Newspaper Page Text
«r
ggT. DR. TALMAGE.
_„ K BROOKLYN DIVINES SUN
T DAY sermon.
V
Subject: “Home Again.”
«•. -**.»«««>. «* -
kill It.* —Lnkft xv., w3.
In all ages of the dortd it has been cu*
ternary to eelehrate joyful events by festiv
jf r _tho signing o' treaties,’ the proclama
tion of peace, the Christ mas. the marriage,
However much on other days of the year
0U r table may have stinted snoD'y. on
Thanksgiving there must be something
tounterms. And all the eorpfortaMe homes ce'e
of Christendom have at some time
hrafed joyful events by banquet and fes
tivitv. Something has hanpened in the old home
stead greater than anrthing that has ever
happen*i he'ore. A favorites b^ome sod, whom the
world supposed would a vagabond
and outlaw forever, havgot tired of sight
seeing and ha* returned to his father’s
house. The world/Said he never would
comebBct-. The <fln man aiwavS said his
son would com*. He had been looking for
him day after day and year after year. He
knew he wou'd come back. Now, having
returned to bis father’s house, the father
proclaim* celebration. Thera is a eaH In
the paddook that has been kept be up and fed for
to utmost capacity, so as to ready aioDg.
some occasion of jov that might come
Ab. there never will be a grander day on
the old homestead than this day. Let the
butcher* do their work and the housekeepers
brine into the table the smoking meat. The
musicians will take their places, and the gay
^groups will move up and down the floor,
AU the friends and neiehhors are gathered
in. and extra sopplv is sent out to the table
of the servants. The father presides Gol at the
table, and says grace, and thanks that
his long absent bov is home again. Ob. how
they mbs-d him! How glad they are to
havo him hack ! On« brother indeed stands
pouting at the back floor and says: “This
is a great ado about 'nothing. This bad boy
shouid have been chastened instead of
greeted. Veal is too good for him!” But
the fathet says : “Nothing is too good,
Nothing is good enough.” There sbs the
young man. elad at the hearty reception, his
but a shadow of sorrow flitting across
brow at tberemembranco of the trouble he
had s en. All ready now. Let the covers
lift. Music. He was dead, aud he is alive
again! He was lost, and he is found! By
such bold imagery does the Bible sot forth
the merrymaking when a soul comes home
to God.
•First of ail, there is the new convert’s joy.
It is no tame thing to become a Christian.
The most tremendous moment in a man’s
life is when he surrenders himself to God.
The grandest time on the father’s homestead
is when the bov comes back. Among the
great throng who, Christ in the parlors of my
church, professed one night w.t3 a
young man. who next morning rang my
doorbell and said “Sir, I cannot contain
myself W'th the jov I feel. I came here this
morning to express if. I have toun l more
joy in flVB minutes in serving God than in
ali the veers of my prodigality, and I came
to say so.”
his Yon physical have seen liberty perhaps and the * man offle-ra running of the for
law after him. and you saw him escape, or
afterward you heard the judge had pardoned
him and hew grant was the glee of that res
cued man! But it is a very tame thing that
compared with the running for one’s ever
lasting life-*the terrors of the law after him
and Christ coming in to pardon and bless
and rescue and save. You remember John
Bunyan, in his great story, tells how the oil
grim put his fingers in his ears and ran. cty
driver, ing, “Life, Ihe, having eternal bad life!” A poor oir
after to struggle to sup
port bis family tor years, suddenly was in
formed that • large inheritance was his, and
there was joy amounting to bewilderment,
but that is a small thing compare J with the
experience of one when he has pat in his
bands the title deed to the joys, the raptures,
the splendors of heaven, and be can trniy
say, “Its mansions are mine ; Its temples
mine ; its songs are m'ne; it* God is mine!’*'
Ob, If ts no tame tmng to become a Chris
tian. It is a merrymaking. It is the killing
of the luted-ealf. It is jubilee. • Yon know
theBIblonever compares it to a funeral, but
always eampares it to something bright. 1^
is more apt to bo compared to a banquet
than Bible anything'else. tbe If is compared in-the
tbe to water—bright, flashing water—
to morning, roseate, fire worked, moun
tain transflvnred morning, I wish I coaid
to-day take all the Bible expressions about
pardon nope and and heaven, peace and and life twist and them comfort into and
one
garland, and put it on ths brow of tbe hum
blest child of God in ail this land, and cry:
“Wear it, wear it now, wear ft forever, son
Oh, of God, daughter of tne Lord God Almighty,
tbe joy of the new convert! Ob, the
gladness of the Christian service V'
You hare seen sometimes a tflan in a re
ligious assembly get up end give his expo
rience. He .Well, Paul gave his experienoe.
rose in tbe presence of two cnarches—
the church on earth and the church in
heaven—and he said, “Now, this ts my ex
perienee, sorrowful, yet aiways rejoicing;
poor, tng, yet making many rich ; having noth
yet poreassing all thing*." If all the
people the who read this religion, sermon knew would the joys
Ot Christian they all
pass over into tbe kingdom of God the next
moment. When Daniel Sandeman was dy
lag of obolera, his attendant said, “Have
iron I found mnyb the pain?” Lord I “Oh.” have be replied, had “since pain
never any
except ain.” Then they said to him,
“Would you like to sene a message to your
friends?” “Yee, I would. Tell them that
only last nig at the love oi Jentts came rush
lag into I my sonl like the surges of the sea,
and had tr*»*ry out: “Stop, Lord; it is
enough I Stop, Lord—enough !’ ” Ob.
the joys of this Christian religion!
j puss over from those tame joys in
Which yon aw indulging—joys of this
world—into the rapturesoi the gospel. The
World cannot satisfy yon; yod nave fount
out—Alexander longing for other worlds to
conquer and yet drowned in his own bottle,
Byron WOrM, whipped Voltaire by disquietudes his around while the
cursing own eon!
uH tbe street* of Paris were applan (ing him,
XL consuming with hatred against
pwfiMttMu lumas a Becker, all liln*trations ot
this world cannot make a man
happy pommel The very saddiv man who poisons Queen I the
of the on wbiect
■HuabeCh rode tbnaie>1 la the street, “Goa
levs the Queen I” One moment the world
, *i t the am moment the world
* Oh,
mre tpw maguiscent neutnuae.
K uflter IM battieof SbUon there
tbowsau’is of wounded ontb« field, and
Ms ampniaaee* hud not eome. One Chris
itut, lyiag there e-dying under tae
riartlghf, otgaa to sing:
There tea lend of pure delight.
And whew weeume to the next Use there
ot voieee united.
r
n was up ali reur the field
am mi the until it Wee said that
sa; at least 10.000 woaaded
(Mr r*fsm m tDejr to tW
:
Itet *
o.
ot
the guardian angel swept a circle clear
around where the yonug man stood. It
a circle of virtue and honor, and he must
not step beyond that circle. Armed foes
circle. came down, They but could were obliged to halt at the
not pass. But one day
a temptress, with diamoned hand, stretched
forth and crossed that circle with the band,
and the tempted soul took it, and by that
one fell grip was brought beyond the eirole
and dipch
frrace of God, to 3iep back? This. I say to
you. is your hour of salvation. There was
in the closing hours of Queen Anne what is
caUed the clock som-. Flat down on
the pillow, in head helpless sickneSs, she could
not move her or move her hand. She
wa< waiting for tbe hour w :i en the •-tnisrers
ot State should gather in angry con. est, and
worried and worn out by the coming hour,
and in momentary absence of the nurse, in
the power—the strange power which de
lir um sometimes g ves one—she arose and
stool in front of the clock, and aloof there
watching the clock whendhe nurse returns i.
Toe nurse said, “Ho > ou see anything uecn'
iar about that clock?" She made no answer,
hut s-oo-t died. There is a clock scene in
every history. If some of you would rise
from the hed of lethargy ant come ont of
your delirium of sin and look qu the clock of
your destiny this moment, you would s-e
and hear something you have not seen or
or hoard bafore. and every tick of the minute,
and every stroke of the hour, and every
swing of the pendu'nm, would say, “Now,
now, now, now! ’ Oh, come home to vour
Father’s house ! Come borne, oh, prodigal,
from the wilderness! Come home, come
home!
But I notice that when the prodigal came
there whs the father's joy. Ha did not greet
jhim with afiy formal “How to you do?’’ He
did not come out and shy : “You are unfit to
enter. Go out and wash in the trough hy
the well, and then you can come in. We
have had enough trouble with you.” Ab,
no! When the proprietor or that estate pro¬
claimed festival, it was an outburst of a
father’s love and, a father’s joy. God is
your father.
I have not much sympathy with that de
script ion of God I sometimes hear, asthougb
He were a Turkish sultan—hard anl uns.vm
pathetic and listening not to the cry of His
subjects. A man told me he saw in one of the
eastern lands a king riding along, and two
men other were with m an bav.ng altercation, and bis one charged
the eaten rice, and
'the king said, “Then slay the man, and by
postmortem examination find whether he
has eaten the rice.” And ho was slain. Ah,
the cruelty of a sc-nft like that! OurGodis
not a sultan, not a despot, but a lather
kind, loving, forgiving—and He makes all
heaven ring again when a pro ligal comes
back, “I have no pleasure.” Ho says, “in
the death of him that dieth.”
If a man does not get heaven, it is because
he Will not go there. No differeno- the col
or. no difference the' history.no differen 'e
the antecedents, no difference the surround
ings, no difference the sin. When the white
horses oT Christ’s victory are brought out to
celebrate the eternal triumph, you may ride
one of them, and, as God is greater than all,
His joy is greater, and wnen a soul comes
back there is in Hi* heart the surging of an
infinite ocean oi gladness, and to express
that gladness it take3 all the rivers of pleas
tire, and all the thrones of pomp, and all the
ages of eternity. higher It is a joy deeper than all
depth, and than all height, and
wider than all width, and vaster than nil im
mensity. It the ov.-rtops, it uudergir and Is. it out- the
weighs all united splendor joy Of
universe. Who can tell what Go Vs joy is?
You remember reading the story oi a king
who on some great day of festivity scat
tered sflvernnd gold among the peop e, who
sent valuable presents to his oourtiers, but
raethinks when a soul comes back God is
so glad that to express His joy H« fling* out
new worlds into space, kindles up new sum
and rolls among the white ro md anthems
the redeemed a greater balleiuiab, while
with a voic* that reverberates among the
mountains of frankincense and is eehosd
back from the everlasting gates He cries,
“This, my son. whs dead and is alive again !’’
At tne opening of the exposition in New
D leans I saw a Mexican flutist, and
played the solo, and then accompanied afterward the
eight or ten bin s ot music, by
the great organ, came in, but too sounl of
that one flute as compare t with all the or
nbestra was greater tnan all the combined
Joy of the universe wuen compsred with the
resounding nesrt of Almlgaty God.
For ten years a father went three times a
day to the depot. His son went off in ag
gravating circa nstances,bnt the father said,
‘He will come back.” Tne strain w.is too
much, and his mind parte I, and three times
a day the father went. In tbe early morning
he watched the train—Us arrival, the step
ping ont of the passengers, and then tbe de
parture of train. At noon be was there
again, watching the advance of the train,
watching the departure.
At nlgnt there again, watching tho com
ing, watching the going, lor ten years. He
was sure his son would come back. Gol has
been watching an 1 waiting for some or you,
my brothers, ten years, twenty years, thirty
years, iorty years, perhaps fifty yetrs, and wait- If
ing, waiting, watching, watching,
this morning the pro iigai should come
borne, what a scene of gladness and festivity
and bow the great Father’s heart woul l
rejolee at your coming will home! not? You You will, will
come, some of you, you
you will!
I notice also that wh»n a prodigal comes
home there Is the joy of tbe ministers of re¬
ligion. Oh, it I is a grand thing to preach
this gospel! know there has been a great
deal said about the trials and the hardsnips
of the Christian ministry. I wish somebody
would write a good, rousing book about the
joys ot the Christian ministry. 8ince I en¬
tered the profession I have seen more of tbe
goodness ot God than I will be able to ceie
braie in all eternity, I know some boast
abont their equilibrium, and they do not
rise into enthusiasm, and they do not break
down with emotion, but I confess lo you
plainly that when I see a man coming to
God and giving up his sin I feel In body,
mind and soul a transport. When I see a
man who is bound hand and loot in evil
batit emancipated, I rejoice -over it as
f bough it were my ownemancdpatlon. When,
in our Coramnuioa servio-, suaa throngs of
young and old stood up at tbe altars and in
the presence of heaven anl earth and bell
attested their allegiance to Jesus Christ, I
felt a joy something woenbesays? akin to that which the
apo*tie he body describes I tell, ot “WOether body
in t cannot or out the
I cannot tell. God knoweth.”
Have not ministers n right to tejoice
when a prodigal and ungbr comas they home? Th-y view
tbe trumpet, not to ho gin -
of tbe gathering of the boas? They pointed
tothe inli supply, andongtrt they not to re¬
joice wnen seal* pant as tbe nart for tbe
water crooks? They ready.” came forth saying, they
‘■All things are now Ougot
not rejolee when the pro Iigai sits oown at
tbe Life bauqum? * Will ad that
. insurance me— ten you
ministers ot religion as a class live longer
than any o:her. It is confirmed by tbe
statistics ot all those woo chleamte upon
human longevity. Why is it? T
is more draft upon tne nervous tyst
t in any other profession, sad
their toil is most rzbaumtag. I have
seen ministers kept on mineable sti¬
pends bjr parsimonious coagmgntioas
who wondered at the anilaess of the sermon.
dmrfc the o: Qod were HreUhoo perplexed 1 and almost had
to tey queutioaa of
not nutrition* too t to keep e*? fire
hitbetr per*went. Vo feet, mo ere I
the twride ot the itfeof
of the
fe—ha* I ih-y X
have •tte
With of • year,
WUii
' by W
the
1
(let 1 ail
of them Week after week entertaining agents
who have maps to sell and submitting and them* yet
selves to all styles of annoyances,
without complaint and cheerful of sonl.
Sow do yon account for the fact that these
life insurance men tell us that ministers as a
class live longer than snv others?. It Is be¬
cause of the jov of their work, the joy of the
harvest fl«ld, the jov of bouse. erecting prodigals
home to their Father’s
We are in sympathy with ail innocent
hilarities. We can enjoy a hearty song, and
we can be merry with the merriest, but those
of us who have toiled in the service are
ready to testify all these joys are tame com¬
pared with th« sstistaerion o f seeing men
enter the kingdom of God. The sreat eras
of everv minister are the outpourings o' the*
Holy Ghost, an i I thank God I have 8 “US
twenty of them. Thank Go 1, thank Got! t
I notice also when the pro ligal ecssveS
hack all earnest Christians rejoice. I* you
stood on a promontory, and there was a hur¬
ricane at sea. and it was plowing toward tho
shore, and a vessel crashed into the rocks,
and you saw people get ashore in vho life¬
boats, and the very last man got on the rocks
1n<ssfetv, you could not controt your .ioy*
And it is a glad tim- w ten the church of God
sees men who are tosse d on t he ocean of their
sins plant their feet on the rock Christ Jesus.
Wnen pro iigais come home, just hear
those Christians sing! It is not a dull ’one
you hear at suoh t roes. Just hear those
Christians pray! It is not astereotyped sup¬
plication we have heard over anl over for
twenty years, but a ptutingof the case lathe
hands of God with an importunate pleading. they
Men never pray at great length unless
have nothing to sav, and their hearts nra
hard and cold. All the prayers in the Bible
that were answered were short prayer*.
‘•God be merciful to me, a sinner." sight.” “Lori,
that I may receive mv
“Lord, save me or I perish.” the The dedication longest
Draver, Solomon's prayer at
of the temple, less than eight minutes in oi
length, according to the ordinary rate
enunciation. And just hear them pray now
that the prodigals are coming hom<*. Just
see them shake hand*. No puttmg forth of
the four lips of the Ungers In a normal way,
but a hearty grasp, where the muscles of tha
heart seem to clinch the Angers ot one hand
around the other hand. And then see those
Cnrtstian faces, how ilium ned they are. And
see that old man get uo and witn the same
voice that he sang fifty years ago in the old
country meeting house say, “Now, Lord,
leftest Thou Thy servant depart in peace, for
mine eyes have seen Thy salvation.” There
vris a man of Keith w to was hurled Into
prison in time of persecution, and one day
negot off his shackles, and he came and
stood by the prison door, and when the
jailer was opening the door with one stroke
he struck down the man who had inoarcera
te pasl“ng along the streets of London, did he
wonierad where his family was. He
not dare to ask lest be excite suspicion, but
passing along a liule way from the prison ne
saw a Kaltn tankard, ft cup that belonged to
tae family from geueratlon to generation.
He saw it in a window. His dear, family, hoping and
that soma day he would get came
K“.S?Krfbr&!. hoping he woutd 0 tM’rn it, and ho
the window, see the
came along and saw if, and knocked -at
door, and went in. and the long absent fatn
hy were all together again. Oj. it you
would start for the kingdom of Got to-day,
I think some of you would fin l nearly ail
your friends and nearly all your families
around the holy tankard or tne holy co
memorates the Iovj of Jesus Christ our Lon!
Oh, it will be a great communion day whan
your wnole family sits around the sacred
tankard! One on oartb. one m heaven,
Once more I remark thnt when the prod
ig.tl gets back the inhabitants of heaven
keep lestlval. I am v.*ry certain ot it. It
you have never seen a te legraphic chart,you
nave no idea how many cities are
togetaer and how many lands. Nearly ail
the neighborhood* of tne earth seem ration
late •, and news flies Jrom city to city
and when a prodigal returns it is announced
betore the throne of Got.
And if these souls to-day should enter the
kingdom there would be some one In the
heavenly kingdom to say, “That’s my
father,” “That's my mother.” “fnat's my
son,” irlcnd.” “That’s my daughter,” used “That’s for,” my
“Thai’s the one I to pray
“That’s the one for whom I w pt so many
tears,” and onesoul would say, “Hosanna!”
and another soul would say, “Halleluiah 1”
Pleased with the news, the saints bslow
In songs their tongues emp'oy.
Beyond the skies the tiding* go,
And heaven is filled with joy.
Nor angels can their joy contain,
But kindle with new fire.
The sinner lost is found, they sing,
And strike the sounding lyre.
At the banquet of Lucullus sat Cicero, the
orator. At tbe Macedonian festival sat
Philip, the conqueror. At the Greoian ban¬
quet silt Socrates, the ali philosopher, bnt prodi¬ at
our Father’s table sit the returned
gal*, more than conquerors. The table Is so
wide Its leaves reaon across seas and across
land*. Its gnosis are tbe relearned of the
earth and the glorified of heaven. The ring
of Gol’s forgiveness Saviour’s righteousness on every hand, the
robe of a The adroop glows
from every shoulder. w>ne that
in the ettps is from the redeemed bowls of of 10,000 sacra
manta Let all the earth and
all the glorified of heaven arise, and with a
gleaming chalice drink to the return of a
tbonsmd prodigals. that Sing, sing, sing!
“Worthy is the L imb was slain to re¬
ceive blessing an t rlehes and honor and
glory and power, world withoat end!”
. Scoich Tenacity.
A curious instance of the tenacity
with which the sturdy Scotehmau
dings to a habit when once formed is
given in the Edinburgh Boots man:
Once, in tbe Foreign Office, a new
ohief was taking possession of his
rooms, and be came face to faee with
a soldier pacing the passage, Be
marvelled because the guard gave the
word, “Keep to the left.”
* “Why do you say, 'Keep to the
left!’”
“I don't know."
The statesman investigated the sin¬
gular aff*<r; and, after not a little
trouble, a o*ew wae found and fol¬
lowed. Fifty years before the pas¬
sage had been painted, and an orderly
had tramped it with orders to bid
everyone to “Keep to This the left” and
avoid the wet paint. order
stood unchanged and practically
questioned for a term of fifty yearn-.
—New York Dispatch.
they Woelten SUnd It.
In the days of tke Pint Empire ike
Paris students formed e eabal againet
night the disturbance was reported to
Nepoteon, Yfho gave orders for s tee
ond
“Play it again,” he said, “and I wffl
go end see it.” This time aU seemed
wefl. In. the third eot ft atroek Hie
z
~
York Dhpeteh.
ROYAL
Baking *
Powder
Absolutely pure. The
official re¬
port shows
* Royal Baking
Powder chemical¬
ly pure, yielding 160
cubic inches of leaven¬
ing gas per ounce of pow¬
der, which was greatly in
>>• excess of all others and more
than 40 per cent, above the average.
Hence Royal Bakin; Powder
makes the lightest, sweetest
and most wholesome food.
KOYAL iAKINO POWDER CO., 106 WALL 8T., NEW-YORK.
Mexico's Unlucky Day.
Tuesday is tbe unlnoky day in Mex¬
ico. If you were born on a Tuesday,
never admit it. You probably have
been a disaster all your life, but peo
p] e wd j firmly believe that you are an
j . J dog * and have the evil eye into
the bargain . if ,, they find . that , a , nf Tuesday
W as honored with your birth. I know
a man wtlo Parted on a Tuesday with
money to pay off the hands in a facto
ry near the city and went instead to
Acapulco, where he took tho Panama
t The board of directors of
*
the manufacturing . __ ._________ company passed a
resolution affirming their undyxng
f a j tb j n his honesty and attributed his
error to h,m 0 g .fried to the mill bn
Tuesday.— Bouton Herald.
Keep on Scratching.
Dig clear ___ in to the , , bone r ,„ and the
Tetter will only be the worse. There s
on | y one way treat an irritated,
germs that cause the trouble and heal
ft up aound and strong. Only one
thing ° in the world will do this—Tet
terms. . . T Its ,,„ 60 oents „ a u__ box. Td_„_ Drug
stores or postpaid by J. 1. ohuptnns,
Savannah, Ga.
Cracker Dessert.— Lay whole
crackers separately on a plate; soak
a little boiling water, o< ver with
«»«i i»r * “>*"
jelly on each,
Hypochoudrica!,
despondent, nerv-
1 ous, “ tired
out ” meu
j\\ j LKsuffer -those from who
fra E Oi /^y weariness, backache,
\ ^4 loss of
I Ij^ergy, im- en-
1 ■ paired mera
■ ory, dizzi
m I T v 11 o n j 1 y ana
m ■ diirAi.rorro
■ ■ mnirf meiu, lira me re- m
Suit cult nf OI ex
9 hausting dis
eases, or drams upon the system,
excesses, or abuses, bad habits, or
early vices, are treated through cor¬
respondence at their homes, with
uniform success, by the Specialists
of the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical
Institute, of Buffalo, N. Y. A book
of 1^6 large pages, devoted to tbe
consideration of the maladies above
hinted at, may be had, mailed, se¬
curely sealed from ofoervation, in a
plain envelope, by sending 10 cents
in one-cent stamps (for postage on
Book), to tbe World’s Dispensary
Medical Association, at the above
mentioned Hotel. For moie than
a quarter of a century, physicians
connected with this widely cele¬
brated Institution, have made the
treatment of the delicate diseases
above referred to, tlieir sole study
and practice. Thousands, have con¬
sulted them. This vast experience
has naturally resulted in improved
methods and means of cure.
Coughs and Colds
Sore Thros^ Bronchitis, Weak Longs, General Debility and
•B forme of Emanation ere speedily eared by
Scotty Emulsion
C o ns nm ptivee always find greet relief by taking it, and
ooomsmp&on is often cured. No other nourishment restore*
strength so qniddy and effectively.
Weak Babies and Thin Children
made strong nod robust by Soott's Emnleon when other
forme of food seen to do them no good whatever.
The only genuine Soott’s Emulsion is put up in salmon
Smdfsr y oos fU et sm FREE.
«.¥, Ait
■
The Mischievous Handglass.
The seemingly helpful handglass
done more h trm to beanty than
article belonging to the toilet table.
The yonng girl knows nothing
freckles until somebody makes her
present of a hand mirror. One blem¬
ish reveals another, ignorance
fies the defects, and then
begins. Quack medicines are
to and alleged remedies that are nasal¬
ly expensive and either worthless little or
dangerous, The vain
goes on studying her glass and losing
contentment Gray hairs and
oome loHfe before their time, her tem¬
per loses its sweetness, she gets round
shouldered from constantly serntin
izing herself, and at the very time
slfls should be sweet and amiable and
sereno she is a screwed A up.Fquinteyed,
sour old woman. toilet mirror
the very worst present that a plain
girl could receive.—CAf cago Times.
Cheap Horse Flesh. .
Two gentlemen were talking
Washington yesterday about the
ness of hone flesh, when an innooent
German, standing near, was asked
opinion as to tbe reason. Here is
reply: “I vill tfell you vy horses
cheap, if yon want to'know,” said
German, emphatically. ‘‘It’s sbackasses
dere is bo many infernal
Vashington .”—Biohmond Star.
WeU Secured.
“Don’t be hard on the boy, James,”
said the young profligate’s mother. “I
know he’s been wild, bnt he gives
promise now of doing better in the fu¬
ture. ”
“Yes,” groaned the father,’ “and
I’m paying 6 per oent on most of his
promises .”—Chicago Tribune.
Obanoe Pat.—The juice and part of
the rind ot one orange, two tablespoon
fuls cornstarch, one gelatine cnpfnl hot water
with one-fourth box dissolved
it. 1
H*lHS i»HM IiwlM 6 Mlli
a •• Car^ uJ Vrrrwiu Hte.um«tl»ii, laui*ttalloa, i
hmudwi, omvth Oleeiuw* ui w*>.
\ A Ureful ID Ekirltwl Vsvsra. in.
rrere «oi nomom t*. xppMiw. mnuu
V lh*Br»*Ui.Ovre.tte.Totea«eoa»»H. BadorMd
- ijj th. Mwlloai Vacuity. Send for if, UorH
PE UVER
PIIIS
-AND
e^ToNic Pellets.
TREATMENT
'
U U It astsisssiissrss BtAVm*. P*.
eral*. B. W. Q. Harrisburg,
Experiments in Georgia
,
•how that the best cotton fertilizer should contain not less than from
3 to 4/. Actual Potash.
Any failures to. this crop can be traced to a deficiency of Potttll
in the fertilizer# used. • >
We will gladly send you our pamphlets on the Use of Potasfc.
They are cent free. It vill cost you nothing to rend them, and they wfll •
dollar*. GERMAN JCaU WORKS,«
For
Breakfast
To-morrow
Buckwheat.
MAKES
Deliciou v
Wholescme cakes,
at a moment’s notice.
No Salt, Yeast ‘
or Baking Powder roqtdrod—
Nothing but Water.
Xlately Tte.M*«4 y. ONE DOLLAR
raw* ELECTRIC pm RUT a j*
Ur M a* Swi M*«f
Oil, He 1 ’ Al
o». iSSmsMi
EKSuiC
lw Da. u—SSS Py*” u 'L.trnr .» a
a. m
*» ..nr wu - .
IH Ul-Ml IMn.
O. M .1 trlrl.1. Tk.
m«tr ,->CTM*U) lu'l, 885-187 ly t« — w R, A
♦5. COR----- ■ v
a ♦
i?
ISM
*l»>
J *2.*L»Bw&awSM0Hl
nr* 1
SEND rote
bhocktoh,
Yea ean sav* DotglulSiOO money Mr w
W. L. r&it
Beeaaae. wo are th. world,and Urns* w
this gradeof shoes In the
.sloe by stamping the name eat
bottom, which protect you
the middlemen's profits. Our
wort: lu style, easy fltttug and wearing
We here them sold ererywhere sil o we e
tbe value given than any other make. Ts
sUWU. If your dealer esuBoteupplr you.
AGENTS WANTED
TO SELL THIS
Standard Dictionary
IN EVERY COUNTY IN TH* SOUTH.
Apply to N. D. MCDONALD.
P. O. Box 249 Atlanta Ga.
*
N. U
L
a
■fi
1 r
i
J r C.-r it: J« ** • t *-v ' - , . ■■
FACE TO FA
The
a
la
Rlpua. J
m