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TAMAGE’S SERMOI
The Eminent Divine's
Discourse
Subject: The Gloviea of Heaven-Clirlst’s
Attractiveness Painted in Glowing Col
ors—Flora Ivory Palaces to the Agony
of the Crucilixfton.
[Copyright, Louis Klopsch. 1899.]
. Wabhinoton, D.C.-In this discourse Dr
Taimage sets forth the glories of the world
to Como and the attractiveness of the
Christ, who opens the way; text, Psalms,
ilv., 8, All Phy garments smell of myrrh
and aloes and cassia out of the ivory pal
aces.” J *
Among the grand adornments of the citv
of Paris is the Church of Notre Dame with
great towers and elaborate ros® windows
and sculpturing of the last judgment with
the trumpeting angels and rising dead- its
battlements of quatre foil; its sacristy
with ribbed ceilings and statues of saints’
But there was nothing in all that build
ing which more vividly appealed to my
plain republican tastes than the costly
vestments which lay in oaken presses
—robes that had been embroidered
with gold and been worn by Popes and
archbishops ou great occasions. There was
a robe that had been worn by Pius VII at
the crowning of the first Napoleon, There
was also a vestment that had been worn at
the baptism of Napoleon 11. As our guide
openod the oaken presses and brought out
these vestments of fabulous cost and lifted
them up the fragrance of the puugent aro
matics in which they had been preserved
filled the place with a sweetness that was
almost oppressive. Nothing that had been
done in stone more vividly impressed me
than these things that had been done in
cloth and embroidery and perfume. But
to-day I open the drawer of this text, and
Ilook upon the kingly robes of Christ, and
..as I lift them, flashing with eternal jewels
the whole house is filled with the aroma of
these garments, which “smell of myrrh
and aloes and cassia out of the ivory pal
aces/’
In my text the King steps forth'. His
robes rustle and blaze as He advances. His
pomp and power and gloi-y overmaster the
spectator. More brilliant is He than Queen
Vashti moving amid the Persian princes;
than Marie Antoinette on the day when
Lotfis XVI. put upon her the necklace of
800 diamonds; than Anne Boleyn the day
when .Henry VIII. welcomed her to his
palace—all beauty and all pomp forgotten
while we stand in the presence of this im
perial glory,- King of Zion, King of tho
earth. King of heaven, King forever! Her
garments not worn out, not dust be-
draggled, but radiant and jeweled and re
dolent. It seems as if they must have
been pressed 100 years amid the flowers of
heaven. The wardrobes from which they
have been taken must have been sweet
with clusters of camphor and frankin
cense and all manner of precious wood.
Do you not inhale the odors? Aye, aye.
■“They stroll of myrrh and aloes and cassia
out of the ivory palaces.”
Your first curiosity is to know why the
robes of Christ are odorous with myrrh.
This was a bright leafed Abyssinian plant.
It was trifoliat.od. The Greeks. Egyptians,
Eomans and Jews bought and sold it at a
high price. The first present that was
ever given to Christ was a sprig of myrrh
thrown on His infantile bed in Bethlehem,
and the last gift that Christ ever had was
myrrh pressed into the cup of His cruci
fixion. The natives would take a stone
and bruise the tree, and then it would
exude a gum that would saturate all the
ground beneath. This gum was used for
the purposes of merchandise. One piece
of it no larger than a chestnut would
whelm a whole room with odors. It was
put in closets, in chests, in drawers, in
rooms, and its perfume adhered almost in
terminably to anything that was anywhere
near it. So when in my text I read that
Christ’s garments smell of myrrh I imme
diately conclude the exquisite sweetness
of Jesus.
Would that you all knew His sweetness!
How soon you would turn from all other
attractions! If the philosopher leaped out
-of his hath in a frenzy of joy and clapped
his hands and rushed through the streets
because he had found the solution of a
mathematical problem, how will you fee!
leaping from the fountain of a Saviour’s
mercy and pardon, washed clean and made
white as snow, when the question has been
solved, “How oan my soul be saved?”
Naked, frostbitten, storm-lashed soul, let
Jesus this hour throw around thee tho
“garments that smell of myrrh and aloes
and cassia out of the ivory palace.”
Your second curiosity Is to know why the
robes of Jesus are odorous with aloes.
There is some difference of opinion about
where these aloes grow, what is the color
of the flower, what is the particular ap
pearance of the herb. Suffice it for you
and me toMinow that aloes mean bitterness
the wor!d'over,*and when Christ comes
with garments bearing that particular odor
they suggest to me the bitterness of a
Saviour’s sufferings. Were there ever such
nights as Jesus lived through—nights on
the mountains, nights on the sea, nights in
the desert? Who eyer had such a hard re
ception as Jesus had? A hostelry the first,
an unjust trial in oypr and terminer an
other, a foul mouthed, yelling mob the last.
Was there a space on His back as wide as
yourtwo lingers where He was n<Jt whipped?
Was there a space on His brow an Inch
square where He was not cut of the briers?
When the spike struck at the instep, did it
not go cl ar through to the hollow of the
foot? Oh, long, deep, bitter pilgrimage!
Aloes! Aloes!
John leaned bis head on Christ, but who
did Christ lean on? Five thousand men
fed by the Saviour; who fed Jesus? The
sympathy of a Saviour’s heart going out to
the leper and the adultress; but who
soothed Christ? He had a fit place neither
to be born nor to die. A poor babe! A
poor lsd! A poor young man! Not so
much as a taper to cheer* His dying hours.
Even the caudle of the sun snuffed out.
Was it not all aloes? Our sins, sorrows,
bereavements, losses and all the agonies of
earth and hell picked up as in one cluster
and squeezed into one cup, and that
pressed to His lips until the acrid, nausoat
ing, bitter draft was swallowed with a dis
torted countenance and a shudder from
headtc foot and a gurgling strangulation.
Aloes, aloes! Nothing but aloes. All this
for Himself? All this to get the fame in
the world of being a martyr? All this In a
spirit of stubbornness, because He did not
like Caesar? No, no! All this because He
wauted to pluck me and you from bell.
Because He wanted to raise me and you to
heaven. Because we were lost and He
wanted us found. Because we were blind,
and He wanted us to see. Because we
were serfs, and He wautedus manumitted.
Oh, ye in whose cup of life tire saocharin
has predominated; oh, ye who have had
bright and sparkling beverages, how do
you feel toward Him who in your stead
and to purchase your disenthrallment,
took the aloes, the unsavory aloes, the
bitter aloes?
Your third curiosity is to know why
these garments of Christ are odorous with
cassia. This was a plant which grew in
India, and the adjoining islands. You do
not care to hear what kind of a flower it
had or what kind of a stalk. It is enough
for me to tell you that it was used
medicinally. In that land and in that age,
where they knew but little about pharmacy,
cassia was used to arrest many forms of
disease. So, when In my text we find Christ
coming with garments that smell of oassia,
it suggests to me the healing and curative
power of the Son of God. “Oh,” you say,
“now you have a superfluous ideal We
are not sick. Whv do we want cassia?
We are athletic. Our respiration is per
fect. Our limbs are lithe, and on bright
■cool days we feel we could bound like a
roe.” 1 beg to differ, my brother, from
you. None of you can be better in
physical health than I am, aDd yet I
must sav we are all sick. I have taken the
diagnosis of your case aud have examined
all the best authorities on the subject, and
lust^H
we
npothH
l>ivin<H
like thH
but tfl
smell oIS.
supp<H
a phial
he kuetv^H
to take ''
Hr ■
\v :
’ - at
a man >is j|wsoul. and as
though the wore liere to
I'ury at tho roads .if
lit'.- ni.d .i.-uth other, throwing
upon the grave^^^Bprailaw and a groat
pile of privileges, so that
those going by^^^Fok at the fearful
mound and lenrrHßat 4 suicide it is when
an immortal souljMbr Which Jesus died,
put itself out of thwfgay.- ,
According to my text, lie comes “out of
the ivory palaoes.” You or if you
do not know I will tell you now, that some
of the palaces of olden time were adorned
with ivory. Ahab and Solomon had their
homes furnished with it. The tusks of
African and Asiatic elephants were twisted
into all manner of shapes, and there were
stairs of ivory, and olmirs of ivory, and
tables of ivory, and floors of ivory, and
pillars of ivory, and windows of ivory, and
fountains that dropped into basins of
ivory, and rooms that had ceilings of
ivory. Oil, white and overmastering beau
ty! Green tree branches sweeping the
white curbs. Tapestry trailing the snowy
floors. Brackets of light flashing on the
lustrous surroundings. Silvery music rip
pling on the beach of the arches. The
mere thought of it almost stuns my brain,
and you say: “Oh, if I could only have
walked over such floors! If I could have
thrown myself in such a chair! If I
could have beard the drip and dash of those
fountains!” You shall have something bet
ter than that if you only let Christ Intro
duce you. From that place He came, and
to that place He proposes to transport you,
for His “garments smell of myrrh and aloes
and cassia out of the.lvory palaoes.” What
a place heaven must be! The Tuileries of
the French, the Windsor Castle of the Eng
lish, the Spanish Alhambra, the Russian
Kremlin, are mere dungeons compared with
it! Not so many castles on either side the
Rhine as on both sides of the river of God
—the ivory palaces! One for the angels,
insufferably bright, winged, fire eyed, tem
pest charioted; one for the martyrs, with
blood rod robes from under the altar; one
for the King, the steps -of His palace the
tjrown of the church militant; one for the
singers, who lead the 144,000; one for you,
ransomed from sin; ono for me, plucked
from tho burning. Oh, the ivory paiacesl
To-day it seems to mo as if the windows
of those palaces were illumined for some
great victory, and-I look and see, climbing
the stairs of ivory and walking on floors of
ivbry, some whom we knew and loved on
earth. Yes, I know them. There are
father and mother, not eighty-two years
and seventy-nine years, as when they left
us, but blithe and young as when on their
marriage day. And there are brothers and
sisters, merrier than when we used to
romp across the meadows together. The
cough gone. The cancer cured. The
erysipelas nealed. The heart break over.
Oh, how fair they are in tho ivory palaces!
And your dear little children that went
out from you—Christ did uot let one of
them drop ns He lifted them. He did
not wrench one of them from you. No
they went as from ono they loved well
to one whom they loved better. If I
should take your little child and press its
soft face against my rough cheek, I might
keep it a little while, but when you, the
mother, came along, it would struggle to
go with you. And so you stood holding
your dying child wllen Jesus passed by in
the room, and the little one sprang out to
greet Him. That is all. Y’our Christian
dead did not go down into the dust and
the gravel and the mud. Thqugh it
rained all that funeral day, and the water
came up to the wheel’s hub ns yon drove
out to the cemetery, it made no difference
to them, for they stepped from the home
here to the home there, right into the
ivory palaces. All is well with them. All
is well.
It is not a dead weight that you lift when
you carry a Christian out. Jesus makes
the bed up soft with velvet promises, and
He says: “Put her down here very gently.
Put that head which will never ache again
on this pillow of hallelujahs. Send up
word that the procession is coming. Bing
the bells. Ring! Open your gates, ye
Ivory palaces!” And so your loved ones
are there. They are just as certainly there,
having died in Christ, as that you are here.
There is only one thing more they want.
Indeed, thqre is one thing in heaven they
have not got. They want It. What is it?
Your company. But, oh, my brother, un
less you change your tack you cannot
reach that harbor. You might as well take
the Southern Pacific Railroad, expecting in
that direction to reach Toronto, as to go
on in the way some of you are going, aud
yet expect to reach the ivory palaces.
Your loved ones are looking out of the
windows of heaven now, and yet you seem
to turn your back upon them.
When I think of that place and think of
my entering it, I feel awkward. I feel as
sometimes when I have been exposed to
the weather, and my shoes have been be
mired, and my coat is soiled, and my hair
is disheveled, and I stop in front of some
fine residence where I have an errand. I
feel not fit to go in as I am and sit among
the guests. So some of us feel Rbout
heaven. VVe need to be washed; we need
to be rehabilitated before we go into the
Ivory places. Eternal God, let the surges
of Thy pardoning mercy roll over us. I
want not only to wash my hands and my
feet; but, like some skilled diver, standing
on the pier head, who leaps into the wave
and comes up at a far distant point from
where he went In, so I want to go down,
and so I want to come up. O Jesus, wash
mejiu the waves of Thy salvation!
And here I ask you to solve a mystery
that has been oppressing me for thirty
years. I have been asking it of doctors of
divinity who have been studying theology
half a century, and they have given me
no satisfactory answer. I have turned
over all the books in my library, but got
no solution to the question, and to-day I
come and ask you for an explanation. By
what logic was Christ induced to exchange
the ivory palaces of heaven for the cruci
fixion agonies of earth? I shall take the
first thousand million years in heaven
to study out that problem; mean
while and now taking it as
the tenderest, mightiest of all facts that
Christ did come, that He came with spike3
in His feet, came with thorns in His brow,
[ came with spears in HisJieart, to save you
and to save me “God so loved the world
that He gave His only begojeon Son, that
whosoever Celieveth in Him should not
j perish, but have everlasting life.” O,
; Christ, whelm all our souls with Thy com
passion! Mow them down like summer
grain with the harvesting sickle of Thy
: grace! Ride through to-day the conqueror,
■ Thy garments smelling “of myrrh and aloes
and cassia out of the ivory palaces!”
B, count in buttles of
war. It is not what
' Hood"s Sarsaparilla
dry of its merit. It has
ible victories over the
nkind—impure blood.
Hood's, because
!aUahalilta
Ummmr
The Veiled Prophet.
It was in the forenoon that two mid
dle-aged women rode out Sixteenth
street in an open herdic. They had
the Indefinable but unmistakable air of
tourists, and one of them carried an
illustrated guide book. Both of them
wore spectacles.
I ‘Tills must be the staute of General
: Scott,” said one, as the lierdie trundled
i around Scott Circle. “Yes, fit is Gen
, oral Scott.”
; “But what’s that other statue over
there?” asked the other woman, peer
. ing near-sightedly at a pedestal
! crowned with a tall figure swatched in
i white draperies. “That wasn’t here
I when we were in Washington before.”
“No. I don’t remember it.” answered
the first woman. “It must be new. It
; must be—why, of course. How stupid
I of me not to recognize it! It’s a statue
j of the Veiled Prophet.”
And the other woman said, content
! odly:
“Why. so it is. Isin’t it a lovely
idea.”—Washington Post.
A Cure for Blue*.
“When I get utterly low spirited,”
said the nervous man, “I find a spin
on my wheel does me a world of
good.”
“It is the exercise,” said his friend.
“I think not. I am so glad to get
home alive that I feel good all the
rest of the day.”—lndianapolis Jour
nal.
Are You Using' Allen’s Foot Ease?
It is the only cure for Swollen, Smarting,
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Stores, 26c. Sample sent FREE. Address
Allen S. Olmsted, Leßoy, N. Y.
The falling of a man’s countenance natu
rally lowers his face value.
To Cure Constipation Forever.
Take Caernreta Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c.
If c. C. C. fall to cure, druggists refund money.
A pretty girl’s miryor indulges in pleasant
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How’s This?
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Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, act
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Hall’s Family Pills are the best.
The man with the least money often car
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Kducate Your Bowels With Cascaret*.
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever,
10c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money.
No man can enjoy wealth as long as he has
the toothache.
Mr. Henry Watters on la Editor
of the Louisville Courier Journal. Mr. W. N.
Holdeman is President of the Courier Journal
Cos. *Ho says: “For 30 years I have used
Wintersmith’s Chill Cure in my family. I do
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Arthur Peter & Cos., Louisville, Ky.
God leads his flock through tho life that
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I am entirely cured of hemorrhage of lungs
by Piso’s Cure for Consumption.— Louisa
Lind am a n, Bethany, Mo., January 8, 1894.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children
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It was not till the widow gave to Elijah
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Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak
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The work of this world is done by men who
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nnM’T To avo, d this, use Tctterlne, the
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SCRATCH!
Dr. M. L. Felder, Eclectic, Ala., s'-ys: “I
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RED SEAL SHOES
In a merchant’s store
/Teans he buys for cash
If nothing more.
He’ll give you the most
For your money, we’ll wage,
His wares don’t look like
I hey’ll die of old age.
His shoes will wear well,.
Indeed, this is no lie.
Perhaps why they sell,
Is because they’re made by
The J. K. ORR SHOE CO.,
or ATLANTA, GA.
A Waited Opportunity.
“I never was so insulted in my life!”
she exclaimed.
“What did he do?” asked her dear
est friend. * ,
“We were all alone and he threat
ened to kiss me.”.
“Well?”
“Well, we were alone and he didn’t
do it.”
“Oh-li-h!”—Chicago Post.
Plantation Chill Cure is Guarantlfl
• -• 4 ,‘\/v • -J-- h.’\ *
When the Man Refused.
A certain Irish Member of Parlia
ment, popular and a bachelor, had
been very polite to the daughter of
the house where he was visiting.
When the time came for him to go,
the too-anxious mamma called him in
for a serious talk. “I’m sure I don’t
know what to sny,” she went on: ’tis
reported all around that you are to
marry Letitia.” “Just say that she
refused me,” quietly advised the par
liamentarian.
Ilia Version.
"Haven’t you and your friend gotten
through that argument yet?”
“It isn’t any argument,” answered
the opinionated man resentfully. “I
am merely telling him the facts in the
ease and he is so obtuse that he can't
understand.”—Washington Star.
A Good-Luck Croft*.
A cross recently discovered iu the grave of
the beautiful Queen Dagmar Is supposed to
keep away all evil Influences. There is no
more evil influence than ill health, and there
is nothing which has so great a power to keep
it away than Hostotter’s Stomach Bitters.
It is worth a bundrod good-luck crosses to the
man or woman afflicted with dyspepsia and
indigestion. A private Revenus Stamp
should cover the neck of the bottle.
About the worst thing you cau take for an
ailment is tho advico of your friends.
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Sterling Remedy Cos., Chicago qr New York.
Tho deadly cigarette and the little green
apple are now running neck and neck.
Ayer’s
% SlfOS^
kJ&
Why He Wan Sluicing?.
What does a soldier sing?
The answer depends very much on
Whether he is a regular or a volun
teer. The regulars take to the last
new song from the minstrel or vari
ety stage and It must be either very
funny or very pathetic. The volunteer
soldier has just come from home In
fluences, and thinks of his mother and
her favorite songs. He Is also fond of
hymns, and they come to his lips un
bidden. In the charge at El Caney,
General Chaffee came upon a private,
deadly white, but making his way up
ward through the thicket under Are,
singing at the top of his voice that
old Presbyterian hymn, “How Firm n
Foundation.” The General checked
him and asked him why lie was sing
ing. The answer came quick:
“That’s my mother’s tune. I’m so
scared it’s all I can hold on to.”— W
verley Magazine.
Died With Her Ilrtood.
Examples of parental affection are
often seen in the animal world, and
this pathetic one was once read in a
German paper: “At Neuendorf the
lightning struck the gable-end of a
barn where for years a pair of storks
had built their nest. The flames soon
caught the nest in which the helpless
brood was piteously screaming. The
mother stork now protectingly spread
out her wings over the young ones,
with whom she was burned alive, al
though she might have saved herself
easily enough by flight.”
To cure, or money refunded by your merchant, so why not try it? Price oOc.
What does it do?
It causes the oil glands
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m write the Doctor about It.
Address, DR. J. C. AYER.
Lowell, Mass.
SAYS WE NEED NEW NABOTH
Prof. Waterhonse Favors Calling;
Tfcfts Country “ Fauna M Herenftar.
The St. Louis Republic publishes
with favorable editorial comment, an
article furnished by Professor Water
house of Washington University, on
the subject of a proper name for this
country, the chief ptfints of which are
herewith given:
“At present there is no proper name
that distinctively describes this coun
try. Columbia and America apply to
the whole western hemisphere. The
people of Canada and Mexico, of Cen
tral and South America are all Ameri
cans and might Justly resent the pre
tension which claims that title exclu
sively for the inhabitants of the United
States of North America.
“ 'The United States’ is an awkward
expression. It is plural in form and
singular in sense. It docs not afford
personal or adjective derivatives.
United Statesmen and United States
ian are inadmisslbly harsh. ‘United
States of North America’ is an exact
designation of this country. The first
letters of these words form the word
‘Usona.’ This term is agreeable to.the
ear, singular in number and precise in
definition. Its introduction would sub
stitute for the incomplete United
States an address so full and exact
that no foreigner could misunderstand
it.
“Formerly the press indicated that
its general information was gathered
from the four quarters of the globe by
placing at the heads of its columns
‘North, East, West, South.' From (he
initials of these words some assert
that the term ‘news’ was derived.
“It is facetiously said that United
States stands for ‘Uncle Sam,’ and this
burlesque personification has found a
permanent place in our language. -The
baptismal names of Generals Grant
and Jackson have been supplanted by
the universally used names which ac
cident or valor gave. Physicists have
Invested the utterly inexpressive watt,
volt, ohm and ampere with technical
meanings and have introduced them
into the terminology of electrical sci
ence.
“In fine, use can create and popu
larize new terms. Do not the words
‘Usona’ and ‘Usonian’ so fully sub
serve the needs of exact address and
grammatical convenience as to deserve
a place in our language? The press
can, if it will, effect the adoption of
these new words.”
Beanly Is Blood Deep.
Clean blood means a clean skin. No
beuuty without it. Cascarets, Gandy Cathar
tic? clean your blood and keep it clean, by
stirring up the lazy liver and driving nil im
purities from the body. Begin to-day to
banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads,
and that sickly bilious complexion by taking
Casearet.s, —benuty for ten eents. All drug
gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c.
Matches may be made in liuavtn, but lotb
can be made in any old place.
Malsby & Company,
39 S. Broad St., Atlanta, Ga.
Engines and Boilers
Steam Water He a tor*, Steam IMimpn and
Fenberthy Injector*,
Manufacturers and Dealers in
SAW MILLS,
Corn 51111*, Feed 51 ill*, Cotton Gin Machin
ery ami Grain Separator*.
SOLID and INSERTED Saws, Saw Teeth and
Lock*, Knight'* Patent. Dors, Bird Mal) Saw
Mil) ami Kngine Etcpai i>, Governors, Gi ate
Bars mid a full line of Mill Supplies. Price
and quality of goods guaranteed. Catalogue
free by mentioning this [taper.
DISCOVERY; *i™
tjf bX v I Cl I quick rellsf and oures worst
! rme- Book of testimonial* and 10 day*’ treatment
Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN'B BON*. Box 1). Atlanta, Ga.
DR- MOFFETT'S ■
[ I CmUi A the
U#g. i 1 rr S 11 1 Si II Bowel Troubles of
ijpl I ■"bllliail Children of Any Age.
■■ TEEIHiNB POWDERS
If uot kept by druggist* mail 25 cents to C. J. IBOFFIiTT, IH. D., ST. LOUIS, MO.^
Loaded Shotgun Shells. Winchester guns and
\ ammunition are the standard of the world, but
W they do not cost any more than poorer makes.
All reliable dealers sell Winchester goods.
All FREE : Send name and address on a postal for 15*
. . m /M. page Illustrated Catalogue describing a!! the guns and
winchester 'repeating ARMS CO.,
Xfijs 176 WINCHESTER ftVE.i |g !, IW.
m STOPPED FREE
Permanently Cared
Inaanllf Prevented by
DR. KLINE’S SREAT
NERVE RESTORER
tvnuDU'ntu. Fit* EpiUptf,
Janci. hoi Itaor Narooa***
reatite and $2 trial bottia
j payingk*prest cLtrgn*onif
to Vf. Klin*. Ltd. B'dlera*
.1 Arch S:.. I’iiilaU* lot.*. I’a-
* tgpp
•“•*,! fj’Onfm
Insanity by iM :
Mrs., Pink kmn
hjß' ■' r> ’ V
ir.nu-ed to have pells ,
Every month I grew
K-cinms so bml that I foun*H|Hß|
gradually losing my mind. *HB
“The doctors treated me forJ(
troubles, but I got no
doctor told me that I would be insaHpj
I was advised by a friend to give LyouP
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
trial, and before I had taken all of th#
first bottle my neighbors noticed th
change iu me.
“1 have now taken five bottles an*
cannot find words sufficient to praise it.
I advise every woman who is suffering
from any female weakness to give it a
fair trial. I thank you for your good
medicine.” —Mrs. Gertrude M. John
son, Jonesboro, Texas.
Mr*. Forklna’ tetter.
‘‘l had female trouble of all kinds,
had three doctors, but only grew worse.
I began taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound and Liver Pills
and used the Sanative Wash, and can
not praise your remedies enough.”—
Mbs. Effie Perkins, Pearl, La.
Lazy Lifer
“I have been troubled a great deal
with a torpid liver, which produces constipa
tion. I round CASCAKI4TS to he all you claim
for them, and secured such relief the first trial,
that I purchased another supply and was com
pletely cured. t shall only In-'ton glad to rec
ommend Cascarets whenever the opportunity
is presented." J. A. Smith.
2ih.‘o Susquehanna Avo., Philadelphia, Pe.
x|F Ifr jp CATHARTIC 4
YRADB MARK ftEOkYrCftCD,'
Pleasant. Palatabm, Potent, Taste Good. Do
Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe, 10c, 25c, 00a
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
Sterling Remfdj ('oiniuiiir, t'hicsip >, Mnntrrnl, New York. H2O
B3fl.Tfl.RAf* B°W and Rimrontoed by nil drug-
HW* l u istff to CUBE Tobacco Habit.
CM ARTER’SINK
GOLDEN CROWN
LAMP CHIMNEYS
Are the best. AsU for them. Cost no moro
than common clrimncys. All dealers.
PITTSBURG GLASS CO., Allegheny, F.
BOTTLE OF MORPHINE.,
J. M. Warren,Ordinary Wilcox(’o., Abbeville,
*aye: “I need dally one bottle morphine and
quart of whisky 7 year*ago; Dr. Symscurod me
in 10 day without h.Btng a night’s sleep or Buf
fering a elngle day, and I have never wanted
any morphine or whisky since. Will answer any
questions.” Patients given a written guarantee.
No Buffering or lohh of sleep. Habit cured i tikfr
• lays; no pay till absolutely cured For terms, etc.,
writoDr. B. A. flyms,fil Williams St., Atlanta,Ga.
THE ATLANTA ?
Sommedd
OffnrH thorough practical course® In llookkcop
lng, and .Shorthand and Typewriting Students
placed in positions without extra charge. Ke
durod rates to nil entering Bchool this month.
Call on or address, THE ATLANTA BUSINESS
COLLEGfc, 128, 180 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga.
a and Whiskey Habits
cured at homo with
out pain. Ilook of par
ticulars sent FREE.
B.M.WOOI,LEY, M.D.
Office 104 N. Pryor Ut.
isisLw' il; *' ' ' ll hy
UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA.
Letters,Science,Law,Medicine, Engineering
Hiifh location gives freedom from Malaria and
Yell- • w FeVer.
begiua September !•>.
Ad dr on* < linirinnii, rnfvcraity of Virginia*
Cbarlonorville, Va.
MENTION