The Cordele sentinel. (Cordele, Ga.) 1894-????, May 12, 1899, Image 7

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DR. TALM AGE'S sermon Xhe Eminent Divine's Sunday Disoourae. Subject: “The Plague of AlcohoV'—The Drunkard's Woe Depicted in Strong Colors—Rum's Mission Is to Destroy All Good—A Call to Clu-lstlans. Text: “And there shall be a great cry throughout all the land of Egypt.”—Ex odus xi., 6. » wa. the worst ,t .b« M his he wJng wing r ovir?he over the n fft land, e nd Rt nim and t ^? there Rht was flapped one dead In each house. Lamentation and mourning and woe through all Egypt. That n “K el has fled the eurtb, b “ l n. far worse has come. He sweeps through these cities. It is the destroying ?, tion UK6 wrought , l f i by this second Ear worse than devastn- by the drst - A r nca worse than the calam ty in Egypt. Thousands of the slnin, nplMona of the slain. No arithmetic can calculate their number. Once upon a time four fiends met in the lost world. They resolved that the people of our eurth were too happy, and these four internals came forth to our earth on embassy of mischief. The one fiend said, “I’ll take charge of the vineyards.” An other said, 111 take charge of the grain fields. Another said, “I II take charge of the dairy. Another said, “I’ll take charge of the music.” The four fiends met in the great Sahara desert, with skeleton fingers clutehed each other in handshake of lldel ity, kissed each other goodby with lip of blue flame and parted on their mission. The fiend of the vineyard came in one bright morning amid the grapes and sat down on a root of twisted grapevine in sheer discouragement. The fiend knew not how to damage the vineyard, or, through it, how to damage the world, The grapes were so ripe and beautiful and luscious. They bewitched the air with their sweetness. There seemed to be so much neaith in every bunch, and while the fiend sat there in utter indignation U and disappointment he clutched a cluster i and squeezed it in perfect spite, and, lo! j his hand was red with the blood of the vineyard, and the blood fiend said: “That re minds me of the of broken hearts, I’ll strip the vineyard, and I'll squeeze out all the juice of the grapes, and I’ll allow the juices of the grapes to stand until they I rot, and I’ll call the process fermentu I tion.” And there was a great vat pre I pared, and people came with their cups 1 and their pitchers, and they dipped up the blood of the grapes, and they drank and | drank drank and until went they away fell in drinking, long lines and of death, the^ 1 so tbni when the fiend of the vineyard wanted to return to his homo in the pit he stepped from carcass to carcass and walked down amid a great causeway of the dead. Then the second' fiend came Into the I graiufleld. He waded chin deep amid the I barley and about the rje. He heard nil the grain I talking bread and prosperous bus bandry and thrifty homes. He thrust his I long arms into thegrainfield, and he pulled I up the grain and threw it into the water, and he made beneath it great fires—fires lighted with a spark from his own heart— and tliere were a grinding and a mashing and st–neh, and the people came with their 1 bottles, and they dipped upthe blasphemed, fiery liquid, and they drank, and they and they staggered, and they fought, and they rioted, thepit, and fiend they murdered, and the fiend of B the of thegrainfield, was so iiis pleased with their behavior that he changed Brel, residence from the pit to a whisky bar B and there he sat by the door of the I bunghole laughing in high merriment at thfe thought that out of anything so harm I ■ less as the grain of the field he might turn this world into a seeming pandemonium. The fiend of the dairy sawthe cows com ing home from the pasture field, lull ud dered, and as the maid milked he said, “I’ll B brandy, soon spoil all and that mess, and I’ll add to it sugar nutmeg, I’ll stir it B into a milk punch, and children will drink it and some of the temperance people will B drink it, and if I can do them mqre harm I’ll give them a headache, and then I’ll B hand them over to the more vigorous fiends B of the Satanic delegation.” And then tho B fiend of the dairy "the leaped upon the shelf and danced until long row o" shining almost quaked. Tho fiend of the music entered a grog r shop, Finding and there were but few customers, | few customers, he swept the cir I cuit of the city, and he gathered up the I musical instruments and after nightfall he I marshaled a band, and the trombones I blew and the cymbals clapped and the I drums beat and the bugles called and the people crowded in, and they swung around I jin in merry dance, each one with a wineglass I [and his hand, and the dance became wilder B IsUook stronger and rougher, until the room I [broke and the glasses cracked and the floor [ and tho crowd dropped into hell. [vineyard Then the four fiends—the fiend of the I [dairy and of the grainfleld and of the and of the music hall—went back to pheir [because home, aDd they held high carnival J land their work had been so well done, satun rose from his throne and an Inounced [ear that there was no danger of the | til’s redemption so long as these four [And mends could pay such tax to tho diabolic, then all the desions and all the sprites | pnd all the fiends filled their glasses and clicked [drink them and cried: “Let us drink— to the everlasting prosperity of the liquor fend traffic! Here’s to woe and darkness [ murder and death! Drink! Drink!” But whether by allegory or by uppaling statistic Sis this subject is presented you know Iterate well as I that it is impossible to plague! exag E. the evils of strong drink. A tuffers plague! In the first place the inebriate from the loss of a good name. God pas so arranged it that no man loses Ms Reputation except by lids own act. The j world liwers may assault a man, and all the of darkpess may assault him—they fcinnot capture him so long as his heart is jure and his life is pure. All the Gibral- powers f earth and hell cannot take that nr. If a man is right, a!i the bombard bent of the world for 5, 10, 20 , 40 years Hil only strengthen him in his position, k> that nil you have to do is to keep toilrself [ right. Never mind the world. Let say what it will. It can do you no pmnge. fee But ns soon as it is whispered, jegins drinks,” and it can he proved, he to go down. What qlerk can get a ■osition with such a reputation? What tore wants him? What church of God [ants him for a member? Wliat dying man rants fetand him for an executor? “He drinks!” | before hundreds of young men— Bd I say it not in flattery—splendidyoung ea who have their reputation as their dy capita]. Your father gave you a good lucation, or as good an education as he uld afford to give vou. He started you \ city life. He could furnish you no I v Bans, but he has surrounded you with iristian influences and a good memory of ie past. Now young man, under God you |e with vourown right arm to achieve lur fortune, and as your reputation it is >ur cion only capital do not bring upon sns Uimentfi by going in and out of liquor breath estub- i or by an odor of your or r •nl any flush glare of your eye or by You any lose unnat- J ' on your eheeks. your putation The and you lose your capital. inebriate suffers also in the fact that – loses his self respect, and when you de foy a man’s pelf respect there is not much (t of him. Then a man will do things he Quid not do otherwise, he will say things ! would net say otherwise. The fact is, pi mint cannot stop or he would stop Jilistines, w. He is bound hand and foot bv the _ vjd and they have shorn his locks ! ^Bthe put ilia eyes out and mad 3 him grind (Iwee-fourtbs mills of a great horror. After he is l®ng gone in this slavery tho first iMRbjit he will be anxious to impress you with | i B*^r he ean stop anv time he wants to. life, family become alarmed in regard to i and ttey say: “Now, do stop this, fjSjmh, awhile it will get the mastery of you.” no!” he S ays “I can stop at any y e. jean stop now. 1 can stop to-mor- •ovi'" Why, Im mofd atrnid confidential losing friend says; balance with that habit. you are your little further You are going a than you can afford to go. You had better stop.” “Oh. uol” he says. I can stop ut any time. 1 can stop now.” liei goes on further and further. He can not stop. I will prove it. He loves him self, and he knows nevertheless that strong drink is depleting him in body, mind and soul, lie knows ho is going down; that he has less self control, legs equipoise oC tem per, than he used to. Why does he not |top? ft by going Because he cannot stop. I will prove still further. He loves his tvifo and children. He sees that his and ^grace ills children. He sees all t his, and he loves them. Why does he not stop? He cannot stop that Ob, my young friends I want to tell you there is a point in inebriation beyond which if a man go ho cannot stop! But sometimes a man will bo more frank than that. A victim of strong drink said to a reformer: “It Is Impossible for me to stop. IrealizeU. But if yon should tell me I couldn’t have a drinkuntilto-mor row off, night unless I had all my lingers cut I would say, ‘Bring on tne hutchet and cut them off.’ ** I hud a verv dear friend in Philadelphia whose nephew came to him and v/as talking about his trouble and con fessod it. He confessed he oould not stop, My friend said, “You must stop.” He said: “I can't stop. If there stood a cunnon, and it was loaded, and there was a glass of wine in the iB”uth of the aauuon, and I knew you would lire it off if I approached, I would start to get that glass of wine. I must have it. I can’t get rid of this habit. I can’t get away from it.” Oh, it is awful for a noun to wake up and feel that he is a captive! I hear him soliloquizing, saying: “I might have stopped three months ago, but 1 can’t stop now. Dead, but not buried; I am a what walking corpse. I am an apparition of I once was. Iam a caged Immortal and my soul beats against the wires of my cage on this sido and beats against the wires of my cage on'the ofher side until there is blood on the wires and blood on the soul, but I can’t get out. Destroyed without remedy!” > See the attendants stand hack from that ward in the hospital where the inebriates are dying. They cannot stand it, The keepers come through it and say: “Hush up, now! Stop making this noise! Be still! You are disturbing all the other pa tients. Keep still now!” Then the keepers pass on, and after they .get past then the poor creatures wring their hands and say: “O God! Help, help! Give me rum, give ;no rum! O God! Help! Take the devils off of me! O God! O God!” And they shriek and they blaspheme and they cry for kelp and then they ask the keepers to slay them, me!" saying: “Stab me, strangle me, smother O God! Help, help! Bum! Give me rum! O God! Help!” They tear out thetr hair by the handful, and they bite their nails into the quick. This is no fancy picture. It is transpiring in a hos pital at this moment. It went on last night while you slept, and more than that, that is tke death some of you will die un less you stop. 1 see it coming. God help you to stop before you go so far that you cannot stop. But it plagues a man also in the loss of home. I do not care how much he loves his wife and children, if this habit gets the mastery over him he will do the most out rageous things. If need be, in order to get strong drink, he would sell them all into everlasting captivity. There are hundreds and thousands of homes that have been utterly blasted of it. I am speaking of no abstraction. Is there anything so disas trous to a man for this life and for the life to come? Do you tell me that a man can be happy when he knows he is breaking his wife’s heart and clothing his children with rags? There are little children in the streets to-day, barefooted, unkempt, un combed, want written on every patch of their faded dress and on every wripkle of their prematurely old countenance, who would have been in the house of God this morning as well clad as you had it not been that strong driDk drove their parents down into penury and then down into the grave. Oh, rum, rum, thou despoiler of homes, thou foe of God, thou recruiting officer of the pit, I hate thee! But my subject takes a deeper tone when It tells you that the inebriate suffers the loss of the soul. Tho Bible intimates that if we go into the future world unforgiven the appetites and passions which were regnant here will torment us there. I sup pose when the inebriate wakes up in the lost world there will be an infinite thirst clawing upon him. In this world he could get strong drink. However poor he was in this world, be could beg or he could steal five cents to get a drink that would for a little while slake his thirst, but in eternity where wifi the rum come from? Dives wanted one drop of water, but could not get it. Where will the inebriate get thedrafthesomuchrequires,somuchde mands? No one to brew it. No one to mix it. No one to pour it. No one to fetch it. Millions of worlds now for the dregs that were thrown on the sawdusted floor of the restaurant. Millions of worlds now for the rind flung out from the punch called bowl of an earthly banquet. Dives for water. The inebriate calls for rum. If a fiend from the lost world should come up on a mission to a grogshop and, having finished the mission in the grogshop, sboma come back, taking on the tip of his wing one drop of alcoholic beverage, what ex citement it would make all through the world of the lost, and, if that one drop of alcoholic beverage should drop from the wing of the fiend upon the tongue of the inebriate, how he would spring up ami cry: “That’s it! That’s it! Bum! Bum! That s it!” And all the caverns of the lost would echo with the cry: “Give it to me. Bum. Bum!” Ab,myfnends,thoinohriate ssor- ab row in the next world will not be tje sence of God or holiness or ugh.; it will be the absence of rum. “Look not upon the wine when it is red, when it moveth itself aright in tjie cup, for at the last it biteth like a serpent, and it stingoth like an ad der.” But I must not dwell on generalities; I must come to specifies. I dislike, Are you it astray. If there is any sermon is a ser mon on generalities. I want personalties. Are you astray? Have you gone so far you think you cannot get back? Dal I say a lew moments ago thut a man might go to a point in inebriation where lie could not stop? Yes, I said it, and I reiterate it. But I want you also to understand that while the man himself, of his own strength, cannot stop, God can stop any man. You have only to lay hold of the strong urm of the Lord God Almighty. He can stop you.^ Many York summers Sabbath ago i went over to New one even ing—our church not yet being open for the autumnal services. I went into a room in the Fourth Ward, New Yoik, where a religious service was being held for reformed drunkards and I heard a revelation that night that I had never heard before—fifteen testimony or,twenty men standing up and giving sue.i as I had never heard given they not changed only testified that their hearts had been by the grace of God, but that the grace of God had extinguished their thirsi. I hey went on to say that they had reformed at different times betore, but immediately fallen, because they were doing the whole work in their own strength. But as soon as we gave our hearts to God, they saicl, “and the love of the Lord Jesus Christ has come into our soul the thirst has all gone, W T e have no more disposition for strong drink.” intemperanc Ch, if you could only hear drumming th with drunkards’ bones on top of the wine cask the Dead March ot immortal souls, you would go home and kneel - down and pray God that rather thai your children should eVer become the victims of this evil habit you might carry them out to the cemetery and put: thorn down in the last slumber, waiting for th flowers of spring to come over the grave sweet prophecies of the resurrection. God hath a balm for sue.i a wound, but what flower of comfort ever grew on the blasted heath of a drunkard’s sepulcher? | Paying Double everything Prices ❖ for is But not * pleasant, that's what is it? you are < E doing, if you don’t buy it Yja here. Did you think it ? ^ possible to buy a $ 50.00 Cat Bicycle for$i 8 . 75 tells ? all 1 Price, 818.75. alogue No. 59 2 about Bicycles, Sewing *X l Machines, Organs and Pianos. What <lo you think of a fine V suit of Clothing, guaranteed made-to-your- and measure, to lit V r.r i)rcttx vaul to your station for I 5 . 50 ? Catalogue No. 57 V V *hows 3 a samples of clothing \A and shows many bargains in ■iJ 1 V V Shoes, Lithographed Hats ana Furnishings. No. shows Carpets, Catalogue Rugs, Por- X V 47 and Lace Curtains, in X tiercs V hand-painted Freight, colors. free, We pa and M V sew carpets A * y furnish lining without charge. A X What do you ** A think of a tJJ A – Solid Oak I V i *** rail ily Dry-air Refrigera- Fam A tor for $ 3 . 95 ? bar- A A i It is but one of over 8000 X A gains contained in our Gen ilm A and eral We Household Catalogue Goods. from of Furniture to 60 «*« A a A save you everything. 40 Why per cent, on A A A buy of at ? retail Which when catalogue you know do £ us *♦« Price , $3.95. you want? Address this way, «,♦« '•'JULIUS HINSS – SON, Baltimore, Md. Oept. BAD BLOOD “CASC'AHETS do all claimed for them and are a truly wonderful medicine. I have often wished for a medicine pleasant to take and at last have blood found has been it in purified Cason rets. and Since complexion taking them, has im- my feel my much better in proved wondertuliy SALLiii and E. l SELLARS, Luttrell. Tenn. every way.” Mas. jflfijuhwk CANDY TRADE MAKN R*ai3TMe£>irfS^ Pleasant. Palatable. Potent, Taste Good. Do Good Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 25c. 50c ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Slerllnf. Remedy Company, Chicago, Montreal, Ne w York. 31 2 ”? THE < M Spalding LEAH OFFICIAL *Vt»n inn ” League Bail isthponly official ball of the National League and must be kIimP use Each 1 in ball all warranted games. ACCEPT NO SUBSTITUTES. If a dealer does not carry Spalding's and address athletic to goods in stock, send your name handsomely us (and his, too) for a copy of our illustrated catalogue. A. C. SPALDSNC A BROS.. New York. IJenver. CUicn go. A Hairy Tree. J. W. Roach, who has been down in Madison county, has made a discovery that is a revelation to us, says the Carnesville (Ga.) Advance. He brings with him a fine specimen of hair that appears to be as fine as human hair and very strong. It is as black as jet and as straight as a line. It grows »n black jack trees and very luxuriantly. It was found on the land of Dr. G. W. Westbrooks, near Ila, and it promises much for utility. It can be used for weaving into cloth, stuffing collars, buggy cushions and various other pur poses for which strong hair is used. It seems that in its discovery Dr. West brooks has become the owner of a very fine piece of property; and when it is fully developed its uses will he many. We will watch with much interest the result of this discovery. During the year 189S < ,483 permits for the erection of new buildings and alterations in old ones were issued in Brooklyn, against 6,807 for the previ ous year. The number of new' build ings actually completed during the year was 2.059. Awful Advertising. Is there anything more awful than the dental sign of a big molar or the fanciful arrangement of false teeth shown in an outside case?—Philadel phia Times. Ask Your Dealer For Allen’s Foot-Ka»e, A powder to shake into your shoes; rests the feet. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen, ■■'ore, Hot, Callous, Aching, Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen’s Foot-Efts© makes new or tight shoes easy. At all drag gists and shoe stores, 25 cts. Sample mailed FREE. Adr’s Allen 8 . Olmsted, Lelioy, N. Y. Pistachio nuts come from Syria, and the Greeks were very fond of them. Chestnuts •orm a portion of the daily food of the Med iterranean nations, though in America they e.re not ground into flour, hut are eaten sim vly as nuts. To Cure a Cold in One Pay. lake Laxative Bromo tjutntue Tablets. All Druggists refund money if It falls to cure. 25c. There are 1.500 submarine telegraph cables in the world, in length covering 179.000 miles and 000,000 costing approximately annually $2')0.000,000. transmitted. Over 6 , messages are Wo-To-IIac for Fifty Cent*. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 60c, }1. All druggists. Manv a girt lives to regret the day she married her ideal man. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrupforehildren teething, softens the gums, reduces in ft anima tion.allays pain.cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle. Fits permanently day’s cured, No Dr. fits Kline's or nervous iiess after first use of Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dk. K. 11. Kune, Ltd.. 231 Arch St., Phlla M Pa. Havana wrappers make good smoking jackets.__ Educate Torn Dowels With Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. Dreams and weather predictions usually go by contraries. 33 41 To cure, or money by yonr so The Ocean Currents. The force, speed and direction of pecan currents are discovered by a pyetcmaUc plan of throwing scaled bottlcB overboard and in time receiv ing reports of them. These reports arc indexed and class ified, with the result that much valua ble Information 1 b gained about the ocean currents. For instance, a bottle was thrown pvverboard November 16, 1896, was picked up March 26, 1898, during which time it had drifted 4,700 miles. Another that was thrown over near Nantucket was found, 512 days later, pff the coast of Scotland. Another, Starting from Cape Cod, brought up (it Cornwall, having traveled 2,500 miles In 600 days. Some bottles, however, have shown (in average speed of thirty-one miles per day, while others have traveled I'long at the slower rate of twenty-six, fourteen, and even four miles per day. |n the Pacific ocean there are fewer i liances of the bottles being picked up, but the experiments are tried there with fair success. As the work goes on, the number of bottles used Is in creasing, and the captains and skip pers are becoming accustomed to find ing the bottles and reporting them to the bureau.—St. Nicholas for April. Conld Apply the Parable. It is not always safe to talk in para bles to the young, as the following school board story shows. A corre spondent states that one of his pupils caused him some annoyance by un couthness of speech, dirty boots and so on, so, says our correspondent, “I drew a verbal portrait for the class of tho man who did not shine in the world of polite society. ‘Y’ou cannot fail to know him,’ said I, ‘for he never cleans his boots, nor washes before meals. He speaks and drinks when his mouth is full, and generally uses his knife in place of his fork.’ Gradually the lad whom this story was designed to profit showed an awakening interest, and put out his hand to speak. In reply to my query, ‘Well’—‘I know him,’ said he. ‘He's our lodger.’ ’’—London Chronicle. Dcnuty 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 by stirring up the lazy liver and driving to-day im- to purities from the body. Begin blackheads, banish pimples, boils, blotches, by taking and that sickly bilious for complexion All drug Cascarets,—beauty gists, satisfaction guaranteed, ten cents. 10c, 25c, 50c. A wise man never questions a child in pub lic unless he is sure of the answer. M. L. Thompson – Co., Druggists, Couders port. Pa., say Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the bes1 and only sure cure forcatarrh they eversold. Druggists sell it, 75c. Piso’s Cure for Consumption has no equal as a Cough medicine.—F. M. Abbott, 383 ten eca St., Buffalo, N. Y., May 9, 1894. About the easiest thing to lose is adiary. II is hard to keep one for any length of time. To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25e, It C. G. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. Those who dwell where are mountains without valleys have joys without sorrows. ..... 5V ? V i] i t i. THE EXCELLENCE OF SYRUP OF FIGS is due not only to the originality and simplicity of the combination, but also to the care and skill with which it is manufactured by scientific processes known to the California Fig Hyrup Co. only, and vve wish to impress upon all the importance of purchasing the true and original remedy. As the genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, a knowledge of that fact will assist one in avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by other par ties. The high standing of the Cali fornia Fig Syrup Co. with the medi cal profession, and the satisfaction, which the genuine Syrup of Figs has given to millions of families, makes the name of the Company a guaranty of the excellence of its remedy. It is far in advance of all other laxatives, as it acts on the kidneys, liver and bowels without irritating or weaken ing them, and it does not gripe nor nauseate. In order to get its beneficial effects, please remember the name of the Company— CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, C«L LOUISVILLE. Kt. NKW YORK. ». Y. Eye-Witnesses. “While I was out West,” said the mail in the mackintosh, “I saw snow drifts more than 600 feet high.” “I don’t doubt it,” replied the man with the cinnamon beard, “When I was out there a couple of weeks ago I saw drifts that couldn't have been less than 900 leet deep.” “If you hadn’t been in such a hurry to tell a bigger lie than you thought I could tell,” rejoined the man in the mackintosh, “I would have explained that the drifts 1 saw were 600 feet up on the side of a mountain.” “That's all right,” said the other. “The drifts I saw were at the bottom of a 900-foot gorge.”—Chicago Tribune. Golden 4 <4 Wedding of Miss Popu lar Esteem and Mr. Sarsaparilla. Ayer’s J fcs jj happiness, Fifty years of 3 L of mm ft * fifty doing years good. 1 Sar- 1111111 The only n* saparilla in the V: world that V: ever celebrat $ Baa ed its fiftieth K) i £ anniversary doing it and is today with no signs mission of decay. is Its 1 to cure and \ to help. No wonder it has fifty happy years back of it. Get a bottle today of \Ayer j Sarsaparilla s [which made Sarsaparilla famous] All Druggists Sell Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. |Si.oo a Bottle. iiiiiim .1 Tnrrinn—'— Ants Not So Smart After All. Professor Bethe of Strasburg doesn't believe the ant is so intelligent as he seems. He cleansed the ants taken from one hill in a solution of alcohol, dipped them in a decoction made of ants from another hill, and placed them in the strange hill. They were not attacked as strangers, even when of different color and conformation. On the other hand, ants treated in this manner when put back in their own hills were not recognized by their tribe, but at once attacked and killed. Professor Bethe infers from this that ants must give out some liquid whose odor guides them, and ihnt each colony must have its own peculiar smell. Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoko Your Life Array. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To Hac, the wonder-worker, that makes weal; men strong. All druggists, 50c or SI. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. The man who has little and wants less is richer than the man who has much and wants more. if! DR. MOFFETT’S f§ Aids Digestion, TeethinA eUb TEETHINA Regulates Makes Bowel Children Teathing Troubles of the Any Relieves Bowels, cf Easy. Age. the TFFTHIKfi PflWHFRS Costs Only 25 Cents. Aek Your Druggist for 1 " V feJL M«ST(>OTKT goiLERfEEl P p qOUCED. yet And very I.OW I’RICKS. Largo stock. Also I>I1'E, VALVES and FITTINGS. EN GIN ES, BOILERS, MILLS ami KEPAIKS. j Lombard Iron Works – Supply Co. AUGUSTA, CIA U8E certain coRw c ube, ’ELF’ colder than B 8? ■ I A over 20 degrees ly A ,,8etl 1" relrigerators just like F SKNDWlmTUul'^m.WAtiTM. UNIVERSAL „„ , _________________ REFRIGERATING AGENTS WANTED. UO., 2 yi Flushing Avenue, BROOKLYN, N. V. GOLDEN CROWN LAMP CHIMNEYS the common best. Askforthem. chimneys. All dealers. Cost „„ more j FITTSBUKG GLASS GO., Allegheny, Pa. --- TIT W ANTED—Gas© of bsm health that RIP * Nr will not benefit. Semi 6 cm. to Kipftns Chun’-a Co - >JewYork, for lu samples arid 10M teothuoiimiN „ The Potash Question. A thorough study of the sub ject has proven that crop fail ures can be prevented by using fertilizers containing a large percentage of Potash; no plant can grow without Potash. We have a little book on the subject of Potash, written by authorities, that we would like to send to every farmer, free of cost, if he will only write and ask for it. GERHAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau St., New York. O # © o Bevel-Soar •CHAINLESS BICYCLE 9 Easiest running, most durable, safest, cleanest. World’s rec : i ord of 250 consecutive dally centuries. Always ready to ride. Nothing to entangle or soil the clothing. _ l(ifilninhia s Chain models I Embody the results of 22 years’ i experience in ttie application • of the best methods of cycle * o building. ! ^^10^3 SIHl lffillSltfiS. 9 The new Mart fords have radi i cal improvements everywhere. 2 Vedettes cannot be equuled for j their price. ! PRICES: Chainless, $75; Co JumbA Chi. r,. $5<3? Hi»rtfor*l9, • $35, V© *©ttBS, $«-»> ©Hfi ® # • Catalogue of any Columbia dealer, or 2 by mail for one 2-cent stamp. * POPE /VlrU. n CO.> Hartford, COHIt. • ------------------—