Newspaper Page Text
REV. DR. TALMAGE.
the rtnooKLYS divinb’s su.\-
DA Y SETtttOS.
Subject: "MarrUffe for Worldly Sue.
co'* Without Regard to Moral
t'haractor.”
itxt: "And, there tM! a man in Maon
uhose possession* uere in Carmel; and ih>
vian uni r*r.j great and he had three thou
•and xhcey. and a thousand junta I Barn
ueJ, xx.Y., 2.
My text inttiMu'vs ns to a drunk** bloat
■-f Urge property. Before th- day of Hafetj
an ', l Rowrument U and nations
*-ks poop o had ttfrtr investment*, in floeki
nid herds, ami this man. Nabal, of the text
hail much of ins j.ovvKKion in live stock
de came also of a distinguished family and
descendant was a sneak, a churl, a sot ond a
lOoL . One instance tri illustrate: It ve&s a
wool raising country, and at the time ol
nheanng a great feast we prepared for the
►hearers; ann David and his warriors, who
lZ MV>d detraction
he thriving floors of Neftal, sent to him
thl ” tne ot plenty, for some bread
?, r , ':!u-,“ U V rV ?- m : n - And N,l!jal cried
out: W ill's David?" As though an Jing
lHhmne bad said: "Who is Wellington?” or
I <-naii should say: “Who is \ ,y n Moltko'”
r an American should say: "Who is Wash
ington; Nothing did Nabal give to the
starving men, and that nigh* the scoundrel
lay dead drunk nt homo, fui 1 the liitue gives
’* * JV !" ‘hro of him sprawling an i
maudlin and boneless.
Now tba* -a as the man whom Abigail, the
ovely and gramons and good woman, mar
led U tuberose planted beside A thistle, a
■l.ii liranch twine 1 mto a wreath of du;tdl**
''.ightshade. Surely that was not one uf the
matches made in h-aven. We *hiow u; > our
ii.mds , n horror at that we Ming. How did
he r\er cons .nt, to Jir,k her destinies with
j! , ft f real are! Well, she no doubt thought
■ imt n would be an honor to be associated
with an aristocratic family, and no one can
Mespir,. a great name beside this, woalth
v*,„ come, and noth it chains of gold and
mansions lighted hy swinging lamps of
aromatic <u., and resounding with the cheer
ti in.uVdi rs scute 1 at tallies laoen with
xinc. from the richest vineyards and fruits
, ~n ‘ ‘pest orchards, and nuts threshed from
foreign woods, and meats Smoking in platters
oi gold, set on by slaves m bright uniform.
r. fore she plighted her troth with this dissi
pated man sho smnetitnee said to hersulf*
•Hew can 1 endure himf To bo associated
oi life with such a debauche 1 cannot add
„ , ‘hit then again she stud to hor
■ i U ,, tl ' no 1 wa ’ ™*rfiod, and this is a
<’..ld world to dejuusd on, and perhaiw I
night do worse and maybe I will make a
sol e) man out of him, and marriage is a iot
erv anyhow,’ And when one day this rep
■' serddtive of a great house presented himself
m h parentlii'sis of sobriety and with an
assumed guniabty and gallantry of manner
and with promises of fidelity and kindness
ands ll abnegation, a June morning 3miled
on a march squad, and the great souled
woman surrendered her happiness to the
keeping of this infamous son of fortune
* possessions were in Carmel; And the
man was verv great, and he hul three thou
■aiul shrep ami a thoitsitiul goats.
behold here a domestic tragedy repeated
“very hour of every day all over Christen
•tom—marriage fur worldly success without
-egard to character. So Mario Jeanne
t hiijion, the daughter of the humble en
grav. r of bans, became the famous Mine.
tuKand of history, the vivacious and brill
'ant girl united with the cold, formal, mo
uot nous mar., because hu came of an affluent
fuiniiy of Amiens and had lordly blood in
his veins. The day w hen through political
revolution this patriotic woinau was led to
thes iffoUl around which lay piles of human
leads that had fallen from the ax, and she
-siud to an aged man whom she had comforted
as ihev ascended the ca(fold: "(Jo tirst that
>ou may not witness my death, ’and then
undaunted took her turn to die—that dav
was to her only the last act, of the tragedy o'f
winch her uncongenial marr.age day was the
Coal and genial character in a man, the
yer> tirst requisite for a woman's happy mar
iiMge. lunate me not as depreciative of
worldly p-osporities. There is a rel.giou
■ ant that would seem to represent poverty as
a virtue and wealth as a crime. 1 can take
jou tliiough a th -uaunl mansions where God
is as mu h worshiped 8 s ho ever was in a
1 , ,*! 1 ,u * t°-si'cl inculcates the virtues which
all lwTYn 1,1 'bemillennium we wi.l
all tlweil iu palaces,and r.de in chariots and
mi nt sumptuous banquets, and sleep under
uch embroideries, and live 400 or 500 years
far ; V, to l,lu JJ ‘ble. in those tunes
a child shall die UK) years old, the average -f
human life will beat hart live centuries, ihe
whole tendency of sin is toward poverty an .
weaifh'‘V's'lf 1 ,U ‘ yrlsbteousu^ toward
Cotlltness is proiitable for the life
c .mn ’v ls as " ILS for that which is to
n tnrw Ao ,, mventr y ran be made of the
putuiu galh ries consecrated to God and of
sculpture, and of libraries, and piliare 1 ma -
mlicence, and of parks, and fWmL und
woulT U -n h0 t o " llershl , P °^ x>d men and
which I two ,uost lord iy residences in
wh.h I was ever a guest had morning md
t'WJiitig prayers, ail the employes orient
f'oT.gl'-U,n°b OVa,, -' ll ' til - *'via-. Lord
And the ■lo -V' I T nusSK ' lla, 'y to Bagdad.
tjvke the dust of every lumlxVrfng and la/.v
▼elii elo; and bo,?ks of history that £i v <> vou
a glmi[ o. all the p.ist; and shelves of
po,-try to which you may go and ask Milton
or l cnnvscn or Silencer or Tom Moore or
Kotverk Burns to step down and spend an
eveiUßg with you; end other shclv.s tc
" h;*n you may go whiir you feel disgust. h
w.tl, the shams of the world, uiai ask th ick
eray to express your i-hagria. or Cbai'iet
I'u-kcns to expose the PvvksnTOanism. oi
Thomas c arlyle to thunder your indignation
ct the shelves where tlie old gos|>‘l w r n -r
--c and ready to warn and cheer us whi e th y
open da-rs into that citv which is so hrig'-.l
the noonday sun is abolished as useless. There
is no virtue in owning a horse that takes four
minutes to go a mile, if you can own one
that can go in a little over two minutes and
half, no virtue in i unuing into the tee:h
(J a northeast wind with thin appare ,
V you can affoi\i furs; no virtue in
* hs P°cr when you can honestly tie rich.
1 ere arv> names of men and women that I
have only to mention and they suggest not
on y wealth but religion and generosity an i
ph lantliropy, such as Am s I,swrence, James
I.ennox, 1 et-r Cooper, William K. Poig-
Shaftesburv, Miss Wolf and Mrs. Astbr.
A rwvnt letter says that of fifty leading
business men in one of our Kartem cities
ami of the fifty leading business men
ot one of our western cities three-fourths of
t. in are Christians. The fact is that about
u.i the brain and the business genius is -n
t,.e s.de of religion. Infidelity is incipient in
sanity. Ail infidels are cranks. Manv of
them talk brightly, but you soon find that :n
their mental machinery there is a screw
loose. When they are not lecturing against
Christianity they are sitting in barrooms
•quirting tobacco juice, and when thev g, -
mad swear till the place is sulphurous. Th.-v
only talk to keep their courage up and at
l>est will feel like the infidel who to
t-e buried with his Christian wife and
daughter, and when asked why he wanted
•uch burial replied* "If there be a resurre *
tc u of the grovxi, as some folks s iv there w '.l
be, my Christian wife and daughter will
somehow get me up and take me ;Uong with
them.”
Men may pretend to despise reli-ion. but
thev are rank h\ pooit*-s Th* s i captain
right when he came up to the village on
the sea coast, and lm-h-tel on >. av ng ;* to
the church although he did n, t attend h .m
--wlf. When asked his r a son. he sal 1 that
he had been in the habit . t carrying cargoes
of oysters and clams from that place, and .*?
found since that chureh was built the people
wi e m*>re ii nest than they us and to b-. f r
1 -lorethe. hnrch was budt he often found the
load when he came to count it a thou nnd
<* am> short. Yes Godhntve- is profitvb’e
lor b- h world-. Most of the great, hon -st,
jH-rmaneut wa rldly sue-esses are by th-'se
who reverence (bxl and the Bible. "But what
1 ■io say is ik it if n man have nothing but
* a* [icsuioii and financial resources, a
w*. m who puts hr happiness by marriage
in his hand re-enacts the folly of Abig- and
when she accepted disagreeable Naba.
"whose possessions were in Carmel; and the
man was very great and he had three thou
sand > —p. and one thousand goat*.”
If ti :-r> te ;.-xi moral char*-ter aecom
pan ac 1; a fiuont circumstanoes. 1 eonrrat-u
--late v a If not. let the morning lark ily
elear nt tbe b *kv Mountain e-igle Tb***c
THE MONROE ADVERTISER: FORSYTH. GA., TUESDAY JANUARY 31, 1888.—EIGHT PAGES.
nti.ee o? woman on the altar of socit
i -ket-k r XI^ta,i ° 3 ‘ S ,T ”" ! an,i
on -e w'itn.' > T txa have more than
nn.u* 1 ' A oomfortable home -a-rh
nmhtn.T more thin r. r lmarv surroundings
• . an attractive daughter carr-fully and
hnstianly reared. From the outaide'Worid
come in a man w ith nothing but money urn
fon7ne*! *°for ,t and -eWshne*' and
sunees a part of his postession. He has his
coat collar turned up when there -is n- .-W;*
m the air but b-x-au* it give* him an air of
•
pear an cand with- _, Mr - *.*s.Tcs! n
a cane thi i T** ' ' >rri’;whjit lon 1,
and c u i? 1 to Hercules
, ! C'l'j ’’ I Gse rr lie, his conversation
lt ‘i i ' ren h P hrß ' s inac- urafely
Ino- th-ifiT 1, an,i a s i vcv b ' f manner indicat
ing that he was not born like most folks, but
terrestrially landed. By ard learned of the
devil he insinuates himself into t' afTec
a n nS t !T dau - ht< ' r of that (diristian home.
All the, kindred congratulate her oft the al
tuostsuspernatural pro ,p- r.s Reports come in
that the young man is fart in his habits, that
Jie has broken several young hearts, and that
™. * me!in and selfish and cru-L But all
this is covered up with ihe fa * that he has
several houses in hit own name, and has
We deposit at the bank, and more than
■ 1, has a father worth manv hundred thou
sand noDars, and very feeble in heaith, and
niay any day drop off, and this is the only
son, and a round dollar held cle-e to ones
eye is large enough to shut out a great desert,
and how much more will several bushels of
dollars shut cut.
Th, marriage day comes and goo-. The
Nvedding ring was costly enough, and the
orange blossoms fragrant enough, and the
benedict on v damn enough, and the wedding
march stirring enough. And the audience
"bed tears of sympathetic gladness, supposing
that the craft containing the two has sailed
otr on a pla-dd lake, although (Jod knows
that they are launched on a Dead Sea, its
waters brackish with tears and ghastly with
ghastly faces of despair floating to the surface
and then going down. There they are, the
newly married pair in their new home. He
turns out to boa tyrant. Her will is noth
ing. l'i*> vViil everything. I>avish of money
for his own pleasure, he begrudges her the
pennies he pinches out into her tren£ ing
Pel n. Insteid of the kind words sajayg
ix-hin 1 in her former homo, now
comp'aints and fault findings and curses. He
ii the master nn-l she the slave. The worst
villain >n earth is the man who. having
Captured a woman from her 1 father’s home
and after the --atli of the marriage altar has
jieen pronounced, says, by his manner if not
in words: "1 have vou now in my power.
What can you do? My arm is stronger than
yours. My voice is louder than yours. My
fortune is greater than yours. My name is
mightier than yours. Now crouch before me
like a do" Now crawl away from me like a
reptilet You are nothing hut a Woman, any
how, Down, you miserable wretch!” Can
halls of tnoasic, can long lines of Etruscan
1 ironor statuary by Palmer and Powers
and Cl aw ford and Chantry and Canova.ca n
galleries rich from the pencil of Bierstadt
and Church and Kenset and Cole and Crop
soy, could flutes played on by an Ole Bull
or pianos fingered by a Gottschalk, Or solos
warbled by a Bonn tag, could wardrobes like
that of a .Marie Antoinette, could jewels like
those of a Eugenio make a wife in such a
companionship happy?
Imprisoned in a castle! Her gold bracelets
are the chains of a lifelong servitude, There
is a sword over her every feast, not like that
of Damocles, staying suspended, but drop
ping through her lacerated lleart. Her ward
robe is full Of shrouds for deaths which she
dies daily, and she is buried alive, though
buried under gorgeous upholstery. There is
oue word that sounds under the arches and
rolls along the corridors, and weeps in the
falling fountains, and echoes in the shutting
of every door, and groans in every note Of
stringed and wind instrument: -‘Woo!
Woe, The oxcit and sheep in olden times
brought to the temple of Jupiter to be sacri
ficed used to be covered with ribbons and
flowers, ribbons on the horns and flowers on
the neck. But the floral and ribboned decora
tions did not make the stab of the butcher's
knife less deathful, and all the chandeliers
you tang over such a woman, and all the
robes with which you enwrap her, and all
the ribbons with which you adorn her, and
all the bewitching charms with which you
embank her footsteps are the ribbons and
flowers of a horrible butchery.
As to show how* wretched' a good woman
tniy Io in splendid surroundings, we have two
recent illustrations, tw-j dm nl j alaees in
Great Britain. They are the focus of the
best things that are possible in art, in litera
ture, in architecture —the accumulation of
other (states, until their wealth is beyond
calculation and their grandeur beyond de
scription. One oi the castles has a cabinet
set with gents that tost $2,500,00J, and the
walls of it bloom with Rembrandts and
Claudes and Poussins and Guidos and Raph
aels. and there are Southdown flocks in
summer grazing on its lawns and Arab steeds
prancing at th * doorways on the "first open
day at the kennels. "Front the one castle the
duchess has removed with her children be
cause sir- can no longer endure the orgies
of her husband, the duke, and in the
other cc.stle the duchess remains con
fronted hy insults and abominations in the
presence of which I do not think God or de
cent society requires a good woman to re
main. Alas for those ducal*country seats!
They on a large scale illust rate what on a
smaller scale may be seen in many places,
that without moral character in alms band
nil thr accessories of wealth are to a wife's
soul tnntalizatinn and mockery. When Abi
gail finds Nabai, her husband, beastly druuk,
a< sit**' comes home from interceding for bis
fortune and ldOj it was no alleviation that
the oi l brute had possessions in Carmel, and
"was very great, and had three thousand
si: op, and a thousand go its. 'and he the
worst goat among them. Tue animal in his
nature sized the soul in its mouth and ran
oiT with it.
Before things are right in this world gen
teel vdiains are to lx- expurgated. Instead
of being welcomed into respectable society
because of the amount of stars and garters
aud medals aud estates they represent, they
ought to be fumigated two or three years bo.
fore they are allowed without peril to tliei#
•elves to put theirliand on the door knob -of
a moral house. ihe time has come when a
masculine est ray will be as repugnant to good
society as a feminine est ray, and no coatof
arms or family emblazonry or epaulet can
pass a Lothario unchallenged among the
sanctities of home life. Bv what law of God
or common 6ense is an Absalom better than a
Delilah, a Don Juan better than a MeSsalina?
The brush that paints the one black must
I-aint the other black. But what a specta le
it was when last summer much of "watering
I’lace"' society went w ld w th ent-hus Ji-.-n
over an unclean foreign dignitary, whose
name in both hemispheres is a synonym for
profligaev, and princesses of American society
trom all parts of the land had him ride in
their carriages and sit at their tables, though
they knew him to be a portable lazaretto, a
charnel house of moral putrefaction, hil
breath a typhoid, his foot that of a Satyr,
and his touch death. Here is an evil that
men cannot stop but von*, m may. Keep all
such out of your parlors, have no recognition
for them in the street, and no more think of
allying rour life and dost'ay with theirs than
"gales from Araby" would consent to pass
the honeymoon with an Egyptian plague.
All that money or social position a bad man
br ngs to a woman in marriage is a splendid
despair, a g:l led horror, a brilliant agony, a
prolonged death, and the longer the marital
union last-; the more evident will be the fact
that she might letter never have leen born.
Aet you an, 11 rave l-eu at brilliant weddings,
where, before the feast was over, the bride
gro in s tongue was thick,and his eyes classy,
ar.d his step a stagger as he clicked glasses
with jolly co'-.trades. ail going w th lightning
limited express trvn to the fatal crash over
the embankm-nt of a ruined life and a lost
eternity.
Woman, join not your right hand with
such aright hand. Accept from such a one
no jewel for finger or ear lest the sparkle of
precious stone turn out to be the eye of a
basilisk, and let not the ring come on the
finger of your right hand lest that ring turn
out to be one link of a chain that shall bind
you in never ending capt ivity. In the name
of God and heaven and home, in the name of
all time and all eternity I forbid the bans!
C ousent not to join one of the manv regi
ments of women who have married for
worldly success without regard to moral
character.
H you are ambitious, oh woman, for noble
affi n'iug. why not marry a King? Aud to
that honor yon are invited by the monarch
of heave* and earth, and this dav a voice
from the skies soan Is forth "As the bride
froom rejoic. th over the bride so shall thy
*od rejoice'ov- r thee." Let Kim put upon
thee th® rctg of his royal marriage. Here is
an honor worth reaching after. By revenfc
an e and faith you may come into a marriage
with the emperor of universal dominion, and
you may be an empress unto God forever,
and reign with him in palaces that the cen
t,cannot crumble nor cannonades de
mohsh
High ’-'orldlv mnrnage is rot necessary for
woman. marriage of anv kind in crier to
vonr happ.incos. Celibacy has been honorel
By the best being that ever lived anl his
greatest apostle. Christ and Paul. What
1* 2^ her honor oouM ®in?l*3 life on earfch
liu’ what von oh woman, is to be affi
” ""‘ i forever and forever, and the bands of
that marriage } am this moment here and
no v ready to publish. Let the angels of
heaven bend from their galleries of light to
witne-s while I pronounce you one—h loving
Go ] and a forgiven soul. One of the most
stirring passage- ;a with wlyeh I rrt
acq uain’ , tells us bow Ciecpalti, sue exiled
<JUG-n or F?*vp*. won th*** symj.athieeof Julius
Caasar, the conqueror, unt 1 he b-came the
bridegroom and she the brid9. Driven from
her throne, she sailed away on the Mediter
ranean sea in a storm, and when the large
ship anchored she put out with one womanly
friend in a small boat unt! she arrived at
Alexandria, where was Caesar, the greet gen
eral. Knowing that she would hot be per
mitted to land cr pass the guards on th* way
ho Cesar's palace, she laid upon the bottom
of the boat some shawls and scarfs and rich
ly dyed upholsterv, and then lay down upon
them, and her friend wrapped her in them
and sh* was admitted asnore in this wrap
ping of goods, which was announced as a
present for Caesar. This bundle was permit
ted to pass the guards of tRe gates of the
palace and was put down at the feet of the
Roman General. When the bundle was un
rolled there rose before Cfesar one whoso
courage and beauty and brilliancy are the
astonishment of the ages. This exiled queen
of Flgyrit told the story of her sorrows, and
he promised her that :he should get back her
throne in Kgvpt and take the throne of wifely
dominion in ms own heart. Afterward they
made a triundDhal tour in a barge that the
pictures of many art galleries have called
“Cleopatra's Barge*’’ and that barge was cov
ered with silken awning, and its deck was
soft with luxuriant carpets, and the oars
were silver tipped, and the prow was gold
mounted, and the air was redolent with the
spicery of tropical gardens and resonant
with the n u-ic that made the night glad as
the day. You may rejoice,oh woman, that you
are not- a Cleopatra, and that the one to
whom you may be affianced had none of the
tins of Cfesar, the conqueror. But it suggests
to me how you, a soul exiled from happiness
and peace, may find your way to the feet of
the conqueror of earth ami sky. Though it
may be a dark night of spiritual agitationjia
which you put out, into the harbor of peace
you may sail, an l when all the wrappings of
fear and doubt and sin shall be removed you
will be found at the feet of Him who will put
you on a throne to be acknowledged as His
in the day when all the silver trumpets of
the sky Shall proclaim: “Behold the bride
groom cometh,” and in a barge of light you
sail with him the river whose source is the
foot of the throne and whose mouth is at th*
sea of glass mingled with fire.
HER HAlit TURNED wiilFA.
A Lady Who Bears the Marks of a
Niyht of Terrible Suspense.
[From the Pittsburgh Dispatch.]
A party of doctors and ladies *vvere
Jiscussing a question which interests
sverybody on this terrestrial sphere*
namely, the snows of time which sooner
or later must whiten the head of Presi
dent and peasant, and a layman who
was also present said;
“I know of a man who but a few
weeks ago had a moustache as brown and
darkly brown as the fur of a seal. Now
it is almost white in places and not a
hair of it but is gray. The change took
place in the space of one night, that
succeeding the death of a daughter who
was to him the prettiest little maid that
ever crowed for kisses. Intense grief
directly caused this sudden transforma
tion.”
Upon this one of the ladies said: ;< I
happened to be in New Orleans a few
years after the close of the war, and at
a reception one night I met a young
lady who could not have been over 20
years old, but whose hair was of a pure
silvery white. She was a beautiful girl,
and with this crown of silver naturally
attracted every one’s attention. I learn
ed how she came to have white hair soon
afterwards. She was the daughter of a
wholesale grocer in New Orleans, and
during the early part of the war lived
with hor parents in that city. Just le
fore New Orleans was occupied by Gen.
Butler, her father, who was then an in
valid, took his family out to a small
plantation tnat he owned near Baton
Rouge. At the same time an uncle of
the girl I am talking of managed to run
the blockade and took with him a very
large quantity of diamonds and other
valuables—-for he was a jeweler. He
reached England in safety with his
precious cargo.
family enjoyed peace and
security for some months at Baton
Rouge until General Butler had hoist
ed the stars and stripes in New Orleans.
One night soon after that event a party
of bummers, or camp followers, said tit
be* attached to the Union army, but
who, as I believe, may just as likely
have been thieves aud cutthroats of
Confederate sympathies from the pur
lieus of New Orleans, made a des e:it
upon the house at Baton Rouge. It was
nearly miduight when the family was
aroused by loud knocking at the door.
The door, a minute or two l iter, was
burst in and five or six masked men en
tered the house. They proceeded at
once to the room where a lamp was burn
ing by tlie be.lsid- 1 of the master of the
house, who was very ill at the time.
“I should have stated, ' said the lady,
‘•that the ge itlonrtn’s name was tlvthe,
if I remember rightly. One of the
men, revolver in bund, stepped tip to
Mr. Hythe anl sad. ‘\Ye want the
'diamonds and jew. lry you brought away
from New Orleans.' Mr. Hythe realiz
! ed at once that the robbers had mis
taken him for lire brother, tlie jeweler,
and tried to explain that he hal no
diamonds or anything ot any particular
value in the house. They refused to
believe him, and proceeded to make a
thorough search of the In-use. Air.
Hy the’s two daughters ha l been sleep
ing in the room below their father’s,
, but of course were awakene 1 by the
noise. Their experience of the tide of
war which had sw. pt over them once or
twice before enabled them to under
stand the situation at once. Bv good
fortune they were able to get out of tlie
house iu safety and reach a neighboring
cubebrake, where they hid. Meanwhile
the robbers, having discovered nothing
but a little U n federate money, tried to
induce Mrs. Hythe, whom they had
captured, to reveal the whereabouts of
the treasure. Site could only affirm,
what her husband had said.. -They sub
jected her to horrible indignities un i
finally set fire to the house. Sue es
caped from the building. The gills in
their hiding-place saw the torches ap
plied : saw their father, as the flames
leaped to the roof, come to the window
of his room and then fall back into the
fire. They dared not move, and when
the neighbors found them, hours later,
the hair of the younger girl, then about
fifteen years old, had turned as white al
mos: us her cheeks, bloodless with
fr srht. Her hair had been block as
night before.'
A Socialist named Seward Mitchell of
New York State thinks of starting a
store on the Socialist plan. Every ona
can help himself and leave in return
whatever he thinks is fair. There is a
iong-felt want for just such a store
among the Detroit Socialists. Air.
Mitchell would get all the custom he
wanted. If he is a millionaire he might
stand such a system for a couple of
days, and by that time he would be
without the cash, but he woul(J have a
valuable (. ’cumulation of experience in
Soeieiis:-
THnon; i THE FOREST.
Th* Olrl acd Young liancrd All Night— Our
Hardr Ancestor*.
Old men live in tht p*s*.
Perhaps it would be better for the yodEg
1 men of the present, if they lived a little bit
mor* in the past, and drew less on the fu
ture.
The log cabin* of primitive times would
seera very cheerless habitations to the people
whn live In the finely constructed, furnace
neated mansions of tX-d&y. But our grand
parent* took a great deal of comfort in these
rude home*.
lhr were rugged and healthy. Th# men
haa stalwart and hardy frames, and the
women were free from the modern ai m-nts
*fcat make the sex of to-day practically help
less slaves to hired foreign help.
White-haired .grani sires frequently took
their life partners and cu horseback rode
* srere of miles through the forest to enjoy
the lively pleasures of a frontier ball, danced
till daylight, rode home again in the early
morning, then put in a good day's work.
Middle aged folks of to-day couldn't stand
i that sort of a racket.
To these mud-chinked log cabins doctors'
visits wer* a rarity. The inhabitants lived
to,a rngtred end green o'd ag
Sometimes the*? log cabin old-timers were
! taken ill. They were not proof against all
the exposures to which they were subjected.
They found the effective remedies for these
I common ailments in the roots and herbs
which grew in the neighboring forests and
field#. They liad learned that nature has a
| cure for evefy ill. These potent remedies
assisted their sturdy frames to quickly throw
j off diseases and left no poison in the system.
The unpleasant feature of nto lern practice
with mineral medicines is the injurious after
effect on the system. May not modern
physical degeneracy be due to this feature?
A drug saturated system is not in a
natnral, consequently not in a healtqy. state.
If any of the main organs are clogged with
traces cf lie mineral poisons used to drive
out a particular disease, the whole machinery
of life is deranged and early decay of natural
powers is the inevitable result.
There can be no questiou that remedies
from the laboratory of nature are the best.
If they are as efficacious, they have the ad
vantage of leaving no after sting.
Their efficacy s if properly compounded,and
the proper remedy applied to the proper dis
ease, wall not be doubted. The experience of
ages proves it.
Their disuse has come about principally
through the rapid congregation of people in
cities and villages, rendering these natnral
remedies difficult to obtain. Progressive
business enterprise has lately led to putting
these old time remedies within reach of all
classes.
The proprietors of AVamer’s *af* remedies,
in the faith that the people of to-day would
b benefited by using th ■ simple remedies of
log cabin days, have caused investigation to
be made and secured the formulas or a num
ber of thos* which long and successful use
had proved to be most valuable.
They will, we learn, be known under the
general, title of ‘ ‘ Warner’s Log Cabin Reme
dies.’ ’ Among these medicines will be a
“Sarsaparilla” for the blood and liver, • ‘ Log
Cabin Hops and Buchu Remedy,’ ’ for the
stomaeh, etc. 1 ‘ Log Cabin Cough and Cos i
sumption Remedy,’ ’ a remedy called “Scalp
in*,” for the hair, ‘‘Log Cabin Extract,”
for internal and external use, and an old
valuable discovery for catarrh, called “Log
Cabin Rose Cream.” Among the list is also
a “Log Cabin Plaster,” and a “Log Cabin
liver PilL”
Endless Railway,
A railway, consisting of a chain formed
of a series of flat plates, 17 inches long
and 13 incites wide, made of hard wood,
riveted between two steel plates, is the
latest solution of the problem of an end
less railway, that is, a road which is as
much a part of the vehicle as the wheels
are. As the wheel revolve i it moves
along the bottom plate of the chain and
brings the next plate into position with
out undue strain or friction. It has been
used to good purpose in South America,
and is now being used in the swampy
land in Germany, where large beet root
plantations are.
Thehe were lynched during the ye r *r
1887 in these U fitted ff.vtcs no-wuwer than
123 persons. Of the various States and
Territories, Texas leads the list, with
fifteen lynchings, and Alississippi is en
titled to second place, with fourteen to
her credit. All the victims were men,
eighty of them being negroes.
A farmer in Ingram's township, North
Carolina, has a wife that he is really proud
of, and with reason; for she can split 200
fence rails a day, and has done it time
and again; and he says that it is a com
mon thing for her to dip seven barrels of
turpentine a day.
A Btaody Affray
i* often the result of “bad blood” in a family
or community, but nowhere is bad blood more
destructiveness of happiness and health than
In the human system. When the life current
is foul and sluggish with impurities, and is
slowly distributing its poisons to every part of
the body,the peril to health.and life even,is im
minent. Early symptoms are dull and drowsy
feelings, severe headaches, coated tongue, poor
appetite, indigestion and general lassitude.
Delay in treatment may entail the most seri
ous consequences. Don’t let disease get a
strong hold on your constitution, but treat.
won? self by using Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical
Discovery, and be restored to the blessings of
health. All druggists.
The fashionable waist this season is 15 inch
es. That’s about all the dude is able to clasp.
Consumption Burrly Cured.
To the Editor:—Please inform your readers
that I have a positive remedy for the above
named disease. By its timely use thousands of
hopeless cases have been permanently cured I
shall be glad to send two bottles of my remedy
free to any of your readers who have con
sumption if they will send me their Express
and P. O. address. Respectfully,
T. A. SLOCUM, M. C., 181 Pearl St., N. Y.
A Great Chnuce.
If you wish a beautiful picture that can not
be distinguished from a Water Color, worth a
large amount of money, you §hould get Demo
rest's Monthly Magazine, for February. It is
simply wonderful how such an elegant picture
can be furnished in a Magazine that only corts
; 20 cents If your newsdealer has not got it,
| ask him to get it for you, or send to the pub
- lisher, W. Jennings Dem rest, 15 East 14th
! St., New York.
The New York City postofflee sold in 1887
eleven tons of postage stamps.
Jeuks’ Dream.
Jenkshada queer dream the other night.
He houghthe saw a prize-fighters’ ring, and
in the middle of it stood a doughty little ctiam
' pion who met aud deliberately knocked over,
one by one. a score or more of big, burly-look
lng fellows,as they advanced To the attack.
Giants as they were in size, the valiant pigmy
; proved more than a match for them. It was
*ll so funny that Jenks w oke no laughing. He
accounts for the dream by i he ’ act that he had
just come to ihe conclusion, afier trving near
ly every big. drastic pili on the marke*. that
Pierce's tin . Purgative Pellets easily "knock
out” and beat all the rest hollow!
The < hinamen in New York are said to send
home over $150,000 a year.
Life is burdensome, alike to the sufferer and
all around him. while dyspepsia and its a*-
•er.di g evils holds sway. < omplaints of this
nature can be speedily cured hy taking Priekiy
i Ash Bitters regularly. Thousands once thus
afflicted now bear cheerful testimony as to its
' merits.
1 "Taylor's Hospital Cure for Catarrh" can
now be had on ten days’ trial, without charge,
from the City : a! Pharmacy. 264 Broadway,
New York. Aii who suffer with this dise .se
should write there at once. Free pamphlet.
If afflicted with ore eyes use Dr. Isa..c Thomp
son's Eye* water. Druggists se 1 at 25c. per bot* le.
Aged People
Whose blood has become thin or impure are
especially liable to attacks of rheumatism, or to that
weainet' -ailed “general debility.” The pains and
eches of the former are relieved bt* .Hood's Sarsa
: parti la. which purifies and vitalizes the blood, while
it alii tones and builds up the whole system. Try
| Hood's Sarsaparilla and realize the peculiar benefit
which It gi' ea
i “I have taken Hood's Sarsaparilla for dyspepsia
and as a tonic alterative, with the most beneficial
respite. I have also used i: for rheumatism with
good eT* ct. I regard it as one <* f the verv be" fare
Illy medicine.-, and would net wll lngiy oe without
tt."—A B. CreRY, Providence, R. I.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all Ir i six :r L Prepare 1 only
1 byC. I. HOOD A C*7 Apo! : ~.'*ri ". Lowell,
10*0 Doses O.ia Dollar
Electricity that Kills.
[From the N. Y. Sun.}
Electric lisrht experts read \ despatch
telling ot th* instant killing of James
O’Connell, a stage manager in Cincim
nati, by a shock from an electric current
that in some way became communicated
to the l ell wire that he pulled to ring |
down the curtain. They were asked if
there was not some way by which BUch
accidents could be prevented. One of
the managers of one of the arc lamp sys
tems used in the lighting of the streets
of New York said that the only precau
tion that could be taken against acci
dent was to properly insulate the wires.
Insulation made them absolutely harm
less, even if charged with the highest
electric power. He s&id that the death
of O’Connell was certainly due to care- |
lessness on the part of somebody in not
having the wires from which the current
was conveyed to the bell wire properly
guarded with insulation.
“it is h Singular thing,” he added,
“that accidents of this 6ort usually hap
pen to men who are more or less familiar
with electricity. They get so used to
manipulating the apparatus that they
sometimes become careless, just as the
brakeman who regularly jumps on a
moving train gets careless sometimes
and suffers the inevitable consequences.
Fooling with electricity is like fooling
with red-hot iron. Nobody but an idiot
would think of handling heated iron
without proper implements, and nobody
should hen die exposed electric wires
without rubber gloves, or allow any de
fect in insulation to go unrepaired a
moment. The accidents that happen
are all to be traced to carelessness, either
in neglecting repairs or in handling th#'
exposed charged wire.
“We reduce danger to the minimum
by insulating all our wires that run in
doors with rubber, and by hanging the
wires that run through the streets, and
which are insulated with material made
chiefly to resist the effects of the weath
er, away up in the air where people
can’t readily get at them. That is all
the safeguard that is possible to throw
about this wonderful secret force of na
ture. With such safeguards we can
run as much as 2,090 volts of electricity
along a wire safely. When some of the
eleetrio supply is desired to light a
building along the route of the street
lights a shunt or guard box is placed at
the entrance of the building, and sep
arate supply wires are run from the in
side. Then only as much electricity as
is wanted to light the building goes
into it, and the rest is diverted by the
shunt and carried back to and along the
street lines. As an average only 1,200
volts oi electricity in carried on the
street wires, and very few buildings re
quire so many lamps that the current
sent to supply the lamps is really dan
gerous, even if the insulation of the
wiies were imperfect.”
A representative of the incandescent
System of electric lighting said that
great danger to life and limb was neces
sarily incidental to the oper ition of the
present systems of electric lighting. In
sulation was at best but a very uncer
tain safeguard where from 1,200 to 2,-
000 volts were sent into the wires. The
incandescent light man said that he
didn’t say this in any carping spirit of
jealousy, but because it was a fact. It
was also a fact that there wasn’t any
danger about the operation of the in
candescent* system, for the simple rea
son that no such deadly “high poten
tial” or power was ever transmitted in
the incandescent system. The highest
used was 220 volts, and the shock from
that, evon when an exposed wire was
touched, was less than could be admin
istered by a common medical battery.
Carpenter Brown, of Sault Ste. Marie
AJich., has built himself a large sleigh,
secured a full team of dogs, and will set
out in a few days to drive them from the
Soo to Grand Haven, a distance of nearly
300 miles.
A Woman’s Sweet Will.
She is permaturely deprived of her charm*
of face and form, and made unattractive by
the wasting effects of ailments and irregular!
ties peculiar to her sex. To check this drain
upon, not only her st rength and health, but
upon her amiable qualities as well, is her first
duty. This is safely and speedily accom
plished by a course of self-treatment with Dr.
* Pierce’s Favorite Prescription, a nervine and
j tonic of wonderful efficacy,and prepared espe-
I c ally for the alleviation of those suffering
I from “dragging - out” pains, sensations or
! nau-ea, and weakness incident to women —a
I boon to her sex. Druggis s.
Tanning boa constrictor skins for pocket
books is an industry in Hamburg. N. J.
“Consumption can be Cured.”
Dr. J. S. Combs, Owensville, Ohio, says: “1
| have given Scott’s Emulsion of Cod Liver
I Oil with Hypophosphites to four patients with
! better results than seemed possible with any
remedy. All were hereditary cases of Lung
disease, and advanced to that stage when
Coughs, pain in the chest, frequent breathing,
frequent pulse, fever and Emaciation. All
these cases have increased in weight from 19
to 28 lbs„ and are not now needing any medi
' cine.”
Itching Piles.
Symptoms —Moisture; intense itching and
stinging: worse by scratching. If allowed to
| continue tumors form, which often bleed and
ulcerate, becoming very sore. Swayne’s Oint
ment stops the itching and bleeding, heals ul-
I ceration, and in many cases removes the tu
j mors. Equally efficacious in curing all Skin
Diseases. DR.SWA YNE & SON, Philadelphia.
! Sent by mail for 50cts. Also soid by druggists.
C 1 Paine’s
elerv
pound
For The Nervous
The Debilitated
The Aged
ORES Nervous Prostration,Nervous Head-
ache,Neuralgia, Nervous Weakness,
Stomach and Liver Diseases, and ail
affections of the Kidneys.
AS A NERV'E TONIC, It Strengthen*
and Quiets the Nerves.
AS AN ALTERATIVE, It Purifies and
Enriches the Blood.
AS A LAXATIVE, It acts mildly, but
; surely, on the Bowels.
AS A DIURETIC, It P.egui&tes the Kid
neys and Cures their Diseases.
Recommended by profession al and business men.
Price $i 00. S'. Id by druggists. Send for circulars-
WELL3 RICHARDSON & CO.. Proprietors,
BURLINGTON. VT.
I CURE FITS!
When. / ay care Ido not me*n merely to et~p them
for & tune end then tneni return in. I mean*
radical cure. I hare i xukde tr. of t ITS, EPIL*
EPSY or FALLING SICKNESS a fife-ion* str ;y. I
trarrect my remedy to cure toe wore* ca.#efl. Because
others ha/re f&iled is no reason for not cow receiTinir a
core. Send at oik e for a treatise and a Free Buttle
rvfiny ini -.ii: Me remedy. Give Express an-T Post G*hce.
11. O. BOOT. M % L-. 1&3 Pear! ?-t. Nevr \ ork.
J.P. STEVENS &BRO.
JEWELERS.
Atlanta, Ga.
>fud for < a'ftloaßf
fF 2 By rrtttrr; eaafL Pol! Descriptive
3^ 4m Hc~*dy’fr New Tallw inite*i of
T Sr & Gul.i* XOGBY t CO., C.aeiasau. 3.
Terracing Levels.
"■be moat ingenious arrangement, and some
thing tba all wide* wake farmers should use
in preserving tf. *r binds, is the l niversnl
Grav:tv Level, manuf.u .‘"re 1 and sold by John
R Wilkinson. 37 south Broad ?te Atlanta, Ga.
A *.,*s Level 19 scieiitififaiiy mnde, of brass and
iron, easily mtanitmiated, very simple in con
struction, lasts always, good builders tool,
combi: ing square, tri-square, iwe-fqot mens-
Tire n*l phi mb. For Terracing ther? is no level
made to equal it. for the small amount invert
ed. (All complete, with target, tor s•>.) Ibe
Gravity Level captures sll the premiums at
fairs wherever exhibited. More of them sold
and belter satisfaction given than any Level
made. Thousands of testimonials front leading
farmers throughout the States tes ify to its
merit. When one go*e Into a community it se ls
others sure. Never lias failed. \\ rite for cir
culars aud and agents’ commissi os. Instruc
tion in ditchi g, drain.ng and terracing ac
company each Level. [Mention this paper.
For Oaty t rills
You can get a beautiful picture (“A Message
of Love”), cannot bedistingu sited from a tine
Water Color worth £25 Atu 1 size paper pat
tern worth 25 cents —Design and size of your
cvrn selection—.besides ihe finest Magazine
published. k; *nd for the February number
th at contains this wonderful picture and pat
tern order. Prce 20 cents, or ask your news
dealer to get it for your inspection. Tell b m
if he sends for it lor you to see, he will pro li
able sell hundreds of them. Published by W .
Jennings Demorest. 15 East 14th St, New
York. Now is the time to subscribe and get
ten times the value of the per year.
The Wealth of a Home
Is dependent upon the lutppiness therein. If
sickness i- there, what a shadow fails. Par
ents, you should never neglect a slight cough
or cold, but give in time Taylor’s Cherokee
Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein.
A. &
"gpfe.
THE GREAT REMEDY FOR PAIN.
Cares Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciat
ica, Lumbago, Backache, Headache,
Toothache, Sore Throat, Swell
ings, Frostbites, Sprains,
Bruises, Cuts, Burns
and Scalds.
WHAT IT IS.
j It is in one word a cure ; it is not nterelv
IMa a relief and in no sense a cure-all; It
is tlie product of scientific research.
Qfl It strengthens while it soothes and snb
f. U, dues, heals and cures; it literally con
quers pain.
orl Its effects are curative and permanent to
dU. the whole group of muscular miseries
and nervous agonies.
/*L It does not merely irritate the outer sui
w I ill face, nor does it merely soften or relax
a constricted muscle. To its specific action a
superior curative virtue is siiperadded.
P*!, It penetrates deeply but gently; search
will, ingly and surely, scekiug the pain
spot in an effort to conquer.
D-j*k Each constituent of the formula has a
Duff recognized intrinsic virtue to serve
most surely the cure of pain.
Sold by Druggist* and Venters Kverywheri.
THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO.. Baltimore. Md-
The best ead surest Kezneay for Care of
all diseases caused by auy derangenreet of
the Liver, Kidneys, Stcraach and Bowels.
Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Constipation,
Bilious Complaints and Malaria of all kinds
yield readily to the beneficent influence of
It is pleasant to the taste, tones up the
system, restores and preserves health*
It ia purely Vegetable, and cannot fail to
prove beneficial, both to old and young.
8 a Blood Purifier it ia superior to all
others. Sold everywhere at gl.oo a bottle.
MARVELOUS
DISCOVERY.
Wholly unlike artificial systems.
Any buck learned in one re ading.
Rsoommeuded by M ‘-RK Twain, Richard Phoctor,
the Scientist, Hons. W. W. Astor. Judah P. Benja
MIN, Dr. Minor, *e. Class of 100 Columbia La-.v stu
dents ; 2UO at Meriden ; SrO at Noru i ,*h ; 350 at Oberitn
College; two classes of 2j ea-5 r; Tale; 4UO at Uni
versitv of Penn, Phila.: tW at Wellesley College, and
three‘large classes at Chatauqua University, Ac.
Prospectus post f: i.f from
PROF. LOISETTE, 237 Fifth Ave., New York.
ELY’S CREAM Bill
pWIi.S SURE TO CURE
COLD in HEAD
Apply Balm in o each nostril.
"u\* 1 Ely Bros.,23sGreenwichSt.,N. Y.
yfjANTED-A l
CAN EARN A
Salary from SIO3 fo S2DO a Month!
We want a live, man, who is not afraid of
work, in every t'>\vn in the S ’th-in States. Sacha
: man can make he above amount, liandiiiur oar goods.
, No capital required. W k tlie year round. Wh only
want to hear tr.-m th'se who mf.an buhin* SI. ( .
IH I> v|N“ Sc ( 0., rub ihluth, 3-J **• If road
Street* ATLANTA and *
W. 1.. DOl ULAS94 SHOE* ihe erUriMl
and only hand-sew ed welt Si 4 shoe in ih€
world, eqnnls custom made handiewe<!
shoes that cost from 86 to 89.
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3 SHQE,\™f
The only #3 SEAMLESS|
Shoe in the world, with- B
out tacks or nail*. / sftjeA
Finest Calf, perfect sfffji |_4
and warranted, ( ongreoe., te/Yj" g-co %
Button and Lace, all efff <■ Ly-Jj ufr
style, toe. AE:iv;!hAi> SP|aa
and durable ai Up se -
eostingfiortt
ail wear the >V. O .%x\lsV
—-l ~ fffMM u! prV.
XY. L. DOIGLAS 50 SHOE is nnex
eelld for heavv* w ear. ■ t ;* your dealer
write W. L. DOUGLAS, llrockton, Mass.
ASTHMA
BRONCHITIS, HA i t'KVEH, *ad all Die
f-n-ee ef the JiLDOI). *-t:: be cared enlyby
1)9 HAIR-'S SYSTEM of TresltieiL
■ hicn is now recogn'zed by the medicsl world at
e only one that will pofi*. rely ana nennmr.er.tly
Astnma.it, kindred affections *jd ail blood
Lseasee. Sot on’.v does ;: eail other method!,
■ g.ying quick relief, but it absolutely cures the
re*, cases permanently. Thousand, have been
.red by it. Convincing" and conclusive proof w. :
je found In my c 4 page Treatise, sent free.
Hr a 0/ UAiR 233 W. FOURTH ST.,
Dll Ol 111 llMlfli CINCINNATI. OHIO.
JO WES
L—a IfvS Htß
f WvP AY S the F R EIC H T
\trj 5 Ton M aeoc Scales.
Tfrre Beta ar. i Beam T-.-x tor
360.
tw'i’e - .. ■ • rr—sr
rALre \ Pw-twre. 'g. *. p.rer *-I .- '
* L if QF BiKSHAMTSS,
BINGHAMTON. H, f
tifSAil”' *<TT*nr. itook-keeping,Penr!u<uhlp.Antkmet
FllnltSu.r* - - * r * -
c .... istATTSCOttUX, hi lik a., lal
1 > *. P-, s
I - 4Q. •
IPISO S CURE FOR^PRSUMPTIJW
IN THE SPRING
Almost everybody wants a "Spring Tonic.”
Here is a simple testimonial, which shows how
B. B. B. is regarded. It will knock your malaria
out and restore your appetite:
SPLENDID FOR A SPRING TONIO.
Arlington, G a., June 30.1587.
I suffered with malarial blood poison more
or less, all the time, and the only medicine that
done me any good is B. B. B. It is undoub’edly
the best blood medicine made, an 1 for this
malarial country should be used by every one
in the spring of the year, and ns good in sum
mer, fall and winter as a tonic and blo.nl puri
fier. . *
GIVES BETTER SATISFACTION-
Cadiz, Ivy., July 8;h, ISS7.
Please send me one box Blood Balm Catarrh
Snuff by return mail, as one of my customers
is taking B. B. B. for catarrh and wants a box
of the snuff. B. B. B. gives better satisfaction
than any medicine I ever soid. I have sold 10
dozen in the past 10 weeks, and it gives good
satisfaction. If 1 don’t remit all right for snuff
write me. Yours,
\Y. N. Brandon.
IT REMOVED THE PIMPLES.
Round Mountain, Tex., March 22, ISB7.
A lady friend of mine Las for several years
been troubled with bumps and pimples on her
face and neck, for which she u ed various cos
metics in order to remove them and beautify
and improve her complexion ; but these local
applications were only temporary and left her
skin in a worse condition.
I recommended an internal preparation —
known as Botanic Blood Balm—which I have
been using and selling about two years; she
used three bottles and nearly all pimples have
disappeared, her skin is soft and smooth, and
her general health much improved. She ex
presses herself much gratified, and can recom
mend it to all who are thus affected.
Mrs. s. M. Wilson.
We Cive a SSO Cold Watch
To the first person naming /3Sl3h.
(A the middle chmptrt in tb Bi-
VgMk bi* before Mar. 15. The sec -/r J
olid a silver watch. RfC’hf /
of the next .6 a f5 nick*>.|J
** ch- Enclose 25 cents U*-s S|
tal note, nW.*r or UIV
J wiih yonf answer for which
we send two rolled di n!•-
le-heart rings end illustrated
eolahKUH. Address, HAICi Tt' W * hKV < 0. f
ATI/tNTA* QA* l Mention thin paper
WELLS'
iiair
0 BALSAM
restore* &r*£
ni ■ ■ ■ nail
SgKaVLri f i fTRS? zli corning out;
ac'i& A strengthens,
tei’wpwD t*; dnyr* fills Pi cleanses and
'B' h.atescalp.
60c. Druggists
SSria
■worst chronic easen. Uneqpelcd tor ( ..-Jirrlml t h r™t
* fractions, foul breath, offensive odors, sore throat,
Sl&'SSfr £jy,U b '***%,?,%
""" )LOOK YOUNG
/"ff’te: jas longasyotl ran, pre
/-J \\y rtty V Ivent tendency towrin*
fi h Q/f-U /reU.fer Ivies or ageing of the
LEAURELLE OIL
f UemoTW and prevent#
and ronsfh
fli? Tfej-’Aft ness o* Eiej*h or Ain i
\ prew-rve* you
jRn' plump,fre*t condition
moves pimples,
Ti. Druggists or hxi*.
t. _5 J J.rtf; i hj. !■ J.
ptarapfpSf
HEAP 3YKPTOM3 "and CONDITIONS
This Eomedy will Relieve and Caro.
If Vein are threatened with, or already have,
(j lUU Bright’s disease, or Urinary troub'e.
If V**,i have sediment in urine like brick dust,
(I I Oil frequent calls or Retention, with
distress or pressure in the parts,
tf V-have Lame Back, Rheumatism, Sting
!l ICU ing, Aching Fains in side or hips,
if Vnti have Diabetes or Dropsy, or scanty or
11 IU LI b’gb colored urine,
\t Y-., have Malaria, Torpid Liver, Dyspepsia,
| j J[j U Gall Stone, Fever and Ague, or Gout,
|Z ~ have Irritation, Spasmodic Stricture,
IT ! Uli or Catarrh oi the Bladder,
If V-., have BLOOD humors. Pimplf " Ulcers,
II I UU Seminal Weakness, or Syphilis,
If Vo,, have Stone in Kidney,or Gravel in Tfiad-
I I I Uli dee, Stoppage of urine or Dribbling,
If Yms have poor Appetite, Ikvl Taste, Foul
-111 UU breath, or internal Slim<?fever,
Dnilrlo up quickly a run-down conn'teflon.
DUM.Uo Don’t neglect early symptoms.
Etirt Dose Goes Bioht to the Fpot !
Prepared at DiPpenßery—P.ecr rr.nurided by rcr.owned
thyaiciaiifr—“lnvalldflP Guide to Health’* fre* Advice fi-ee
SII Genuine have Dr. Kilmer’s likeness on
rill outside and inside wrappers.
>_| J by all DitrceisTs, and Db. Kil*eb A Cos.,
jQIQ Binghamton, N. Y.
*s,oo—Six Bottles $5.00
EXHAUSTED VITALITY
A Great Msdioai Work for Young
and Men.
PI’KI.ISII F.D by the PEABODY MKDI
( 4 1, INSTITH E, No. 1 Bollfiarh St.,
goal on, W’M. 11. PARKER, M. D-,
r o..tn *!* %Ph lan More than one mtLton note*
, l It treats upon Nervous and Fhi*l al * ebillty,
p.e ..ature beeline, Kih. etfd Viu :tr Impaired
Vigo, and Ir.ipurities of the bioou and the untold
nn-e e.i con..- juent t .ereon. Cont*ia So pave*,
, spatial em os* and bln .Inr. full gilt. Warranted
V <-i, *<>* popular me -tc*l treatise published in the
. En dish language. Price only *: by mall, postpaid,
and concea ed lr> a plain wrapper. WvxtrcUl ia
tu,,,,, r f,rr if ou .end now Adtiresi a- above.
• n ■ o,i n are - *
THOS. F. SEITZINGER,
PRINTERS’ EXCHANGE
DEALEE and manufactubeb cf
Printers’ Supplies,
32 West Mitchell Street, ATLANTA. GA.
AGENT FOR
Campbell Cylinder Press, Peerless Job
Presses, Clueen City Ink.
Cha< and Ga!U*ya of aii k _€J
Will trade for aii kinds of Printing Materia.. Old
l exchanff® for new.
R-infrar>er to ?tet yonr *npr>li--B from the naan’; f act •
.irer, \rm trie best discounts
Aril nlf"nO wll get Pensions. If'<
dll II rn\ rlri Officer** •
eiU LLIL! IO bounty < ned: fie*'* •.■ r *
“ relieved; 22 years' practice -ucc■<*--. <r . .
Uvi Kot free. A. W. McCormick L Son. Wa.t..*..-.•
tireal Eeaui.n uau: and
SriUS* Hneumatic .emedy.
Oval Hex, .Hi rsnod. Pill*
A MOUTH. A v iVir’ed beet reb
•%y.B'rk*rt ■’ *b.- 1 *dC.- ic f r>r
rfcT# v* 1| • ; 11* W: •*. o,\.Detroit,iHch.
Uf S a MOLDIER s and *_helr W <1 *.i
pjCMßfil Wlin Pcnslo snow fori m
Vf Iren E. it. krfsteu ifc Ce., -• • • *• • • •-
ri P is SS a day. Sfcmple* worth {LI- KLEE.
Lines not an-er the horse's feet. Writ ■
Brr* ter Safetv 11-1 b ' rt. .: M -
1 ’ OLD is worth §SOO per!b. Per, fs Eje -w, i
* 7 worm 21,W0, got is ao-.a sre. ao -x t* u-i.fers
I A- M. C Four. ’SB
7