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DR.TALH AGE’S SERfION
The Eminent Divine’s Sunday
Discourse.
Subject: The Importance of Promptness
—Lost Opportunities—Victory Over Ob.
stacles—Benefits of Having to Strug
gle Hard For a Living.
[Copyright 101. 1
Washington, D. C.—From a passage
of Scripture unobserved by most readers
Dr. Talmuge in this discourse shows the
importance of prompt action in anything
ivc have to do for ourselves or others;
text. Ecclesiastics si, 4. “He that observ
eth the wind shall not sow.”
What do you find in this packed sen
tence of Solomon’s monologue? 1 find in
ii a farmer at his front door examining
the weather. It is seedtime. His lields
have been plowed and harrowed. The
wheat is in the barn in sacks, ready to be
taken afield and scattered. Now is the
time to sow. But the wind is not favor
able. It may blow up a storm before
night, and he may get wet if he starts out
for the sowing. Or it may be a long storm
that will wash out the seed from the soil,
t>r there may have been a long drought,
and the wind may continue to blow dry
weather. The parched fields may not
take in the grain, and the birds may pick
it up, and the labor as well as the seed
may be wasted. So he gives up the work
lor that day and goes back into the house
and waits to see what it will be on the
morrow. On the morrow the wind is still
in the wrong direction, and for a whole
week, and for a month. Did you ever see
'iioh a long spell of bad weather? The
lethargic and overcautious and dilatory
-agriculturist allows the season to pass
without sow ing, and no sowing, of course
no harvest. That is what Solomon means
when he says in my text. “He that obser
v'd h the wind shall not sow.”
As much in our times as in Solomonic
times there is abroad a fatal hesitancy—
i disposition to let little things stop us—a
ruinous adjournment. We all want to do
.some good in the world, but how easily
we are halted in our endeavors. Perhaps
we are solicitors for some great charity.
There is a good man who has large
means, and he is accustomed to give liber
■ally to asylums, to hospitals, to reform
•organizations, to schools, to churches, to
communities desolated with flood or de
vastated with* fires. But that good man,
like many a good man, is mercurial in his
Temperament. He is depressed by atmos
pheric changes. He is always victimized
by the oast wind. For this' or that rea
son you postpone the charitable solicita
tion. Meanwhile the suffering that you
wish to alleviate does its awful vqork, and
the t opportunity for relief is past. If the
wind had been from the west or north
west, you would have entered the philan
thropist's counting room and sought the
gift, but the wind was blowing from the
-east or northeast and you did not make
the attempt, and you thoroughly illus
trated my text, “He that observeth the
wind shall not sow.”
Tliere comes a dark Sabbath morning.
The paftor looks out of the window and
secs the clouds gather and then discharge
their burdens of rain. Instead of a full
•church it will be a handful of people with
wet feet and the dripping umbrella at the
doorway or in the end of the pew. The
pastor has prepared one of his best ser
mons. It has cost him great research,
•and he has been much in prayer while
preparing it. He puts the sermon aside
lor a clear day and talks platitudes and
goes home <|uite depressed, but at the
-same time feeling that he has done his
duty. He did not realize that in that
small audience there were at least two
persons who ought to have had better
treatment. One of those hearers was a
man in crisis of struggle with etui appe
tite. A carefully prepared discourse un
der the divine blessing would have been
to him complete victory. The fires of
mn would have been extinguished, and his
Ireen and brilliant mind would have been
consecrated at the gospel ministry, and he
would have been a mighty evangel, and
tens of thousands of souls would have un
der the spell of his Christian eloquence
given up sin and staffed anew life, and
throughout all the heavens there would
liave been congratulation and hosanna,
find alter many ages of eternity had
passed there would be celebration among
the ransomed of what was accomplished
•one stormy Sunday in a church on earth
under a mighty gospel sermon delivered
to fifteen or twenty people. But the cri
sis I speak of was not properly met. The
man in struggle with evil habit beard that
•stormy day no word that moved him. He
went out in the rain uninvited and un
helped back to his evil way and won to
his overthrow. Had it been a sunshiny
•Sabbath he would have heard something
worth hearing. But the wind blew from a
stormy direction that Sabbath day. That
gospel husbandman noticed it and acted
upon its suggestion and may discover
some day his great mistake. He had a
sackful of the finest of the wheat, but he
withheld it, anti some day he will find
when the whole story is told, that he was
a vivid illustration- of the truth of my
text, “He that observeth the wind shall
inot sow.”
There was another person in that
stormy Sunday audience that deserved
something better from that pastor than
extemporized nothingness. It was a
mother who was half awakened to a
sense oi responsibility in regard to her
household. She had begun to question
herself as to whether it would not be bet
ter to introduce into her home a religion
tmt would decide aright the destiny of
her sons and daughters. Her home had
so far been controlled only by worldly
principles. She had dared tlie riot of the
elements that morning and had found her
way to church, hoping to hear something
that would help her to decide the domes
tic question which was to her a solicitude.
A good, strong sermon under the divine
blessing would have led her into the king
dom of God and uiterward her whole fam
ily. The children, whether they became
farmers or mechanics or merchants or art
ists or men of learned profession or wom
en at the head of households, would have
done their work in a Christian May, and
utter li'ves of usefulness on earth’ would
have taken thrones in heaven. It would
have been a whole family saved for time
and saved for eternity. But the pastor
had adjourned the strong and effective
discourse to a clear Sunday. The motlfer
went home chilled in body, mind and soul
and concluded not to trouble herself or
her household about the future, and to let
to-morrow take care of itself and keep on
doing as they had been doing. No forma
tion of thorough Christian character in
the lives of those growing up boys and
girls. They will go out into the world to
meet its vicissitudes without any sublime
of the gospel. What a pity
it was that he did not put down the’man
usrript of his well prepared sermon on the
Bible if he preached from notes or pour
it out of his soul if he had lodged it there
through careful preparation! No. He al
lowed that opportunity, which could never
return, to pass into eternity unimproved,
tie observed jjay the way the rain dashed
•against the windows of the parsonage and
the windows of the church that the u'ind
was from the east or the northeast, and
lie did noFsow or sowed that which was
not worth .sowing.
In all-departments of life there are those
hindered by the Mind of public opinion.
It has become ah aphorism in politics and
in all great rgovements, “He is waifing' to
see which way the wind blows.” And it
is no easy*thing to defy puttie opinion, to
be run upon by newspapers, to be over
hauled in social circles, to' be anathema
tized by those who heretofore were your
friends and admirers. It requires a hero
ism which few possess. Yet no great re
formatory or elevating movement lias ever
been accomplished until some one was
willing to defy what the world should
think or say or do. But there have been
men and women of that kind. They stand
all up and down the corridors of history,
examples for us to follow. Charles Sum
ner in the United States Senate, Alexan
der ±l. Stephens in Georgia convention.
oa\ onarok staking his life in time of per
secution. Martin Luther fighting the bat
tie tor religious freedom against the
mightiest anathemas that Mere ever
hurled. William Carey leading the ntis
sionary movement to save a heathen
world while churches denounced him as a
lanatic and with attempting an impossi
bility. Jenner, the hero of medicine, cari
catured for his attempt by vaccination
to beat back the worst disease that smote
the nations. They who watch the Mind
ot public opinion will not somn It is an
uncertain indication, and is apt to blow
the wrong way.
Let us have Mar with England, if
needs oe. said the most of the people of
our Northern States in 1861, when Mason
and Slidell, the distinguished Southern
ers- had been taken by our navy from the
British steamer Trent, and the English
Government resented the act of our Gov
frmnent in stopping one of their ships.
' Give up those prisoners,” said Great
Britain. “No,” said the almost unani
mous opinion of the North, “do not give
them up. Let us have war with England
rather than surrender them.” Then Will
iam H. Seward, Secretary of State, faced
one of the fiercest storm* of public opin
lon ever seen in this or any other country.
Seeing that the retention of these two men
M’as of no importance to our country and
that their retention u'ould put Great Bri
tain and the United States into immediate
conflict, said, “We give them up.” They
M'ere given up, and through the resistance
of popular clamor by that one man a
Wcrld-M’ide calamity Mas averted.
. Hom t many there are M’ho give too muck
time to notching the weather vane and
studying the barometer! Make up your
mina what you are going to do and then
go ahead and do it. There ahvays Mill be
hindrances. It is a moral disaster if you
allow prudence to overmaster all the
other graces. The Bible makes more of
courage and faith and perseverance than
it does of caution. It is not once a year
that the great ocean steamers fail to sail
at the appointed time because of the storm
signals. Let the weather bureau prophesy
what hurricane or cyclone it may, next
Wednesday, next Thursday, next Satur
day the steamers will put out .from New
York and Philadelphia and Boston har
bors and will reach Liverpool and South
ampton and Glasgow and Bremen, their
arrival as certain as their embarkation.
They cannot afford to consult the wind,
nor can you in your life voyage.
Young men, you have planned M'bat
you are going to be and do in the world,
but ,you are waiting for circumstances to
become more favorable. You are, like
the farmer in the text, observing the
wind. Better start now. Obstacles will
help you if you conquer them. Cut your
u'ay through. Peter Cooper, the million
aire philanthropist, u'ho will bless all suc
ceeding centuries witlj the institution he
founded. worked five years for $25 a vear
and his board. Henry Wilson, the Chris
tian statesman who commanded the Uni
ted States Senate with the gavel of the
Vice-Presidency, wrote of his early days:
“Want sat by my cradle. I know niiat
it is to ask a mother for bread when she
has none to give. I left my home at ten
years of age and served an apprenticeship
of eleven years, receiving a month’s school
ing ea-ch year and at the end of eleven
years of hard work a yoke of oxen and
six sheep, which brought me SB4. In the
first month after I was twenty-one years
of age I went into the wood*, drove a
team and cut mill logs. I arose in the
morning before daylight and worked hard
till after dark, and received the magnifi
cent sum of $6 for the month’s u'ork.
Each of these dollars looked as iarge to
me as the moon looks to-nieht.” Won
derful Henry Wilson! But that u'as not
his original name. He changed his name
because he did not want on him the
blight of a drunken father. As the Vice-
President stood in my pulpit in Brooklyn,
making the last address he ever made and
commended the religion of Christ to the
young men of that city, I thought to my
self, “You yourself are the subliraest spec
tacle I ever say of victory over obstacles.”
For thirty years the M ind bleM r the wrong
May, yet he did not observe the wind, but
kept right on sowing.
Just call over the names of the men and
women M’ho have done most for our poor
old world, and you null call the names of
those M’ho had mobs after them. They
M’ere shunned by the elite; they M’ere
cartooned by the satirists; they lived on
food which you and I would not throw
to a kennel.
Many of us who are non' preachers of
the gospel, or medical practitioners, or
members of the bar. or merchants, or citi
zens in various kind of business had very
poor opportunity at the start because we
had it too easy—far too easy.
If it Mere proper to do so, and you
should stand in any board of bank direc
tors, in any board of trade, in any Legis
lature, State or national, and ask all ndto
M-ere brought up in luxury and ease to lift
their hand, here and there a hand might
be lifted, but ask all those who bad an
awful hard time at the start to lift their
hands, and most of the hands M’ould be
lifted.
Columbus, by calculation, made up his
mind that there must be anew hemisphere
somewhere to balance the old hemisphere
or it M'ould be a lop-siddd world. And I
have found out, not by calculation, but by
observation, that there is a great success
for you somewhere to balance your great
struggle. Ho not think your case is pe
culiar. The most favored have been
pelted. The mobs smashed the u’indou’s
of the Duke of Wellington while his M’ife
lay dead in the house.
Put my subject takes another step.
Through medical science, and dentistry
that has improved the world’s mastication,
and stronger defense against climatic
changes, and better understanding of the
laws of health, human life has been great
ly prolonged. But a centenarian is still a
wonder. How many people do you know
a Hundred years old? I do not know one.
We talk of a century as though it were a
very long reach of time. But what is one
century on earth compared with centuries
that we are to live somewhere, somehow —
ten centuries, a million centuries, a quin
tillion’of centuries? We are all determined
to get ready for the longer life ice are to
live after our exit from things sublunary.
We are u’aiting for more propitious op
portunity. We have too much business
to attend to now or too much pleasure to
allow anything to interfere with its bril
liant progress. We are waiting until the
wind bloM’S in the right direction. We
are going to sow, and sow the very best
grain, and we are going to raise an eter
nal harvest of happiness. We like what
you say about heaven, and we are going
there, and at the right time we will get
ready, but my lungs are sound, my diges
tion is good, the examining physician of
the life insurance company says my heart
beats just the fight number, of times a
minute, and I am cautious about sitting
in a draft, and I “observe all the laM-s of
hygiene, and my father and mother lived
to be very old, and I come of a long-lived
family.
So we adjourn and postpone until, like
the farmer suggested by my text, M’e allow
the seedtime to pass and sudden pneumo
nia or a reckless bicycle or an, ungov
erned automobile puts us out of life M’ith
all its magnificent opportunities of decid
ing aright the question of everlasting res
idence. A Spanish proverb says, "The
road of By and By leads to the town of
Never.”
Whether.in your life it is a south u’ind
or a north wind, a west wind or an east
wind that is now bloM’ing, dp vbu not feel
like saying: “This whole subject I now de
cide. Lord God, through Thy Son Jesus
Christ, my Saviour. I am Thine foretier.
I throw myself, reckless of everything eke,
into the fathomless ocean" *f Thy mercy,”
THE WEEKLY NEWS, CARTERSVILLE, OA.
HEAT’S FATAL RECORD
Deaths and Prostrations Reach
Large Figures In Crowded
Cities of the North.
A New York dispatch says: The re
lief from the killing heat oi the last
M’eek, which was promised Sunday in
the shape of thunderstorms, did not
materialize.
There was an increase in the fatili;
ties reported over Saturday, though
the numoer of simple prostrations was
not so large. Up to midnigui nineteen
deaths had been recorded and twenty
prostrations. The deaths Saturda>
numbered eleven.
According to a special from Pitts
burg. Pa„ between midnight Saturday
and midnight Sunday eleven deaths
and fifteen prostrations directly trace
able to the heat were recorded in that
city. In addition to this many chil
dren have succumbed, as is evidenced
by the burial permits issued. In eight
een hours fifty-nine permits were is
sued. three-fourtns of which were for
children under four years of age. The
normal death rate is sixteen.
Weather Bureau Report.
Reports to the weather bureau at
Washington from points throughout
the hot wave show remarkably high
temperatures generally with little or
no rainfall relief and out poor pros
pects for any immediate substantial
relief in the eastern part of the coun
try. In the south Atlantic and middle
and east gulf states there wcfo local
rains and thunder storms Sunday and
in the extreme northwest cooler weath
er came from local showers.
High temperatures continued during
the day in all districts east of the
Roclcy mountains. At New York the
maximum, 98 degrees, broke the rec
ord there for June, and at Philadel
phia the maximum, 98, equaled the
highest temperature previously record
ed tuere.
Corn Fields Being Destroyed.
Missouri and Kansas are suffering
from hot winds that threaten great
damage to corn. Atchison, Kans., re
ports the greatest drought in north
western Kansas since 1860, a warm
wind having blown from the south al
most ceasingly for seven days.
Abilene, Kans. reports 105 degree
weather with many fields in South
Dickinson county'ruined. A Mexico,
Mo., dispatch says the thermometer in
that part of the state registered 101
Saturday and Sunday and that if rain
does not come soon the farmers will
have to put their stock on the market
immediately to save it. Sedalia, Mo.,
reports 103 degrees in the shade, with
tne statement, that another week of
similar weather will make certain a
failure of the corn crop in Central Mis
souri.
EXCURSIONISTS FACED DEATH.
Seven Hundred Pleasure Seekers lies
cued From Mtikintr ship.
A special from South Norwalk,
Conn., says: Seven hundred em
ployees of the John W. Green hat fac
tory returning Saturday afternoon
from an excursion to Glen island on
the steamer Mohawk were startled by
a tremendous crash, the ship having
struck a rock ten minutes after the
return trip began. A panic followed,
during which every one of the 700 pas
sengers on board scrambled for the life
preservers.
In the crash women and children
were knocked down and trampled
upon.
During the excitement the steamer
had been steadily sinking and ten
minutes after the crash the first deck
was submerged.
Three launches which were near by
when the accident occurred had by
this time nearly reached the disabled
steamer. They immediately went to
the rescue of the passengers who
jumped overboard.
The -water was just beginning to
wash over the second deck when the
excursion steamer Myndert Stearn ar
rived from the island and took on
board the remaining passengers.
The accident was caused by the pilot
of the steamer going on the wrong side
of the buoy which marks the course
to be followed by steamers to and
from the Island.
GUARD SLRPT ON DUTY.
Officers Had Easy Job In Captnring
Mne Belligerent Miners.
During Sunday night Detective T. L.
Felts, assisted by John Justice, deputy
United States marshal, and a posse
of six men, went to the Kentucky side
of Tug river, near Thacker, W. Va.,
and captured the nine persons Mho
are charged with terrorizing the min
ers for the past ten days by shooting
at all who could not give the proper
strikers’ sign. The men were surprised
in their sleep with their winchesters
under their pillows. Even their guard
was captured, asleep on duty.
qUEF.X DOWAGER BALKS.
Old Lady Saspwt* a Trap and Will
Keep Shy of Pekin.
A Shanghai special says: Marquis
Tseng has received a dispatch from
Sian Fu to the effect that the empress
dowager, fearing a trap to capture her,
declines to return to Pekin and has
notified the grand council that the fu
ture capital will be Kai Feng Fu, in
the province of Honan.
SADDENING IMITATION OF
FAME.
\ou are not making any permanent
contributions to literature?”
Oh. I don’t know; I wrote a story
about the Simpsons which has kept them
mad at tne for nine year*.”— Chicago
Rccord-lleralJ.
GOUGE GAME.
’t ou lost your money when you bet
on that fellows height, didn’t you?”
es, but he took an unfair advan
tage. He straightened up his bow legs
and made himse'f two inches higher.”—
Chicago Tribune.
Pracc in the Philippines.
Pm** in the Philippines is bound to prove
profitable to all concerned. Warring con
ditions, whether they bo in the Philippines
or in the human stomach, are equally dis
astrous. If your stomach has rebelled, there
is one authority that will quickly subduo it.
It is Hostettcr’s Htomaeb Hitters, and it cures
constipation, indigestion, biliousness, ner
vousness and dyspepsia. See that a private
Revenue Stamp covers the neck of tho bottle.
r
It’s a wonder some people don’t get in
digestion from chewing the rag.
Pvtjiam Fadrlers Dyes do not sUvin the
hands or spot the kettle. Sold by all drug
gists.
Only per cent, of the total land
area of the Southern States is under cul
tivation.
( There arc 0742 locks and keys in the
Grand Opera House, Paris.
■lest For llic Hostels.
No matter vrhat ails you, headache to
cancer, you will never get well until your
bowels aro put right. Casoakets help nature,
cure you without a gripe or pain, produce
easy natural movements, cost yon just 10
cents to start getting your health back. Cas
oabets Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put-up
in metal boxes, every tablet has C. C. C.
stamped on it. Beware of imitatiog.
Sneaking of autographs, it’s the man
with a bi" bank'aceount whose signature
is most valuable.
Are You I'silig Allen's Fool-Ease
It is the only cure for Swollen, Smarting.
Tired, Aching, Hot, Sweating Feet, Corns
and Bunions. Ask for Allon’s Foot-Ease, a
powder to be shaken into the shoes. Cures
while you walk. At all Druggists and Shoe
Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Address,
Allen S. Olmsted, Leßo.v, N. Y.
Freight can Vie carried on trolley cars
M’ithin the city limits of Detroit, Mich.
FITS permanently cured. No liis er nervous
ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free
Ur. It. U. Ki.ixe, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila. Fa.
A laugh on the face is M'orth two in the
sleeve.
Seeadvt. of Smithdeal’s Business College
Those who are half sick and mentally de
pressed. and trowing old In both xnlnd and
body, are suffering from starvation of tho
nerves. Dickey's Nervine Is a nerve
food and nerve toulc. People get better when
they have taken a lew doses of this wonderful
medicine.
Sick Headache
And similar affections, resulting from disor
dered stomach, are promptly relieved by a
full dose of Crab Orchard Water.
The betft part of the Kimberley dia
mond field covers cine acres only.
THe BESTIS CHIAKST
Why Not Wear ’Em ?
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McILHENNY’S TABASCO.
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the wrappers of our one pound sealed packages (which is the only form in which this excellent coffee is sold).
WOOLSON SPICE CO.. TOLEDO, OHIO.
E. A. Rood. Toledo, Ohio, say*: “Hall’s Ca
tarrh Care cured my wife of catarrh fifteen
years ago and she has had no return of it. It’a
a sure cure.” Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Some men ean never find anything
about the house except fault.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, soften the gums, reduces inflamma
tion .allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle
Agriculture is developing rapidly in the
West Indies.
To the golf writer the pen is mightier
than the sward.
rise’s Cure cannot be too highly spoken of
ss a cough cure.—J. W. O’Bbirn, 322 Third
Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6, 1900.
Even a small barber can be called a
strapping fellow.
Constipation
Does your head ache? Pain
back of your eyes? Bad
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your liver! Ayer’s Pills are
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always s steudv demand lor our goods. Semple
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sls tO S3O/ TO AGENTS
PER WEEK \ SELLING
CRAW’S POPULAR ATLAS
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“ I have used Ayer’s Hair Vigor
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though I am past eighty years of
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Geo. Yellott, Towson, Md.
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no matter; for Ayer’s
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Sometimes it makes the
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SI.M ■ bottle. All druggists.
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send us ono dollar and we will express
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J. C. AYER CO., Lowell, Mass.
FRAGRANT
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In a handy Patent Box ( new) a p .
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fIEDICAE DEPARTMENT
Tnlane Diversity of Louisiana.
Founded in 1834,/ now has 3,841 Graduates.
Iti adYKnU**§ for practical instruction, both in ampl
laboratoti** and Abundant hospital inAlarUlßaro une
qualled. Fr*a -ICCOBA i girnn to tho irreiu Charity Ho§-
pitai with 900 bda and 30,000 patientaannually Special
mmruotion ia given dai y at th* bedaida of the nick-
The next sesninn begin a October 31 at, 1901* For cata
logue and information address Phof. 8- K* Chajlle,
M. !., Dean, P. O. Drawer 261, New Or.eans, La.
DYSPEPSIA
yields to nature’s medicine,
ft easily cures Dyspepsia and all atnmach,
liver, kidney and bowel disorders. An un
rivalled aperient and laxative; Invigorates
and tones the whole syslem. A natural
water ot the highest medicinal value, con
centrated td make It easier
and cheaper to bottle, .rfc liftTih
ship and use. A 6-07.-
bottle is etpiel to 2 gallonsl NSnag”
, of uncondeneed water. ~ jpsea
Sold bj drugiiists every- vjwni-’ Er ' luiW
where. Crab apple trade- Kuttj
murk on every bottle.
CRAB ORCHARD WATER CO., Louisville, Kg.
Malsby & Company,
30 8. Itroud St., Atlanta, On.
Engines and Boilers
Meant Water Healer*, Steam Pump* and
l*nlirthr Injector*.
Manufacturers and Dealer* in
SAW MILLS,
C orn Mills, M ills. Cotton Gin Mtu'liln*
ery and Grain Separators,
SOLID and INSERTED Saws, Saw Tenth and
1 o<*ks, Knight's Patent Dog*. Hirdsall Saw
Mill and Kngine Repairs,Governors,Grata
Pam and a full line of Mill Supplies. Pri*e
and quality of poods guaranteed Catalogue
free by mentioning this paper. *
. jA SPOt^N
BAKING POWDER
IS THE BUST. THY IT.
J.D. A R.B. CHRISTIAN CO.. RICHMOND. VA.
nDnDQY NEW DIBCOVERY; g.™*
UT\ I V 9 ■ quick relief and cures worst
• ■*. liooK of tetlimoDiab and IO days’ treatment
Free. Dr. B. H. GUia'ISOWS. Box B. Atlanta. U*.
Use CERTAIN S'CUBET:
__ - B
HS cures where all elseTailS.
M Beat Cough Syrup. Taste* Good. L'ae g|
Meutioi this Paper 'r.rSr.SS
“MY MARY ANN.”
(Csn be sung to the sir of “My Maryland.”)
In the kitchen she has sway—
Mary Ann, my Mary Annl
There she rules throughout the day,
Mary Ann, my Mary Ann!
Ereakfast, lunch and dinner lair
Excellently she’ll prepare,
Served with LION COFFEE rare—
Mary Ann, my Mary Annl
at
She’s a tried and trusted cook—
Mary Ann, my Mary Ann!
You can bet she knows her book—
Mary Ann, my Mary Ann!
Coffee she can understand,—
She will use no other brand
Than the LION COFFEE grand—
Mary Ann, my Mary Ann!
Well she knows it is not glazed,—
Mary Ann, my Mary Annl
That in million homes ’tie praised!
Mary Ann, my Mgry Ann!
One pound package, in the bean.
Lion head on wrapper seen.
Premium List ißfidc wilt mean
Presents lot my Mary Ann!