The Cordele sentinel. (Cordele, Ga.) 1894-????, May 05, 1899, Image 7

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D r.TALMAGE’S The Eminent Divine’s Discourse. Subject: "A Great Man Fallen”.A Eulogy of the Late Justice Field—One or tlie Most Notable Characters of Our Times Whose Life Is Worthy of Emulation. Text: “Know ye not that there is a prince and a great man fallen this day in Israel?”—II Samuel lit., 38. Here is a plumed catafalque, followed by King David and a funeral oration which he delivers at the tomb. Concerning Abner the great, David weeps out the text. More appropriately tered may than now utter when this originuiiy resounding ut we lamentation, “Know ye not that there is a prince and a great man fallen this day in "it was thirty minutes after six, the exact hour ol sunset of the Sabbath day and while the evening lights were being kin dled, that the soul of Stephen J. Field, the lawyer, the judge, the patriot, the states man, the Christian, ascended. It was sun down in the home on yonder Capitol hill, Washington, as It was sundown on all the surrounding hills, but in both cases the sun set to.be followed by a glorious sunrise. Hear the Easter anthems still lingering In the air, “The trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall rise.” Our departed friend came forth a boy from a minister’s home in New England. He knelt with father and mother at morn ing and evening prayer, learned from ma ternal lips lessons of piety which lasted him and controlled him amid all the varied and exciting scenes of a lifetime and helped him to die in peace an octogenarian. Blot out from American history the names of those ministers’ sons who have done honor to judicial bench and commercial circle and national Legislature and Presidential chair, and you would obliterate many of the grandest chapters of that history. It is no small advantage to have started from n home where God is honored and the sub ject of a world’s emancipation from sin and sorrow is under constant discus sion. The Ten Commandments, which are the foundation of all good law— Roman law, German law English law, American law—are the best foun dation upon which to build character, and those which the boy, Stephen J. Field, so often heard in the parsonage at Stocir bridge were his guidance when a half cen tury after, as a gowned justice of the Su preme Court of the United States, ho un rolled his opinions. Bibles, hymn books, catechisms, family prayers, atmosphere sanctified, are good surroundings for boys and girls religion to start and from, and if our laxer ideas of Sabbath days and home training produce as splendid men and women as the much derided Puritauic Sabbath and Puritanic teachings have pro duced, it will be a matter of congratulation and thanksgiving. ■ Do not pass by the fact that I have not yet seen emphasized that Stephen J. Field was a minister’s son. Notwithstanding that there are conspicuous exceptions to the rule—and the exceptions have built up a stereotyped defamation on the subject statistics plain and undeniable prove that a larger proportion of ministers’ sons turn out well than are to be found in any other genealogical table. Let all the parsonages of all denominations of Christians where children are growing up take the consola tion. See the star of hope pointing down to that manger! Notice also that our departed friend was a member of a royal family. There were no crowns or scepters or thrones in that ancestral line, but the family of the Fields, like the family of the New York Primes, like the family of the Princeton Alex anders. like a score of families that I might mention, if it were best to mention them, were “the children of the king,” and had put on them honors brighter than crowns and wielded influence longer and wider than scepters. That family of Fields traces an honorable lineage back 800 years to Hubertus de la Feld, coadjutor thank of God William the Conqueror. Let us for such families, generation after gener tion on the side of that which is right and good. Four sons of that coun try minister, known the world over for ex traordinary usefulness in their spheres, legal, commercial, literary and theological, and a daughter, the mother of one of the associate justices of the Supreme Court. Such families counter-balance for good those families all wrong from generation to generation—families that stand for wealth, unrighteously got and stingily kept or wickedly squandered; families that stand for fraud or impurity or malevolence; family names that immediately come to every mind, though through sense of pro priety they do not come to the lip. The name of Field will survive centuries and be a synonym for religion, for great jurispru dence, for able Christianjournalism, as the names of the Pharaohs and the Caesars stand for cruelty and oppression and vice, While parents cannot aspire to have such conspicuous households as the one the name of whose son wo now celebrate, all parents may, by fidelity in prayer and holy example have their sous and daugh ters become kings and queens unto God, to reign forever and ever. But the work has already been done, and I could go through this country aud And a thousand households which have by the grace of G.od and blessing upon paternal and ran ternal excellence become the royal families of America. they by their Let young men beware lest behavior blot such family records with some misdeed. We can all think of house holds the names of which meant everything honorable and consecrated for a long while, but by the deed of onesonsacri ’ aud blasted. Look out fleed disgraced consecrated ancestry of how vou rob your unsullied! the name they handed to you Better as trustee to that name add some thin” worthy. Do something to honor the old homestead, whether a mountain cabin or a city mansion or a country parsonage, Kev. David Dudley Field, though thirty two years passed upward, is honored to day by the Christian life, the service, the death of his son Stephen. books of the Among the most absorbing Bible is the book of Kings, which again and again illustrates that, though piety is not hereditary the style of parentage has much to do with the style of descendant, It declares of King Abbam, “He walked in all the sins of his fatbei which he ha.l done did before him ” and of King Azariah. “He that which was right in the sight of the Lord, according to all that his lather Amo ziah bad clone.” We owe a debt to those who have gone before in our line as cer talnly as we have obligations to those who subsequently appear in the household. Not so f acred is your old father’s walking staff, which you keep In his memory or the eye glasses through which your mother.studied the Bible in her old age ns the name they bore, the name which you inherited, Keep it bright. I charge you. Keep it suggestive of something elevated in character. Trample not underfoot thnt which to your father and mother was clearer than life itself. Defend bhoir graves as they defended your cradle. Family coat of arms, escutcheons, ensigns armorial, lion coucnant, or lion dormant, or lion rampant, or lion combatant, may attract attention, but better than all heraldic in ecription is a family name which means from generation to generation faith in God, self sacrifice, duty performed, a life well lived and a death happily died aud a heaven gloriously wonl That was the kind of name that Justice Field augmented and honorable adorned and perpetuated-a of the eighteenth name at tbe close century, more honored now at the close of the nineteenth Notice also that our illustrious friend was.great in reasonable aud genial dls sent. Of 1042 opinions he rendered, none weremoropotentormemorablethantbo.se learned and distinguished lawyer of this SSdso ViHrt-? dl i.' TOul ! se ? ?. tl,l rath#r «r opinions he author than to or b« , , m ° f ^ CoD8tlt utlon of the United il st« Stat r 8 Th6 tendency is to go - tl | ink ™ Ultit “ de ’ t0 tt»lnk what others roes’ m t ° * ny ' ind d ° what others do. Some nmes t the h majority are wrong and it lequires heroes to take the negative d ° tbat lo K |oal ly and In Rood hu^r ofL f r < U . r6 ^ 8 om B e * erru> nts of make not Fndeet n » fOUnd . ln j . ,ldlclal dissenters up Indeed, in , nny class , of There or. Ksewrss men, are so ■rancorous and obnoxious ways that a Judge Field was needed to make the negative re S‘ under ed God “ n . d save K° ntol the nuJ world right. and Minorities save the A ° unthinking and precipitate li he roio ,o 1 „ n ?. ay no. *?, e 9 |0PPed The majorities by a righteous are not and al Tbe old gospel liymn de Hares Numbers are no mark that men will right be found; A few were saved in Noah’s ark to many millions drowued. The Declaration of American Independ ence Church was of a dissenting opinion. The Free his Scotland, under Chalmers and The compeers, Bible itself, was Old a dissenting Testament movement. Testament, and New is a protest against the the ories that would have destroyed the world and is a dissenting ns well as a divinely inspired book. The deca logue on Sinai repeated ten times “Thou shalt not.” Forages to come will be quoted r ,°?i, Ebooks in court rooms Justice T, Field s magnificent dissenting opinions. Notice that our ascended friend had such a character as assault and peril alone can develop. cushions He had not come to the soft of the Supreme Court bench step ping on cloth of gold and saluted all along the line by handclapping of applause. Country parsonages do not rock their babies in satin lined cradle ot afterward send them out into the world with enough in their hands to purchase place and power. Pastors’ salaries in the early part of this century hardly ever reached $700 a year. Economies that sometimes cut into the bone characterized many of the homes of the New England clergymen. The young lawyer of whom we speak to-day arrived in San Francisco in 1849 with only $10 in his pocket. Williamstown College was only introductory to a post-graduate course which our illustrious friend took while administering justice aud halting ruffianism amid the mining camps of Cali fornia. Oh, those “forty-niners,” as they were called, through what privations, through what narrow escapes, amid what exposures they law move-:.. Administering and executing among outlaws never has been an easy undertaking. Among mountaineers, many of whom had no re gard for human life and where the snap of pistol and bang of gun were not the unusual responses, required courago of highest metal. Behind a dry goods box surmounted judi- by tallow candles Judge Field began his cial career. What exciting scenes he passed through! An infernal machine was handed to him, and inside the lid of the box was pasted his decision in the Pueblo case, the decision that had balked unprin cipled speculators. Ten years ago his life would have passed out had not an officer of the law shot down his assailant. It took a long training of hardship aud abuse and misinterpretation and threat of violence and flash of assassin’s knife to fit him Jor the high place where he could defy legislatures and congresses and presidents and the world when he knew he was right. Hard ship is the grindstone that sharpens intel lectual faculties, and the swords with which to strike effectively for God and one’s country. friend did Notice also how much our for the honor of the judiciary. What momen tous scenes have been witnessed in our United States Supreme Court, ou the bench and before the bench, whether, far back, it held its sessions in the upper room of the Exchange at New York, or after ward for ten years in the City Hall at Philadelphia, or iater in the cellar of yonder capitol, the place where for many years the Congressional Library was kept, n sepulcher where books were buried alive, the bole called by John Randolph “the cave of Trophonius!” invitation which How suggestive the William Wirt, the great Virginian, yonder wrote bis friend inviting him to Supreme Courtroom: “To-morrow ». week will come on the great steamboat question from New York. Emmett and Oakley on one side, Webster and myself ou the other. Come down and hear it. Emmett’s whole soul is in the case, and he will stretch all his powers. Oakley is said to be oue of the fluest logicians of the age, as much a Phoeion as Emmett is a Themlstocles, and Webster is as ambitious as Ctesar. He will not bo outdone by any man if it is within the compass of his power to avoid it. Come to Washington. It will be a combat worth witnessing.” The Supreme Court has stood so high in England and the United States that the vices of a few who have occupied that important place have not been able to disgrace it, neit her the corruption of Francis Bacon, nor the cruelty of Sir George Mackenzie, nor the Sabbath desecra tlon of Lord Castlereagh. tribunals Abrabam JTo that highest of all Lincoln called our friend, but be lived long enough to honor the Supremo Court more than it had ever honored him. For more than thirty-four years he sat In the pres ence of this nation and of all nations a model judge. Fearlessness, integrity, de votion to principle, characterized him No bribe ever touched his hand. No profane word ever scalded his tongue. No blemish of wrong over marred his character. Fully qualified was he to havo his name associa ted in the history of this country with the greatest of the judiciary. ail that such To have done well, a pro fesslon could ask of him, and to have made that profession still more honorable by his brilliant and sublime life, is enough for na tional and international, terrestrial and celestial congratulation. And then to ex pire beautifully, while the prayers of his church were being offered at his bedside, the door of heaven opening for his en trance as the door of earth opened farewell for his departure, the sob of the earthly caught up into raptures that never die. Yes, he lived and died in the faith of the old fashioned Christian religion. Young man, I waut to tell you thnt Jos tico Field believed in the Bible from lid to lid, a book all true either as doctrine or history, mucii of it the history of events that neither God nor man approves. Our friend drank the wine of the holy saaru ment aud ate the bread of which if a man eat he shall never hunger.” He was the up and down, out and out friend of the church of Cbrist. If there had been anything il logical in our religion be would have scouted it, for he was a logician. If there had been in it anyth ng unreasonable, he would have rejected it, because he was a great reasoner. If there had been in it any thing thut would not stand research ho would have exploded the fallacy, for his life was a life of research. Young men of Washington, young men of America young men of the round world, a religion Field that would stand the test of Justice s penetrating and all ransaoking intellect must have In it something worthy of your confidence. I tel * Y° u n< J w tda ^ Cdr ‘f^ i ity has not only the heart of , the world on Its side, but the brain of l i* e y° rld ,." so ' Ye who have tried to represent the ( of the B.ble as something Christian pusillani faith o how do you account for the of Stephen J. Held, whole shel es law library occupied with his magnificent decisions? the God ot all .. comfort , nmfnrt . And now may especialljr to h speak to the WreR, life the day when , was the queen of his from as a stranger he was shown to her pew in the Episcopal Church to this time of the broken heart. He changed churches, hut did not change religion for the <g«roli In which which he he died was born al ^® ^llptnln^n^the believe in God lather Alraigby. M k beirot and in the life everlasting, Amen, A "Lightning Change” Artist. As I lay stretched on the bank at. the foot of a great maple I saw a weasel run along in the brush fence some dis tance away. A few' seconds later he was standing on the o: ;iosed root of the tree hardly a yard from my eyes. I lay motionless and examined the beautiful creature minutely, till sud denly I found myself staring at the smooth greenish-gray root of the maple with no weasel in sight. Judging from my own experience, I should say that this Is the usual termination of nny chance observation of either weasels or minks. Occasionally they may be soon to dart into the brushes or behind some log or projecting plank, but much more frequently they vanish with a sudden ness that defies the keenest eyesight. In all probability this vanlshnig is accomplished by extreme repidity of motion, but if this is the case then the creature succeeds in doing something utterly impossible to nny other warm blooded animal of its size. Mice, squirrels, and some of the smaller birds are all of them swift enough at times, but except in the case of the humming bird none of them succeed in accom plishing the result achieved by the weasels—W. E. Cram, in Appleton’s Popular Scientific Monthly. The Fate of a Valentine. “Yes, he’s a tough boy. I sent bis sister a five-pound box of candy for a little valentine reminder and let it go anonymously, and that young scorpion got off a lot of nonsense to her about tbe poisoned candy case, and she final ly gave it to him to thrown ou the ash pile.” “What became of it?” “Well, the boy’s been in the doc tor’s charge for a week.”—Cleveland Plain Dealer. A CHARMING ful What old lady a pleasant grandmother! in good influence health! in the house is a delight Mrs. Mollie Barber, St. James, Mo., writes: “I took Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound during change of life, and have passed through that ____ critical period safely. I suffered for SL B ^*BLBKT ArflJSE- m HBB years with falling of the womb and mffl B female weakness. At times could ^ JeL _ hardly stand on my feet, also had fipf leucorrhoea. I tried several good *—-— doctors, but instead of getting better, grew worse all the time. A friend advised me to try Mrs. Pinkham’s Compound. I did so and after taking six bottles, was cured of both leucorrhoea and falling of womb. I am now enjoying good f>v—r health and feel very grateful for the good your medicine has m sEk done me. I would recommend Hl^ it to all women suffering as I h was.” hr.h Mrs. N. E. Lacey, t Pearl, La., writes: I f* A) “I have had leucorrhoea .) | for falling about of twenty years, V womb by spells sfor ten years, and my I bladder was affected, had la backache a great deal. I tried a number of doctors. They would re \ ■ i k lieve me for a little ' Sk while, then I would be SPworse than ever. I e m n then thought I would try Lydia E. Pinkham’s I \ Vegetable Compound. j Eleven bottles of Com pound and one box of ; Liver Pills cured me j and I am now sound and well. It helped me through the change of life period. I j am fifty-five years old.” The women of advanced years who are healthy and happy are invariably those who have known how to secure help ; when they needed it. Mrs. Pinkham will advise any woman ; free of charge who writes about her health. Her address is Mass. \ Aft 4 HAG II II II II R T {■ R H ft ll A \ I I T i ULI I I / keuhem OUR n hll , linillTrr ft hfi ft I t Ur nn HUS niTinuo I NUNN | r -tl»n Fare raid Actual “n Business county Free ol Tui to one of em-h sex every your sta te WRITE QUICK to OA.-ALA. BUS. COLLEQE, Hacon.Qa. Actions may speak louder than words but women will continue to use words, Beauty U Blooa ueep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im : purities from the body. blotches, Begin blackheads, to-day to | banish pimples, boils, by taking \ and that sickly biliouB complexion All drug Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. At, Roc.kmart, Ga., an engine of the South ern Railroad picked up a pig and on the cow- de catcher, carried it six mile?, then posited it upon the ground without the Slightest injury: To Pure a Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if It falls to cure. 25c. Tlickory nuts are an American product and we export them in large numbers to Europe, where they are found good eating. Pecans belong to the hickory family. Educate Your Bowels Wltn Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation refund forever. 10c. 25c. If C. C. C fall, druggists money At a wedding the men all pity the hriile and the women all pity the groom. I can recommend Piso’s Asthma.-E. Cure for Consump- D. tion to sufferers from Town send, Ft. Howard, Wig., May 4, 1894. A wise man prepares for the worst while hoping for the best. To Care Constipation Forever* Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c. tf C. C. C. fall to cure, druggists refund money People who live in glass houses should have them frosted. I V. CO # 1 w F • ■a iSi g ma mm ar ■. r;.-/ • ■ v "1 J "1 : -' v- ■pr-: r ■■ ; C • : /> CO V. 7 ■ B £ 7C .-y ' : - m £ To cure, or money refunded by yowr merchant, so why not try it? .Price 50c. Pofervesence. Teacher—What happens when a man’s temperature goes down as far as it can go? Smart Scholar—He liaB cold feet, ma’am.—Tit-Bits. Ask Your Dealer For Allen’s Foot-Ease, A powder to shake into your shoes; rests the feet. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Sore, Hot, Callous, Aehfiig, Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen’s Foot-Ease mnkes new or tight shoes easy. At all shoe stores and druggists, 25 cts. Sample mailed FltEE. Adr’s Allen S. Olmsted, LeKoy, N. Y. Love in a cottage is but another name for a labor union. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoko Tear Life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, bo mag netlc, full of life, nerve ami vigor, take No-To llao, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. AH druggists, SOc or *1. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. Learning and wisdom ure not always on good terms. Sirs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup forchlldren teethiug.softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. Uoc. a bottle. The Ring and the Field. Watts—I can’t see any difference, morally speaking, between a prize fight and a war between nations. Potts—The principal difference is this: In a prize fight it is unfair to finish the fight by jumping on your enemy aud kicking in his face after you get him down.—Indianapolis Journal. He Took Xo Risks. “Dad,” said the youthful Billvillian, “thar’s a big rattlesnake under the bed!” “All right,” said the old mam, com posedby, “jest let him stay thar—kaze ef you pester him he’ll spring bis rat tle an’ wake yer mammy up, an’ then thar’ll be the devil to pay!”—Frank Stanton in Atlanta Constitution. m ■ CO J ♦ Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic It is simply Iron and Quinine in a tasteless form. ... Sold by every druggist in the malarial sections of the United States ... No cure, no pay.. • • Price, 5cc. WHOLESALER. St. Louis, Mo., Feb, 8, 1899. Pabis Mbdicimb Co., City. Gentlemen:—We wish to congratulate having you on the increased sales we are on your Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic. On exam ining our record of inventory under date of Jan. 1st. we find I hat we sold during the Chill season of 1898. 2680 dozen Grove’s Tonic. Wo also find that our a les on your Laxative Bromo-Qalntne Tablets have been some thing enormous: having sold during tho late Cold and Grip season 4.200 dozen Please rush down order -nclosed herewith, and oblige, Yours truly, BROS. DRUG CO. MEYER Keball. Per Lang Life. “I want to see the airship an lished factor in our every day remarked the skeptic. “You think it would be a particu larly useful institution?” i “No,I’d like to live that long; that’s all.”—Washington Star. nnnnrrinrrTnnnmnnnnnnr^^ o - £ \ 3 ° i ° ° <• t ! A ° i o 1 r 0, ° << ° o A v X % o o o ilh o £ Q r -lb' Oi a • o ° ° m ylVfR i i BP \ -i a : ?, o o o CJK o o * ' GDa. o o t o o h* O >o ; e> o O * 5? y o< • m s -<f o I —c- s ° o C 3 ° FLANNELS. o £ £ HOW TO WASH o o ° of Ivory Soap in boiling water, o ° Dissolve fine shavings O £ and when cool enough to bear your hand in it, immerse % % one piece of flannel. Don’t rub it with soap, but knead it with the hands. Don’t rinse in plain water or in cold ° 3 r water, but make second solution, warm and well blued, cJ a for this purpose, Use a clothes-wringer; hand-wringing is insufficient. Dry quickly in a warm place. If left to ° stand wet, flannel shrinks. o ° Cut out these directions and tell the laundress to follow o Soap. It keeps tbe flannels soft. p them with Ivory very p o Copyright 1890, by Tha Procter k Gamble Co., Cincinnati. CjlJUULSUlSUlSULSLSULSljLSL'UU^^ 0 Out of His Role. “That gloomy Mr. Simpson acted real cheerful last night.” “Did you like him?” “No; he looked so unnatural and silly that I was glad when he got gloomy again.”—Detroit Free Press. Ycu will never know what Good Busk is unless you use Carter’s. It costs no more than poor ink. Funny booklet “ How to Make Ink Pictures M free. CARTER’S INK CO., Boston, Mass. Malsby – Company, 39 S. Broad St., Atlanta, Ga. Engines and Boilers Strain Water Heaters, Stems Pumps and PenbertJiy Injectors. stall i: Manufacturers anil Dealers In SA.'W' MILLS, Corn Mills, Feed Mills, Cotton Gin Machin ery and Grain Separators. SOLID and INSERTED Saws, Saw Teeth and l ocks. Knight’s Patent Dogs, Blrdsall Saw Mill and Engine Repairs, Governors, Grate Bars and a full line of Mill Supplies. Price and quality of goods guaranteed. Catalogue free by mentioning this paper. lira if) 18 8 ift rokJi M –Dd Wbfrkcy homo Habits with M H N a cured at 1J |fl jw H| W* B Sy B $$§$3 H out ticularnpcnt ;>ain. Book FREK. of pnr MgBB » w w w BMBB B.M.WOOLLEY, N. M.D. St. AtluntaTGa. Office 194 Pryor S CO N CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. QRvW .*?• u Best Cough Syrup Tastes Good* Use „ n . in in time. Sold by druacrista. .... eg CONSUMPTION: • i? V ^ 'JJ , iuii V-r i 3SB V RETAILER. Kbdbob, Ills. Pabis Mbdioinb Co. , Gentlemen:—I handle seven or eight differ ent kinds of Chill Tonics but I sell ten bottles of Grove’s to where I sell one of the others. I sold 36 bottles of Grove’s Chill Tonic in one day and could have sold raoro if I had had it on hand. Mr. Dave Woods cared five cases of chills with one bottle. Respectfully, JOHN T. VIK7ARD _ USE CERTAI N C HILL CUBE. - GOLDEN CROWN LAMP CHIMNEYS Are the host. Ask for them. Cost no more than common cliimnoya. All dealers. P1TT8BURG GLASS CO., Allegheny, Fa. A For INDIGESTION and DYSPEPSIA. “I havo found immediate rollof In every in stance.”—P. B Louden, Philadelphia. A cure for a try. S6e. a box. Ask your drug gist, or write for free sample to TIZAKURE CO., Tarpon Springs, Fin. ‘ELF’ REFRIGERANT than ice R over 20 decrees colder 8 u used perfect in refrigerators substitute ior jnsfc like a CIRCULARS. AGENTS WANTED. SEND FOR FRIGE K ATI NGC’O., UNIVERSAL UK IlItOdKhlN, N. 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First Tasteless Tonic ever manufactured.. All other so-called “Taste less” Tonics are imita tions.. Ask any druggist about this who is not PUSHING an imitation. CONSUMER. Tex., Pabis Mbdicinb Co., St. Louis, Mo. Gentlemen:—I write you a few lines of ChfU grat itude. I think your Grove’s Tasteless Tonic is one of the best medicines in the world for Chills and Fever. X have three children that h«ve been d iwn with malarial fever for 19 months and have bought Chill medicines of all kinds and Doctor’s bills coming in all the time until I sent to town and got three bottles of Grove’s Tonic. My children are all well now and it was your Tastelest Chill Tonic that did it. I cannot say too much in its behalf. Yours truly, JAMES D. ROBERTS. OPIUM Habit. New Painless home cure. GUARANTEED, Write to day for FREE SAMPLE and uook. dF€. t. PURDY, Houston, Texas. IV ANTED—C»«» of b»fi health that RTF AN 8 \\ will not bstieSt Send 6 cte. to Kipane Chemical Co NewYork for In eainnlee end lout) testimonials. MENTION THIS PftPER^.M-TS