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Htouls Klopsoh. 1599.1
<' !:. t:.:- ;r-e r>
i. of some of the perils that
Hr Am-riean institutions uni
Of, HpThe path of safety; text, Isaiah
HBliy land shall be married.’’
greater includes the less, so does
of future joy around our entire
include the epicycle of our own re-
Bold, exhiiarant, unique, divine
Hagery of the text. At the close of a
in which for three days our national
capital was a pageant, and all that grand
review and bannered procession and na
tional anthems could do celebrated peace,
It may not be inapt to anticipate the time
when the Princo of Peace and the Heir of
Universal Dominion shall take possession
of this nation and “thy land shall be mar- 1
rled.”
In discussing the final destiny of this i
nation, it make 9 all the difference in the !
world whether we are on the way to a
funeral or a wedding. The Bible leaves no
doubt on this subject. In pulpits and on
flatforms and in places of public concourse
hear so many of the muffled drums of evil
prophecy sounded, as though we were on
the way to national interment, and beside
Thebes and Babylon and Tyre in the ceme
tery of dead nations our republic was to
be entombed, that I wish you to under
stand it is not to be obsequies, but nup
tials; not mausoleum, but carpeted altar;
not cypress, but orange blossoms; not re
quiem, hut wedding march, for “thy land
shall be married.”
I propose to name some of the suitors
who are claiming the hand of this repub
lic. This land is so fair, so beautiful, so
affluent that it has many suitors, and it
will depend much upon your advice
whether this or that shall be accepted or
rejected. In the first place, I remark;
There is a greedy, all grasping monster
who conies in as suitor seeking the hand
of this republic, and that monster is known
by the name of monopoly. His scepter is
made out of the iron of the rail track and
the wire of telegraphy. He does everything
fpr his own advantage and for the robbery
of the people.
Things went on from bad to worse until
in the three legislatures of New York, New
Jersey and Pennsylvania for a long time
monopoly decided everything. If monop
oly favor3 a law, it passes; if monopoly op
poses a law it is rejected. Monopoly 9tands
in the railroad depot putting into his
pockets in one year £200,000 in excess of
all reasonable churges for services. Mo
nopoly holds in his one hand the steam
power of locomotion and in the other the
electricity of swift communication. Mo
nopoly has the Republican party in one
pocket and the Democratic party in the
other pocket. Monopoly decides nomina
tions and elections—city elections, state
elections, national elections. With bribes
he secures the votes of legislators, giving
them free passes, giving appointments to
needy relatives to lucrative position, em
ploying them as attorneys if they are law
yers, carrying their goods 15 per cent, less
if they are merchants, and if he find a case
very stubborn as well as very important
puts down before him the hard cash of
bribery.
But monopoly is not so easily caught !
now as when during the term of Mr. Bu
chanan the Legislative Committee in one
of our States explored and exposed the
manner in which a certain railway com
pany had obtained a donation of public
land. It was found out that thirteen of the
Senators of that State received £175,000
among them, sixty members of the lower
house of that State received between £SOOO
and £IO,OOO each, the Governor of that
State received £50,000, his clerk received
£SOOO, the Lieutenant-Governor received
SIO,OOO, all the clerks of the Legislature
received SSOOO each, while £50,000 were di
vided among the lobby agents. That thing
on a larger or smaller scale is all the time
going on in some of the States in the Union,
but it is not so blundering as it used to be,
and therefore not so easily exposed or ar
rested. I tell you that the overshadowing
curse of the United States to-day is mo
nopoly. He puts his hand upon every
bushel of wheat, upon every sack of salt,
upon every ton of coai. and every man,
woman and child in the United States feels
the touch of that moneyed depotism. I re
joice that in twenty-four States of the
Union already anti-monopoly leagues have
been established. God speed them in the
works of liberation.
I have nothing to sav against capital
ists. A man has a right to all the money
he can make honestly—l have nothing to
say against corporations as such; without
them no great enterprise would be possible,
but what 1 do say is that the same prin
ciples are to be applied y> capitalists and
to corporations t Hat are applied to the
poorest man and the plainest laborer.
What ;s wrong for me is wrong for great
corporations. If 1 take from you your
property without any adequate compensa
tion, I am a thief, and if a railway
damages the property of the people with
out making anv adequate compensation,
that is a gigantic theft. What is wrong on
a small scale is wrong on a large scale.
Monopoly in England has ground hundreds
of thousands of her best people into semi
starvation and in Ireland has driven multi
tudinous tenants almost to madness and
In the United States proposes to take the
wealth of 00,000,000 or 70,000.000 of people
and put it in a few silken wailels. !
Monopoly, brazen faced, iron fingered, j
vulture hearted monopoly offers his hand,
to this republic. He stretches it out over |
the lakes and up the great railroads and
over the telegraph poles of the continent
and says, “Here is ruv heart and hand; be
mine forever.” Let" the millions of the
people North, South, East and West forbid
the banns of that marriage, forbid them at
the ballot box, forbid them on the plat
form, forbid them by great organizations,
forbid them by the overwhelming senti
ment of an outraged nation, forbid them
by the protest of the church of God, forbid
them by prayer to high heaven. That
Herod shall not have this Abigail. It shall
not be to all devouring monopoly that this
land is to be married.
Another suitor clniming the hand of this
republic is nihilism.
He owns nothing but a knife for uni
versal cuttbroatery and a nitroglycerin
bomb for uriversal explosion. He believes
in no God, no government, no heaven and
no heli except what he can make on earth!
Ho slew the czar of Bussia, keeps maDV a
king practically imprisoned, killed Abra
ham Lincoln, would put to death every
king and president on earth, and if he had
the power would climb up until he could
drive the God of heaven from His throne
and take It himself, the universal butcher.
In France it is ealled communism; in the
United States i: is called anarchism; in
Bussia it Is called nihilism, but that last is
the most graphic and descriptive term. It
means complete and eternal smash up. It
would make the holding of property a
crime, and It would drive a dagger through
your heart and put a torch to your dwell
ing ana turn over this whole land into the
possession of theft and lust and rapine and
mnrder. „ _ ~
Where does this monster live? In all the
and cities of this land. It offers its
hand to this fair republic. It proposes to
tear to pieces the ballot box, the legislative
ball, the congressional assembly. It would
take this laud and divide it up, or rather
divide it down. It would give ns much to
the idler as to the worker, to the bad as to
the good. Nihilism'. This
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ii • v •■!•;. r.* ■ f St a:-'* and thHHH
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l’ai;.'s "Ago of Reason” or SHraSHH
•TMiproj hy ..f Hi-torv.” It
tak- awav from 1 ;:.:ry the j^HHHH
make- diff-r-:. I ctween tuHBHH
state- an 1 t!:- king i f 1 >ahflHHH||
tween American civ ilktatiou and b3HE9|
canniliaiism. If infidelity
tile Scriptures, it would In' 200 ytaßE
the civihoed tiati. • to-.-mii vrbHHH
and then from sernii*arbaristn intoSHB
night savagery until then oral- of a uo^HH
erie of tigers, rattlesnakes and
zees would lie better i ban the morals
shipwrecked human race. ,
The only impulse in the right
that this world bus ever had has
from the Bible. It was the
Roman law and of healthful
That book has been the mother of all
forms and all charities—mother of
lish magna charta and American
tion of Independence. Benjamin FranklSH
holding that Holy Eook in his hand. stoeH
before nn infidel club in Paris and read fIH
them out of the prophecies of HabakknleM
and the infidels, not knowing what boofl|
it was, declared that it was the best poetryl
they had ever heard, That book broughH
George Washington down on hi 9 knees in 1
the snow at Valley Forge and led the dy
ing Prince Albert "to ask some one to sing
“Rock of Ages.”
I tell you that the worst attempted crime
of the century is the attempt to destroy
this book. Yet infidelity, loathsome, stench
iul, leprous, pestiferous, rotten mODSter !
stretches out its band, ichorous with the :
second death, to take the hand of this re
public. It stretches it out through seduc- !
tive magazines, and through lyceum lec
tures and through caricatures of religion.
It asks for all that part of the continent al
ready fully settled, and the two-thirds not
yet occupied. It says; “Give me all east
of the Mississippi, with the key3 of the
church and with the Christian" printing
presses—then give me Wyoming, give me
Alaska, give mo Montana, give me Colo
rado, give me all the S'ates west of the
Mississippi, and I will take those places and
keep them by right of possession long be
fore the gospel can be fully intrenched.”
But there Is another suitor that presents
his claim for the hand of this republic. He
is mentioned in the verso following my
text where it says. “As the bridegroom re
•joiceth over the bride, so shall thy God re
joice over thee.” Before Columbus and his
120 men embarked on the Santa Maria, the
Pinta, and the Nina, for their wonderful
voyage, what was the last thing they did?
They sat down and took the holy sacrament
of the Lord Jesus Christ. After they caught
the first glimse of this country and the gun
of one ship had announced it to the other
vessels that land had been discovered, what
was tbo song tbst went up from all the
three decks? “Gloria in excelsls.” After
Columbus and his 120 men had stepped
from the ship’s deck to the solid ground,
what did they do? They all knelt and con
secrated the new world to God. What did
the Huguenots do after they landed in the
Caroliuas? What did the Holland refugees
do after they had landed in New York?
What did the pilgrim fathers do after they
landed in New England? With bended knee
and uplifted face and heaven besieging
praver, they took possession of this conti
nent for God. How was the first American
Congress opened? By prayer, in the name
of Jesus Christ. From its birth this nation
was pledged for holy marriage with Christ.
And then see how good God has been to
us! Just open, the map of the continent
and see how it is shaped for immeasurable
prosperities. Navigable rivers, more in
numoer and greater than of anyotherland,
rolling down on all sides to the sea, prophe
sying large manufactures and easy com
merce. Look at the great ranges of moun
tains timbered with wealth on the top and
sides, metaled with wealth underneath.
One hundred and eighty thousand square
miles of coal. One hundred and eighty
thousand square miles of iron. The laud
so contoured that extreme weather hardly
ever lasts more than three days—extreme
heat or extreme cold. Climate for the
most part bracing and favorable for brawn
and brain. All fruits, alf minerals,
all harvests. Scenery displaying an
autumnal pageantry that no laud
on earth pretends to rival. No
South American earthquake. No Scotch
mists. No Loudon Fogs. No Egyptian
plagues. No Germanic divisions. The
people of the United States are happier
than anv people on earth. It Is the testi
mony of every man that has traveled
abroad. For the poor more sympathy,
for the industrious more opportunity.
Oh, how good God was to our fathers, and
how good He lias been to us and our chil
dren. To Him, blessed be His mighty
name—to Him of cross and triumph, to
Him who still remembers the prayer of the
Huguenots and Holland refugees and the
pilgrim fathers, to Him shall this land be
married. Oh, you Christian patriots, by
your contributions and your prayers,
Hasten on the fulfillment of the text.
While some people may stand at the
gates of the city, saving, “Stay back!” to
foreign populations, I press out as far be
yond those gates as I can press out beyond
them and beckon to foreign nations, say
ing, “Come, come, all ye people who are
honest and industrious and God loving!”
But say you, “I am so afraid that they
will bring their prejudices for foreign gov
ernments and plant them here.” Absurd.
They are sick of the governments that
have oppressed them and they want free
America! Give them the great gospel of
welcome. Throw around them all Chris
tian hospitalities. They will add their in
dustry and hard earned wages to this
country, and then we will dedicate all
to Christ and “thv land shall be married.”
But where shall 'the marriage altar be?
Let It be the Eockv Mountains, when,
through artificial and mighty irrigation,
all their tops shall be covered, as they
will be, with vineyards and orchards and
grainflelds. Then let the Bostons and the
New Forks and the Charlestons of the
Pacific coast come to the marriage altar
on one side, and then let the Bostons and
the New Yorks and the Charlestons of
the Atlantic coast come to the marriage
altar on the other side, and there be
tween them let this bride of nations kneel,
and thee if the organ of the loudest
thunders that ever shook the Sierra
Nevadas on the one side or moved the
foundations of the Alleghanies on the
other side should open full diapason of
wedding march that organ of thunders
could not drown the voice of him who
would take the hand of this bride of nations,
saying, “Asa bridegroom rejoiceth a
bride, so thy God rejciceth over thee.” At
that marriage banquet the platters shall
be of Nevada silver, and the chalices Oi
California abld and the fruits of northern
Kcchards, and the spiees of southern
1 the tapestry ot American manu
- from a!
IllgigH. : - e-.r.h a:. 1 frer. aii the
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pPP/e Goeth
'Before a Fall/’
flSEHpret/d pcor.’e ,u .ink they .’•<’ strong.
WM/mh* ide.i o f disejse. negU-.i health.
run and stc'n.ich. h.i
become deranged. Take
hHSpm.w'Ss and you nodi pre-vent
and save your pride.
II National ForeTer.
writer in Cornhill gives some
iSpaorous notes of English school ex
'■Kinations. Apparently national
iferatteristics come out as vividly as
Sliviiual ones, at these encounters
ifitwesn the learned and the unlearned.
-S Onaday, an examiner was listening
to a cljss of Irish boys, in London, as |
they repeated Macan'lay’s “Horatius." ;
“Would three soldiers, nowadays,” ;
he aslfed, “be likely to hold a bridge
whole army?”
the boys answered.
Englishmen, for ex
ample?”lße continued.
said the class.
“Would three Scotchmen?”
They again dissented.
“Would three Irishmen?”
“Please, sir,” shouted an excitable
little fellow, “one Irishman would
do itl”
THE EXCELLENCE OF SYBOP OF FIGS
is due not only to the originality and
simplicity of the combination, but also
to the care and skill with which it is
manufactured by scientific processes
known to the California Fig Syrup
Cos. only, and we wish to impress upon
all the importance of purchasing the
true and original remedy. As the
genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured
by the California Fig Syrup Cos.
only, a knowledge of that fact will
assist one in avoiding the worthless
imitations manufactured by other par
ties. The high standing of the Cali
fornia Fig Syrup Cos. with the medi
cal profession, and the satisfaction
which the genuine Syrup of Figs has
given to millions of families, makes
the name of the Company a guaranty
of the excellence of ils remedy. It is
far in advance of all other laxatives,
as it acts on the kidneys, liver and
bowels without irritating or weaken
ing them, and it does not gripe nor
nauseate. In order to get its beneficial
effects, please remember the name of
the Company
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FK AN CISCO, CnL
f.OCZSViLLE. Kx, J’KH Y9RK.N.I,
GOLDEN CROWN
LAMP CHIMNEYS
Are the best. A*k for them. Cost no more
than common chimney*. Ail dealer#.
FITTSBi:KG GLASS CO., Allegheny, Pa.
TPANTED-Cm# of bad health that R I P-A N 8
Vf will not benefit. Send 6 cts. to Ripan* Chemical
Cos - Newi’ork. for lo samples and low testimonial*.
15J UufitS WHEIt'E ALL ELSE FAILS. {3
fitag Beet Cough Syrup. Taetee Good. Use
08E CERTAIN CORN CURE.
MENTION THIS PAPERES“HW23S
Refuted.
“Sure, Mrs. Muicahey, they do be
a sayin’, ma’am, thot ye’re a two-faced
woman.”
“Fwhat’s thot? Shure, I’ll have ye
arrested if ye say a thing like thot
forninst me!”
“Faith, Mrs. Muicahey, ma’am, I
didn’t say it at all! Why, I stood up
for ye! I said it wasn’t so, bekase if
ye did have two faces, ye’d wear th’
other one mighty quick.—New York
Herald.
Plantation Chill Eure is Guaranteed
' —■ 11, —M———— y
' BpWWUffyfh: n e: ■> ■ ■
ittn I. is Y
that - * *•! At *oi a
du.ng, if you don't hi v
hrre. Did you think u
possible to buy a $50.00
Bicycle for sl* 75? Ca:-
PFVfC, $18.75. alogtie No. 59 tell* all
“ about Bicycle*, Sewing
' Machines, Organs and Pianos.
What do you think of a fine
suit of Clothing, made-to-your
measure, guaranteed to fit and Ln
expresn jiaiti to yonr station
for $5.50? Catalogue No. 57 r,
shows 3a samples of clothing }
and shows many bargains in /
Shoes, Hats and Furnishings.
Lithographed Catalogue No. J/uV
47 shows Carpets, Rugs, Por- A
tieres and Lace Curtains, in j\
hand-painted colors. Wt pOU mNJ '
Freight, sew carpets free, and I
furnish lining without charge.
W’hat do you mI B
Ms/
ily Relrigera
sfyjytor for $3-95?
*W ' I.M ‘ S ul onc ov€r ® oo ° r_
gains contained in our Gen
iMyyji eral Catalogue of Furniture
1 I Household Goods.
-i w e uve you from 40 to 60
SBcf per cent, on everything. Why
buy at retail when you know
of us ? Which catalogue do
Price , $3-95. you want? Address this way,
JULIUS HINSS & SON, Baltimore, Md. Dept. SOI
Transaction Between Quest and Clerk.
Joe Walsh, night clerk, was a party
to a deal the other night which made
him $3 richer and which he ir, still
studying about. It was getting along
toward the theatre hour when one of
the guests of the hotel came down
stairs with his valise, and, after pay
ing his bill, requested that the clerk
keep his valise until he came back
from the show, as he was going out on
a late train. He also pulled ass bill
out of his pocket and asked the clerk
to change it. Walsh looked in his cash
drawer, but found he did not have it.
“Well,” said the guest, “just keep the
*5 for security and lend me a dollar.”
The clerk did so and the guest de
parted. He came back about 11 o’clock
and, being in a hurry to catch the
train, rushed up to the desk. He threw
down four silver dollars and the clerk
gave him the $5. It appeared all right.
When the guest had gone TValsh looked
over his cash and found himself .$3
ahead.
“Well,” said Walsh, after he had
puzzled his head for a while to see
how It happened, “that man needs a
bookkeeper. It was lucky for me he
didn't make a mistake the other way.”
Exp:nsive Plovers’ Eggs.
A French contemporary grumbles be
cause, owing to the greediness of the
English, plovers’ eggs cost 25 cents
apiece in Paris. But the complaint
need not be taken seriously, as the
same authority quotes SI per egg as
the price current in London, asserting,
moreover, that as much as sls was bid
'for a couple of specimens recently. On
the Continent the eggs of the plover
are not by any means so highly appre
ciated as with us. The late Prince
Bismarck, however, was particularly
fond of them, and his admirers used
to send them to him by the thousand
from the plains of North Germany.—
London Chronicle.
Beauty Is Bliwxl l)oep.
Clean blood means a clean skin. No
beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar
tic clean your blood and keep it clean. by
stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im
purities from the body. Begin to-day to
banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads,
and that sickly bilious complexion by tailing
Cascarets, —beauty for ten cents. All drug
gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c-
A Frenchman proroses to print papers by
exposing the original copy to the X-ray.
Try "Tlz-a-Kure” for Dyspepsia.
This Is a grand new remedy for all stomach
troubles. Many people suffer all the time,
when they can easily be relieved and cured.
This remedy Is In tablet form in a small box
easily carried in the vest pocket, ready at a mo
ment’s notice to betaken when distress is felt.
Jf your druggist does not have it send 25c, or if
you prefer to try It first, send for free sample.
Tizakure Cos., Tarpon Springs, Fla.
Cocoa nuts come from tho East Indies. West
Indies and other islands near the equator.
Educate Your Howels With Cascurets.
Cndy Cathartl \ cure <ronstlpatlon forever,
10c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money.
By experiments with brill hearings on
the saving of power wa> 35 percent.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is a liqutrl and is taken |
; nternally. and act* directly on the blood and I
mucous surfaces of the system. Write for tea- I
timonials, free. Manufactured by
F. J Cheney & Cos., Toledo. O.
A three-dav trial of heavy traffic vehicles
will begin at Liverpool. England, July $Lt.
Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away, j
To quit tobacco easily and forerer, be mag
netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To-
Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men
strong. All druggists. 50c or sl. Cure guaron
teed. Bock let and sample free Address
Sterling Remedy Cos., Chicago or New York.
Hazel nuts grow In Europe. Russia, Asia,
North Africa and North America.
Skin Diseases In Young or Old.
Tetter. Eczema. Ringworm, and kindred trou
bles. are cured by Tetterlne. Sold at druggists
for 50c a box. or prepaid for same price by J. T.
Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga Voluntary letters
blessing us for cures, from all over the count* y,
are on file, and we are glad to show them.
Lots of people are willing to do any kind of
work, but really want an easy job.
Mrs, Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
•eethinc.oftens the gums, reduces in Aaintna
‘ion,allays pain.rures wind colic. 25c. a bottle.
Fits permanently cured. No firs or nervous
ness *fter first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great
Nerve Restorer, t'-i trial bottle and treatise free.
Dit. It. H. Ki.ink, Ltd.. 931 Arch St.. Phi la.. Pa.
I believe Piso** Cure for Consumption saved
my boy’s life last summer.—Mrs. Allie Doug
lass. Le Roy, Mich., Oct. 30. 1894.
Queen Victoria’s I) res* maker's bills would
be modest for a woman in ordinary socle: y.
To Cure Constipation Forever.
Take Cascareto Candy Cathartic. 10c or ?sc.
If C. C. C. fall to cure, druggists refund money.
Nothing bores a man more than an expla
nation of something about to be explained.
To cure, or money refunded by your merchant, so why not try it? 'Price 50c.^
Oor Bridge Builders la Africa.
Between Khartoum and Alexandria
the Nile flow* for 1,800 miles, and in
all that distance it receives only one
tributary, the Atbara, which comes
from the Abyssinian highlands. In
building the railroad from the Lower
Nile to Khartoum, hundreds of miles
along the right bank of the river, It Is
necessary therefore to erect only one
bridge. This bridge will be an iron
and steel structure over a quarter of a
mile in length, nnd a Pennsylvania
firm of bridge-builders are now turning
out the material, which will be shipped
to Egypt and transported up tho Nile
to the banks of the Atbara. The force
of Philadelphia artisans who will erect
the bridge have sailed for Egypt, and
hope to have the foundations ready for
the superstructure by the time it ar
rives.
The British Government Is having
this bridge built in America because
there Is pressing need for It to obviate
considerable delay In the completion
of the railroad, and we can turn It out
more quickly than British builders
would agree to do. The prodigious
work of developing Africa will require
many bridges and a great deni of ma
chinery, and our builders and manu
facturers are perfectly able to com
pete successfully with the rest of the
world for the supply of many of these
products.—New Y'ork Sun.
Concerning the Stupe of an Anaesthetic.
It is a Bath physician who tells the
following:
“Some time ago I happened to spend
the night in a country town not far
from Bath, and it happened that there
was stopping at the same hotel an
Itinerant eye specialist.
"We drifted into a conversation, and
during the course of the evenlL*g he
told me of some of the marvellous
operations he had performed on the
eye. One case In particular he spoke
of that caused me considerable aston
ishment, for I didn’t know, I confess,
that the operation had been success
fully performed. He said ho had re
cently taken out a patient’s eye, scraped
the back of it and returned it to its
proper place. The patient, he said, was
never troubled by bnd eyesight after
ward.
“ ‘That was a difficult operation, doc
tor,’ said I.
“ Wes,’ said he. *lt was.’
“ ‘I suppose you found It ueejssary
to employ an anaesthetic?'
I)o Your Feet Ache and Burn ?
Shake Into your shoes Allen's Foot-Ease,
a powder for the feet. It makes Tight or
New Shoes feel Easy. Cures Corns, Bun
ions, swollen, Hot, "Callous, Aching and
sweating Feet. Sold by all Druggist*,
Grocers and Shoe Stores, 26e. Sample sent
FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Leßoy,
N. Y.
A iialf-million-do.lar electrio cotton mill
is to be erected in North Carolina.
If you are young you nat
urally appear so.
If you are old, why ap
pear so?
Keep young Inwardly; we
will look after the out
wardly.
You need not worry longer
about those little streaks of
gray; advance agents of age.
Auers
will surely restore color to
gray hair; and it will also
give your hair all the wealth
and gloss of early life.
Do not allow tne falling of
your hair to threaten you
longer with baldness. Do not
be annoyed with dandruff.
We will send you our book
on the Hair and Scalp, free
upon request.
WrHm to thm Doctor.
If you do not obtain all tbo bone
fit* you exported from the uee of
the Vigor, write the doctor about It
Probably there la aome difficulty
with your general ftem which
may be eatily removed.
▲ddreaa, DR. J. C. AVER.
Lowell, Maia.
A5JSr_ m DR. MOFFETT'S B BXita*.
wferrECTUIII ft “ts
AC&y 1 ttlnlN||srs,v
2&mSmßk ™ TEETHING POWDERS ■■■ Auk Your Dr ugijlst for IB
Jfappj/9/fl I m
Sratitudm l
■!
■ ———3l^H
[LIT?t TO MSS. PISSHAM *9. *6,785! * f
*’ Dkab Mrs. Pinkhasi—l have manyl“
many thanks to give you for what your
Vegetable Compound has done-for me.
After first confinement I tv a* sick for
nine years with prolapsus of tlie womb,
had pain in left side,in small of back,
a great deal of headache, palpitation
of heart and leucorrhoea. I felt so
weak and tired that I could not do my
work. I became pregnant again and
fook your Compound all through, and
now have a sweet baby girl. I never
before had such an easy time during
labor, and I feel it waA due to Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I
am now able to do my work and feel
better than I have for years. I cannot
thank you enough.”—Mrs. Ed. Eh
linger, Devins, Tex.
Wonderfully Strengthened.
“ I have been taking Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound, Blood
Purifier and Liver Pills and feel won
derfully strengthened. Before using
your remedies I was in a terrible state;
felt like fainting every little while. I
thought I must surely die. But now,
thanks to your remedies, those feel
ings are all gone." —Mrs. Emilib
ScHXEIDKR, 1244 HELEH AVI., DEIROII
Mich.
DYSPEPSIA
“ For six years I wu a victim ot dys
pepsia in its worst form. 1 could eat nothing
but milk toast, and at titnesmy stormich would
not retain and digest even that Last March I
began taking CASCARETS and since then I
have steadily improved, until 1 am as well as I
ever was in my life.'
David H. Murphy. Newark. O.
/F CATHARTIC a
Vooew
THAOI UA*K RCOIftTZRID
Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Tnste Good. Do
Good. Nevijr Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 26c. 60a
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
4trrilair Redj €•*!*■?, (hloag*, Mofilrfal, titw ¥®rk. 311
NC.TA BjAft Sold and gnrranteed by all drag
’KN I l$ n BAw gists to nJKI; Tobaoco Habit.
THE ONLY mCTICAL METHOD the Harle
quin Cabba/c Pup described In: “The Use of
the Gasoline Torchfn Fighting Insects,” n book
written and copyrighted by Fred Keinleln. Mt.
Vernon. 111., which will be mailed on receipt of
10c. The meth<*l it describes will be found to bo
also by far the simplest way of lighting < lunch
bugs, Squash bugs. Plant Lice am! Scale Insects^
SALESMEN
CItAM’S M.AhMFI C KNT TWFNTI K^m>.
CENTURY MAP OF UNITKD STATKSatfV
WORLD just completed. Largest, latent
most accurate map ever printed on one sheet
In the world Shows all recent change*. s oll9
at sight Price low. Exclusive territory given.
lJip profit to salesmen. Also Handsomest. Line of
Low-Priced. Qulck-SeUlng Hooks ami Family
P.ibles ever offered Address li TIMiINS PI H
LIBIIINQ CO., Klsor Building, Atlanta, Ga.
Hartford and Vedette
Ir3lCY r CLES.
Public appreciation of the un
equaled combination of quality and
price embodied in these machines
is shown in the present demand for
them which is entirely without pre
cedent.
NEW MODELS.
Chainless, ... $75
Columbia Chain . . 50
Hartfords, ... 35
Vedettes, . . $25,26
A limited number of Columbia, Models 45, 46
and 49 (improved) and Hartfords, Patterns 7
and 8, at greatly reduoed prices,
BEE OCR CATALOGUE.
*~ ‘ *
POPE MFQ. CO., Hartford, Conn.
HIM repairs
II SAWS, RIBS,
BRISTLE TWINE, BABBIT, &c.,
FOB ANT MAK.K OF CUN.
ENGINES, BOILERS i< PRESSES
Anti Repairs for same. Shafting, Pulleys,
Belting. Injectors, Pipes, Valves and Fittings.
LOMBARD IMS IRKS 4 SUPPLY CO.,
AUGUSTA, GA.
‘ELF’ REFRIGERANT
I A over 20 degree* colder than I AP
I used In refrigerators Just like ISj W
■ “ perfect substitute for 1 w
SEND FOB CIRCULARS. AGENTS WANTED.
Flushing Avenue, BROOKLYN, N. Y.
"•SR&EfT Thompson’s Eyo Wator
Q AQQY NEW DISCOVERY; gve>
VJf TX V-* I V quick relief and cures worst
case-. B<x>k of teat tmen mi tend 1 O days’ treatment
Free. Dr. H. ■. OKSEV'B SORB. Box D. Atlanta. Oa.