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’REV.D'R.TALMAGE
The Eminent Divine’s Sunday
Discourse.
Sabject: Practical Clmrtty—The Bencvo
lence of I)ora Kxlolled Her Work
Cuntra.ted With Present Day Methods
—Wotuau God's Handuialdeii.
[Copynjdit liioti.l
M ASHINGTON, D. G.—Dr. Talmage,
'•’ho is still traveling in Northern Europe,
has forwarded the''following report of a
sermon in which he utters helpful words
to all who are’engaged in-alleviating hu
man distresses and shojva how such work
will be crowned at the last; text, Acts
ix, 30, “And all the widows stood by him
weeping and showing him the coats and
garments which Dorcas made while she
was with them."
Joppa is a most absorbing city of the
Orient. Into her harbor once floated the
rafts _of Lebanon cedar from which the
temples of Jerusalem were builded, Solo
mon s oxen drawing the logs through the
town.. Here Napoleon had 500 prisoners
massacred. One of the most magnificent
charities of the centuries was started in
this seaport by Dorcas, a woman With her
needle embroidering her name ineffaceably
into the beneficence of the world. I see
her sitting in yonder home. In the door
way and around about the building and in
the room where she sits are the pale faces
of the poor. She listens to their pliant,
she pities their wipe, she makes garments
for them, she adjusts the manufactured
articles to suit the bent form of this inva
lid woman and to the cripple that comes
crawling on his hands and knees. She
gives a coat to this one; she gives sandals
to that one. With the gifts she mingles
prayers and teavs and Christian encourage
ment. Then she goes out to be greeted on
the street corners by thos. whom she has
blessed, and all through the street the cry
is heard, “Dorcas is coming!’’ The sick
look up gratefully in her face as she puts
her hand on the burning brow, and the
lost and the abandoned start up with hope
as they hear her gentle voice, as tflough
an angel had addressed them, and as she
goes out the lane eyes half put out with
sin think they see a halo of light about,
her brow and a trail of glory in her path- 5
way. That night a half paid shipwright
climbs the hill and reaches homo and sees
his little boy well clad and says, “Where
did these clothes come from?” And they
tell him, “Dorcas has been here.” In an
other place a woman is trimming a lamp;
Dorcas bought the oil. In another place
a family that had not been at table for
many a week are gathered now, for Dorcas
has brought bread.
But there is a sudden pause in that wom
an’s ministry. They say. “Where is Dor
cas? Why, we haven’t seen her for many
a day. Where is Dorpas?” And one of
these poor people goes’ up and knocks at
the door and finds the mystery solved. All
through the haunts of wretchedness the
news comes, “Dorcas is sick!” No bulletin
flashing from the palace gate telling the
stages of a king's disease is more anxiously
waited for than the news from this bene
factress. Alas, for Joppa there is wailing,
wailing! That voice which has uttered so
many cheerful word* is hushed; that hand
which has made so many garments for- the
poor is cold tfnd still; the star which had
poured light into the midnight of wretch
edness is dimmed by the blinding mists
that go up from the river of death. In
every fbrsaken place in that town, wher
ever there is a lick child and no balm,
wherever there is hunger and no bread,
wherever there is guilt and no commisera
tion, wherever there is a broken heart and
no comfort, there are despairing looks
and streaming eyes and frantic gesticula
tions as they cry, “Dorcas is dead!”
They send for the apostle Peter, who
happens to be in the suburbs of the place,
stopping with a tanner of the name of Si
mon. Peter urges his way through the
crowd around the door and stands in the
presence of the dead. What demonstra
tion of grief all about him! Here stand
some of the poor people, who show the
garments which this poor woman had
made for them. Their grief cannot be ap
peased. The apostle Peter wants to per
form a miracle. He will not do it amid the
excited crowd, so he orders that the whole
room be cleared. The apostle stands now
with the dead. Oh, it is a serious mo
ment, you know, when you are alone with'
a lifeless body! The apostle gets down on
his knees and prays, and then he comes to
the lifeless form of this one all ready for
the sepulcher, and in the strength of Him
who is the resurrection he cries: “Tabitha,
arise!” There is a stir in the fountains
of life, the heart flutters, the nerves thrill,
the cheek flushes, the eye opens, she sits
up. . ...
We see in this subject Dorcas, the disci
ple, Dorcas the benefactress, Dorcas the
lamented, Dorcas the resurrected.
If i had not seen that word disciple in
my text, I would have known this woman
was a Christian. Such music as that never
came from a heart which is not chorded
and strung by divine grace. Before I show
you the needlework of this woman 1 want
to show you her regenerated heart, the
source of a pure life and of all Christian
charities. I wish that the wives and moth
ers and daughters and sisters of all the
earth would imitate Dorcas in her disciple
ship. Before yon cross the threshold of
the hospital, before you enter upon the
temptations and trials of to-morrow, I
charge you in the name of God and by the
turmoil and tumult of the judgment day,
O woman, that you attend to the first, last
and greatest duty of your life—the seeking
for God and being at peace with Him!
When the trumpet shall sou ml there will
be an uproar and a wreck of mountain
and continent, and no human arm can help
you. Amid the rising of the dead and
amid the boiling of yonder sea and amid
the live, leaping thunders of the dying
heavens calm and placid will be every
woman’s heart who hath put her trust in
Christ—calm notwithstanding all the tu
mult, as though the fire in the heavens
were only the gildingssof an autumnal sun
set, as though the awful voices of the sky
were but a group of friends bursting
through a gateway at even time with
laughter and shouting, '‘Dorcas the disci
ple!” Would God that every Mary and
every Martha would this day sit down at
the feet of Jesus!
Further, we see Dorcas, the benefactress.
History has told the story of the crown;
epic poet has sung of the sword; the pas
toral poet, with his verses full of the redo
lence of clover tops and a-rustle with the
silk of the corn, has sung the praises of
the plow. I tell you the praises of the
needle. From the fig leaf robe prepared
in the garden of Eden to the last stitch
taken on the garment for the poor the
needle has wrought wonders of kindness,
generosity and benefaction. It adorned
the girdle of the high priest, it fashioned
the curtains in the ancient tabernacle, it
cushioned the chariots of King Solomon,
it provided the robes of Queen Elizabeth,
and in high places and in low places, by
the fire of the pioneer’s back log and un
der the flash of the chandelier —every-
where —it has clothed nakedness, it has
preached the gospel, it has overcome hosts
of penury and want with the war cry of
“Stitch, stitch, stitch!” The operatives
have found a livelihood by it. and through
it the mansions of the employer are con
structed.
Amid the greatest triumphs in all ages
and lands I set down the conquests of the
needle. I admit its crimes; I admit_ its
cruelties. It ha3 had more martyrs than
the fire; it has punctured the eye; it has
pierced the side; it has struck weakness
into the lungs; it has sent madness into
the brain; it has filled the potter’s field;
it has pitched whole armies of the suffer
ing into crime, and wretchedness and woe.
But now that I am talking of Dorcas and
her ministries to the poor I shall speak
osly of the charities of the needle. This
woman was a representative o'f all those
who make garments for the destitute, who
knit socks for the barefooted, who prepare
bandages for the lacerated, who fix up
boxes of clothing for missionaries, who go
into the asylums of the suffering and desti
tute bearing that gospel which is sight for
the blind and hearing for the deaf, and
which makes the lame man leap like a hart
and brings the dead to •' life, immortal
health bounding in their pulses.
What a contrast between the practical
benevolence of this woman and a great
deal of the charity of this day! This
woman did not spend her time idly plan
ning how the poor of the city of Joppa
were to bb relieved. She took her needle
and relieved them. She was not like those
persons who sympathize with imaginary
sorrows and go out in the street and laugh
at the boy who has upset his basket of
cold victuals, or like that charity which
makes a rousing speech on the benevolent
platform find goes out to kick the beggar
from the step, crying, “Hush your miser
able howling!” Sufferers of the world
want not so much theory are practice; not
so much tears as dollars; not so much kind
wishes as loaves of bread; not so much
smiles as shoes; not so much “God bless
you,” as jackets and frocks. I will put
one earnest Christian man, hard-working,
against 5000 mere theorists on the subject
of charity. There are a great many who
have fine ideas about church architecture
who never in their lives helped to build a
church. There are men who oan givb you
the history of Buddhism and Mohamme
danism who never sent a farthing for
evangelization. There are women who talk
beautifully about the suffering of the world
who never had the courage, like Dorcas,
to take the needle and assault it.
I am glad that there is not a page of the
world’s history which is not a record of
female benevolence. God say* to all lands
and people. “Come, now, and hear the
widow’s mite rattle down into the poor
box.” The Princess of Conti sold all her
jewels that she might help the famine
stricken. Queen Blanche, the wife of
Louis VIII. of France, hearing that there
were some persons unjustly incarcerated
in the prisons, went out amid the rabble
and took a stick and struck the door as a
signal that they might all strike it, and
down went the prison door, and out came
the prisoners. Queen Maud, the wife of
Henry 1., went down amid the poor and
washed their sores and administered to
them cordials. Mrs. Retson; u Matagor
da, appeared on the battlefield while the
missiles of death jvere flying around and
cared for the wounded. Is there a man
or woman who has ever heard of the civil
war in America who has not heard of the
women of the sanitary and Christian com
missions or the fact that before the smoke
had gone up from Gettysburg and South
Mountain the women of the north met the
women of the south on the battlefield, for
getting all their animosities, while they
bound up the wounded and closed the eyes
of the slain? Dorcas the benefactress.
I come now to speak of DorcaS the la
mented. When death struck down “hat
good woman, oh, how much sorrow there
was in the town of Joppa! I suppose there
were women there with larger fortunes,
women perhaps with handsomer faces, but
there was not grief at their departure like
this at the death of Dorcas. There were
not more turmoil and upturning in the
Mediterranean Sea dashing against the
wharves at that seaport than there were
surgings to and fro of grief because Dorcas
was dead. There arc a great many who
go out of life and are unmissed. There
may be a very large funeral, there may be
a great many carriages and a plumed
hearse, there may be high sounding eulo
giums, the bell may toll at the cemetery
gate, there may be a very fine marble
shaft reared over the resting place, hut
the whole thing may be a falsehood and a
sham.
The church of God has lost nothing;
the world has lost nothing. It is only a
nuisance abated. It is only a grumbler
ceasing to find fault. It is only an idler
stopped yawning. It is only a dissipated
fashionable parted from his wine cellar,
while on the other hand no useful Chris
tian leaves this world without being
missed.
The church of God cries out, like the
prophet, “Howl, fir tree, for the cedar has
fallen!” Widowhood comes and shows
the garments which the departed had
made. Orphans are lifted up to look into
the calm face of the sleeping benefactress.
Declaimed vagrancy comes and kisses the
cold brow of her who charmed it away
from sin, and all through the streets of
Joppa there is mourning—mourning be
cause Dorcas is dead.
Has that Christian woman who went
away fifteen years ago nothing to do with
these tilings? I see the*flowering out of
her noble heart. I hear tire echo of her
footsteps in all the songs over sins for
given, in all Die prosperity of the church.
The good that seemed to be buried has
come up again. Dorcas is resurrected!
After awhile all these womanly friends
of Christ will put down their needle for
ever. After making garments for others
some one will make a garment for them;
the last robe we ever wear—the robe for
the grave. You will have hoard the last
cry of pain. You will have witnessed the
last orphanage. You will have come in
worn out from your last round of tnercy.
I do not know where you will sleep nor
what vour epitaph will be, but there will
be a lamp burning at that tomb and an
angel of God guarding it, and through all
the long ni;dit no rude foot will disturb
the dust. Sleep on, sleep on! Soft bed.
pleasant shadows, undisturbed repose!
Sleep on!
Asleep in Jesus! Blessed sleep
From which none ever wake to weep!
Then one day there will be a sky rend
ing and a whirl of wheels and the Hash of
a pageant, armies marching, chains clank
ing, banners waving, thunders booming,
and that Christian woman will arise from
the dust, and she will be suddenly sur
rounded—surrounded by the wanderers of
the street whom she reclaimed, surround
ed by the wounded souls to whom she had
administered!
Daughter of God, so strangely surround
ed, what means this? It means that re
ward has come; that the victory is won;
that Die crown is ready; that the banquet
is spread. Shout it through all the crumb
ling earth! Sing it through all the flying
heavens! Dorcas is resurrected!
In 1855, when some of the soldiers came
back from the Crimean war to London,
the Queen of England distributed among
them beautiful medals, called Crimean
medals. Galleries were erected for the two
houses of Parliament and the royal family
to sit in. There was a great audience to
witness the distribution of the medals. A
colonel who had lost both feet in the bat
tle of Inkerniann was pulled in on a wheel
chain others came in limping on their
crutches. Then the Queen of England arose
before them in tiie name of her Govern
ment and uttered words of commendation
to the officers and men and distributed
those medals, inscribed with the four great
battlefields—Alma, Balaklava, Inkermann
and Sevastopol. As the Queen gave these
to the wounded men and the wounded gffi
cers the bands of music struck up the na
tional air,, and the people, with streaming
eyes, joined in the song:
God save our gracious queen!
Long live our noble queen!
God save the queen!
And then they shouted “Huzza! Huzza!”
Oh, it was a proud day for those returned
warriors! But a brighter, better arid glad
der day will come when Christ shall gath
er those who have toiled in His service—
good soldiers of Jesus Christ. He shall rise
before them, and in the presence of all the
glorified of heaven He will say, “Well
done, good and faithful servant!” And
then He will distribute the medals of eter
nal victory, not inscribed with works of
righteousness whioh we have done, but
with those four great battlefields, dear to
earth and dear to heaven—Bethlehem,
Nazareth, Gethsemane and Calvary!
Hjfk hair has ►
MH no liioJi
f i It is starved. It keeps* t
M coming 1 out, gets y
K thinner and thinner,
bald spots appear, *
l then actual baldness. \
jj/ The only good hair f,
P? mh
;s wair
; : Visor
< the roots, stopsk
\ starvation, and the >'
\ hair grows thick and
long. It cures dan
► druff also. Keep a "■
bottle of it on your \
\ dressing table. ►,
\ It always restores ►
color to faded or gray >
► hair. Mind, we say '
S “ always.”
51.00 a bottle. All druggltti.
►
l “I have found your Hair Vigor
to bo tho bt reuiedv I liavo ever x
i triod lor the hair. "My hair was
4 I would try a Dottle of it. I had r
used ouly oua boulo, uud my hair
stopped falling out, and it is now >
g real thick and lou£.”
7 j Nancy J. Mountoastltc, k
y July 28,1808. Yonkers, N.Y.
Wrtto tho Doctor, ”
lie will solid you hi# book on The t
a Tl*ir and Scalp. Ask him auy ques- ’
► tiou you wish about your hair. You
j will receive prompt answer free.
* Address, 1)1*. J. O. AYKIt,
r Low oil, Mass.
Opening for Through lioute.
Stranger—“ls that a deep well you
are digging?”
Larry —“Skure, Sor, if it gets much
deeper Oi’ll rint it to th’ government
to hurry soldiers through to Chiny.”
—Chicago News.
Prof. Walter Wilson,
Of the Savannah High School, says:
“I feel it my duty to testify to the won
derful curative properties of Tetterine.
It has cured in a few days my son,
whose feet had been very badly afflict
ed with some stubborn skin trouble,
after having used a number of reme
dies without any benefit.” 50c. at
druggists or by mail from J. T. Skup
trine, Savannah, Ga.
An Explanation,
Singleton—l wonder why a spinster
nearly always has a cat or a dog for a
pet?
Wederly—Oh, I suppose she wants
something that will stay out at night
occasionally, so she will have some
thing to worry about.—Chicago News.
Notice— I Two traveling salesmen wanted In each
state. Salary and expenses; experience unneces
sary. Pocahontas Tobacco Wks, Bedford City, Va
A Venerable Cartoonist,
Sir John Tonntel has been on the staff of
Punch for fifty years, and In that time Las
draw'n for the magazine over 000 cartoons.
Ijailies Can Wear Shoes
One .size smaller after using Allen’s Foot-
Ease, a powder for the feet. It makes tight
or new shoes easy. Cures swollen, hot,
sweating, aching feet, ingrowing nails, corns
and bunions. At all druggists and shoe
stores, 25<*. Trial package FREE by mail.
Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
Simply Had to Do It.
“Why la It.” they asked, “that you have
changed from Irish to .Scotch whisky?” have
Joined a golf club,” he replied.—Chicago Even
ing Post.
FITS permanently cured. No fits or nervous
ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free,
hr. It. H. Klink, Ltd., 031 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
Iu the Rhetoric ('lass.
Young Professor—Give me an example of
sarcasm.
>weet Junioress The phrase, “Man’s superl
ority to woman.”-Somerville Journal.
Did You Ever Run Across
an old letter —ink all faded out? Couidn’t
have been Carter's Ink for it doesn’t fade.
Sunday at the Zoo.
Mr. Murphy—“Kxciii-e me. sorr; but can ye
direct me to the going out Intrance?”—Punch.
We refund 10c. for every package of Put
nam Fadeless Dye that fails to give satis
faction. Monroe Drug Cos., Unionvillo, Mo.
Sold by all druggists.
A Dark Secret.
Foreigner—“ How are your senators elected?”
American—“ None of them will tell.” —Puck.
The Best Prescription for Chills
and Fever Is a bottle of Gkovk’s Tastelrs3
Chill Tonic. It Is simply iron and quinine lu
a tasteless form. No euro —no pay. Price 50c.
Then She Wanted It Too.
Mrs. Willful— “My husband told me if I
didn’t like this brooch you'd change it for me.”
Jeweler— “Certainly, madam. I’ll be only too
glad, as four different ladies of your set wanted
It.”—The King.
Happiness cannot be bought, but one of
the great hindrance** to its attainment can
be removed by Adams’ Pepsin Tutti Frutti.
There are Many Such.
Mrs Hoon—You can believe very little th&t
Mrs. Gabbleby says.
Mr. Hoon—No; the poor woman Is sadly
iifflictcd with palpltatlonof the Imagination.—
Puck.
Plantation Chill Cure is Guaranteed
> To Cuie.orMojf*-, Refunded bY Your Merchant.so V/Hv Wot T >V It? Pri Loi .
Deed* Drawn by WWtam Penn. /'
A unique feature of several old
Philadelphia busbies bouses Is that
the transfer of the property on which
the building* stand has been made by
inheritance under the original deed
drawn by William Penn. The old snuff
works, on South Second street, have
been operated T>y successive members
of the Garrett family for 130 years,
ami the ground on which the building
stands was deeded by Pean. Although
now In the tobacco trust, one room of
the plant has been reserved for a,num
ber of antiquities of the snuff trade,
and here is the original deed of the
proprietor of Pennsylvania.. The old
est <Wd IrSPennsylvanla to written In
Dtj * Yd of transfer tlf William
P j Messrs# Dutchman who owned
- e and W. YLetnon Hill, and who sold
York Mdrills document Is careful
ly fife- don the sixth floor of the
OltT'deeds hare a certain Intrinsic
value aside from their original pur
pose/ A great many colonial deeds
have been bought by gold beaters for
the sake of the superior parchment on
which they were written, as they have
discovered that it serves tho purpose
of “gold beaters’ skins.” Collectors of
autographs have occasionally come
across valuable finds In these shops.—
Philadelphia Record.
A Wonderful bnccess.
The Cincinnati, 0., Enquirer is the
only paper in the United States that
has maintained the high, liard-price
subscription rates up to this date.
The daily Enquirer costs $14.00 a
year and its weekly issue SI.OO a year.
Nothing but actual merit and true
worth in a newspaper could maintain
such rates in tlieso days.
Its circulation, price, size and en
terprise are like its success, truly
wonderful.
Ingenious Idea of a Bride-
A Belgian lmSflo oj recent date made
an ingenious application *f the auto
graph ideu. cVery guest to
write his or her name in pfibcil on the
train of her white satin gown. These
she will embroider later iu silk and
keep as a souvenir of the occasion.
The same original young woman had
In her bridal bouquet some myrtle
grown from a sprig planted by her
from her elder slstor’s bridal bouquet.
A weeding feast in Belgium begins at
3 o’clock In the afternoon and lasts
until 9.
THE BLACK DEATH
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A Good Word For Mature.
“Nature constructed the world on a
perfect system,” observed the profes
sor of geology as he tried to blow the
foam off his glass of ice tea. “She
put nothing where it would not be use
ful.” *
“That’s right,” agreed the real es
tate agent, “Just see how far she put
Kentucky from any large body of water.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduce* Inflamma
tion. allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle.
I do net believe Plao’s Cure for Consumption
ha 9 an equal for coughs and <x>lds.—.John F.
Boyek, Trinity Springs. Ind., Feb. 15, 1300.
W. H. Griffin, Jackson, Michigan, wrltee:
“Suffered with Catarrh for fifteen years.
Hall's Catarrh Cure cured me.” Sold by Drug
gists, 75*;.
Did You
any one who smoked gja
of Five Cent cigar ifiggsK
time? Five Cent cigflßp
always dissatisfied—alwa^l
something new—or something differ
ent, as there always seems to be some
thing wrong about the cigars they have*
been smoking. Ask your dealer for
OldVirg mia Cheroots
They are always good. *
Three hundred million smoked this ycai. Jlrice, 3 for 5 cents.
mmjlN CH E3TE
WW FACTORY LOADED SHOTGUN SHELLS®®
“NewßSvsi, " " Leader/’ and “Repeater "
Insist upon having them, take no other# and you will get the best shell# that money can buy.
ALL DEALERS KEEP THEM.
F® TALKED INTO IT.
*■"3 / 7SX Don’t allow yourself to be talked Into buy
vCj fs i \ i n 8 a shoddy job to save a dollar or so when
iYaJv / \ Jl the best i9 on sale in every town in the
)ly V'' £/) South. Did you ever think how easy it is
\ \ 7 / ' for some people to be talked into a thing?
, “ 7 1181 I buggy co..
see OUR AOBNT OR WRITS DIRECT.. OBB*£L ROCK HILL SC
QALESMEN WANTED.
Just out ami a splendid seller. Our New
Lj Political History of tho U lilted States.
Complete and attractive. Sample and
tortus sent upon receipt of 25 cents.
RAND, McNALLY <Sc CO.,
Chicago, Illinois.
BUBONIC PLAGUE,
ASIATIC CHOLERA,
YELLOW FEVER,
all begin in the bowels. It's the unclean
places that breed infectious epidemics, and
it’s the unclean body—unclean inside —that
“catches” the disease. A person whose
stomach and bowels are kept clean and
whose liver is lively, and blood ptire, is
safe against yellow fever, or any other of
the dreadful diseases that desolate our
beautiful southland. Some of the cleanest
people outside are filthiest inside, and they
are the ones who not only “catch” the
infection, but endanger the lives of all their
friends and relatives. There’s only one
certain way of keeping clean inside so as to
BOILER FLUEC
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Six Car Loads in Stock.
Cut and Ship Quick.
3L.0M33A11D
Foundry, Machine and Boiler Works and
Supply Store, • ■ Angusta, Ga.
nDADQY NEW DISCOVERY;
LJ D \ W WE 1 quiok roliof and enren wontt
cam**,. Rook of testimonials and ]() diiY*’ treatment
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That Lillie Book For Ladies, ?£££
ALICD MAHON, UociltßTEß, H. Y.
At K DIG Ali miPAHTMES T.
Tulane University of Louisiana.
lin advantages for practical instruction, both
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M. !>., Dean, I’. O. Drawtvl 01, Now Orleans, La.
Southern dental College.
DENTAL DEPARTMENT
Atlanta College of Physician* and Surgeons
Oldest Collkok in State Fourteenth An
nual Session opens Oct. 2; closes April 30th.
Those contemplating tho study of Dentistry
should write for catalogue.
Address H. \V. FOSTER, Dean.
Inman llullding, Atlanta, tia.
1 w-am W anted for the best
A |'L/ soiling book ever
/ft lip V I published. 1,000 de
/- VI I i| 1 I . | Uvered In York (Jo.,
M. s. c.. 1,100 In Ander
son County. 000 in
Charleston, 1,139 in Memphis. One agent sell©
MO la one week, $4 00 to SIO.OO per day sure.
In answering state your experience, If any.
j. l. NieHOLS & eo.,
Vo. 01 2-D24 Austell Kulldhig, Atlanta, Ga
Mention this Paper"* wr T„7.v^T rlia * r ’‘