The Dallas new era. (Dallas, Paulding County, Ga.) 1898-current, October 14, 1898, Image 5

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DR. TAL.M AGE*S«EITMON The Eminent Divine’s Sunday Discourse. Gnt.Jcct: “The RmMMI Reindeer”— I.«t Those IVho Are Pursued by the Hounds of Persecution Uun • to the Glorious Lake sf IMdne Solace. Text: ‘‘As the hurt pjinteth after the water broolts, go pnhteth my soul after Thee, O ChicL”—-Psa. Xlli., 1. David, who must some time have seen a a deer-hunt, potnts us here to a hunted stag making for the water.' The fascinat ing animal called in my text the hart is the same animal that in sacred and profuno literature is-called the stag, the roetuck, the hlad,tbe gazelle, the reindeer. In Central Syria, in Bible times, there wore whole pasture-fields-of them, ns Solomon euggests when -he says, *T charge you by the hlhds of the field.” Their antlers jutted from long grass as they lay down. No hunter who has been long in "John Brown’s traet” will wonder that in the Bible they were elassod among- clean animals, for the dews, the showors, the lakes washed them as clean xs ithe sky. When Isaac, the pa triarch, longed for venison, Esau shot and brought home a roebuck. Isaiah comparos thesprightlluess ofithe restored cripple of rolUonalid Aimes to the long and quick jump of the stag, saying, “The lame shall leap ns the hart.” Solomon expressed his disgust at a hunter who having shot a deer is too laey.to oook it, saying, “The sloth ful mao ronsteth not that which he took in hunting. M But one Jdny JDavId, while far from the home from which ho had been driven, and sitting near the mouth of u lonely cave where ho had lodged, and on the banks of a pond -or river, hears a puck of hounds In swift pursuit. Because of the previous si lence o: the forest the 3langor startles him, nod beouya >to himself: “I wonder what those dogs are after.” Then there is a craeklipgln the brushwood, and tho loud breathing of some rushing wonder of the woods, and the antlers of u deer rend tho leaves of tho ticket, and by an instinct whlqli hunters recognize the eroature plunges into a pool or lake or river to cool Us thirst, and at tiro same tlmo by Its ca pacity for swifter and longer swimming to get away from the foaming harriers. David says to himself: Aha, that is mysolfl Saul after me, Absalom .after mo, eneraios with out number after me; I am chosod;.their bloody muzzles.at my heels, barking at my good name, barking after my body, bark- ng after my soul. Ob, the hounds, the hounds! Butlook there,” says David to himself. -“That.reludoor has splashed Into the water. It puts.its hot lips and nostrils into thoeool wave .that washes its leathered flanke,and It swims away from the ilorv canines, and It is frUe at Inst. Oh, that X might Had la the •deep,,wido lake of Ctod’H mercy, and consolation escapo from my pursues) Oh, tor Jhe waters of life and rescue! 'As the b*tf pauteth after the water brooks, ao pauteth my soul after Thee, O God/ " The Adirondacks are now populous wBh hunters, and tUedeer.ore being slain by the •core. Talking one summer with a hunter, I thought I would like,to seo whether my text was a ecu rata in its .‘allusion, and as I beard tha dogs baylng.a little way off and supposed they wore on,tho track of a deer, I said to one of the hunters:in rough cor duroy: “Do the deer uLwayo make for wa ter when they are pursued?” .He said: “Ob, yes, Mister; you see they .are a hot and thirty animal, and they know,where the water is, and when they boar.danger In the distance they lift their antlers and sniff the breeze and start for the Raquet or Loon or fiaranAc; and we get Into our.cedar shell- boat or stand by the‘runaway’with rifle loaded and ready to blaze away.” My friends, that is one reason .why I Ilk# the Bible so much—its ail us ion s.g re so true to nature. *ltspartrldes are real partridges, Its ostriches real ostriches, und .its rein deer real reindeer. I do not wonder thnt this antlered glory of the text makes the hunter’s eye sparkle and his.cheek glow and bis respiratlou quickeal To say.noth ing of its usefulness, although It .is .the most useful of all game, its flesh delicious, its skin turned into * human apparel, its sinews fhsh^pned into bow-strings. Its antlers putting handles on cutlery, and the shavings -of its horn used as a pungent restorative, the nata^taken from the hast and called hartshorn. But putting aside its usefulness, this enchanting creature teems made out of gracefulness and •lsstlolty. What An eye, with u liquid brightness as if gathored up from a hun dred lakes at sunset! The horns,a coronal branching into every possible curve, and after it sterns complete ascending into other projections of exquisitoness, a tree of polished bone, uplifted in pride, or swung down for awful combat. The hart is velocity embodied. Timidity, impersonated. The enchantment of the woods. Its eye lustrous in life and pathetic In death. The splendid animal a complete rhythm of muscle, and bone, and color, and attitude, aud locomotion, whether couched (it the grass among the shadows, or a living bolt shot through the forest, or turning at bay to attuok the hounds, or rearing for its last full under the buckshot of tho trapper. It is a splendid appearanco that the painter’s pencil falls to sketch, and only u nunter’s dream on a pillow of hemlock at the foot of St. Regis is able to picture. When, twenty miles from any settlement, ft comes down at eventide to the lake’s edge to drink among tho lily pods and, with its sharp-edged hoof, shatters tho crystal of Long Lake, it is very picturesque. But only when, after miles of pursuit, with heaving sides and lolling tonguo and eyes Swimming in death the stag leaps from tho cliff into Upper Sdnuino, can you realize how much David had suffered from his troubles, and how much lie wanted God when ho expressed himself in the words of the text: “As the hart pauteth after tho water brooks, so*panteth my soul after Thee, 0 God.” Well, now. let all those who have ooraing nfter them the lean hounds of poverty, or tho black hounds of persecution, or tho spotted bounds of vicissitude, or the pule bounds of death, or who are in any wise pursued, run to the wide, deep, glorious lake of diviue solace and rescue. The most of tho men and women whom I hap pened to know at different times, if not now, have had trouble after thorn, sharp muzzled troubles, swift troubles, nll-de- vouriug troubles. Many of you have mado tho mistake of trying to fight them. Somebody meanly attacked you, and you attacked them; they depreciated you, you depreciated them; or they*overreacbed you in a bargain, and you tried, in Wall street parlance, to got a corner on thorn; or you have had a bereavement, and, instead of being submissive, you are lighting that be reavement; you charge on tho doctors who failed to effect a euro; or you charge on the carelessness of tho railroad company through which the accident occurred; or you are a chronic invulid, and you fret, und worry, nnd scold, and wonder why/ you cannot bo well like other people, and you angrily blame the neuralgia, or tho laryn gitis, or the ague, or the sick headache. I saw whole chains of lakes in the Adir- ondacks, and froth ono height you can bob thirty, and there are said to be over eight hundred in the great wilderness of New York. So near arc they to each other that your mountain guide picks up and carries the boat from lake to lake, the small dis tance between them for that reason called a “carry.” And the realm of God’s Word Is one long chain of bright, refreshing lakes;each promise a lake, a very short carry between them, and though for ages l he pursued have beeu drinking out ol thorn, they are full to the top of the green banks, and the sAine David- describes them,«nnd they seem so near together that in three different places he speaks of*them ns a continuous river, saying: “There is a river, the streams whereof shall make glad the city of God;” “Thou shalt make them drink of the rivers of Thy pleasures;” “Tmou great I v onriohest it with the river of C.od. wbh-.i Is full ol water.” But many of you have turned your back on that supply, and confront your trouble, aud you are sou rod with your circum stances, and you are lighting society, aud you are lighting a pursuing world, and troubles, instead of driving you Into the cool lako of heavenly comfort, have made you stop and turn around aud lower your head, and it is simply antler against tooth, I do not blamo you. Probably under the same circumstances I would have done worse. But you are all wrong. You neod to do as the reindeer does in February and March—it sheds its horns. The Rabbinical writers allude to this resignation of antlers by tho stag when they say of a man who ventures his money !u risky enterprises, he has hung It on the stag’s horns; and u proverb in the far East tells a man who has foolishly lost his fortune to go aad find whoro the deer sheds her horns. My brother, quit the antagonism of your cir cumstances, quit misanthropy, qnlt coin- g lulnt, quit pitching into your pursuers, e us wise as, next spring, will be nil the deer of the Adirondacks. Shed your horns. But very many of you who. are wronged of the world—and K In any assembly bo- twoon here aud Golden Gate, San i’rau- jlsco, it were asked that all those that hud been sometimes badly treated should raise both their hands, and full response should be made, thore would be twice as many hands lifted as persons presents say many of you would declare: “We have al ways done the best we ooald and tried to be useful, and why weehonld become the victims of mallgamont, or Invalidism, or mishap, is inscrutable.” Why, do you know the finer a deer and.tho more elegant Its proportions, nnd the more beautiful Its bearing, the more anxious the hunters and tho hounds are to capture it. Had tho roe buck a ragged fur and broken boors nnd an obliterated eye and a limping gait, the hunters would have said: “Pshaw! don’t let us wnste our ammunition on a sick dcor.’’ Aud tiie hounds would have given a few sniffs of the scout, and then darted off in another direction for bettor game. But when they seen deer with antlers lift-. ed in mighty challenge to eutlh nnd sky, and the sleek hide looks as If it had boon smoothed by invisible hands, and tho fat sides enclose tho richest pasture that could be nibbled from the banks of rills so clear they seem to have dropped out of Heaven, and the stamp of its foot defies the Jack shooting lantern und tho ride, the horn und the hound, that doer they^vill have if they must needs break their ueck in the rapids. So it there were no noble stuff in your make up, if you were u bifurcated nothing, if you were u forlorn failure, yon would be allowed to go undisturbed; but the fnot that the whole paok is in full cry after you is proof positive that you arc splendid game and worth capturing. Yes, for some people in this .world thore seems no lot-up. They are pursuod from yquth to manhood, and from manhood to old age. Very distinguished are Lord Staf ford's hounds, the Earl of Yarborough's hounds, aud Queen Victoria nays eight thousand live hundred dollars per year to her Master of BuckU-ounds. But nil of thorn put together do not equal iu number or speedt or .power to luaut down, the .great? kennel of hounds of which Siu uud Trouble are owner nnd master. But what is a relief for all this pursuit of trouble, and annoyance, and pain, and be reavement? My text gives it to you in a word of three letters, but oaoh letter is a "harlot It you would triumph, or a throne If you WAnt to be crown**, or a lake if you would slake your thirst—yes, a chain of three lakes—G-O-D, the One for whom David longed, and the Owe whom David found. You might as well meet aetag which, after Its sixth mile of running at .the top most speed through thleketandgorge, and With tho breath of the dogs on its heels,has come in full sight of Seroon Lake, and trv to cool its projecting nnd blistereditongue with a drop of dew from a blade of glass,as to at tempt to satisfy an immortal soul,;wiien fly ing from trouble aud sin, with anything loss deep, aud high, and broad, and immense, aud infinite, aud eternal than God. His comfort, why it embosoms all distress. His arm, it wrenches off all bondage. His hand, It wipes away nil tears. His Curistly atone ment, It makes us all right with tho past., aud all right with the future: nil right with God, all right with man, and all right for ever. Lamartine tells us that King Nimrod said to his three sous, “Here are three vases, aud one Is of eluy, another of amber, and uuother of gold. Choose now which you will have.” The eldest sou, having first cholcq,' chose tho vase of gold, on which was written the word “Empire,” and when opeuod it was found to contain human blood. Tho second sou, making tho next choice, aliose the vase of umber, inscribed with tbo word ‘"Glory,” and whoa openod It contained tbo Hshesof these who were once called groat. Tbo third son took the vase of clay, und, opening it, found it empty, but on the bottom of it was in- soribed the name of God. King Nimrod asked bis courtiors which va*e they thought weighed tho most. Tho avaricious men of bis court said tho vase of gold. The poets said .the one of amber. But tho wisest men said the empty vase, because oue letter of the name of God outweighed a universe. • For Him I thirst; for His graee I beg; on His promise I build ray all. Without Him I cannot bo happy. I have tried tho world, audit doos well enough as far it goes, but It is too uncertain a world, too evanescent a world. I am not a prejudiced witness. I have nothing against this world. I have boon one of tbe most fortunate, or to use a more Curistiau word, one of the most blessed of men—blossed iu my parents, blessed in the place of ray nativity, blessed iu my health, blessed in my field of work, blessed In my natural temperament, blossed in my family, blessed in my opportunities, blessed In a comfortable livelihood, blessed In the hope that my soul will go to Heaven through the pardoning mercy of God, and my body, unless it bo lost at sea or cre mated in some conflagration, will lie down iu the gardens of Greenwood among my kindred and friends, some already gone and others to come after me. Lire to many has been a disappointment, but to me it has beeu a pleasaut surprise, aud yet I de clare that if I did not feel that God was now my Friend and over-present help, I should be wretched and terror-stricken. But I want more of Him. I have thought over this toxt and preached this sermon to myself until with all the aroused energies of ray body, mind and soul, I can cry out,. “As the hart pantetli aftor tbe water brooks, so pauteth my soul aftor Thee, O God.” Oh, when some of you get there it will ho like what a hunter tells of when push ing his canoe far up North in the winter and amid the ice-floes, and a hundred miles, as he thought, from any other human bo- ings! lie.was startled one day as he heard astuppingon the ice, and ho cooked his rifle ready to moot anything that came near. Ho found a man, barefooted and in sane from long exposure, approaeblug him. Taking him iuto Ills canoe nnd kindling fires to warm him, lie restored him and found out where he had lived, and took him to Ills home, and found nil tho village iu groat excitement. A hundred men wore searching for the lost man, and bis family aud friends rushed out to meet him; and, us had been agreed at bis first appearance, bells were rung, and guns were fired, and banquets spread, and the rescuer loaded with presents. Well, when some of you step out of this wilderness, where you have.been chilled and torn and sometimes lost amid the icebergs, into the warm greetings of all the villages of the glorified, and your friends rush out to give you welcoming kiss, tho news that there Ls • another soul forever saved, will call tho cuterora of Heaven to sprend the banquet aud tbe boll-men to lay bold of the rope in the tower, aud while the chalices click at the feast, und tho bells clang from the tur rets, it will be a scene so uplifting I pray God I may be there to take part in the telestial merriment. “Until tbo day break nnd tho shadows floe away, he thou like a roe or a young hurt upop the moun tains of Bether.” A Japanese admiral receives, by a recent ordinance, G< 00 silver dollars a year, a vice* admiral 4000, while firsthand secoud-elas. SHE’S AN ARMY LIEUTENANT. Dr. Anita IhQro I. tin, Fir.l Woman to Hold an (Ifllnr'i Commission. Mrs. Anita Newcomb MoGee, who lias bean commissioned nil acting As sistant Surgeon in tho United Stntes Army, with tho rank nuil pay of a Second Lieutenant, and who is tho ASSISTANT SUnOBON U’OKE. llrst wornnn who has over received n commission in our nrmy, has bognu hor official duties at tho Army Bnild- ing, in Whitehall street, New York City. Her first duty wns to scloot thirty women uurBes for the army in Porto ltioo. Speaking of her commission, Mrs. MeGeo Baiil: “It carries tho rank, pay and quarters of n Second Lieuten ant, but I must wear a Hocond Lieu tenant’s uniform. It will be the same ns a rogular officer’s uniform, except that I Blial wear a skirt instead of trousers. The skirt will be of army cloth, and the jacket like a man’s, shoulder-straps and all. My ootnmie- sio is for a limited period, to be re newed ns my services are required. It will not niter tho work 1 have been doing as a member of tho Ited Cross.” Dr. MoQeo is a bright-faced young woman of nnruffied good tomper, a quick and taotful business woman. She is only thirty, yet bos worn dis tinction in tho Holds of science and .medicine. Dr. MoGee is the wife of Professor W. J. McGee, head of the Hereon of Ethnology, in Washington, and daughter of Profesor Simon New comb. Slic is tho mother of several children. Born iu Washington, ehs was early sent abroad to be educated at Geneva and one of the universities for women in Englaud. She served two years on the staff of Johns Hop kins Hospital, Baltimore, and is well known in her profession in Washing- tan. A Outer Klver Cruft. The accompanying illustration shows the qnoer boat used for the as cent and descent of the Han Biver, in tho ICwau Tung province of China. The lower sail is made of fine bamboo matting, and it is let down on a hinge at night so that it rests on the broad, A IIAN RIVER JUNK. upturned prow of tho boat, thus form ing a highly convenient shelter for the boatman and his numerous family. Sharp. Said an Irishman to a telegraph operator: "Do you ever oharge any body for the address of n message?” "No," replied the operator. “Aud do you oharge for signing his name, sir?” said the customer. “No, sir." “Well, then, will yo please send this? I just want my brother to know I am here,” handing the following: “To John Mc- Flynu—at New York—i signed] Patrick MoPlynu.” It was sent as a tribute to Patrick’s shrewdness. Not (lie Union Soule ILfiYIISf BOCKS l DICKENS’WORKS 'ALL THIS WtEK l FOR ONLT'1.12 LL| sp •• T ■iJ A Domestic Incident. From the Obeercer, Flushing, Mich. "'Early In November, 1B94,” says Frank Lour, who lives near Lennon, Mloh., “on starting to get up from the dinner table, I was taken with a pain in my baok. Tho pain increased aad I was obliged to take to my bad. The physician who was summoned pronounced my ease muscular rheumatism aocompaulod by lumbago. Ho gavo mo remedies and Injected morphine into mV arm to ease the pain. “My disease) gradually became worso un til I thought that death would be Welcome release from my sufferings. Besides my regular physician I also consulted another, but ho gavo mo uo encouragement. “If Oi wuz woorkin* fer thot mooch a week Oi wouldn’t let people know it.”—-Chicago Record. ■On Gelling Up From the Table. “I was finally induced through roading some accounts In the newspapers regard ing the wonderful cures wrought by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People, to try thorn. I took the pills according to direo- tloiiH and soon began to notice an improve ment Iu rny condition. Before the first box was used 1 could get about the house, nnd after using five boxes watt cutlrely cured. “Since that time I have felt no return of tho rheumatic pains. I am coulldont that Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills waved tuy life aud I try to tuduco my friends w!so arc sick *o try tho same remedy. I will glti.lly answer luqulrlus concerning my sickness and woa- derful euro, provided stamp Is enclosed for reply. Fiiank Loro." Sworn to before me at Venice, Mich., this 15th diy of April, 1894. G. JJ. Goldsmith, Justice of the Peace. Wit In tbe Sixty-Ninth. Ono of tho bd.vs of the Sixty-ninth New York was arrested not long ago ami taken to the guard house for be ing absent without leave. Upon bo- Ing asked where ho was by his cap tain he gave the following reply: “Ol was over to the holf mlnlt rlgl- ment, nor." Tho captain, being a son of Erin, also replied: "If youse’ll tell me whare the holf mlnlt rlgiment Is 01*11 relase yees.” The witty plsoner replied: “Over to the Thorty-Hleond rlgiment, sor!“—Fer- nandlna letter In Cleveland Plain Dealer. Tbe Smallest Public Loan. The parish of WJggenhnll St. Mary, Norfolk, England, has the honor of a pioneer position atqong rural par ishes, Its parish council Is the first to float a public loan. Corporation stock ls generally Issued In large sums, but the WIggenhall consols only run to the modest sum of $2,000, which tlio parish . needs for a new burying ground. It Is to be hoped that our financiers will not all speak at once, or the resources of tho city may be un- diily strained.—Westminster Gazette. A Clever Circumvention. In order tlmt she might become betiv ess to $100,000 of her grandfather’s money, Estelln A. Knapp of Oakland, Cnl., lins been legally adopted by her own father. The grandfather did not recognize the little girl, who is the daughter of his son's divorced wife, but provided for "future children.” Lawyers ndvlsod Mr. Knapp that he could get around this provision by the process adopted.—Baltlinoro Ameri can. The Way lie Won Her. “How did Miss Koekingham over come to choope thnt measly littlo chap for her husband, when she might Ijavo had tho Marquis do Montmorency?" “The measly littlo chap could under stand her Fronch ■ or at least he mado hor liolievo ho could—and tho marquis couldn't.”—Clovolnnd Leader. Ttontity In Itlunri Deep. Clean blood moans a clean skin. No beauty without It. Cancarots, Camly Cathar tic clean your blood and koep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all lm- purltlen from tho body. Begin to-day to banish pimples, bolls, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by tAklng Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug- (fists, satisfaction guaranteed, lOo, 25c, fiOo. Attention Farmers! Do you want to make a pockot full of money before ('hrlstninsY You can certainly nmkn It selling our groat. “Wak With Spain,” a com plete history of the w»ir ft am beginning toend. Mont complete and authentic book published, buporhly lllUHt rated. Liberal commissions amt handsome premiums. Outfit trcooti receipt of ‘JOctsln postage to pay mailing. Bonanza for farmers who have horse and buggy and can travel through the country. Order outfit and secure choice of territory. Addrc D. K. LUTHER PUB We usually sdrertlseaspsclmen „neof our catalogues, hut we dolPt dm|n this < > advertisement because we're perplexed. Ogr ♦ furniture catalogue consists of 160 page*, every pane filled with bargains. Now, how are we to pa*e t ( ) select o ♦ on cart you want, you'll nnd it in our cmaioguca « ( ► feast per cent, cheaper than you can buy It < < ► an &*ouk7we'*pend our money advertising oar ‘ { j furniture and carpet catalogues (they'r* ? We say to you, if there's anything ( on earth in the furniture or carpet line that ou want, you’ll find it in our catalogues at . ;iw,: iutely free, not even a stamp necessary) if they ^ • ♦ imeiy ircc, nog even u .. j weren’t worth having? Not much. If you t ) get these catalogues you'll see for yourself ( \ i . what an enormous amount you can save by , . ' ' buying from mill owner* ana furniture mm ms- 4 ) (acturera like s that we are so anxious designed, and you can select carpet fro* { a It just as though you were in the sampte^fwMl , ▼ of one of our mills, because it’s lithographed la ten colors from hand painted plates. -i ► We couldn't exaggerate the value of our fur* , niture cat a logo if we tried. Just think of fitr | i large pages devoted to furniture, and stuff i . page filled with bargains. Will you be afriead ■ I ► to yourself? Will you write for those cat** r () logues at once? Address (exactly as below.) II JULIES HINES & SON, It D.pk.,01. BsUlrnsre, M. i ><;»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ > BmI Tobacco fipll sod Smoke Yoor IJfb Away* To quit tobacco oaslly and forover, be ma^ nolle, full of Ufa. norvo and vigor, take No-Tw Duo, tlio wonder-worker, thgt makes weak men strong. All druggists, ftOo 0^ 91. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling lteinody Ca, Chicago or New York. Nearly 70,000 tons of cork aro consumed In England pvery year. Deafnean Cannot lie Cured by local applications, ns they nannot reach tho diseased portion of tho oar. There Is only ono wav to cure deafness and thnt Is by constitu tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an In flamed condition of tho mucous lining of the Kustachlan Tube. Whnn this tuho gets In flamed you have a rumbling sound or ’imper fect homing, nnd whon It Is entirely closed Deafness Is the result, and unless tho Inflam mation can bo tnk'-n out and this tuho restored to Its normal condition, heating will bo de stroyed forover. Nino cases out of ton aro causei by catarrh, which Is nothing but an In flamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give Ono Iltiudrod Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that can not be ftired by Hall's Catarrh Curo. bond for circulars, free. F. -T. CfiBNET A Co., Tolodo, O. Hold by Druggists 75c. Hall’s Family Fills aro tho beat. CO., Atlanta, Ga, THE EXCELLENCE OF SYRUP OF FTCS Is due not only to tho originality and simplicity of tho combination, but also to the care und skill with which it is manufactured by scientific processes known to the California Fia Syrup Co. only, und wo wish to impress upon all the importance of purchasing the true and original remedy. As the genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured by the. California Fio Syrup Co. only, a knowledge of thnt fact .will assist one in avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by other par ties. The high standing of the Cali fornia Fio Syrup Co. with tho medi cal profession, and tho satisfaction which tho genuine Syrup of Figs 1ms given to millions of families, makes the name of tho Coinpuny a guaranty of the excellence of Its remedy. It is far in advunce of nil other Inxativos, as it acts on tiie kidneys, liver and bowels without irritating or weaken ing them, and it docs not gripe nor nauseate. In ordertoget its beneficial effects, please remember tiie uumo of the Company — CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. BAN FRANCISCO, Cut M1UISVILLE. Us. NEW YORK. ILF. ! Thompson’s Ey« Wafer To Cure Constipation Fornvpr. Taka Cawamts Uandy Cathartic. IO j or 2Vl ll C. C. C. fall to curo, druggists rofuud mrraoy., I.yon A C’o’n “I*lek Leaf" Pmoking Tobacco given tlio consumers tho very boot Tobacco they can get. 2 ounces for 10 cents. ItlsraKt winning its way to public favor. Try it Fits permanently cured. No flrs or nervous ness Hirer first day’s uho of Dr. KIlno'H (treat Norvo Restorer. $2 trial bottle and troatleo free. Du. It. II. Ki.ink, Ltd., 931 Aren Ht., Phila., Pa. For Whooping Cough, I’Ibo’b Cure is a suo- Cf**< infill remedy.—M. P. DIET Kit. 67 Throop Avc., Bro jk-yn, N. Y., Nov. 11,1894. • Mr** Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children tei-r.Jiin/.HoftenH the gum«. reduces inflamma tion.nllnyn pnln.cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle. K«lnento Your ItowoU With Caftcaret*. Candy Catliartlo. curo const! nation forovor. 10c. IfC. C. C. fall, druggists rofand money. W ANTED—Specialty Salesmen; new plan; t*ell goode; secure Halesmon; salary, ox- inlhBlon. W. F. Main Co.,Iowa City,la. 1* I PIl’v AI V KH " and FITTINOS. KN- <11 NFS, IIOII.KIIR, MILLS anil UF.PAIIMi. Lombard Iron Works & Supply 0o,, auiwsta.ua. |Ajtonta for Farmors* ■ Manual. It con tains "Cotton Hollers’ Ta- f bio that runs from 8o to tOo. It flg- ' tires the filths nnd 20ths. Also for the lilbln Looking (Hites. It tenches the Bible by Illustrations. Lstest war books. Out fit free. A gen Is soil 7 out of Oralis, agent In Walkor Co., Tpx., sells 20 In 6 honre. ,r. L. NI (TOOLS & co., ATLANTA, CA. drilling wolls for house, farm, City and Village* Water Works, Facto ries, Ico Plants, Brew eries, Irrigation, Con* n®® Mineral Prospecting, Oil and One. eta. Lntost anu Dost J® years nxperlonce. WRITE US What you want. LOOMIS * NVMAH. Tlffll, OMa Good All the Year Round. ST. ANDREWS j COLD TEA^i*- For tbo Liver. S AVE MONEY. Buy your Carriages and Buggies direct from tlio factory. Wo furnish anything in tho fine. Carriage, l'ltaeton. Top or Onoit Buggy, O tbrlolet, Murrey, Trat.. Oort, Road or Sprltig Wagon at a saving of from 35 to ao par cent. Write HOIJTHKIIN CAHllIAGK * FREE WATCfl! B»nd yonr adfiresB and we will express 60One,1om» tiller Nickel cigars. When nuld, remit tie |2.Man4 we will mail you.fr#*, a handsome stem wind ai*4 to»» retails for “* Tan I I you, sot wain!, wliloti — . tlUAU €O..Nu. UJ Aial -PATENTS-- ssa&ta The Bust BOOK AY WARM'S uously illustrated! |»rto« 9*), fros to anybody sending t wo annual subscription* al 91 each to the overland Monthly, BAN FUANC'IHOO. Sample Overland, As, HDHDQV NSW Hit 00 VERY; gt*e» \J rx vJ ra I qnlak relief and •a*** won* ousex. Hnn»l 'or book ortnutirnnnial* and IO day** treatmnut Free. Dr.H.R.aaiBN'S SONS, Atlanta. Oa. W ANTED—Case of bad health that R'ITA H’9 Will net lien*-tit. Horn! ft ots. to Ripen* Chemical Co., New York, fog 10 samples and low testlmonlala. TRACIIKIIR WAIVTRD—A««ts. Grade, Pub. ft I’rlvuto. Union Teachers’ Agencies, Wash In? ton, D.C. ) In writing tomlvar- MEHT10M THIS PlPERi..^ sss.!»M»sooae«_9»*e.S!*»B<i«eev To Women! After yon have tried Doctors and ail other preparations, and they have failed to relieve you, then use ’ GERSTLE’S FEMALE PANACEA. ▼naes (GE F\ T 3 .)—"'- % -IT WILL CURE YOU. FOR SALE BY ALL DEALERS IN MEDICINES. L. GERSTLE & CO., Chattanooga, Tenn. Sole Manufacturers and Proprietors. 6°/o COLD BONDS, Payable Berai-annnally at the Globe Trust Company, Chicago, III. These bonds are a first mortgage upon the entiro plant, including buildings, land and other property of an Industrial Company located close to Chicago. The Company has been established for many years, is well known and doing a large and increasing bnsinoss. Tho officers of the Company are men of high reputation, esteemed for thoir honesty an4 business ability. They have made so great a success of this business that the bonds of this Company are rarely ever offered {or sale. A few of theBo bonds came into our hands during tho hard times from parties who had purchased them several years ago. Wo offer them in issues of $100.00 each for $80.00 and accrued interest. For security and a large interest rate these Industrial Bonds nre recommended os being among the best. First-class bonds and securities of all kinds bought and sold. SCENDALL & WHITLOCK, BANKERS AND BROKERS, 02 Exchange Plaoe» New York, ,