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■
Session opens Sept. '27tli, 1893.
SHORTER COLLEGE
For Young; Ladies,
HO HI.' UKOIICU. »5®F
I
plL
Feonlty ooiupleto end efficient. Locnlion
end equipments most ndmirablo. Young In
dies receive the tenderest onre, enjoy n
charming bom' 1 lile, nre surrouuded by the
sweetest intlueonos, end possess the finest
facilities for Eduonllon nnd for culture.
j,it. a. .T. n^TTLE, President.
PIIOF. IVY W. DUGGAN, Bus. Mang’r.
Xnrrotv UmiKf Alliance
Regular meeting" nt Bethlehem Academy,
near Wartime. Saturday beforo 2nd Honda,
In each month. W. T. Askcw, 1 res.
H. 8. Sturm, Beot’y.
NORTH GEORGIA
AT DAHLONEGA.
A branch of the State University
Spring Ta m begins First Monday in
February. Fall Term begins
First Monday in September.
What Causes Pimples?
Clogging of the pores or mouths of the seba
ceous glands with sebum or oily matter. I
Hie plug of sebum In the centre of the pimple |
Is called a blackhead, grub, or comedono.
Nature will not allow the clogging of the pores |
to continue long, hence,
Inflammation, pain, swelling nnd redness,
later pus or matter forms, breaks or Is opened, I
the plug comes out and the pore Is onee more
free.
There are thousands of these pores In the face I
alone, any one of which is liable to become ]
clogged by neglect or disease.
What Cures Pimples?
The only reliable preventive and cure, when J
not due to a constitutional humor, is
Cuticura Soap.
It contains a mild proportion of CUT1CITUA,
tho great Skin (Tire, which enables it to dissolve I
the sebaceous or oily matter ns it forms at tlio
mouths of the pores.
It stimulates the sluggish glands and tubes to
healthy activity, reduces inflammation,soothes
and heals Irritated and roughened surfaces and
restores the skin to its origlnnl purity.
Tills Is the secret of its wonderful success.
For bad complexions, red, rough hands and
Shapeless nails, dry, thin and falling hair, scaly
anil irritated scalps and simple baby blemishes
it is wonderful.
It is preserving, purifying and beautifying to
a degree hitherto unknown among remedies for I
the skin and complexion.
Kale greater than the combined sales of all
other skill anil complexion soaps.
Bold throughout tho world.
FOTTKH I lut'd AND CllEM. Colic., Solo Pro- |
prletors, lioBton.
Women full of pains, aches
anti weaknesses find comfort,
strength and renewed vitality In
Cuticura Plaster, the first and only
pain-killing, nerve-strengthening
plaster when all else fails. _
Host school in the soutli, for students with
limited menus. Tho military training is
thorough, being iindoraU. B.Army officer,
deluded by tho Secretary of’YVar.
BOTH NEXEN HAVE ERllAI, ADVAN
TAGES.
Students are prepared and licensed to
teach in the public schools, by act of the
legislature.
Lectures, on Agriculture and tho Sciences
by distinguished educators and scholars.
For health tho climate is unsurpassed.
Altitude 2287 feet.
Hoard $9 per month nnd upwards. Mess
ing nt lower rates.
Kadi*senator and representative of tho
slnto is entitled and requested to appoint ono
pupil from his district or county, ■without
paying matriculation fee, during his term.
For catalog or information, address Sec
retary or Treasurer, Board of Trustees.
Your Stomach
DistressesYou
after eating a heart y meal, and tho
result Is a chronic ciiBoof Indiges
tion, Pour Stomach, Heartburn,
Dyspepsia, or a bilious attack.
RIPANS TABULES
..WAV IW.' «. OAI-
i wHBsrnnis
I INTERNATIONAL J
<> r.Hlir.
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DICTIONARY i
i‘l '”. cihao'l
more t!mn $300,oo.)
expended.
I', vsrybody
should mvu ill
1,1 Dictionary. 1 uu- 3
suers all quomhms *
Aj cimet ruing tho Ms- J
.—torv, hi oiling, 1 ro- {
nuueia'.lnn, pud «.
meaning «.f v.-onta. *
A i ibrary in Itself. lini-ogiyuH *
c ol'-. ii •'.<Hl'rcil lafiirnmtl.iit •rmtig t
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if l-.-ticui ol foreign ipiotallons, wutus, ami *
5 proverbs; etc.,etc.,ote. >
1 Th In Worl: ir, Invaluable in the 4
5 piaiHcl oM.au 1 to the I, acker, icluilar, pro- -
lt A.-iMiml limv., i;nd teli-LMiueiiiifr. J
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touMiicmm« and nil other hlsoascs arising
from a dlBordurod condition of tho Liver siul
M eS 1 clue £ ii in ni * an ii should Imi kept for
lino lu every fundly.
malfon receipt of j»t
Uo.r (6 viola) 15 eta. lockage
(« boxes) $2. Ra n\pli * /• t e -
Afumrsa
THE RIPANS CHEMICAL CO.
10 Wprucc St., New York.
WE TELl YOU
nothing new when we stale that II pays to
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wi
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DAVIS SEWING MACHINE CO.
U“TUe Compound Oxygen Treatment,” Dre,
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and made portable that it is sent all ovor the
world.
Drs. Starkey & Palen have the liberty to
refer to the following nataed well-known per
sons wbo have tried their Treatment;
Hon. Win. D K-illey, Member of Con
gress, Philadelphia.
Rev. Victor L. Oonrad, Editor Lutheran
Observer, Philadelphia.
Rev. Charles W. Cushing, D. D., Roches
ter, N. Y.
Wm. PennN.xon Editor Inter-Ocean
Cbiongo, III.
W. H. Worthington, .Editor New South,
Birmingham, Ala.
Judge H. P. Vrooman, Quenemo, Kan.
i ilis Mary A. Livermore, Melrose, Mass.
Judge R S. Voorbees, New York City,
Mr. E. 0. Knight, Philadelphia.
Mr. Frank Siddall, Merobant,Philadelphia
Hon. IV. W. Sohuyler, Easton, Pa.
Edward Ii. Wilson, 833 Broadway, N. Y.,
Ed. Pbila. Photo.
Fidelia M. Lyon, Waimoa, awatl, Sand
wich Islands.
Alexander Ritobio, Iverness, Scotland.
Mrs. Manuel Y. Ortega, Fresnillo, Zaeate-
oas, Mexico.
Mrs. Emma Cooper, Utilla, Spanish Hon
duras, 0. A.
J. Cobb, Ex-Vioe Consul, Oosabianoa. Mo
rocco.
M. V. Ashbrook, Red Bluff, Cat.'
James Moore, Sup’t. Polioe, Blandfori.
Dorsetshire, England.
Jacob Ward, Bowral, New South Wales.
And thousands of ethers in every part of the
United States.
“Compound Oxygen—its Mode of Action
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Starkey A Palen, which gives to all inquirers
full information as to this remarkable cura
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surprising cures in a wide range of chronio
oases—many of them alter being abandoned
to die by other physicians. Will be mailed
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the brochure I
DUS. STARKEY A PALEN.
No. 1529 Arch Street Philodelpliia, Pa.
the eea; these gorgeously upholstered
castles of the Almighty in tho under
world! The author of the text felt the
pull of the hidden vegetation of the
Mediterranean, whether or not he ap
preciated ite beauty, as he cried out,
"The weeds were wrapped about my
head.”
Let my subject cheer all those who
had friends who have been buried at sea
or in our great American lakes. Which
of us brought up on tho Atlantic coast
lias not had kindred or friend thus sep-
■lchered? Wo had the useless horror of
thinking that they were denied proper
resting place. Wesaid: “Oh, if they had
lived to come ashore and had then ex
pired I What an alleviation of our trouble
it would have been to put them in somo
beautiful family plot, where we could
havo plantod flowers and trees over
them." Why, Qod did better for them
than we could hare dono for them. They
were let down into beautiful gardens.
Before they had reached the bottom they
had garlands about their brow.
In more elaborate and adorned place
than we could have afforded them they
were put away for tho last slumber
Hear it, mothers and fathers of sailor
boys whoso ship went down in our last
August hurricane! There aro no Green
woods or Laurel Hills or Mouut Auburns
so beautiful on the land as there aro
banked and terraced and scooped and
hung in the depths of the sea. The bod
ies of our foundered and sunken friends
are girdled and canopied and housed
with such glories as attend no other
Necropolis.
They wero swamped in lifeboats, or
they struck on Goodwin sands or Deal
bench or the Skerries, nnd were never
heard of, or disappeared with the City of
Boston, or the Ville de Havre, or tho
Cymbria or were run dowu in a fishing
smack that put out from Newfoundland.
But dismiss your previous gloom about
tho horrors of ocean entombment.
THE MISTAKES OF JONAH.
When Sevastopol was besieged in the
Anglo-French war, Prince Meutchikof,
commanding the Russian navy, Baw that
the only way to keep the English out of
the harbor was to sink all of the Russian
ships of war in the roudsteud, and so 100
vessels sank. When, after tho war was
over, our American engineer, Gowan, de
scended to the depths in a diving bell, it
waB nn impressive spectacle.
One hundred buried ships! But it is
that way nearly all across the Atlantic
ocean. Ships sunk not by command of
admirals, but by the command of cy
clones. But they all had sublime
burial, nnd the surroundings amid
which they sleep the last sleep are more
imiKising than the Taj Mahal, the mau
soleum with walls incrusted with pre
cious stones and built by the great mo
gul of India over his empress. Your
departed ones wero buried in the gar
dens of tho sea,fenced off by hedges of
coralline.
The greatest obsequies ever known on
the land were those of Moses, where no
one but God was present. The sublime
report of that entombment is in the
book of Deuteronomy, which says that
the Lord buried him, and of those who
havo gone dowu to slumber in the deep
the same may be said, “The Lord buried
them.” As Christ was buried in a gar
den, so your shipwrecked friends and
those who could not survive till they
reached port were put down amid iri-
descence—“In tho midst of the garden
there wns a sepulcher.”
It has always been n mystery wliat was
tho particular mode by which George G.
Cookman, the pulpit orator of the Meth
odist church and the chaplain of the
American congress, left this life after
embarking for England on the steamship
President, March 11, 1841. Tho ship
never arrived in port. No ono ever
signaled her, and on both sides of the
ocean it has for 50 years boen questioned
what became of her. But this I know
about Cookman—that whether it was
iceberg or conflagration midsea or col
liBion he had more garlands on his ocean
tomb than if, expiring on land, each of
his milliou frionds had put a bouquet
on ills casket. In tho midst of the garden
was his sepulcher.
But that brings me to notice the mis
nonter in this Jonahitio expression of
the text. The prophet not only made a
mistake by trying to go to Turshish
when God told him to go to Nineveh,
but lie mado a mistake when he styled
as weeds these growths that enwrapped
him on the day he sank. A weed is
something that is useless. It is some
thing you throw out from tire garden
it is something that chokes the wheat,
It is something to be grubbed out from
among the cotton. It is something un
sightly to tho eye. It is an invader of
the vegetable or floral world.
But this growth that sprang up from
tho depth of the Mediterranean or
floated on its surface was among the
most beautiful things that God ever
makes. It was a water plant known as
the red colored alga and no weed at all.
It comes from the loom of infinite
beauty. It is planted by heavenly love.
It is the star of a sunken firmament. It
is a lamp which the Lord kindled. It is
a cord by which to bind whole sheaves
of practical suggestion. It is a poem all
whose cantos are rung by divine good
ness. Yet we all make the mistake that
Jonah made in regard to it and call it a
weed.
“The weeds were wrapped about my
head.” Ah, that is the trouble on the
land as on the seal We call those weeds
that are flowers. Pitched up on the
beach of society are children without
home, without opportunity for anything
but tv, seemingly without God. They
are washed up helpless. They aro called
ragamuffins. They are spoken of as the
rakings of the world. They are waifs.
They are street arabs. They are flotsam
and jetsam of the social sea. They are
something to be left alone, or something
to be trod on, or sometliing to give up
to decay. Nothing but weeds. They
are up the rickety stairs of that garret.
They are down in the cellar of that tene
ment house. They swelter in summers
when they see not one blade of green
grass, and shiver in winters that allow
them not one warm coat or shawl or
Bhoe.
Such the city missionary found in one
of our city rookeries, and when the poor
woman was asked if she sent her child-
dren to school she replied: "No, sir, I
never did send ’em to school. I know it,
they ought to loam, but I couldn’t. I
try to shame him sometimes (it is my
husband, sir), hut he drinks and then
beats me—look at that bruise on my
face—and I tell him to see what is corain
to his children. There’s Peggy goes
gellin fruit every night in those sellers
in Water street, and they're hells, sir.
She’s leamin all sorts of bad words
there and don’t get back till 13 o’clock
■t night. If it wasn’t for her carnln a
shillin or two in them places, 1 should
starve. Oh, I wish they was ont of tho
city. Yes, it is the truth. I would
rather have all my children dead than
on the street, hut I can’t help it."
Another one of those poor women
found by a reformatory association, re
cited her story of want and woo and
looked up and said, “I felt so hard Uj
lose the children when they died, but
now I’m glad they’re gone.” Ask any
one of a thousand such children on the
streets, “Where do you live?” and they
will answer, “I don’t live nowhere.
They will sleep tonight iu tub barrels, oi
under outdoor stairs, or on the whnrf,
kicked and bruised and hungry. Who
cares for them? Once in awhile a city
missionary, or a tract distributor, or «
teacher of ragged schools will rtacue one
of them, hut for most peoplo they are
only weeds. * . ,
Yet Jonah did not more completely
misrepresent tho red alga qbout his
head in tho Mediterranean than most
people misjudge theso poor aud forlorn
and dying children of tho street. They
aro not weeds. They ure immortal flow
ers, Down in the deep Bea of woe, but
flowers. When society and tho church
of God come to appreciate their eternal
value, thero will be move C. L. Bracee
and more Van Meters nnd more angels
of mercy spending their fortunes find
their lives in the rescue.
Hear it, O ye philanthropic and
•n m to make % channel, nnd Ireland has
become an island. The islands, for tha
most part, are only the foreheads of
sunken continents. The sea conquering
the land all along the coasts and crum
bling the hemisp’-eres, wider and wider
become the subaqueous dominions.
Thank God that skilled hydrographefs
have made us maps and charts of the
rivers and lakes and seas and shown ns
something of the woi* of tha eternal
God in the water worlds. ’
Thank God that the great Virginian
Lientenant Manry, li>ed to give us “The
Physical Geography of the Sea,” and
that men of genius have gone forth to
study the so called weeds that wrapped
about Jonah's head and have found them
to bo coronals of beauty, and when the
tido receded these scientists have waded
down and picked np divinely pictured
leaves of the ocean, the naturalists, Pike
and Hooper and Walters, gathering them
from the beach of Long Island sound,
and Dr. Blodgett preserving them from
the shores of Key West, and Professors
Emerson and Gray finding them along
Boston harbor, and Professor Gibbs
gathering them from Charleston harbor,
and for all the other triumphs of algol
ogy. or the science of seaweed. 1
Why coniine ourselves to tho old and
hackneyed illustrations of the wondei
workings of God, when there are at least
five great seaB full of illustrations as yet
not marshaled, every root «nd frond
and cell and color and movement and
habit of oceanic vegetation crying <>nt:
“God! God! He made us. He clothed
us. He adorned ns. He was the God of
our ancestors clear back to tho first Bea
growth, when God divided the waters
which were above the firmament from
the waters which were under tho firma
ment and shall be theGod of our descend
ants clear down to tho day when the sea
shall givo up its dead. We have hoard his
command, and We have obeyed, ‘Praise
the Lord, dragons and all deeps.’ ”
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Thero is agreat comfort that rolls ovor
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letter, end we will eend by return ■'•'L p rlee,one
received at the Herald offioe, and wo are dold in SandersviUa by W. Rawlings and
now prepared to do exoellont work. f Broggiste elsewhere
but flowers. I abjure you as the friends
of all newsboys’ lodging houses, of all
industrial schools, of all homes for
friendless girls and for the many re
formatories and humane associations
now on foot. How much they have al
ready accomplished! Out of what
wretchedness, into what good homos!
Of 21,000 of these picked up out of tho
streets nnd scut into country homes
only 13 children turned out badly.
In the lust 30 years a number that no
man can number of the vugrants have
been lifted into respectubiKty and
usefulness and a Christian life. Many
of them have homes of their own.
Though ragged boys once and street
girls, now at the head of prosperous
families, honored on earth and to be
glorious in heaven. Sotuejjf them have
been governors of states. Some of them
are ministers of the gospel. J* all de
partments of life those who were
thought to We weeds havo turned ont to
be flowers. One of those rescued lads
from the streets of our cities wrote to
another, saying; “I have heard you are
studying for the ministry. So am I.
My hearers, I impload you for tin
newsboys of the streets, many of them
the brightest children of tlic city, but
with no chance. Do not stop on theii
bare feet. Do not, when they steal a ride,
cut behind. When the paper is 3 cents,
once in awliilo give thorn a 5 cent piece
and tell them to keep tho change. 1 like
the ring of tho letter trie newsboy sent
back from Indiana, where lie bad been
Beut to a good home, to u Now Yotk
newsboys’ lodging house: “Boys, we
should show ourselves thut we are uc
fools, that we can become as respectable
as any of the countrymen, for Franklin
and Webster and Clay were poor boys
once, nnd even George Law and Van
derbilt and Astor. And now, boys,
stand up and let them see you have
got the real stuff in you. C<5me out
here and make respectable and honor
able men, so they can say, ‘There; that
boy was once a newsboy.’ ’’ My hear
ers, join the Christian philanthropists
who are changing organ grinders and
bootblacks and new.eboys and street
arabs and cigar girls imo those who shall
bo kings and queens unto God forever.
It is high time that Jonah finds out that
that which is about him is not weeds,
but flowers.
CORONALS OF REALTY.
As I examine this red alga which was
about the recreant prophet down in tho
Mediterranean depths, when, in the words
of my text, he cried out, “The weeds
were wrapped about my head,” and I am
led thereby to further examine this sub
marine world, I am compelled to exclaim,
Wliat a wonderful God we have! I am
glad that, by diving bell, and “Brooks’
deep sea sounding apparatus,” and ever
improving machinery, we aro permitted
to walk the floor of the ocean and report
the wonders wrought by the great God
Study these gardeusof the sea. Easier
and easier shall the profoumds of the
ocean become to us, and more and more
its opulence of color aud plant unroll
especially as “Villeroy’a submarine
boat" lias been constructed, making it
possible to navigate under the soa al
most as well as on the surface of the
sea, and unless God in his mercy ban
ishes war from the earth whole fleets of
armed ships will yet far down under the
water move on to blow up the argosies
that float the surface. May such sub
marine ships bo used for laying open the
wonders of God’s workings in tho great
deep and never for human devastation!
Oh, the marvels of tho water world!
These so called seaweeds are ths pasture
fields and the forage of tho innumerable
animals of the deep. Not one apecies of
them can be spared from the economy of
nature. Valleys and mountains and
plants miles underneath the waves are
all covered with flora and fauua. Sunken
Alps aud Apennines and Himalayas of
Atlantic and Pacific oceans. A continent
that once connected Europe and Ameri
ca, so that in the ages past men came on
foot across from where England is to
where we now stand, all sunken and
now covered with tho growths of ths
sea us it once was covered with growths
of the land.
England and Ireland once all one piece
ef land, but now much of it so far sunk*
theoTmarkwalter,
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oot J, INI.
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doctrine of a particular providence. Joan take care of yon.
Whon I find that the Lord provides in
the so called seaweed the pasturage for
the thronged marlno wofld, so that not
a fin or scale in all that oceanic aqua
rium suffers need, I conclude he will feed
us, and if he suits the alga to the ani
mal life of the deep he will provide ths
food for our physical and spiritual needs.
And if ho clothes the flowers of the deep
with richness of robe that looks bright
as fallen rainbows by day, and at night
makes the underworld look as though
the sea wore on Are, surely he will clothe
you, “O yo of little faith!”
And what fills me with unspeakable
delight is that this God of depths and
heights, of ocean and of continent,
may, through Jesus Christ, the divinely
appointed means, be yours and mine, to
help, to cheer, to pardon, to save, to
imparadise. What matters who in
earth or hell is against us if he is for usl
Omnipotence to defend ul, omnipresence
to companion us and infinite love to en
fold and uplift and enrapture us.
And when God does small things so
well, seemingly taking as much care
with the coil of a seaweed as the out-
branching of a Lebanon cedar, aud with
the color of a vegetable growth which is
hidden fathoms out of sight os he docs
with the solferino and purple of a sum
mer sunset, we will be determined to do
well ail we are called to do, though no
one see or appreciate us. Mighty God!
Roll in upon onr admiration and holy
appreciation more of the wonders of this
submarine world. My joy iB that after
we are quit of nil earthly hindrances we
may come back to this world and explore
what we cannot now fully investigate.
If we shall have power to soar into ths
atmospheric without fatigue I think we
shall have power to dive into the aque
ous without peril, and that the pictured
and tessellated sea floor will be as ac
cessible as now is to the traveler the
floor of ths Alhambra, and all the gar
dens of the deep will then swing open to
us their gates aa now to the tourist
Chatsworth opens on publio days its
cascades and statuary and conservatories
for our entrance. "It doth not yet ap
pear what we shall be.” You cannot
rnako me believe that God hath spread
out all that gaxniture of tho deep merely
for tho polyps and crustacea to look at.
And if the unintelligent creatures of
the Mediterranean and the Atlantic
ocean he surrounds with such beautifnl
grasses of the deep, what a heaven we
may expect for our uplifted and ran
somed souls when we are unchained of
the flesh and rise to realms beatific! Of
the flora of that “sea of glass mingled
with fire," I have no power to speak, but
I shall always be glad that, when the
prophet of the text, flung over the gun
wales of the Mediterranean ship, de
scended into the boiling sea, that which
he supposed to be weeds wrapped aoout
his head were not weeds, but flowers.
Aud am I not right in this glance at
the botany of the Bible in adding to
Luke’s mint, anise and cumin, and
Matthew's tares, and John’s vine, and
Solomon's cluster of camphire, and Jer
emiah’s balm, and Job’s bulrush, and
Isaiah’s terebinth, and Hosea’s thistle,
and Ezekiel’s cedar, and “the hyssop that
springeth out of the wall," and the “rose
of Sharon and lily of the valley,” and
the frankincense and myrrh and cassia
which the astrologers brought to the
manger at least one stalk of tho ulga of
the Mediterranean.
And now I make the marine doxology
of David my peroration, for it was writ
ten about 40 or 50 miles from the place
where the scene of the text was enacted.
"The sea is his, and he made it, and his
hands formed the dry land. Oh, come,
let us worship and bow down; let us
kneel before the Lord, our Maker. For
he is our God, and we are the people of
his pasture.” Amen.
The Dollar Lookot.
There has been a variation invented
on the dollar locket. When the spring
is touched, instead of disclosing the
face of one’s very best young man,
small mirror is there, so that half the girls
you suspect of being very sentimental
aro really only studying the state of
their bangs.—Jenness Miller Monthly,
MALLABY BROS. & CO.,
Macon, Qa.
Ifir, Mention this paper.
William H. Hall,tm*s.
R. T. Pullen, sic-r.
Herring-Hall-Marvin Co.
STANDARD SAFES.
HERRINC-HALL -MARVIN CO’S
SAFES ARE THE BEST.
Repairing ana Putting on Combination Locks,
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SAFES SOLD OH THt INSTALLMENT PLAN.
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“Seeing is Believing.”
A nd a good lamp
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Byrap evaporators and furnaoes oan be had
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Lookout Mountain
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B. W. Wrbnn, G, P. & Tkt Agt,
Look for thifietemp—Thh Rocjikbtbr.
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. If the lamp dealer hAsn’t the ff'JJjJV
a to 113 for our new Illustrated cal ^.00*
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nocHESTItil liAJGP CO., 43 Park Place, NsW Torn
^ “The Rochester.
QUICK TIME
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CHICAGO
X.V. JACKSONVILLE:,
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ckeonvillt*
U Sleeping Car to Chicago, without rhunee. An elegant vesobu ^f^ ouS “i#ASHIJ|*I,|
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and CHATTANOOGA VESTIBULE” at 11:20 a.m, No ex- iijFtUIAAQfl I
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WRITE OR CALL ON any ticket agent of the E. T. V. A O. RT«° FM u
B. W. WRENN, G. P. A., KN0XV,Ll ^V %% ^