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Abject: Xlie Queens of Home—Tlie Rights
of Woman Discussed—Her Dominion
Is Home, and There She Should Klglit
ly Rule—Comforter of the Sick.
[Copyright, Louis Klopsch, 1899.1
Washin(}tos, D. C.—ln this discourse the
opportunities or usefulness for women tire
set forth by Dr. Tutmiige, and many sym
pathies are stirred and memories recalled.
The test is Solomon’s Songs, vi., 8. “There
are three-score queens.”
So Solomon by one stroke set forth the
Imperial character of a true Christian wom
an. She is not a slave, not a hireling, not
a subordinate, but a queen. In a former
sermon I showed you that crown and court
ly attendants and imperial wardrobe'were
not necessary to make a queen, but that
graces of the heart and life will give coro
nation to any woman. I showed you at
some length that woman’s position was
higher in the world than man’s, and that,
although she had often been denied th’e
right of suffrage, she always did vote and
always would vote by ber influence, and
that her chief desire ought to be that she
should have grace rightly to rule in the
dominion which she has already won. I
began an enumeration of some of her rights
and now I resume the subject.
In the first place, woman has the special
and the superlative right of blessing and
comforting the sick. AVhat lahd, what
street, what house has not felt the smitlngs
■of disease? Tons of sick beds'
What shall we do with them? Shull man,
with his rough hand and clumsy foot, go
stumbling around the sickroom, trying to
soothe the distracted nerves and alleviate
the pains of the distressed patient? The
young man at college may scoff at the idea
at being under material influences, but at
the first blast of typhoid fever on his cheek
he says, “Where is mother.”
It is an awful thing to be ill away from
home in a strange hotel, once in awhile
men coming in to look at you, holding
their band over their mouth for fear they
will catch the contagion. How roughly
they turn you in bed! How loudly they
talk! How you long for the ministries of
home! I know one such who went away
from one of the brightest of homes for sev
eral weeks’ business absence at the west.
A telegram came at midnight that he was
on his deathbed far away from home. By
express train the wife and daughters went
westward, but they went too late. He
feared not to die, but he was in an agony
to live until his family got there. He tried
to bribe the doctor to make him live a lit
tle longer. He snid, “I am willing to die,
but not alone.” But the pulses fluttered,
the eyes closed and the heart stopped. The
express trains met in the midnight, wife
and daughters going westward, lifeless re
mains of husband and father coming east
ward. Ob, ft was a sad, pitiful, over
whelming spectacle! When we are sick,
we want to be sick at home. When the
time comes for us to die, we want to die at
home. The room may he very humble, and
the laces that look into ours may be very
plain, but who cares for that? Loving
hands to bathe the temples. Loving voices
to speak good cheer. Loving lips to read
the comforting promises of Jesus.
In our Civil War men cast the cannon,
men fashioned the musketry, men cried to
the hosts, “Forward, march!” men hurled
their battalions on the sharp edges of the
enemy, crying, “Charge, charge!” but
woman scraped the lint, woman adminis
tered the cordials, woman watched by the
dying couch, woman wrote the last mes
sage to the home circle, woman wept at
the solitary burial, attended by herself
and four men with a spade. Wo greeted
the generals home with brass bands and
triumphal arches aud wild huzzas, but the
story is too good to be written anywhore
save in the chronicles of heaven, of Mrs.
Brady, who came down among the sick in
the swamps of the Chickahominy; of Annie
Hess in the copper shop hospital; of Mar
garet Breckinridge, who came to men who
had been for weeks with their wounds un
dressed —some of them frozen to the
ground, and when she turned them over
those that had an arm left waved it
and filled the air with their “hurrah!”
—of Sirs. Hodge, who came from Chi
cago with bhmkqts and with pil
lows, until the men shouted: “Three
cheers for the Christian commission!
God bless the women at home!” then sit
ting down to take the last message: “Tell
my wifonot to fret about me, but to meet
me in heaven; tell her to train up the boys
whom we have loved so well; tell ber we
shall meet again in the good land; tell her
to bear my loss like the Christian wife of a
Christian soldier,” and of Mrs. Shelton, in
to whose face the convalescent soldier
looked and said, “Your grapes and cologne
cured me.” And SO it was also through all
of our war with Spain—women heroic on
the field, braving death and wounds ’to
reach the fallen, watching by their fever
cots in the West Indian hospitals or on the
troopships or in our smitten home camps.
Men did their work with shot and shell and
carbine and howitzer; women did their
work with socks and slippers and bandages
and warm drinks and Scripture texts and
gentle stroking of the hot temples and
•tories of that laud where they never have
any pain. Men knelt down over the
wounded’and said, “On which side did you
fight?” ’Women knelt down over the
wounded and said: “Where aro you hurt?
What nice thing can I make for you to eat?
What makes you cry?” To-night while we
men are sound asleep in our beds there will
be a light in yonder loft; there will be
groaning down that dark alley; there will
be cries of distress in that cellar. Men will
sleep, and women will watch.
Again, woman has a special right to
take care of the poor. There are hun
dreds and thousands of them all over the
land. There is a kind of work that men
cannot do for the poor. Here comes a
group of little barefoot children to the
■door of the Dorca3 society. They need to
be clothed and providod for. Which of
these directors of banks would know how
many yards it would take to make that
little girl a dress? Which of these mascu
line hands could fit a hat to that little
girl’s head? Which of the wise men would
know how to tie on that new pair of shoos?
Man sometimes gives his charity in a rough
way, and it falls like the fruit of a tree in
the east, which fruit come3 down so heavily
that it breaks the skull of the man who
is trying to gather it. But woman glides
so softly into the house of destitution and
finds out all the sorrows of the place and
puts so quietly the donation on the table
that all the family come out on the front
steps as she departs, expecting that from
under her shawl she will thrust out two
wings and go right up toward heaven,
from whence she seems to have come down.
Can you tell me why a Christian woman,
going down among the haufits of iniquity
on a Christian errand, never meets with
any indignity? I stood in the chapel of
Helen Chalmers, the daughter of the cele
brated Dr. Chalmers, in the most aban
doned part of the city of Edinburg, and I
snid to her as I looked around upon the
fearful "surroundings! of that place, “Do
you come here nights to hold a service?”
“Oh, yes!” she said. “Can it be possible
that you never meet with an insult while
performing this Christian errand?”
“Never,” she said, “never.” That young
woman who has her father by her side,
walking down the street, armed police at
each corner, is not so well defended as that
Christam woman who goes forth on gospel
work into the haunts of iniquity, carrying
the Bibles and bread. God with the red
richt arm of His wrath omnipo nt would
tear to pieces any one who sltocUl offer in
dignity to her. He would smtie him with
lightnings and drown him with floods and
swallow him with earthquakes, and damn
him with eternal indignations. Some one
said: “I dislike very much to see that
Christian woman teaching those bad boys
in the mission school. I amjifraid to have
her instruct them.” “So,^agiid^u^^i|T
teredbyffH
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: mat hnnfBHBHHE
■■an i get
gets it. The man is hurd-fiste^H^m
but
■•■ l fr sh-uila^HH
No need of your turning your bac^^^S
protending you doii'f hear; you
There is no need of vour saying yoqHH
begged to dentil. There is no need of
wasting your time, and you might
submit first as last. You had better rigS
away take down your checkbook, minH
the number of the check, fill up the blanl3
sign your name and hand it to her. TherS
is no need of wasting time. Those poor
children o.n the back street have been
hungry long enough. That sick man
must have some farina. • That consump
tive must have something to ease his
cough. I meet this delegate of a relief so
ciety coming out of the store of such a
hard-fisted man, and I say, “Did you get
tlie money?” “Of course,” sh# says, “I
got the mourn'; that’s what I went in for.
The Lord told me to go in and get it, and
He never sends me on a fool’s errand.”
Again, I have to tell you that it is a
Vsvoman’s specific right to comfort under
the stress of dire disnste.r. She is called
the weaker vessel, but all profane as well
as sacred history attests that when the
crisis comes she is better prepared than
man to meet the emergency. How often
you have seen a woman, who seemed to be
a disciple of frivolity and indolence, under
one stroke of calamity changed to a hero
ine. Ob, what a great mistake those busi
ness men make who never tell their busi
ness troubles to their wives! There comes
some great loss to their store or some of
their companions in business play them a
sad trick, end they carry the burden all
alone. He is asked in the household again
and again, “What is the matter?” But he
believes it a sort of Christian duty to keep
all that trouble within bis own soul. Ob,
sir, your first duty was to tell your wife all
about it!
Again, I remark it is woman’s right to
bring to us the kingdom of heaven. It is
easier for a woman to be a Christian than
for a man. Why? You say 9he is weaker.
No. Her heart is more responsive to the
pleadings of diviue love. She is in vast
majority. The fact that she can more eas
ily become a Christian I prove by the
statement that three-fourths of the mem
bers of churches in all Christendom are
women. So God appoints them to be the
chief agencies for bringing this world back
to God. I may stand here and say the soul
is immortal. There is a man who will deny
it. I may stand here and say we are lost
and undone without Christ. There is a man
who will contradict it. I may stand here
and say there will be a judgment day after
awhile. Yonder is some one who will dis
pute It. But a Christian woman in a
Christian household, living in the faith and
the consistency of Christ’s gospel—nobody
can refute that. The greatest sermons are
not preached on celebrated platforms; they
are preached with an audience ,of two or
three and in private home life. A consis
tent, consecrated Christian service is an
unanswerable of God’s
truth. •
There are prayers for you to offer, there
are exhortations for you to give, there are
exnmpSfc for you to set, and I say now as
Paul sam to the Corinthian woman, “What
knowest thou but that thou shalt save thy
husband?” A man was dying and he said
to his wife, “ltebecca, you wouldn’t let
me have family prayers, you laughed
about all that and you got me away into
worldliness, and now I’m going to die, and
my fate is sealed, and you are the cause of
my ruin!” O woman, what knowest thou
but thou canst destroy thy husband?
Are there not some of you who have kind
ly influences at home? Are there not some
who have wandered far away from God
who can remember the Christian influences
in their early home? Do not despise those •
influences, my brother. If you die without
Christ, what will you do with your moth
er’s prayers, with your wife’s importunities,
with your sister’s entreaties? What will
you do with the letters they used to write
to you, with the memory of those days
when they attended you so kindly in times
of sickness? Oh, if there be just one strand
holding you from floating off from that
dark sea, I would just like to take hold of
that strand now and pull you totbebeachl
For the sake of your wife’s God, for the
sake of your mother’s God, for the sake of
vour daughter’s God, for the sake of your
sister’s God come this day and be saved.
Lastly, I wish to say that one of the
specific rights of woman is, through the
grace of Christ, finally to reach heaven.
Oh, what a multitude of women in heaven!
Mary, Christ’s mother, in heaven, Eliza
beth Fry in heaven, Charlotte Elizabeth in
heaven, the mother of Augustine iu heaven,
the Countess of Huntington, who sold her
splendid jewels to build chapels, in heaven,
while a great many others who have
never been heard of on earth or known
but little havo gone into the rest and
peace of heaveD. What a rest! What a
change it was from tho small room,
with no fire and one window (the glass
broken out), and tho aching side, and
wornout eyes, to the “house'of many man
sions!” No more stitching until 12 o’clock
at night, no more thrusting of the thumb
by the employer through the work to show
it was not done quite right. Plenty of
bread at last! Heaven for aching heads!
Heaven for broken hearts! Heaven for
anguish bitten frames! No more sitting
until midnight for the coming of stagger
ing stepsl No more rough blows across
the temple! No more sharp, keen, bitter
curses.
Some of you will have no rest in this
world. It will be toil and struggle and
suffering all the way up. You will have
to stand at your door fighting back the
wolf with yoir own hand red with
carnage. But God has a crown for you.
I want you to realize this morning that
He is now making it, and whenever
you weep a tear He sets another gem in
that crown, whenever you have a pang
of body or soul He puts another gem in
that crown, until after awhile in all
the tiara there will be no room for an
other splendor, and God will say to His
angel, “The crown is done; let her up
that she may wear it.” And as the Lord
of righteousness puts the crown upon your
brow, angel will cry to angel, “Who is
9he?” and Christ will say: “I will tell you
who she is. She is the one that came up
out of great tribulation and hud her robe
washed and made white in the blood of the
Lamb.” And then God will spread a ban
quet, and He will invite all the principali
ties of heaven to sit at the feast, and the
tables will blush with the best clusters
from the vineyards of God and crimson
with the twelve manner of fruits from
the Tree of Life, and waters from the
fountains of the rock will flash from the
golden tankards, and the old harpers of
heaven will sit there, making music with
their harps, and Christ will point you out,
amid the celebrities of heaven, saying,
“She suffered with Me on earth; now we
are going to be glorified together.” And
the banqueters, no longer able to hold their
peace, will break forth with congratula
tion, “Hail! hail!” And there will be
handwritings on the wall—not such as
struck the B’ ylonian noblemen with hor
ror, but fire-lipped fingers, writing in
blazing capitals of light and love, “God
hath wiped away all tears from all faces!”
The Free Methodist societies of Christian
! Endeavor number 11,593 members.
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of this
ri-sa with equally bail luck.
One oflife fleets appeared in his neigli
borhoconStmd he sallied out to attack
it. The pirates surrounded him, and
after a furious engagement, which last
ed all day, and with such havoc as nfay
be left to the imagination, captured
him and whatever fragments of his
fleet were still afloat. This disaster
was partly avenged the next year,
when the Chinese admiral, with a hun
dred junks, attacked another fleet fe
the same cruising-ground. Great num
bers of the pirates were destroyed and
some two hundred taken prisoners.
Those who are familiar with Chinese
methods can easily judge how long the
two hundred were kept from joining
their bloody comrades in the shades
below. In another encounter not far
from the same place, before the com
batants could close upon one another,
it fell dead calm, whereupon crowds
of the pirates leaped Into the sea like
savages, swam to the enemy with their
knives in their teeth, aud attacked
them so fiercely that they could not be
beaten off, and actually cut out sev
era junks from the imperial fleet. The
fortunes of war varied. With provok
ing Impartiality, and apparently w r ith
no ethical preference, victory would
perch on the standard of the pirate
quite a often as on the banner of the
righteous defenders of their country’s
commerce. We read of whole fleets
engaged, fighting all day and all night,
two days, even three days at a time,
two or three hundred junks on a side,
and a drawn game at the end. No
child’s play this. At one time the ad
miral is lying quiety at anchor among
the islands, when suddenly two hun
dred pirate crafe slip around the head
land, and pounce upon him with an on
set so furious that, in spite of a vigor
ous defense, twenty-five of his fleet
are gone with their captors before he
can get up his anchors and chase them.
These encounters were not confined to
the sea. There were frequent raids on
the villages that lined the harbor and
rivers.
Wholly Discouraged.
“No, ma’am, I don’t like ’em,” said
Mr. with emphasis. “I’m free
to say these dialect stories makes me
tired. Half the words in ’em ain’t in
the dictionary.”
‘!But you might cultivate a liking
for them,” said his wife’s sister. “It
is something like music. You may not
have much of an ear for it at first,
but if you keep at it you will soon
appreciate it.”
“Well, maybe I will some day. But
I’d rather have something solid. I’d j
like to begin on some of my youngest
girl's school books and go right
through ’em. That’s the sort of read- i
ing that I’d enjoy spending time on.” j
He picked up one of his daughter’s j
books which happened to be lying i
near. It was a copy of Virgil, which
his daughter had been translating into ;
English. He stared solemnly at the j
first page of .the Latin epic for awhile i
and then slowly turned the leaf. |
When his eyes had gotten down to the j
middle of the next page he laid the |
volume down with a sigh.
“It’s no use,” he exclaimed regret
fully.
“What is of no use?”
“My trying to read dialect. And I
must say that this thing of teachin’ it
in the public schools strikes me as
piaguey foolishness.” Washington
Star.
A New French Coin.
The new gold coin which has just
been issued from the mint of France
is said to be one of the most beautiful
ever designed. The face of this coin
is the head of the symbolic figure of
France, while the reverse shows a
very aristocratic-looking rooster with
inflated chest. The designs are the re
sult of three years’ work on the part ol
M. Chaplain, chief engraver of the
mint, and the coin is known as the
Louis d’Or.
fl iiii; P..,,.,,
P sirLlion Lhi uurß iSuU3r3n®d
I p
j ■
/ Kvheisi wres thu'
were st> Eirajßßrnsto be protected by
Rood drainljp and by surrounding
gave yield of over 40 bUohe!s
per acre. Mr. Oliver claims he can ral. r
40 to 50 bushels of wheat per acre with
favorable seasons.
The fertilizer used last season cost
$4.00 per acre, and it would no doubt
have given double the yield of wheat,
f the weather had been favorable.
Why raise cotton when you can get
more money value from wheat, with
less labor and expense, and at the same
time have a chance to grow on same
land, same season, another crop either
of peas, millet or corn. The farmers
in the South will be much more inde
pendent when they raise all the wheat,
corn and hogs and cattle that they con
sume, and only half as much cotton ax
is now grown.
You can grow good wheat, corn ar
hay, and gather two crops per yea".
You can improve your land and mah
it worth double in five years what i!
will now sell flor. You can not do
by raising cotton alone, you must
farm on a broader minded prlnclp'o
and use fertilizer freely, and above al’,
use the highest grade fertilizer on tlv>
market, it is cheaper than the lowest
grades, quality considered.
m .
Elephant’s Flesh as Meat.
There appears to be considerable di
versity of opinion as to the merits of
elephant’s flesh. In India aud Africa
it is a favorite dish with the natives,
but a European who has traveled
much in Africa says: “I have tasted
elephant over and over again. It is
more like soft leather and glue than
anything I can compare it to.” An
other traveler, however, declares that
lie cannat imagine how an animal so
coarse and heavy can produce such
delicate and tender flesh. All authori
ties, however, agree in commending
elephant’s foot. Even the traveler
quoted above, who compared elephant’s
flesh to leather and glue, admits that
“baked elephant’s foot is a dish fit
for a king. When an elephant Is shot
in Africa the flesh is cut into strips
and dried; it is then called “Biltong.”
The elephant foot is cut off frdfn the
knee point, and a hole about three feet
deep is dug in the earth and the sides
of it baked hard with burning wood.
Most of these faggots are then remov
ed and* the elephant’s foot placed in
the hole. It is filled up with earth,
tightly packed down, and a bazing tire
built on top, which Is kept burning for
three hours. Thus cooked, the flush
is like jelly, aud can be eaten with a
spoon. It is the greatest delicacy
which can be given to a rvaflir.
How the French President Lives.
The rule of life at the Elysee Is as
simple as circumstances will permit,
for, except when obliged to give offi
cial entertainments, M. and Mine.
Loubet take tlieir luncheon at 12 and
their dinner at 7 in a small diuing
room, the furniture of which is as plain
as the menu on the table, though now
aud then they have an intimate friend
to join them at the formal meal. M.
Loubet, however, simple as are his
I tastes and fbugal as is his fare, is fully
alive to the importance of maintain
ing the dignity of his office, and it may
he taken for granted that he will, when
he returns to Paris from Itambouillet
and Montelimar, between which places
lie will, if all goes well, spend his well
earned summer holiday, put himself
into training for the severe social
rSities which the president of the re
public will have to discharge during
the exhibition year.
Tetterlne in Tlie Name of It.
If you have any skin disoaso such as eczema,
Bitlt rheum, ringworm or totter, nothing will
cure you so quickly or thoroughly os Tetterlne.
It has cured Thousands and will cure you. Nu
merous testimonials for the asking. Accept no
substitute. .J T. Hhuptrlne, Atanul’r., Hnvnn
nah, Ga., will send you a box postpaid forsoc. in
stamps if your druggist doesn’t keep It.
In the vicinity of Norfolk, Va., there are
1,500 acres devoted to the culture of peanuts.
To (’lire C'nnutipation Forever.
lake < ascurctß ("andy Cathartic. 10c or 25c.
II C. C. C. fall to cure, drugglstarefund money.
No i ionic is a success to that weman who
doesn’t get a piece of her own cake.
Fits permanently cured. No Air or nervous
ness after first day s use of I)r. Koine's Great
Nerve Restorer. #2 trial bottle and treatise free.
bu. R. 11. Kline. Ltd.. 931 Arch St., Phiia., Pa.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
i eething.softens the gums, reduces inflamma
t lon.allays pain.cures wind colic. 35c. a bottle.
There Israore Catarrh In this section of tho
country than all other diseases put together,
and until the last fow years was supposed to he
incurable. For a groat many years doctors
pronounced It a local disease and prescribed
local remedies, and by constantly failing to
cure with local treatment, pronounced It in
curable. Science has proven catarrh to be a
constitutional disease, and therefore requires
constitutional treatment. Hall s Catarrh Cure,
manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Cos , Toledo,
Ohio, is the only constitutional cure op the
market. It Is taken internally in doses from
10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on
the blood and mucous surfaces of the system.
They offer one hundred dollars for any case
it falls to cure. .Send for circulars and testi
monials. Address F. J ( henry & Cos., Toledo,O.
Sold by Druggists. 75c.
Hall’s Family Pills are the best.
It takes an intellectual person to have fun
on fifty cents.
No-To-liac for Fifty Cents.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure. mnkpß weak
men strong, blood pure. 50c, si. All druggists.
The fruit business of Oznaha, Neb., is said
to be valued atsl,soo,o9oannually.
To cure, or money refunded by your merchant, so wliy not try it? Price SOc.
n qhvV WMF ‘
not become preqmin™ W 1
“Seeing one of your books, I you
my troubles and asking for advice. Yotl an-
swered my letter promptly and .1 followed
the directions faithfully, aud derived so
much benefit that I cannot praise
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- z' *
pound enough. I now find myself wv*/
pregnant and have begun its jt '(v^r
use again. I cannot praise it / Jjsfi!
Mrs. Perley Moulton,
I think Lydia E. Pinkham’s r fXJfil
Vegetable Compound is an j Z /]j
excellent medicine. I took
several bottles of it before J 1
the birth of my baby and j i
got along nicely. I had no / \
after-pains and am now / \
strong and enjoying good / \
health. Baby is also fat and 1
more, Md., writes: “Dear \ ElfMp 1$ i
Mrs. Pinkham— Before tak- | s
Vegetable Compound I was
unable to become pregnant; but since I have used it my
health is much improved, and I have a big baby boy, the joy
and pride of our home.”
Two recent consignments of goods
lo London houses Includes 8,000 birds
of paradise, 3,000 Impeyan pheasants,
-1.300 crested pigeons, 300 small birds
of various sizes, etc.
The Government Is to buy from tfcf
Crow Indians and throw open to set
tlement, 1,100,000 acres of good laud in
the Yellowstone Valley.
Bounty Is Blood Deep.
( Iran blood means a clean skin. No
beauty without it. Casearets, Candy Cathar
tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by
stirring up the inzy liver and driving all im
i critics from the body. Begin to-day to
banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads,
and that sickly bilious complexion by taking
Casearets.—beauty tor ten cants. All drug
gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c.
Music-boxes forb cycles are now man .tfac-
Mired by a Him tn Hum burg, Germany.
Fli# Money in Fancy Strawberries.
Our free publications tell how to make it.
I*. Cos., Strawberry Specialists, Klttrell, N. C.
To maintain* the chanties department In
Boston last year cost $114,H43.
Piso’s Cure for Consumption has no equal
is a Coutrh medicine. —F.M Abbott, 1183sen
eca St., Buffalo, N. Y., May 9, 18W4.
“My Wife Had the Chills
and one bottle of Wintorsmith’s Chill Cure
cured her. She has never been bothered with
chills since. Miss Lula Vertices had the chills
fora yetr and broke them with Winter
smith's Chill Cure,” —W. K. AJobberly,
Upton, Ky. Address Aktuuh Peter a Cos.,
Louisville, Ky.
Man knows that Hope is a flatterer, yet he
keeps on coaxing her to talk lo him.
Kducate Your Bowel* Willi Cascurets.
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever,
H'c, fcfic. If C. ('. C. fail, druggists refund money.
It is now proposed to save the Palisades by
popular subscription.
Ajj§& 1
!im
Look at yourself! Is your face
covered with pimples? Your skin
rough and blotchy? It’s your liver!
Ayer’s Pills are liver pills. They
cure constipation, biliousness, and
dyspepsia. 25c. All druggists.
Want your monilach© or beard ii
brown or rich black? Then use
BUCKINGHAM’S BYE (M&.
or cy.y,i.T., „ n. e, Hjuj co. w W ia, h. h,
MAKE MONEY
Bg
Writing Stories.
For Particulars Address
The Sunny South Pub. Cos.,
ATLANTA, GA.
ARTEC'S INK
Ask for it. If your dealer hasn’t
►- it he can get it eaaliy.
jm% yfP — m "Ugrars a
(0 •r, - 7 f S 1 ■ ■ TIB I&K (Teething Powdeie) to our little
1 gfi bLn | hS 3 ftl IS grandchild with the Imppiont re-
| L L I HI ll /-I r g \,a?„nS^ e y re ro^ n r
(Teething Powders. j-UL ’“ n , ' f ' m>i,,) ' t,ilnw *
®osts Oflly 23 Cents. Ask your Druggist for it. Irn m^iSsven’t^ l ta Utm
C - J* MOFFETT, M. D„ St. LouS, Ma
GOLDEN CROWN
LAMP CHIMNEYS
Ar tho beat. A.lc for them. I’oitnonmr.
lliun mimmoti i-liininry.. All (];il,r*.
I’ITTKIIUKIi Sl.\ss Cl).. Alioelieny, I’.
|
Send your name and address on a (
postal, and we will send you our 1 56- j
page Illustrated catalogue frea.
WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS’CO. <
178 WlnchtvAer Avim*, New Haven, Conn '
Malsby & Company,
HO S. Broad Rt., Atlanta, On.
Engines and Boilers
Steam Water Heaters, Steam Pumps and
Pen berth y Injectors,
Manufacturers and Dealers in
SAW MIIjXjS,
Corn Mills, Feed Mills. Cotton Gin Machin
ery ami Grain Separators.
SOLID and INSERTED Saws, Saw Tenth and
l ock*, Knight's Patent Dogs, Blrdsall Saw
Mill ami Knglne Kepnlrs, Governors, Grate
Bars and a full 11ns of Mill Supplies Price
mid quality of goods guaranteed. Catalogue
tree by mentioning this paper.
QEED WHEAT jjIBSALEL
W We again offer the cleanest seed wheat on
the market, and from probably the largest
crop yield In the State, If not the United
States. We had BBoa*res In wheat this year,
arid tfio crop averaged 20 bushels nor uore.
Where we had a good stasd, not winter kil
led, we had over 40 bushels per acre. One
hundred bushels of our wheat will contain
less cooklo seed than one bushel of ordinary
seed wheat. Prloo $1.15 per bushel on cars
at Charlotte. Bags hold two bushels and
are new- no charge for bags. Terms: Cash
with order.
CHARLOTTE OIL & FERTILIZER GO.
Per FRED OLIVEfI, Pre.’l.
CIIARI.OTTK, ----- N. C.
W. L. DOUGLAS
53&53.50 SHOES
M Worth $4 to $8 compered with
other rr.akas.
Indorsed by over
1,000,000 wearers.
AIL LEATHERS. ALL STYLES
THK OHRiriXK I.rtf W. L. PoofW
name ui prle stamped bottom.
Take no substitute claimed
to be aa good. Largest makers
of *3 and $8.60 shoes In the
world. Your dealer should keep
them—lf uot, wo will send you
a pair on receipt of price. State
kind of leather, size and width, plain or cap toe.
Catalogue C Free.
W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO.. Brockton. Mass.
n| Ila 1 and Whiskey Habit*
Sam gl® 0 8? flauM cured at homo with-
HM 8# 88 5 KWI out pain. Book of par-
H B|J a BwS owl tlenlar, pent FREE.
wJ.3 'um’WtsiLxm b.m.wooixey.m.d.
dfice 104 N. Pryor St.
MENTION THIS PAPERM^M