Newspaper Page Text
1,’EV. Dll. TAI.MAGi;.
THE BROOKLYN DIVINE’S SUN¬
DAY SERMON.
Subject: “Thc Angola of tlic Grass.”
which Tfxt: is “// Him Cod an clothe the 'jrass,
to-dau 1 the field, and to-m nrrow
is ./ { to the ox cn ; how much more wiU
he clothe 1/our’—Luke xiL, 28:
n Illy in the queen of Bible flowers. The
11 in •. have di pitted her throne in modern
s and won it; Lift the r<c“ original.y
it was tinder the long
Hie r. inu.il lushed an.i nteiise iiit'i jt ' of t»,e world that
'• and < 7 ...........«...i,y".„,?a“i myirh and y (r
nd the follow spikenard he lily. and cam
rose 1 Fourteen
an in the Hi H Uie lily mentioned; only
t 1,il' VliM! OK* " ,f, y now have
1 h] y™*r Un th " utm
- “•er .1 . t " mon m th0
of t hr. t. ’
. vir had his throne on the hills The
had her throne in th. valley. In the
test sermon that was ever preached,
e tvasonli one flowor.and thatalily. fhe
ford dreamer, John Runvan, ent-red the
- of th- int-rpr-t-r,and was shown a
-r of flowers, and was told to “consider
th
tiidy or reject other acieneeg nt
t " 1‘ so with ndronomy it u so
ar) . it is so with jurisprudence
o with r»h } o ology, it is with geology ’
■ so
iciK ••of botany Christ commands
>t fitly "hen be says: “Consider the
M.usuro them from root to tin 1 o '
petal. f Inhale Inc th-ir breath. Notice the
gm- s of their poise. Hear the whis
f t in whits lips of 1 ho Hns'eu uni of
th-re 1 lips of the Amnri-an farnSr lily
Ill "otliis royal lily nMilim »
t h- lily of the Nile, tin-Sierras! tli-‘ Japnn the I adv
Washington of the Golden Bund
th-Giant lily of Nepaul tho Turk’s Can
the Afri-aii lily from the Capo of Good
tiii' tvi'.ical f 't'r' ,n-|
t morning as of ( flo W
d th Faster dav. garlanded with all this
o|>ulan-e of floral b-anty. lilies,' i-eeins to addi-essim
••.me: “ Consider tie- nUuinL consider tho ;!
,.,u (i/ui-'i 1.. f.i lonsidellhn . 1
i vie in! I eon i-l-r th- h-ioiroi,-s eonsid r
the oleni ,d-i . With differ-,iti-il 'Hill .
fu! nnd int—IIi gent nnd worshipful SmSiK souls con
*«-• •'“•»>
homely us-s eonsid. them ’ *•
r
The flowers are the angels of the eras*
They A all have voices. when S, SrS tho clouds
M. ..... . thmiilrr; who,,
mm*' tlicv lilwavs ,! ,,,•!
wh sisir I K I n
pret their'message. IS What have you worshipful to say
;ini'titiid-' ° f 11,0 E r,iss > lo this
Tl.2 mornin- I mean to discuss bjS what flow
-I a,.■,o.,.| flow'.s or . T! G ys y J W mt
nr- .......for;
I. i remark, in the first place, they are
K?' nal. ^asi'hrV-i'i was < hnstslbsi, O ; , 7 thought l ? , , rO ^ ,le,, All Si l « these r0 -
luu-i, seem to address us to day, saymg :
°
I,, v- mwhivfl : ) which to spin, no loom
. , , sickle with which
" 1 " 111 1 11 n, a Vl ‘. no
to harvest, no well sweep with which to draw
water; hut God slakes our thirst with the
.lew, and G.wl feeds us will, tho bread of (he
”,
> o clot hte'l us, t ho ^ra >•< of ihc» field, will ho
>i"! much 1111 re clothe you, oh ye of littlo
M. n and . women of r worldly ... anxieties, . take .
thismay,:Ign G- l taken care home of with you! you Quarter How long < f has tho
journey ol life! half the journey of life?
tine-(i,mrt-rs toe journey of life? Can does you
not trust Him tho rest of the way? G.wl
i>'t th-Roman promise I y 011 anything like that which
impc-.n-liad on his table at vast
expense lias .>()() nightingales’ tongues but He
promised to take care of you. He lins
promised you the necessities, not the luxur.es
livid not cake. II God so luxuiiantly
. lothos tho grass of the field, will he not pro
vide for you, his living and immortal clnl
dr-u? He will.
No wonder Martin Luther always had a
flower on his writing desk for inspire
fl.u'u- T !low!v 1 ( ' m,' kS 0t hlZ ’I'w?
tiooi a n flow. 1 grew -mw up to to , . beet lien
ola. Mungo had Park, the great traveler and
explorer, He in his lit— saved hy a flower,
sank down the desert to die, but seeing
a flower near by, it suggested God’s merciful
care, and I10 got up with new courage and
traveled on to safety. I said the flowers are
the angels of the grass. I add now that they
are tlie evangels of tho sky.
11. If you insist on asking me the question;
tVhut are flowers good lor? I respond: They
are good for the bridal day. 'the bride must
have them on her brow, and she must have
them in her hand. The marriage altar must
ho covered with them. A wedding without
flow ers would he as inappropriate as a wed¬
ding without music. At such a time they are
for congratulation and prophecies of good.
Bo much of the pathway of life is covered
up with thorns, we ought to cover the leg in¬
ning with orange blossoms.
Fiowei s are rppropriute on such occasions,
for in ninet y-nine out of a hundred cases it. is
the very host thing that could have happened.
The world may criticise and pronounce it an
inaptitude, and may lift its eyebrows in sur¬
prise hotter; and think it might suggest the something
but the God who sees twenty,
forty, fifty years of wedded Jife before they
have I egun arranges all for the best. So
that (lowers, in almost all eases, are appro¬
priate for the marriage day. The civerg, lives
of disposition will become correspondences,
r—klesstie-s will become prudence, frivolity
will he turned to practicality.
There has been many an aged widowed
s >ul who had a carefully locked bureau, and
m tho bureau a box, and iu the box a folded
p ip« r, and in the folded paper a half blown
pressed. •so. •slightly Sen grant, discolored, carefully
She put it there forty or fifty years
ag". t hi the anniversary day of her wedding
she will go to the bureau, sue will lift the
h-x. she will untold the paper and to her
cws will be exposed the half blown bud, and
th > lnoinwries of the past will rush upon her.
mi l a tear will drop upon tho flower; and
mi lileuiy the it is transfigured, nnd there is a
s', ir in dust of the anther, nnd it rounds
out. and it is full of life, and it begins to
tremble in the pros ssion up the church aisle,
and the dead music of a half century ago
conies ished fatvs throbbing through tho air; and van¬
Join reappear, nnd right hands are
d, and a manly voice promises: “I will
tor belter or worse,” and the wedding march
thunders a salvo of joy at the departing
cjniwd; but a sigh on that anniversary day
scatters the scene. Under the deep fetched
breath, lating the altar, the flowers, the congratu¬
nothing groups left but are scatter is i, and there is
tad 1 rosebud, a trembling hand holding a
m which is put into tho paper,
nnd then into tho box and the box carefully
p aced in the bureau, and with a sharp, sud¬
den dick of the lock the scene is over.
Ah. mv friends, let not the prophecies of
the flowers on your wedding day be false
prophecies. 'lake Bo blind to each other's faults,
the most of each other's excellences.
Above all, do not both get mad at once! lte
nit mlw the vows, tho ring on the third finger
of the loft hand, and the benediction of the
I'alla
UI. If you insist on asking me the question:
'' hat are flowers good for? I answer, tli-y
«t I he e good to honor and comfort the obsequies.
worst gash ever made in the sine of
our {>oor earth is the gash of the grave. It
is so deep, it is so cruel, it is so incurable that
it needs something to cover it up. Flowers
for the casket, flowers for the hearse, flowers
for the cemetery.
What a contrast between a grave in a coun¬
down, try churchyard, with th» enee broken
and the tombstone aslant, and tho
neighboring lein stalks and cattle the browsing Canada amid thistles, the and mul¬
a
June morning in Greenwood the waves of
roseate bloom rolling to the top of the
mounds, and then breaking into foaming
crests of white flowers all around the pillows
of dust. It is the differen-o between sleeping
un.io! rays nnd sleeping under an ombroi.l
one s.v.r.o' h md wo'want • >l.l' Ma t iiitv to have
flower seed in tho palm of the othei
hand
**()h. the donit Know, it ..
yon say, aeaa
makes im* mistaken, ’ ,!lfT art not,, not maiv'.tam ma
ers and rail trains coming to any living citv
h< there are convoys coming from heaven to
earth; and if there Ik* instantaneous and c *n
stant communication l*otwe *n th s world an l
th * L-tter world. >1 > yon no: suppos* your
derarfoi friend* know u-hat you do uith
their b.Hlies? Why has Hod plant** 1 ‘Vcl I n
ro.1” and wild flowers in tho forest nn l on
tbe prairie where no human eye ever sees
•
f *■* MONROE
rp rv* : FORSYTH. GA TUESDAY. APRIL 1 ' 1888.—EIGHT PAGES.
• ^ .
IV-n ■ He planted t'l^rn th n re for M imaw
int. c-tv-ft to l K>'i at and admire, and vrh
' isi I ifttellism *n
EF? . .I’ .
ild fl ,f a l
' ’.V ! s ,, '» * an , ^
the binds, wifi th whU^!??-t , v < ‘ X( 7 ,r, , . ° ! lsan l RPe
fiowei ,,‘r . . 1U n 1 "‘ c
ti When nate remo-nijrrvvw a,'i *
T nm t ° UW ... A
handful of vinV*. ' ««« ' n ' on,, coii“ I pill ■ them
Oil of jxi„!i r»«lr 0 xu'Tr
the < ■'tge of th. “ r Jiiy—no' W - n mg
r.irelv cvtK.-i f-.-i i " ln ano 'LvJav, , .
t»m -s at frijm r' ’ r tl. t ', liT'’ Uiedi-p’ay as some- takes
1 ., 11 rad ,Vfr? " ’. h children** ,
the oV -l ^ f ‘* mouths, and
rr .rn thV. r . osmperacy a ' e!r ha of flower* hut something Rather
than v'bn 1 of H ian [
a«k * U< * 'm <-.<ar,
s ini*, bn. rhibt d'1? iPP **
s-rmon or r ' nrwian an rtwl to bring a
hi ' ^ ,.r S molcr^tT^£ teni
t for a *
,
1“ ot f 1 ™ floral goapH. Pillow of flowers,
1 . !uu ‘jK J; 1 ''*' lor the pilgrim who has
i th ^', s fj.mrney. Anchor of got to
anehor'i' is flowers,
nslm Gro^of , !' * lan hope which we have
Power M-adfast.
our Sim W, ° °” Wb ‘ ch j
r -
f 1 had my war, I would cover up all the
dieiSSSt*‘or^t^b" d lSl5? M h
: n „“;
mausoleum ki I
»”d«ron,uticurUrLnc«. or j^tterN fle d with radiant !
‘ r ‘ t be ‘dst Tl« Wble I
m of the garden there was a sej>
< per. I wish that every sepulcher might j
l<c in t ne midst of a garden. j
^ f Y 01 * » n 1st on .asking me the question 7^ •
W ,* ,at ,tro «o",.ers go.,1 fori I answer !
£ ,!l ? ,olls symbolism Have you ever studied
•J'-'vPtuml jy 3 » d» vine floraf conservatory The Bible it is R an arlioretum: herbarium j I
Kh ljeaut : a
♦ \ r w ^ J VL th ‘' f ,,r « vlt y T of the if you brightest want to human iilus- j
llfe t Wl)1 ;
’ you quote from Job: “A man
fP meth form as a Hover and is cut down. ” |
ry iJ u ' v ‘ b quote from the pcilmist: “As 1
,, power of the field, ho flourisheth; |
wind pas«eth so the i
ll over it and it is gone.” Orvou
' v, quote from Isaiah: “All flesh is grass, I
a la. L'.. t l - “ ^lodUness ” ° r thereof will quote is as from the James flower i
Apo * ? , “As y° u
&ESP , f t h 0: * w ’ the flower of the grass, so j
* jr
AH the cut flowers of this Easter day will
? 0 orl be dead, whatever care you take of them.
j r , hough morning and night
n 'll 7T ot the show-r, you the baptize them
not „ nt be to them ordinance baptism Thev will
|V a savine «»5ed knitl
that l ? *’ut 'TV them. talM They f wo are bleeding with the their life
away ; t,ic y «re dying now. The fragrance
i/niro” nir i9 their departing and ascending
’’’ohyes! fleer, «re b„ m »a Bet
duy Vh, with the thought of resurrection.
;. / n Lord Nelson was buried in Bt. Paul’s
. at j" < ra ’ London, the heart of all Eng
JSiuSSSl ot a '.'.ati™' tCSTL™
tl “ rt .v Vumpetor, statioued at the door of
tho cathedral, with instruments of music in
hand, waiting for the signal, and when the
I’uul^'cAith.Xar'tteS G.irty teumpeters
FY °F un itt ‘ d bl ,st ’ aa<1 tllen ""as si
, , , not vvako the
i Ihavtio w [flvonwhat
thirty trumnet
er.s coull not do for one man, Ages one trumpeter lulled
-dido for all nations. The have
, m, an 1 the clock of the world’sdodinv strikes
<1, in, n, 1 an ,| time shal | be no i 01 7 fie ff -r!
I’.hol I the nr-hangei hovering. takes
the trumpet,points it this way, puts its lips to
his lips, and then blows one long, loud, ter
rifle, thunderous ’ reverberating and resurrec
tionnry blast. Look' Look! They rise'
Thedead! The dead! Some coming forth
-m!,T r "'s' y v "y"" ^» n ” f, T th " ity
thoro another spirit is joined to another bod y,
and millions of dep lete 1 spirits are assorting
the bodies an 1 then reclothing themselves in
forms now radiant for ascension.
The earth begins to bun,-the bonfire of a
great victory. All ready now for tho pro
cession of reconstructed humanity! Upward
and away! Christ. leads and all the Christian
dead follow, battalion and battalion, nation
alternation. Up, up! On, oil! Forward,
ye ranks of Go 1 Almighty! Lift up your
anists tell us that flowers breathe, tho y take
nourishment, they eat, they drink. They
are sensitive. They have their likes and dis
likes. They sleep, they wake. They live in
families. They have their ancestors and
their their descendants, their birth, their burial,
the cradle, their the grave. digs Th® zephyr rocks
one, and storm the trench for
the other. The cowslip must leave its gold,
li, v ,, *. ust L'ave its silver, the rose must
leave - diamond l necklace of dew.
its morning
Dust to dust. So we come up, we prosper,
we spread abroad, we die, as tho flower—as
the flower!
Change thou nn.l decay on all around abide T see;
O who cliaugest not, with me!
Flowers also afford mighty symbolis of
Christ, who comptiroa Hnnselr to the an
cent queen, tho lily, and tho modern
queen, tho rose, when lie said: “I am tho
rose of Sharon, and the lily of the valley.”
Redolent like the one, humble like the other.
wa.it banqueters. like Hovering wedding over bell, the folded mar
r:age ceremony a or
like a chaplet on the pulseless heart of tho
d ”;V, L
Oh, Christ! let tho perfume r of . ™ Tliy name
be wafted around the earth—lily and rose,
lily and rose—until the wilderness crimson
into a garden, and the round earth turn into
one great bud of immortal beauty laid
dowTfrom ttie*'worlds^baiiners eaglfMind
lion* and put on lily and rose, lily and rose.
hut, my friends, flowers have no grander
use than when on Easter morning we cole
brato the reanimation of Christ from the
resurrection. There is not a nook or corner
in all the The building but carried is touched spices with the in
cense. women to tbe
tomb of Christ, and they dropped spices all
around about the tomb, ami from those
spices have grown all tho flowers ot Easter
morn. The two white robed angels that
hurled the stone away from the door of the
tomb, hurled it with such violence down the
hill that it crashed in the door of the world's
sepulchre, and millions of the stark and dead
shall come forth.
However labyrinthian sarcophagus, tho mausoleum,
however costly the however
architecturally grand the necropolis, how
ground^wo'wmTt tffalf broken upbj
the Lord of resurrection. The forms that
we laid away with our broken hearts must
rise again. Father and mother—they must
= ott must
come out. Our darling children-they trembling must
come out. The eyes that with
fingers we closed must open in the luster of
resurrection moru. The arms that we folded
in death must join ours in embrace of re
union. Tho beloved voice that was hushed
must be retuned. The beloved form must
come up without its infirmities, without its
must come
Ob, how long it seems for some of you.
hearts to-day a cool, soft bandage of Easter
lilies. Last night we had come in the mails
a beautiful Easter card, on the top of it a
tt!S^SjT<5^% e aSd S !fndSTttein l .
seription: "The trumpet shall sound, and
heads, ye everlasting gates, and let the con
querors come in! Resurrection! Resurrec
tl0 festal flowers of this
An d so I twist all the
cliurch with all the festal flowers of chapels
ami cathedrals of all Christendom into one
great chain, and with that chain I bind the
KaS v lS ft rfl r Oi .f n till th I T i wnrl?rs WLlltl ^Sorv-tt^un-ecLote •
-
Mav the Got of peace that brought again
from the dead our U r 1 Jesus, that great
Shepherd of the sheep through tao blood perfect or
the everlasting covenant, make you
in every g o->d wort: to do H jswtJ
A Story of Jo Jefferson.
When Jefferson was plaving his
amous part of Rip Yan Winkle during
an engagement at St. Louis he one night
went to the theatre tired by a long day’s
journey. I he curtain rose on the third
act and disclosed him deep in his twenty*
grew impatient. At length the gallery
waxed uproarious and yelled their de
light at one of them inquiring “if there
avhs to bo nineteen vears more of
this sleeping business. ” Still Jefferson
slept on and actually snored. Opening
a small trap door beneath the stage, the
prompter him prodded fumble in rup liis from pooket below, only
to boo for an
imaginary railway ticket*and hear him
mutter, “Going clear through, con
ductor?” Of course this brought down
the house .—Ph iladelph ia IS cm,
NAH'RAL GAS.
___ i
Tin- ™ K TRANSFORMATION* , IT HAS
i I'EC’TED
I.V SOME PEACES.
, The Terrific Advent I
of the Giant
Kary Well —The Da/zlin* Ca- *
* .
reer _____ of l indleya . „ Nat
ural Gas Boom. / / !
- •
a^ral . . ga-fiirmshes , .. ail the ,
- stimn.ant
Northern Obn, and Indiana need.
1 ncertaintv united to unlimited possi
bilitics, which, in one wav ' or another.
m -' nbcr t o, k «8
U P the exhllaratl0n - fherc ^, is no foot of
?'°und that may not be the spot. A few
dollars chipped in to buy a drill bv an
; rrand boy ^* may turn into a fort-ane up
'
iftcd b a cu 8her ” Such thin rr s have
happened alUbout-at Findley, " L ygnet,
Montpelier, Delpbos. *
f « Cn( ' rati ° n h P. strange sights.
r r ° ledo was settled , 111 1«34. and a small
book, published shortly after makes nr
mention of coal. The surrounding coun
try was dense forest and swamp. The
forest was cleared and then rune ’ the 1C
COa! ’ bnn ,? in S f««bcr prosperity. Now ..
coal 13 di-mi'-se 1 for natural gap. On :
September 7 Toledo was ablaze celebrate i
in g the operation of her pipe line from !
the “ lc UanCocK Hancock and ana Wood \ 00a count> countv gas tras fields tields. i
1 nese changes have been radical, touch- 1
»ng life at every point. j I
Hut much more dazzling are" the imme
diate examples. cxamnles That nut of w Findlev uiuitv, tor for
exam P le * 1 hree \ ear^ ago it was a sroall ;
town on the Blanchard River surrounded |
by an area of bleak, swampy ground, !
and with a population of o,0"J0 or 0,000
pursuing the dull dead-and-alive life of
other small towns. Then natural gas was
discovered. There was much digging
and plenty 1 J of failures. A little over two
Kars ago the great Kary well was struck.
Its advent was terrific. A baJloon-like
Hume mounted on a geyser shot, into the
air. The engineer even fled the scene.
A» Icng.l, .he earth „ removed about
■'• ^ .**«*,«« •>«•'«• thc TT
were sustained by iron braces, and the
great creature was chained. Its flow is
tremendous. It is the welfi. giant among Find
<Urtr active
The town of Findley offered gas as
fuel to manufactories free. Home glass
works accepted hnU it. This was only about
a year and a ago Then canie Find
^ 3 1 he excitement can be com
^ ‘ ls ^very of gold in Cali
f tliC . °f ^nnsyl
° r T’ 01 1:1
' ‘ um " 01 >• x \ < a>s i.mu ingei .
Men poured m with real their savings in their
pockets to invest iu estate. Women
came up from as far as Cincinnati, grip
sack in hand, and money in the sacks, on
th,. on,ne 1 errand ‘ The accommodations ‘
of . the town could neither lodge nor leed
the strangers. Real estate leaped from
hour to hour. Two real estate agents,
not able to find a place to transact busi
{U11 ^ oilerecl the ow/aei »*^,0d0 tor his
place for the rest ot the year. Thc
jeweler, who had paid $200, ’ tumbled his
w „ ne lf
At AFleu' lengt.i th this tins excitement excitement subside suiniue l i, =
but here arc the substantial results. T he
ivclls now put forth 1)0,000,000 cubic
feet of ® < r »s a dav ’1 a supply fully equal to
tnc .< ltrsu ,1 now, atm . 1 ie ,1;/. tawiti .'1 r j io , untiin- r
d e d. 1 hcicis no wood 01 coal burned in
the town. Every house and workshop is
heated by gav at a cost of fifty cents a
month for stoves and five cents a burner
p, lor P n„hfinir lighting,. Thorp Iheieare are now now forty fnrtv dif dd
ferent Biaaufactunng has interests increased represent*
ed there. The town from
5,000 to between 1.1,000 and 18,000 with
iu a /„ year, and additions have been laid
out , , foi 40,000. , . Within the j eai o -,300 •>->
houses ivere built. .\ ater works are con
tracted for, and from six to eight miles
of railroad track arc to be put down this
summer Business property sells at
$ 1() o and $300 a foot.
rin ^, . 13 i 'V' - <• : uu ! i Ltz. ing caicei of c
1 ludiey shines before , and Indiana. the eyes ot all
Northern Ohio The gas
and oil belt, as it is called and known,
rr* s u r N i b!e8vm ‘ ; - •^ st •*
Indianapolis, and Jims Muncie, northeast, cm- .
bracing Montpelier. and Del -*
phos,aud passing through Findley, where
it has proven 1 richest. Gas is found both
noith ., and south of the bel., , ,, blit . not _ . m .
“gushes,” and not in paying quantities,
This, however, lias not damaged the
hopes that it may be vet found, with im
P lov ed methods and greater knowledge,
Montpeliei . lias pi oven t j be the oil city
of Indiana and. Cygnet that of Ohio. In
ing" Cygnet the Big Parker twenty-four well, discharg
lfl,000 barrels in hours,
18 s:ud u ? be the largest od wel known
Cvgnet is thirty miles from loleclo, and
a year ago was only forest and swamp,
Itfis now a village of 700 inhabitants,
and iu six weeks after the discovery of
-
there thirty . . tanks , , elected ^ hold- , ,
were
ing 35,000gallons each. From these fields
oii is now piped to Lima, Ohio, where
within a vear 1,000 tank builders have
, been added A to the population.
Pittsburgh furnishes the basis for alt
estimates, authentic and commercial. It
h as pu t off its sooty robe. It is light,
ai J7’ .comparatively clean and livable.
\V ithin a distance Oi from b to oo miles
there are 280 xvells boreu at a cost ol
from $300 to $0,000 each. The initial
ZZofeZ^o 000,000 leet are scat sc^t fmlfdaf^ eacn oay as fSy ireely
as annual water, saving for o to cents the pei cit y 1,000^Leet. is $(>,000,000. lhe
q'| iC savin'.' During in labor amounts to o,00G
^ the year 000,000 9 tons of
3nd water ])i}>es weic pioauceu. it*
Plumbers' bills for connecting gas main
with houses amounted to $1,500,000.
estate increased 25 per cent. It is
impossible <0 compete in manufactures
with any place holding such an advan
tage. Other cities are alarmed.
Natural gas has its dangers, and chiefly
from leakage. The Pennsylvania gas is
odorless, which increases the danger,
In the little village alarmed of Lewisburg all the when
your neighbor is lights
f town n » ist 8°. out ’. But the raanu '
hacture o safer . pipes is now going . for
! war l. The Ohio and Indiana gas has
J a wlr( slightly h pungent itself. and sulphurous Still accidents odor,
announces
OCClir ar » as ; li5 ar * \udcrs0n VUUC ‘, Indiana ’ theotber J.,,
day, where several people were killed J in .
| a domestic explosion.
0 f the ultimate results in that part of
. thc country there is no question. Gas
! w j H l>e the fu ® 1 of th ? futurCy aad i ts
cheapness will revolutionize .
prices in
every direction, and put the cost of
living on an entirely different basis. The
j c iat :r ° tures cC of for ou the [lie East East and to consider.— its manu
is
! - Uir Jors^’a.
!--— -
a .i,*,*,, t.* w .
| Notwithstanding is some reports to the
contrary, M. Eiffel’s work wonderful progressing rapidly
upon iron tower.
or observatorv, which is to dominate thc
Exposition grounds and all Paris next
year. reach According to the plans, it is tc
a height of 300 meters, equal tc
about 1,000 feet. The four raightv
arched pillars of tho base, rising over
the Champ de Mars like the skeleton of
some extinct monster, have alread'
, naarlv reached the height of the tower-
1 c f Notre Dame. —Frank Leslie's
The Lessons nF ••I'nser Fritz" Case- :
The greatest doctors in Europe don’t seem
to known what ails “Unser Fritz."
Thus are the Garfield an 1 Grant in episodes j
repeated, and pub! oafidence shaken. “expert"
medical knowledge is a rain
The effect is a revulsion,
Since the fatal days of 1883 many of the
of toe s*boo!naun concern ng ex
tensive med - ation have been abandoned
and all schools of practice are more and more
relying upon old-fashioned careful simple nursing—the root and i
herb preparations and
only relidnces known to our ancestors. t
These methods and reliances are il unrated
to-day in a series of old-fashioned roots and
herbs' preparations recently given to the |
world by the well-known Proprietor of.
W arner s safe cure—preparations made from 1
f ™:mhe possessM by many,of our oldest
t£t^s^Esssr«#z Los Cabin Remedies. 1
ner s
“My son,” exclaimed a venerable woman to i
the writer when he was a boy. “my sou, you re 1
> v " r an i j-ale an i weak like lo km . you re ;
“ e .' hf * a «°' jl shaki,,g Up W * th 80,1,6 j
-
Ti?g of in S the t ring “winter sarsaparilla supplies'" was of just fifty as
necessary theory
funeral Vreva'eur tLt
L * .T the Fa^pariUa use of such explains a prep
araUon (.’abin
the rugged health of our ancestors.
While IVarner’s Log Cabin Sarsaparilla is
an excellent remedy for all seasans of the
vear, it is particularly valuable in the spring,
whwl the Astern is full of sluggish blood and
requires a natural constitutional tonic and
invigorator to resist colds and pneumonia,
and the effects of a long winter 1 hdo M.
Parsons, clerg ot the City Hotel of Harttord,
Conn., was prostrated with a cold which, he
said, “seemed to settle through my body. I
neglected it and the result was my blood be
ca, ne impover.shed and poisoned, indicate!
by inflamed eyes. I was treated, but mv
eyes grew worse. I was obliged to wear a
shade over them. I feared that I would be
obliged to give up work.”
“Under the operation of Warner’s Log
Cabin Sarsaparilla and Liver Pills,’ he says,
than it has been for years. I have a much
b -tter appetite. I shall take several more
bottles for safety’s sake. Warners Lo
Cabin Sarsaparilla is a great purifier and 1
most heartily recommend it.
A few bottles of Warner's family Log Cabin will Sar
sapanlla used m the now save
many a week of sickness mid many a dollar
of bills. Use no other. This is the oldest
»“« £Tr|Sa'fr^ eontaining 1S.I There ?!,'
"‘arhet, similar is no
other prepa ration of namo that can
equal it. The name of its manufacturers is a
guarantee of its superior worth.
W hile the great doctors wrangle over the
technicalities of an advanced medical science
that cannot cure disease, such simple prepa¬
rations yearly snatch millions from untime¬
ly graves.
A TEACHEU in one of our l| grammar
school9 vvas pitting lvin her clas3 a s son on
tbe art of words into sentences.
The with their defini .
tions ’ were “aqueduct, a conductor,” and
. r ofIe rvcsce towork.” One of the sen
. te ‘ ,Cf8 handed / in w-s 1 “Mv father 1 tbe is an
l u l ,l6tl “ ct , ’ m<l , haa to ^rvesce very
hard.
,--; * -• -
A Pleasure Shared by Women Only,
Malherbe, the gifted French author, de
S^5wna“ne^take Son.™!ly 1 ^JESSSSfd’ Jra.dt th'
Tin.«*m»
I liis bein? her prerogative, ought she not to
be told that Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription
baniAhehAmAe^istreldn^malad^thflTLoe her life hii^n m 1
a ™ i „ a'rfd >
ceration, ities, uterine prolapsus disorders,Inflammation ul
and kindred weaknesses,
As a nervine, it cures nervous exhaustion,
prostration, debility, relieves mental anxiety
i - pochondria, and promotes refreshing
! 1
_
Andrew Carnegie conducts liis steel Works
in Pittsburg, Pa., on the co-operative plan,
CoiiNtimplion Surely Cured.
To the Editor:—Please inform your readers
that! have a positive remedy for the above
named disease. By its timely use thousands of
shall hopeless be ca^s have been permanently cured. I
glaa to send two of my remedy
' to any of your readers who have con¬
sumption and P. O. address if they will Respectfully, send me their Express
T. A. SIAM 'EM. M. C„ 181 Pearl St., N. Y.
NERVES! NERVES!!
What terrible visions this little word brings
before the eyes of the nervous.
Headache, Neuralgia,
Indigestion, Sleeplessness,
Nervous Prostration,
Ail stare them in the face. Yet all these nervous
troubles can be cured by using
v£js A* Paine's
r y
(ombound
For The Nervous
The Debilitated
The Aged.
j THIS GREAT NERVE TONIC
Also contains the best remedies for diseased con¬
I ditions of the Kidneys, Liver, and Blood, which
always accompany nerve troubles.
It is a Nerve Tonic, an Alterative, a Laxative
and a Diuretic. That is why it
CURES WHEN OTHERS FAIL.
$i.oo a Bottle. Send for full particulars.
WELLS, RICHARDSON i§ CO., Proprietors,
BURLINGTON, VT.
ail VM’l.l>-\ man: Can Earn a K a tnrv
| maki required. theabov- Work imoii^Lli^dii^g^r'giSdg the round, il. 1 . 1
w 1 "bi'skers, year ATLANTA, t’.
lV ' " t; i.
umo.xhbbkirtoitI Slid Sfitifi RifebORS ■■&£
i
K rare gift for the Udirs. Sara
much money and secure
2a best.’ Every lady
Knows and appreciates,
l ft r viicpe of hav
a inpa ribbon, w rewnauts of
thousand handy for tho
and ou*
tasty and useLi
1 purposes forwbiC
! fi m each goods a
used, and whic*
! S3 th or, the ladies
, 19 use to smhadvi
! mid S3 tacre. To purchase
wii'.t it wanted at
the usual prices
j Rl£SK-c|£4 £uth poods are
| BKlafefor, large would
of create a bill
j g i therefore expense, debars and
S3 a
mm great many from
g, tastes indulging their
iu thi*
. direct ion. KcaJiz
& 8 a , jug were upon that thouAamla tho;.sands there i Of
m 9^ rein boos niants of ib
» lare amoner the
houf^ofAmrn'S
*o#wToaeapableoijiurch«siagrlai^ejir*weiiistitutAdaeearch, b. ^ntngto^.eor.a bulk,for*s m .u rYaYofZ™*,
2«.Uiog m cur obtaining the entire stock of Silt «ud
i»a*pend«i nponaa«i f «.ri,.rto «Mvtirm S to te rwiDii, exceja
S
j gtaiity, f«nc C k-w«<r,bonnr-t uA« viini^aaj k net quili st a ? ; .hat ?tc..etc. trimmm*r», &
■ cf *h«» r»mn*nts!->•«» rU» and
«,; >• ffrds in Jen
late styles, r.nd
S.sor’i^Vn^Ar liable and ele
’ Kt‘t a Ihix eontainiii; 1 a t oim>!ete
t of these elegant ribbons Free,
'eal Ilousekeefier ami I.adies*
ireoiriedg-d, br tbo«c u i ni .. I «ittoj U d ; c,t.. ueu.e'i^.tj^ri
luratrt!
«»»=»« * i»*«
, and
wc'Il*k^ e U2Tfr“?n , “^ 1 er 0 ^
«t reem neirsabs->r;i»m, who, not »<wr, but next
!
f”- v u “*“**
tapperAddress,
HEHBnAHB tm » rove * ieau herbra FIFTH W •AZX. trm EL. CO., iSfcarSK tnuom, , a !?
Cl VJ worth O 1, D 81 13 worth bat $5iH sold per lb. Pettits Eje 5 Satreis
. (Mi, is at Sc. a box by d eaiers.
The Coirs Were Watered.
“Mamma." said a Connecticut avenue
girl. just returning from a visit to a
Maryland farm, “you are always talking
about nice country milk and how much
better and richer it is than the milk you
get in the city, but I think you are mis¬
taken.”
“I don’t think I am,” replied tho
mother. ,
*.\\- p n ‘ r kuovv know von J 011 are are for for tW they need used
‘
to water.the cows twice every day while
I was at Aunt Ann’s.”
The poor mother went up stairs and
shcd a few scalding ° tears.-Washing w ton I
.......
*
,. the A recent cold snap to put *?”*<**■»«* mortgage
a
on her place, and the first thiug she
bought was a celluloid toilet set in a
case _
—
hat DrB « 'V, 1 '„ee7” Those En * ,l9h
"Wicked Macbeth, who murdered good King
Tl^n^of'iie&of di^ "ai'dmte^
i|*g hat will scour the impurities from my
SinTltue^flisxove^wm the do'it 'tvhl"
purple headache life-tide :s sluggish .causing drowsP
ness, and loss of appetite, use this
wonderful vitalizer, which never fails. It
forces the liver into perfect action, drives out
^ rf unus W,. brings the glow of health to
AUdrnMist^ * ^ al sparkle totheeye -
—
Even the weakest mania strong enough to
enforce his conviction.
Consumption, Scrofula, General
Debpi.ity, Wasting Diseases of Chii.duf.s,
Chronic Cou-hs and Bronchitis, can be cured
by Liver the u-e of Scott’s Emulsion of Pure C’od
Oil with Hypophospbites. Prominent
physicians use it and testify “1 to its great value.
Please read the following: used Scott's Emul¬
sion for an obstinate Cough with Hemorrhage,
Loss of Appetite, Emaciation, Sleeplessness,
Ac All of these have now left, and 1 believe
your Emulsion has saved a case of well devel¬
oped consumption.’’—T. J. Findley, M.D..
Lone Star, Texas
Farmers and others who have a li*tle leisure
time for the next few months will find it their
interest to write to B. F. Johnson & Co., of
P’chmond, Ya., whose They advertisement offer great appears induce¬
in another column.
ments to persons to work for them all or part
of their time.
Bless I)e T.ord
Is what the grateful heart of old Cynthia Ram¬
sey, of Newnan, asthma Ga., spoke had when after a
severe attack of been relieved hy
one dose of Taylor’s Cherokee Remedy of
Sweet Gum and Mullein, the great medicine
for coughs, colds and consumption.
Think as yon please about tho tariff, but
plant for revenue only.
When everything else fails, Dr. Sage’s Ca¬
tarrh Remedy cures.
A chair holding a bent pin is the most in¬
fallible sign of an
«|TJjLCOBS Oil
FtH ETJ1VI ATISDff.
Corroborative and Conclusive Testimony.
Lowell, Mass., July 0, 1857.
Gentlemen:—Mr. Lewis Dennis has just callef
upon me, and informs me that the boy Orin Robin
son, who was a poor cripple on crutches, and was
cured by St. Jacobs Oil in 1881; the cure bai
remained permanent. Tho young man has been
and Is now at work at manual labor; the cas*
certainly proves the efficacy of St. Jacobs Oil.
DE. GEO. C. OSGOOD, M. D.
Sold by Druggists and Dealers Everywhere.
T ’.e Charlos A. Vogelev Co.. Hal to.. Hd.
S say 0 ,... that
cured them ot
‘^Sl^pply rmc ATARRH.
Balm into each nostril.
.—lUjLiEly Bros.,235GreenwichSt.,N.Y.
$50 Gold Watch Given
t<> the first person miming the i
shortest book in tho Bible be
EvV Nj fore Watch. June To l. 2nd, 25, a $25 Sii ver kel
next $5 ic
/om Watches. Next 75, elegant
Garnet or Persian Ruby set.
-2 m rolled-gold Kings. Each per¬
son must send 25c. (silver or SB .ffjy
stumps), lieavy, for choice of one No, ^**s ’ ,
and rolled-goid wedding,
or two he art rings, postage on illustrated catalogue.
1IAUT JEWELRY CO., Atlanta, Georgia.
m Yli A I
I., u. M m. m
4 p r 'JBJ m K
© u
' \ te
\ : ■ m
"" : "
..........
[ Copyright, 1887.1
that it 1 on give ?T medicine satisfaction for woman’s in peculiar ailments, xvill sold by drug-gists, under a positive guarantee, from the manufacturers,
wi. every case, or money be refunded, is Dit. Pierce’S Favorite Prescription. This guarantee has
been printed on the bottle-xvrappers, and faithfully carried out for many years.
THE OUTGROWTH OF A VAST EXPERIENCE
The treatment of many thousands of eases of those chronic weaknesses and distressing ailments peculiar to fomaJes, at tho
Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y., has afforded a vast experience in nicely adapting and thoroughly testing
remedies for the cure ol’ woman’s peculiar maladies.
A . Boon _ ■ Or. Pierce’s Favor*
Tfl yk/flMEy Xraw e r‘„riS!ig th „f
fU SFUmLfl, J ■ *8 is great and valuable
experience. Thousands
of testimonials, received
from patients and from physicians who
have tested it in the more aggravated and
obstinate cases which had baffled their skill,
prove it to be tho most wonderful remedy
ever devised for the relief and cure of suf
fering women. It is not recommended as
a “cure-all,” but as a most perfect Specific
for woman’s peculiar diseases.
vigoratiug As a powerful. in= it
fl A Amurn-m rOnERFuL imparts strength tonic, the
to
lOHiG. whole system, and to the
uterus, or womb and its
lar. appendages, in particu
For overworked,
“ worn-out,” “run-down,” debilitated
teachers, milliners, dressmakers, seam
stresses, mothers, “shop-girls,” housekeepers, nurs
mg and feeble women generally,
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is the
greatest earthly boon, being unequaied as
It an appetizing cordial and restorative tonic,
food, promotes digestion and assimilation of
cures nausea, weakness of stomach,
indigestion, bloating and eructations of gas.
TREATING THE 'WR.OTTG DISKiYSH.
another Many time3 women call on their family physicians, suffering, as they imagine, one from dyspepsia, another from heart disease,
Irom liver or kidney disease, another from nervous exhaustion, or prostration, another with pain here or there, and in this way
they he all present his alike to themselves and their easy-going and indifferent, or over-busy doctor, separate and distinct diseases, for which
disorder. prescribes physician, pills and potions, assuming them to be such, when, in reality, they are all only symptoms bills caused by The some womb
The ignorant of the cause of suffering, encourages his practice until large are made. suffering
patient gets no better, but probably worse by reason of the delay, wrong treatment and consequent complications. A proper
medicine, like Dr. Pierce s Favorite Prescription, directed to the cause, would have entirely removed the disease, thereby dis¬
pelling all those distressing symptoms, and instituting comfort instead of prolonged misery.
P PjraMMl FJI ED
; '
wrote a l«ter*to my family anS SE nane^brieflv ti *Li --° nt t. rf ffl n ;, ble n? ^ to* nce - my I
health had bron restored e the * fu11 particulars
toanv on° ~ writineme for teemonH vAPTn Y.Yi ftomped-encelope ,
1 for havTd4scrifflffl^nTSlTand reply I have received over tile f. YS*™* l n rcp!y
adS1hem r tS^do ^se ’
received second letters of Mke thanks xtiTTl F?om a ^t manvThave' a ? y 1 ha ' e
required menced the for ute the of ‘Medical Tavorite Adviser.’ Pr^'cript cn ’ hid applted Trt the , ¥Tm
fully and plainly and had P the local
treatment so laid down therein, and were much
xR e SS rl ePi f?, r V T.S™T P ^fwl F i r-r ^ v ? nte A p Pl KO,n T 8Cri -T P t ! on » f has k C ™5 done me a
great deal of t l from retroversion of the uterus,
for wh ch fifing I took twa a^iff^ent wonST” Prescn P tl0n and 1
am now Lke >
Doctors Failed.—Mrs F. Corwin, of Post Creek, N. Y„
writes: I doctored with three or four of the best doctors in
tnese parts, and I grew worse until I wrote to vou and began
using your ‘Favorite Prescription.’ I used three bottles of it
and two of tbe ‘Golden Medical Discovery,’ also one and a half
bottles of the 4 Purgative Pellets.’ I can do my work and sew and
walk ail I care to. and am in better health than T ever expected to
be in this world again, I owe it all to your wonderful medicines.”
Spring
Medicine
At no titers ’ho human sy tem so mu h i
neeti r the aid of roli.i'ole medicine like Hood's 8 sr- |
aparillt r.s now. The Impoverished condition of j
the blood the weakening etT-.cts of tho long, cod
winter, the ost appetite, mid that tired feeling, all
make a good medietne al>solulely necessary.
U.xkI's Sarsaparilla is peculiarly adapted for Uni
purpose and Increases in popular.ty every year.
Hood ? s
Sarsaparilla
| f , care f U u y pr6r . ar ea ri-o v Sarsa-arHii, Dandelion. |
Mandrake. Dock. FiMs-ova, Juniper Derrica and
oth " weU knowa ve f eta ^ .^Tn 7? ‘1
^“ e "a-h^it . wiu'^euro^vhen s 'in holts!pimple, tue ixove- 'g
mcd.ctae, setefula. sale rheum, sore*,
«Uhumors, dyspepsia. Wllousness. sick headache. |
catarrt ’ rheU!Uatoa
Sidney and Uvg coinpUlnts.
Purifies
the Blood ! ‘
“Wo all like Hood’s Sarsaparilla, it Is so strength !
ening.”—L izzie Baltocr, Auburn, H. I.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. SI; six for $5. Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD x CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, M.isi.
IOO Doses One Dollar
Do you want a good, ami simple reliable Inspirator?
£ 2 « L
a £ 3 im,» || I? so,
§2£ | J wnta
i! , ATLANTA, •” 3 5="r? 3 =2 = 3 i BltO
jv ioeaiLc.fi !-■ = = \V
N
spa I : - n iV
~
1 r vvasie ?2f (fiin- II
5 GA. a 3' I
>? NI
i
HahU fiJ’On I k.... Duy Until you
find out the new
I m prove
& ments.
Save Middleman’s Profits. tSsrSend the for Catal ogue. I
J. P. STEVENS & BR0.
47 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga.
SENT FREE! In Georgia eorgui
and St djoui
ing a tes,
* samples Of
■ .
WALL and
BUILDING PAPER, with prices, and book on liow
to apply it. iU* HI* MAIJCK, Atlimia, t*a.
SINNERS, Mer
ve nso
one-half, or more, by .ordering articles, of the Chicago Scale
Co. 1,000 other useful at less than wholesale
prices. Address Catalogue free. SCAhli Agents nnd Dealers Cliiongo, supplied.
CHICAGO GO., 111.
$ too to $300 A MONTH -an be
made working for
us Agents preferred who can furnish their o I
horses and rive their whole time to the business.
•ire moments may t>e profitably emnloyed JOHN¬ also.
A few vacancies in towns and ehies. B. P.
SON & CO., 1013 Main st., Richnund, Va.
[•OLD Live at home and make more money working for as thaB
I Taruiii at anything else in the world Either sex Costly outfit
rmc.u.. vuun. A<1.1 •a, s. True It Co., Augusta, Alttina.
AP ’NX lo 8S a flay. Samples worth St.50, FREE
%3 W Liues not under the horse’s feet. Write
Brewster Safety Rein Holder Co., Holly, Mich.
£ianfl/t tMdUjK?* MONTH. les . in Aoents the world. Wanted. 1 sample 90 best Free. aell
JA Y BRONSON, Detroit, Mich.
nsmm RE fo^cqhsumpti on
'■ ajBKKEnB^Kn Soothing! As a soothing;
I & Prescription” is
uI une
I I NFRVlKF. | qualed allaying and is and invaluable subdu
m
! in g nervous excitabil
irritability, . exhaustion, prostration,
hysteria, spasms and other distressing,
, nervous symptoms commonly attendant
HP on functional and organic disease of
t”® womb. It induces refreshing sleep
and relieves mental anxiety and de
spondcncy.
tion .Hr* Pierces is a legitimate Favorite ^ medicine^ Prescrip
carefully compounded physician, by an experienced
ar *d skillful and adapted to
woman’s delicate organization. It is
purely perfectly vegetable in its composition and
harmless in its effects in any
condition of the system.
------------------ in pregnancy, “Fa
i fl a as IY!UTHCH ft Tiirn’« S vorite “mother Prescription” is
a relieving s cordial,”
, RfiPPiAl _ nausea, weak
I uui.jihl. ness of stomach and
j other distressing symp
toms common to that
condition. If its use is kept up in the
latter months of gestation, it so prepares
j From 4 Ciufot. Voice j j aaaisffirss
; could walk all to over be leaving the.city without under inconvenience. the b-nign influence Ail my of
troubles seem I feel me than for My
TOUr medicine, and now smarter years before.
j physicians told me that I could not be cured, and therefore you
! will please accept Cod my everlasting thanks for what you have done
for bless you in your good works ”
later, she writes: “It is now four had vears since I took your ‘Fa-
7 orit £ P/efcription,; and I have no return of the female
trouble 1 kad then ’
Well as I Ever Was.-Mrs. John Stewart, of Chippewa i
Fads, Wig., writes: “I wish to inform you that I am as well a s
and of^eUTOritJSclcSon^aSSS» four bottles of the‘Pellets.’ All of the ol bad jSr symptoms bate
disappeared. I do all mv own work; am able to be on my feet all
j day. My friends tell me! never looked so well.”
VW° Favorite Prescription is Sold hy Druggists the World
Over ! Zarge Bottles .$1.00, Six for $S.OO.
Send ten cents in stamps for Dr. Pierce’s large, illustrated
Treatise (160 pages, paper covers) on Diseases of "Women.
Address, World’s Dispensary Medical Association,
No. 663 Main Street. Buy? alo« N. Y,
y
6
Ah?
m
"? if
Cf ?• \
V
■I p
W. L. DOUGLAS
S3 SHOE. FOR
GEM ELY. EN.
Ti e only tin > c.ilf $3 Si* iml 1 ss Sh o n t
mad • wit limit tat* I is oi* mi i Is •*. A
dun b'.e a tl lose cos iing jjii <»r $'», an I h t * g Ht
tacks or • uatls to wt ar tho stocking or li t t feet
ma lakes them tis comfortable autl web ll “"S :
Iiui 1 i sewed shoo. Huy tho hest. \>i.c mane im
loss stamp'd t. n b itiom “W. U Douglas Shoe,
warranted.”
\v. u. norui. \ s s t suoi’. tho«rigtnal and
only turn ! sewe l welt >!n e, we.tcl :loh s custom
made shoe, c >stin-: from lo $:h
W. I.. 1)0 PC l, AS S J.50 SHOE G unox
celled foe heavy wi n '.
W. DOKi 1, \S SHOE i worn by all
Boy*, mid is thc best school shoe In tho war. .
All the above go vl i a m \ K> in C >nctTO^. Hutton
and Lice, •c, nud'if and if not not > ll by your itc il *r wr.tj
\V. J,. 1)01 (il. is, H • eclit cn. llnss.
/tfaw* B
OX I /.
rf
SIIOSs'3DO “ l P
PURE o •oAA
O WHITE CO
-5
Q ■£ J? A $ •
IS s^f /v LA* 5 0
© &
& Tn.UlK MARK.
JOHN T. LEWIS & BROS.,
WAR II V Vl’KI) BL UE
I White Lead, Painters’ Red Lead, Colors Litharge, Linseed Orange Oil.
Mineral, and
COllllES BON BENCE SO LlciTEB.
O ThO bUYEBS’ GUIDE is
issued March and Bept.,
each year. It is an ency¬
clopedia of useful infor¬
mation for all who pur¬
chase tho luxuries or tho
necessities of life. Wo
can clothe you and furnish you with
all the necessary and unnecessary
appliances to ride, walk, dance, sleep,
eat, fish, hunt, work, go to church,
or stay at home, and in various sizes,
styles and quantities. Just figuro out
what is required to do all theso things
COMFORTABLY, and you can make a fair
estimate of tho value of tho BUYERS’
GUIDE, which will bo sent upon
receipt of 10 cents to pay postage,
MONTGOMERY WARD & CO.
111-114 Michigan Avcnuo, Chicago, Ill.
”
“OStlOOI)”
-Hi V. S. Standard Scalcj.
_ Sent on trial. Freight
C F //r paid. Fully Warranted.
^ ’ ' '
-- 3 TON $35.
Other size., proportion- Catalogue
ately low. Agents well paid. Illustrated
free. Mention this Paper.
OSGOOD & THOMPSON, Binghamton, il. Y.
CUREmDEAF Cu.niosto
Pkck’b 1'at.mt Improved
E.rDrum. Perfectly Restore the
Hearing,whether the deafoeiw is earned
by coldt, fevera or iujuriet to the natural
drum*, invhlble, comfortable, »lw«yi
In poiltlon. Mustc, conversation, whi»
,,cr« heard diitim tly. Wc refer to thow
rt P uttng them. Write to F. HISCOX, 85 J.
lirondway, cor. Nth St., New York, for
illustrated book of proof*. FKEIC.
Blair’s Pills. G Rh"o^'r
Oral Box. 34j round, 14 Pill*.
A. N. U...... ......Fifteen, ’88.
the system for delivery as to greatly
lessen, and many times almost entirely do
away with the sufferings of that trying
oi-deal.
“Favorite Pre
CURES _ script! on” la a
J itu THF int the positive complicated cure for
! WnnCT fiiocs most
I !l UnO 1 UAuLu. and obstinate cases
Hiiimihiiibi'v of loucorrhca, excessive or
flowing ■ “whites,” painful
at monthly periods, men
struation, si is failing unnatural of the suppression, womb, weak prolap- back,
or
“ female weakness,” ant eversion, re-trover
sion, bearing inflammation, - down sensations, chronic
of congestion, the and ulceration
womb, inflammation, pain and
tenderness in ovaries, accompanied with
i “internal heat.”
. “Favorite Prescrip
I r FAR THE I tion.” whe-n taken in con
f, $ * u nection with the use of Dr.
jCmUPV? IPierce’sColdenMedicalDis- I
! g |j fUUflt.li>. | doses'of cover}', and Dr. small Pierce's laxative Pur
■™i»■ ■ ■m— < gative Pellets (Little Liver
Pills), cures Liver, Kidney and Bladder diB
| eases. Their combined use also removes
j 1 scrofulous blood taints, humors and abolishes from the cancerous and
system.