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TJ ARRIS FISHER, M. I)..
Physician, Surgeon and Accoucheur.
Office at Eastman rung Store, next i
door to post office. Residence, corner
Fifth avenue and Church street.
Eastman, Ga., Jan. 11, lHfcib ly tues
J AS. R. MOOD, M. D.
Physician and Surgeon.
Olli •<* in b:i-cirn.*nt rear of Masonic
Loil^c, formerly oocii|)i»* l bv I>r* ( ■ l •
Latirner. Residence »outh side of Court
House Square. to dec 10
Jjlt. \V. L. SMITH, i
Dentist,
HAWKINSVILLE, - GFORGIA i
ftftice in Pulaski House.
1'2-1-88-ly tues
^|JU. T. F. ROBiysO",
OIM I. BURGEON
DENTIST,
EASTM AN, GEORGIA.
Office over Sol Ilerrman & Bro.’s
store. july 19-1 y
( LACY & BISHOP,
Attorneys at Law,
EASTM AN. GEORGIA.
Will practice in all the courts of the
State. Attention given to Convey
ancitig, Examination of Titles to Land.
Furnishing Abstracts Partin*rsnipM of Title ollcctions, Kxeeu
tors, Trustee**,
Contracts, Criminal Law and all other
branches of practice. Office 2-1-1 at Oourt
House. y tut
J A. SMITH,
L
Attorney at Law,
EASTMAN, GEORGIA.
Office over store of E. J. IVaeoi k A
Co. 7-5 1 v tile
W. L. C1.ARKK. ROUT. R. NORMAN.
/jLAUK & NO It MAN,
Attorneys at Law
MT. VERNON, G A..
will practice in all State and
Courts. nor. 29, ’88-1 y
HI -i J * '? i :
A PIANO FREE:
Yes, We Mean It.
GIVE IT A WAV TO ADVERTISE
i Ollt HI'S IN'ESS.
Write and Learn I’.uitictlabn
We sell Music for 10 cents
Q W Sold *1.25. elsewhere for 40 cents
- - to
Send for italogne of over 3,000
|»iee* To ttelecl from. A great saving
to pi 'is who are giving their Daugh¬
ters n no, deni education.
4 lx V T If Ij 1 \\ r Guitars, Banjos, Vio
it tins and Music Boxes
DEI’AKTUKE sold on
small mon¬
thly payment*. Catalogues tree.
Organs, Pi from from $25 upward upward in in price. price.
anos, $185
if you wish to save money and
have a musical home, call on or
address
THE GEORGIA MUSIC HOUSE.
E. 1). IRVINE,
mulberry Street, Macon, Ga.
gjff* 'J'he enterprising Music my24-ly House
of the Smith.
J, L. SI IEA,
MERCHANT TAILOR,
MAC OX, CKOKGIA.
nprl-ly
PEACOCK A NASH,
FEED, LIVERY AND SALE
STABLES.
First class teams. Open day and night.
Kates reasonable. Special attention
given the commercial travel.
LUMBER CITY, G£OKGIA
aprJ3 wiytu *
T. H. Davis,
hlVEnY, llll'li i\P SALE
STABLES.
New Supply ol'Stork. Mucks, Etc.
J.r.MHKB i TV, GA.
March 14, G mo. tu
Eastman Barber Shop
EASTMAN da.
First-class in all Appointments
ISAAC NIXON, Barbee.
Superior facilities, best xx-orkmansbip fotind
and giKid company always 11’89 in our
shop. Jan.
"jAffl. MASON.
FASlflO XAlll.E liABBEIi.
Fourth Avenue near Postoffice.
Eastman, Ga.
First Class in Every Eespect.
Ticket. 10 shaves. $1.00. Single shave.
l.V.
Mar. 22 6-mo fri
G. \Y. ETIIBIDGE & C 0 .
DEALERS IN
Fine Whiskies,
Wines, Etc. ’ .
4It! POPLAR St.. MACON, GA. ..
We make a specialty of the
JOG TRADE
t.a~~ All orders by mail receive
prompt attention. mar!2-lytu
Take a Rest.
Excursion ticket* *t low rates will be sold to
all Summer Resorts throughout the counter b\
the Ei»t TenBMsee.Virjffn).* Georgia R»fl»
comraencin* Jonrist. gN.nl to return ooor before
°Filnftrain »er,ice with Pullman B. W. cars. XVREN
rsr.
Gen. Pass. & Ticket Agt.
Why Is It
That people linger continual along always tirol com
plaining about that feel
lugs One lH>tt\e <'f Beoo's ^lood Pt-
RiriE* and Bloop Maker xxtn entirely
Appetite remove this feeling, give them a good
Ukkrm.n and regulate Herru.n. digestion. Druggists. I
A
|
“
Central Railroad
OF rtr- GEOnUlA. rrnnrn
(90th Meridian Time.)
BCHFDULE IN EFFECT MARCH 31, 1889. !
-------
FOLK DAILY TRAINS—MACON TO ATLANTA
vm^on 9 05 a m. „o P ». 6<opn, ! J£; »
A r Atlanta 110 p m . 5 ,5 pm. 10 40 p
jVhU train srop. only at Barnysville, Onftn
andEMtWnt
Iiv Columb*.
Tvn?»n£Z™ „„„„ an d Monteomerv g via
'
1 v Macon------- a EEEE 935am i
Ar Columbus . a 240 p m j
A r Union Springs........... a 447 P m l
Ar Montgomery *__ 6 45 P. 1 ?
......
doibiedauy Jacksonville: service
To Savannah and if
Arviacmi.............. 10.5 am p 3 ,
l .v Savannah ...............^ 3° P m Ox 3° a 3
A,-l:,.iwm-.iilc ...........7mam tot., 3
Lv T Macon........... ■■ Thomasyille and Jacksonville 16 45 P ,n vtaAjb»»r_ O Ot^t^ % m
........
Ar Albany.......... .......no 45 pm .j p m
:ir Thomasville..... '•ta p m
Ar Jacksonville..... 5 a m
This train does not stop between Macon and
Fort Between'Macon Valley. and Augusta via Millen :
Lv Macon..................1045 a in u 11 ib p m
Ar Millen................. 240pm 3 p m
Ar Augusta.......... . • - ■ 4 30 p m 35 a m
_
To Columbus and Birmingham :
Lv Macon ... ........3 2 5 a EES 9 35 a m
Ar Columbus ...... 7 C :1 1 jo :t m
.\r Birmingh am ........iiop
To Milledgeville and Eatonton
Lv Macon............................ ... .*10 45 a m
ai Milledgeville..................... 2 45 P m
a r Eatonton........................ 4 15 P m
ARRIVALS FROM
6 15 p nt il 00 p m
A )i. a ny. .6iopm ....... .. 8 40 :i in.
savannah * 20 P n ' i '5 a ro¬
'fstmiton.
‘Daily except Sunday.
SOLID TRAINS
. arc run to aud from Macon and t.'olum
j bus, Union Springs, Montgomery. Alba¬
ny. Savannah and Atlanta, sleeping
} ears on night trains. Tliomaston take either
Passengers for
9:05 a in, or I :40 pm train. Passengers
for Carrollton take either 3:30 am or
0:05 am train. Passengers for Perry train.
take either 9:35 a in or «:46 p m
Passengers for Fort Gaines. Buena N 1s
ta, Blakely and Clayton should take
10:05 a m train. Passengers for Syl
vania, Wrightsville and Sandersville
take 10; 15a m train.
THE “ CENTRAL”
j s {|„, only line from Macon makingeon
nectiou lit Union Passenger Depot at
Atlanta with through trains for the
northeast and northwest, it is the line
to rely upon speed, safety and comfort,
Therefore look to your interest and use
it when you travel. relative
For further Information to
schedules, routes, ticket rates, etc.,
write or call unon
J. A. KnulicRTH, Agent
Kecciv’g Depot, Macon, Ga.
II. Brown, (Tty Ticket Ag't
Hotel Lanier. Macon, Ga.
J. T. Hook, 'Ticket Ag't
Cen’l Pass. De’t, Macon.Ga.
K, T. Charlton, G. F. A.
apllfl tf Savaiinali, Ga.
r A S S E N G E R S C 11EDCE E
—.AND—
FIX EIGHT SEKV1CE
In effect Juno. 16, I8S9, via the
MCM SOUTHERN anil FLORIDA
HAi BROAD.
Suwanee River Route to Florida
Standard Time same as Macon city tima.
GOING SOUTH. GOING NORTH.
J.v M aeon 400 pm Lv. Valdosta. 3^ am
Sofkec MaconJun..4 05 pin! “ “ Hahira... Mlneola.. 5 ara
g .... 4 19 pm j Cecil.....,-...6 . .5 54 a in
Avondale... 4 30 pm “ t>9 am
.. VVellston... .4 41 pm “ Add . 6 49 am
»• Bonaire.....456pm; “ “ Sparks Lenox... 6 54 am
o Kathleen..- 5 07 *8 pm Eldorado 7 13 am
to Tivela......5 pin “ 7 2 i am
“ Grovania. . . .5 391>ni “ Tilton... 7 42 am
“ Elko........5 47 I»m pm‘ “ ClmlaJ 7 57 **«
to Unadilla .907 u Inaha.. o 12 run
..
.. .
»» Ejnehurst. Findlay.....628 ...6 20 pm pm! “ Sycamort A'sldn 8 8 22 am
“ irn 30 am
‘‘ Vienni.....040 pm! “ Dakota ahi 8 8 43 ant
“ Rich wood ...6 49 pm : : tV 55 *»»’
“ Cordele......7 Jt pm ! *•* Cordele......9 . cnona , . . .9 07 I9 am
•“ Wenona.....7 33 P»ni “ Rich wood
“ Arab!.......7 Dakota......801 47 P'»i Vienna 935
“ Ashburn .8 pmj Findlay,,. , 944 9 54 '
*‘ ... 14 pin 1 ai
i Sycamore . .8 23 p ym\ ** Pinehmst.. 10 02 ;vm
.
> Inaha.. .831pm “ I'nadilla . , 10 14 am
Chula ..847 pm! “ Elko 10 29 an
.
Tifton •9°7 P ,n G rov ama .10 38 a in
Eldorado .9 25 pin j * Tivo .10 53 ain
k Lenox... 940 pin* * Kathleen .11 03 am
* Sparks... 1000 pm; “ I’oniiir.e 11 11 am
“ Adel..,. .io05pmj “ WeiJbfnn Avondale 11 »\4 pm
“ Cecil...... Sol'kee... “ 37
*‘ Ilahira.. . 11 40 pm
‘ Mjneola. .1051 pm Ar ** Macon miicon jun .12 00 m
Ar. \ aldoeta ..II 15 pin 12 45
Pas-enger trains arrive and depart
from Union Depot daily. Freight re¬
ceived and delivered at Central railroad
warehouse. daily
Local freight train leaves Macon
at 6 o’clock a. in., and arrives daily at
8 :30 o’clock p. 111.
For further information apply to
A. C, Kjf*i*r, Traffic Manager, Ga.
Macon,
fpRS
I
THE EAST TENNESSEE, YIR
GINIA AND GEORGIA
RAILWAY.
-VIA-*
BRUNSWICK, JESl'P.
MACON. AO, A NT A.
ROME, C H A XT ANOOG A.
—ONLY LINE—
DOUBLE DAILY SLEEPING CAR
SERVICE
—BETWEEN—
CINCINNATI and JACKSONVILLE
—(OI.1P TRAIN'S BEN" KEN—
CHATTANOOGA AND
J ACKSONVH I.E
_CLOSELY CONNECTING WITH—
DOUBLE DAILY TRAINS,
—WITH—
PULLMAN SLEEPING CARS
—TO AND FROM—
,,r„mitj MEMP “¥v'to-nn v , anvil I F tivsis
Cl l A AND 1 HE 'ivi'vr " r. I.
_ *' 1 __
KXOXVII.LE, WASHINGTON,
YEW YORK
AMllllb • VnTHF tAM. F VST
THE SHORT LINE JTTlr- kK Ptruriv l \ I.l.N
. !!! !!!,lv,viimah , T,,,.t . n nvillp
Atlanta V and Sax an&an.
Atlanta and Brunswick.
Atlanta and Macon.
Atlanta and Roifte,
For. Rate.-. Time Cards and other in
'
f orma tion, apply to agents
Of the
EAST TF.NX., VA. & GA. RY.
B. 'V. WKF..VN,
Gen. Pass, and Ticket Agent.
Knoxville.
S. II. HARDWICK, Gen. Pass. Agent,
Asst.
Atlanta.
,
T. D. LOYAL, Ticket Agent,
Eastmxn, Gx. i
Di;\r i U, \ 17i\ 2 \ I r ijLL/JJliiUl-'* \ f M \fJP ■
1 » •
THE BROOIILYH DlYImE , T _, CI 5 hu orr10 ni . •
DA.Y u SERMON.
Subject— “Outwitted by the World."
(Preached at Liringston, Mont.)
Text : “The children of this world are in
their generation u i*er than the children of
light,"—#t. Luke xvi., 8.
That is another wav of saying that Chri*
tians are not ro skillful in the manipulation of
spiritual affairs as worldling are skillful in
arounn he^anagement me peot..« wuoare ajeri, earnesi, am
centrated y R0 xn tfe© andjkillful affairs of in the monetary soul, are laggards, matters,
i
.
136,1 ■
me great, wan. or this world is more com
mon sense m matters of religion. If one-half
of tho skill and forcefuiness employ©d in
hasj.mjnffa.rs ing tne truthsiof wore Cbn.s£, employed and trying mdir^mmat- to make
the world better, within ten yean> the last
juggernaut would fall the lastturonoof op
echoed from ail nations and S?h kindred ire ana \
people: ’ (-lory to tlod in the highest, and
on Some earth peace, good will to men.; toward
years ago, on a train going
the southwest-, as tha porter of the sleeping
cal' was mailing up t-he berths at the evening
tide, I saw people a man In kneel down to pray.
Worldly the ear looked on. as much
as t" say: ‘‘What does this mean V I gnu
pose tho most of the people in the car thougnt
that man was either insane or that he was a
fanatic; hut he disturbed no one when ho
knelt, and he disturbed no one when he arose,
In after conversation with him I found out
that he was a member of a church in my own
city, that he was a seafearing man, and
that ho was on his way to New Or
loans to lake command of a vessel. I
tbought then, ns I think now, that ten such
men—men with such courage for God as that
man Cbrist: had—w thousand ould such bring the would whole bring city this to
n men
whole land to God; ten thousand such earth men,
in a short time, would bring the whole
into the kingdom of Jesus. That ho was sue
cessful in worldly ati'nirB, I found out. That
he v/as skiliful in spiritual afi’airs, you aro
well pe-rsuadod. If inon had tho courage, the
pluck, the alertness, the in acumen, matters of the the indus- soul
try, the common sense
that they have in earthly matters, this would
be a very different kind of world to live in.
In the in the first building place we and wont conduct more of churches common
sense
The idea of the adaptiveness is always para
mount in any oilier kind of structure. If
bankeis meet together and they resolve upon
potting up a bank, the bank is if especially
adapted to banking purposes; building, a it mans.- is
factaiing company put u]> a to
be adapted to manufacturing purposes; ouestion but in
nrfant?Yf*nr>«; is ctarcli^In^Zj not nlwavs tho
of om
churches we want more light, more
rtXim, more ventilation, more comfort. Vast
sums of money are expanded on ecclesiastical
structures, and men sit down in them, and
you a*k n man how he likes the church; he
mvs: “I like it very well, but I can't hear.”
As though ashaul faetcry were good for
everrthing but making shawls. The voice
cf tlie preacher dashes against the pillars,
Men sit down under tho shadows of the
Gothic arches and shiver, and feel they must
be getting religion, or something else, they
feel so uncomfortable.
O my friends, wi-want more common sonso,
In the rearing of churches. There is no ex
cuso for lack of light when the heavens are
full of it.no excuse for lack of fresh air
when tho world swims in it. It ought to be
mi expression not only physical of comfort, our spiritual when h*Ir>
pines#, but of our we
eay: “How amiable are Thy tabernacles, O
Lord God of Host*! A day in Thy courts is
thousand.” '
bettor than a
Again) remark: We warit more common
sense in the obtaining that of religious hope. succeed Ail in
men understand In order to
worldly directions that they must subject concentrate, until their
mind They takes think fire on with the one velocity of their
own
thoughts AH their acumen, all their strategy,
nil their wisdom, ftlltheir common they sense, they
nut in that one direction mid succeed,
Rut how seldom it is true in the matter of
seeking after God. While no man expects to
aceomplish anything for this world without
concentration and enthusiasm, how many
there are expecting after awhile to get 8 into
tbe khiKdom of God without the use of
any such means. A miller in Califor
nri ’ many years ago bewitched held up a sparkle
of gold until it nations,
Tens of thousands of people banket® letfc their
homes. They took their and their
pickaxes and their pistols and went to tlio
wilds of California. Cities sprang up sud
denly on the Pacific coast. Merchants put tho
asitlo their elegant apparel and put on
miner's garb. All the land was full of the
talk about gold. Gold in tho eye®, gold In
the ears, gold in the wake of ships, Word gold m
the Rtre©t#—gold, mountain gold, gold. God’s love comes full of
to us that the of is
bright treasure; that men have been dig
ging there, and ha- o brought up gold, and
amethyst, and carbuncle, find jasper, and
sardonyx, and chrysoprasus, aud all the pre
cious stones out of "which the walls of heaven
were fcuilded. Word comes of a man who, has
digging in that mine for one hour,
brought up treasures worth more than
all the stars that keep vigil over bogus our
sick and dying world. Is it
company tliat is formed? Is unde
vcloped territory? Oh no, the gtory is true,
There are thousands of people in this audience
who would be willing to rise and testify thar
they have discovered that gold, and have it
In their possession- Notwithstanding all this,
what is the circumstance? One would sup
pp»© that the announceraeut would down*oui send r>eo
pie iu great excitement up and
streets. That at midnight men would
knock at your door, asking bow
* those treasures. In¬
they piay that, get hands be¬
stead of many of us put our
hind our back and walk up and down iu front
of the mine of eternal riches, and say: “Well, I
if I am to be saved, I will be saved; and if
am tp l>e fiamed. I will be damned, Why, and broth¬ there
is nothing to do about it.” my
er, do you not do that way in business mat¬
ters? Why do you not to-morrow go to your
btore and sit down and fold your arms
and say: “If these goods are to tie sold.
they will be sold, aud if they arc not to be
su>ld, they will not be sold; there is nothing
for me to do about it.” No, advertisements, von dispatch
your agents, you print your windows, push
you adorn your show you
thoso goods, yon use the instrumentality.
Oh that men were as wise in tho matter of
uhe soul as they are wise in the matter of
dollars and rents! This doctrine of
I God’s sovereignty, how it is misquoted
and spoken which of as bound though it hand were and an
lnui hum us
I foot for time and for eternity, when,
1 sq far from that, in every liber of voVr
nod^, in every faculty of your mind, in
every passion ct your soul* you aro a
froo man and it is no more a matter of free
moice whether you will to-morrow go
abroad or stay at home, than it is this
moment a matter of free choice whether
vo* wijl accept Christ or rojtxrt Him.
In all the army of banners there is not one
conscript. Men arc not to be dragooned into
heaven. Among all the tens of thousands of
the Lord's soldiery there is not one man but
will tell you: “1 chose Christ. I wanted Him;
I desired to be in Hi$ service; I am not a con
scripC -l mn a volunteer.” Oh, that men had
tho same common sense in the matters of re¬
ligion that they have in the matters of the
world—the same concentration, the same
push, the same enthusiasm! In the
one case a secular enthusiasm; in
tne othf*r* a consecrated enthusiasm,
Again I remark: We want more common
sense in the building up and enlarging of our
Christian character. There are mon here
who have for forty years been running the
Christian race, and thev ' have not run a quar
ter of a mile'
No business man would be willing to have
Ms ln»e»tiuefltS unaceumatafiva. If you m
vest u dollar yoi xpect that cioliar to come
home bringing another dollar on its lack
AVliat would you think of a tutu who should
invest fen thousand dollars in a monetary
institution, then go oil for five years,
make no inquiry in regard to
the investment, then come back, step
«P “> of ,hr i^fht.on
and say: "Have you I kept lodged those . ton thousand
dollars safely that with you?” but
asking no question about interest'or about
dividend. Why. you say. “That is not com
mon sense.” Neither Is it, but that is the
way we act in matters of tne soul. Me
make a far more important invest
rnent than ten thoosmid dollars We
invest our ul. Is it accumulative?
Are we growing Are in grace 5 Are we getting
K'tter ? we getting worsef God de
clares many dividends, but we do not collect
them, we do not ask about them, we do not
want them. Oil fhat in this matter of aecu
mulation we arc as wise in the matters of the
soul as we are in the matters of the world!
How inue common sen^*e in the reading of
the Scriptures' We get any other book and
we open 11 and we say: *NoV. what does this
book mean to teach me’ It is a book on ae
tronomv; it will teach me astronomy. It is
a book on political economy; it will
teach me political economy." Taking
” P the Bible, do we arit ourselves what
means to teach? It moans to do just
tiling; get the world converted and get
us all to neaveo. That is what it proposes to
io Put instead of that, wc go into the
Bible as botanists something to pick dowers, to fight or we other go as
uuedists C^istianswith, to get logicians trying
taa^n^ cr we goas facultii for better
to iuwtal this about . the
argument, and we do not like
aad we not Hke that, and vrp do
not like the other tiling. What would you
think of a man lost on the mountains? Night
bus come down; he cannot find "bis
xvjy home and h© sees a light in a mountain
rahin; lie goes to it, he knocks at the door;
the mountaineer comes out and fin ks tho
traveler and says: "Well, here I have a I*j»
torn; you can take it and it will guide you
on the way home;*’ and suppose that man
should say: “I don’t like that lantern, I don’t
like the handle of it, there are ten or fifteen
things about it I don’t like: if you can’t givo
me a better lantern than that' I won’t have
any.”
Now. God says this Bible is to be a lamp to
our feet and a lantern to our path, to guide
»tSTitohSuf P “ and
iieprlSfte ,k«» criticism Sn. uow^nneo denreeat- x.^I- thi- mid
that. xv,
bo if by it* holy light wo found cur
wav to onr ov-riastmc home!
, fhen we do no , rcad tha Bible as we read
other books. Wo read it perhaps four or five
minutes just before we retire at night. AV>
are weary and sleepy, so somnolent we hardly ;
know which end of the book is up. We drop
our 0 y e perhaps on the story geological of Sampson ;
^ t h e fo«s,or upon some table
important religious in it® place, but the stirring no more
emotion than announcement
th8t fiome body begat somebody else,
“? musS^y^^l^kye^i d ho . Begat some-body else, insteal I
destiny is involved in this book.”
IJow lifctlo we use common sonso in !
prayer! r We say: ''Oh, Lord, givo m 1
thif - aad - 0 h Lord, give mo that,” and
i-Qi] ’ Lord, ..JL,. give me something else,” and wo i
, . not^kuo-.v to get it or trettimr 8 it
we do we have it. Wo have
no anxiety about it. Y.'e do not watch
and watt for Its coming.
As a merchant, you telegraph or you write !
to some other city for a lull of goods. Yon
say. “Send me by such express, or by such a
stoamer.or rives. You by suelia rail train.” Tho depot day ar
the wharf. send.your goods wagon do to the You or
to 1 he not come.
with immediately thoso goods? telegraph: ffe haven’t “What received is tho matter them.
Send them right away. We want them now,
or we don’t want them at all.” And you koep
writing sending and you keep tclographiug, tho and you
keep your wagon the to wharf, depot, until or to
Bio express office, or to you
get the goods.
In matters of religion wo aro not so wise
ns that. Wo ask certain things to bo sent
from heaven. 'We <lo not know whether
they come or not. y 0 have not any special
anxiety as to whether they come or not
V. e may get them cud may not get them.
Instead of at 7 o clock in tha morning
saying: “Have 1 got that blessing ?•
?*- -'-I o'clock noonday, asking; “Have
got- teat bieswnar" at 7 o clock m
the evening saying: Have I received that
pleading—begging, blessing?” and not begging—asking, getting it, pleaduig,
until Now, brethren, asking
you get. my is not
that common sense? It we ask a thing from
Bod, who has sworn by His eternal throne
that He will do that which we ask, is it not
common sense that we should watch and
wait until wo get it?
But I remark again: Wo want more com
mon sense in doing good. How many people
there are who want to do good and yet are
dead failures! Why is it? They do not cx
ercisetho same tact, tho the same ingenuity, the in
same stratagem, Christ that same they common in worldly sense
tlie work of do
tilings, this direction ptherwise they well would they snoceed succeed iu
as us
in tho other. There aro many turn
who have an arrogant way with
them, although they may not foci They arrogant.
Or they have a patronizing way. talk
to a man of the world in a manner which
seems to say; “Don’t you wish you look were us
good os beiore I am? I Why, X have to clear
down cau sec you, you aro so far
beneath me.” That manner always dis
gusts, always drives men away from the
kingdom or Joshs Christ instead of
bringing them in. When I was a
lad 1 was one day m a of village store, and
there was a large group young and yChrrstian men there
man came m, and without any introduction
of the subject, and while there were in great
hilarity, SRid to one of them: "George,what
is the first, step of wisdom?" George looked
tip and said: “L very man to mind his own
business.” Well.it was a very rough answer,
but it was provoked. though Religion nail bomb- been
hurled in i Here as it were a
shell. We must bo adroit In thepresenta
tlon of religion to the world,
Do you suppose that Mary in hor conver
Ration with Christ lost her simplicity > or
that Paul, thundering vfhy from it Mars Hill, took
tho pulpit naturally tone? is mooting people and cannot
talk as m prayer on
religious subjects as they succeeds do in worldly in
circles? For no one ever any
kind of Christian work unless he works
naturally We want to imitate the I,ord
Jesus Christ, of tlio who field. plucked t\ a po»m from tho
grass e all want to
imitate Hun who talked with
farmers gbout tho mau who wont
forth to sow. and talked with tho fisher
men about the drawn net that brought in
fish of all sorts, aud talked with the vme
dresser about the idler in the vineyard, aud
talked with those newly and affianced about the
marriage supper, talked with tha innri
debtors, cramped and in talked money with matters the about the two
woman about,
tho yeast that leavened the whole lump, and
talked with the shepherd about the lost sheep.
Oh, we might twist gather like even forget-me-nots tho stars of the
sky and of Jesus. them We bring in the
garland Him—the wealth of must language, everything the
to tender
ness of sentiment, the delicacy of morning
dew, the the saffron of floating the cloud, bursting the thunder tangled
surf of tossing sea,
guns of tho storm’s bombardment. Yea,
every star must point down to Him, every
heliotrope must breathe His praise, every
drop in the summer shower must flash Hi,
glory, all the tree branches of the forest
must thrum their music in the grand march
which shall celebrate a world redeem*],
Tow, all this being so, wnat is tne common
sense thing for you and for me to do ? What
we do I think will depend that npon has three ruined great
f«et®. The first fact sin us.
It has blasted body, mmd and soul.
fVo want no Bible to prove that we are
sinners. Any man who is not willing
to acknowledge himself an imperfect
and a sinful being is simply a fool ami has not to
he argued with. Wo all feel that sin dts
organized our entire nature. 1 hat is one
fact. Another fact Is that Lhnst came to
reconstruct, to restore, to revise, to coiTect.
to rcflecm. That Is a socond tact, me
third fact is that the only time we the are sure
Christ will pardon is the us is tiling pres¬
ent. Now*, what of common these three sense farts?
for us to do in view
7-Zst 1 ^ ^Tn^nTw skill 40 ^ had perfect sot:
business man in whoso you
confidence should tell you that to-morrow
(Mondayl morning between 11 ami 12o’clock
you could by a certain flimncicd trana
action make five thousand dollars, but
that on Tuesday perhaps be you might
make it. but there would not any posy
tivenass about it, and on Wednesday there
would not be so much, and and Thursday lass,
Friday less, and so on, less less when
I will attend to that matter between 11 and
12 o'clock to-morrow I (Monday) morn
ing, for then can surely ac
accomplish w^atto“3 it, but on Tuesday I
pTipS 1st I n bring in thus
Now us our common sense
matter of religion. Here are the hopes of
the Gospel. We may get them now. To
morrow me may get them aud we may not.
Next day we may and we may not. The
prospect less and less and less and less.
The only sure tioie now—now. 1 would
not talk to you in this way if I did not know
that Christ was able to save all the people,
and save thousands as easily as save one. I
would not go into a hospital wounds and tear if 1 off had the
bandages balm from the I would not have
the no face to to tell* appiy. he Ls sinner unless
a man a
I had at hjp tho same time the authority
of saying mav be saved. Suppose in
Venire there is .'Raphael, a faded marks picture, of
great in its time, bearing some its It
greatness. Historv describes that picture.
i« nearly faded away. You say: “Oh, what
a pi tv that so wonderful a picture hy Raphael
should be nearly defaced f’ After awhile he a
man comes up. very unskillful in art. and
proposes to retouch it. You say: "Stand
off- l would rather have it just as it is; while you
w iH on ir make it worse.” After a
there comes an srtist who was tte
equal of Raphael. He says: “I will rc
touch that picture and bring out all its orig
inalpower." You have full confidence iu his
ability. He touches it lien, and there
Feature after feature comes forth, and when
he is done with the picture it is complete God in
all its original power. Now im
pressed His image on our race, but
that image has been deface.! for bun
dreds and for thousands of years, get
ting fainter aud fainter. Here comes
up a divine Raphael. He says: “I can restore
that picture.” He has all power in heaven
and on earth. He is the equal of the One
who made the picture, the image of the One
who drew the image of God in our soul. He
touches this sin anl it is gone, that tl ' an - C -
gression and it disappears, and all tne deface- J
meat vanishes, and ‘where sin abounded
grace doth much more abound.”
Will you have the defacement or
will you have the retoratMn?
I am well persuaded that if I could by a
touch of heavenly pathos been in done two minutes put
before vou what has to save your
soul, there would be an emotional tide over
whelming. “Mamma" said a little child to
her mother when she was being put to bed at
night, mamma, what makes vour hand
*> »arred aud tw*Md abd naliia
other people’s h*od« r ' ••'VTeli,” said the
mother, “my child, when you wore
younger than you are now. years ago, one
night after I had put you to bed I heal'd a
cry, a shriek upstairs. I came up and found
h» bed was on fire, and you were on fire.
and I took hold of you and I tore off th'*
burning garments and while I was tearing
them off and trying to get you away I burned
my hand, and it has been burned and scarred
over since, and hardly looks any
ruore like a hand; but I got that,
my child, in trying to save you.” Oman’
O woman! I wish to-day X could show you
the burned hand of Christ—burned in pluck
i ng you out of tho fire, burned in snatching you
away from the flatus. Aye, also the burned
foot, and the burned brow, and tho burned
By Hi, stripes ye are
A . SHIPb WARD-ROOM.
E0V7 NAVAL OFFICERS LIVE
V/ITHIN CLOSE GUARTERS.
A Little Odd World on a United
States Man-of-war—Some Terrors
of a Long Cruise, &c.
“Permission to smoke, Mr. Smith;”
"Certainly, Mr. Jones.”
» « the ward-room of a
united otates man-of-war, ana the time
is just after dinner, when til© ollieers,
ranged and about the table, staff to right
line to left are sipping JvitmWi their coffee
sn( j eirhou-' ^ ,, J rfJOd-natuiea . ■ chatt. elmff At -it
Bie hem 1 sits the executive officer, and
it is to him that Mr. Jones addresses the
request for mif. permission to smoke. As
there 10 is ,s a a P* u “ . at a - ,i„„ dimit 1PT i, - it it to is n ,, matter mft tter
course tha. everyone may smoke a
cigar . with coffee, but it is equally a
matter of course that no one shall do so
without first asking permission of the
• ,- line (tho. s.nt. . it n i« .1™,-, always
senuu r p.< ri is
Wise aboard a man-of-war to ask per
mission before doing anything,
The wardroom is an oud little world,
whore the rigors of red tape and oflicial
; SI1 , *,. m i-ered hv f trood fellowship or
' ' jj j,,.,,
rcnuoituMiuni q , j 0 l. u unuHtuiuo.eoy n n duii»b'eby potty pt .ty
tyranny, officers ranch ship wardroom. has from ten to
twenty often within in the Here,
smaller space than is ac
C0r( l 0 d tons many convicts in a well
regulated ‘r 1 pr'son pi -on, these t,.ese men men eat eat, uiiuk diink
ami sleep. Opening off the wardroom
saloon are the onicerc’ private rooms—in
most enough ships tinv apartments, barely high
°, fur » tall mu to staudup in and
- f t j, fl hil to lie
aoout i ui 0 on(n enongu iw .,. mm „ u i.e
<l“" u la - Sitting at the wardroom talile
you may shake hands with a man in the
nearo t b ink.
Close quarters these. Some of the
11 shins bill I' s hive ua-c l-i-m-i- wardrooms w.imioomb, and atm
. of them haven A
»f'», some t. voyage
U1 thiee months m theso cramped
quarters is a crucial test of a man’s social
qualities. If the executive ollicer, who
IS e ft’ ec t ^he captain r V of tho wardroom
. P e tt niamutt , • t 01 a 1. O.a .,,.j aguaiu, ; „ n „ n i wntui which
latter ., lip seldom t.:e ship floating
is, is a
hades. T wo or three evil spirits among
subordinate officers mav make a dozen
brother officers uncomfortable Sume
times tll !* es ?. a -bin “ lil P noes half “a t round loumt the tlie world wona
witlt the wardroom s occupants in a
ul mutual hatred. Perhaps the
executive fourths oiiieeris subordinates unpopular, and address tlirce
of his never
],; ™ m { V .v,*cnt “ ^ in tho ' cour-e 'wA of liu" dut-v Per
haps the pGionmal i w.u of ot line ami anil stoft stall
is sucli thsit tue right side of the dinner
tablo finds it difficult to bo civil to the
leit side. These conditions, however,
se ,-m to bo comparatively A f 1 are, and now
; , the ud , 0011 is the S( . cn o of
absolute . . peace and , good i Mill, n mi ihc eye
cutive is officers unquestioned and authority
exorcised with courtesy luikunwl
edged without—Tud'-in”-. Title and statf
l “ 1 1 , burv l p^ tlioir e!1 llu mutual * tu ‘ u susnichins SUH I ,c ‘ ous i
S n « . the , best ill made of close qiuuteis.
Ut course nearly every wardroom bad lias its
bore. Perhaps he makes puns, per
haps ho tel's long stories, perhaps lie
talks tarns about a unit liims himself ( u ncrlmns pc. naps he lie ri-losa u .os a
'“b»y He is soon t.mnd out. Indeed
he is often known beforehand, iorttoju|
a-e bores who have a fame
the navv. They lmve
& „ . . . “ «•«,..i vortms Z
„ w dow «"*"«* V'
On the home station, m
in the tropics. Brother
tho register old ‘amiliur and rejoice bore to will discoV^^HH be l'enHI
SO nifi
before ■},/, another i cruise
What of p yard-room „ , talk < First, ,__ ana
always, ^ chuff’. The little vanities, the
porsonal habits, the petty likes and dis
Ijkes of each arc known aud hinted at.
m, t] „ r0 stories to be told One
11 tell tlio same story tuicc m ■ a cruise ,
.
without incurring serious penalty, but
if the cruise be long, every mau is likely
to have spun his varn until they are
v, lown hv he-irt
- learned. ,____,
M ... aid-room , talk , is.seldom . , , A ,
dozen clever, well-educated, gooil-nian
nered men together, find it impossible
to keep themselves up to a general dir
“ n „r 1 ko-'-lI or liobtic.-il m'eta
r?P lcs> Magazim-S, fw-n 110.1 one t°
three months ,, , old, are on board, ami tlio
«We ship can mpstor some hundreds of read
books. These are a resource when
a shipmate is ili-te npered or tiresome,
Dice are an unfailing source of amuse
ment. You shake for etervthing,
xrmiot ALonot >ln ni.ms us, if-u’l mi t it. it' \Vii Abet 1 is is the tlie
cogioenfeariOH. .M ■ ■ 11■:11 pay for^ life;
slow, bet s ue promotion; un piestioned
i social stariil ng; tho sight of stiange
lamia the world over, aud whatever
j lvw(iril of faithful service
Stars and . StnjYes. .. [.New x - A lork - ,
Star.
Curious Chinese Habits.
ffine'xwTh
but when be <l<H‘s not i him to sthy
lie puts the question: “Oh, won’t VOU
E t;iv tm<l (lino xvith nip, pleaspf” The
vi> ; t , r will then know that ho is not
,
hen Clunameu . . expects present
'* a a
and it does not come lie sends one of
lesser value.
\ rich man’s servant gets no salary, if,
Tot .nan, me thf, uppheants; while
salaries are ]'aid to the servants of the
common people, but few make anpliea
fions. Tlio perquisites of the former
often more than triple the salaries of the
\attor,whi.hiN the aole reason of the-c
dilieiences. I<» eneouift-e honesty and
sincerity, confidential clerks and sales- i
men in all branches of industry "f tho receive firm’a j '
nil annual net ; erre t c e
business, The liesides their regular salary
highest ambition of a Chinaman
is . to have , hue . fim
a nice cornu anu a
oral.
j u China one can always borrow
monflV f?' *i, e strength i of bavin" ' ‘ a son.
Bbfr’dy , * ow ] c l a< J I v,ll ’ ce V,? 1 a “
he hau a dozen daughters. l;.e tormer
js responsible for the .b bt o; his father
for three generations. The latter is only
responsible for tbe debts of her own bus- '
‘
* t
M ,,, lien Cliiiianx-ii . moo s ano.her ,, 116 , | i
a
6bakes unci squeezes ins own hands and
covers his head. If great friends have
pot seen each other for a long time they
i .,, Jih.'-wC . ,. VEO * tired
Inrie.il of a laiu tu o ouitrs leain J-eVth
the. would say; l Ti nVl ' l.your stonuudr
or “Have vou enten your rice." “How
old arc vou ” K w niiK-li did you pay
f yotir vandelaf”
Menw.ai 1 n- netti 1 -Vs And „n ft carry cirrv
fans, while the women wear snort jack. ;
ets and curry ■ anc-. Boats are (Irawfl
by horses, carriages move kitei, hv gajlg. Old
men plav ball uad flv while cliil
, '. ’, . ar u,s*anJ look Old
women, n,-. s -,„!d .. I l,i d t-, t e T , ng, n „ are * the t) ‘ .
.
idols of s •• ietv. Lovemaking is only
done tree days before marriage. It is
not only heakl considered the safest MirestVav wav to
^ ft of a rival but the
to y cpt a « if,. ' it * nr Wi no- ^ in. ' tn ^ { tuae,
.
A previous a<* :uaintance lx?tween the
male and foxnaie prevent - them from
marriage. For this rca o 3 S a man ?►©!
d )In we j„ a „ irl of u s flwn . If a
mi aman defrf.c^ the-uea ... n of f au Tt enemy _ T . ATn _
«e goes and hangs himself upon that
enemy's u -m . It is cansi'lered a 61l re
wav t < kid not onlv that particular family
f .i i. , i. en*ire
«U1 be,m jo,,par.lv of lofemg tke.r fixes. i
Mail »nd Lxpre>s.
QUAINT AND CURIOUS.
Few women stutter.
Virginia has a dog with two tails.
Gustavus Adolphus was killed in
1632.
Tho man who invented the locomo¬
tive cow-catcher never got a cent for
it.
An Ohio woman has had a toe foul
and three-quarter inchei , 1“ampu- ,
tated.
rr, The hyphens 11. . cd , words, , “Clan-na- ,,,
Pool Gael, ” l'a is said .11 to be Gaelic for 1 Children n
of Ireland.”
Pans . 900 just
years ago was as emi
nent toward the rest of Europe ai it ta
at this moment.
George Clements of Gaiussvillc, Ga.,
has a bunch of forty distinct heals of
The Union Pacific road otters $2000
cash to any passenger on any train that
will shoot a train robber.
A housewife at Gridley, Cal., while
dressing a chicken for dinner, found in
its crop a diamond, which was sold for
$185.
Beggary has been reduced to an art
as well ns a profession in II >me. In a
recent case before the police an old man
admitted that he had as many as fifty
lies in daily use.
The giant svliom Forepaugli exhibited
in 18S2-85 was eight feet ami two
inches in height, and weighed 350
pounds, lie was born near Scarborough,
Eng., in 1860. Ills real name was Henry
Alex Cooper.
A colored man testified in a St. Louis
police court the other day that while he
had good clotlici to wear he preached
the gospel, but as soon as his clothes
wore out and his money ran low he
went to work as a day laborer.
A Georgia farmer prevents his cows
from jumping a fence by cutting off
their lower eye-lashes,making them think
the fence is three times as high as it
really is. If you cut the upper lashes, a
reverse delusion will result, he says.
The largest ferryboat in the wor Id is
tho Solano, used in carrying trains
across the straits of Carquiuez, Cal.,
between Bclnicia and Porta Costa. It
is 460 feet long, and has a capacity of
forty-eight freight cars aud two loco¬
motives.
More onions were raised in this coun¬
try last year than ever before in a sea¬
son. They were such a drug in several
States that farmers hauled thousands of
bushels out to tho woods and flung them
out. That’s the one vegetable that can¬
neries don’t take hold of.
At a recent examination of volunteers
for one-year service in the army at
Muenster, Austria, the remarkable spec¬
tacle was seen of twenty-two young
monks of the Franciscan order present¬
ing themselves. They all passed tho
examination in each branch required.
HHBgxLhm
. i -
Millie at. A liny wiml
JP^urned by tho current from burning
candles furnishes the power to move all
tha figures automatically.
An Incident of City Life.
In a Sixth avenue elevated train at
Forty-second street, Monday, a tall,
well-dressed and prosperous-looking
man, apparently 10 years old, entered a
car and took a seat in one of the cross
sections. He pulled a newspaper from
his pocket and bsgan to rcad. Iu turn¬
ing tho paper ho glanced over it at a
woman who sat opposite. With visible
agitation he laid down the paper and
fairly stared at the lady. His face
grew red and liis eyes bulgol out of his
head. Then, with a suddenness that
was startling, he leaned over, took th#
young woman’s face between his hands,
and planted two resounding kisses on
her lips.
She jumped to her feet in consterna¬
tion and gave a little scream, where¬
upon the gentlemau said: “Don’t you
know me, Mary?”
When it was her turn to stare at him
she evidently knew him, lor she quickly
threw her arms about his neck and be¬
gan crying. They paid no attention to
the interest taken in them by the other
passengers, but conversed in an animat¬
ed manner until the train reached Four¬
teenth street and then alighted. In an¬
swer to inquiries later the man said:
“I'm not going to give you my name,
but I will tell you the rest. When I
was a boy of 15 I live l iu Dayton, O.
1 ran away from home with a circus.
Now I live in lime Mont., and am
rich. This is my sister Alary, whom I
have not seen in that time and have
heard imm ouly once, bite says she
wouldn't hare known me, but I knew
j lcf She is a b >arJing-housc keeper in
Harlem but, by thunder, she’s going to
Montana with me. I may liax-e acted a
little foolish, hut I think I would have
done the same in chutch—in church,
sir, when the preacher was praying. ’—
York Sun '
__ ^
A Device to Make Coats Fit.
A simple little thing that is bound to
net Its inventor a fortune is a spring
yoke to go about the neck and under
the collar of a coat. It is specially de¬
signed to give shape and tit to the col
lars ol , lancy flannel, . silk, linen,
pongee,
or seersucker coats, and by its use gar
men ts of , that ., class , fit „ as snugly . as
taji 0 r made ' Snring 1 ° or Winter ciothino 1
The slovenlincsi of a Summer coat
a,)out a ). out ,h ne e neck neCl£ has n * , been Decn a a material material
drawback, which this simple 1 invention,
sold la ail the furnishing stores, obvi
a tea.
A Peculiar Will.
“John Colter, I give you all this
property when , 1 T die, ,. for . you and ,
youi
wife, for taking care of me so long, and
Tim Crowley, you hear me say this,” is
the way James Ryan's last will disposed !
of a $500 lot. The bequeit written by
one of Ryan’s friends, was filed for pro¬
bate yesterday. —5a» Fnncitco Ctironi
eta.
Th© L©©ch Business.
There are only two firms in the busi
ness here, and’all the leeches used in
the United State® and a large part oi
South America are handled by them.
Their importations of late aud years 850,000, have
been between 300,000 ol
which number 100,000 or thereabouts
were rc shipped to South American
ports. The avt rage thousand, price at while which the they ri
are sold is $35 a
tail Twice k for a lee h is from *011"" “0 to ->.T
cents, leaving , a profit . to the retail dealer
of from nearly 600 to 800 per cent.
Prior to 1830 there was no regular ira
port J" trade of European leeches into this
country, , , but , sea sea cantatas captains were ere accus- accui
toim-il to bring them m occasionally speculation, in
small quantities on therefore, private obliged
Leechers were, to
depend largely on the native leech for
drawing blood, and during the early
part of the century the American species
was 111 considerable demand. All this
gpo -ies is quite widely distributed, the
principal -source of supply appears to
Bucks counties.
Leeches are imported slight during most of
the year, but only to a extent in
Summer, as they are easily killed by an
excess of heat. June, July and quanti- August
are the months when tho smallest
ties are received, and when the greatest
mortality occurs, reaching sometimes 25
per cent. They arc imported water-tight packed iu
swamp earth, in air and
wooden eases, holding 1,500 rather leeches light
each. These coses are made
and are about 21 inches long, 15 inches
wide and 13 inches high. in
In shipping leeches to customers
tins country, the same cases are u.seu l«>r
Bending largo tlio qualities, ami tight
wooden pails for smaller quantities,
the packing of swamp earth being also
employed. American leeches, on the
contrary, aro kept best in water, in
earthen or glass jars, in a cool place.
Although considerable quautilies hand of
leeches the importing are kept houses constantly Mr. on Witte in
obliged to draw oil his storage poudl OU
Long Island, between Winfield III! $
Newtown, especially for supplying the large amounts, trade.—
and for export
[New York News.
The Ten Health Commandments.
1. Thou rhalt have no other food
(han nt meal time.
2. Thou slmlt not make unto thee
my pies or put into tlio pastry the like
ness of anything that is it) the heavens
above or in the waters under the earth.
Thou shalt not fall to eating it or trying
to digest it. For the dyspepsia will be
visited upon tlio children to tlie third
and fourth generation vigor of them that eat
pie; and long life and upon those
83 E*“* k ”'' k
3. Remember thy bread to bake it
well; for lie Will not be kept sound that
eateth his bread as d.>ugh.
4. Thou slmlt not indulge sorrow or
borrow anxiety in vain.
5. Six days slmlt thou wash and keep
thyself clean, and bath, the seventh thou
slmlt take a great thou and thy
son, and thy daughter, and thy man
servant and thy is within maid-servant, and the
stranger that thy gates. For
in six days man sweats and gathers
filth and bacteria enough for disease;
wherefore the Lord has blessed the
bath-tub and hallowed it.
6. Remember thy sitting room and
bed chamber to keep them ventilated,
that thy days limy be lung in the laud
which the Lord thy God givetli thee.
7. Thou slmlt not eat hot biscuit.
8. Thou slmlt not eat thy meat fried.
9. Thou slialt not swallow thv food
uuehewed, or highly spiced, just Wore
hard work, or just after it.
10. neighbor’s Thou slmlt house, not keep late hours hj:r in
thy oards, his glass, with not' with
nor thy neighbors.—[New nor anything England
that is
Farmer.
An Arkansas Hermit.
There lives in a wilderness section of
Columbia county, Ark., a hermit, lie
has yielded a destructive knife and re¬
volver in half a fcorc of tragedies, and
is constantly on the alert, expecting to
be assassinated This man, who lias
forfeited the companionship of mankind,
is guarded l:y animals hag that are well
trained watchmen. He a magic con
trol of the bmte creation, and owns six
large goats and au < quid number of
dogs. Ills lonely cabin stands in the
middle of a fifteen acre field. AYheu lie
goes to ploiwng each fide three of the dogs are
placed end. at These dogs of the field at his
row’s are trained to
patrol the adjacent forest, and no human
being can these approach vigilant without being ex¬
posed by dogs and sentries, At
night tlie goats lie about the
cabin—the goats without the yard cnclo
sure, and the dogs within. When any
human being approaches these goats s, t
up * an unearthly series of bleating. ‘ The
dogs Within ... understand j . the , Signal . . and .
rush furiously at the intruder. Armed
to the teeth, the proprietor hails the vis
itor. If found to be a f,i, ml, one word
from the hcimit a lences both goats and
dogs, and the guest is invited in. Thus
guarded, this desperate than man says he
sleeps more securely the czar, he
cauae, unlike th** imperial cohorts of the
latter, Ids faithful sentinels cannot he
bribed or otherwise rendered unsafe by
'
collusion with their owner’s enemies.
According to a French astronomer,
the cooling of the terrestrial crust appa
rcntly goes on more rapidly under the
sea than with a land surface. From this
lie argues that tlie crust must thicken
under oceans at a much more rapid rate,
so as to give rise to a swelling up uni I
distortion of the thinner portions of the ;
must that is forming mountain chains.
One volume of liquid benzine will
make 16.000 volumes of air inflammable,
and 5,000 volumes of air highly explo¬
sive, but nothing but contact with flame
or a white hot body will touch off the
most explosive mixture of petroleum va¬
por and air.
There in a man in our town
And he it T©ry wtec, sir,
When e’er he doeen’t feel just rig!it
One r» me»ly the thin he uie«, take rir. in sprint;
It*§ Joat ijj to
The b ood to to par fy,
He tells hie friend?, and nothing else
Ie he induced to try
Hecaase, having tafccn Dt Pieroe’i Golden
Medieai Dtoooverr to hlofvl, oicanse his system. to? f*
It up and et.rieh the aod finding that it
eiw&vs produces tho deslrc-d result, he conari
er« that he would be foo l*h to eiperiraei “Prove all t
with anything e se. Hi< motto U:
thing* end hold fast to that which lajeood.”
That’s whv he pin" hi? faith to the “Golden
Medical Discovery.”
Walking advertise in enta f or Dr. Sage's Ca¬
tarrh Remedy ar e the thous ands t has cured.
A young spark, suffering from a too ?tr>>r»g |
sensation of the more fender feeiin ■**. defines [
his complaint iikan atta* k « t lassitude.
Oregon, tlie Paiadlse of Earner*.
Mild, equable climate, cer tain and abundant
crop-*. Best fruit, srrain. era*-- «nd>t*rf*k coun¬
try in the world. Fa'l informstion free. Ad¬
dress Ore*?. Im’ijfra’in Hoard, Port {arid, Or»*.
COUGf 25 CTV, v ^ FOR (bW5V/*\?Tj°/Nf.
m TOP g-, A _r br nr-jGciST,
—
BRYANT & STRATTON Business College
L'ZfJi'&.VSUtZ; L 0 TJI 8 VILLE. £Y,
Wonderful SUffpM.
A remedy must have merit or it will never be¬
come a favorite remedy with the people. Where
the virtue of Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) ftriJ
thoroughly l.nowu, it sell, totter than any other
medicine. NabcraA Morrow, of Birmingham,
Ala., say they sell a gross of B. B. B. a mouth
to their retail customers. They buy it t t n gros,
at a t:m«, as they also have a good wholesale A -
uund for it. O. her similar instances might be
mentioned, Sufficient but we have not the space to spore,
it is to know thalli. 11. it. has quicker
effect than all other bloorl punfl.-rs, aud,
gen-ral health ristorer sud eireiiatheuer ot iln
.vsiem, it is the h-t an 1 only safe remed-.
Wh.n your Modi is impure, when aches and
pains trouble you, when sores hr ak out ou d-h't- your
person, when yen feet wait,.nervous fails, and
iroubled "lienyour dyspepsia, appetite when there when is you arc
„1 with a geuer- when
fuuodonal de.angement of thesyatooi,
you feel all broke up and lire hardly seems worth
1 ving, give R. R. B a trial find you will at ouae
b°8>» to grow U tter and stronger,
Many are the A of Charles
Dickens but hk ,u , Ins given
ii,- m Hi,.’n,na publirirnltsome t hitto 1 taipPIffriill -Iji^n
interview time since he
me always had a cigarette in hia
mouth."
Sarah Bernhardt.
is coining to Auitrica, aud great will lie the
enthusiasm aroused amongst her adm.r ; rn.
But, we luveourown bright star, Mary Ander
eon. who will continue to bear off the palm in
the dramatic, as does I.ut y Hinton in the
Kroftt tobacco world.
___________
i-nnecesam-r Misery,
Probablv as much misery comes from lmhit
for toe that todTa^ d™dfmeuU likes take to
euro, the reason no on© to
the medicines usually prescribed. Hamburg
^ wero^re^ta
women and children. 25 cents. DoseeneRig.
Alack Drug Co., N. Y.
Have you ivied “Tanslll’s Punch" Cigar?
ASI Run Down
*. , w |,cada; otr^u of warm w»Uur, by
hard work, or from a long lUawts, you nr«J a seed
tonic and blood partllor. Wood's tar».parlUa»!«•
ft tfroogttoeus tho Avtaole p mV
fles th© bhxxl, r©ffnlatc« thto dfge^tluu.
“It affords me muoh pkvuinrr Ut reoouLUMKl
Hood's Sarsaparilla. My health two years Ago was
very poor. My frkm«ln thoviRlit I tv as cofag with
cousuuiptloo. I eommMcod using Hood's B*m»v
parfUa, took five bot4U* of it, aud to-day 1 can do m
hnrvi a day's work ba 1 ever conltl. It saved me
from tho grave and put me on my feet a wnind,
healthy man.“—3rux R. D Tribbey, 141 ttast Main
St., Wlgg«onsvllle, Ohio.
Mood’s Sarsaparilla $5
Sold by all druggists. $1 | bIx for Preparad o
by C. I. HOOD & OO., Apofchw*ari«», Inwall, Macs.
IOO Dosos One Dollar
THE STORY OF HU
PUBLISHED, t ~ASU TSSS
au able soUottor. tt omon o,^^ £
every cciuntv in the IT. S Apply aarlv If yon want
sch««.oa thl, towV r i*o p * rtT ' >
... - N ,.
( , hioslo niiuoi..
DSJTCHER’S
l FLY KILLER
m Makes a clean sweep. Every
. sheet will kill u quart of files
htops buaalng around ear*.,
(llvin* at eyes, tickling your
don, skips uard words aud a*>
I \K cures peace at trifling for 5 «ip«UR'.
Send rents aheele to
V. DUTV'HRU, St. Alhana, ▼!.
'
Aftw ALL others
consult
'9 PHILA..PA.
Twenty years' oontlnuou* wwUce In the treat
men! an<l euro <>f the nv lul rfleete of oarfy
vice* destroying mind and body. Medicine
mid Ircatmcnt for one mouth, Five Dollars, aent
securely scalcsl from o 1 tserv.vision to any address.
r < *i*relul DlwenweS free.
Plantation tneinss
With Oglf-Contained
SFTtffTRl FLUE BOILERS,
FOR DRIVING
COTTON GINS and MILLS.
Illustrated Pamphlet Kr«f. Addrtsa
JAMES lefpel & Co.
KPUINOFIELD, OHIO,
or 1 l« Liberty St., New Vurk.
vl.« V <»t 1 HlNKlNG
OK LI VING A
'L m Cotton Press Will W« msihI ami manufacture or Circulars two Hay liny and a Press? PniMflH. (Jotton Prioa
V List upon application.
It O 1 NO li i: I RON AND
■ WOOD WORKS
CHATTANOOGA, TKNN.
' V. O. li,.* 2R0.
4 ,-^v m CHICHESTER'S PENNYROYAL ENGLISH PILL 8
.
“ l:,a < m.. lltaimind llraud.
The only reliR'-l* pill for sale. a«fw
■ •rt. Ladle*, ask l»rn**Ut 1<* We IM»
Moiid Brand, >■ red uiewilla Win, Mal*4
with blue ribbon Take no other- MU
, \ L‘ (etamps) fur ptsrtieui^re »t».i “ UeUcf far
V -"7 Ladle*,*' tn .s'fer. hr hsmII. .Vosns Pamte.
Cklelieater Ckewical Cs»., JLudUoa *4-, 1’klUda, Ffc
IMANTED.
Si tin. r\i: >ii:r’sgin sii m. i*kmcu n«w
way of hharponit'g no . Make your old (fin* new , k»*m
jour new iriiiff 8 i. No fllea. Anyono can nee it. Corurni -
MoitH pain agent on Al.l.HalnH in county, whether made
l>y us <>r him a*H) mnchineM in n»e eiuce oei teinbor last.
.M ichino-, »m<| h»i -fa tiou guaranteed. Ilia, Wnteatonoe Trim.
to .1. G. I A il.S iV I O., .11 CHIP
SIS <»'* for S ua. ' J5U Agents A mmthm* preferred trho to mad* can worki»* furutah
nhorsoaud give their Whole time to Ute UaeHieao
son a 00., ioo» Main at . nichmo«uJ, v» n. b.
jMfc
f T _ la
—
NSShvlilS, TeWl. ColISJB for YOURg LadleS,
i« tb* leading •chord of tbi*» •action. Ra f an im
JJS< Full
p«pil« from i§ Biaiaa. courao !o Liur«tur«.
c»n i*id1«# m. P ,r LHtalogtjo *i|drc«ff President.
Ii«r. Gao. W. F. i'aicK, i>. 1 ) , NaahvilU, T«na.
■flottaii to j,iG“T**a8ire Informalloii »ttn1ent*. All Free, IntfrcitM
VI will raralve valuable TOUWJSli Beaton,
Ujr ad'lxesRlnK 1C
1 > \ * III H. ( Oi l. I < . I Phi h<i«i pbia* P*.
1 >«■’ hi aliip and poHit iona. 950. Writ* lo r cirualar.
and 'Whlakoir If ok
I ta cured at borne with
on t pain, Book of par
tlealara aent FBEE.
_U. M. WOOLLEY. M-D.
Aii.au. t.w. umce 0U4 wriuIiaU t.
S?5 31 r CO., TflK mndr Kirhat*a«l. I 1 I»R. by wr PRRKINH A fast*. fa.
ri DilO bo jr you Mn<i want *tawp U>kny tor ctrcTr or aeil to * I Lflnlla lft|np
I n.imu fJurrt* dt Rujvff -a.-jS Broa4lw* r Jf. r
,
A ***ntu wanted. 91 a n It r T'turli (jat'lrua
and AatnD-« <r«*s. O. K. Maiirhai.g Buffalo. N Y.
who hnv* uaed Pito’t
Car© for fotiHumptlon
My It 1* BEST OF ALL,
Sold everywhere. 26c.
PEERLESS DYES
dor*** I prescribe G and tally
W Big ** ta* only
~\ TO Cot** b DATS. 1* 1 specific of this tor tbe csria.fi cnr«
lltrul**4 »»t I* O.H.INGRAHAM.1I d..
MEM SkrkMUX*. AmslerdLm. N Y.
yrd *m\y by th* We hsve sr*ld Big C tor
!usi Ckssiotl Dinny yt-an, snd It has
Cinfftanatlfl 8* k v*n tbe b«st of sfiGs
Ikw , faction.
Chio. I). R. DYCHK t CO..
( hirafo, 111.
■ask * % 1,00. Bold by I>ruf gists.