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THE BaXNER-YVATCHMA^, ATHENS dX^ ArdUST 28, 1888,
Lactated Food
Endorsed by 10,000 Physicians
Af. a perfect feed for Invalids, In dyspepnla,fevers, sick headache.
#nd for ,ntan “
T5ie Favorite Food in Hospitals
New York Infant Asylum*
Mt. Vf.rnon, N. T.
WO are rain- your Lmctatcd Food In our in-
mnt biyium whenever we require the use of artl-
ficia* foul, and find it superior to any which wo
t -wc ever racd. Being pleasant to the taste, it
l. apcdAlly adapted to children. We hare in
car branch institution over 250 children.’*
Mrs. L. If. Bates,
- Chairman of ML Vernon Branch.
Tho Most Palatable, Nutritious, and Digestible Food
Tut Hot »xn host Ecoxoki<mi. Food. I mr A vuluiblc pamphlet on “Th* Nutrition ot
S30 Meals for an Infant for SI.OO. I mnuiQ *nd Invxlkta,’’ tret on ippiintlon.
Ei ilypromred. At Dmg g liu-2i« 3 .,Mcu.,«l. | WEUS, RICH AROSOIIA CO., BQRLIIBTOI.VT.
TALMAGE IN CANADA.
6reat results may depend on
SMALL EVENTS.
I | aloas with joyful emotion, responds:
I woold hare perished but for the living '‘Yes, father; we held the roue. 1 feel |
1 stairs of peasants' shoulders. , my work is done. Now, Lord, le;ti*st
An English ship stopped at Pitcairn thou thy servant depart in peace, for
j Island, and right in the midst of sur- mine eyes have seen thy salvation.” |
rounding cannibalism and squalor, the ' “Pshaw!" says the futher, “I never felt ;
Hahnemann Hospital.
New York City,
“ Wo have Icon using Lactated Fool for sever-
1 mouth*- post In casts of dyspepsia, afUropcra-
loot, ani children, and in all coses it has
n>vercd admirably. We would gladly recom-
h nd it ns a food cosily digested. nutrition.’, and
iot uhagreeable U. the patient.”
Y. S. Fulton, M. I)., House Surgeon.
BIG MONEY ! &°^ c TO)» T Y^Te?a cE ‘ 0 * ,,w ' y ^ Mn -
CLEVELANDandTHDRMAN
!■' »*««• " • t. Heasel ; also. Life of Mra. Cleveland ; exquisite steel portraits. Voters’ Cart
rida* Box. Reform Trade Policy, Ac., complete. Agents report immense success. Forbest
W. >i k. apply quick arts niakc f2U0to $500 a month. Outfit S5c. HUBKARD BROS.,
Jl.'Lt Philadelphia, Pa.
passengers discovered a Christian' colony
*h«r» Are Mo Insignificance• In Our Lives, of churches and schools and beautiful
The Casual, the Accidcnta . Are |*»rts * hoT1UM and W K l,e * **yle of religion and
of - r«.. t ■>, _ , _ civilization. For fifty years no mls&ion-
" • Great Plan—The Oninlpr. sc nee of _ , _ . ^ f i . .,
. M .. , arv and no Christian influence had landed
. Mother*. I n.ven. j there. Why this oaoia of light amid a
Grimsby, Can., Aug. 20. —The Rev. ! desert °( heathendom? Sixty years be-
T. De Witt Talmage. D.D., of Brooklyn! foro a ®I“P bad wet disaster, and one of
pnacbed on tho camp ground at this t,ie wnubl© to save anything else,
J^laoe today. All Canada is represented w * *— w *~ 1p ‘ D:u, ‘
m the immense throngs assembled. Dr.
Talmage has preached at Grimsby many
summers. This closes his summer ab-
sence. lie has preached, lectured and
visited in thirteen states of the Union
went to his trunk and took out a Biblo
which his motlier had placed there, and
swain ashore, the Biblo held in hU teeth.
The book was read on all sides until the
rough anu vicious population were
evangelized, and a church was
The Mexican Land and Development Company,
Capitol Stock $1,000,000. Shares $5.00 Each.
Fall Paid and Non-Assessable.
FORTY THOUSAND SHARES
vwili i Iiuthi = of Five ACRES of 'and to each share are offered to imm.
: sui'si rilnTs at par of five dollars per share, for the benefit of the
this summer. Ilia audiences numbering i 8 tarted, anil an enlightened common-
ten and fifteen thousand people. The I we ‘ lltl1 established, and the world’s his-
•ubject of his sermon here to dav was i tory lias hJ> more hrilliant page than that
“Great Results May Depend on Small which te!Is of the transformation of a
Events.” Dr. Talmage tool; for his text: I nation by one book. It did not seem of
“Through a window, in a basket, was I i “ucli importance whether the sailor
letdown by the wall.” II Cor. it, 33. continued tc. hold the book in Ids teeth
Ho said; I or let it fall in the breakers, but upon
Damascus is a city of white and glisten- I w j“» t small circumstance, depended
lng architecture sometimes called “the . w hr»t mighty reralto!
eye of the east,” sometimes called “a 1 Practical inference; There are no in
pearl surrounded by emeralds.” at one significances In oar lives. The minutest
time distinguished for swords of the I thing is part of a magnitude. Infinity
best material called Damascus blades, j la rend* up of Infinitesimals, Great
and upholstery of richest fabric called ; things an aggregation of small things,
damasks. A horseman by the name of i Bethlehem manger polling an a star in
Paul, riding toward this city, had been i the eastern sky. One book in a drenched
thrown from the saddle. The horse liad I sailor’s mopth the evangelisation of a
dropped under a (lash from the sky, 1 multitude. One boat of papyrus on the
which at the same time was so bright it | Nile freighted with events for all ages,
blinded the rider for manv days, and 1 j The fate of Christendom in a basket let
think so permanently ■ injured his eye- j down from a window on tliewaU. What
sight that this defect of vision became ' you do, do well. If you make a rope
the thorn in the flesh he afterwards ' make it strong and true, for you know
speaks of. He started from Damascus not how much may depend on your
to butcher Christians, but after that hard workmanship. If you fashion a boat
i vi's rich agricultural, grazing and mineral lands, immense forests of valuable
t unities for vast miMirenterprises intlie dfvHi pn.eiit ai d st ill, u nit «.f a ter
rjrem-H the stale of Pennsylvania, w’th a rood population, a healthy moderate
■ rain fall. The land offered with tie stock anti for which negotiable certificates
1 prove a choice investment of itself while each share participates In the whole
1 ouvhe lowes*. price ot Government land In the United states the shares will
f times greater than the price at which these forty thousand are offered to
ha Ian, e in •••|iial payments at Thirty, sixty and Ninety days. Remit by Draft, Check, Kx-
i.i'w «.r Kcuisieretl Letter, direct or through any banker o: broker. Prospectus and full infor
mation ou application-
F. K MORELAND, Financial Agent,
No. B7 Broadway, New York.
fall from his horse he was a clianged
| man and preached Christ in Damascus 1
' till tlie city was shaken to its foundation.
The mayor gives authority for his ar
rest, and the popular cry is “Kill him!
Kill him!” The city is surrounded bv a
high wall, and the gates are watched by
the police lest the Ciiician preacher
escape. Many of the houses are built on
the wall, and their balconies projected
dear over and hovered above the gardens
outside. It was customary to lower
baskets out of these balconies and pull up
fruits and flowers from the gardens. To
this day visitors at the monastery of
Mount Sinai are lifted and let down in
baskets. Detectives prowled around from
house fo house looking for Paul, but liis
friends hid him now in one place, now in
another. He is no coward, as fifty inci-
centa in his life demonstrate. But he the illustrious preacher as fie steppe 1
feels his work is not done yet, and so he
evades assassination. “Is that preacher
here?" the foaming mob shout at one
house door. “Is that fanatic here?" the
>olice sliout at another house door.
Sometimes on the street incognito he
through a cloud of clenched fists,
and sometimes he secretes himself on the
housetop. At last the infuriate popu
lace get on sure track of him. They
have positive evidence tliat ho is in the
house of one of the Christians, the bal- 1 mob at the door luul led them to say:
cony of whose home reaches over the | "Paul must take care of himself, and we
walk "Hero he is! H«*rc he is I" The will take care of ourselves." No, no!
vociferation and blasphemy and howl- 1 They held the rope, and in doing so did
ing of the pursuers are at the front more for the Christian church than any
THE A DMIRERS
Of the Product of I W *' A it PER, Distiller, Nelson County, h
v\ links is m.t sold promiscuously over the country, but Is placed —. ,
Lit* in t*ach place, whose uarne Is a guarantee tliat the Whisky is pure as it conies from the
Distillery. * JnneThSn
LOWE &. CO, SOLE AGENTS, GREENSBORO. GA.
door. They break in. “Fetch out
that Gospelizer, and let us hang his head
on the city gate. Where is he?" The
emergency was terrible. Providentially
there was a good stout basket in the
bouse. Paul's friend# fasten a rope to
tlie basket. Paul steps into it. The
basket is lifted to the edge of the balcony
on the wail, and then while Paul holds
on to the rope with both hands his
friends lower away, carefully and cau
tiously, slowly but surely, further down
and further down, until the basket
strikes the earth and the apostle steps
EVERETT G. ATKINSON,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
--WHISKY DEALER—
Madison, Ga.
Keeps on hand nothing but the best brands. All orders promptly filled and
satisfaction guaranteed.
All noted brands of BOTTLE BEER made a specialty.
fjF Also agtut for the celebiated I.W. HARPER whisky.
E. G. ATKINSON,
june30-d6m MADISON, GA.
The whisky manufactured at tho EAGLE PASS! DISTILLERY* l
claim to be superior to any that I have ever handled in this country and
those who have used itw'ill admit the same. This whisky, together with
all the sttandard Whiskies and Fine Wines, and LAST but not LEAST
three of the leading brands of BEER» can be found at my saloon in MADI”
SON COUNTY, where I will take pleasure in promptly filling orders.
Address, J. A. FOWLER,
15dtjl Athens Ga.
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ORR& HUNTER.
let it bo waterproof, for you know not
who may sail in it. If you put a Bible in
the trunk of your boy as he goes from
home, let it be heard in your prayers, for
it may have a mission as far reaching as
the book which the sailor carried in his
teeth to the Pitcairn beach. The plain
est man's life is an island between two
eternities—eternity past rippling against
his shoulders, eternity to come toucliing
his brow. The casual, the accidental,
that which merely happens so. are parts
of a great plan, and the rope that lets
the fugitive apostle from the Damascus
wall is the cable that holds to its mooring
the ship of the church in the northeast
storm of the centuries.
Again, notice unrecognized and unre
corded services. Who spun the rope?
Who tied it to the basket? Who steadied
so much like living in my life as now. I
want to see what that fellow is going on
to do, he has begun no well."
Something occurs to me quite personal.
I was the youngest of a large family of
children. My parents were neither rich
nor poor; four of the sons wanted col
legiate education, and four obtained it,
but not without great borne struggle.
We never heard the old people say once
that they were denying themselves to
effect this, but 1 re.«»*iiiber now that my
pareDts always 1 Hiked tired. I don’t
keep him safely, I advised him to flee
for his life, and a basket was let down
over the wall with the maltreated man in
it, and I was one who helped hold the
rope " And I said: “Is that a!i?" and
he answered, “Tlmt is all." And while
I was la>t in amazement, I heard a
strong voice that sounded as though it
might onrt Jiave l>een hoarse from
uianv exposures ami triumphant
as though it might have be
longed to one of the martyrs, and it
Kiid: “Not many mighty, not many no-
blo are called, but God hath chosen tho
weak things of the world to confound
the things which are mighty, and base
things of the world and things which are
d^pised hath God chosen, yea, and
think that they over got rested until they things which arc not tfl bring to naught
lay down in the Summerville cenn t<jry. things which are, that no tie. h should
Mother would t.it down m the
tcry.
rung,
and say: “Well, I don’t known what
makes me foil so tired!" Father would
fall immediately to sleep, seated
by the evening stand, overcome with
the days’s fa’ ’ ties. One of the four
brothers, after preaching the Gospel for
about fifty years, entered upon his
heavenly lest. Another of tho four is
now on the other side the earth, a mis
sionary of tho cross. Two of us are in
this land in the holy ministry, and I
think all of us are willing to acknowl
edge our obligation to the old folks at
horns. About twenty-two years ago the
one, and about twenty-four years ago
the other, put down the burdens of this
life, but they stiff hold the rope.
O men and women here assembled,
you brag sometimes how you have fought
your way in the world, but I think there
have been helpful influences that you
have never fully acknowledged. lias
there not been some influence in your
early or present homo tliat the world
cannot see? Does there not reach to you
from among the Canadian hills, or west
ern* prairie, or from southern plantation,
or from English or Scottish or Irish home
a cord of influence that has kept you
right when you would have gono astray,
and which, after you had made a
crooked’ track, recalled you? The rope
may be as long as thirty years, or
five bundled miles long, or three
thousand miles long, but hands tliat
went out of mortal sight long ago still
hold the rope. You want a very swift
horse, and you need to rowel him with
slmr|>e8t spurs, and to let tho reins lie
loose upon the nec'k, and to give a sliout
to a racer, if you ore going to ride out of
reach of your mother’s prayers. Why,
a ship crossing the Atlantic in seven
days can’t sail away from that! A sailor
finds them on the lookout as I10 takes his
place, and finds them ou the nuist os he
climbs tho ratlines to disentangle a rope
in the tempest, and finds them swing
ing ou the hammock when he turns in.
Why not be frank and acknowledge it—
the most of us would long ago have been
dashed to pieces bad not gracious and
loving hands steadily and lovingly and
mightily held the rope.
But there must como a time when we
shall find out who these Damascene were
What if tlie sound of a i ^ho lowered Paul in the bosket, and
it? Who relaxed not a muscle of the
arm or dismissed an anxious look from
his face until the basket touched the
ground and discharged its magnificent
cargo? Not .one of their names has
come to us, but there was no work
done that day in Damascus or in
all the earth compared with the im
portance of their work. What if
they had in tlie agitation tied a knot
that coold slip?
glory in his presence." And I lookcxl
to see from whence the voice came, and
lo! it was the very one who had said:
“Through a window, in a basket, was I
let down by the waff. "
Henceforth think of nothing as insig
nificant. A little thing may decide your
all. A Cunarder put out from England
for New York. It was well equipped,
but in putting up a stove in the pilot
box a nail was driven too near the com
pass. You know how tliat nail would
affect the compass. The ship’s officer,
deceived by that distracted compass, put
tlie ship two hundred miles off her right
course, and suddenly the man on tlie
lookout cried, “Land ho!" and the ship
was halted within a few yards of her
demolition on Nantucket shoals. A six
penny nail came near wrecking a Cu
narder. Small ropes hold mighty des
tinies.
A minister seated in Boston a* hi3 table,
lacking a word puts his liand behind his
head ami tills back hia chair to think, and
tho ceiling falls and crushes the table and
would have crushed him. A minister in
Jamaica at night by tlie light of an in
sect, called tho candlo fly, is kept from
stepping over a precipice a hundred feet.
F. W. Robertson, the celebrated English
clergyman, 6aid that ho entered tlie
ministry from a train ot circum
stances start'd by tho barking of
a dog. Had the wind blown one way
on a certain day the Spanish Inquisi
tion would have beer, established in Eng
land; but it blew the other way, and
tliat dropped the accursed institution
with 75,C00 tens of shipping to tho bot
tom of the sea or flung the splintered
logs on tlie rocks.
Nothin*, unimportant in your life or
mine. Three noughts placed on the right
side of tho figure one makes a thous<md.
and six noughts on the right side of the
figure one a million, ami our nothingness
placed on the right si lo may bo augmen
tation illimitable. All tire ages of time
and eternity affected by the basket let
down from a Damascus balcony.
thousand of us will ever accomplish.
But God knows and has made eternal
record of their undertaking. And they
know. How exultant tliey must have
felt when tliey read his letters to the
Romans, to the Corinthians, to tlie Gala
tians. to the Ephesians, to the Philippi-
ana. to the Coloesians, to the Thessaloni-
ans, to Timothy, to Titus, to Philemon,
to tlie Hebrews, and when they lieanl
how lie walked out of prison with the
earthquake unlocking tlie door for
him; and took command of the Alexan
drian corn ship when the sailors were
out, and afoot and alone sfcirts ou that 1 nearly scared to death, aud preached a
famous missionary tour, the story of sermon'tliat nearly shook Felix off his
which has astonished earth and heaven. ! judgment seat. I hear the men and wo-
Appropriate entry in Paul’s diary of •
travels: “Through a window, in a bas
ket, was I let down by the wall.’*
Observe, first, on wliat a slender tenure
great results hang. The rope maker who
twisted tliat cord fastened to that lower
ing basket never knew how' much w'ould
depend on the strength of it. How if it
had been broken and the apostle’s life had
been dashed out? What would have be
come of the Christian church? All that
magnificent missionary work in Pam-
phiffa, Cappadocia, Gslata, Macedonia
would never have been accomplished.
All his writings that make up so indis-
lensable and enchanting a part of the
S*ew Testament would never have been
written. Tho story of rcs'irrection would
never have been so gloriously told as he
told it. That example of heroic
and triumphant endurance at Philippi,
in the Mediterranean euroclvdon, under
flagellation and at his beheading would
not have kindled the courage of ten
thousand martyrdoms. But that rope
holding that liasket. how much depended
on it! So again and again great results*
have hung on what seemed slender cir
cumstances.
Did ever ship of many thousand tons
crossing the sea have such important pas
senger os had once a boat of leaves, from
taffrail to stern only three or four feet,
the vessel made waterproof by a coat of
bitumen and floating on the Nile with
the infant lawgiver of the Jews
board? What if some crocodile
should crunch it? What if some of
the cattle wading in for • drink should
rink it? Vessels of war sometimes cany
forty guns looking through the port
holes ready to open battle. But tliat tiny
craft on the Nile seems to be armed
with all the guns of thunder that bom
barded Sinai at the law giving. On bow
fragile craft sailed bow much of his
torical importance!
The parsonage at Epwortb, England,
men who helped him down through the
window and over the wall talking in
private over the matter, and saying:
“How glad I am that we effected that
rescue! In coming times others may
get the glory of Paul’s, work, but
no one shall rob us of the satisfaction of
knowing thft we held the rope."
There are sa d to be about sixty-nine
thousand minsters of religion in this
country. About fifty tbotwand I war
rant came from early homes which had
to struggle for the necessaries of life.
The sons of rich bankers and mer
chants generally become tankers and
merchants. The most of those who be
come ministers are the sons of those who
had terrific straggle to get their every
day bread. The collegiate and theolog
ical education of that son took every
loAdry from the parental table for eight
years. The other children were more
scantily appareled. The son at collegq
evesy little while got a bundle from
home. In it were the socks that mother
had knit, sitting up late at night, her
sight not as good as once it was.
And there also were noma delicacies
from the sutar’s band for the voracious
appetite of a hdngry student. The father
swung the heavy cradle through the
wheat, the sweat rolling from his chin
be^v/mg every step of the way, and then
sitting down under the cherry tree at
noon thinking to himself; “I am fear
fully tired, but it will pay if lean once
soe tliat boy through college, and if lean
know that he will be preaching the
Gospel after I am dead.” The younger
cliildren want to know why they can’t
Jiave this and that as others do, and the
mother says; “Be patient, my children,
until j our brother graduates, and then
you shall have more luxuries, bat we
must see that boy through."
The years go by and the sou has been
erdained and is preaching the glorious
Gospel, and a great revival comes, and
is 00 fire in the night, and the father a0U u by scores and hundreds accept the
rushed through the hallway for the rea- Gospel from the lips of that young
cue of his children, Seven children are I preacher, and father a"d mother, quite
* i.1.1 Ik* enn af «kn n'l.
out and nle ou the ground, but one re- ] 0 m are .kiting the Kn at the Til-
mmina in the consuming building. That lage parsonage, at the close of a
one wake*, and, finding his bed on fire j gabbnth of mighty blessing father and
and the building crumbling, come* to | mother retire to their room, the eon
the window, and two peuants make • lighting the way and taking them if be
ladder of their bodier, one present stand- could do anything to —them more
Ing on the shoulder of the other, and comfortable, etying if they want tny-
down the human ladder the hoy demend, thing In the night just to knock on the
—John Wesley. If you would knowhow j wa lL And then mil alone father and
much depended on that ladder of pew- ' mother talk orer the gracious Influences
ants ask the millions of Methodists on of the dsy and say: "Well, it wss worth
both aides of theses. As their mission all w, went through to educate that boy.
stations all around the world. Ask xtwaa a hud pull, but we held on till
their hundreds of thousands slnudy the work was done. Tbs world may
•mended to join their founder, who not know it. but, mother, we held the
I tope, didn't wul" And tha rotes, trem-
greet them and all those who have
dered to God and the world unrecognized
and unrecorded seryices. That is going
to be one of tho glad excitements of
heaven—tho hunting up and picking out
ofthose who did good on earth and got no
credit for it. Hero the church has been
going on nineteen centuries, and this is
probably tlie first sermon ever recogniz
ing the services of the jieople in tliat
Damascus balcony, diaries G. Finney
said to a dying Christian: “Give my love
to St. Paul when you meet him." When
you and I meet him, as we will, I shall
ask him to introduce me to those people
who got him out of the Damascene peril.
We go into long sermon to prove that
we will be able to recognize people in
heaven, when there is one reason wo fail
to present, and that is better than ah —
God will introduce us. We shall have
them all pointed out You would not be
guilty of the impoliteness of liaving
fri**nds in your parlor not introduced,
and celestial politeness will demand that
Wk» be made acquainted with all the
heavenly household. What rehearsal of
old times and recital of stirring reminis
cences. If others fail to give
troduction, God will take us through,
and before our first twenty-four
hours in heaven—if it were cal
culated by earthly time pieces—
have passed, we shall meet and talk
with more heavenly celebrities than in
our entire mortal state we met with
earthly celebrities. Many who made
great noise of usefulness will sit on the
last ceat by the f ront floor of the heavenly
temple, while right up within arm s
reach of the heavenly throne will be
many who. though they could uoi preach
themselves or do great exploits for God,
nevertheless held tlie rope.
Come, let us go right up and accost
those bn this circle of heavenly thrones.
Surely they must liave killed in battle a
million men. Surely they n-ust have
been buried with all the cathedrals
sounding a dirge and all tho towers of
all the cities tolling the national grief.
Who art thou, mighty one of heaven?
"I lived hr choice the unmarried daunh-
ceru&a muuute seme rout 1 mignt iaxo
care of my parents in their old age, and
I endured without complaints all their
querulousness and administered to all
their wants fbr twenty years.”
Let us pass on round the circle of
thrones. Who art thou, mighty one of
heaven? “I was for thirty years a Chris
tian invalid, and suffered all tho while,
occasionally writing a note of sympathy
for those worse off than I, and was gen
eral confidant of all those who had
trouble, and once in a while I was strong
enough to make a garment for tliat poor
family in tlie hack lane.” Pass on to
another throne. Who art thou, mighty
one of heaven? “I was the mother who
raised a whole family of children for God,
■nd they are out in the world Christian
merchants, Christian mechanics, ’Chris
tian wives, and I have had full reward
of all my toil.” Lotus pass on in the
circle of thrones. “I had a Sabbath
school class, and they were always on my
heart,'and they all entered the kingdom
of God, and I am waiting for their ar
rival.”
But who art thou, the mighty one of
heaven on this other throne? “In time of
bitter persecution I owned a house in
Damascus, a house on the wall. A man
reached Christ was hounded from
to street, and I hid him from the
. and wlien I found them break
ing in my bouse and I could no longer
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BARBER SHOP.
DAVIS & HARRIS.
Best Door to Unlrertlty Bank.
Hot and Gold Biln at all Hours
no v20dlr. DAVIS Jk HARRIS.
GLASSES : FITTED
SCIENTIFICALLY
With the latest improved instra
ments. If you cannot see distinctly or
your eyes pain, call at the
Rosenberg Spectacle Co.,
AT THE
Old Post-Office Building.
(^^Examination of ^ the eye no
charge.
july5d&w3m.
COM PETIT IV* EXAMINATION
ACCORDANCE WITH THE . LAW
I
cants Tor pi
nology. 1 hereby give noth
j tliat such examiha
tion Wih l»e conducted at the Court House,
Satunlay Septemlwr 1st, brsliiniiiu *t« o'clock 1
a. m. Applicants must Ihj at least sixteen
years of age and of pxmhI moral character. The
county of Clarke Is entitled to one beneficiary,
•t Sept I H. It. BERNARD.
mg u nun«*u w
sal Mtl8faciK.n In U>*
cure of Gonorrhcea and
Gleet. I prr«cribe limed
feel safe la recommmDC
tog It to mil sufferer*
A. J. STOWB, M.IL,
Decatur, 111.
PRICE. SI. OO.
Bold by D-ugglsti.
Db. E. S. Lyhdos. Act, Athens, Os.
WANTED
A No. 1, ten to fifteen
horse-power engine, if it
can be bought low. Apply
to Box 105, Washington,
Ga. tf
Uflfl ittv