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|3JT£gE’S SERMON 1
e Eminent Divine’s Sunday
Discourse.
Subject: “Peril* of the Metropolis”—The
Luxury and the Squalor of Great ClUe*
Thrown Into Violent Contrast—Object
Lessons Drawn From Experience.
Text: “Wisdom erietb without: she ut
ternth her voice in the streets."—Proverbs
i., 20.
We are all ready to listen to the voices of
nature—the voices of the mountain, the
voioes of the sea, the voices of the storm,
the voices of the star. As in some of the
cnthedrals in Europe there is an organ at
either end of the building, nnd the one in
strument responds musloally to the other,
so in the great cathedral of nature dny re
sponds to day and night to night and
flower to flower and star to star in the
great harmonies of the universe, The
springtime is an evangelist in blossoms
preaching of God’s love, and the winter is
a prophet—white bearded—symbolizing
woo against our sins. We are all ready to
listen to the voices of nature, but how fow
of us learn anything from the voices ot the
nolsv and dusty siret » You go to your
mechanism and to you: work and to your
merchandise, and yr mine back again,
.
and often with how uinarnnt a heart you
pass through the streets. Are there no
things for us to learn from these pave
ments over which we pass? Are there no
tufts ot truth growing up between these
cobblestones, beaten with the feet of toll
and pain and pleasure, tho slow tread of
old age and the quick step of childhood?
Ave, there are great harvests to be reaped,
and now I thrust in the sickle because the
harvest is ripe. “Wisdom crieth without:
she uttereth her voi la in the streets.”
In the first place, the street impresses
me with the fact that this life is a scene of
toil and struggle. By ten o’cloak every dav
the city is jarring with wheels, and shuff
ling with feet, and humming with voices,
and covered with the breath of smoke
stacks, and a rush with traffickers. Once
in awhile you find a man going along with
folded arms and with leisurely step, as
though lie had nothing to do: but for the
most pft, as you And men going down
these st jets on the way to business, there
is anxic y in their faces, as though they
had some errand whleh must be executed
at the first possible moment. You are
jostled by those who have bargains to
make and notes to sell. Up this ladder
with a hod of bricks, out of this bank with
a roll of bills, on this dray with a load of
goods, digging a cellar, or shingling wall, a roof,
or shoeing a horse, or building a or
mending a watch, or binding a book. In
dustry, with her thousand arms and thou
sand eyes and thousand feet goes on sing
ing her song of work, work, work, while
the mills drum it and the steam whistles
fife it. Ail this not because men love toil.
Some one remarked, “Eyery man is as lazy
as he can afford to be.” But it is because
necessity with stern brow and with uplifted
whip stand over you ready whenever shoulders you
relax your toil to make your
sting with the lash.
Can It be that passing up and down
these streets on your way to work nnd
business that you do not learn anything
of the .world’s toil and anxiety Rnd
struggle? Oh, how many drooping hearts,
how many eyes on the watch, how m^tny
miles traveled, how many burdens carried,
how many losses suffered, how many
battles fought, how many victories gained,
how many defepupjuffered, ensured; what how losses, many what ex
asperations wretchedness, what pallor,
hunger, what
what disease, what agonv, what despair!
Sometimes I have stopped at the corner of
the street as the multitudes went hither
and yon, and it has seemed to me a great
pantomime, and as I looked upon it ray
heart broke. This great tide of human life
that goes down the street is a rapid, tossed
and turned aside, and dashed ahea<J, and
driven back—beautiful in its confusion,
and confused in its beauty. In the carpeted
aisles of the forest, in the woods from
which the eternal shadow is never lifted,
on the shore of the sea over which iron
coast tosses the tangled foam sprinkling whirl
the. eraclced cliffs with a baptism of
wind and -tempest, is the best place to
study God, but in the rushing, swarming,
raving street is the best place ts study
man.
Going down to your place of business
and coming home again, I charge you to
look about—see these signs of poverty, ot
wretchedness, of hunger, of sin, of bereave
ment—and as you go through the streets,
and come back through the streets, gather
up in the arms of ycur prayer ail the sor
row, all the losses, all tho sufferings, all
the bereavements of those whom you pass,
and present them in prayer before an all
sympathetic (jrod. In the great day of
eternity there will be thousands of persons
with whom you in this world never ex
changed one word, will rise up aud call
you blessed, and there will be a thousand
fingers pointed at you in heaven, saying:
“That is the man, that is the woman, who
helped me when I was hungry and sick and
wandering and lost and heartbroken. That
is the man, that is Rio woman,” and the
blessing will come down upon you ns
Christ shall say: “I was hungry, nnd ye
fed Me; I was naked, and ye clothed Me; I
was sick and in prison, and ye visited Me;
inasmuch as*Ve did it to these poor waifs of
the streets, ye did it to Me.”
Again, the street impresses me with the
fact that all classes and conditions of so
ciety must commingle. \Ye sometimes cul
ture a wicked exclusiveness. Intellect de
spises ignorance. Refinement will have
nothing to do with boorishness. Glove3
hate the sunburned lymd, tyid the high the
forehead despises the flat head, and
trim hedgerow will have nothing to do
with the wild copsewood, and Athens lia’os
Nazareth. This ought not so to be; The
astronomer must come down from the
starry revelry aud help us in our naviga
tion. The surgeon must come away from
his study of the human organism and set
our broken bone's. The chemist must come
away from his laboratory, where he has
been studying understand analysis and synthesis, of and the
help us to the classes nature
soils. I bless God that all of peo
ple are compelled to meet clashes on the street.
The glittering couch wheels against
the scavenger’s cart. Fine robes run
against thr peddler’s pack. Robust health
meets wan sickness. Honesty confronts
fraud. Every class of people meets every
other class. Impudence nnd modesty,
pride and humility, purity and beastliness,'
frankness and hypocrisy, meeting on the
same block, in the same street, in tho same
city. Oh, that is what Solomon meant
when he said, “The rich and the poor meet
together; the Lord is the Maker of them
all.”
I like this democratic principle of the
gospel of Jesus Christ which recognizes
the fact that we stand before God one and
ihe same platform. Do not take on any
airs. Whatever position you have gained
in society you are nothing but a man,
born of the same parent, regenerated by
the same spirit, cleansed by the same
blood, to lie down In the same dust, to got
up in the same resurrection. It is high
time that we all acknowledged not only
the Fatherhood of God, but the brother
hood of man.
AgaiD, the street impresses me with the
fact that it is a very hard thing for a man
to keep his heart right and get to heaven.
Infinite temptations spring upon us from
these places of public concourse. Amid
so much affluence, how much temptation
to covetousness and to be discontented
with our humble lot! Amid 30 many op
portunities for overreaching, what tempta
tion to extortion! Amid so much display,
what temptation to vanity! Amid so many
saloons of strong drink, what alurament
to hell dissipation! In the maelstroms and
gates of the street how many make
quick and eternal shipwreck! If a
man-of-war comes back from a bat
tie and ET towed into the navy
yard, we K down to look at the
splintered spars and count the bullet holes
nnd look with pntriotio admiration on the
(lag that floated in victory from the mast
head. But that man is more of a curiosity
who has gone through thirty years ot the
sharpshooting of business life and yet Bails
on, victor over the temptations of the
street. Ob, how many have gone down
under the pressure, leaving not so much as
the patch of canvas to tell where they per
ished! They never hnd any peace. Their
dlsbonestles’kopt tolling in tneir ears. If
I had an nx and could split open the beams
of that fine house, perhaps I would And in
the very heart of It a skeleton. In his verv
best wine there is a smack of poor man’s
sweat. Oh, it is strange that when a man
has devoured widows’ houses he is dis
turbed with indigestion? AH the forces of
nature are against him. The floods nre
ready to drown him nnd the earthquake him to
swallow him nnd the fires to consume
and the lightnings to smite him. But the
children of God are on every street, and in
the day when the crowns of heaven nre
distributed some of the brightest of them
will be glvon to those men who were faith
ful to God nnd faithful to the souls of
others amid the marts of business, proving streot.
themselves the heroes of the
Mighty were 1 heir temptations, mighty tbeir was
their deliverance and mighty shall be
triumph.
Again, the street Impresses mo with the
fact that life is full of pretention and sham.
What subterfuge, what double dealing,
what two fnoedness! Do all people who
wish you good morning really hope you a
happy day? Do all the people who shake
hands love each other? Are all those anxi
ous about your health who inquire con- who
cerning it? Do all want to see you
ask you to call? Doasall the world know
half as much as it pretends to know? Is
there not many a wretched stook of goods
with a brilliant show? Passing up and
down the streets to your business and your
work, are you not impressed with the fact
that society is hollow and that that there
are subterfuges and pretensions? Oh,
how many there are who swagger
and strut, and how few people who are
natural and walk! While fops giggle, simper
and fools chuckle and simpletons laugh!
how few people are natural and
The courtesan and the libertine go down
the street in beautiful apparel, while within
the heart there are volcanoes of passion
consuming their life away. I say these
things not to create in you incredulity or
misanthropy, nor do I forget there are
thousands of people a great deal better
than thev seem, but I do not think any
man is prepared for the conflict of this life
until he knows this particular peril. Ehud
comes pretending to pay his tax to King
Eglon, and, while he stands in front of the
king, stabs him through with a dagger Judas un
til the haft went in after the blade.
Iscariot kissed Christ.
Again, the street Impresses me with the
fact that it is a great field for Christian
charity. There are hunger and suffering,
and want and wretchedness in the coun
try, but these evils chiefly congregate in
our great cities. On every street crime
prowls, and drunkenness staggers, and
shame winks, and pauperism thrusts out
its hand asking for alms. Here what is
most squalid and hunger is most lean. A
Christian man, going along a street In New
York, saw a poor lad, and he stopped
and said, “My boy. do you know how to
read and write?” The boy made no an
swer. The man asked the question twice
and thrice. “Can you read and write?”
And then the boy answered, with’ a tear
plashing on the back of his hand. He said
in defiance: “No, sir, don’t read nor write,
neither. God, sir. don’t want me to read
and write. Didn’t he take away my father
so long ago I never remember to have seen,
him? And haven’t I had to go aloDg the
streets to get something to fetch home to
e:tt for the folks? And didn’t I, as soon and as
I could carry a basket, have to go out
pick up cinders and never have lfo school
ing, sir? God don’t want me to read, sir.
I can’t read nor write, neither.” Oh. these
poor wanderers! They have no chance.
Born in degradation, as they get up from
their hands and knees to walk, they take
tbeir first step on the road of despair. Let
us go forth in the name of the LordJesns
Christ to rescue them. Let us ministers not
be afraid ot soiling our black clothes while
we go down on that mission, While we
are tying an elaborate knot in our cravat
or while we are in the study rounding off
some period rhetorically we might be multi- sav
ing a soul from death and hiding a
tude of sins. O Christian laymen, go out on
this work! If you are not willing to go
forth yourself, then give of your means,
and if you are too lazy to go, and if you
are too'stingy to yourself help, then in the get out dens of and the
way and hide
eaves of the earth, lest, when Christ’s
chariot comes along the horses’ hoofs
trample you into the mire. Beware lest
the thousands of the destitute of your city
in the last great day rise up and curse
your stupidity and your neglect. Down to
work! Lift them up.
One cold winter’s day, as a Christian
man was going along the Battery in New
York, he saw a little girl seated at the gate,
shivering in the cold. He said to her:
“My child, what do you sit there for. this
cold day?” “Oh,” she replied, “I take am
waiting for somebody to come and
care of me.” “Why,” said the man,
“what makes you think anybody will come
and taka care of you?” “Oh,” she said,
“my mother died last week, and I was cry
ing very much, and she said: ‘Don’t cry,
dear, though I am gone and your father is
gone, the Lord will send somebody to take
erre of you.’ My mother never told a lie;
she said some one would come aud take
care of me, nnd I am waiting for them to
come.” Oh, yes, they are waiting* for
you. Men who have money, men who
have influence, men of churches, men of
great hearts, gather them in, gather Heavenly them
in. It is not the will of your
Father that one of these little ones should
perish.
Lastly, the street Impresses me with tho
fact that all the people are looking for
ward. I see expectancy written on almost
every face I meet. Where you find a thou
sand people walking straight on, you only
find one stopping aud looking back. The
fact is, God made us all to look ahead, be- of
cause we are immortal. In this tramp
the multitude on the streets I hear the
tramp ot a great host, marching and
marching for eternity. Beyond the office,
the store, the shop, ihe street, there is a
world, populous and tremendous. Through
God’s grace, may you reach that blessed
place. A great throng fills those boule
vards, and the streets are arush with
the chariots of conquerors. The inhab
itants go up and down, but they never
weep and the never toil. A river flows
through that city, with rounded and lux
urious banks, and the trees of life, laden
with everlasting fruitage, bead their
branches into the crystal. that
No plumed hearse rattles over pave
ment, for they are never sick. With im
mortal health glowing In every vein, they
know not how to die. Those towers of
strength, those palaces of beauty, gleam
in the light ot a sun that never sets. Oh,
heaven, beautiful heaven! Heaven,
where our friends are! The take no
census in that city, for it is inhab
ited by “a multitude which no man
cun number.” Rank above rank.
Host above host. Gallery above gallery,
sweeping all around the heavens. Thou
sands of thousands. Millions of millions.
Blessed are they who enter in through tho
gate into that city. Oh, start for it to
day! Through the blood ot the great
sacrifice of the Son of God take up your
march to heaven. “The spirit and the
bride say, Come, and, whosoever will, let
him come and take the water of life freely.”
Join this great throng marching heaven
ward. All the Joors of invitation are
open. “And I saw twelve gates, and the
twelve gates-were twelve pearls.”
The Rismarcks’ New Resting Flace.
The bodies o' Frinca and Princess Bis
marck were placed in the new mausoleum
at Friederichsruh, Germany, a few days
ago, Emperor William attending the cere
monies.
««!*■
fi 'i h - m
t y-.m *r ; yh //' 5 §5 i
* V Wm r.gjj
*
:
C /
An Excellent Combination.
The pleasant method and beneficial
effects of the well known remedy,
Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the
California Fig Syrup Co., illustrate
the value of obtaining the liquid laxa- be
tive principles of plants known to
medicinally laxative and presenting the
them in the form most refreshing to It
taste and acceptable to the system.
is the one perfect strengthening effectually, .laxa
tive, cleansing the headaches system and fevers
dispelling colds, promptly and enabling
gently yet habitual constipation one
to overcome freedom from per
manently. objectionable Its perfect quality and sub
every and its acting the kidneys,
stance, on
liver and bowels, without weakening
or irritating them, make it the ideal
laxative.
In the process of manufacturing figs
are used, as they are pleasant to the the
taste, but the medicinal qualities of
remedy are obtained from senna and
other aromatic plants, by a method
known to the California Fig Syrup
Co. only. In order to get its beneficial
effects and to avoid imitations, please
remember the full name of the Company
printed on the front of every package.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO. CAL.
LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK, N. Y.
For sale by all Druggists.—Price 50c. per bottle.
A Poseur.
A little seven-year-old girl of the
rich, who spent a couple of months at
a country house in Wiltshire, England,
last summer, was walking down Mas
sachusetts avenue the other day. She
carried a tiny red whip in her neatly
gloved little hand. A little roly-poly
fox terrier pup waddled along after
the child. The little girl stood at the
street corner to wait for a carriage
to pass and the fox terrier pup caught
up with her. The pup, full of foolish
affection for the child, reared up on its
weak little hind legs and clawed at
her skirt's. She turned upon the pup
with her tiny whip upraised and a
look of infantine command in her eyes.
“Down, hounds!” she exclaimed.
“Down, hounds!”
The pup looked at the child wist
fully for a moment, as much as to
inquire, “Do I look like a wffiole pack
of big ‘uns?” and then resumed the
waddling on in the rear.
“Y'oung, for a poseur, that ldd, isn’t
she?” said a man who saw the child’s
little imitation of an English gentle
woman at the hunt. “Well, what she
won’t be able to do with her eyes,
and a fan, and a lorgnette chain when
she gets into long dresses.”—Washing
ton Post.
He Weakened at Last.
“They told me,” said a citizen, “that
the plumber tvas king. Well, I didn’t
believe it; so, when the water-pipes
burst I bought some soldering irons
aud a slow furnace, and my wife and
I started to repair the damage.
“We got along famously—and when
I retired that night the leal^s were all
mended, and we left the water run
ning to avoid another freeze.
“Well, when I awoke in the morning
the water was still running—that is, it
was running from the leaks we had
mended. In fact, it was- running all
over the house. There Were several
beautiful-lakes of it on four Brussels
carpets; the upholstered chairs were
floating around in an aimless sort of
way; the piano’s legs were knee-deep
in it; the kitchen stove looked like it
had been wrecked in a storm, aud the
table was preserving an unsteady bal
ance in the dining room. I waded out
in wrath, turned the water off and
sent for a plumber.
“But—mind you—the leaks where
the water escaped were those my wife
had mended. I told her it would that
way!”—Atlanta Constitution.
Beauty Is Blood Deep.
Clean blood means a clean skin. No
beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar
tic clean your blood and keep it clean, all im- by
stirring up the lazy liver and driving
purities from the bodv. Begin blackheads, to-day to
banish pimples, boils, blotches,
and that sickly bilious complexion by All taking
Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. drug
gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c.
In Alexander county, North Carolina. Mrs.
Calin Bowman dropped dead in Friendship
church during services. She was just about
having her infant child baptized when death
claimed her.
To Cure a Cold In One Day.
. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All I
Druggists refund money If ft falls to cure. 25o. j
In the trial of a man at Savannah. Ga.. ;
charged with embezzlement, a mistrial was ;
ordered on account of tbe death of a child
of one of tho jurors and the insanity of the
juror’s wife.
I am entirely cured of hemorrhage of lungs
by Piso’s Cure for Consumption.—L ouisa
Lindaman, Bethany, Mo., January 8,1894.
Mrs. Win a low’s Soothing Syrup for children
feething.softens the gums, reduces inflamma
tion.allays pain.cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle.
In cultivating your virtues, be sure and
uproot your vices.
5o-To-Bsc for Fifty Cent*.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak
men strong, blood pure. 50c, W- All druggists.
At Staunton. Va.. a man bad a spell of hie- ,
coughing which lasted seventy-two hours. j
X/’<' • V; Plantation Chill Cure IsEuaramegd m n b*' %
To cure, or money refunded by your mercliant, so why not try it 7 i rice ouc.
A New Name For It.
A teacher In the sixth grade of one
of our city schools iluds time, now and
then, in spite of the ton thousand aud
one things unknown to the school
ma’am of our youth which the modern
teacher is expected to teach, to give
her pupils a talk on current history.
Recently she told them, one clay, some
interesting things about Queen Vic
toria and her family. Portraits cut
from various magazines illustrated the
talk. Among them was a picture of
the Duke of York. The teacher held
it up. Nobody in the class could tell
her who it was.
“Well," said she at last. “I will tell
you who this gentleman is. He is the
Duke of York. And now can any of
you tell me what lie is?”
Quick as a Hash the hand of a little
girl in the second row went up.
"I can tell what lie is, Miss Blank,"
she said proudly. “He’s tlic heir con
sumptive to the British throne.”—
Washington Post.
A Kalakaun Anecdote.
When Knlakaua was postmaster of
Honolulu, he rarely attended to the
details of the office, as he had a faith
ful aud accurate clerk in W. G. Irwin.
At that time the postage on an ounce
of letter matter was seventeen cents.
While Mr. Irwin was absent from the
office one day, Kalakaun attended to
the business. A woman presented a
package weighing twelve ounces.
“What is the postage?” she asked. Ka
lakaua recalled the fact that seventeen
cents was usually paid on a letter, and
replied at once “Seventeen cents.”
The stamp was bought aud placed on
the package. Mr. Irwin on returning
noticed, and informed his superior at
once that tho postage on the package
should be .$2 .instead of seventeen
cents. Kalaltaua replied that if the
woman ever called at the office again,
he would collect the balance due. She
never called.
The Pioneer Medicine ^
is ft Auers Sarsaparilla
Before sarsaparillas were it known, began
fifty years its work. ago, Since
then you can count
m m the sarsa
f by parillas the
> --- (i 'A » thousands,
L. withevery
[®1 / \ variation
* of imita-
7, tion of the
(o original, ex
cept They one. have
' ?
never been
able to itn
itate the
I sfW / the quality pioneer. of
MU When
Ayefs you
t Isv see on
a bottle of sarsa
parilla that is
enough; If you can
have confidence at once. you want an
experiment, buy anybody’s Sarsaparilla; if
you want a cure, you must buy
Ayer [The Sarsaparilla which made Sarsaparilla famous] s
Engifsh Barber a Bad Workman.
It would be hard to find a worse
workman of his sort in any civilized
land, they say, than the average Eng
lish barber. In the first place, English
barbers have no chairs at all approach
ing the American barbers’ chairs for
comfort. When you go into an English
shop yoti sit down into a common
straight chair, and, if you are wise,
you brace yourself for such a mauling
and hauling and pinching and scrap
ping as you won’t forget in a long
day.
M OTHERHOC^D is woman’s natural destiny.
Many women are denied the happiness of children
through some derangement of the generative organs.
Actual barrenness is rare.
Among the many triumphs of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound is the overcoming of cases
SORROWS of supposed barrenness. This great
medicine is so well calculated to regu
OF late every function of the generative or
gans that its efficiency is vouched for
STERILITY by multitudes of women.
Mrs. Ed. Wolford, of Lone Tree,
-— Iowa, writes:
“Dear Mrs. Pink ham— Before taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound I had one child which lived only six
hours. The doctor said it did not have the proper nourishment
while I was carrying it. I did not feel at all well during preg
nancy. In time I conceived ajjaln, and yfigffo.
thought I would write to you for advice,
Words cannot express the gratitude I feel
towards you for the help that your medi
cine was to me during this time. I V.-Z
felt like a new person; did my work
_ ____ V '
up to the last, and was sick only a .5
short time. My baby weighed ten
pounds. He is a fine boy, the
joy of our home. He is now six
weeks old and weighs sixteen
pounds. Your medicine is cer
tainly a boon in pregnancy." PsJ,
Mrs. Flora Cooper, of i
Doyle, S. Dak., writes: l
“ Dear Mrs. Pinkham— 1 d
Ever since my last child I I
suffered with pains inflammation in back, left of tejj J|
the womb, it
side, abdomen and groins. My m
head ached all the time. I m
could withoutsuffering not walk across intense the pain. floor rchj ®?jj i is –
I kept getting worse, until
two for Lydia advice, years E. Pinkham’s ago and I wrote began Vegetable to taking you Compound. IIP?
I had not finished the first bottle before I felt better. I took
four bottles, and have been strong and perfectly healthy ever
since, and now have two of the nicest little girls.”
GOLDEN CROWN
LAMP CHIMNEYS
Are the best. Ask for them. Cost no more
than common chimneys. All dealers.
PITTSBURG GLASS CO., Allegheny, Fa.
Had No Fighting Blood.
“Pauline couldn’t establish her
be Daughter of the ^ _ lievolu- .
claim to a
tion.”
“Weren’t her papers all right? ’
“Yes, but they said she was too
peaceable.”—Chicago Record.
FARM 4? 'v, -• ^
SEEDS kvJJc, a < 5
Saber's Seeds ar e Warra utad to 1‘rodnee. V •-T .
J»Mablon Luther, K. Troy. Pa.. Mto»Uhed world!
fbU bv growing 2..0 bushel* Big Vout 0*1* J. Broider,
r3Sf Mhbloott, Wia., 173 bush, growing barley, 320 bu»h. aud Sa 11. zer Lor«joy b corn # i.
I fcf Hod Wing, Minn., by them. We wi*h to gain
tier acre. If you doubt, write send trial *.
200,000 now customers, hence w ill on
V.‘ \ 10 DOLLARSlWORTH Rush, FOR Rape for 10c. Sheep,
m 10 pkgqof rare f»**m seeds, Salt Harley,
V i the BromutInerraU—Yielding! $.1000 Com. “ Big Four Oats,” tonubay Beardless peracroondry •
\ \ soils, etc., Catalogue, “40c. Wheat. telling ” including all about our oar roamniotb Farm J ,
Soi-d receiptor but JE
W seeds, etc., h 11 mailed you upon
, 10c. postage, positively worth $10. to get a
l ps m k start, 100,000 bbI*.Rood Potatocn^g£>
tv at $1.20 and up a bbl. s
S5 pkgs earliest vegcta«
Please ^ seeds, Si Catalog
send this 3 $ 7 V alone, 6c,
adv. ulong. No. AO
thedifference
Between A
INEW FLORENCE
m ANY OTFER WAGON.
«C4-0>CCKr(HCrt!» Prices and creates or, ol write THE tween I If the saves your FLORENCE receive under direct usual the and a NEW dealer the live Bolster FLORENCE, Testimonials. Sand Team breakages. to full welght.makesthe does FLORENCE Bolster WAGON information and and not prevents Axle handle ALA,, in WORKS, front behind has this Draftlight- with 75 per and Springs Wagon which Cats, cent, be
Saw Mills
SI29 TO S929.00
! With Improved Rope and Belt Feed,
SAWS, FILES nnd TEETH in Stock.
Engines, Boilers and Machinery
All Kinds and Repairs for same.
- Shafting,Pulley's,Belting, T'alves and Fittings. Injectors, Pipes,
LOMBARD IRON WORKS J8UPPLYCO.,
AUGUSTA, GA.
TIZAKURE forINDIGESTION
and DYSPEPSIA.
I “Dyspepsia has been tho bane of my life for
i sixty years, find of all the hundreds of reins,
dies. 1 have received more benefit from Ttza
kure than from any oiher.”—J ohn J. Peaece,
D. D., Cincinnati, 0.
A cure for a try. 25c. a box Ask your drug,
gist, or write for free sample to
TIZAKUKK CO., Tarpon Springs, Fla.
mzmEnwmm i stopped free
ESf iSi Permanently Cureft
! IS insanity Prevented by
m gig ■ Bd L' mm W DR. KLINE’S GREAT
fS–F® NERVE RESTORER
Spanns Posltlvo enro forall lre^vouMlfiteaatib.FUe, Rptiopey,
WM and St. Vitua’Dance, bo Mtaer Nemmanteft
Hjttj gp lifter free to Uret Fit day’s patieute, one. they Treatiw>and$3tri–lhottIa payiagejpreao chargeeonlf
ixJS wlit'ii received. Head to Dr. Kline, Ltd, Bellevu* '
Institute of Medicine, 1131 Arch £t.. Philadelphia* Pa.
§ Oor Smnlley and Bat
I tle Greek self-feed
Drag .Saws ere the
standard of tho world.
Also all Bixes of Circular
SAWS Suwb, aud the colobrated
B. C. Picket Will
Horse Pov/e rsforopor
ating. Kilo Machinery,
Feed Mill*, itout Cut
ters, Corn ."Giellers.
SMALLEY MF«. VO., S.I*U.lun, Manitowoc, Wlfc
QOQO Overstock: R Must 1CYCLES He Closed Out#
.
fcMtfeN SI AS If Alt D 'HH HOVELS,
guaranteed, $9.75 to
■ S1G. Shopworn –
A sec
ond hand wheels, good
Jrcv Jj as ^ new, * factory C3 enuring to glOj sala.
rViKM roa
’without a exit in advene*
EARN a S3/CYCLE
*“ by helping ub Advertise c ,ir aurjerb line of
’W mo'fela. Yf, giro one JUAer Ageul i a etch town FREE USE
of -ampj* wheel toi ntroduce them. Writ* at oooo for our epedal offer.
K. F. Mend Cycle Company, Chicago, Ill.
ELF’ REFRIGERANT
over 20 degrees colder than !GE
HHftd ie refrigerator# .lust like
BENI) n perfect. Mubgiitutc for
I#Oit CIRCULAR#. AGENTS W ANTED.
SME2 _ UNIVERSAL REFRIGERATING CO.,
Flashing Avenue, BROOKLYN, N. Y.
npo W »» V “ DC r' Wg Y ■ quick NEW relief DISCOVERY; and cares worst rive*
esses. Book of testimonials end 10 da vs’ treatment
Free. Dr. H. H. OkEEN S 80HS. Box D, Atlanta. G».