Newspaper Page Text
THE MARKETS.
JEW TOBK COTTOW FUTURES.
Cotton quiet. Middling uplands 7 9-16;
middling gulf. 7 18-16. Futures very firm.
Sales 87,7C0 bales.
August......7 27(£29 December.... 7 43<£44
September. ..7 27<®29 January......7 49
October.. .7 33*34 February .... 7 54*55
November .7 38* 39 March.......7 59*60
LIVERPOOL COTTON MARKET.
Cotton firm. Middling 3 29-32. 8ales 6,000.
Aug. A Sent. .3 56*57 Sept. A Oct. .3 5CA58
Oct. A Nov. ...3 58*59 Nov. A Dec. .3 50 s
Dee A Jan. 8 61 b Jan. A Feb.. .3 62*63
Feb. A March.3 63*64 Mcb. A April.4 01 b
Apr. A May. 4 02*03
CHICAOO GRAIN AND PRODUCE.
wheat Aug . 65% Sept........ 66%
COEN— Aug . 39% Sept . 38%
OATS- Aug .... 21% Sept.. • 20%
roBK Sept..... 9 90 Jan.........
I. AUD Sept..... 6 15 Oct.........
RIBS- Sept.... . 5 92% Oet.........
HOME COTTON MARKETS.
Bat- Char- Cot- Char
ctgh. Intt*- OHltltH. tP“lOD
Good middling.......7% 7% 7% 6 7-16
Strict middling........7% 7% 7 7%
Middling............. .7% 7% 6% 7
Strict low middling ... 7 6% 6%
%/w middling.........6% 6% 6 11-16
1111 ges.....
Clean stains .7 6
Deep stains and blues.
SEA ISLAND COTTON.
Medium fine slightly off color, 17al8; me¬
dium fine 22a24: fine 24a28; extra fine 30a35.
BALTIMORE PRODUCE MARKET.
Flock -Quiet. Western super 2 65*285; do
extra 2 90* 320; do faintly 3 45*3 75; wioter
wheat patents 3 85*4 00; spring wheat pat
ents 3 85*4 10
Wheat— Weak. No. 2 red spot end Aug.
69% * 69%; September 70% * 70%.
tf earner No. 2 red 65 1-2*65 3-4 South-
ern by sample, 70*71; do on grade 67*70.
Corn— Dull. Mixed spot and Angus.
46%; September 45% asked; steamer mixed
—; Southern white 49*50; do yellow 48%*42
NAVAl. STORES.
Wilmington. N. C.—Rosin dull, strained,
1 15; good strained, 1 20; Spirits turpen¬
tine steady, steady, 24%; Tar hard firm 1.20, at 1.35; soft, crude 1.60,
turpentine
virgin. 2.00.
New York—R o 1.52%(S>1.57%. s i n seady; Turpentine strained,
common to good
quiet at27%*27%
Charleston Turpentine firm at 24%.
Rosin firm at 1.05*1.15
- Cotton Seed Oil.— New York—Cotton
seed oil quiet and about steady; prime crude
24*25; prime crude f. o. b. mills 18*22; off
crude 22*23; better grades 28*30 nominal;
prime summer yellow 27; off summer yellow
26%; prime white 30*31.
RICE.
The rice market was quiet at Charleston.
The quotations are: Prime 5 a5%; Good
4 a 4%; Fair 3%a3%; Common 2%a3.
FRUITS AND VEOETABLES.
Lemons, 3«0’s, per box 4.00. Raisins,looso,
per box 1.75; cluster, per box 2.00. Mixed
nuts, per pound 10c. Egyptian onions, per
bag 2.50. Virginia peanuts, hand-picked, per
pound 5c; North Carolina peanuts, hand¬
picked, per bushel 1.25. White beans, per
bushel 2.50.
COUNTRY PRODUCE.
medium Country Butter—Choice Tennessee 18a25e,
Cow 12% to 15c.
Peas 65c and 70c. per bushel.
Poultry- dozen. Grown fowls, choice 3.00 to 3.25
per Chickens 2.25a2.75 per dozen,
according to size and quality. Ducks—
dozen. Muscovy 4a4.50. Geese, young 4.50 per
Eggs Eggs 9c to 10c per dozen.
Woo) Washed 15c per pound; unwashed
lie. Hides 11c to 12c. Wax 25c to 27c.
Alabama LIME, and CEMENT AND PLASTER.
Tennessee lump lime 85c;
Eastern Rockport, Maine, lime 1.25; car-lots,
1.10. Cement—Rosenthal 1.40 to 1.65; car-
lots 1.25. New York plaster Paris 2.00.
Laths 1.60 to 2.00 per M. Portland cement
Belgium 2.40 to2.75. English Portland 2.50
to 3.00; Belgium, carlots 2.00; English car-
lots 2.25.
TIMBER AND LUMBER.
Meichnutable 14.00 to 16.00 for city sawed;
12.00 to 14.00 for railroad; square and sound,
9.00 to 13.00 for railroad. 8.00 to 11.00 for
raft. Dock limber 4.50 to 6.50; shipping
8.50 to 10.50. Shingles 5.00 to 7.00.
PIlOSrJIATE ROCK.
Crude 2.75, delivered at works; hot air
dried 3.25, free on board; ground rock 5.00.
In bu’V.
Thc Cotton Visible.
In New York t he tota! visibie supbly oi
cotton is 2,604.830 bales, of which 2.283,63(
,ba!esare American.against 2,144,583I)alesanc
1,715.483 bales respectively last year. Re.
coipts of eotio-t Inst week at a!! interioi
towns, 3,332 bales. Receipts from plnnla
tious, none. Crop in sight, 9,705,588 bales
At West Rockport, Me., Daniel
Androw®, wh > is ninety-sis, recently
lielpe l to string 2')') rods of wire
lence over Spruco Mountain.
Marvelous ekvb Restorer. No &ts after first day’s use.
tle free. Dr. cures. Treatise and $2.00 trial bot¬
Kline. 931 Arch St., Phil a.. Pa.
, SlOO Reward. 9100.
t The readers of this p iper wiil be plenead to
that there is nt one dreaded disease
that science has been ab'e t » cure in a'l ils
Jtttgoe, •-areIs and the onlypo* that Is catarrh. live Hull's knoun Catarrh
The medical fraternity. cure now to
1 ti tut tonal disease, Catarrh being a con-
treatment. Hall's Catarrh r< quires a constitut onal
ternally, acting directly Cure is tu4.cn In¬
mu ous surlacei of the upon the blood an 1
Hroying th- foundation system, th^rci y de-
(living the patient of Ihe disen-e, nil
constitution assisting si length by building up the
an t nature in doing its
Work. The proprietors have to much fait h in
V ureu 3 curative l)o lurs powers for ttiat theyoTcr One Jlun-
benn for list of any case tliut it toils to cure,
testimoni-i s. Addresi
E. J. Chunky t o., Toledo, 0.
t® K.o.d . by Druggist<, 75o.
A New View of Life,
It is surprising how otfen the troubles of
this life spring from indigestion. And more
surprising I how few people know it. You sav,
am blue," or "My head feels queer,” or “I
can't sleep.” or “Everyt hing frets m \ Nin«
times in ten indigestion is at the bottom of nil
your would miseries, anl a box of Ripnns Tubules
give you tin entirely new view of life.
Pure an l " holrsomo QtinMry
Fommunds to public approval tho California
liquid laxative remedy, Syrup of Figs. It is
pleasant to the tnste and by acting gently
the kidney, on
liver and bowels to cleanse the sys¬
tem effectually, it promotes the health and
eomfort of all who use it, and with millieni it
the boat and only remedy.
Cion, atlavspain.rums wind entje. ?v. ,i bottle
Wife used "Mother's Frucnti" before first
child -was quickly relieved; suffered but little:
recovery rapid. E. E. Johnston. Eufauto, Ala.
Piso's Cure is the medicine to break up
children's Coughs and Colds.—-.Mrs M
G. Blunt, Sprague, Wash.. March 8. '<!*.'
Mothers Appreciate the Good Work
of Parker's Ginger Tonic, with its reviving
qualities—a boon to the pain-stricken and
nervous.
11" afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
son s Eyewater. Druggists sell at 25c per bottle
makes the
Weak Strong
flood’s Sarsaparilla tones and strengthens
the digestive organs, crentes an appetite,
«ives refreshing anl
sleep. Remember
Sarsaparilla Hood’s
Is the one True Blood Purifier.
Hood’s PIHs iEspssi c. pill 25c. ami
__ j
SOW Water MILLS Tc CORN it it r» -aiiT AND t e ’ i ! i I
e r WrtoAts *5 anH h«« b,... r ® 8 * 8 . B.
,
psT i v ill uvrr
»cl.oach Mill .llf*. c., 305. Allan, a , ’ Ua U 1 I
’
Boot Cough Syrup. Ti Good. Use
tattaaw Sold by ,
1
! *
TEARS WIPED AWAY
DR. TALMAGE’S SUNDAY THEME
Jeeus Sympathizes With All Thos<
Who Are in Trouble.
Text: “And God shall wipe away all
tears from their eye?.’’—Revelation vii.. 17.
Riding across a Western prairie, wild flow¬
ers up to the hub of the carriage wheel, and
while a longdistance from any shelter, there
f ame a sudden shower, and while the rain
was falling in torrents, the suu was shining
as brightly as I ever saw it shine, and I
thought what a beautiful specteele this is!
So the tears of the Bible are not midnight
storm, but ra ! n on pansied prairies in God’s
sweat and golden sunlight. You remember
that bottle whi*h David labeled as contain¬
ing fears, and Mary’s tears, and Paul’s t°ars.
anl Christ’s tears, and the harvest of joy
that is to soring from the sowing of tears.
God mixes them. Cod rounds them. God
show: them where fo fall. God exhales
them. A census is taken of them, and there
is a roeor I as to the moment when they are
bora and as to the place of their grave.
Tears of bad men are not kept. Alex¬
ander »n lbs sorrow bad the hair clipped
from his h -rses and mules aud made a great
a *o about his grief, but in all tho vases of
heaven there is not one of Alexander’s tears.
I speak of the tears of God’s children. Alas,
me. they are falling all tho time! In sum¬
mer you sometimes hear the growling
thunder, and you see there is a storm miles
away. > ut you know from the drift of the
o'oud'i that it will not come any¬
where near you. So though it may bo all
bright around about you. there is a shower
nr trouble somewhere all the time. Tears!
T*’ars!
What is the use of them anyhow? Why
not substitute laughter? Why not make this
a world where all the people are well and
eternal strangers to pain and aches? Wiiat
is the use of an eastern storm when we
might have a perpetual nor’wester? Why,
when a family is put together, not have
them all stay, or if they must be transplant¬
ed to make other homes, then have them all
live—the family record telling a story of
marriages and births, but of no death? Why
not have the harvests chase each other with¬
out fatiguing toil? Why tlm hard pillow,
the hard crust, the hard struggle? It is easy
enough to explain a smile, or a success, cr a
congratulation, but come now and tiring all
and your all dictionaries, and all your philosophies,
your chemist religions, and help me explain
a tear. A will tell you that it is
made up of salt and lime and other compo¬
nent parts, but he misses the chief ingredients
he acid of a soured life, the viperine
sting of a bitter memory, the fragments of a
’-roken heart. I will tell you what a ta ir is.
It is agony in solution. Hear, then, while I
discourse of the uses of troub’o
First, it is the design of trouble to keep
this world from being loo attractive. Some¬
thing must he done to make us willing to
quit this existence. If it were not for
trouble, this world would be a good enough
heaven for me. You and I would be willing
Intake a loose of this life for 100,009,009
years if there were no trouble. Tho earth
cushioned and upholstered and pillared and
chandeliered with such expense, no story of
other worlds could enchant us.
We would say: “Let well enough a!on \
If you want to die and have your body dis¬
integrated in the dust and your soul go out
on a celestial adventure, then you can go,
but this world is good enough for me!” You
might as well go to a man who has jusl ert-
'or 'd the Louvre at Paris and tell him to
hasten off to tho picture galleries of Venice
nr Florence. “Why,” he would say. “what
•s the use of my going there? There are
Rembrandts and Rubenses and Raphaels here
that I haven’t looked at yet.” No man
wants to go out of this world, or out of any
house, until he has a better house. To cure
this wish to stay hero God must somehow
'•rente a disgust for our surroundings. How
shall He do it? Ho cannot afford to deface
His horizon, or to tear off a fiery panel fro u
the sunset, or to subtract an anther from the
water from the lily, or to banish tho pungent aroma
the mignonette, or to drag the robes of
morning in mire. You cannot exneet a
Christopher Wren to mar his own St. Paul’s
Cathedral, or a Michael Angelo to dash out
his own “List Judgment,” or a Handel to
discord his “Israel in Egypt.” and vo u can-
not expect God to spoil the architecture and
music of His own world. How. then, are we
to be made willing to leave? Here is where
trouble comes in.
After a man has had a good deal of trouble
he say?: “Well. I am ready to go. If them
is a house somewhere whose roof doesn’t
leak, I would like to live there. If there is
an atmosphere somewhere that does not dis¬
tress the lungs, I would like to breathe it.
“If thero is a society somewhere where
there is no tittle tattle, I would like to live
there. If there is n home circle somewhere
where I can find my lost friends, I wont l
like to go there.” He used to read the first
part of the Bibie chiefly, now he reads tlie
last part of the Bible chiefly. Why has ho
changed Genesis for Revelation? Ah. he
used to be anxious chiefly to know how this
world was made, and all about its geological
constru tion. Now ho is chiefly anxious to
know how tho next world was made, and
how it looks, and who live there, and how
they dress. Ho reads Revelation, ten times
now whom lie reads Genesis once. The old
story, “In the beginning God created tho
heavens and the earth.” does not thrill him
half as much as the other story, “I saw a
new heaven anl a new earth.” The old
man’s hand trembles as he turns over this
apocalyptic handkerchief leaf, an 1 he has to take oui his
to wipe his spectacles. That
book of Revelation is a prospectus now of
i .i - e. inn try into which he is soon to immi-
•:> a : the country in which he has lots a 1
-
jeeiv laid out, and avenues opened, au 1
mmsions built.
\»t there are people here to whom this
world is brighter than heaven. Well, dear
souls, l do not blame you. It is natural.
Hut after awhile you will be ready to go. H
was not until Job had been worn out with
bereavements that he wanted to see God. It
n a: not until the prodigal got tired of living
- m-uig the hogs that he wanted to go to lus
father’s house. It is the ministry of trouble
to make this world worth less and heaven
worth more.
Aga : n, it is ihe use of trouble to make us
feel our dependence upon God. Men think
Hun they can do anything until God shows
them they can do nothing at ail. We lay out
on It looks great plans and we like to execute them.
big. God comes aud takes us down,
a 7 Prometheus was assaulted by his enemy
wh m the laneo struck him it opened a great
swelling that ha i threatened his death, and
l-egot well. So it is the arrow of trouble
tunt Ms out great swellings of pride. We
neve, feel our dependence upon God until
we get trouble. I was riding with my little
child along the road, and she asked if she
might drive. I said. “Certainly.” I handed
over the reins to her. aud 1 had to admire
the glee with which she drove. But after
awhile wo met a team and we had
to turn out. The road was narrow,
and , it .. was sheer . down both
She handed the on sides.
said. reins over to me and
"1 think you had better take charge of
t he horse.” So we are all children, aud on
tins road of life we like to drive. It gives
one such an appearance of superiority and
power, ft looks big. But after awhile we
meet some obstacle au I we have to turn out,
and the road is narrow, and it is sheer down
on both sides; and then we are willing that
God should takfv the reins and drive. Ah,
my do friends, we get upset so often because we
not hand over the reins soon enough.
After a man has ha l trouble, praver is
with him a taking hold of tbe arm of God
anleryiugout for help. I have heard earnest
prayers on two or three occasions that I re¬
member. Once, on the Cincinnati express
train, sromg at forty miles the hour, thetrain
jumped the track, ant we were near a chasm
eighty feet deep, and the men who, a few
pennies before had been swearing and bias-
pnemmg God began to pull and jerk at the
he.i rope and got up on the backs of the
seats, and cned out. “0 God. save us!”
There was another time, about 800 miles
•mt at sea. on a foundering steamer, after
the last lifeboat had been split finer than
kindling wood. They prayed then. Wbv is
»t you so often hear people, in reciting the
^t experience of some friend say. “He
made the most beautiful prayer 1 ever
heard?" What makes it beautiful? It is the
earnestness of iri Oh! I tell you. a man is
m e arnest when his str »t>ped ami nake 1 soul
wades 1 out m the soundless, shoreless, bot-
toa,,e ^ o^anof eternity.
. eel ^ our ,s dependence trouble, my upon friends, God. that We makes do not us
kuow our own weakness or God’s strength
until the last plank breaks, it is coute npt<-
ble iu us when there is nothing else to take
hold of that we catch hold of God oalv.
Whv vou d i not know who the Lori is’ H i
is not an autocrat cmeree^ seated far up 'elujprecedefl iu a naiaee
from which He ooce a 1
stand by ns in every crisis and predicament
of life. I tell you wbat some of you busi-
ness men make me think of. A young m-m
goes off from home to earn his fortune. He
goes with his mother's consent and bene lie-
tion. She has large wea'th, but he wants to
make his own fortune. He goes far a wav,
falls sick, gets out of money, He sends for
the hotel keeper where he is staying, asking
for lenience, and the answer he gets is, 1 If
you don’t pay up Saturday night, you’ll be
removed to the hospital.”
The young man sends to a comrade in the
same bauker building. No help. He writes to a
who was a friend of his deceased
father. No re'ief. He writes to an old
schoolmate, but gets no help. Saturday
night comes, and he is moved to the hospital,
Getting there, ho is frenzied with gri<^
and he borrows a sheet of paper and a post-
age home, stamp, and he sits down, and he writes
saying: “Dear mother, X am sick un¬
to death. Come.” It is ten minutes of 1<1
o’clock when she gets the letter. At 10
o’clock the train starts. She is five minutes
from the depot. She gets there in time to
have five minutes to spare. She wonders
why a train that can go thirty miles an hour
cannot go sixty miles an hour. She rushes
intc the hospital. Sho says: “My son, what
does all this mean? Why didn’t you send for
me? You sent to everybody but me. You
knew I could an l would help you. Is this
the reward I get for my kindness to you al-
Wavs.- She bundles him up, takes him
home hhd gets him well very soorL Now,
some of you treat God just as that young
Utah treated his mother. When yoU get into
a financial perplexity, yo\l call o’rt the ban¬
ker, you call on the broker, you call on your
ere utor s, you can on your lawyer for legal
counsel; you call upon everybody, and when
you You cannot get any help, then you go to Go b
say: “O, Lord. I come to Thee. Help
me now though out of my perplexity.” Aud the Lori
comes, it is the eleventh hour. He
says: “Why did you not send for Me before?
As one whom his mother eomforteth. so will
I comfort you.” It is to throw us back upon
God that we have this ministry of tears.
Again, it is the use of trouble to capaci¬
tate us for the office of sympathy. The
priests, under the old dispensation, were set
apart by having water sprinkled upon their
hands, feet aud head, aud by the sprinkling
of tears people are now set apart to the office
of sympathy. When we are in prosperity we
like to have a great mauy youug people
around us, and we laugh when they laugh,
and we romp when they romp, and we sing
when they sing; but when we have trouble
we like plenty of old folks around. Why?
They know how to talk.
Take an aged mother, seventy years of age,
and she is almost omnipotent in comfort.
Why? She has been through it all. At
7 o’clock in the morning she goes over
to comfort a young mother who has just lost
her babe. Grandmother knows all about
that trouble. Fifty years ago she felt it. At
12 o’clock of that day she goes over to com¬
fort a widowed soul. She knows all about
that. She has been walking in that dark
valley twenty years. At 4"o’clock in the
afternoon some one knocks at the door,
wanting bread. She knows all about that.
Two or three times in her life she came to
her last loaf. At 10 o’clock that night sho
goes over to sit up with some one severely
sick. She knows all about it. She knows
all about fevers aud pleurisies an l broken
bones. She has been doctoring all her life,
spreading plasters and pouring out bitter
drops and shaking up hot pilloivs aud con¬
triving things to tempt it poor appetite.
Drs. Abernethy and Rush and Hosaek and
Harvey were great doctors, but the greatest
doctor the world ever saw is an old Christian
woman. Dear me! Do wo not remember
her about the room when we were sick in
our could boyhood? Was there any one who
ever so touch a sore without hurting
it?
Wueii I began to preach, my sermons on
the : abject of trouble were all poetic and in
semi blank verse, but Gocl kuockedthe blank
verse out of me long ago and I have found
out that I cannot comfort people except as I
myself have been troubled. God make me
the son of consolation to the people! I
would rather be the means of soothing one
perturbed spirit to-day than to play a tune
that wou’d set all the sons of mirth reeling
in the dance.
I am an herb doctor. I put iuto the cal¬
dron the root out of dry ground, without
form or comeliness. Then I put in the rose
of Sharon aud the lily of the valley. Then
I put into the caldron some of the leaves
from the tree of life and the branch that was
thrown into the wilderness Marah. Then I
pour in the tears of Bethany and Golgotha;
then I stir them up. Then I kindle under
the caldron a Are made out of the wood of
the cross, and one drop of that portion will
cure the worst sickness that ever afflicted a
human soul. Mary and Martha shall receive
their Lazarus from the tomb. The damsels
shall rise. And on tho darkness shall broalc
the morning and God will wipe all tears
from their eyes.
Jesus had enouah trial to make Him sym¬
pathetic tho with all trial. The shortest verse
in Blblo tells tho story, “Jesus wept."
Tho soar on the back of His either hand, the
scar on the arch of oither foot, the row of
scars hoaven along thinking. the lino of tho hair, will koqi all
Ob, that Great IVcoper is
just tho one to silence all earthly trouble,
Why, wipe out Ills all Btains of earthly griel. Gentle!
step is softer thau tlio stop of tho
(low. It will not bo a tyrant bidding you I o
hush up your crying. It will bo a father
who will take you on His left arm, His face
of oeaming the into yours, while with the soft tips
all fingers of tho right hand He shall wipe
away tears from your eyes.
of Friends, what if we could get any appreciation
God has in reserve for us, it would
make us so homesick we would be unfit for
our formerly everyday work. Professor Leonard,
of Iowa University, put in my hand
a meteoric stone thrown off from some oth¬
er world to this. How suggestive it was
to me! And I have to tell you the best rep¬
resentations we have of heaven aro only
aerolites flung off from that world which
rolls on bearing the multitudes of the re¬
deemed. We analyze these aerolites and
find them crystallizations of tears. No won¬
der, flung off from heaven! “God shall
wipe away all tears from their eyes.*’
Have you any appreciation of the good and
glorious times your friends are having in
heaven? How different it is when they get
news there of a Christian’s death from what
it is here! It is the difference between em¬
barkation and coming into port. Everything
depends upon which side of the river you
stand when you hear of a Christian’s death.
If you stand on this side of the river, you
mourn that they go. If you staud on the
olher side of the river, you rejoice that they
come. On the difference between a funeral
on earth and a jubileo in heaven—between
requiem here and triumph there—parting
here and reunion there! Together! Have
you thought of it? They are together. Not
°ne o f your departed friends iD one land aud
another in another land, but together, in dif¬
ferent rooms of the same house—the houso
of many mansions. Together!
I never more appreciated that thought
tha i when we laid away in her hist slumber
my sister Sarah. Standing there in the vil¬
lage cemetery, I looked around and said.
“There is father, there is mother, there is
grandfather, there is grandmother, there aro
whole circles of kindred,” and I thought to
myself, “Together in the grave—-together
in glory." I am so impressed with the
thought that I do not thiuk it is any fanati¬
cism when some one is goiug from this
world to the next if you make them the
bearer of dispatches to your friends who are
gone, give saying, “Give my love to my parents,
my love to my children, give my
love to my eld comrades who are in glory,
and tell them I am trying to fight the good
fight of^ faith and I will join them after
awhile. ' I believe the message will be de-
| livered. and I believe it will increase the
gladness of those who are before the throne.
Together are they, all their tears gone.
My friends, take tkis go yd cheer home
with you. These tears of bereavement that
course your cheek, and of persecution, and
of trial, are not always to be there Tho
moth wlv hand of Go'd will wipe them all
away. What is the use, on the way to such
a consummation—what is the use of fretting
about anything? Oh, what an exhilaration
i L ought to be in Christian work! See you
j t of he our pinnacles Go J. against t the sky? It is the city
j j Id be busy an in we the are days approaching it. Oh,
us ’the that remain for us!
I i»ut this balsam on wounds of your
hear-. Rejoice at the thought of what vour
departed friends have got rid of. and'that
you have a prospect of soon making your
own escape. Bear cheerfully the ministry of
D-.ijeenlel m 1 exult at the thought that tbUl 3on soon it U
~
’ 1 "
111 * re marctl U P the , heavenly street
An i groani our arms at Jesus’s feet.
Caj, . la P 1 H
' n 1 ^* nas • 'fry, the unce note 1
jSer . ******' wili soon become a
BILL ARP’S LETTER.
A DISSERTATION UPON HAPPI-
NESS AND CONTENTMENT.
The Rich Declare That Wealth Does
Not Bring It, While William Says
It Helps Considerably.
j The blues are a masculine ma'adr and affliot
j
men more than women. Women have more
grief and Borrow, but when ihere ie no
great trouble in the house they are naturally
more cheerful than the men. I notice it very
fi eqnently thU while I am worried and per¬
plexed about temporal things and can’t see my
way out and find mvself in a fit of the bluo*,mv
wi'e an l daughters keep their spiri's tip. and
o and her women bright come and*go and talk all and laugh
%ould ear be awful tilings. That is right. It.
for the whole family to hare
thh blues at the same time. In fact, nobody
ought to have them and nobody is obliged to
to havi them, Jhey creep sealtl.ily
upon a man sometimes, aud if he does not
fight them off he is very poor company. My
wife aa.vs I look like I dident hive a friend in
the world, ’ihe b.st remody is to qu ; t tbl r k-
ihg and go to work. Do somoihing—work in
the garden, chop some wool, fix the window
curtain*, chiidrea—do tie tip the fl .wers, swing the gran 1-
from something to divert your nvnd
yourself. It is better to read a story than
to think and brood over trouble that may nev r
come. The body is so mysteriously connec'e l
wi h the mind that the blues impair digestion,
and that causes loss of appetite, and the fli>t
thing a man knows lie is sick sore enough. I
has been mpposed that tho heart was the seat
Of the affections and emotions, but that is a
mistake. It is the stomach, ami if that is out
of order the whole body is sick. The Bible
tells about bowels of mercy and bowels of com¬
passion.
Another good way to drive off the bines is to
write letters to kindred and friends and ventil¬
ate your troub es and abuse somebody. Give
your feel ngs an explosion and you will find ri-
lief. I had such a letter from a fiiend Ihe
other clay and he wound up bv savins: “And
now I think 1 ieel better, plague take ’em.”
Sometimes a vi w from the other aide produc s
a reaction. Consider the folks around von who
are worse off and yet keep cheerful and thank¬
ful- “Yonder conies the old man with his
wood,” said my wife. Yes, he is about as old as
I am and is wearing my old liat and coat that
she gave him, and like the “son of Alknomoc,
he never complains.” He lives six miles away.
He cuts a loatl of wood one d«y and hauls it to
town the next day wi ll a yoke of steers, and
when, he can’t sell it for 75 cents lie knows he
c m haul it to my house and Mrs. Arp wiil take
it. He always wears a smile and says: “ .Vo
are getting along fairly well at my house—is
your chunks people all well?” Ho throws two or throe
of lightwood on top so as to keep the,
cook in good humor. Oxen are an awful slow
motor in tlio.-e lightning times, but they art-
cheap and don’t die and nobody will steal them
anl they suit an infirm old man better than
mules. They never run away or kick or get out
of temper. A man can driveoxen until he ge‘s
slow and amiable and serene, He beconiei
thankful for what little he has got and he go s
to meeting on Sundays and chews his tolun co
and enjoys Ills religion. Poor folks ought to
enj iy religion, for they don’t have much else
to enjoy. Just think how many things the up¬
per crust havi> to distract their mind* from tho
comforts of religion. There are the shows and
theaters an l sewing societies and the parties
fashion and buggy i ides and bicycles and shopping and
magazines and going to the springs
and visiting and receiving visits, besides the
domestic affairs of putting up jelly and jam
and p’ckles and preserves- The old wood
hauler has nemo of these things, but he does
have a few texts of Scripture that are worth
them all and more, too. The meek shall inherit
the earth and the poor in spirit the Kingdom of
heaven, and if there is anything else to inherit
I don’t know it.
Poets, philosophers and rich men have all
testified to the vanity of riches and yet tv rv
ra cal of them wants more than they have got.
And so do I. Sonu of us are fools enough t>
believe that we want money to do good with
and help other people. There are a fe-v rich
men of that kind, but they are rare. There
are still left hero and there at lonely di-tanc s
a reter Cooper or Peabody or Georgo W. Sco t,
who do not wait until they die to do good with
their money. Carnegie and Rock feller give off
a slice occasionally, but they hold fast to tho
big end of the rop3 and keep on piling up.
Th3 New York World sent out inquiries not
long ago to all of the milliona rrs to know
whether or not great riclies brought happiness.
Carnegie said: “Wealth brings happiness only
when the possessor feeds the hungry, clothes
the naked, endows institutions of learning,
founds hospitals and does other countless goo l
Works.”
Rockfellersaid: “Wealth does not brit g hap¬
piness, for no man thinks himself wealthy. No
m tn is so rich but what there are others rich; r
than hi i-, and that fact makes him fed poor.
Practically, there is no such thing as a rich
man. nobody Jloney is like s ran berries and cream—
ever gets enough. ‘Don’t yon t! ink
you have had enough, Ethel?’ said her aunt.
T nrtv think so. auntie, but I don’t feel to,'
said E hel. No, the fnct is that great weal h
brings unhiippin s.”
Ruisdl Sa.e said: “Riches are all vanity and
v xution of spirit. Few people have any id. a
of tho trouble and incinvenit nets that wcnlth
btings. The rich never ask such a fooli-h
quesiion as ‘does wealth bring happiness?’ Ft A
rich man is constantly in the public t y \ -
Tacy is impossible for him. Tt e public i< cu-
rious even to know how he opens his letters and
puts on his shoeB and what he lias for break-
fas'. An incognito is impossible. No, riclies
do not bring happiness ncr contentment.”
Russell A. Alger says: “Men are no liappipr
when rich than when poor. A millionaire is no
clerk happier when driving a $50,000 horse than a
who gets only $15 a week and is out driv¬
ing a livery stable horse on Sunday evenings
with his best girl by his side.”
John W. Mackiy said: “I am surprised that
any one would for a moment think that, riches
brought happiness. I was happier during my
early struggles with poverty than I have ever
been since. I enjoyed the toil, privation and
hardship I endured to win wealth. When
swinging happy pick and shovel as a miner I was as
as 1 ever can be.”
Levi P. Morton said: “When I was a poor
young man of twenty yea- s, clerking in a coun¬
try store I used to think that if I ever got to be
worth $100,000 I should be the happiest man
al ve. Now I am worth that and more, but feel
that I am no happier than in my poorer days.”
George happier W. than Pullman said: “I am certainly
no when I had not a dollar that I
could call my own save that for wh'ch I worked
from morn till night. I can wear but one suit
of clothes. I ate three square meals a day then
and can eat no more now. Then I had no re¬
sponsibilities head and could go to sleep when my
touched the pillow. Now that I have vast
intf rests and business cares resting upon me, I
cannot than I sletp like I did then. I was happier then
am now.”
And many others answered on the same line.
Now the question comes up why don’t they
lighten the load? Jf the surplus brings care
and trouble, why don't thpv stop trying to
make it bigge>? Wbv not divide out the re-
spo-isibi'ity? I know lots of men who would
help to carry the load. In fact, I would volun-
teer my owu service?. I don’t understand why
these men all write one wav and do another
way. But maybe it is the force of habit—like
the poor fellow who had staid in jail so long he
wouident come out when his time had expired.
We all like to see a man succeed in his business,
but we like him still more if he becomes his
own executor and does not hold on to his riches
until grim death has to prize his hand open to
make him let go. It seems to me there would
be great reward in helping the unfortnna'e.
Some m?ti say that poverty and misfortune
come from bad conduct and bad management,
Well, it does as a general rule, but there are so
many exceptions that it can hardly be called a
rule. Good luck has made many a man rich.
but he thinks it was his smartness. And bad
luck has made many a one poor. The Germans
have a word for an nnluckv man that we have
no equivalent for. They call him a schlemiel with
—th it is a person who never prospers,
whom everything goes wrong, misfortune has
marked him—bad luck follows him. Yet. as
thonch providence had pity on him, the sehle-
miel is al <avs good natured and light-hearted.
A smile illuminates his face, just such a smile
as our wood hauler wears. I reckon he is a
seblemiel. But the good Lord shapes the back
to the burden. The German schlemiel is con-
scious of his misfortune and will say with a
merry twinkle of the eve: ‘ I ain’t no goot. I
got no sense. I ish a schlemiel.”
I know some such people—good people they
ate, too, but bad luck has followed them ever
since I knew them—bad luck in a money way,
I T mean, but I like to meet them: they are bo
cheerful and amiableand they laugh so merrily
•* * A**, in Atlanta Confutation.
THE MERRY SIDE ? OF T LIF£
STORIES THAT ARE TODD BT THE
FUNNY MEN OF THE PRESS.
Dressed That Way—Discouraging***
Nervous— Letting the Cat Out
the Bag—Not a Jilt, Etc., Etc.
*T wish I were a man.” she sighed,
He quickly raised his head.
And looked at her in wild surprise;
“I thought you were,” he said.
—Brooklyn Life,
DISCOURAGING.
Clara—“He is so obstinate.” ri
Maude—“In wbat way?”
Clara—“It’s the hardest thirty in
the world to convince him that.I am
always right.”—Puck.
NEKVOU£.
Uncle Treetop—-“We must put in a
day on the river ; the fish are biting
DOW.”
Jess (a niece from the city) — “Is
their bite poisonous?”—Life.
LETTING THE CAT OUT OF THE BAG.
Principal (to new apprentice)—
“Has the bookkeeper told you what
you have to do in the afternoon?”
Youth—“Yes, sir. I was to waken
him when I saw you coming.”—Da*
heim.
THAT SEBVANT GIRD,
“No!”
She spoke in accents of scorn,
“I can not be yours.”
He turned away despondently and
sought another employment bureau.-—
Truth.
NOT A JILT.
“Have you broken your engage¬
ment with Fred?”
“Yes.”
“When did that happen?”
“Oh! When I married him. r —New
York Ledger. -1
AN UNSTEADY EIGHT.
“I’m very glad I don’t live in
Rome,” remarked Mrs. Bickers.
“Why?” asked her husband.
“I’m sure I never could learn to
read by the light of Roman candles.”
-Detroit Free Press.
RELIEVED OF A BAD HABIT.
First Sportsman—“Does your setter
chase rabbits?”
Second Sportsman—“Not now.”
“How did you cure him?”
“I’ve peppered him so full of bird-
shot that he couldn’t run if he tried.”
—Chicago Record.
A CHANCE IN THE CRY.
Wayside Ways—“Say, Rogers, don’t
dese calamity howlers make yer
tired?”
Restful Rogers—“Naw; dey ain’t
half as bad as der business revival
ehouters wot’s inquisertive ’cause yer
ain’t at work.”—Puck.
HOW HE BROKE THE ICE.
Gus —“How did you happen to ask
her to marry you the first time you
ever met her?”
Chollie—“Well—ah—you see I had
just been introduced to her, and I—
ah—couldn’t think of anything else to
say.”—Harper’s Bazar.
ANTICIPATION.
New Customer “Is that your dog?”
Barber -“Yes, sir.”
New Customer—“He seems very
fond of watching you cut hair.”
Baiber—“It is not that, sir. Some¬
times I make a mistake and take a
leetle piece off a gentleman’s ear l”—
Tit-Bits.
THE EVENING PRAYER.
Little Pet (on her knees, before re¬
tiring)— “Mamma, may I pray for
rain?”
Mamma—“Y-e-s, if you want to,
but why?”
Little Pet—“Susie Stuckupp didn’t
invite me to her picnic.”—New York
Weekly.
UNMERCIFUD.
Miss Mature—“Do you know, peo¬
ple are always making the most absurd
mistakes about my age. Why, some
man guess me to be no older thau
s >me of the chits of silly girls one
meets.”
Miss Smart —“Ah ! that’s when you
talk.”—Judge.
THE INEVITABLE CONCLUSION.
Freddy—“Mamma, our principal
8\ys that his school days were the
happiest days of his life. Do you be¬
lieve that?”
Mamma—“Certainly. He wouldn’t
ssy so if it were not true.”
Freddy—“Well, Isuppose he played
hookey and didn’t get caught.”—Life,
HIS OCCUPATION.
“And you say Dodkins is married.”
“Ye?.”
“Why, I thought he hadn’t a cent
Of money.”
“He hadn't. But he’s all right
now. The young lady has any quantity
of cash. All he w ill have to do now is
to clip the coupons off the bonds of
matrimony.”—Washington Star.
THE WOP.K HE LIKED.
He was au unkempt-looking fellow
j aud _ he , stopped , at the , subur . Dan resi-
j Felice naa askeJ. for employment. The
I lady of tho house wars tuperinteading
I the transplanting of^ilauts. The door
j of the greenhouse was open.
j “Are you a gardener?” asked the
j woman.
, 4 -^ . in ■ fc ,, hacl , ™ uch , experieoca. - ,,
“Call you plant these bushes?”
j j “I’d hate to risk spoilin’ ’em,
’
j “Then ‘ what can you do?”
j “Well, ma'am, if
! you’ll give me ono
• o’ your husband’s cigars,” he replied,
meditatively. “Til sit in the green¬
house an’ smoke out the insects that’s
eatin’ up the leaves o’ them rose
bushes.”—Oakland Tribune.
i A urnmi Mollier.
A lady in Southport, England, th<*
mother of a large ° family J of interestin-v
il ' e > as Rever struck one blow in
anger. When a child does wrong, sho
keeps a bottle of castor oil and^ rhu-
i inr ], j n the f| 1A cupboard, i and 0 , at , once
lorees t e culprit , to take dose of the
a
mixture. — Tit-Bits,
Nmtnern Illinois Srn a ;•<«... »; an itr-
ir - b: ‘’ tUc aro P
The Latest In Soap Babbles.
? thV mWhTr tll9tlUed ^ V, "°™ WRt Usl f J’ r ‘
then iilter -r£ i jesjsss
wi*h one-tkirtl of it* bulk of putt
Rlycerine. Before luaj uain s di.k. well.
Get .email R \a Ba .bout t.o
uiobe-Democrat, If connect s.j. the it St. with Benia a
tube of India rubber, and you can
blow bubbles with this apparatus that
will surpass the rainbow itpelf in
brilliancy lot anti beauty. Yes, there ■a ■
of trouble in getting your scientific
pipe and liquid ready, but think of
tbe sport in the end." Just imagine
a bubble twelve inches across! You
can blow them in this way by putting
them upon a big iron ring—very care*
fully, of course—while the metal is
wet with the prepared solution. Qet
a ring that is quite rusty—that as¬
sures a good result. A string of bub-
bles two or three inches ? in m rlinmofor diameter
can enn Hot bs kept intact for ten . or twelve
hours.
M. Izern has communicated to the
Academy of Soieooes a new method for
longer obtaining Boap bubbles lasting a much
time than those obtained from
the soap water generally used. He
has recourse to a resinous soap made
by the following formula : Pulverize
together ten grammes of pure resin
mid SU ten 5®” par iinrfo f 8 °[ car _bonate of f potash, a i
actci 1UIJ parts of water and boil until
complete solution ; wo obtain in this
wav a thick solution, which mav bo
i kept . j. in - stock . , to , , be diluted for
use
with from four to five times its volume
of water. It can be kept indefiuitelv.
even will'll Ptnnspd P tn tko air mr ^ le
*
, bubbles , , , produced , .
and, consequently, are very persistent,
can be made use-
ful in the study of the phenomena re-
l.tiog to thin laminae and in makin*
photographs in which sop.p bubbleo
play a part,
Write Lheer.til Letter.?.
The popular woman does not write
doleful letters; she waits till she is in
a better frame of mind before begin¬
ning them, for sho realizes that there
are burdeus enough in life without
adding to them by inflicting pessimis¬
tic epistles on her friends.
If she writes a letter of condolence
it seems to come from the heart, for if
it does not. sound that way she will
not let its coldness further grieve a
bereaved one ; and if she sends con¬
gratulations to a bride or a mother
she makes a poiut of recollecting or
looking up some rousing good wishes
that have the ring of genuine inter¬
est.
One woman drops a fragrunl flower
in a letter, not to a gushing school
girl, but to an old lady or a tired
mother of an exacting family, and by
this bit of sentiment—not sentimen¬
tality— keeps her memory green in the
hearts of her friends.— New York
Herald.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report
Powder Baking
i asssssa
ABSOLUTELY BURE
Tho disappearing guns at Fort
Hamilton, New York Harbor, have
been made available by an electrical
contrivance for aiming them.
A London restaurant is said to use
an electrically-heated plate to keep
one’s food warm. There is no danger
of receiving a shock from touching the
plate.
_
In the Police Court-Trie 1 and Judgment
in its Faver.
Some time ago Judge Andy E. Calhoun,
judge of the pobce court of Atlanta, had oc¬
casion to pass a sentence that vrai gratifying
to him, and if people Will tske fi s advice
much sutu ring Mill be alleviated. The judge
is-uhject Here to nervous his sick headaches anu dys¬
pepsia. ii sentence:
-f nm a creat sufferer-from nervous s ! ck
headache and have found no re medy so effeo
tive as Tyner’s Dyspepsia Reme sdy. If taken
when the headache first begins it invariably
cure*.”
Price 50 cents per bottle. For tale by a'l
druggists.
Wh en You Come to Realize
that your corns are gone, and no pa in, how
grateful you feel. The work of Hind ercorns.
loc.
Don't Drag Your Feet.
Many men do because the nerve centres,
weakened by the long-continued use of to¬
bacco. become so affected that they are weak,
tired, lifeless, listless, etc. All this can be
easily overcome if the tobacco user wants to
quit and gain manhood, nerve power, and
enjoy vigorously the good things of life.
Take No-To-Bac. Guaranteed to cure or
money refunded by Druggists everywhere.
Book free. Tho Sterling Remedy Co., New
York City or Chicago.
British admirers are moving for the erec¬
tion of a great monument to Professor Hux¬
ley’s memory.
DO YOU EXPECT
To Become a Mother?
l L If so, then permit us
t to say that Doctor
Pierce’s Favorite
h/ Prescription is
h “Mother’s indeed a Friend,” true
£> FOR IT MAKES
Childbirth Easy
parturition, by preparing assisting the
system for thus Na¬
ture and shortening “Labor.” The painful
ordeal of childbirth is robbed of its terrors,
and the dangers thereof greatly lessened,
to both mother and child. The period of
confinement is also shortened, the mother
strengthened and an abundant secretion of
nourishment for the child promoted.
Send twenty-one (21) cents for The Peo¬
illustrations, ple’s Medical giving Adviser, all iooo particulars. pages, over Sev¬ 300
eral chapters of this great family doctor
book are devoted to the consideration of
diseases peculiar to women with sugges¬
tions as to successful home treatment of
same. Address, World’s Dispensary Medi¬
cal Association, Buffalo, N. Y.
Exhausted Soils
are made to produce larger and better crops by the
Use OI f ,, l’CrtlllZCFS ... rlCtl • _» 111 • r» xOttlSpJq < „,t. f
Write for our “Farmers’ Guide,” a it A^oge illustrated book. It
is brim full of useful information for farmers. Jt will be sent free, and
will make and save you money. Address,
GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 N*mu Street, New York.
Acute Rheamatism.
EH3SSSS&
Oconee County. 8. O., was a constant sol-
ferer from rheamatism and could And no re-
M " “ W ""7 * .?
pbfricum. o tto Soollu
JSfET f,” JJSSK? ^ \ 1 ? ,L
manner. Such was her experience, and for
th* b®Doflt of suffering humanity she con-
*«nted to an interview touching her peculiar
case.
“Yea, It is true that I hal chronic rbeu-
wattomot long standing.'’ said Mrs. Hunter
to a reporter, “and the m >»! celebrated phy-
■loionsof Houth Carolina could effect no
! *1 »** ?***•}' » a ‘L, th » t °° m -
| bright Hmll*»and ch«*wf<i ountenance. ‘ W ° W a
“I am sixty-nix irwar* of age, she con-
tinued » ““«* *ho >ut five years ago I began to
suffer from a^uta rheumatism. The pain
soon became constant, and for four years I
oould find no relief. 1 could not remain still
1 lu aQ y Position, etthcr lying, sitting, walk-
ing or standing. There was no rest nor ease
I for me, and thus it continued until life itself
became a burden, During these years Icon-
suited several of tho most capable and emi-
1 nont P h Y 3ic}ans of State and took their
i j failed to give any relief at all. The malady
would return with accumulated force after
period of temporary suspension, and at
About this timeT^^dved 5 a lctte^from
! m Y sister, Mrs. Lucinda Stewart, of Texas,
T rho wrote me to try Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills
for Pale Teoplo, aud sho told mo It iw much
ROodthey for hu ., don „ her sho ha , v>wu3iok
seven years and had had two strokes of
paralysis. None of the doctors of Texas
seemed do anything for her. aud her euro
friend impossible. But she wa> told by a
to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, andshe
at last did so. She wrote that she ha l taken
; on,y haU a box when sll ° experienced a de-
etded change for the better, and soon she felt
like a young girl again, even though sho was
over forty years old. In a short time sho
was cured, and she is now enjoying good
. . „ , , ,,
w.
pills. I continued to receive treatment from
little physicians for a year or more, because I had
or no faith in patent medicines of any
kind. But finally, being reduced to a dire
extremity, and alt else failing, I concluded
t<> write for one box of the pills, and did so.
Within a week after beginuing to take them
1 commenced feeling better, aud when tho
first box was used l ordered six boxes. But
two more boxes effected my cure, aud that
permanently, too; for during the past year I
have been entirely free from rheumatic pains,
and count my cure complete. Since then I
have given the pills to other members of my
family, and in no instance have they failed
to give speedy and permanent relief. I am
convinced that the pills are all that Dr. Will¬
iams claims for them, and more too. I cheer
fully recommend them to all sufferers.”
To confirm her statement of facts beyond
all doubts. Mrs. Hunter made the following
affidavit:
Sworn to before mo this, the 9th day of
May. A. D. 1895.
Mrs. (L.S.) li. T. Jatnes. Notary Public.
Hunter is well and favorably known,
being the wife of one of Oconee’s most suc-
cesstul and substantial farmers. No one can
doubt her statement fora moment, and many
of her neighbors, moreover, are cognizant of
aer remarkable cure.
The apricot crop in -California is compara¬
tively short this season
London continues to be crowded with
Americans.
The Greatest Hedical Discovery
of the Age.
KENNEDY’S
Medical Discovery.
DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS.,
Has discovered In one of our common
pasture weed3 a remedy that cures every
kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula
down to a common pimple.
He has tried it in over eleven hundred
cases, and never failed except in two cases
(both thunder humor). He has now in
his possession over two hundred certifi¬
cates of its value, all within twenty miles
of Boston. Send postal card for book.
A benefit is always experienced from the
first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted
when the right quantity is taken.
When the lungs are affected it causes
shooting pains, like needles passing
through them; the tame with the I,Ivor
or Bowels. This is cause 1 by the duots
being stopped, and always disappears in a
week after taking it. Read the label.
If the stomach is foul or bilious It will
cause squeamish feelings at first
No change of diet ever necessary. Bat
the best you can get, and enough of it
Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bed¬
time. Sold by all Druggists.
WE WANT
SEi.r.ixo goods ever known. Permanent work and
boro, largo ky. nag. INDUSTRIAL PUBLISHING CO., Owens¬
JOHNSON’S CHILL AND FEVER TONIC
Cows you to cants a bottle if it cures tub.
and not * sin*’» cent nnless it does. ’ ' '
What does It cure’
1st. Chills snd Fever.
3n<l. Bilious Eever.
3id. Ttphoip FtTCK.
4th. Hemorrhagls I ei«.
Btb. Dengue Fever-
6th Measles.
7th- Iteureljia.
8tb. La Grippe.
Honey b»ck if one bottle isiis. Ask roar des'ert sbeet
tt. A. B. Gl *aRdzac, havannih, G*., Proprietor
D TO AVOID THIS USB
0 M TETTERINE
S "• T The CURB only for the painless w#rst. type ind of harmless Kczom*,
C R I ■ Tetter, es on H ihe cgworm.Bfly face, crusted reach pitch* ecaifK
*T cn jstao.p* Ground pies. short Poison itch, ALL Cj»h from IICIU. chafes, i»y J. or T. cb; r Send p poi-on Shaptnoe, *P», Me. pim- oak. ia
• M or to
* * drajgiat Sarannah, don’t Ga.. keep for it. one box, if foai
PARKER’S
,V. ^ HAIR BALSAM
Cleecses and beei-tifler the heir.
Promote* a luzurisnt growth.
Never Fails to Bestore Gray
Bair to its Youthful Color.
Cure* scalp <!:**•««■ A hair laUmg.
fit)c,andSL<J0ar Dmzeidi
S. N. u.—34.