Newspaper Page Text
Tjrrir Rev.de. T^T% mivwi/Nn
a
THR NOTED DIVIMBTS SUNDAY
discourse.
Subject: “The Division ot Spoils.”
■'
t
T*rr: “He shall divide the spoil with the
strong.”—Isaiah ill., 12.
figure Ofa^f’ An^T h
the UDrlffht ni^*«
of suffering .SESeJS??h« than of S ^Tt LL?! U nt^Chrint
the S5w3EK.2%4 r .S&Kf .& L
might divide the palaces and mansions and
cities and valleys and mountains among his
officers, so Christ is Roing to divide up all
the earth and all the heavens among His
share people, and you and I will have to take our
if we are strong in faith and strong in
our ChrisHan lovalty, for my text declares
it. “He shall divide the spoil with tho
strong ”
•aisasJSfSttBBSB; ”“’. l i^ SSK;Ktt“i“ 1 TC
,
are l,6i)0,00),000 of people ’now in the world.
and 450,000,000 are Christians. Subtract
455,000,000 ^te^M^Tho’aTnHh^ who are Christians from the
tta^thiSffiSowho and will that shall are have Christfans* aver!
you And we to
age less than three souls each, brought by
us into the kingdom of God. to have the
whole world redeemed. Certainly with the
church rising up to its full duty, no Chris
will be filing to bring less than three
souls into the kingdom of God.
I hope and pray Almighty God that I may
bring more than three. I know evangelists
who have already brought 50,000 each for
the kingdom of God. There are 200.000 peo
pie whose one and only and absorbing busi
ness in the world is to save souls. Whan
you take these things into consideration,
and that the Christians will have to average
the the bringing kingdom of only three souls each into
ot our Lord, all impossibility
vanishes from this omnipotent ernsade.
Why, I know a Sabbath-school teacher who
for many years has been engaged in train
ing the young, and she has had five differ
ent classes, and they averaged seven to a
class, times and they were thlrtv-flve all converted, and live
calculate. seven are as near .03 I con
So that she brought her three
Into the kingdom of God and had thirty-two
to spare. My grandmother prayed her chil
dren Into the kingdom of Christ, and her
grandohildren, grandchildren, for and God I hope all her great
rememb3i-s a prayer
seventy-five years old as though It ware
only a minute old, and so she brought her
lelTpCe 0 rd -tho B tSraph: be th^ffie
world, within a few years, wiii brought
within compass of ten minutes. Besides
that, clence omnipotence, presiding bmnipresence and omnis- tho
are in this matter of
world’s betterment,"and takes the question
of the world's salvation out of tho impossi
bilitles Into the possibilities, and then out of
the possibilities Info the probabilities, and
then out of the probabilities into the certain
ties. The building of the Union Pacific
Bailroad from ocean to ocean was a greater
undertaking than the girdling of the earth
with the Gospel, for one enterprise depended
upon the hitman arm. while the other de
P D<?nds unoD Elmic’hHDPvi all'the
Do I really mean earth will sur
render to Christ? Yes. How about the tin
gelized? inviting portions? The possibility Will Greenland bo evan¬
is that after a few
more hundred brave lives are dashed out
among the Icebergs that great refrigerator,
til© Polar region, will bo given up to tho
walrus and bear, and that the inhabitants
will come down by olimates invitation into tolejabb and.
climates, or those raay sofien, that
as it has been positively demonstrated
the arctic region was once a blooming gar¬
den and a fruitful field, those regions may
change climate and again be a blooming
garden and a fruitful field. It is proved be¬
yond controversy, by German regions and American the
scientists, that the arctic were
first portions of this world inhabitable; the
world hot beyond human endurance, those
regions were, of course, the first to be oool
enough for human foot and human lung. It
was positively proved that the arotio region
was a tropical olimate. Professor Heer, of
Zurich, says the remains of flowers have been
found In the arctio region, showing is it was
like Mexico tor olimate, and it found that
the arctio was the mother region from whioh
all the flowers descended. Professor Wal¬
lace says the remains of all styles of animal
life are found in the arctio live regions, only including
those animals that oan in warm
climates. Now that arotio region, which has
been demonstrated by flora and fanna and
1 geological argument to hare been as fnll ot
vegetation and life original as our bloom Florida, and may glory, be
turned baok to its
or it will be shnt up as a museum while of crystals
for curiosity seekers onoe la a to vteit.
But arctio and Redeemer’s antarctic realm. in some shape will
belong to the
. What about other unproductive or repul¬
sive regions? All the deserts will be irriga¬
ted, the waters will be forced up to the great
American desert between hete and the Pacific
bv machinery now known or yet to be lo
’ vented, and as Great Sait Lake City has no
rain and could not raise an apple or a bushel
of wheat In a hundred years without artifi¬
cial help, bnt is now through such means one
great garden, so all the unproductive parts
of alt the continents will be tamed Into har¬
vest fields and orchards. A half dozen De
Lesseps will furnish the world with all the
canals needed and will change the ooorse of
rivers and open new lakes, and the great
Sahara desert will be cut up into farms with
' an astounding yield drained of bushels ot its to waters the acre. and
The marsh will be
cured of its malaria. I saw. what was for
many years called the Black Swamp ot Ohio, by
its chief crop chills and fevers, bnt now,
the tiles put into the ground to carry off the
surplus moisture, transformed into the richest
and healthiest or regions. The God woo
wattes nothing, I think, means that this
world, from pole to pole, has corns to perfec¬
tion of foliage and fruitage. For that reason
he keeps the earth running blazing through space, in
though so many fires are down its
timbers and so many meteoric terrors have
threatened to dash it topieoes. As soon as
the earth is completed phrtat will divide it
np among the good. The reason He does not
divide it now is because it is not done. A
•kind father will not divide the ripe. apple In among ful¬
m« children until Few the apple Testament to promise,
fillment ot the the
“The meek shall inherit the earth, “He and shall
promise of the Old Testament.
divide the spoil with the strong,” worthy the world
will be apportioned to those to pos
SQ83 He capable
It is not so now. In this country
of holding, feeding, clothing and sheltering
1 , 200 . 000,000 people, and where we have
00 000,000 Inhabitants, we have 2 , 000.000
, get honest work, and with their
who cannot 6,000,000
families an aggregation of that are
on the verge or starvation. Something
wrong, most oertainly. In some way there
will be a new apportionment. Many of the the
millionaire estates will crack to pieces on
dissipations of the grandchildren and then
dissolve into the possession of the masses
who now hare an insu.flciency. of the
► What, you say, will become expen¬
sive and elaborate buildings now devoted to
debasing Bwtnw mentB? They will become
-BSSfWlSB!SSSS5 '^rtSkjjnofrSl
ud no vrondsr. “whst'an
/?V»m theatrical stuff we have within the
last few yean hhd brought to our rimes*
Mm Sebtiri y, bo d y, gum mi nd sad
withdraw ywsr nmte 5F2. # wSSSlF
fat I a
nffiaimffln suds childothall?” Bwomtobe
sri^
forever. you do not kpow who the Lord is.
God wilt not wait for-the will day become of Judgment. palaces
Alt these palaces of sin
ot righteousness. They will come virtue into and the
possession of those strong tor
strong for God. “He shall divide the spoil
withtbe strong.” ^
China and Africa, the two richest portions
of the earth by reason of metals and
woods and inexhaustible productiveness,
not yet divided up among the good
Africa shall be entered, and Bishop
With his band of self supporting
aries. have done their work, hnd the
and Uenegambians Him, shall and know shall Christ be as
bais ** y° n know there on
of the Nile and the Niger a higher
ass.;> °ifo » »«- SLHnmt
S“*5 Hl ? Wends *}ll ^ ait uattl n n tw China, f* which is ha
‘
>w large as all lt Europe, shall have
her cap j^ 06 for I ^ ce aad f 11 * 1
a ® oa K <*llbles, and , her amethyst and ,
ph,r Porphyry ® and among topaz a precious ° ^ , opal stones, ^“fj Mp9 and I
rosewood and ebony and camphor and var*
pjnsstrss. "»rird.S„ a
evangelized. Then the LmI Lord wUl^vlde will divide it
up among the goodL
<*wUS t&n the
?' «»• aMtafK
Christian merchants, and all the
held by Christian officials, and all the
commanded by Chrlstiau under the captatns and ail
■universities instructlou of
Christian professors; Christian kinga, Chris
£ att presidents, Christian governors,
Han mayors, Christian common council. Yet.
^hatn scouring out. What on up.urmng
What a What a resureection
* not underrate the jenomy. Julius
Cwsar _ got his greatest victories by fully estl
mating the vasmess of his foes and prepared
?, la K ^k-t^Lhop^B^^sfin
,nn (inn ths*
elephants. I do not underrate vast
Johovahitreh. 7
who commands us? And a the
[ asarV0 00 ^ ps b j* in i,? 0 £ re a11 the of
derbolt. The good wo.k. ot the world s re¬
dem ption is going on every minute. Never
30
on many the good 0i A 0 people as now. Diogenes has
heen spoken of to a w^ man beeause he
'Jff A m??. £ £“‘1^ !“lAAfwf h ^ n “^“ ht^A’if y ’ 5^2*5*
r
A 1 ' lessons
Sunday-school Christendom the next going generation
^ ^^ M„Sl!°lS are tb to be
!T lse ? n JL 8 rnJ°**n
at do °° ft d - J be h b ^i°,A 5 U08 A, 0 ' w A b a nnn^ith m 1
-
everpolishedasvorteaspoon h whit mn more «
^
be tarnlah »t
tionment. bke hea T° for ;„ a my ^ tmet is re-enforced iA by por a :
ac “He ° re shaUdlflde 81 n* j fi’«Tnon the spoil with the strong.
® ut ’ 3 f° BR J' 1
? hav f . for ® att . \ 9 ”> a annehne^vUt^n^n^T ?5om th«? n«t i «h»u
aba ll get no advantngo from that new ap
pointniflDt. Ab f you navo only drivon ni8
consideration, consideration, and ana that mat is is tnat that SSSlTS? Christ uqnst is is go- go
ing to divide up heaven in the same way.
There are old estates In the celestial of world
that have been in tho possession the in¬
habitants for thousands of yearc, and they
shall remain as they are. There are bid
family mansions In heaven filled with whole
generations of kindred, and they shall never
03 driven out Many ot the vlcjors from
earth have already got their palaces, and
they ara pointed out to those newly will arrived.
Soon after our getting there we ask to
be shown tho Paul apostolic residences, and ask
where does live and John, and shown
the patriarchal residences, and shall say,
•‘Where does Abraham live or Jacob?” and
shown tho martyr residences and say,
“Where does John Hass live and Ridley?”
We will want to see the boulevards, where
the chariots of conquerors roll. I will want
to see the garden where the princes walk.
We will want to see Music row, where Han¬
del and Haydn and Mozart and Charles Wes¬
ley and Thomas Hastings and Bradbury
have their homes, out of their windows, ever
and anon, rolling transported some snatch with ol an the earthly
oratorio or hymn com¬
poser. We will want to see Revival ter
aoe, where Whltefleld and Nettleton and
Payson and Rowland Hill and Charles Fln
ney and otber giants of soul reaping are
resting from m their their almost almost supernatural supernatural la¬ la
bors, their doors thronged with themselves. converts
just wived, brilliant oomtng the to report and like
Bnt os sunset the
leavn for number are tho odeetlal homes
yet to be swarded when Christ to you and
millions ot others shall divide the spoil.
What do you want there? You shall have it
An orehmrd? There it is—twelve manner of
fruits, and fruit every month. Do you want
river scenery? the river, T»ke in longer, your ehojoe wider, on deeper the
banks of
roll if mingled thou Danube In or and Amazon emptying or Mississippi, into the
one, with Do sea
of glass, mingled fire. you want
your kindred back again? Go out and meet
your father and mother, without the staff or
the stoop, and your children Ins dance of im¬
mortal glee. Do you want a throne? Select
it from the million burnished elevations. Do
you want a crown? Pick it out of that
mountain of diamonded coronets. Do yoa
want your old church friends of earth
around you? Begin to hum an old revival
tune, and they will flock from all quarters to
revel with you is saored reminisoenoe. All
the earth for thoee who are here on earth at
the time of and oontiuental ail heavens and planetary for thoee dis¬
tribution the who
are there.
That heavenly distribution of spoils will
bo « aurpruM) to iiiaiiy. H«o enters heaven
the soul ol a man who took up a great deal
of room in the church os earth, but sacrificed
little, aad among Us good’,works’selfishness
was evident. He just crowds through the
shining gate, bnt it's i a very tight squeeze,
so that the doorkeeper has to pull hard to
get him in, and t«* man expects hail of
heaven for bis share of trophies, aad he
would like a monopoly in of all suburbs, its splendor
aad to purchase lots the •o i that
be could get advantage fittle of the growth of tho
city- Wril, just enough little by get him he gets through, grace and of
heart, to
to him is given •second-hand crown which
one of the saints wore st tbe start, but ex¬
changed for a brighter one ae he went on
from glory to glory. And be is put in an
old bouse Cnee occupied by an angel
was buried out of heaven at the time of
satan’s rebellion.
Bight after him comes a soul that makes a
great rush stir among the the celestial*, each bringing and the her an
gels to scene, to a
coronet. Who is she? -Over what
realm on earth was festival she queen? she In what
Dusseidorf was the eanta
Neither. She was invalid who
left her room for twenty years,but she
wee strong In praye r --na d Ae prayed down
revival after revival and penteooet after pen
upon the churches, aad with her pale
hand she knit many a mitten or tippet for
poor, and with her contrivances she add¬
ed joy to may a hands holiday festival, for and kindness now
with those thin 00 ttp# strong for
and with those white *0 Wrong se £
worn coronation
and jubilee. And Christ said to
the angels who have brought enehaetowh
forthegtorifled tnv*Hd: Tfe, not
not Bnt In the
jeweled vase at fee side of My
throne there 1 is oae nrcoar
for her r toT&
I and
a . Fetch
long ago in the sickroom, ‘Be thou faithful
unto death, and I will give thee a crown.’"
But notice that there is only will one distribute Bring
In the universe who can and
tbe trophies of earth and heaven. It is the
Divine Warrior, the Ooramandendn-Ohlef of
the Centuries, the Champion of Ages, the
Universal Conqueror, the Son of His God, Jesus.
You will take the spoils from friendship, hand or
sever take them at all. Have His
and you may defy all'time and all eternity,
but without it you are a pauper; though you
had a universe at your command. We are
told in Revelation that Jacob's twelve sons
were so honored as to have the twelve gates
ot heaven named after them—over one gate
of heaven Napbtali, over another gate of
heaven Issaohar, over another Zebnlon. Dan, over
another Gad, over another Christ's over
another Judah, and so on. But
name is written over all the gates and on
every panel of the gates, and have Hts help,
His pardon. His intercession, His atonement.
I must or be a forlorn wretch and forever. all who My
Lord and my God, make me,
bear me this day. and all to whom these
words shall come, Tby repentant, ransomed believing,
sworn, consecrated and followers
forever.
What a day wonld'rise it will Its be! This if entire
assemblage to feet you oould
realize It, the day In which Christ shall, In
fulfillment of my text, divide the spoil.
It was a great day when Queen Victoria, in
the midst of the Crimean War, distributed
medals to the soldiers who had eome home
siok and wounded. At the Horseguards. in
presence of the Boyal family, the Injt ured
men were carried in or came on erutoh es—
Colonel Trowbridge, who Sayer, lost who both had foot the at
Inkermann, of and Captain leg off Alma,
ankle joint his right shot at
and Captain Carre, his disabled limb sup¬
ported by a soldier, aud others maimed and
disfigured and exhausted—and with her own
hand me Queen gave each the Crimean
medal. And what triumphant days for
those soldiers when, farther on, they received
tbe French medal, with the imperial eagle,
and the Tnrklsh medal, with Its repre¬
sentation of four flags—Franoe, Turkey,
England and Sardinia—and beneath it
a map wheel. of tho And Crimea what spread rewards over a
gun are
suggested to all readers of history by
mere mention of the Waterloo medal, and
the Cape modal, and the Gold Cross medal,
and the medals struck for bravery in our
American ware! But how Insignificant all
these compared with the day when the good
soldiers of Jesus Christ shall eome In out of
the battles of this world, aud in the presence
of all the plied up galleries of the redeemed
and the unfallen. Jesus. ou»King, shall di¬
vide the spoil! The more wounds the greater
the inheritance. The longer the forced
march the brighter the trophy. glorious The more
terrible the exhaustion tbe more the
transport. Not the gift ot a brilliant ribbon,
or a medal 'dt brass, or silver or gold, forever but a
kingdom iiMvhlch we are to reign
and ever. Mansions on the eternal hills.
Dominions ot unfading power. Empires everlasting of
unending love. Continents ot
light. Atiaatio and Pacific Oceans of billow¬
ing joy.
It was a great day when Aurelian, the
Roman emperor, came baok from his vic¬
tories. Iu the front of the procession were
wild beasts from all lands, sixteen loads hundred
gladiators and richly dad, presented wagon by conquered of
crowns trophies the oapttves Syrians, Egyp¬
cities. Among
tians. Goths, Vandals. Samaritans, Franks,
and Zanobla, the beautiful captive queen, on
foot in ohains ot gold that a slave had to
help her carry and jewels under the weight,
of which she almost fainted. And then came
the chariot of Aurelian drawn by four ele
puants In gorgeous caparison, and followed
by the Roman senate and the Roman army,
and from passing. dawn Rome Jill day in the all procession her his¬
was
tory never saw anything muoh more greater mag¬ the
nificent. Jay But how
when our conqueror. Ja9us.
shall ride under tho triumphal arches of
heaven. His captives, not on foot, but in
chariots, all the kingdoms of earth and
heaven in procession. Tho armies celestial
on white horsey Rumbling artillery unUmbcred, of
thunderbolts never again to ps line, saintly,
Kingdoms in line, eenturios in
cherubic, seraphic, Cbrl^seated arohangello splendors great rolling In
line, and on one all
hosanna, shalTcry madw out of all halleluiahs of
worlds, halV'to the prooesston. Aud
not forgetting even the humblest in all the
reach of His omnipresence. He shall rise,
and then and there, His work done and Hts
glory consummated, proceed, amid an eostasy
such as neither mortal nor immortal ever im¬
agined, to divide tho spoil.
AN AVERAGE HEALTHY YEAR.
Special Diseases Which Afflicted Certain
Sections of the Land.
In answer to the general bss been question healthful whether
or not the past year a one
for human bring*, the estimate from about
72 per oent ot the counties of the United
Stain reporting the to people’s the Department health is of equal Agri¬
culture is that to
an average, while 28 par cent, put it below
the average.
Six hundred and fifty-tour counties
throughout the country make mention ot
special diseases, the leading complaints be¬
ing grip from 100 counties, or 4? per cent of
the whole: pneumonia from 228, or 85 per
cent.; typhoid fever from 212, or 82 per
oent.; measles from 188, or 21 per cent.; ma¬
larial fever from 90, or 14 percent.; diph¬
theria from 78, or 12 per cent.; lung troubles
from 80, or B per cent., and scarlet fever
from Typhoid 58, or fever 9 per cent. to have been
prevalent seems Ohio, where its espe¬
cially in ravages
are explained by contamination of the water
supply, resulting from the long-continued
drought. Measles were epidemic chiefly ia
Georgia and tho Carolinae, and malarial
fever in the Gulf and and Lower lung troubles Mississippi
States. Pneumonia ap¬
pear from the reports to have been propor¬
tionately more prevalent in tbe Middle Mis¬
sissippi Talley—Kentucky. Matas—than Illinois, Missouri
and neighboring in the region
north of it. _
BERLIN’S EXHIBITION OPENED.
Tbe Emperor sf Germany ffu F r e a e n t at
the Sterling.
The Berlin Industrial Exhibition was
opened by the Emperor of Genm&uyt Elthouzh by
the preparations complete. for Its The opening weather were was
no means The
bright and the crowds large. Em¬
peror and Empress same Alexandra. to the grounds
on the Imperial yacht The
Kaiser appeared to be in one ot his moot
serious expected moods. to do, He and made merely no speech, said as he “Yes” was
in reply to the formal question whether Ms
Majesty would permit the opening ot the ex¬
hibition. Freiherr von Boric paen, Prussian
Minister oi Commerce, then declared the
exhibition opened. A number of members
of tho Imperial household accompanied tbe
Emperor and Empress. Prince Ferdinand
of Bulgaria, who is in BerUc, paid a visit to
the exhibttloa building.
ECLIPSE OF THE SUN.
The Great Aatranomical Eveot el the Year
IMS.
The great event of the year 1856 la the total
eclipse of the *us, visible only tn the extreme
portion of ‘ Japan ■ , A-moor River, Siberia,
Nova Zeutbia ZembUaad aad i the northern part of Nor
WftV 1 within VV a »*■ the Arctic — Circle. It t is Is 1 estimat
*4 tbst th«re will Europe be many England, expeditions Germany from
various haaea. points ia On June 27 party ot X
a
3S3SSU______ Wffl leave Philadelphia to of riew^he
on the morning August
8th. the Uwfli midnight also be peeeflde which to ta gets glimpse at the
o< sun, seen
North Cape at the horizon Thus, at midnight, few da as
latent August let within a
to eee the full sun at
The expedition will and be accompanied of
JtronomcrB students
A M0T0RMAFS LITE.
rrn OF HABDlHin, IIPOSCM axd
CONSTANT DANGER.
The Great Strain on n Man's Nerves Safi,
dent tn Itself to Wreck Him in a
Short Time—The Experience
of • Well-Known Motormnn.
From the Cincinnati, Ohio, 1Vnt/uirer.
The life of a motormnn is not a bed of
roses. He is subjected to many hardships, es¬
pecially in the winter, when ha is exposed to
the cold and snow. Even in the summer
he must bear the intense heat which
beats down upon him. Considerable nerve
and self possession are necessary In a
good motorman, for the lives and
limbs of his passengers are at stake
One of the b#st known electric motormen In
this city is William Frazer, who is at present
running a ear on the Cumminsvtlle electric
Hne. He is not only well known to his fel¬
low employes bnt to the people who travel
on his car. Mr. Frazer ia a young man about
twonty-six years of age and resides with his
wife and child at 144 Betts Street, Cincinnati,
O. About a year ago Mr. Frazer was taken
with serious stomach troubles. He bought
several kinds of medicine which were rec¬
ommended to him, but none ot them seemed
to give him even temporary benefit An en¬
thusiastic admirer of that famous for remedy
known as Dr. Williams’ Pink Pill Pa'e
People told him to try them. Frazer was
almost discouraged, but took the advice. To
a reporter “I of the Enquirer recommend he said: Dr. Will¬
oan most heartily all that Is
iams’ Pink Pills. They fact are they advertise
claimed for them; in medloine
themselves better than any I ever
saw. I was seized some time ago with a bad
attack of indigestion. My stomach hurt me
nearly all the time and I could not digest my
food. The pain was almost unbearable and
I found nothing that would give me relief. I
confess tbnt when I bought the first box ot
Pink Pills I hadn’t much confidence in their
efficacy because I had tried so many things
without success that I was almost dlsoour
aged. Before I had taken one box I was de¬
cidedly better. Two boxes cured mo entire¬
ly. While I have been under the weather
from other oanses my indigestion has never
returned. If it ever shouldj know Just what
to do. I have so much confidence in the oT
floaoy of Pink with Pilis that disoj-der it I I shall ever get
sick again any use
of thmn. It Is a pleasure for me I
you to testify Pills. to the excellent only qualities of
these Pink They not tone
stomach but regulate the bowels and
as a mild cathartic.”
Mr. Frazer’s testimonial means something.
He speaks doubts from personal received experience the and benefits
one who that ha
stated can easily verify the assertion by
ing on Mr. Frazer or seeing him some
while he Is on hla car.
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills oontaln all the
elements necessary to give new life and
ness to the blood and restore shattered
loose nerves. They are gold In boxes hundred) (never
form, by the dozen or at 50
centB a box, or six boxes for 92.50, and
be had of all druggists or directly by mall
from Dr. Williams' Medicine Company,
Schenectady, N. Y.
Who Did!.
“Birdie,” said Mrs. McGinnis to
danghter, “what were yon sitting
reading last night? Was 'it a
Tell your mother.”
“Yes, ma; it was a novel.”
“And who writ it?”
“Dumas, the elder.”
“Now, don’t tell me that.
ever heard of an elder writin ’m
you’d sit up half the night to read?”—
Texas Siftings.
At the Dentlst’u.
Tramp (at dentist’s door)—Plesse, this
sir, oould yer fill me teeth morn¬
ing? gold?
Dentist—With silver or
Tramp—Cold Toast turkey will do.
—Up-to-Date.
There ere people uslair Dobbin.' Electric Soap
to-d«y who commenced Its nee in IMS. Would
thl* be the cue were It not the pureet end motl
economical eoop made. A*k your grocer tor It.
took out for imitation*. Dobbins'.
Italy ta the home of the pawn-hops, einee
ta claimed Savonarola eetabliehea the flret
one.
The Mere Oae I7.ee Parker's Ginger Teale
the more its virtue, are revealed in dUpeliintr
colds. Indigestion, p.ln aud every weak new.
WOMAN TO. WOMAN.
Women are being taught by bitter
experience that many physicians can¬
not successfully handle their pecu¬
liar aUmente known as female diseases.
Doctors are willing and anxious to
help them, but they are the wrong sex
to work understanding^.
When the woman of to-day ex
m periences such symp
toms as backache,
nervousness, lassi
* tude,
whites,
irre ff n '
-‘[f lar or
pain
ful
( struation,
pnina in
groins,
bearing-down
feeling sensation, palpitation, “all
gone” and blues, she at once
take* Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable
Compound, feeling sure of obtaining
immediate relief.
Should her symptoms be new to her,
she writes to a woman, Mrs. Pinkham,
Lynn, Maas., who promptly explains
her case, and tells her free how to get
welL
Indeed, so many women are now
appealing to Mrs. Pinkham for advice,
that a score of lady secretaries are kept
eonatantly at work answering the great
volume ot correspondence which comes
in every day. Bach letter fa answered
carefully aad accurately, as Mrs. Pink¬
ham fully realizes that a life nay de¬
pend upon her reply, and into many
an d many a home has shed the
rays of happiness.
A e
Tbe Firs* Steel Pen.
working Sixty jeers sgo John Gillott was Eng¬ a
jeweler in Birmingham, split
land.' One day he accidently one
of his fine steel tools, end being sud¬
denly notrfinding required to handy, sign e receipt, used end the
e pen he
split tool as a substitute. This happy
accident led to the idee of making pens
of metal.
An Offer.
Old Bachelor—Now that your sister
has married it is your turn.
Toung Lady—Is that meant as an
offer?— Lustige Blaetter.
Rxeurtloa to Richmond. Ta.
Tbe Southern Railway will sell excursion
tickets to Richmond, Va., at Veteran ottl cent Reunion per
mile account of Confederate Ry. is the
June 30 to July 2. The Southern
8hort W. Line to Richmond. Dist. Pant. For Agt. particulars So. Ry.,
write H. Tayloe,
Atlanta, Ga. .
sc
Gladness Comes
IX/ith VV a*better understanding of the
transient nature of before the many phys¬ ef¬
ical ills which vanish proper efforts—
forts—gentle efforts—pleasant There is comfort in
rightly directed.
the knowledge that so many forms of
sickness arc not due to any actual dis¬
ease, hut simply to a constipated condi¬
tion of the system, which of Figs, the pleasant
family ly. laxative, That Syrup Is why it is the prompt¬ only
removes. 6
remedy with millions of families, and
who everywhere value good esteemed health. bo highly Its beneficial by all
effects are auo to tho fact, that it is the
ono remedy which promotes internal
cleanliness, without debilitating therefore tho
organs on which it acts. It is
all important, in order to get its bene¬
ficial effects, to noto when you pur¬
chase, that manufactured you have the genuine article,
which is by tho California
Fig Syrup Co. only, aud sold by all rep¬
utable druggists. *
If in the enjoyment of good health,
and the system is regular, then laxa¬
tives or other remedies are not needed.
If afflicted with any actual disease, skillful one
may be commended to tho most
physicians, but if in need of a and laxative, with
then one should have the best,
the well-informed everywhere, Syrup of
Figs stands highest general and ia most satisfaction. largely
used and gives most
All over
Mm the house
you need Pearline,
> id more than ever in
I L/*V jf? use—soaps things house-cleaning. an<( over fluids that and the you and powder* list might what Just ot
not. Some 6 f them >n’ *v pretend to help you as ■■, much
as Pearline; sortie v ini C re paint, or surfaces, or fi fabricaj
some But are with only Pearline, meant to wash will or clean time certain and labor things. clean
you save in
ing anything that pure water won’t hurt Not only can m it
do no harm, but it saves useless and harmful rubbing.
C UBAN'o IL
lerve
ires
dealer.. Price, 25and » cents. Get Manufac¬ Cuban
Relief for tbsMewjpenoer sumuur complaint. Medloine
tured only by Twin.
Co., Ch.ttawoooa.
$ 25.00
STOVE
iJh FOR
* 12 . 00 .
i»sssns*^s order*. Refer to any hank or merchant
in Augusta. Addfese
n.. zr. inans dyett, *a (U
Oie Diwcd fitroot
inti iituuk tiuvvu iewHwvAMt
■
& ADHy5UM.jp
• an war**
11 MSiSjsd
r«*<w»iwr v* gw
mmm
1 t ■wsis. 1 T »iraiiT. au-msix
WVEHAV a
•rM
too
#•
a . Iftte
IF. ft ta*.
EVERY MAN HIS OWN DOOTO
ftr J. Hamilton avers, «. d. jn
4
A 600-page Illustrated Book, containing valuable inforai
diseases ot the human system, showing how to aa “
of medicine*. The book contains analysis of courtship and
mj management oi children# beside# Talnable p
with a full complement of facta in matcrin mediea t
This most indispensable adjunct to every w«Jl-re
mailed, postpaid, to any address on receipt of pr fee,
ATLANTA PUBLISHIj
116
iff- v-f
.
History Ready R (Si&i
for
and Topical Reading.
By J- N; LARNED, Ex-Prt,. Am. Z-itnuy
sw*,s sr. drgfcs gyg'fii
i. ^
A T Un.bki po&HoMUr '■*«—A
X have found this work very Useful aud air
^ ta JlTCS % Attorney General vain, .,
I believe it will prove one of the most
able reference books in existence. Historian.
DB. Jobs Fisk*, r?A$S£.
%. suits.
helper. Rev. Moses D. Hoar., D.D., L LJ>.
Sold only by tubacr lptlon. Send for Clrcrta*.
CHA8.L. VAN NOPPEN.Oenerel Agent,
128 Corcoran Building, Washington, D.C.
i
’A
t
»
“Some time ago," said Clifton Ants- h "
Ey.), County /"• *
parger (ot Paris, '
Attorney ot Bourbon Co., Ky„ “I . ;
saw the advertisements of Ripens , . '
Tabules in the Louisville Courier
Journal, and believing it was the
remedy I needed, I determined to j
get some of the Tabnles. There wag
no name attached to the advertise¬
ment, so I wrote to the publishers of -
the Courier-Journal and Fas
referred to the Rlpano Chemical Co., !
10 Spruoe st., New York, from whom
I obtained a box for 50 cents. I had
been greatly troubled wltb slok
headache, but since I secured Ulpaua
Tabules, whenever I begin to feel
symptoms of slek headache or sour
stomach, I take one or two Tabnles ,
'
and escape all the terrors of a • ',
splitting hood ache. Ono taken after
aldod digestion and ’
eating has my
mado me feel like a different person,
I find I now oan get the Tabules
from a local druggist. (Signed).
Currox AnsspABOZB, SeptomSor
13tb, 1895.”
matTif It i pans Tabnles are sold by druggists, nr The by
the price (50 cents abnx) 1* *pnt to
Klpans V^rk. Chemical Company. ’•muI. 1^ No. nt lOfspewcsSt,;
r ,
Cotton.
With careful rotation
crops and liberal fertilizations, The
cotton lands will improve.
application of a proper ferti*
lizer containing sufficient Pot
ash often makes the differeiiCf
between failure. a profitable fertilizers crop contaii an
Use
ing not less than 3 to 4%
Actual Potashi
♦
Kainit is a complete
against “Rust/*
Oar ra i pW et . ue not advarWag cktalin
£g tbe molu of tataM*Xnwrimeata ta ttaa n
<y*.**rr ****"•««»?• «fmt
--- > ' A -
53!
si
A. N. 0.