The Toccoa times. (Toccoa, Ga.) 1894-1896, October 26, 1894, Image 7

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EY Dir. TAXMTAGK. W Tbe Brooklyn Divines Sunday Sermon. 1 bject: * ‘Autumn Thoughts. ** 1'u * *, “The stork in the heaven knoweth , pr appointed time, and the turtle, and the * and the swallow observe the time of fhrir ne but people know not the Ljgmant coming, Lord,”—Jeremiah my vlll, 7. of the J God would set fast a beautiful When plants it in tree. When He ♦hoaebf. He a ‘ o0 !d pat it afloat, He fashions it into a fish. When He would have It glide the air. He molds it into a bird. My text speaks of four hird« of beautiful instinct—the stork,of such s-rong affection that it is allowed familiarly to come in Holland and Germany and build ua nest over the doorway; the sweet di«positioned turtledove, mingling in color white «nd black and brown and ashen and chestnut; the crane, with voice ltke the clang of a trumpet; the swallow, swift as a dart shot out of the bow of heaven, falling, mounting, skimming, sailing—four birds started by the prophet twentv-flva oenturies igo yet flying on througn the ages, with rousing truth under glossy wing and in the clutch of stout claw. I suppose it may have l,een in this very season of the year—autumn —and the prophet out of doors, thinking ot the impenitence of the people of his day, bears a great cry overhead. Now, you know it is no easy thing for one with ordinary delicacy of eye-sight to look Into the deep blue of noonday heaven, but the prophet looks .up, and there are flocks of storks snd turtledoves and oranes and swallows drawn out In long linos for flight southward. As is their habit, the cranes had arranged themselves in two linM.mak wild ing an velocity, angle, a the wedge old crane, 8p !!* with command ing call, bidding them onward while the towns, and the cities, and the continents prophet, almost slid blinded under__them. from looking ^ into The the dazzling heavens, stoops down and be gins to think how much superior the birds are in sagacity about their safety than men are about theirs, and heputs his hand upon the pen and begins to write, Thestork in sxssrsrns'sssrssssssss time of their ooming, but observe the Lord/’ my people know not the judgment ot the If you were in the fleld to-day, in the dump of treee at the comer of the field, noisy you would see a convention of birds, night before as the American Congress the last adjournment or as the English Parliament when some unfortunate member proposes more economy in the Queen’s household, a convention of birds all talking at once, sub moving and passing resolutions on the Sf iect of migration, S aiZg some tC proposing te t£day, go to they that go they but all unanimous in the fact must go soon, for they have marching orders white from the Lord written on the first sheet of the frost and in the pictorial of the changing leaves There is not a belted kingfisher, plover, or a chaffinch, or a fire crested wren, or a or a red legged partridge but expects to spendthe winter at the been South, for the apart menis have already ordered for them in South America or in Africa, and after thousands of miles of flight they will stop in the very tree where they spent last January. Farewell, bright plumage! Until spring ot weather, away! musicians! Fly on, groat the band oonti heavenly with music, and. Strew whether from nents Ceylon isle, or Carolinian swamps, or Brazilian groves men see your wings or hear your voice, may they > et bethink them selves of the solemn words of the text, “The stork in the heaven knoweth the her appointed and the times, and the turtle, and crane, swallow observe the time of their coming, but m y people know not the judgment of the Lo ira. n I propose so far as God may help me in this sermon carrying out the idea of the text to show that the birds of the air have more sagacity than men. And I begin by par tlcularizlng and saying that they mingle music with their work. The most serious undertaking of 'a bird's life is this nual they flight southward. thin and Naturalists tell us that arrive weary and plumage ruffled* and yet they go singing all the Way, the ground the lower line ol the music, the sky the upper scattered line of themusle, themselves I the notes up and down between. suppose and their helpe song with gives the elasticity Journey, to their wing on into 400. Would that ling 1000 miles God we were as wise as they in mingling Chris tiaa song With out everyday work! I be lieve there is suoh a thing as »»Kn g the pitch keeping ot Christian all devotion in the think morning and It the day. I we might disagreeable take some of the dulleet. life heaviest, most work of our and set ft to the tune of “Antioch” or “Mount Pie gah.” ' 0 c • It is a good sign when you hear a work men whistle. It is a better sign when you hear him bum a roundelay. It is a still bet Ur sign when you hear him'* sing the words of Iaoso Watts or Charles Wesley. A violin chorded and strung, if something accident there ally strikes ft, makes music, and I suppose is soeh a thing as having our hearts so sttoned by divine grmoe that even the rough collisions of life will make a heav only that the vibration. I do not believe power of Christian song has yet been fully tried. I believe that if you could roilthe “Old Hundred” doxology through the straet it would put an end to any panic, I believe that the discords, and the sorrows, and the sins of the world are to be swept out by heaven-born halleluiahs. Some one asked Haydn, theoeiebrazed musician, why heal ways “Why,” composed be said. such “I cheerful do music, can’t otherwise, When I think of God, my soul Is so full of toy that the pen." notm leap ud Sight dance from my I wish we ail exalt melodiously before the Lord, tpr our Pother and Christ for our snd heaven for our borne and future should companions, and eternity me, we strike all the notes id Going let through the wilderness ot . us remember that we are on tea ettme of heaven, and the migratory populations flying igh this ' autumnal air learn always to 1 qfcriop «* »• wfcs^andviya ■to God t lateral way your fath ers trod, we :: ' God wtU be a tri auto it ft that the birds ot r than wets tho tact that hi fly rss,s to God we the 4n I We fly so tow ot the world, t *. •at I fin t of ft 5® wp awhile a steamer from England to New York.” Th laut far'now odhtm to sedan, but we have (rone so that we base ceased to laugh at anything as Impossible for human achievement. Then I ask, to any thing lieve that ImpoMlble God exhausted lor the Lord? all His I don^be- grace in Paul and Latimer and Edward Payson. I believe there are higher points of Christian attainment to be reached in the tntnre ages 0 YouSHS^U°PauV went np to the Up top of dthe Alps of Christian attainment, Then I tell you that the stork and crane have found above the Alps plenty ot room for tree flying. We go out and we conquer our temptations by the grace of God and lie down. On the morrow those temptations and by the rally themselves and attack us, £K? ST-SSiS we have the same old battles to fight over, Why forward not whip march, out our making temptations and then one raid Do, brethren, let SSJihTBfi&S have novelty my ua some of combat, at any rate, by ohanging.by going on, by making advancement, trading off our stale prayers about sins we ought to have quit long ago. going on toward a higher state of Christian character, and routing out Mns that we have never thought of yet. as^indfviduaU, ‘^ade^'rapidAdvancement in the Christian life these stereotyped pray ers we have been making lor ten or fifteen years would be hats, as inappropriate the to us as the shoes, fifteen and the and Oh, coats for we higher wore ten or years ago. a flight in the Christian lire, the stork and the crane in their migration teaohing us the les son ! Dear Lord, and shall we ever live At this poor dying rate, Our love so faint, so cold to Thee, And Thine to us so great? Again, I remark that the birds of the air ar0 wJser than we 1*^39 they know . when to atari. If you should go out now and 8 t 0 ut, “Stop, j» stotks would and sapT cranes, “No, don’t be in a jj Urry tb0y we cannot atop _ L as t n i K ht we heard the roaring in t jj h e woods bidding us away, and the shrill ute of the north wind has sounded the re treaf _ We must go.” So they gather them ge i veg into companies, and turning not aside yor Btort i, ^ or mountain top, or shock 0 j mask try over land and sea, gtraight as an arrow to the mark, they a sack of corn and throw it in the fields and try and get them to stop they are so far up they would hardly see it. Th^ are on their way south. \ou could not stop them Oh, that we were ns wise about the best time to start for God and heaven' ’Ns say : “Writ until it is a little later in the season of mercy. Wait until some o. these green leaves of hope are all dried up and have been scattered. Wait until next year, After awhile we start, and it is too late, end we perish in the wav when God s wrath U kindled but a little Thereat*, birds have you started know exceptional oases, where too late, and in the morning you have found them dead on the snow And there are those who have perished half way between the world and Christ. They waited until the last sickness, when the mind was gone, or they were on the express train going at forty miles an hour, and they came to the bridge, and the “draw was up, and they went down. How long to repent and pray? Two seconds! To do the work of a lifetime and to prepare for the vast eternity in two seconds f I was reading of an enter tainment given in a king’s court, and there were mustolans there, with elaborate pieces of music. After awhile Mozart came and began to play, and he bad a blank pleoe of paper before him, and the king familiarly looked over his shoulder and said: What are you playing? I see no music before you." And Mozart put his hand on his brow, as much as to say, “I am Improvising. friends,, It was very well for him j but, oh, my. we cannot extemporize heaven. If we do not get prepared in this world, we will never take part In the orohestral harmoniesol the saved. Oh, that we were as wise as the era ns and the stork, flying away, flying away from the tempest! have felt the pinching frost • Some of you of sin. You feel it to-day. You are not happy. .1 look into your faces, and I know you are not happy. There arevolces within your that soul that will sinners, not l»,silenced, and that without telling you you are the pardon of God you are undone forever, What are you going to do, my friends, with the accumulated transgressions of this life-time? Will you stand still and let the nvalanohe tumble over the you? Ob, that ot you would go away into warm heart God’s mercy! The southern grove, redolent with magnolia and osetus, never waited for northern flocks as God has waited for you, saying : “I have loved thee with an evertast ing love. Come unto Me, all ye who are weary and heavy laden, and I will give you rest.” It Another frost is bidding you away. is the frost of sorrow. Where do you live now? “Oh,” you ser, “I have moved.” Why did you move?" You say, “I don’t want as large a house now as formerly.” house? You Why do ‘lly you not want as large large.” a Where have say, thev family 10? is not Eternity! so Your mind baok gone through goes through that lost sickness, and the Almost supernatural effort to keep life, and through those prayers that seemed un availing, and through that kise which received no response because the tolling, lips were lifeless, and I hear the bells and I hear the hearts breaking. While I speak I hear them break. A heart! An other heart! Alone, alone, alone! This world, which in your girlhood and boyhood was sunshine, is cold now, and, oh 1 weary dove, you fly around this world ae though you would like to stay, when the wind, and the frost, and the blackening cionds would bid you away into the heart of an all com totting God. You may have noticed that when the chaffinch, or the stork, or the crane starts on it. migration U calls all those of Us kind to come too. The tree top# are full of chirp and whistle and carol, and the long roll call, The bird does not start off alone. It gathers all of its kind. Oh, that heaven, you might and be that as wise in this migration ail to families and you might gather I your I would that Hannah your friends with you might take Samuel by the hand, Hagar and Abra ham might take Isaac, and might take lahmael. I ask you if those who sat at your break fart table this utoraing will eit with you in heaven, I ask yoa what in¬ fluences yon are trying to bring them. upon them, what example you are settle* Are you calling tbem to go wUb yoa? Aye, aye. have you started yourself? and take children Burt tor heaven and ail your thy house, with you. Come, Tell thou into the ark, your little ones that there are realms oi balm and sweetness for all those who fly In the right direction. Swifter than eagle's stroke put out for heaven. Like the Crane, or thestork, stop not night or dsy unto you Snd the right pines tor service, shopping. will Seated to-day ia Christian sr be ed ia the the _■ heavens tho have elements passed swsf have wtta s great notoe, and redeemed Melted with fervent heat, the’tlmme and the gathered sronnd ot JssnS? Savtour calls. Te wanderers, eoae. Oh, wfer re tonightwi mam? soato, longer of tbs In 54 Union si 'Vi . . TRADE TOPICS. R. G. Dun A Co.’s Report of Business for the Past Week. “Cotton below 6 cents and wheat be¬ . 0,r __ cents, , each . ,„„„ lower than * ever, sinoe present classifications were known with the exports of gold, instead of P*°dnots «t such low prices in October &re the salient features in business this week. Distribution of goods to con sinners goes ® on fairy at gains at near *** ,, points in comparison With last V Year, but not yet at a rate to sustain the present volume of manufacturing •»”*?“ * “*• tie. With many features of encour agement, business has not yet answer ered expectations and it is evident that th. lo« of part of the cor, e«,p. .ed the unnaturally low prices of other great staples, affect the buying power 01 mill “iT 110 - domestic from „ New \ „ York ,, exports . . two weeks of October IIS w were per cent less in value than last year, while !“ Cre “« in the has been 27 per cent. Muon of the decrease in exports is in price, but In August and September the quantity of wheat decreased over a third. Pro¬ visions and cotton gained, but oil de creased, and in minor products exports in September declined 16 per cent. The increase in imports exclusive of sugar was over 35 per cent, in Sep¬ tember, and in two weeks of October at New York over 43 per cent. With this heavy increase in purchase and a decrease in sales of products abroad, the market for foreign exchange is in position to be quick¬ ly affected by withdrawals of capital of apprehensions regarding the future peace of Europe. It appears that three trust companies here now hold over 840,000,000 idle money and that east¬ ern mill loans are being taken from New York by New Epglaud banks, while the northwestern demand for money is unusually small. The treas¬ ury is again falling backward in re¬ serve, and large imports yield a little less revenue than last year, while in¬ ternal revenue for the past three weeks is $4,600,000 smaller than a year ago. and “The dry goods business textile industries were especially favored by the demand in August and September. Wholesale and then retail stocks have been replenished, and business waits for retail sales, which are as yet lower than was expected. In cotton goods the new business has been narrow and resumption by the Fall River mills has depiessed prices to some extent.” “The iron and stell business makes a better showing this week, Bessemer pig having stiffened to $10.90 at Pitts¬ burg, and at Chicago and New York farther structural and bridge orders have been placed, but bar iron has fal¬ len to 90 cents for common and $1 for steel at Pittsburg, which are prices below those current in Great Britain. There is a good demand for sheets and some good bridge contracts are re¬ ported. thus far have “Failures in October been moderate in strictly commercial lines, the liabilities amounting to $3,- 821,937, of which $1,793,636 were of manufacturing and $1,996,636 of trad¬ ing concerns. Some failures of bank¬ ing, investment and loan concerns, not here inclnded, have not proved of gen¬ eral importance. During the past week the failures have been 253 in the United States against 341 lost year, and forty-three in Canada against twenty-nine last year.” For matronly wear there are ribbon trimmings of moiro, with jet orna¬ ments placed along the center and jetted point d’esprit quilling at the •edges. • _ ATLANTA MARKETS. COBHECTED WEEKLY. Ureeerles. Ooffee—Boasted—Arbockle’s 21.25 Green—Extra 9 100 lh. rurr. Levering** choice good ...... Mr 18c; choice 20c; Sugar---Granulated 19c; com¬ 4Ka mon 17c. $y powdered 53^0; cat 1 oat % white extra C 4%c; New Orleans yellow Syrup- clari¬ fied 4%a4J£c; yellow extra O 4 l Ao. New Orleans Molasses choioe —Genuine 45c; prime Cuba S6<840e;oommoa 85@38o; im¬ 20@30c. 22@36. Tea*—Black S5@55c; green itation 40<ae0e. Nutmegs 66<@86c. Cinnamon (........ Allspice 10011c. Heed Singapore te: good fitfieommou pepper lie, Mace $L Bice, Japan &@&V4e. Salt—Hswley*# 4Vic; imported $1-40; Ice $L0O; dairy, cream Virginia 7<Jc, half Uheese-fiate bbU. $4-«b 12^01314 pafl# «0c; White fish, half barrels, $6.0008.50. Soap. TaUow/ Mackerel «.OO0L7&. 100 ban, 75 lbs turpentine, 00 bar*, <10 lbs, $2.26 a 3.60 j Candles—Pamflne Uo; star lie. Hitch es ....... 400s $4 00; 800s $8 00a3 76; 200* $$ 00s$ 70; 60S Brga sgva s __$5 26*6 Oh V. W. oysters $176; LW •125; com $2 60*180; twm*toe#*2.00 Bail potato $310. Starch—Feart 4s; Lump. $5.(4, 4*r; nickel packaga* $8 10; oellaWa n kJSrtr flffi’$VS £ mek^ Fleer. Grata **4 Flour—First patent $400; _ $2»; . haiily &&&$& |$.£0; exft*fancy$*.00, f*«wy 75c- S’ 96c; No. Mu, hmB sack* 60s. Gifts, MRtataf sTS. dStp-SS; Todays § 5 ^ T 0 *> 1 hn. to the 2, FLOATING FACT8. The unexplored area of Canada ia estimated at 1,000,000 square miles. Ip China when a pupil is reciting his lesson he turns his back to bis teacher. A Kansas editor, in a plea for better pavements, says that even cats and dogs have sprained ankles in that town. In {Norway vaccinated persons who allowed have vote not are not to St any election. New York has 400 regular egg chan¬ dlers, who earn their bread by telling good eggs from bad. A hundred tonB of cats’ tails were recently sold in one lot in London. The one-legged man always puts his best foot forward. A Beautiful Blotch; ace. Bight off you say “Impossible!” And so it is. Tetter, Eczema, Ringworm or any other scaly, ugly skin disease makes the handsomest face hideous. “Tetterine” will cure them. It’s the only care—certain, safe, sure. It costs 50 cents. Druggists or by mail from J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga. Mb. Cbimsonbeak— Isn’t it hard work minding the baby? Nurse Girl—Not half as hard as try¬ ing to make the baby mind me. MACON’S EXPOSITION* The Attractions of the Interstate Dixie Fair Will Be Par Excellence. As usual when our Maeoirfriends get right • down to business, they aro sure to make a success of the Dixie Interstate Fair. Advices received from the secretary’s office say that the exhibits in all the departments and the special attractions will be better than have ever been known In the State of Georgia. The attendance of many thousands of people is the only thing that gives the managers any concern. The problem now seems to be to care for the people and the secretary has found it necessary to advertise in the local papers for all persons who are willing to take visitors during the fair, to send their names to his office. It would seem, therefore, that while every inducement is being offered to crowd the city with visitors, no effort will be spared to make them comfortable while there. To our farmers we would say that if they would like to see what their neighbors are doing in the way of producing from Georgia soil let them go to Mao Sit any time between October 23d and November 8th and they will find enough to astonish them in that line. Many people in our own county are sending entries in the several departments, and this is assurance that considerable interest is being taken in this section in tbe ooming Dixie In¬ terstate Fair. Besides field crops, in which the premiums are very llbSVal, the Georgia farmer is given an opportunity to see what he can do in the way of stock-raising. The pre¬ mium offers in this department are exceed¬ ingly liberal. The following specimens taken at random from the premium list will show what is being done in that line. Best Stallion, 3 years old and over, and three of his colts—first prefcainm, $26.00; sec¬ ond premium, $16.00. Best Brood Mare and Suckling Oolt—first premium, $20.00; second premium, $10.00. Best Mare, 3 years old and over—first pre minm, $16.00; second premium, $10.00. The individual making the largest and best display of products grown or produoed by him or her, or under his ob her direction, $203. The indiYidual making the second best dis¬ play as above, $100. The individual making the third best dis¬ play as above, $100. Best Di-play ot Garden Vegetables grown and exhibited by one person—first premium, $26.00; second premium, $16.00. But while the farmer Is being instructed he will also be entertained The list of special attractions prepared for the Dixie Interstate Fair is a long one. We mention the celebrated Midway Plaisanoe which Is in iteelf worth a trip to Macon. At the recent St. Louis Fair, which closed laet week, the attendance on the Midway Plaisanoe in one day was 86,000 peo¬ ple. This give# some idea of the popularity of this great attraction snd tbe wonderful hold it has on the people. The enterprise ehown by the managers of Dixie Interstate Fair in securing this great attraction is only in keeping with the entire management of this whole exposition. But not content with that, they have secured, at at enormous expense. Pain’s celebrated pyro teehnlo and spectacular production known as the “last Days of Pompeii.” This production will be given for six night# during tbe fair and will afford our people the last opportunity they will probably have in some time to see It In addlticVte the Fall ot PompeU and other brilliant fire-works there will be produoed from ti to time portraits in fire ot many ot tbe distinguished personages of the day. Close neighbors as we are to Macon, with (he cheap railroad fares famished, we eaa afford to look in on our Macon friends often daring the continuance of the fair, and the time can be profitably and pleasantly spent. The hoe pitallty of Macon Is proverbial and she he# never failed in this particular. Our people will give her an earnest support and we know that there trill be a gathering there such ee will make us gUl to see. Study mon sees* and comfort rather than and fashion. *iaffigiaggaflr - Itols are i^ftbB^ft lET*rfftWy Fun J. On met. JtS&L V' . ErTJC: fra*. 0. 'L yV&ss S5 » ■ Highest of all in Leavening Jfewer.—Lite** U. S. Gov't Report Royal S -V ABSOLUTELY PURE ■ THINGS WORTH KNOWING. The Duke of Wellington was called the Achilles of England, from the vic¬ tory at Waterloo. Charles I. was called the Man of Blood by the Puritans, and the Boyal Martyr by the royalists. William Hogarth was dubbed satirical the Juvenal of Painters, from the character of Ms works. The imperial guard at Peking, wMch is drawn from the banner army, con siits of eight regiments. Thomas Moore was the yonng Catul lns, Melodious Bard and the Pander of Nenus, from the character of his works. Correggio was called the Ariel of the Italian Renaissance, because of the light, airy, cheerful character of his paintiugs. Among the Turks the bodies of the dead are held in extreme reverenoe, though the cemeteries are used as pic¬ nic grounds. Heavy deposits of blaok sand, of about the firmness of ordinary beach sand, are found at various points along the Paciflo ooast. The mummification of human bodies was practiced by the Egyptians from prehistoric times until after the Sixth oentury of our era. A piece of flagging on Grasswell road, London, weighing 217 pounds, was lifted out of place by the growth of toadstools beneath it. The Egyptian embalmers preserve not only the human body, but also the bodies of cats, monkeys, saored bulls and some other animals. Sowter was the old name for a shoe¬ maker hence Sowter, Sntor, Sutter, and from another name oobble, cob¬ bler, oobber, oobbet and others. Arizona has produoed more than $800,000,000 of precious metals. The exports of silver have exoeeded $5, 000,000 a year and of oopper $4,000, 000 r ' • . An inquiry instituted Among the Lon - don free libraries shows that Mrs. Henry Wood, Edna Lyall and Eider Haggard are the most popular writers. Funeral orations are of the highest antiquity. Before written history be gan they were pronounoed over the bodies of kings and heroeB. Waters, Watson, x Watterson, , Wat kins, Watkinson and some others are sons of men called Water, because he li ved on the bank of a stream. The most ancient tombs in the world, so far as known, are those of the Theban kings Of Egypt. They ate believed to be more than four thousand s KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends tends to to personal enjoyment when rightly rightly used. The many, who live bet¬ ter yAan others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, the world’s by beet more products promptly to adapting needs of physical being, will attest the the value to nealth of embraced tbe pure in liquid the remedy, laxative Syrup Principles of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the the form taste, most tbe acceptable refreshing and and pleas¬ ten ly ant to lax¬ beneficial properties cleanring of a perfect the system, ative: dispelling effectually colds, headaches and fevers ana permanently curing constipation. millions and It has given satisfaction to medical met with the approval of the profession, because it acts on the Kid¬ neys, Liver and Bowels without weak¬ ening them and it ia perfectly free from every Syrup objectionable of Figs ia for substance. sale by all drug stain 50c anofl bottles, but it ia man¬ ufactured by the California printed Fig Syrup Co. oaly, whose name is on every package, also the name, Syrup will ofFlgs, not and being well informed, offered. you tmept any substitute if The Best Thing in rTs, >4 Milk Pane * K Pearline. Bum lljllBf m get them cleaner, and \ - M fuss, than with aoj“ mug ' 1 HP y, It Mvei you so mu ^,-4 the cc largest , •.. 0 c MWilM 1 _____ * iK'* Some |?r'. t’ 17. ■ s. so easy, IpFSl milk pads, ko«wla anyway. •fiv m n Not * About People; The khediveof Egypt haengoi bioycle, almost entirely plated silver. Everyone of England’sroysiprinces bride’s wedding wears a facsimile of Mb ring. Mokane, At a recent wedding in Abraham Mo., the groom’s name wss the offi¬ Lincoln Strickland and that of ciating clergyman wss Jefferson Davis Greer, Governor Stone has commenced a crusade against gambling in Missouri by closing all the houses in St. Jo¬ seph. Miss M. E. Braddon, who has writ¬ ten fifty-four novels, quails before tho camera. One hundred dollars and • royalty on every picture sold have been offered to her if she will consent to be “taken,” but she is not tempted. TO PUT ON needed flesh, no mst ter it, take how Dr. you’ve Pierce’s lost . ///'Golden Medical It works Dis covery. wonders. By restor w y. ing the normal ac ( / tion of the deranged Z organs and functions, % it builds the flesh op to a soft and healthy standard—promptly, pleasantly and nat¬ urally. emaciated, The, tlun, weak, jpflfci jin a ^L3S puny are sMnt fa** ing so effective as a strength r, JE£: restorer and flesh maker is known to medical sci¬ ence; this puts on healthy flesh compounds. not the ftt of cod liver oil and its filthy It rouses every organ of the body lo se and strengthened. it If yon be are that tool the food weak, assimilation too nervous, is at feolt may A certain of bile foods is in necessary the blood. for the Too reception often ' i fat this which holds back element wo digestion. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Discovery stimulates, liver, nourishes tones the up si orates the and u the muscles, stomach nerves rich blood they require. Uajs ^J. writes "Aitor st*, ; . ES'i agoy p far *jmst it r to w *g^ 0 “2S 1 I Medical Discovery and from that entirely day 1 cured, and know, lo thia I do not thank God. what eyea s ' Boston, in one day (few £f*'jg£2T b£j*eflt° C, relff i~c l got more tn erne hoar fro m yocr medidnes, ^Uny s« far as my stomach wss yacenx*. ptraon who reads thia and la wtn suffering from dyspepsia or con*tipati<M> nvtyv** J, ...iLREES * :WINE OF CARDU ► _ t 1 Li k i ffi , V i 1 4 i 4 < ■ 4 i 4 4 a 4 4 t i i 4 h 4 V i 4 t For ■ ■ FemalB IT $$$Ufl*Hiir Diseases, f M ■ V vftrte $*•1 * A *. V o*