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THE SUNNY SOUTH, ATLANTA, GA., SATURDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 0, 1890.
CHAT.
“The quality of mercy is not strained.” How
these words ring in my mind. Time is the book
we study, and as each lexf « p tur»», or chapter
complete, we realize moie fully that ‘it drop -
peth from heaven.” Human we all are and
prone to put self upon the pedestal to be wor
shipped. Home flaw in our make up or some
error in our judgement throws us on a nearer
level with our neighbors, and in mortification
we exclaim against our Creator.
Mercifully, we are not called to account for
onr words and we profit so much by the knowl
edge gained through this clearer insight, this
knowledge of at least one flaw We realize the
kindness of this discipline and once more test
onr powers.
The youth trudging to school is endowed with
ambition and brains. He knows that to suc
ceed he must aim high, and so be calls upon a 1
his powers to assist him. The way Is long and
rough, and he soon overtakes another, thULc 1-
bound. “1 sha'l pans him aud gain an extrr,”
he thinks, but the mercy that is dropping into
his life will not lei him do so, aud to his aston
ishment the added burden steadies him and the
Companionship teemed to lessen the difficulties.
School days ended, he now eutirs the broader
arena of life and with his eye upon the highest
mark oi ce more boldly at temps to attain it.
Ere long difficulties spring up that have
daunted many. Tie finds s< me one just ready
to turn back. “Let him give up; 1 can goon”
he say6, but again he listeLS to that voice that
intercedes, and in helping his fellow-worker
finds the way clearer for himself and a new,
fresh inspiration springing from the knowledge
that he has helped a comrade.
Life is full of selfishness, and mercy falls un
noted on many hard aud sterile hearts; but in
the hereafter we may realize that more has been
accomplished than we wot of
Mother Hubbard.
HOPE.
When the sun forsakes the day.
When spring flowers die in May,
Hope ilies away.
When the sun cornea back again,
When the flowers resume their reign,
Hope comes too.
Hope, thou art but a shadow,
And still we are sadder.
When thou art gone.
Palmetto.
Householders: It has been quite a loDg wbi e
since 1 was with you, and now 1 see so few old
faces that I feel almost a new one myself.
I wonder where Mrs. L. S. V. is now? You
are the only one of the Household whom I ever
knew personally, and It are say you Luxe for
gotten me, n has been so long ago. Haxeyou
deserted ranks entirely?
Billy Cucumber 1 think a man who takes on
two or three tips a day has just that many too
much. Of course, they will not blush to lace a
few women lx cause o 1 moderate drinking. No,
no, tLe> gi t so harder cd to the vile habit that
really it takes something to mate them inter
eating! You say she is a Y. W. C. T. U. eh!
Well, not exactly but just enough to vote
against the blushli g fluid if 1 bad a chance.
You are u-take- the-world -easy kii d of feilowt?)
and not a respectnb t,moderate drinker?
The world i- not. to me, the same happy
world 1 onee thought it. Since I was In-re I
have o.-tmy dear mother in the old home
stead's hal.owed acre we put her near my
father’s grave. Oft 1 wish i were beside them;
but tl at is not ri$lit.
Who will welcome me? so long have I been
absent, 1 feel ah>i e aim ng this cheery conn a-
ny. Ah! I re-e Mother Hubbard beckon me to a
seat beside Ler. J am now at home.
Texas Girl.
19 THE FLIRTING WOMAN MAR
RUGEABLifi,
Dear Mother and Fkieni>s: I read with great
interest the letters discussing the query: * is
the business woman marriageable?” Yes, she
is, and if her husband can manage w ilhout her
assistance, then her duty is plain; home with
its many caics, and responsibilities, needs her
most. Should she be so unfortunate (in some
instances we may omit the u n) as to become
a widow it is well for her, and her husband,
that she be a business womm. My iuuntion
however, was not to discuss this subject, but to
propound another of equal impoiiai.ee is the
nirtu g woman marriageable? Now, some of you
will say, the respectable woman eioes not flirt.
I deny the assertion. 1 have w-en happy homes
deprived of all peace—loving hearts sundered
apart, by the innocent girlish flirtation con
tinued in the woman, wile and mother.
Nov ,girls, you may lake the other side, for
the fli ting man must be lealt with too. A
lady friend ssid to me: “To you think there is
harm in a trained lacy dancing?” Hots jour
husband object?
“Yes.” Then never destroy your domestic
happiness for pleasure. “Hut” she continued
*T never dance with Just one; he would never
£ ut up with that ” tan you not retail three
omes in the circle of your acquaintance, where
the inmates have been mace miserable by be
ginning as you have? She was sav. d, those
three homes are ruined. Now,friends,weigh the
subject well, ai d give i s honest and candid
opinions, (would be glad to hear from Mary
Wilson )
What percentage of tl e flirting girl makes the
fiiiting wife? Ilow n an} divorce cases are from
this cause? Are there any homes made happy
by it?
Married flirtations are tot confined to the
ball •room. J mow a nicstwortuy laiiy.in every
other resj oet, ami a uenUauci r, but who is iu
competent ol loving, in its truest and purest
aente, iiom bergriat pas*ion lor “making con
quests " as the terms .t, hut lair wonau, be
ware, in the day oi judgment seme ion souls
may cry cut against jqu. Eittilsics.
RETROSPECTION.
Ah', there are momenlr-we cauuot tell why—
but an aching woe iilis the soul; each thought
Is a turbulent ocean whose waves threaten to
ovewhelm us—each hope bears witn its burden
and we invoke the river oi tears to Relieve our
broken spirit Oh, why are our souls permuted
to clamber up lofty heights but to f.ll and be
bruised, trampled and crushed beneath tire feet
ol humiliation? Truiy, there are toirows that
“bruise the heart like hammers” and age it
prematurely.
Yesterday! oh, it seems ages ago! Yesterday,
how joyous-the tk> was blue, with only a few
white clouds dotting it here aud there; the sun
shine was warm and tender—so bright appeared
all thing, we fonottlia;tisuotalwaysMay”—
roses blushed and not’did their graceful
beads, while the Southern sweet voiced songlers
filled the sir with their ciear, sweet notes. Was
ever na ure to lavishing with her charms? I
wonder if any heart could le sad on such a day
as this! What tor guo can teri, < r what pen por
tray the bappiness of tin.t day ? Kven all previ
ous flights of imsg nation art irauseeueed by
this exquisite reality.
“Bweet memoiy comes wirh her ravishing tone,
And I am full of woe—would may heart were
a stone ”
Ah, ’tis noon—the shadows begin to lengthen,
making ns realize there is “far more shadow
than sunshine in this world.” llush! the -God
of Day,” slowly, grandly and magnificently
■inks Into the vast k a of motionless clouds as if
loth to withdraw his lifegiving rays. Ab,
what means those distant sounos? Nearer they
approach, nearer, nearer; darker grows the
heavens, wbst an oppressive weight is upon my
aoul. Is not this a premonition of tbeapproach
inf storm soon to burst forth in all its fury with
in my heart? Still the light of day is not quite
gone, some hope remains. Bark!another peal
of thunder; darker grows the clouds until, ob,
can it he that the sunshine of love, that but a
few short hours ago was in its a nth, making
life seem brighter and heaven Dearer by its
tender rays, baa disappeared forever? * * »
The storm of yesterday is passed and naught re
mains of it hut memory. Today the sun shone
just as bright the birds caroled as gayly as yes
terday, but to me it waa only mockery, remind
ing me of yesterday and that sunset hour. It is
our own htDds I wonder that sumn on the minor
tone which thrills us through life? “I would I
might tell what a burring pace lies here on mv
aoul tonight” Does the calm and peace that
fallow the storm, come to eaee the heart alter
the violent emotions that swsy it? Will I ever
realize that peace, not of satii-fled but extin
guished longings, the peace, not of love that is
blissful and btppy but of quiet and accepted
loneliness—the peace, not ol tbe heart whose
life is one joyful day, fsr from sorrow and hu
miliation, but of the heart whose conflicts are
over, and whoss brightest snticipstioi s are
buried, “not tbe peace which brooded over
Eden but that which crowned Get sernane ”
Mother, I've been a 1 »'K time away, but like
the prodigal child I return. Already my heart
is bruited snd bleeding, and to you ; deurett
mother, and the sweet home nest. I come bring
ing my wounds for vou to heal with your com
forting words. Will you welcome me bomt?
My old name, like all things else of the past, I
lay aside, and now let me be cslied
Hebuione.
ANOTHER CHAPTER,
There’s nothing in life that can be depended
on. We plan and save and S int for some end,
aud what toes it amount to?
All the year I have saved every penny I could
to help pay the mortgage, and at the last mo
ment fate decrees otherwise. I am sure I'd be
desperate if 1 were a man and had a house full
of thildren to provide for.
Mrs. Myers speut last night with mother and
insisted 1 should enjoy myself with the rest of
the young folks at her house. We did have a
si lendid lime and I got the a rpie out of the
water, and Bud uearly strangled himself in try
ing to do likewise.
1 am glad now we could not see into the fu
ture, for whe- he go; h me he found Molly bis
best mule sick, aud before morning she died,
i just cried. He says 1 should be tuankful that
it is after all the crops are off aud she can be
spared Tnat’s all true, but what good will her
dying do any one? I want to ktow. Ye wise
ones of the tl H., answer.
Moth-r is ever so much better, and I-guess
we d navi too much happiness for weak mortal
ity had we a home free from debt ami our
mother able to toll er.-elf where she pleased.
Zerline. you don't go about with toe right
idea iu that head oi yours. ' Nothing succeeds
like success.” if you don’t seem to need help,
plenty wil beollercd you. You must rave that
suave courtesy toat appears to be whatever they
think just then, and you must not commit
yourself by being natural. Souls are for sale,
and they are at least bidding or trying to sell.
El en starwo >4, I often wonuer if some ill
luck did not befall those Shanghai chickens you
meant to sed to buy your new dre-s. My plan
is to set apsrt nothing for blight of some kind
issore ti come. One thing is pretty certain, I
shall keep my Chautauqua, if I sell every
chicken in the yard.
“ * ho loves not s nowledge? Who shall rail
against her beauty?
’Tis the one thing that I’andora left in my
box—Hope! Why, that frail bridge was of rain
bow fancies, and the dowu-pour of misfortune
swept it all away. Grim determination and
sheer will keep me well in band wheu the dear
Mother is nigh; but give me my books ana fol
lowing tbe lofty flights of Ge age Eiio't or the
every day tramp of Dickens, 1 forget the “slings
and arrows” of misfortune.
Some poet writes of the daffodils flashing
on the inward eye
"The bliss o! solitude.”
Now that’s just wbat a good book does for me.
I don’t wash,that’s where 1 draw the line but all
day long there’s more work before me than two
should do. I wash the dishes, and see bow
much of last night’s reading I remember. 1
take tbe potatoes out on the piazza and talk to
mother while I prepare them, then I fly around,
and at every quiet interval 1 have that bliss of
solitude.
Time makes us all better or worse, we are told,
and I wonder what has happened to me. A long
time has passed since last we met here. Am I
changed and bow? There's a conundrum for
you. At least 1 am, honestly yours,
Glamssa Johns.
KID GLOVE EMBROIDERY.
The expensive leather trimmings which
have been among gilt-edged (antics in fashiona
ble dressmaking for the past year, have given
rise to a new kind of fancy work which is mani
fold in its application, and which also affercs a
use for tbe old kid 'loves, which have hitherto
been among the most useless of things.
Figures cut from the kid are tppliqued oil
velvet or cloth, and buttonhole sjuebed mid
veined with silk like the cretonne 'fiuhroidery
so popular seme yeais ago.
The adeilion of beads and tinsel renders the
work much more effective. Dress trimn jugs of
tniK, iu bands, vt sis, cuffs, collars etc., if neatly
made, are quite as tflectiveas those which cost
a snail fortune, when imported irom Paris.
One ingenious }tui g wcmi.ii lias made lor her
self a set oi bodice garniture, oi oak harts aud
acorns in miniature, outlined wiili gold thread,
and veiued with gold leads; li e ;calher cut
from tbe tan colored giovts ol her L-roiheis aud
gentlemen cousins.
Another txquiai'e pitee of fancy work, in
brown kid of \sirens shaoes iv icavv brown
\e veU.cn, bas lie u used to upholster an uu-iqiie
clmir wiih caned main gany inme; making
thereby, a very naiidso e , i re ol luioiiorc.
a New Von, deouiaii-e is s id to h.ve uli.ized
tbe lops of the long gloves worn at the parties
of her lint season iu making tobac o bags,
which she presented to the most attentive of
her first season’s beaux. I>oi g < veiling gloves
iu pale tints are cm iu -trips and sewed t, geib
er the joinirg covered with heais, for glove
and handkerchief cases. Gray and tun; tau
and lemon; aud wuiieaud mauve are effective
combinations; go d silver, crvstal, aim slet-l
beads being used for the embellishment ol the
work. Strung buttou-hoie twist lnu-t he used
for sewing ou the bet da as tbt-y are proue to
cut. \\olk bags; hi ok covers; photograph
cases; opeia-glais fags; bordeis for table eov. rs
hnisbed with a fringe ol si'k netted at the top,
with or without beacB, these are some among
the various purposes to which this work may
be put.
vii artistic maiden has made a curtain fora
small took shed irom her cast-oil' evei iug
gloves; ( lilting ilie li ng tups into three inch
wide snips aud dei or.ting iliem with sketches
in India ink. These are joined with steel and
crystal beads and hung irom a liny steci rod.
Mrs. M. P. HamiY.
H1NIS IN LETTER WRITING.
Thick cream-laid l ore, hand-finish linen, or
linen bond paper is plain, elegant and agreeable
to write upou. The fashionable paper folds but
once imo a square envelope, and outre sizes are
but little used. The square corrtspcnceuee
card is a thing of the past, and dainty note
paper, which fits into an envelope without
loiding, is substituted. The gray paper and
white ink which wss a French caprice lad a
brief existence and was received with favor by
misses in their teens and women in sean.li of
the bizaire....
fcTlie Grandironian and Erummeiian sty’e of
stiIlly expressed phrases slid fulsome compli
ments is no longer in vogue, aud the height of
epistolary eh game is attained w hen one can
write just as uatuially as one talks. Brevity ou
many occasions is much to be commended, aud
rambling or lengthy descriptions are tiresome;
even wheu traveling the) are apt to hsve a
smack ol Baedeker or the red-bound Mu; rev's
guide.
Crests, monograms and initla's once so fash
ionable, aie rarely seen, although tit rtaiti peo
ple have never given up the illuminated cipher
or crest The most fastidious ietter-wrib rs
have simply the aooiess, engraved in eilher
black or colors, in a fac-smlle oi tbcirown hand
writing and running across one corner at t re-
top ol the page.
Women wno should know bett- r often sign
th nselvea Mrs.So ana so,” or ‘Miss ro-and-
so,” instead of usiogtheirchristiannames. Tbit
ia tbeaemeof v ulgarity, hut if when writing to
a stranger it is necessary to stale whether Miss
or Mrs., place the prefix In parentheses, as
“(Mrs.) Amelia Brown ”
Good sense and good taste should govern one’s
corresponience as it should all otter tbiugs
and a man or woman ol fine breeding, educa
tion knd heart will not go very far astray in me
inditing of polite epistles.
Tne aigular English style of bandwriting, al
though neither leglb'e nor symmetrical, is the
one in high lavor, the flowing Italian and the
cramped French cbiiogropby being quite out of
date.
Black ink la tbe rule, although some women,
notably those with romantic proclivities affect
violet ink, which, it must be admitted, flows
easier and ia ol a superior quality to the ebony
fluid.
A married woman's letters always should te
addressed in tbe name of her bus bond,as • Mm.
Bomaine Brown,” instead ol 'Mis. Amelia
Brown.”
The colloquial atyle ia by far tbe moat agree
able, while a didactic method ol expression is
unpleasant and to be avoided,
s. Never use a postal card.—Chic*go Ledger.
PERSONAL MENTION
What the People Are Doing and
Saving.
Ex-Senator Pair recently invested $3,000,
000 in San Francisco real estate.
Adolph Avolloni, a sculptor at Rome, is
making a bust of Chauncey M. Depew.
The modeling bas been finished, aud the
bust will lie put into marble in Europe.
The papers of Buda-Pcsth are asking for
A popular subscription for Kossuth, who
has lost his entire fortune iu railroad specu
lations, and who is no w 75 years of age.
Thomas F,disou says that although in
Italy he has the title of count he prefers
that of “the old man,” by which he is
better known among his employes at Men
lo Park.
Emin Pasha relates that in tbe forest ol
Msongwa is a large tribe of monkeys that
understand the art of making fire. They
go out at night to hunt fruit and light
their way with torches.
The most expensive brougham ever seeti
fat Philadelphia, it is said, is the one built
far Amos Ellis, who is a connoisseur in
such matters. It is white aud gold and
magnificently upholstered.
Editor Dana, since his return from
Europe, is said to be noticeable from the
fact that his square cut American whiskers
have encountered a French barber and
thereby attained a Vandyke point.
Ex-Millionaire Jose F. de Navarro, ol
New York, Mary Anderson’s father-in
law, says there are $50,000 standing against
him, and ali the property he has in lh«
world consists of about $75 worth ol
clothing.
William E. Russell is not, as frequently
published, the youngest man ever elected
governor of Massachusetts. Mr. Russei
fa 33 years old. George S. Boutwell wai
elected governor in November, 1830, at tb<
age of 33.
Vicar General Fronton, who is also chan
eellor of the Roman Catholic diocese oi
New York and rector of St. Ann’s church.
Bast Twelft ii street, recently celebrated tin
fortieth anniversary of his ordination t<
the priesthood.
The largest cotton planter iu the world
fa James S. Richardson, of New Orleans,
who owns 49,000 acres of cotton land and
employs 9.000 negroes. lie has refused an
English syndicate’s offer of $33,500,000 foi
his plantaiious.
Stuart Robuoo, the comedian, had a nar
row escape on the sleeper going from in
dianapolis to Cincinnati recently. Som<
one shot a bullet through the window ol
the car iu which he was sitting, aud tht
■hot just grazed his head.
Chief Simon Pakagon, who waseducated
to be a Catholic priest, has just sent si.v
more remnants of his once powerful Pot
tawatouiie tribe to a Kansas Indian col
lege. He says his people in Michigan wil.
ho entirely annihilated in half a century.
Eugene Bunch, the noted train robber,
wrote to liie New Orleans stock exchange
from Mexico to know if a certain issue oi
■tote bonds (which he admits having sto
len) are nil right, as he doesn’t want to seli
them “to any one who might suffer by it il
they are not good.”
SCIENTIFIC SQUIBS.
Platinum ami silver can each be drawn
toto wire many times smaller than a ha
Acrording to M. Bertillon’s police de
toctives' photography the ear is the moat
Important factor in the problem of ideuti
Mention.
An electric railway has recently been
opened in Switzerland which ascends the
peak of Rouchlierg at an angle of nearly
to degrees.
The telescope enables us to measure the
invisible by first making it visible; the
spectroscope enables us to measure the in
vfaible without making ft visible.
An employe of the Pullman company has
invented an electrical air brake, which is
ao constructed that the air chambers can
bo recharged whether the (ir.ike is ill opera
bon or not.
An ima id’sehair propelled hy electricity
fa among the late novelties. The battery
fa capable oi propelling the chair over an
ordinary roa t for nine hours at tile rate ol
six miles per hour. t
Every year a layer of tbe entire sea, four
teen feet Liir- v, is taken up into the clouds.
The winds bear their burden into the land
and the water comes down in rain upon
the fieius, to flow back through rivers.
A new material called rubber velvet fi
made by sprinkling powdered felt of any
oolor over ru fiber cloth while the latter is
hot anil soft. The resalt looks like felt
doth, hut is elastic, waterproof and ex
eeedingly light.
A device bus lieeu submitted to the Brit
ish admiralty by which, it is said, the larg
cot battle ship in the service can iu four
minutes be protected from the uttack ol
any number of torpedoes, no matter bow
skillfully tl ley may be directed.
Oxygen is Hie most abundant of all the
■laments. It composes at least one-third
ot the earth, one-fifth of the atmosphere
and eight-ninths by weight of all the wa
ter ou the globe. It is also a very impor
tant constituent of all minerals, animah
and vegetables.
EXTREME NOVELTIES.
Persiau lamb sleeves iu sealskin jackets
□map
fALMAGE’S SERMON,
Bbooklyn, Nov. 30.—Rev. Dr. Talmage
preached today the tenth of his series of
Mrmons on his Palestine tour, describ
ing hi.Q experiences on tjie lake whose
waters were once stilled at the command
of Christ. The sermon, which was de
livered in the Brooklyn Academy of Music
|r the morning and usual repeated be
fore an enormous audience at the Chris
tian Herald service in New York in the
evening, was from the text: “He entered
Into a ship, and sat in the sea; and the
whole multitude was by the sea on the
land”—Mark iv, 1.
It is Monday morning in our Palestine
experiences, and the sky is a blue Galilee
above, as in the boat we sail the blue Gali
lee beneath. It is thirteen miles long and
dx miles wide, but the atmosphere is so
it seems as if 1 could cast a stone
from beach to beach. The lake looks as
though it had beea-ASt down on silver pul
leys from the heavens and were a sect ion
of the sea of glass that St. John describes
ee a part of the celestial landscape. I^ake
Galilee is a depress Jn of six hundred feet
ta which the river Jordan widens aud
tarries a little, for tbe river Jordan comes
in at its north side and departs from its
south side; so this krico bas its cradle and
Its grave.
Its white satin cradle is among the
enows of Mount Hermon where the Jor
dan starts, and its sepulcher is the Dead
sea into which the Jordan empties. Lake
Como of Italy, Lake Geneva of Switzer
land, Lake Lowfond of Scotland, Lake
Winnipesaukee of America are larger, but
Lake Gal ilec is the greatest diamond that
over dropped from the finger of the clouds,
and whether encamped on its banks as we
were yesterday and worshiping at its crys
tal altars or wading into its waves, which
make an ordinary hath solemn as a bap
tism, or now putting out upou its spark
ling surface iu a boat, it is something to
talk about and pray about and sing about
until the lips with which we now describe
it can neither talk nor pray nor sing.
THE LAKE HAS MANY NAMES.
As sometimes a beautiful child in a
neighborhood has a half dozen pet names,
and some of t be neighbors call her by one
name and others by another, so this pet
fake of the planet has a profusion of
Barnes. Ask the Arab as he goes by what
this sheet of water is, and he will call it
Tabariyeb. Ask Moses of the Old Testa
ment, and he calls it Sea of Cbinnereth.
Ask Matthew, and he calls it Sea of Gali
lee. Ask Luke, aif-:! he calls it Sea of Gen-
neaaret Ysk John, and he calls it Sea of
Tiberias. Ask Josephus and Eusebius,
and they have other names ready. But to
it appears a child of tbe sky, a star of
the hills, a rhapsody of tbe mountains, the
haptismal bowl of the world’s temple, the
iile of the great God. Many kinds of
fish are found in these waters, every kind
of tree upon its bank, from those that- grow
in the torrid zone co those iu tbe frigid,
from tbe palm to tbe cellar.
Of tbe tivo hundred aud thirty war ships
Josephus maueuvred on these waters—for
Josephus was a warrior as well as a his
torian—there remains not one piece of a
hnlk, or one patch of a canvas, or one
splinter of an our. But return to America
we never will uni il we have hadasail upon
this inland sea. Not from a wharf, but
from a beach covered with black aud white
•ai d a boat of about ten
propelled partly l»y
t»r. jt’hi* ma.'.t leasts
it >eems about to fall,
purposely so built, and
pulley manages to hoist
il. it is a rough boat,
•il»le ••••moved from a
i* a sportsman’s yacht,
v and hammer and ax
many of you to-Ud make a better one.
Four barefooted Arabs, instead of sitting
down to their oars, stand, ;is they always
do in rowing, and pull away from shore. 1
insist on lie]pin .;, for there is nothing more
exhilarating to me than rowing, hot I soon
have enougli of the clumsy oars aud the
awkward attempt at wielding them while
in standing posture.
We put our overcoats and shawls on a
small deck iu the stern of the boat, the
very kind of a deck where Christ lay on a
fisherman’s coat when of old a tempest
pounced upon the fishing smack of the
affrighted disciples. Ospreys and wild
ducks and kingjbshers fly overhead or dip
their wings into ihe lake, mistaking it for
a fragment of fallen sky. Can it be that
those Bible stories about sudden storms on
this lake are true? fs it possible that a
•ea of such seeming placidity of temper
eould ever rise and rage at the heavens? It
does not seem as if this happy family of
elements could have ever had a falling out,
and the water strike at the clouds and the
clouds strike at the water.
PULL AWAY, OARSMEX*
Pull away, oat imeul On our right bank
pebbles, we gt
or twelve ton
sail a?>4-r-»rl
ao far forward t
but we find it w
the rope «hrongi
and let dov. n ihd
and as i y•
Venetian Jo.idol
With a common
Russian turbans of velvet edged with tore the hot sulphur baths, so hot they are
fur. | scalding, aud the waters must cool off a
Tartan plaids cross barred with hair, ^ c _^.f? re haud or foot can enduro
lines.
Blue bear fur for trimming velvet cos-
apart Galilee and the Dead sea; the ana years or age. not no doctor is needed now
flower banked and the other bitnminoas . in this house at Capernaum. The people
and blasted; the one hovered over hy the look at the sun dial to see what time it is,
mere}’ of Christ, the other blasted by the and Bee it is just past noon and 1 o’clock
wrath of God; the one full of finny tribeo Then they start out and meet tbe return-
aporting in the clear depths, the other for- ing father and as soon us they come within
ever lifeless; tbe waters of the one sweet speaking distance they shout at tbe top of
and pleasant, to the taste, the other bitter thei voices; “Your boy is getting well.”
their temperature. Volcanoes have been
boiling these waters for ceaturics. Four
springs roll their resources into two great
1 swimming reservoirs. King Herod hero
with black astraxhau tried to bathe off the results of his excesses,
and Pliny and Josephus describe the spurt
aud fevers ou black cloth ingsoutof these voicauicbeats, at:d Joshua
, and Moses knew about them, aud this mo
ment long lines of pilgrims from all parts
of the earth are waiting for their turn to
step into the steaming restoratives.
Let the boat, as far as possible and not
ran aground, hag the western shore of the
lake that we may see the city of Tiberias,
once a great capital, of the architecture of
which a few mosaics and fallen pillars and
pedestals, aud here aud there a broken
and shattered frieze remain, mightily sug
gestive of the rime when Herod Antip.-is
had a palace here and reigned with an
opulence and pomp and cruelty and
abomination that paralyzes the lingers of
the historian when he comes to write it,
and the lingers of the painter wheu he at-
I suppose
tomes.
Serges plaided
effects
Mink sleet-
jackets.
Tortoise shell buLtons, carved, for hand-
aotne cloaks.
Basque jackets, called vestes hy tin
French manufacturers.
Fans of lisse frills, decorated wilh lac*
and jeweled butterflies.
Red ingot es of black cord passementert-
madc up over colored silk.
White sarin autique botnets trimmed
with black tips aud velvet.
Wrappers of cream eiderdown trimmed
with Valenciennes lace ruffles.
Robes embroidered in silk, wilh tiny
and sharp and disgusting. Awful Dead
sea! Glorious Gennesarct.
We will not attempt to cross to the
eastern side of this lake, as I had thought
to do, for those regions are inhabited by a
thieving aud murderous race, and one
must go thorotflfhly armed, and as I never
ahot any one and have no ambition to be
shot, I said; “Let us stay by the western
shore.” But wo look over to ttie hills of
Gadara, on the other side, down which two
thousand swine after being possessed by
the devil ran into the lake, and bringing
down on Christ for permitting it thewTath
of all tbe stock raisers of that country be
cause of this ruining of the pork business.
Yon see that Satan is a spirit of bad taste.
Why did he not say: “Let me go into those
birds, whole flocks of which fly over Gali
lee?” No; that would have been too high.
“Why not let me go into the sheep which
wander over these hills?” No; that wonld
have been too gentle. “Rather let me go
into these swine. I want to be with the
-denizens of the mire. I want to associate
with the inhabitants of the filth. Great ia
mndl I prefer bristles to wings. I wonld
rather root than fly. I like snout better
than wing.”
THE SCOFFING OF INFIDELITY.
Infidelity scoffs at the idea that those
■wine should have run into the lake. But
it was quite natural that under the heat
and burning of that demoniac possession
they would start for the water to get cool
ed off. Would that all the swine thus pos
sessed had plunged to the same drowning,
for this day the descendants of some of
those porcine creatures retain the demons,
and as the devils were cast out of man into
them they now afflict the human race with
the devils of scrofula, that comes from eat
ing the unclean meat! The healthiest peo
ple on earth are the Israelites, because they
follow the bill of faro which God in the
book of Leviticus gave to the human race,
and our splendid French Dr. Pasteur and
our glorious German Dr. Koch may go on
with their good work of killing parasites
in the human system; but until the world
corrects its diet, and goes back to the
divine regulation at the beginning, the
human race will continue to be possessed
of the devils of microbe an--' parasite. But
I did not mean to cross over to the eastern
aide of Lake Galilee even in discussion.
Pull away, ye Arab oarsmen! And we
come along the shore near by which stand
great precipices of brown and red and gray
limestone crowned by basalt, iu the sides
of which are vast caverns, sometimes the
hiding place of bandits, and sometimes the
home of honest shepherds, and sometimes
the dwelling place of pigeons and vultnrea
and eagles. During one of Herod’a wars
his enemies hid in these mountain caverns
And tbe sides were too steep for Herod’s
army to descend, and the attempt to climb
in the face of armed men would have
called down extermination. So Herod had
great cages of wood, iron bound, made and
filled them with soldiers and let them
down from the top of the precipices until
they gave signal that they were level with
the caverns, and then from these cages
they stepped out to the mouth of the cav
erns, and having set enough grass and
wood on lire to fill the caverns with smoke
and strangulation, the hidden people
would come forth to die; and if not coming
forth voluntarily.llerod’s men would pull
them out with long iron hooks, and Jose
phus says thatoue father, rather than sub
mit to the attacking army, flung his wife
and seven children down the precipice and
then leaped after them to his own death.
WE WANT TO I’ltEAG'H CAPERNAUM.
Now, ye Arab oarsmen, row on with
swifter stroke, for we want before noon to
land at Capernaum, the three years’ home
of Jesus. But before arrival there we are
to have a ucw experience. The lake that
had beeu a smooth surface begins to break
np into rough ues3. The air, which all the
morning made our sail almost useless, sud
denly takes hold of our boat with a grip
astonishing, and our poor craft begins to
roll aud pitch aud tumble, aud iu five min
utes we pass from a calm to violence. The
contd-.rr of this lake among the hills is au
invitation to hurricanes. I used to won
der why it was that ou so limited a sheet
of water a hestormed boat iu Christ’s time
did not put back to shore when a hurri
cane was milling. I wondoj no more.
Ou that lake au atmospheric fury gives
no warning, and the change we so v in live
minutes made me feel that the boat in
which Christ sailed may have bo n skill
fully managed when the tempest -reruck it
and the wild, importunate cry went up,
“Lord save us or we perish!” I had ill along
that morning been reading from the New
Testament the story of occurrences on aud
•round that lake. But our Bible was
closed now, aud it was as much as we could
do to hold fast, and wish for the land. Il
the winds aud the waves had continued to
Increase iu violeuee the following fifteen
minutes in the same ratio as iu the first
five, and-we had been still at their merey,
our bones would have beeu bleat hing in
"the bottom of Lake Gennesarct instead oi
our being here to tell the story.
But the same jiowcr that rescued the
fishermen of old today safely lauded our
party. What a Christ for rough weatherl
All the sailor boys ought to fly to him as
did those Galilean mariners. All you in
the forecastle, and all you who run up
And down the slippery ratlines take to sea
with you him who with a quiet word sent
the winds back through the mountain
gorges. Some of you Jack Tars to whom
these words wiii come need to “tack ship”
and change your course if you are going to
get across this sea of life safely and gain
the heavenly harbor. Belay there! Ready
•bout! Helm's a-lee! Mainsail haull
Star of peaee: beam o'er the billo w
Bless die soul that sighs for tires;
Bless the sailor's lonely pillow,
Far, far at sea.
Here at Capernaum, the Arabs having ip
their arms carried us ashore to the onlt
(dace where our Ixtrd ever had a pastorate;
and we su-pped amid the ruins of th*
“Is it possible?” says the father. “When
did the change for the better take place?”
“One o’clock” is the answer. "Why,” says
the courtier, “that is just the hour that
Jesus said to mo ‘Thy son liveth.’ Oae
o’clock!”
GLADNESS ON THEIR COUNTENANCE.
As they gather at the evening meal what
gladuess or, all Ihe countenances in that
home at Capernaum! The mother, Joan
na, has not had sleep for many nights, and
she now fails off into delightful slumber.
Tbe father, Cbuza, the llerodiuu courtier,
worn out with anxiety as well as by the
rapid journey to and from Cana, is soon in
restful unconsciousness. Joanna was
Christian before, but I warrant she was
more of a Christian afterward. Did the
father Chuza accept the Christ who had
cured his boy? Is there iu all the earth a
parent so ungrateful for the convalescence
or restoration of an imperiled child as not
to go into a room and kneel dowu and
make surrender to the almighty love that
came to the rescue?
Do not mix up this case with the angry
discussions about Christian science, but
accept tbe doctrine, as old as the Bible,
that God docs answer prayer for the sick.
That Capernaum boy was not the only
illustration of the fact that prayer is
mightier than a typhoid fever. And there
is not a doctor of large practice but has
come into the sick room of some hopeless
case and, in a cheerful manner if he were
a Christian, or with a bewildered manner
if he were a skeptic, said: “Well, what
have you been doing with this patieut?
What have you lieeu giving him? The
pulse is better. The crisis is past. After
all, I ibitik lie will get well.” Prayer will
yet be acknowledged in the world’s materia
medica, and the cry is just as appropriate
now as when Chuza, tlie courtier from
Capernaum, uttered in Christ’s hearing,
“Come don n ore my child
If the prayer be not answerer] in the way
we wish, it is because God has something
better for the child than earthly recovery,
aud there are thousands of men and
women now alive in answer Lo fathers’ and
mothers’ prayers, myself one of the multi
tude. For i have heard my parents tell
how when at three years of age scarlet
fever seemed to have done its full work ou
me, and i he physicians had said there was
no more use of tin ir coming aud they had
left a lew simple directions to make the
remaining hours peaceful, aud according
to the custom in those times in country
places the neighbors had already come in
and made the shroud, the forlorn ease sud
denly bright one 1 and the prayer “Come
down ere my child die.’ 1 ’ was answered iu a
recovery that has not lieeu followed by a
moment's sickness from that time to this.
PRATER THE MIGHTIEST AGENCY.
The mightiest agency in the universe is
prayer, and it turns even the Almighty. It
decides tiie destinies of individuals, fam.-
lies and nations. During our sad civil war
a gentleman was a guest at the White
House in Washington, and ho gives this in
cider.t, lie says: “I had been spending
tiecre weeks in the White House with Mr.
Lincoln as Ids guest. One night—it was
just after the battle of Buil Run—I was
restless aud could not sleep. I was repeat
ing the part which 1 was to take in a pub
lic performance. The hour was past mid
night. Indec 1, it was coming near to the
dawn when 1 heard low tones proceeding
from a pi i\ate room wlieie the president
slept. The door was partly open. 1 in
stinctively walked in, and there I saw a
sight which I shall never forget. It was
the president kneeling before an open
Bible.
“The light was turned low in the room.
His back was turned toward me. For a
moment i was silent us f stood looking in
amazen.t ut and wonder. Then lie cried
out in tones so pitiful aud sorrowful; ‘Oh,
thou Go I that heard Soiomon iu the night
when lie prayed for wisdom, hear me! i
cannot lead this people, I cannot guide the
affairs of this nation without thy help.
am p<
wisdo
You -
tirni s
_>r anc
list lie
• hy,
eak and sinful. Oil, God,
u- Solomon when he cried foi
r me and save the nation!’ ”
'.<*c c need iS-> go back Lo Bible
- ience that prayer is heard and
me may say that Christ at Cu
ffed that courtier’s child, yet
jve done it fur oae.iti humble
ia that very Capernaum lie
19 thing for a dying slave be-
he mau who had made a pres-
u of the church of which Je-
sior, the synagogue among
1 today leap from fragment to
l iiis was the cure of a Roman
e, whose only acknowledged
he wishes of his owner. And
so enslaved or so humble or
■iuful but the all sympathetic
Christ is ready to help them, ready to cure
them, ready to emancipate them. Hear it!
Pardon for all. Mercy for ali. Help for
ail. Comfort for all. Heaven for ail. Oh,
this lake Galilee! What a refreshment
for Christ it must have been after sympa
thizing with the sick, and raising the
dead, and preaching to the multitudes all
day long to come down on these banks in
the night time, and feel the cool air of ihe
sea on bis hot face, and look up to the stars,
But
permit
would
life. ’
did the sun
longing to
ent to the to
bUS pi
whose ruins
fra&rmeiit.
soiuier » sun
rights were t
□one are no\v
jo sick or so
Paris anil France will come, linng lierlim
and Germany will come. Bring St. Petenh
burg ami Russia will come. Bring Vienna-
ami Au&tria will come. Bring Cairo and
Egypt will come. Bring the near tlire#
million people iu this cluster of cities oa
the Atlantic coast ami ali America will
soon see the salvation of God. Ministers
of religion! let us intensify our evangel
ism. Editors and pubihdiersl purify yotur
printing presses! Asylums of mercy! en
large your plans of endeavor!
And instead of this absurd and belittling
and wicked rivalry among our cities os to
which happens to have the most men and
women and children, not realizing that th©
more useless and bad people a city has the
worse it is off, and a city which hasten
thousand good people is more to he ad
mired than a city with one hundred thou
sand bad people, let us take a moral census*
aud see how many good men and good wo
men are leading forth, how large a genera
tion of good children who will consecrate
themselves aud consecratethe round world
to holiness aud to God. Oh, thou blessed
Christ, who didst come to the mighty cition
encircling Lake Galilee! come Lu mercy to
all our great cities of today.
Thou who didst put thy hand on the whit*-
mane of the foaming billows of Gennesarefr
and make them lie down ut thy feet, hush
all the raging passions of the world! Oh,
thou blessed Christ, who on the night
when the disciples were trying to cross this-
lake and “the wind was contrary,” after
nine hours of rowing had made only three-
miles, didst come stepping on water that
at the touch of thy foot hardened into
crystal, meet .ill our shipping, whether oa
placid or stormy seas, aud say to all thy
people now, by whatever style of tempest
tossed or driven, as thou didst to th*
drenched disciples in the cyclone: “Be of
good cheer. It is I. Be not afraid!”
Thank God that 1 have seen this lake at
Clnistiy memories, and 1 can say with
Rnjiert -MeCheyne, ihe ascended minister
or Scotland, who, seated on the hanks of
this hike, wrote in his last, .tick days, and
just before he crossed the .Jordan, not th*
Jordan that empties into Galilee, but Lh*
Jordan that empties into the \>ca of glass
mingle i wilh fire,” these sweet words, III
to be placed by human lingers < u strung
strings of earthly lute, or by augtdM finger®
on seraphic harps:
Iti, not that the wild gazelle
Colics clown to drink thy tide,
Bnt he that was pierced to save from hell
Oft wandered by thy side.
Graceful around thee the mountains meet*
Thou calm, reposing sea;
But ah! far more, the beautiful feet
Of Jesus walked o'er thee.
O Saviour! gone to God's right baud.
Yet the same Saviour stiff,
Graved on thy heart is this lovely ^uaud
And every fragrant hill.
There are some patent med
icines that are more marvel
lous than a dozen doctors’
prescriptions, but they’re not
those that profess to cure
everything.
Everybody, now and then,
feels “ run down,” “ played
out.” They’ve the will, but
no power to generate vitality.
They’re not sick enough to
call a doctor, but just too-
sick to be well. That’s
where the right kind of a
patent medicine comes in,
and does for a dollar what
the doctor wouldn’t dq for
less than five or ten.
We put in our claim for
Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical
Discovery.
We claim it to be an un
equaled remedy to purify
the blood and invigorate the
liver. We claim it to be
lasting in its effects, creating
an appetite, purifying the
blood, and preventing Bilious,
Typhoid and Malaria! fevers
■f taken in time. The time
to take it is when you first
feel the signs of weariness and
weakness. The time to take
it, on general principles, is
NOW.
ited inm;
Inch .
•ounJ the heavenly
.* had descended!
-still; from Lire high post
s and nioouLain coast,
vere slid - though not in
church where he preached again and again
and again—the synagogue whose rich
sculpturing lay there, not as when others
ree it in springtime covered with weeds
and loathsome with reptiles, but in that
December weather completely uncovered
to our agitated and intense gaze. On ona
•tone of that synagogue is the sculpturing
of a pot of manna, an artistic commemora
tion of tbe time when the Israelites were
fed by manna in the wilderness, and to
which sculpturing no doubt Christ pointed
upward while lie was preaching that ser
mon on this very spot iu which he said,
‘Not as your fathers did eat manna and
be was one of the worst men that ever ’are dead; tie that eateth of this bread shall
lived. And what a contrast of character live forever.” Wonderful Capernaum!
eomes at every moment to the thoughtful Scene of more intrudes than any place in
traveler in Palestine, whether he walks all the earthl Blind eyes kiudling with
tbe beach of this lake or sails as we now the morning. Withered arms made to
pulsate. Lepers blooming into health. The
dead girl reanimated.
These Arab tents which on this Decem
ber day I find in Palestine disappear, and
Not a Bate Hiding Place.
Many people^ particularly those of small
raaans, regard banka with distrust, and
prefer to keep their savings under personal
■npervision. One of these folks, Mrs. Kep-
aar, of Johnsonville, Rock county, Wis., i
had to leave the house daring the absence
af her husband, and pnt $195 in tbe stove- I
ffee for safe keeping. She did not think
ot the money after returning to the liouse,
and a/ewdays later told her little daughter
to start afire in the stove. It was some
time before she thought about the money,
amd when she came to look for it found
it was too late, the $195 having ea-
through the chimaar.
Milan bulls accentuating the design.
Brown camels’ hair goods having poika tempts to transfer it to canvas,
dots of yellow aud turquois blue hair.
A trimming embroidery of flowers in
their natural colors intermixed with tinsel.
White satin vests embroidered with sil
ver aud fastened with silver buttons for ^ t jj ese wa terst
purple visit ing toilettes. | side BY SIDE.
Lace skirting ornamented with scallops. Side by side are the two great characters
a border and siugle flowers embroidered in of this lake region, Jesus and Herod An-
tho natimil colors and veined with gilt. tipas. And did any age produce any such I see Capernaum as it was when Jesus was
Shopping bags of tan or gray snede kid antipodes, any such antitheses, any such pastor of the church here. Ix>ok at that
m the old style handkerchief bag Are, opposites? Kindness and cruelty, holiness wealthy home, the architecture, the mar
finished at the top with draw string bag of and filth, genorosity and meanness, self ble front, the upholstery, the slaves in uni-
ailk or velvet.—Dry Goods Economist. sacrifice and selfishness, the supernal and form at the doorway. It is the residence
the infernal, inidnoon and midnight. The of a courtier of Herod, probably Chuza by
Improved Smoking Arrangements. father of this Herod An tipas was a genius name, his wife Joanna, a Christian disci-
Quite a change appears to be taking at assassination. Ho could manufacture pie. But something is the matter. The
place in the general opinion as to the hast mote reasons for patting people ont of thia alaves are in great excitement, and the
anangenient of smoking room accommo- life than any man in all history. He aends courtier living there runs down the front
flations «n some classes of passenger trains, tor nyrean us to come irom uauyion to steps and takes a horse and puts him at
and it is quite possible that the common Jornsalem to be made high priest, and fall run across the country. The boy of
smoking car will before long cease to form slays him. He bas his brother-in-law while that nobleman is dying of typhoid fever,
a part of the better class of trains. Quite In bathing with bint drowned by the king’s All the doctors have failed to give relief,
a number of railroads have constructed attendants. He slays his wife and his Bat about five miles up the country, at
their chair cars with smoking rooms of wife’s mother and two of bis sons and bis Cana, there is a 5?vine doctor, Jesus by
sufficient capacity to provide accommoda- ancle, and filled a volume of atrocities, the name, and the agonized father has gone
ttons for the occupants of each car. The laat chapter of which was the massacre of
practice of thus famishing a smoking room all the babes at Bethlehem,
far each car is rapidly extending to the With such a father as Herod the Great
oommon day coaches, and a number of very yon are not surprised that this Herod An-
prominent roads are putting a smoking tipas, whose palace stood on the banks of
compartment in nearly every car.—New this lake we now sail, was a combination
York Commercial Advertiser. of wolf reptile an d hyena; while the
Christ who walked yonder banks and sailed
Window blinds that have become dingy these waters was so good that almost every
aasnnie a wonderfully fresh look when rood of this scenery is associated with some
wiped with a cloth wet with linseed oiL wise worJ or some kindly deed, and all
They must be thoroughly dusted first. literature aud all art and all earth and all
The grand duke of Baden has just grant- heaven are put to the utmost effort in try-
ed permission for a monument to Victor ing to express how grand and glorious and
von Sdieffei, tiie author of the “Trumpeter lovely lie was and is and is to lie. The
of Sakkiu’ten,” to be erected ou the Castle ! Christiy nml Iferodie characters its differ^
terrace in lieideliierg. <mt as th. two Inlr»— we visit, find not far
for him, and with what earnestness those
can understand who have had a dying
child in t he house. This courtier cries to
Christ, “Come down ere my child die!”
While the father is absent, and at 1
o’clock in the afternoon, the people watch
ing the dying boy see a change in the
countenance, aud Joanna, the mother, on
one side of his couch, says; “Why, this dar-
lin„ is getting well; the fever has broken.
See the prespiration on his forehead. Did
any of you give him any new kind of medi
cine?” “No,” is the answer. The boy
turns on £is pillow, his del'
lie hub of the
art. and I'ue
staggers real-
tire l ake we
cities—Seytii-
uala, Chora-
GERMETUER
NATURE’S REMEDY JF
a first-class scientific preparation, the £
—nit of Dr. King’s untiring labors and
researches following after Gaffrey, De- a
geer, Brandilett, Pastuer, Koch, Miquel JT
hose la-
the li
palaces fro.n v
All heaven and e:
Of stars to the h
AU heaven am
sleep,
But breathless, as we grow wheu feeling most.
“But,” says some one, “why was it that
Christ, coming to save the world, should
spend so much of his time on and around
so solitary n place ;ts Lake Galilee? There
is only one city of any size on its beach,
and both the western and eastern shores
are .1 solitude, broken only by the sounds
coming from the mud hovels of the de
graded. Why did not Christ begin at
Babylon the mighty, at Athens the learned,
at Cairo the historic, at Thebes the hun
dred gated, at Rome the triumphant? If
Christ was going to save the world, why
not go where the world's people dwell?
Would a man, wishing to revolutionize
for good the American continent, pass his
time amid t he fishing huts on the shores of
Newfoundland?”
My friends, Galilee was t
wheel of civUizatiou and
center of a population that
ization. On t he shore of
sail today stood nine great
opolis, Tarich, Hippos, Gj;
zin, Capernaum, Bethsaida, Magdala,
Tiberias—and many villages the smallest
of which had 15.000 inhabitants, accord
ing to Josephus, and reaching from the
beach back iuto the country in all direc
tions. Palaces, temples, coliseums, gym
nasiums, amphitheatres, towers, gardens
terraced on the hillsides, fountains be
wildering with sunlight, baths upon whose
mosaic floors kings trod; while this lake,
from where the Jordan enters it to where
the Jordan leaves it, was beautiful with all
styles of shallop or dreadful with all kinds
of war galley. Four thousand ships, his
tory says, were at one time upon these wa
ters. Battles were fought there, which
■hocked ali nations with their com*-
quences.
Here mingling blood with pure and sparkling
foam.
In her lost throes Jud<ea fought with Rome.
Upon those sea fights looked Vespasian
and Titus and Trajan and whole empire*.
From one of these naval encounters ao
many of the dead floated to tbe beach tur
eould not soon enough be entombed, and a
plague was threatened. Twelve hundred
soldiers escaping from these vessels of war
were one day massacred in the amphithafa- OHM-ELASTIC HOOFING FELT coats only
tie at Tiberias. For three hundred yean ** *** per W0 sq tare feet Makes a good roo.
- - tor ,ears, and anyone can put It on. Send stamp-
for sample and fell particulars.
and other illustrious compeers,
hors substantiate, as held by the French
Academy of Science, that* 4 disease germs
may be not only attenuated until nearly
harmless, but may be revivified by degrees .
aud given the most virulent character.** ^
—ROYAL GERMETUER—
is an Infallible cure for numerous diseases,
such as Rheumatism, Indigestion, heart
J troubles, Headache, Liver, Bladder, and
* Kidney diseases. Chills and Fever, Ca-
C tarrh, Paralysis, Asthma, Bronchitis
Coughs, Incipient Consumption, all Blood
and Skin diseases, Female troubles, etc.
Jt cures by purifying and correcting a dis
eased condition of the blood. It builds up
from the first dose, the patient quickly
feeling its invigorating and health-giving
influence. It increases the appetite, aids
digestion, clears the complexion, purifies
the blood, regulates the liver, kidneys,
etc., and speedily brings bloom to the
cheek,strength to the body ami joy to the
heart. For weak and debilitated females
it is without a rival or a peer.
If you are suffering with disease, and
fail of a cure, send stamp for printed mat
ter, certificates, etc. It is a boon to the
suffering and the wonder of the century.
For sale by King’s Royal Qernietner
Company, Atlanta, Ga., and by druggists.
Price $1.50 per concentrated bottle, which
makes one gallon of medicine as per di
rections accompanying each bottle. Can
be sent by express C. O. D. if your drug
gist can not supply you.
LIMITED NUMBER OF
active, energetic canvassers
to engage in a pleasant and
profitab e business. Good
men will find this * rare chance
WANTED-'
profi
will find this a rare
TO MAKE MONEY.
Bneh will rlease answer this advertisement by
letter, enclosing stamp for reply stating wbat’
business they have been engaged in. None but
those who mean business need apply. Add;
L'o Attorn
I IN lxY, Hoxvxy A Co
nta, Ga.
ROOFING.
that almost continuous city encircling
Lake Galilee was tbe metropolis ot onr
planet. It was to tbe very heart of Ufa
world that Jesus came to soothe ita Bor
rows, and pardon its sins, and heal itsaick, ; 777-12t
and emancipate its enslaved and reanimate
ita deatl.
And let the church and the world take jftj, goods*/to^fr merilT V“wrat
the suggestion. While the solitary place* County and Genera! Agents, and will take back
are not to !>o neglected, we must strike fop all goods unsold if * fountv Agent fails to clear
*v,n mv*’)j y.jfifju jf this world is ever to 1m flDD and expenses after a thirty days trial, or a
the great cities, u tnis worm is ever to n» GenprRl AKe ,„. , essthsn5i , 0 w e will send large
taken lor C li list. Evangelize all the earth illustrated circulars amt ’ettcr with a special
im gone, and, except the cities aud iu oue year the cities offer to suit t-rritory applied for on receipt of
Gun Elastic Rooting Co ,
19 A 41 Wcst Bxoadway, Naw York.
Local Agents wanted.
AGENTS WANTED.
asks for something to eat and says: would corrupt the earth. But bring the Address Al>p ' y 8t once aaii get in oc
“Where’s father?” Oh, he lias gone up cities and all the world will* come. Bring u 8 MANUFACTURING CO., Pittsburgh, Ta
to Cana to cet a you UR doctor of about 31 London and F.n .eland will come. Rrinw 777 3mos.