Newspaper Page Text
6
THE SUNNY SOUTH
IMMORTALITY.
By Rer. B. S. Ntorrx, 1>. D., ia
Klagi Chapel) Bortoa.
Heb. 12:1—"Wherefore seeing we » ! so ere com-
jsacd about with so great a cloud of witnesses.”
To any thoughtful and aspiring person,
sensitive to fine influences, desirous of men
tal and moral advancement, eager for oppor
tunities for culture or for usefulness, there is
always a sense of exhilaration in feeling him
self connected with a various, splendid, wide
ly extended social system. It impels natur
ally to larger effort, gives expansiveness to
the whole plan of life, furnishes incentives
to nobler personal aspiration and hope. It
dignifies, instead of dwarfing, the individual
personality. It widens the whole borison of
thought and expectation, and makes one
more sensible of both the responsibility and
the privilege of life. Isolation tends always
to enfeeble the powers and impoverish the
spirit, whether it be the hermit’s cell or the
superb palace which sets one apart from his
fellows in the world. Life in large commun
ities is more attractive and rewarding than
in the smaller—in the village more so than
in the hamlet; in the city more so than in
the village. The energetic and sympathetic
feel this most surely; and their scheme of
life is modified by it.
This is a tendency so strong that it prints
its traces upon the hard tablets of the census
itself; and we see how, in our own time and
land, as civilisation advances, cities become
the centres toward which gravitate the most
eager and sensitive spirits. Life is enriched
for one who in a great community sustains
close relations to the society around him.
Oue of the benefits of modern civilization is
that it is continually multiplying opportuni
ties and instruments for bringing us, where-
ever we dwell, into communication more or
let-s intimate with tbe life of the country,
with the life of the world. Thus far, no
doubt, this relation is mainly an external one.
We bear the clatter ot tbe woi Id, rather than
enter into what is richest and best in its
spiritual iife. But the progress is to go on,
till in tbe coming time itshall be tbe privilege
of each who is attentive and though' tul to be
set in intimate, responsive communication
with tbe beet moral and spiritual attainment
of mank nd at large.
We can conceive of ourselves in any rela
tion to others, imaginable, in any place on
earth, in any position, but we cannot con
ceive of ourselves as non-existent.. That our
consciousness is wholly and finally to termin
ate; that this spirit with i>s soaring thought
and deep affection and noble aspiration is to
become dead and extinct, we cannot formu
late that idea to our own minds. As tbe
mind becomes superior in its control over
matter, as the dignity of thought is more ful
ly recogn'z d. as civiliz it<i-n advances, this
sense of a relation to something beyond tbe
present time becomes always stronger.
Science tells us that the forces of nature do
not cease; that light is turned into heat, but
that it does not cease as a f- rce. Tne light
ning, when it passes frem our sight, has not
gone out of existence* How, then, can it be
that this living and personal spirit in man,
wbich seizes the light and makes it paint pic
tures on tbe plate, wbich seizes the lightning
and makes it run whispering messages from
land to land, under tbe see, and around the
world, how is it that this 1 viog and personal
spirit, so superior to these natural and phys
ical forces on wbich it acts, is to terminate,
while they go on f We cannot believe it. So
there is a sense more or leas deep in every
people, in every person we may say, of a re
lation to a life 1 eyond the present. Christ
brings that life to us in vivid fullness of
manifestation. “To-day thou shale be with
mo in Paradise,” he says to the robber dying
at his side. “1 go to prepare a place for you,’'
he says to bis disciples.
Now, it is a truth wbich we may well con
sider, tdat the more clearly we apprehend
these higher realms of life, the more deeply
we feel our personal and vital relations to
them, tbe more will they, by the influence
wh-cti falls from them, enrich and exalt our
dai'y life.
For one thing, it lessens tbe attraction of
tbe world upon our minds and hearts We
are right in desiring the conveniences of life,
in desiring to serve ourselves with things
wh ch make life more rich and rewarding to
us. Ir is the instinct <>f civilization. This is
right in itself. It is this which is setting the
race forward, ago by age. But the tendency
is strong—and all the more so as cities be
come more populous and wealthy—toward
excessive ambition for outward good, and
the fastening of our hopes upon things which
are visible and temporal. In our times, this
world seems to draw the spirit to itself almost
as the power of gravitatioa holds the bod v to
tbe planet. You see it in literature. You
have read, most of you probably, tbe book
recently published by a man who has held
eminent place in tbe English' government;
a man of whom no one would speak without
great respect for the vigor and vivacity of
his intellectual force, for the variety of his
accomplishments, for the brilliant and almoet
heroic energy with which, against a thousand
obstacles and absurd prejudices, he has forc
ed himself to the front ra»k of English socie
ty—Lord Beaconi-field. Yet this man in the
book which he publishes treats simply of the
gilding and upholstery of life, of material
banqaeta and palarial residences, of secular
success and high political or social position.
It is of the earth earthy, from beginning to
end; without any aspiration that lifts our
thoughts above the present time.
This is true of very much of the literature
which is most common, most influential; and
so the entire forces of tbe mind are often
given to the attainment of that wbich i
merely present, physical, secular, while al
most nothing of thought and force is given
to i bat which is supreme.
I do not know woetber yon have bad here
what we had lately in New York, that ice-
storm, where the gently descending raiD
froee as it fell, until it covered every tree
•nd shrub with a raiment of brilliancy, as if
ll had been plated in diamond and hung with
diamond drops. It was superb to look upon,
almost an apocalypse of natural beauty
Yet tbe very splendor broke the tree, 'ibe
brilliant garniture overwhelmed that which
was tender and vital in tbe shrub which it
adorned. Bo it is with the great and splen
did accumulations of wealth and tbe orna
ments of pleasure that are so feverishly and
anxiously sought. They destroy to us often,
by their very attainment, tbat wbich is fin
est and grandest in our spiritual nature.
Yet bow to resist this encompassing influ
ence? We cannot resist it by force of will;
we might as well try to jump from the pi met
We cannot extricate ourselves from tbe con
stant social ii fluences which are around us.
luring us to these results. We must some
how or other rise above it all. As we walk
tbe streets, we see one budding towering in
to the air, and another standing bnmbly by
its side; Lut when we rise to the mid air, ail
the roofs come to tbe same level. When we
arise to the contemplation of those supreme
realms of life with which our relations are
most vital and enduring, then -all differences
in the matter of earthly poesessions practi
cally vanish. As long as we contemplate
that into which we enter by and by, we are
comparatively careless of that which is be
nea<h. It ceases to make tbat masterful im
pression on our spirits which otherwise it
had made, and which itherwise it must al
ways make.
It is said that heaven is a place of rest,
k ss; but it is not the rest of laziness; it is not
tbe rest of passivity; it is thereat of tri
umphant power, working without break or
j ir, every force in completes! harmony with
every other, and all operating with easy and
nnahatiug success. Now, this moral and per
sonal power we should seek, in its fullest de
velopment, that we may be ready for that
higher life. It will not be power over me
chanical instruments tbat is needed; it will
not be power over political combinations;
but personal, moral, spiritual force, fully de
veloped in us, is what we need to carry, into
those realms of supreme and mysterious ex
istence.
There is no possible motive for tbe culture
of character or tbe high culture of power in
us, like that wbich comes from tbe as yet
unrealiz-d but not unimagiDed realms of life.
Here is tbe grandest benediction of uplift
ing powers falling from the heavens upon tbe
earth, to elevate, purify, ennoble the spirit
of man.
The contemplation of this superior life in
spires, too, the noblest culture of character.
If we are to be associated forever with pure
holiness on high, we must cherish in our
selves. through God’s truth and by his gra
cious help lit the Spirit and through his Son,
the character by which we shall fit ourselves
for that great and beautiful fellowship, that
illustrious society. Nothing is more painful
to a sensitive spirit than te be associated
with those of a governing temper with which
it is not congenial. Put the gross minded
person with the spiritually-minded, and he
recoils from contact with him. If you keep
him there, you have doomed him to a terrible
fate, unless hi- spirit is changed. The same
sunshine which nourishes the flower as it
bends upon its fragile stem, which paints the
picture on the prepared plate, hailing upon
the diseased eye gives it intolerable torture,
and falling upon the enfeebled brain blasts it
with death. Character, therefore, when it is
inharmonious with our own, no matter how
lofty and pure it is—all tbe more as it is lofty
and pure—becomes to us a sharp condemna
tion, until we are in sympathy with it. But if
we feel ourselves related this moral and per
sonal life, glorious, transcendant in the heav
ens, there is an impulse exerted on our spir
its leading us to fit ourselves for that com-
rnunit n and fellowship, that we may not feel
any disharmony between our souls and those
of martyrs, apostles, confessors, and sainted
ones who have gone through sorrow into tri
umph and Immortal life. I can conceive of
no force greater than this to exalt human
character. As the sunshine of the morning
lifts the mists and reveals the landscape and
clothes it with a mantle of beauty, making
tbe very rock burst into life and surround
itself with verdure, so this it flaence f cm
above, from the celestial realms which we
have not reached but toward which we are
tending, and the gates of which Christ opens
to us, disperses from the spirit what is malefic
or obscure, and prints a new and vital beauty
on it alL
Here is the hidden meaning and blessed
nes which the thought of heaven brings in
the events which seem most painful—chose
events wbich force sorrow into our hearts
and tears into our eyes and darkness into
cur life, and from the shock of wnich we
think we can never escape. Tne motuer lays
down her little child, a part of her own life,
with scalding tears; and the world seems
lonely aud desolate, the heavens are brass
and the earth is iron. But with time some
to her mind the words of her Master
‘Know ye not tbat in heaven their angels do
always behold the face of my Father which
>s in heaven? Of such is the kingdom ot
Cod.” She remembers tbat He spoke this not
as a theory or a thought, but from his own
consciousness, his own lecoilection, of the
Kingdom of Cod from which he had come.
Ana tbe mother’s thoughts go on with the
iife of that little cbild continued in unseen
realms, as if the were borne up on eagle's
wings, until she feels the reality of heaven
and the beauty and charm of it. Thereaf
ter tbe household whence the litt'e cbild has
gone has always in it tbat Facredness and
ihat sweetness of hope which before it could
not have possessed. So when our beloved
friends nss-i from us; so when misfortunes
and distress come upon us; this thought of
thebigner life comes to cheer and couifon.
Here, then, you see at once tbe mischiev
ous tendency of skep'ical thought, which
tends to obscure this vision of tbe world to
come, and to make it signify a mere fancy,
a mere dream of the world’s youth, which
as tbe race goes on, will more and more be
dissipated, as the tinted clouds of m< ruing
disappear when tbe sun rides high and
higher to the meridian.
NEWS SUMMARY.
GEHEKAL NEWS.
The first cotton mills in tne United States
were at Beverly, Mass. In 1778.
Crow Dog killed Spotted Tail last week.
Both noted Indian chiefs.
The demand for piano fortes in Boston is
greater than ever known bafore, and one
manufactory is shipping 70 instruments per
week.
A turtle weighing 3084 pounds has been
sold to the 8mithsonian Institute m Washing
ton, for (i25
Barnet Vermont has the largest pulp mill
in New England.
A female seminary in Utah flourished until
the principal one day eloped with the whole
school.
A Maryland farmer picked 307*4 bushels of
peas from 3J4 acres.
A strang ■> malady resulting in blindness
is spreading among the cows in Charleston
ana Lincoln, IlL
A fall failure of the peach crop in Dele-
ware and Maryland is reported.
The October carnival in Baltimore is
termed the “ Oriole.”
A corner has been made in canned peaches.
Massachusetts divorced 600 couples last
A Philadelphia butcher caught and killed
I85 rats with his hands inside of an hour.
Chicago has had 33 murders since January
fln-t. 1
Tnere are 65ooo physicians in tbe United
States.
A Kansas man has invented a new lager
beer tbat has sparkle, froth, good taste and
no alcohol.
Jobn Morrissey’s widow is keeping a board
ing house at Saratoga, and looks as young
and buxom as a dozen years ago.
General Spinner says that Florida has
cured his rbeumatism, but it has not cured
bis weird signature.
SLOplirting has grown alarmingly preva
lent m New Yook city, and most ot is done
by wealthy ladies.
Sitting Bull’s home is to be located in Da
cota, where be will chew reservation beef
and be treated in all respects like a common
Indian.
An eminent foreign*pbysician has reported
case of chronic lead poisoning
resulting from tbe use of matches containing
chromate of lead to light a pipe.
Three children in Venango county, Pa.,
died last Saturday under peculiar circum
stances. Two of them while playing around
in the yard were bitten bv snakes, and ttatir
mother going to their assistance, left a kettle
of boiling water on the floor, and the third
1 hi'd fell into it
C ptain Howgate. United States Army,
who is the leading figure in tbe late Wash
ington scandal. has been arrested at Mt. Cle
mens, Mich., on a warrant charging/ him
with embt zz ement from the government of
more than (40,000 while he wasdisburing
officer in the signal service department.
A curiosity in damage suits is that brought
by the children of Robert E. L ttle, of Louis
ville, against Ibeir uncle James H. Arnold,
claiming (50 oco damages for tbe murder of
their faiher tw years ago. Arnold was tried
for the murder, but acquitted. Tne children
are all under ten years of age, and claim tbat
by the murder dtpnved them of the means
of support.
At the Paris Electrial Exhibition will be
shown a chair, in which a criminal con
demned to death will be seated. Tbe judge
who sentences tbe victim to death pulls a
crank, a statue of justice beside the cnair
drops on the bead of the condemned man one
of* tbe balances in her band, and he dies in
sb naneously and painlessly.
Thin slices of watermelon profusely deco
rated with flies and placards as “only one
cent,” are among tbe delicacies of the season
on local hucksters’ stands in New York,
which tempt tbe appetite of newsboys and
others of like modest means.
Such thought may not have originated in
any evil temper. It may not be formulated
or published with any spirit of malice toward
any. It may spring simply from tbe ten
dency to believe nothing which we do no>
see, to accept tbe validity of no idea which
we cannot measure with chain and compass.
There is a deep tendency in tbat direction in
many minds, a tendency wbich for our own
health should he overcome. Nobody ever
weighed tbe affection of a friend, and yet we
know it as a reali'y. Nobody ever saw tbe
flash of thought as it swept through the air,
and yet we know tbat it has reality, nnn
power to impress and enkindle us. Tne
things which are spiritual are really the
things which are permanent, wbich have life
intbems-lves, and to which everything else
js subordinate.
No matter wbere the skeptical thought
originates, or how it gets access to our minds,
we see at once tbat it fl ittens tbe level of
life and of all aspiration. It narrows tbe
horrison of our outlook. It makes ever)
part of our person.. 1 character less vigorou-
and aspiring than it would have been. It
tends all the time to bind us to tbe level of
tbat materialism in onr desires and amhi
tions wbich is tbe bene uf our life, and wbic >
our modem civilization will reinforce, un
less we continually resist its influence. Skep
ticism takes out of tbe life of tbe world its
noblest power of inspiration and exaltation.
Cared of Drlnkiag,
A young friend of mine was cured of an
iu-atiuble tnirst for liquor, whieh bad so
prostrated him tbat be was unable to do any
busine-s. He was entirely cured by the u-e
of Hop Bitters. It allayed all tbat burning
thirst; took away tbe appetite for liquor;
made bis nerves steady, and be bas remained
a sober and steady man for more than two
vears, ai d has no desire to return to bis cups;
I know of a number of others who have iwn
cured of drinking hv it.”— From a leading
railroad official, Chicago, III.
Searching Diligently.
It is related of an ancient physician that
be went about searching fer ills to whicb
flash is heir to test the power of his concoc
tions, having a single remedy for each dis
ease. The idea that a medicine is applicable
to one ill only has long since been exploded
bv practical demonstration. A preparation
may contain a number of ingredients, each
adapted to a purpose without interfering
with the functions of each other, besides be
ing particularly efficient as a whole. Espe
cially can this be said of natural medicine*.
As an ilustration we can refer to the Seven
Springs Iron and Alum Mass, nature’s own
design, which is perhaps used more success
fully for a larger scope of complaints than
any artificial preparation known. Its com
position is of such a nature as to permeate a
system, search diligently for defections, and
eradicate all traces of disease. It assists di
gestion, preventing and curing dyspepsia;
cleanses the blood, and invigorates the body.
In the treatment of diseases peculiar to fe
males it has no equal on earth, being both
sure and direct. Diseased urinary organs
are readily relieved, and liver and kidney
affections and bladder troubles cured by its
Those who have used it testify, in al
most every instance, to its special curative
qualities aud recommend it as one of the best
and most reliable remedies known. The prioe
has been reduced and is within the reach of
all. Try it once, and satisfy yourself.
Emiarat Pkysidaas
Are prescribing tbat tried and true remedy,
Kidney-Wort, for the worst cases of bllious-
ness and constipation, as well as for kidney
complaints. There is scarcely a person to be
found that will not be greatly benefited by
a thorough course of Kidney-wort ever
spring. If you feel out of sorts, and don’
know why, try a package of Kidney-Wort
and yon will feel like a new creature.—In
dianapolis Sentinel.
‘BEAU YE ONE ANOTHER S BURDENS.’
TMHOTS
ORWA
To
G. H. U.
Superior Piano* and Organs from ten of
the beet manufacturers. Lowest pria
easiest terms in America, at
House of the South.” .
O. O, ROBINSON dt CO.,
Augusta, Georgia
A prices and
‘‘The 1
Music
Til HiriE'S
iTUITL (I.
R. O. RANDALL, Secretary.
H. M. EU8TI8, Assl tant Secretary
CANDLER A THOMSON, Legal Ad
Legal Advisers.
WM. L. BAKER. President.
WM. W. SUBLETTE. Vice-President.
W. D. BIZZELL, M. D.. Medical Director-
. Gate CITY NATIONAL BANK, Depository*'
Fumithei Protection to the Beneficiaries of its Members at Actual Cost
or abont one-third of the amount usua’Iy charged by Life Insurance Companies. Member
ship fees and annual dues paid by members are as follows: ^ memoer-
OertifcoU of SLOOO MemberMp fee, $ 8 Annual Duo*, (4
•• •• »
*• 4.000 •« 14....::.::.:: „ •
•* 5,000 •< u M j
Medical Examination Mast be Paid for by Applicant.
The mortuary assessments are based on tbe "American Experience Table.” and sllvhtw
increase each year to the age of 60. TO PAY DEATH CLAIMS, assessments will h. £22
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AGEirTti AND MEMBERS WANTED.
For particulars call at office corner Peachtree and Wall streets, or address,
B. 0. RANDALL, Secretary,
““ " ATLANTA. GA.
L. P. Q. S.
Hiaersus testimonials from Yfr
rials te Alabama verify the fleet that
prices fer same make and style of
< at “Tbe
thaw in
SOUTHERN NEWltr'—
A Catoosa county, Ga., pumpkin vine bore
36 pumpkins whose aggregate weight was
44i pouuds.
A horse at Meridian, Miss., put his foot on
white (E iglist) rabbit, bit off its bead ana
ate it. A rare bit lor a horse I
Mississippi is about to castor oil crop up!
Meda springs, on tbe top of Magazine
mountain m Arkansas, is 3 150 feet above tbe
Dr. C. H. Gregory, of Altus, Ark., has an
orchard of 60 acits.
The Kentucky legislature meets November
28
Nashville is on one quarter water rations.
W. W. Woodiuff, of Griffin, Ga., is ship
ping 1,00c pounds ot grapes daily.
Sixty convicts are at work in the shoe de
partment of tbe South Carolina penitentiary.
They consume 120 hides and turn out 600
pairs of shoes per day ; (50,000 is invested in
machinery.
The tea farm at Summerville, S. C., is a
Chester county, 8. C., has a white dwatf
t6 years old who is38 inches b'gh and weighs-
68 pounds. R ce of this years growth has
been received m Louisiana.
Dr. Todd of Barnwell, 8. C. recently ex
tracted from tbe foot of a gentleman a pistol
hall he bad been carryirg tor 25 jeers. The
ball resembled a butter bean but did not
-contain more le9d tban a squirrel shot.
J. P. Fort is boring an artesian well in
Dougherty county, Ga., and is creating a
-ens-ttion. Augusta 20 y ears ago ti ied it and
failed.
Aoiericus, Ga., is crying out for a dairy
farm,
Jacksonville, Fla., is growing in favor as a
summer resort.
A new mineral spring bas been developed
in Florida, called Magnesia, 3 miles from
Starke, and three-fourths of a mile from tbe
Florida Southern Railway. The spring is 45
hy 70 feet, is 25 feet deep and discharges
2500 gallons of pearly clear water every
UllltUtd.
The Genito Mills in Powhatan, Co., Va.,
over one hundred years old has b*en destroy
ed by fire.
Landlords in Richmond, Va., are putting
up tbe rents of small bouses.
Texas votes S ptetuber 61b on proposed
amendments to tbe Constitution and f jr the
location of ibe S'ate Uuiverrity,
A cow at Union Springs, Ala., died from
sun stroke.
A Bullock county, Alabama negro sleeps
in oue end of a hollow log and keeps his
cooking utensils in the other end.
A Florida cattle owner lives in a shanty
which has neither fireplace nor chimney.
He is a recluse (»rack-loose ?) and owns I50,
000 head.
The owners of vineyards in Albemarle,
Va, are realizing fortunes on grapes shipped
10 northern markets.
The Supreme Court of Florida has decided
that a convicted thief cannot vote.
D. E. Brown, of Brown house fame, Ma
il, Ga., ia building a new hotel in tbat city.
UiC C- rnelia Bradley, of A c onias c< uuty,
Va., while bathing on tbe sea shore was
-.wept beyond her depth and drifted out to
sea. She was rescued by two young men
a boat a mile from shore. Knowing how to
float saved her life.
Tbe public FCuooIs of North Carolina com
mence December first.
Tne van Jla plant has become quite an ar
ticle of expori from W ilmingtou, N. C.
The Nonh C arolina Sunday-school Associ
ation meets in Salem, N. C., on September
first and second.
Eleven farmers near Newton, N. C., made
9 524 bushels of wheat this season.
Fi e-klts, bargs and crinoline are Augusta’s
reiening triumvirate.
V. E. McBee, of Charlotte, hss been ap-
pu?"eH superintendent of the Wtftern N.
C. R. R.
A German named Reus is one of the larg-
e-t sugar planters in Louisiana, and com
ps 8 all bis hands to learn and speak the
German language.
The “Mountain L’ly” is the name of a
boat running from Hendersonville to Bre
vard, on the French Broad. This river is
abont 2000 feet above the sea level and is
supposed t j be the highest navigable river on
tbe globe.
East and West Tennessee is ex - ibiting
deep interest in tbe introduction ot German
labor in farm aud household work,
Piano* and Organs are lea
Mnale Honae af the Soatfc"
Mow York.
E. 1.0. M.
PURCHASERS OF PIANOS, ORGANS
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS, SBEE1
MUSIC, ETC., WILL SAVE FROM 10
TO 20 PER. CEN1. BY VISITING OR
CORRESPONDING WITH
6. O. ROBINSON * CO.
234-17
ened by the strain c
your duties avoid
stimulants and use
Hop Bitters.
If you are young: and I
discretion or dissipa I
ried or single, old or I
poor health or languish I
ness, rely on H O p |
Whoever you are.
whenever you feel
that your system J
needs cleansing, ton
ing or stimulating,
without in toxicating,
take Hop
Bitters.
Have you dye- .
pepsi a, kidney i
or urinary eom-§
plaint, diseasi
of the stomachy^
jera toiling 01
night work, to res
tore brain nerve and
raate, use Hop B.
I suffering from any In-
tion; if you are mar-
I young, suffering from
lingon a bed of sick-
Bitters. ^
Thousands die an
nually from some
| form of Kidney
sease that might
ive been prevented
r a timely use of
HopBItters
liver or nerves
Tou will be!
cured if yon use
Hop Bitters
If you are sim
ply weak and
low spirited, try
it 1 ft may
eay.oypMT
life. It nas
saved hun
dreds. *■
D. I. C.
is an absolute
and ftrresista-
ble c u r e for
drunkenness,
use of opium,
tobacco,or
narcotics.
Bold by drug
gists. Send fur
Circular.
fpvfi ce*,-
l-bcter, M. T*
ft Toronto, Ont.
Ladies
Do you want a pure, bloom
ing Complexion! If so, a
few applications of Hagan’s
MAGNOLIA BALM will grat
ify you to your heart’s con
tent. It docs away with Sal
lowness, Bedness, Pimples,
Blotches, and all diseases and
imperfections of the skin. It
overcomes the flushed appear
ance of heat, fhtigue and ex
citement. It males a lady of
1HIRTY appear but TWEN
TY: and so natural, gradual,
and perfect are its effects,
that it is impossible to detect
its application.
KIDNEY-WORT
THE GREAT CURE
fob
RHEUMATISM
As it i. for all diseases of the KIDNEYS,
LIVER AND BOWELS.
It cleanses the syitem of the acrid poison
that causes the dreadful suffering which
only the victims of Rheumatism can realise.
THOUSANDS OF CASES
of the worst forma of this terrible disease
have been quickly relieved, in a short time
PERFECTLY CURED.
KIDNEY-WORT
has had wonderful success, and an immense
sale in every part of the Country. In hun
dreds of cases it has cured where all else had
failed. It is mild, but efficient, CKKTAIN
IN ITS ACTION, but harmless in all cases.
17*11 cleanses, Strengthens and gives New
Life to all the important organs of the body.
The natural action of the Kidneys is restored.
The Liver is cleansed of all disease, and the
Bowels move freely and healthfully. In this
way the worst diseases are eradicated from
the system.
As it has been proved by thousands that
KIDNEY-WORT
is the most effectual remedy for cleansing the
system of nil morbid secretions. Its aould be
used in every household as a
SPRING MEDICINE.
Always cures BILIOUSNESS, CONSTIPA
TION, PILES and all FEMALE Diseases.
Is put up in Dry Vcgctablc Form, in tin cans,
one packapre of which makes 6quarts medicine.
Aiso in Liquid Form, very Concentrated for
the convenience of those wno cannot readiiy pre
pare it. It acts icith equal efficiency in eitherform.
GET IT OF YOUR DRUGGIST. PRICE. 91.00
WELLS, RICHARDSON A Co.. Prop s,
(Will send the dry nost-naid.) lHRMSflTOX. YT.
KIDNEY,-WORT
C/\ Elemaut, Ail New Cbromo, Scroll and
tJU Cards, no 2 alike, name nicely printed
Hie. Card Mills. Northford, CL 268.eow.2-Jt
I AVSUJff&JF M tSPJtZ.
IsaHurn A heavy mornth pm fk csd be Ikowm ot
BLOOD.
. Dr. Hartxr's Iron .
phates, associated with tl.. ..
mended by them for I>yap—y
ity. Nervous Prostration..
Cover. It Jerves every purpose where a Tonic is necessary.
Bawfactnred b| THE DR. HARTER MEDICINE CO., No. 213 North Main Street, St. Loots.
DYSPEPSIA.
Health is Wealth.
Dr. E. C.West’s Nerve and Brain Treatment;
a specific for Hysteria, Dizziness, C onvulsions,
Nervous Headache, Mental Depression, Loss of
Memory, Spermatorrhoea. Impotency, involun
tary Emissions, Premature Old Age. caused by
over-exertion, self-abuse, or over indulgence,
which leads to misery, decay and death. One box
will cure recent cases. Each box contains one
month’s treatment. One dollar per box. or six
boxes for five dollars; sent by mail prepaid o-.
receipt of price. We guarantee six boxes to cure
any case. With each order received by us for six
boxes, accompanied wiih five dollars, we will
send the purchaser om written guarantee to re
turn tbe money if the treatment does not effect a
cure. Guarantees issued by Lamar, Rankin &
Lamar, Wholesale and Retail Agents: Atlanta,
and Macon, Ga. Orders hy mail will receive
prompt attention. 277
Dr. JT. IK. ARMSTROMG’N
HEALTH INSTITUTE,
JONESBORO, UA.
Wonderful Cures Hade Without Pills
on patients coming here <mm nil other places,
ana xs tlie last resort from drugs and drue
doctors. For circular containing particulars
enclose postage stamp. 3i31y
A WMF P WT or lady that sends us
X iTXflX X their address will re
ceive something Free by Mail tbat may prove
tne stepping-ato< e to a life of sucrvss. It is
especially adapted to those who have reached
the foot of the hill Addreas M. Young. 173
Greenwich street, New York. 3j9 13t
0
FI UM
HABIT
CURE
By B. M. WOOLEY,
Atlanta, Geoigla.
Reliable evidence given
and reference to enred pa-
tients and physiclana
Send for my book on the
Habit and Cure. Free.
Office 33% Whitehall St.
Atlanta Georgia
6 lor 12; lor (2
" Green-
and Lea
ding Plant*
Hardy Shrubbery, Seed*. etc..by mail. Catalogue
free J. T. Phillips. West Grove, Chesser co., Pa,
EOSES sHj
Dot Springs, Arkansas.
DRS.VAUGHAN&, BLAYDES,
PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS,
HOT SPRINGS**, ARKANSAS.
All forms of Chronic Diseases successfully
treated— Blood and Skin diseases especia ly.
Office opposite the Brick Bath House. Circulars
sent on application. Box 98. P O. 296-ly
Dentists.
J)RS. J.P4W, B. HOLMES,
MACON, GEORGIA.
Special Notice to Dentists.
Publishers of the Dental Luminary. Proprie
tors of the »»acon Dental Depot. Dealers in ALL
kiuds of Dental Goods. 289 ly
ROYAL T. TWOMBLY,
Beal Estate Agent,
FORT WORTH, TEXAS,
Ho. 7 Main Street.
I REPRESENT large tracts of Land in all
parts of Northwestern Texas, sm 11 lracts
Improved or Unimproved offered on reason
able terms and 1< ng time, if desired Large
inducements held out, to colonies.ot
" Doolittle House,”
OSWEGO, NEW YORK.
S. H. STACY, Prop’r.
C. H. FOSTER, Bap’t.
fJIHE MOST ATTRACTIVE SUMMER RESORT
in the States.
Beautiful aud Picturesque
Sceuery,
Life-hiTlag mineral Waters,
Unsurpassed Flshlsg aad
Hunting; Grounds.
Oswego is the northern terminus of tbe New
York, Ontario and Western Railway by whieh it
has a direct and independent connection with
New York.
The celebrated Deep Rock-water free to guests
of the Doolittle House.
Only hotel with elevator, electric hells and all
modem improvements; and only fint-elaas hotel
in the city.
ON THE SHORE OF LAKE ONTARIO.
Connection ia made by steamer for Toronts,
Kingston, Montreal, and other Canadian points
Also by rail and steamer lor tbe river St, Law
rence and the "Thousand Islands."
W Send for descriptive Pamphlet.
Ague Cure
» a purely vegetable bitter ami powerfu,
•nic, ami is warranted a speedy and cer-
in cure for Fever and Ague, Chills and
ever, Intermittent or Chill Fever, lie-
dttent Fever, Dumb Ague, Periodical
• Bilious Fever, and all malarial dis-
,’ders. In miasmatic districts, the rapid
ilse, coated tongue, thirst., lassitude, loss of
ipetite, pain in the back and loins, and cold-
;ss of the spine and extremities, are only
emonitions of severer symptoms which
rminate in the ague paroxysm, succeeded
/ high fever and profuse perspiration.
It is a startling fact, that quinine, arsenic,
ul other poisonous minerals form the basis
most of the “ Fever ami Ague Prepara-
jiis,” “ Specifics,” “ Syrups,” and “ Ton-
h,” in the market.. The preparations made
om these mineral poisons, although they
e palatable, and may break the chill, do
>t cure, but leave the malarial and their
vn drug |x>ison in the system, producing
tinism, dizziness, ringing in the ears, head-
lie, vertigo, and other disorders more for-
iilable than the disease they were intended
> cure.* Ayer’s Aoue Cire thoroughly
adicates these noxious imisons from tin
stem, and always cures the severest cases
contains no quinine, mineral, or any tliint
iat could injure the most delicate patient ;
id its crowning excellence, above its cer-
.inty to cure, is tbat it leaves the system a"
ee from disease as before tlie attack. •
For Liver Complaints, Ayer’s A*t ?
ohe, by direct action un the liver and bil*
rv apparatus, drives ont the poisons widen
mince these complaints, and stimulates the
stem to a vigorous, healthy condition.
We warrant it when taken according to
rections.
‘repared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co.,
Practical anil Analytical Chemists,
Lowell, Mass.
anvn no- AT T. nRrooT«T« RVFRWnTRt
a week In yourown town. Terms »nd
J)0D $5 outfit free. Address H. HaLLITT A
Co.. Portland, Maine.
Ar- i *nn per dav at home Sample
5p0 10 3)cl/ worth 550 free.Address Stin
son <£ Co., Portland. Maine.
All Goid Chromo and Lit’g Cards (Fo 2
Oil alike), nameo i, 10c. ClinionBros., Clln-
tonville, Conn. 286 26t