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flKKK AM* riTRRR.
Tbo flniut lom'i in (treat Britain in
undoubtedly l lint of ttir Duko of Ham
ilton, in the grounda of the duke’*
sent. It cost over 81,000,000.
The Duke of Rutland, though he has
some splendid grouse and other shoot
ing, and an ideal shooting box, never
handles a gun himself.
Ex-Senntor Ingalls declares that ho
has n dread of publio speaking, and
that ho is filled with a namoloss terror
every time he faces an audienoo.
A French newspaper publishes tho
following advertisement: “M. Emile
Zola of Plambonf, inventor of tho
spring nippers, notifies his customers
that ho has nothing in common with
his namesake, Emilo Zola,the writor.”
Hopkins county, Ky., is experiencing
a notable religions revival under the
preaching of a womnn evangulist, Mrs.
Munn, of Madisonville. In a five
weeks’ tour of the county Mrs. Munn
preached sixty sermons, notting 119
conversions.
Tho Inrgcst sum paid for a singlo
novel is said to havo been 8200,000 to
Alphouso Hamlet for ‘‘Hnppho,” pub
lished in 1884. Eighty thousand dol
lars was received by Victor Hugo for
“Lea Miserablos,” which was published
in ten languages.
Fair and Fruitful
As the West Is, It Is often mIllarions. lint It
Is pleasant to know that a competent safe
guard In the shnpe of Hostetler’s HtomaSh
Hitters exists, which absolutely nullifies the
poison of miasma. Western bound emi
grants should bear this In mind. Nor should
It he forgot ten,'the Bitters Is a sterling remedy
for dyspepsia, biliousness, constipation, kid
ney and nervous complaints and rheumatism.
'Tie looking downward that makos ono
dlz/.y.
Cnn the sale of sn Inferior article constantly
Incrosso for 111 years? Dobbins* Klectrlo .Soup
bits been on Ihe market ever since ns*', and in
day an over, I hr hrtf ami j.urrtl family soap
made. Try It. Your grocer wilt get It.
KI|M tomatoes will remove ink and other
sin ns from the hands.
I1F.V. Dll. TAT.MACI,.
IHK NOTKD DIVINE’S SUNDAY
DISCOURSE.
li Subject: “ChrlHt’a Extlo.
Texti "And tho king went forth and tar
ried In ii plnco which wm fnr ofT."—IIJHamuol
xv., 17.
lie
This
Wcolter One Hundred Dollars Howard for
nny case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
K. .1. Chunky * Co.. Props., Toledo, O.
We, I he undersigned, have known F. J. Che
ney lor the last IS years, and believe him per
fectly honorable in all IhisIiiohh transactions
and financially able to carry out nny ubligtv-
I Inn made by I heir firm. , , .
West .V Tiiitax, Wholesale Druggists, loledo,
Ohio.
WAi.niNO, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale
DriigalMe, Toledo, Ohio.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally,
acting * 1 i*cMy upon tho blood and mucous
surfaces of ihesyslein. Price, T8c. per bottle.
Bold by all Druggist*. Testimonials free.
If a small ldooo of bread is put upon tho
point of the knife will e peeling and outtlng
onions it will prevent tho tears from flowing.
PITH -topped tree by Hu. K I,ink’s hkkat
Nkiivk ItKHTOiimt. No ills after tlrst day’s use.
Marvelous cures. Treatise and $‘2.(Hi trial hot/*
tie free. l)r. Klino. 931 Arch St.. Phiia.« Pa.
Mrs. Winslow’s Booth Inn Syrup for children
teething,softens the gums,reduce* in flam mo
tion, allays psin.cures wind colic. 23c. a bottle.
Why You should Use Illmlercoriis.
II takes out the coma, and then you have com
fort, surely a Rood exchange. 15o. at druggists.
PlsoM Cure for Consumption lias saved me
‘ * 111.—S, F. Hardy. Hopkins
2, ’1)4.
many a doctor’s bllK
Place, Baltimore, Md., D<
Spring
Medicine
Vour blood lu Sprlug is alinoit oertaia to
be lull of ImpurltlOB—the accumulation
of tlie winter mouths. Bad ventilation
of sleeping rooms, Impure air in dwell
ings, factories and shops, overeating,
heavy, Improper foods, failure of the
kidneys and liver properly to do extra
work thus thrust upon them, are the
prime enusos of this condition. It Is
of the utmost lmi>ortanoe thot you
Purify
YourBlood
Now, as when warmer weather comes and
tho tonlo effect of cold bracing air is
gone, your weak, thin, Impure blood
will not furnish necessary strength.
That tlrod feeling, loss of appetite, will
open the way for serious disease, ruined
health, or breaking out of humors and
Impurities. To make pure, rich, rod
blood Hood's flnrsnpnrilln stands uu-
oqu ailed. Thousands testify to Its
merits. Millions take It as their
Spring Medicine. Get Hood’s, because
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
IatheOneTruo Blood Purifier. AUdrmcflats. $1
Prepared only by C. 1. Hood &■ Co., Lowell, Mass.
are the only pills to take
Hood's Pills ivlth iiooii's tJamaparllla.
ASK YOUR DEALER FOR
W. L. Douglas
®3. SHOE “VoM.dT he
*3.
If you pay 84 to SO for shoes, ex
amine the \Y» L. Dougins Shoe, and
see what a good shoo you can buy for
OVER IOO STYLES AND WIDTHS,
CONGRESS, BUTTON,
and l.ACK, nuulo In all
klndH of the bout selected
leather by skilled work
men. Wo
make and
sell more
$3 Shoes
K than nny
»t h © r *
manufacturer in tlio world.
None genuine unless name and
price is stamped on the bottom.
Ask your dealer for our So,
94, s:k.'»o, S2.0O, 8M.-5 Shoes;
82.50, 8*4 and 81.75 for boys.
TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. Ifyourdealer
cannot supply you, send to fac
tory, enclosing price and 36 cents
to pay carriage. State kind, style
of toe (cap or plain), sue and
width. Our Custom Dept, will till
vour older. Send for new Illus
trated Catalogue to Box It.
W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass.
Far up and far back in the history of
heaven there came a period when its moat
illustrious Citizen was about to absent Him-
solf. He was not going to sail from beach to
beach; we have often done that. Ho was not
going to put out from ono hemisphere to an
other hemisphere; many of us have done
that. But IIo was to sail from world to
world, the spaces unexplored and tho im*
monsltloB untravoled. No world has ever
hailed heaven, and heaven has never hailed
any other world. I think that tho win
dows and tho balconies wore thronged,
and that the pearly beach was crowded
with those who had come to see'Him sail
out of the harbor of light into the ocean
beyond. Out and out and out, and on
and on and on, und down and down and
down Ho sped, until one night, with only
one to greet Him when He arrived, His dis
embarkation so unpretending, so quiet that
it was not known on earth until tho excite
ment in the cloud gave intimation to the
Bethlehem rustics that something grand and
glorious had happened. Who comes there?
From what port did He sail? Why was this
the place of ills destination? I question the
shepherds. 1 question the camel drivers. I
question the angels. I have found out. Ho
was an exile. But the world had plenty of
exiles. Abraham, an exile from ilarnn;
John, an exile from Ephesus; Kosciusko, an
exile from Poland: Alazzlnl, an exile from
Borne; Emmet, iui exile from Ireland; Victor
Hugo, an exile from France; Kossuth, an ex
ile from Hungary. But this one of whom I
speak to-day had such resounding farewell
and os.mo into such chilling reception—for
not even a hostler went out with his lantern
to light Him in -that He is more to he cele
brated than any other expatriated exile of
earth or heaven.
First, I remark that Christ was an im
porlal exile. He got down off a throne. lie
took ofT a tiara. He closed a palace gate be
hind Jilin. His family were princes and
princessess. Vasliti was turned out of the
tlironoroom by Almsuerus. David was de
throned by Absalom’s .infamy, Tho five
kings were hurled into a cavern by Joshua’s
courage. Home of tho Henrys of England
and some of the Louis of France were jostled
oil their thrones by discontented subjects.
But Christ was never more honored or more
popular or more loved than thejday He left
heaven. Exiles have suffered severely, but
Christ turned Himself out from throneroom
into sheep pen, and down from the top to
the bottom. He was not pushed ofT. He
was not nmnnelcd.lor foreign transportation.
Ho was not put out beeautto they no more
wanted Him in tjelestial domain, but by
choice, departing and descending into an
exile live times as long as that of Napoleon
at Ht. Helena, and a thousand times worse—
the ono exile sufTerlng for that he had de
stroyed Nations, tho other exile suffering bo-
causo He came to save a world. An imperial
exile. King eternal. “Blessing ami honor
and glory and power bo unto Him that slt-
toth upon tho throne.”
But I go farther and toll you Ho was an
oxllo on a barren island. This world is ono
of the smallest Islands of light In the ocean
of immensity. Other stellar kingdoms are
many thousand times larger than tills.
■Christ came to this small Futmos of u world.
When exiles are sent out, they are generally
sent to regions that are sandy or cold or hot
—some Dry.Tortugas of disagrcoablono.-p,
Christ came as an exile to a world scorched
with heat and bitten with cold, to deserts si
moon syvept, to a howling wilderness. It was
tho back dooryard seemingly of the uni verse.
Yea, Christ came to the poorest part of this
barren inland of a world—Asia Minor, with
its intenso summers, unlit for the residence
of n foreigner, and in tho rainy season unfit
for the restdencojof a native. Christ came
not to such a land us Ameitcu or England or
France*or Germany, but to a land one-third
of the year drowned, another third of the
year burned up. and only one-third of the
year just tolerable. Oh, It was the barren
island of a world! Barren enough for Christ,
for it gavo such small worship and such In
adequate affection, and such little gratitude,
Imperial exile on the barren island of a
world. The earth against Him.
I go further and tell you that llo was nu
exile in a hostile country. Turkey was never
so much against Russia, France was never so
much against Germany, as this earth was
against Christ. It took Him in through the
door of a Htablc. It thrust Him out at the
point of a spear. Tho Roman Government
against Him with 0very weapon of Its arm,
and every decision of its courts and every
beak of its war eagles. For years after His
arrival the only question was how best to
put Him out. Herod hated Him, the high
priests hated Him, the Pharisees hated Him,
Judas Iscariot hated Him, Gestas, the dying
thief, hated Him. The whole earth seem
ingly turned into a detective to watch Ills
steps. And yet Ho faced this ferocity. Notice
that most of Christ’s wounds were in front.
Homo scourging on the shoulders, but most
of Christ’s wounds in front. He was not on
retreat when He expired. Face to face with
tho world’s ferocity. Face to face with the
worUFsstn. Face to face with tho world’s
woe.' His eyes on tho raging counte
nances of Ilia foaming antagonists when
He expired. When the cavalry officer
rowoleu his stood so that he might
eoine nearer up and see the torture l visage
of the suffering exile, Christ saw it. When
the spear was thrust at His side, and when
the hammer was lifted for His feet, and when
the reed was raised to strike deeper down
the spikes of thorn, Christ watched the whole
procedure. When His hands wore fastened
to the cross they were wide open still with
benediction. Mind you, His head was no 4 ,
fastened. Ho could look to the right and
He could look to tho left, He could look up
and Ho oouhl look down. He saw when the
spikas had been driven home, and the hard,
round, Iron heads were in tho palms of His
bauds. He saw them us plainly as you over
saw anything in tho palms of your hands.
No other, no chloroform, nr> merciful anies-
thetio to dull or stupefy, but, wide awake,
He saw the obscuration of the heavens, the
unbalancing of the rocks, the countenances
quivering with rage und the caohinnntion
diabolic. Oh, it was the hostile as well as
the barren island of a world.
I go farther and tell you that this exile
was far from home. It is 1)5.000,000 miles
from here to the sun, and all astronomers
agree in saying that our solar system is only
] one of the*smaller wheels of the great ma
chinery of the universe turning around some
ono groat center, the center so Itir distant it
U beyond ifll imagination and calculation,
and if, as some think, that great center in
the distance is heaven, Christ came far from
home when llo came here Have you ever
thought of the homesick ness of Christ? Some
of you know what homesickness is when you
have been only a few weeks absent from the
domestic circle. Christ was thirty-three
years away from home. Some of you feel
homesickness when you are a hundred or a
thousand miles away from tho domestic
circle. Christ was more million miles away
from home than you could count if all your
life you did nothing but count, You know
what it is to be homesick cyan amid pleasant
surroundings, but Christ slept in huts, an 1
TToTmalckn**** will make a week seem ax
long a :» month, and It seems to me that tho
three decades ol Christ’s residence on earth
must have seemed to Him almost as inter
minable. You have often tried to measure
tho other pangs of Christ, but you havo
novor tried to measure the magnitude and
ponderosity of a Haviour’s homesickness.
I take a step farther and loll you that
Christ was in nil exile which He knew would
end In assassination. Holman Hunt, tho
master painter, Ims a picture in which ho
represents Jesus Christ in the Nazareno car-
f ienter shop. Around Him aro tho saws, the
lammors, the axes, the drills of carpentry.
The picture represents Christ as rising from
the carpenter’s working bench and wearily
stretching out nis arms ns one will after be
ing in contracted or uncomfortable posture,
and the light of that picture is so arranged
that tho arms of Christ, wearily stretched
forth, together with His body, throw on the
wall the shadow of tho cross. Oh! my
friends, that shallow was on everything in
Christ’s lifetime. Shadow of a cross on the
Bethlehem swaddling clothos. Hhudow of a
cross on tho road over which the three fugi
tives fled into Egypt. Hhudow of a cross on
Luke Galilee as Christ walked i's mosaic
iloojr of opal and emerald and crystal.
Hhudow of a cross on the road to Eminaus.
Hhudow of a cross on the brook Kedron. nnd
on the templo, and on tho side of Olivet.
Shadow of a cross on sunrise and sunsor.
Constantine, marching with his array, saw
just once a cross in the sky, but Christ saw
the cross all the time.
Hawthorne, turned out of the ofllce of col
lector at Halem, went home in despair. His
wife touched him on tho shoulder and said.
“Now is the time to write your book,” and
hls famous “Hcarlot Letter” was tho brill
iant consequence. “Worldly good sometimes
comes from worldly evil. Then bo not mi- I
Kcialic B lion mat Ism and Iti Cure.
From the. Gazette, Jiurlington, Iowa.
The story of Mr. Tabor’s nearly fatal at
tack of sciatic rheumatism is familiar to hls
large circlo of acquaintances, but for the
benefit of others and thoso similarly afflicted
The. Gazette has investigated the mattor for
publication, Mr. Tabor is Secretary nnd
Treasurer for the Commercial Printing Com
pany, with offices in tho Hedge Block and
resides at 417 Basset Street, Burlington, la.
A Gazette man sought an interview with Mr.
Tabor at his place of business to-day, and,
although he was busily engaged wifh im-
neratlve duties, he talked freely and feel
ingly on the subject of his recent severe sick
ness anil subsequent wonderful cure.
“Yes,” said Mr. 'l abor, “I can safely say
that I am a well man, that is, my old trouble
with rheumatism has entirely disappeared,
but I am still taking Pink Pills and will keep
on taking them as long a« I continue to grow
stronger and healthier, as 1 have been every
day since I begun to use them. You will
not wonder at my profound faith in the mer
its of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale Peo
ple after you have heard what I have to toll
you. About one year ago I was stricken
suddenly with sciatic rheumatism and was
confined to my bed. It grew worse and rap
idly assumed the form of inflammatory rheu
matism. I suffered constant ami acute pains
and all the tortures which that horrible dis
ease is capable of inflicting. At length un
der ttie constant care of a local physician I
was enabled to return to my work, but only
at intervals. Revere attacks would appear
regularly in iny back and descend into my
leg and foot, and threatened to make me a
permanent cripple. I tried various remedies
for rhoumatisin, but without any benoflolal
bolloving whou I 'toll you flint from tho | resulla. I grew pale, fconkand haggard. and
greatest crime or nil otornlty mi l of tho | my family and friend* grew alarmed nt my
whole universe, the murder of the -Ron or
God, there shall come results which shall
condition.
“About eight weeks ago my mother in
duced me to try Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for
Palo People, and you know the result. Be-
. fore I had used ono box I felt greatly re
lieved and much stronger. I continued their
use and improved rapidly. I have now taken
eight boxes and feel liko a new man ami
completely cured, all of which is due to the
eflloacy of Pink IMIls. They are invigorating
and thoroughly wholesome, and huvo helped
mo in every way.”
In reply to inquiries Mr. Henry, th* drug
gist, stated that Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills
were having a largo sale, that it was particu
larly gratifying to him to know that the cus •
tomers themsolvos were highly pleased with
the benefits they had derived from their usoj
that many of them stated that the ptlfs were
tho only medium that had done them any
good; that they not only gave quick relief
but permanent benefit. That the pills do sell
and that the pills do cure is a certainty.
Dr. Williams’ Piuk Pills contain, in a con
densed form, all the elements necessary to
give new life and richness to the blood and
restore shattered nerves. They are also a
specific for troubles peculiar to females,
such as suppressions, irregularities and all
forms of weakness. In men they effect a
radical cure in all cases arising from mental
worry, overwork or excesses of whatever
nature. Pink Pills .ire sold in boxes only nt
50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.60, and
may be had of all druggists or direct by
mail from Dr. Williams’ Medicine Co.,
Bchonectady, N. Y.
Reads Like a Fairy Tale.
The youug lady, a poem iu blue and
a symphouy iu chiffon, came tripping
into the car, and the young man
got up.
“Oh, keop your seat, sir,” she said,
“I really prefer to stand.”
“But, Misa ,” began the youug
man, preparing to step into the aisle.
“Oh, I msist upon it,” she ex
claimed, sweetly, and pushed him res
olutely back into tho soat.
“But, my dear young woman, I
want to get off,” expostulated tho
young,man.
“Ob,” she said, and blushed. And
somebody smiled.—Cleveland Flain
Dealer.
He was athirst, and He was a-huugored, an l ; Turned was tho key in tho portal,
IT.. ....... ... «1... ....... .... 1...?.... 1,...... 1.. 1 Thill vinrTtl,:? til., iVi.i.I.in
eclipse all tho grandeurs of eternity past and
eternity to come. Christ, an exile from 1
heaven opening the way for the deportation
toward heaven and to heaven of all thoso
who will accept the proffer. Atonement, a
ship largo enough to take all tho passengers
that will come aboard It.
For this royal exile I bespeak tile love and
service of all the exiles here present, and in
one sense or the other that includes all of
us. The gates ot this continent have been so
widely opened that there are hero many vol
untary exiles from other lands. Home of
you are Hootohmon. I see it in your high
cheek bones nnd in the color that Illumine^
your face when I mention the hind of your
nativity. Bonny Scotland! Dear old kirk?
Home of your ancestors sleeping in Groy-
frlars churchyard, or by tho deep lochs filled
out of the pitchers of heavon, or under the
heather, sometimes so doep of color it makes
ono think of the blood of the Covenanters
who signed their names for Christ, dipping
their pens into the veins of their own arms
opened for that purpose. How every
liber of your nutuio thrills as I mention
the names of Robert Bruce and tho Camp
bells and Cochrane! I bespeak for this royal
exile of my text the love and service of all
Hootch exiles. Home of you are Englishmen.
Your ancestry served the Lord. Have I nqt
read of tho sufferings of the Ilaynmrkot, and
have I not seen In Oxford tho very spot whom
Ridley and Latimer mounted the red char
iot? Home of your aucstors heard George
Whltofleld thunder, or heard Charles Wes
ley sin, or heard John Runyan toll his dream
of the oolestinl city, and the cathedrals uu-
der tho shadow of which some of you were
born had iu their grandest organ roll tho
name of the Messiah.
I bespeak for the royal exile of my sermon
the love and the service of all English ex
iles. Yof,some of you came from the Island
of distress over which hunger, on athrouoof
human skeletons, sat queen. All efforts at
ainolioration halted by massacre. Proces
sion of famines, procession of martyrdoms
marching from northern Channel to Cape
Clear and from the Irish Heu across to the
Atlantic. An Island not bounded as geogra
phers tell us. but, as every philanthropist
knows, bounded on the north and the south
and the east and the west by woe which no
human politics cun alleviate and only Al
mighty God onu assuage. Land of Gold
smith’s rhythm, and Hherldan’s wit, and
O’ConuoU’s eloquence, nnd Edmund Burke’s
statesmauship, and O’Brien’s sacrifice.
toother Patinos with its apocalypse <«f
blood. Yot you cannot think of It to-day J\I KS. GOOLD’S GRATITUDE
without having your ovoa blinded with onto- I 11.1.1 lit I ij
tiou, for there your ancestors sloop in graves,
some of which they entered for lack of .
broad. For this royal exile of my sermon 1
bespeak tho love and the service of nil Irish !
exiles. Yes. some of you are from Germany,
the land of Luther, and some of you are
from Italy, the land of Garibaldi, nud some
or you are from France, the land of John
Calvin, one of the three mighties of the
glorious reformation. Homo of you nro de
scendants of the Puritans, and they wero
exiles, and some of you descendants of the
Huguenots, and they wero exiles, and some
of you are descendants of the Holland refu
gees, and they were exiles.
Home of you were born on the banks of tho
Yazoo or tho Savannah, and you are now liv
ing in this latitude. Some of you on the
banks of tho Kennebec, or at the foot of tho
Green Mountains, and you are here now.
Homo of you ou the prairies of tho West, or
the tablelands, and you are hero now. Oh.
how many of us far away from home. All
of us exiles. This is not our homo. Heaven
is our home. Oh, I am so glad
when the royal exile went hack He
left the gat*' ajar, or loft it wide I
open. “Going home!” That is tho dying 1
exclamation of the majority of Christians, j
I havo seen many Christians die. I think >
nine out of ten of them in the last moment ;
say, “Going home.” Going home out of j
banishment and sin and sorrow ami sad- J
ness. Going home to join in the hilarities of !
our parents and our dear children who have |
already departed. Going homo to Christ.
Going home to God. Going home to stay.
Where are your loved ones that died in
Christ? You pity them. Ah. they ought to
pity you! You are an exile far from home.
They are home! Oh, what a time it will be
for you when the gatekeeper of heaven shall
siy: “Take off that rough sandal, the jour
ney’s ended. Put down that saber, the bat
tle's won. Put off that iron coat of mail
and put on the robe of conqueror.” At that
gate of triumph l leave you to-day, only
reading three tender cantos translated from
the Italian, If you ever heard anything
sweeter, I never did, although I cannot
adopt all its theology.
’Twos whispered one morniug in heaven
How the little ehilil angel May,
In the shade of the great white portal,
Sat sorrowing night nnd day;
How she said to tim stately warden,
He of tho key and bar:
“Oh, angel, sweet angel, I pray you
Sot the beautiful gates ajar,
Only a little, l pray you,
Set tho beautiful gates ajar.
“I can hear my mother weeping,
She is lonely; she cannot see
A glimmer of light in the darkness
When the gate shut after me.
Oli, turn mo the key, sweet angel.
The splendor will shine so far.”
But tho warden answered. “I dare not
Set the beautiful gates ajar.”
Spoke low and answered, “I dare not
Hot the beautiful gates ajar.”
Then uprose Mary, tho blessed,
Sweet Mary, the mother of Christ,
Her hand on the hand of the angel
She laid, ami her touch sufficed.
Population of the l arge Cities.
According to a calculation made by
Elmer L. Corthell, the well-known en
gineer of tho Tehuantepec railroad, in
Mexico, the census of 19*20 will show
the leading citiea of the world possessed
of tho following populations:
Greater Loudon 8,516,256
Greater New York 6,191,250
Paris 3,234,063
Berlin 3,496,729
Chicago 8,208,000
Philadelphia 2,002,932
St. Petersburg 1,500,495
—New Nork Recorder.
Her Trip to the Country.
“What are you packing up for?”
said an Allegheny lady who called on
a Pittsburg friend and found her stow
ing her belongings in large trunks.”
“I am going to Philadelphia.”
“What are you going to Philadel
phia for?”
“Oh, I always spend a week or two
in tho country in the Bpring.”—Pitts
burg Chronicle Telegraph.
Nodd—“Before we were married,
when wo went into a restaurant, it used
to take my wife about an hour to de
cide on what she wanted.”
Todd—“Doesn’t it now?”
“No, sir! I never let her see a bill
of fare.”—Detroit Freo Press.
Tt Took tli© Ribbon.
Dear Sir:—'“Having used several boxes of
your Txttirink, I cun say that it is the best
remedy I have ever found for skin diseases.
Auer falling with Guticura and other similar
.preparations, through the recommendation of
a friend I tried u box of Tetteiunr, and two
applications was all t li at it took to effect a
complete cure of a breaking out on my foot of
long standing. I think it is the best salve in
tho world for skin diseases.’’ Yours truly,
11. B. A lex awpkr,
Mt. fcelma, Texas.
I box by mall for 60c. in stamps.
J. T. Shuptbine, Savannah, Ga.
Gladness Comes
W ith a®oetter undcrstanclinfz of tho
transient nature of the many phys
ical ills which vanish before proper ef
forts—gentlo efforts—pleasant elf orts—
rightly directed. There is comfort in
the knowledge that so many forms of
sickness are not due to any actual dis
ease, but simply to a constipated condi
tion of the system, which the pleasant
family laxative, Syrup of Figs, prompt
ly removes. That is wliv it is the only
remedy with millions of families, and is
everywhere esteemed so highly bv all
who value good health. Its beneficial
effects ure due to the fact, that it is tho
one remedy which promotes internal
cleanliness, without debilitating the
organs on which it acts. Itis therefore
all important, in order to get its bene
ficial effects, to noto when you pur
chase, that yon have the genuine article,
which is manufactured by tho California
Fig Syrup Co. only, and sold by ull 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, ono
may be commended tothomost skillful
physicians, but if in need of a laxative,
then one should havo the hast, and with
the well-informed everywhere, Syrup of
Figs stands highest and is most largely
used and gives most general satisfaction.
A. N. U Seventeen, 96.
“Aye! There’s the rub!”
And that ought to be enough in itself to seal the
doom of bar soap. This rubbing with soap
may get clothes clean, if you work hard
enough, but can’t you see how it wears
them out ?
Follow the directions that come on
every package of Pearline, and you'll find
that you not only do away with the hard
and ruinous work of rubbing—but that you
save time, and actually get better results.
At every point Pearline is better than
soap. But the mere fact that Pearline
saves the rubbing—that ought to settle it.
RPAA7 A I? TT Peddlers will tell you “this is as
VV i'i.lvLlf good as” or “the same as rearl
ine.” IT’S FALSE—Pearline is never peddled. If your
grocer sends you an imitation, be honest—send it back. 488
pent in I'nrker's Ginger Tonic
sled. It subdue* pain, and brinvs
Htion, better btremetk and health.
WHAT IS ALABASTINE ?
A pure, permanent and artistic wall-coating
ready for the brush by mixing in cold Mater.
FOR SALE BY PAINT DEALERS EVERYWHERE.
FREE
He was on tho wav from being born In
another mini’s barn to being buried iu
another men's grave.
I have road how the Swiss, when they nr i I
fnr away Irom their native eeuutry, nt the 1
sound of their National air get so iiomesiuk ;
that they fall Into melancholy, nud some
times they die under the homesiokuoss. But,
oh, the homesickness of Christ’ l’over y
homesick for celestial riches. Persecution
homesick for hosauua. Weariness home
sick for resi. Homesick for an.g .
mid archangelie companionship. Home
sick to get out of the night, and
the storm, and tho world's execration.
11 ringing tho golden hur.
And, lo, in tho little child's lingers
Stood the beautiful gates ajar,
Iu the little ehild’s angel lingers
Stood tho beautiful gates ajar.
A limn lu Henderson, Ky., sends aon-
soinuco money t > a local capitalist wl;h tins
note: '• Honesty Is the best policy. Th’s
twenty cents is for stealing rides on the olo
mule ears.”
A young woman, who hits no hands, was
arrested in New York City the other day for
stealing with her teeth.
HOW SHE WAS RESTORED TO
HEALTH.
Condition Before and After the Birth
of tier Child.
From every city, town und hamlet on
tills vast continent, come letters from
suffering’ women; from thoso whoso
physicians have
been unable to
assist them, or
from that num
berless class
whose confi
dence in Mrs.
Pinkham's ad
vice and the
curative prop
erties of her
Vegetable
Compound is
unbounded.
Every letter
received from wo
men is recorded,
and hundreds of
volumes of eases
treated aid in fur
nishing practical
information for the
women of to-day.
No letters are published without the
request of the writer. The strictest !
confidence is observed. The following
letter represents thousands :—
“ I always enjoyed good health tin- |
til six months before the birth of my \
babe. Then I was very weak; my back
ached all tho time. My physicians '
said I would be all right after tho birth
of tho child, but I was not, although
nt that time I had tho best of care.
The pains in my back were almost un- j
hearable. I had leueorrhoea in its |
worst form; menstruations were pain- !
ful.
’’Any work or care would entirely I
unnerve me. When my babe was 11 i
months old, friends persuaded me to
take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound. Before I had taken one
bottle I felt the effects. My hack did
not ache so badly, and I felt stronger.
After taking four bottles I felt well.
My ambition returned, menstruations
were painless, leucorrha-a entirely
cured, nud X could take care of my
babe and do my housework. I shall
always recommend your Vegetable
Compound for all women, especially
for young mothers.’.’—Mbs. H. L.
Goolp. Oregon. Vis.
If Mrs. Goold had been well before
th“ birth of her child, subsequent
suffering would have been avoided.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound should always be taken before
and after birth, iu order thai, the
system may withstand the shock.
A Tine Card showing 12 doflrahle tint©,
also Aluhoatine Souvenir Rock ©cut free
to any one mentioning this paper.
ALABASTINE CO.. Grand Rapids. Mich.
“Blight
costs cotton planters more
than five million dollars an
nually. This is an enormous
waste, and can be prevented.
Practical experiments at Ala
bama Experiment Station show
conclusively that the use of
“ Kainit”
will prevent that dreaded plant
disease.
Our pamphlets are not advertising circular* boom
ing special fertilizers, but are practical works, contain
ing the results of latest experiments in this line
Everv cotton farmer should have a copy. They uro
scut free for the asking.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
03 Nassau St., New York.
- $25.00
STOVEI
FOR
$12.00.
To introduce our good*, wh will ship J
I tins full size N«i. rt Cooking Stove and 21
j pi n s ot ware for $12.00 and pay the
treieht to your depot. Money refunded!
it not as represented. Send nidi with I
orders, liefer to any bank or merchant |
| in Augusta. Address
U. F. Padgett,
Mrs. Annie T. llisloy, of No. 1429
Bouth 50th St., Philadelphia, is the
wife of a prominent real estate agent
and moves in high social circles.
She is also a member of the Presby-
torian Church. Under date of Sep
tember 11th, 1835, Mrs. Rlsley writes!
“I write to thank you for tho bene
ficial results from the use of llipans
Tabulos. I saw them advertised,
and though I rarely put muoh]
conffdonco in patent medicines, I
decided to try them. Since I began
taking them my dyspepsia has di
minished nnd 1 can fool that it is
leaving mo. My complexion lias
improved, and I feel llko a n©w
woman—not^tho ‘new woman’ of the
present fad, but a rejuvenated and
physically regenerated being.
(Signed), Mbs. A. T. Rislky.”
llipans Tftlmles are sold by druggists, or by
mail if the price (50 cents a box) i* -cut to The
Ripans Chemical Company, No. 10 Spruce St.,
New York. Sample vial, 10 cents.
PLANTER’S
CUBAN OIL
For Yourself and your Stock.
It is good for man and beast. The
; and leach you free jou
work In the locAltty wherw you Iiyc;
Bond u* your •ddr«v , u and we will explain
tho buelneee fully; remoinoer wo iruar*
an too e clear prodt of $3 for every . ay'r
Cures fresh cuts, wounds, bruises, sores,
rheumatism and pains of all kinds. Take no
substitute, os it has no equal. For sale by all
medicine dealers.
PRICE. 25 and 50 Cents.
Manufactured only bv the
NEW SPENCER MEDICINE CO.,
<11 XTTANOOtiA, TK.NN.
ia/F HAVE n° agents.
WW u I inw I— hot Mil direct to the oon-unv
or at wholeealo prices. Ship
ranted, ioo styles of’Car-
rlages, 90 styles of Mnr-
ie.ss,^i stylesRidingSad-
lies. Writ© for catalogue
ELKHART
Carriage A Harness klfg C*
Elkhart, Ind.
OPIUM
- pay -
Ds. J. Stephens. Lebanon. Ohio,
f BUHLS WHERE'ALL ELSE FAILS.
m best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use
E in tiiue. Sold by druggists.
PACKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Cleanse* and beactlfie* the hair.
Promote# a luxuriant growth.
*©ver Fails to Kestore Gray
Hair to its Youthful Color.
Cure# scalp rit«< a*es k hair tailing.
5u’,mnlgl at Dni^bt#
AGENTS
Samples bv mai
OPIUM
, MAKE 85 PER DAY selling
. durable patented device for
f bowing shutters at any angle.
I Samples by mail, 16c. Territorv given. Address
B.& M. Shutter Bow Co.,73 W. 11th St., N. Y.Cxty*
and WHISKY habits cured. Book sent
FREE. Dr. B. II. WOOLLEY. ATLANTA. «A.
Strikes at the Root —When you
take Brown’s Iron Bitters yon find it strikes at the
root of the disease. That’s the secret of its mighty
success. Whatever the symptoms, Brown’s Iron
Bitters attacks the cause — speedily, vigorously,
effectively—and the symptoms vanish.
GUARANTEE.
Purchase money refunded should Brown's# 1 kon taken ns directed, fail
to benefit any person suffering with Dyspepsia, Malaria, Chill- ami Fever, Kidney
and Liver Troubles. Biliousness, Female Infirmities. Impure Blood, Weakness,
Nervous Troubles, Headache or Neuralgia. Brown Caiumxc#l Co., Baltimore. Md.