on the public. It costa no more to GET THE GENUINE. If your dealer don’t sell them, drop us a card, and get the name of the nearest up-to-date merchant. The J. K. Orr Shoe Co., ATLANTA, OA. GROVES TASTELESS CHILL TUNIC 18 JUNTAS COOD FOR ADULTS. WARRANTED. PRICE 60 cts. GALATIA, ILIA, NOV. 10, 2693. Paris Medicine Co., St. Louis, Mo. Gentlemen:—We Hold last year, 000 bottles of GROVE’S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC nod have bought three grown already this year, in all our ex perience of 14 yean. In the drug bust newt, have never sold an article that gave hucB universal biuib> l*«Uou as your Tonic. Yours truly, ABNEY. CARR A CO» MBS. PINKHAM TALKS TO THE FUTURE WOMAN. MET Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use I In time. Sold by drurglstfi Lc In tmio. Sold by druggists. Will the New Generation of Women be Hot. Beautiful or Lose Bo? Mine Jeeele Ebner’e Flxperlenoe. A pleasing face and graceful figure t These are equipments that widen tho sphere of woman's useful* ness, llow can a woman have grace of movement when ahe is suffering from some disorder that gives her those awful bearing-down sensations? How can she retain her beautiful face when she is nervous and rached with pain ? Young women, think of your future and provide against ill health. Mathers, think of your growing daughter, and prevent lb her as well as la yourself Irregularity or suspension of nature's duties. If puzzled, don't truBt your own judgment. Mrs. Pinkham will charge you nothing for her advice; write to her at Lynn, Mass., and she will tell you how to make yourself healthy and strong. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound strength ens the female organs and regulates the menses as nothing else will. Following Is a letter from Miss Jessie Kunkii, 1712 West Jefferson St., Sandusky, Ohio. “Deab Mrs. Pjnkuam:—I feel it my duty to let you know 6f the great benefit your remedies have been to me. I suffered for over a year with inflammation of the ovaries. 1 had doctored, but no medicine did me any good. Was at a sanatorium for two weeks. The doctor thought an operation necessary, but I made up my mind to give your medicine a trial before submit ting to that. I was also troubled with lcucorrhoca, painful menstruation, diz ziness, nervousness, and was so weak that I was unable to stand or walk. 1 have taken in all several bot tles of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and Blood Purifier, abd am now in good health. I will always give your medicine tho highest praise.” Ask Mr*. Pinkham’s Advlce-A Woman heat Understands a Woman’s Ills tho 18tbs and 20th*. Also for tho Blbto Looking Gian*. It teaches the Blblo by Illustrations. Latest Wnr Book*. Circu lars free. Agent* sell 7 out of 9 calls; agent In Walker Co., Tox., sells 80 In B hours. J. L. NICHOLS A CO., AUsnto, Os. STOPPED FREE Psrtniseetly C«r*d iMUlty Prevents# Imp Ms HUM'S MAT SERVE RESTORER /Xmmw. ru*. ApOtpsp, Treatise and $1 trial bottle Ui*y MySfrapfOM ebortooMlf - - Kline. Ltd. Keller** St.. PtiiUdelbhl*. Pa. FREE WATCH! will express GO fine, long- filler Nickel clears- When Hold, remit uh fXGOand we will mall yoo*, free, el * set watch, which rotsllH .. CIGAR CO.*No. to Mai *, free, a handsome stem wind and — ain iCold Tea ST. ANDREWS! FOB THE ttvpp — Cures Headache, INACTIVE LIVER. $100 FORFEITURE. Oar 8CMWAL «MS wonts night emisaioan sMolately, or wo fotfdt 8100.00 In gold. Ten days trial free. Writ* tcxSaf for particulars, Addresa, CAPITAL Cl*t cot, r. o. 57S, ATLANTA, M, dropsy; cuhaa. Send for book of t*i WW DISCOVERY; give* _ _ qttlek relief and care* worst cas4M. Send for book of testimonial* and IO days* treatment Free. Dr.B.H.OkSIN'S SORB. Atlanta. 0*. \Users. AND 98-40