The Cordele sentinel. (Cordele, Ga.) 1894-????, June 09, 1899, Image 7

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talmas B’S s biwon. The Eminent Divine’s Sunday y Discourse. Subject: “Tire Path of Snfely“_yrenaoe8 to Our National Kxistencc—The Dun* gern of Monopoly, Nihilism and In fidelity Pointed Out. [Copyright, Louis Klopsch, 1899, | Washington, 1). C.—In this discourse T)r. Talmage speaks of some of tho perils that threaten our American institutions and points out the land path shall of safety; text, Isaiah Ixii., 4, “l’hy be married.” As the greater includes the less, so does tho circle of future joy around our entire 1 world include the epicycle of our own re publio. Bold, exbilarant, unique, divine imagery of ‘the text. At tho close of a week in which for three days our national capital was a pageant, and all that grand review ami,‘bannered procession and na tional anthems could do celebrated peace, it tnny not.be inapt to anticipate the time when the Prince of Peace and the Heir of Universal Dominion shall take possession of this nation and “thy laud shall be mar rted.” discussing the final destiny of this In difference nation, it makes .all the in the world whether we are on tho way to a funeral or a wedding. The Bible leaves no doubt on this subject. In pulpits and on platforms and in places of public concourse I bear so many of the muffled drums of evil prophecy sounded, ns though we were on the way to national interment, and beside Thebes and Babylon and Tyre rep'ublio in the ceme tery of dead nations our was to be entombed, that I wish you to under stand it is not to be obsequies, but nup tials; not mausoleum, but carpeted altar; not cypress, but orange blossoms; not re quiem, but wedding march, for “thy land shall be married.” I propose to name some of the suitors who are claiming the blind of this repub lic. This land is so fair, so beautiful, so affluent that it has many suitors, and it will depend much upon your advice whether this or that shall be accepted or rejected. In tho first place, I remark: There is a greedy, all grasping monster who comes in as suitor seeking the hand of this republic, and that monster is known by the name of monopoly. His scepter is made out of the iron of the rail track and the wire telegraphy. and He does everything robbery for bis own advantage for the of the people. from bad to until ThiDgs went on worse in the three legislatures of New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania for a long time monopoly decided everything. If monop oly favors a law, it passes; if monopoly op poses a law it is rejected. Monopoly stands in tho railroad depot putting into his poekets in one year $200,000 in excess of all reasonable charges for services. Mo nopoly holds in his one hand the steam power of locomotion and in the other the electricity of swift communication. Mo nopoly has the Republican party pifrty in one pocket and the Democratic iu the other pocket. Monopoly decides nomina tions and 'elections—city elections, state elections, .national elections. With bribes be secures the votesoE legislators, giving tbem free passes, giving appointments to needy relatives to lucrative position, em ploying them ns attorneys if they are law yer-s, carrying their goods 15 per cent, less if thoy are merchants, and if he find a case very stubborn as well as very important puts down before him the hard cash of bribery.. , easily caught But monopoly Is not the so term of Mr. Bu now as when during ehanan the Legislative Committee in one of our States 'explored and exposed the manner in which a eertain railway com pany had obtained a donation of public land. It was found out that thirteen of the Senators of that State received. $175,030 among them, sixty members of the lower house of that State received between $5000 and $10,000 each, the Governor of that State received $50,000, his clerk reeeived $5000, the Lieutenant-Governor reeeived $10,000, all the clerks of the Legislature were'di received $5000 each, while $50,000 vided among tlieiobby agents. That thing on a larger or smaller scale is all the time going on in some of the States in the Union, but it is not so blundering as it used to be, and therefore not so easily exposed or ar rested. I tell you that the overshadowing curse of the United States to-day ia mo nopoly. He puts his hand upon every bushel of wheat, upon every sack of salt, upon every ton of coal, and every man, woman and child in the United States feels the toueh of that moneyed depotism. I re r capital i havo mothWc to sav against In ists hf A man bus lion a right to the money can make estjy-I have nothing to say against corporations as such; without bufXfldlTsavisthalttesame*prin^ put wiiat I do say is that the I ciples are to be applied to capital s s to corporations that ar a Pl formers . Wbatls wrong wrong for' great corporations. If 1 take from you your property without any adequate eompensa- railway tion, I am a tliief, and if a damages the property of the people with –• wa as of thousands of her best people driven into multi- . starvation and in Ireland has tudinous tenants almost to madness in the United States i0,000.000 of , wealth of 60,000,000-or p I and put it in a few silken wallets. Monopoly, brazen faced, iron Angered vulture republic. hearted moa He °P stretches ol J t °w r l^ it out over over to this railroads and the lakes and up the great continent over the telegraph poles of the and says, “Hero is my heart and band be mino forever.” Let tho uHlbona people North. South, Em si Mud West ioioui the banns of that marriage, forbid them at the ballot box, forbid them on tho plat form forbid them by great organizations, senti forbid them by the overwhelming mentofan outraged nation, forbid them by the protest of the church of God, forbid them hv sUl nraver to thfs high Abigail. iieaven. That Herod not have It shall not be to all devouring monopoly that this land fuother is tn he married this suHor claiming the hand of rennhlie ts nihilism versal^cuUbroatery He owns nothing but a knife for uni and a nitroglycerin be bomb for ur.iversal explosion, believes iu no God 7 io government, no heaven and no hell except whut be can make on earth! He slew the czar of Russia, keeps many a king practicallyimprisoned killed Abra and ‘pres P i den t* on Lrth.andifhe could hrnt the ine nower power wouju would climb cumu up P until lie drive the God of benxon from His throne and take it himself the caimd“^nanism; universal butebe^ United States it is cal lei . In Russia it is called nihilism, but that last is the most graphic and de i means complete and eternal smash up xc would crime, and it would Jn-fiddrivi drive f dagger Kg through dwell your heart and put a to our this . ing and turn over theft and vv lust and > rapine ana possession ot m live? In all the Where does this monster offers its towns and cities of this land. It hand to this fair republic^ j ta di^H down. It vvould give'as much to a lands has set its paw prowled across other on our soil, and it is only waiting for ine was nihilism that slew black people in our immigrants P–R–ZST– years ago; SW–2<25; it is nihilism that osout °. f tlie wiudows of the drunker ies upon sober people «s they go by. Ah! its power has never yet been tested! t pray God its power may never be fully tested. It would, if it had the power, leave every house church, chapel, cathedral, school and college in ashes. Another suitor for the hand of this na tion is infidelity. When the midnight ruf in nans St. despoiled the grave of A, T Stewart Mark’s churchyard, everybody was shocked, hut infidelity proposes something worse than that—the robbing of all the graves of Christendom of the hope of a re surrection. It proposes to chisel out from the tomb-stones of your Christian dead the words, the “Asleep in Jesus” and substitute Infidelity words, “Obliteration—annihilation ” proposes to take the letter from the world’s Father, inviting tho nations to virtue and happiness and tear it up into fragments so small that you cannot read a word of it. Tt proposes to take the eonso latlon from the broken hearted and the soothing pillow from the dying. Infidelity proposes to swear iu the President of the United States nnd tho supreme court and the Governors of Htates and the witnesses in the courtroom witb.their right band on Paine’s “Age of Reason” or Voltaire’s take “Philosophy of History.” It proposes to away from this country the book that makes the difference between the Unitod States and the kingdom of Dahomey, be tween American civilization and Bornesiau cannibalism. If infidelity could destroy the Scriptures, it would in 200 years turn the civilized nations back to semibarbarism, and then from semibarbarism into mid night savagery until the morals of a menag erie of tigers, rattlesnakes and chimpan zees would be better than the morals of the shipwrecked human race, The only impulse in the right direction that this world has ever had has come from the Bible. It was the mother of Roman law and of healthful jurisprudence. That book has been the mother of all re-, forms nnd all charities—mother of Etig lish magna charta imd American Declara tion of Independence. Benjamin Franklin, holding that Holy Book in his hand, stood before an infidel club in Paris and read to them out of the prophecies of Habakkuk, and the infidels, not knowing what botfk it was, declared that it was the best poetry they had ever heard, That book brought Oeorge Washington down,on his knees in the snow at Valley Forge and led the dy ing Prince Albert to ask some ofie to sing ‘ ‘Rock of Ages." I tell you that the worst attempted crime. of the century is the attempt to destroy this book. Yet infidelity, loathsome, stench ftil, leprous, pestiferous, rotten monster stretches out its band, ichorous with the second death, to take the baud of this re public. It stretches it through out through seduc tive magazines, and lyceum lec tures and through caricatures of religion, It asks for all that part of the continent al ready fully settled, and the two-thirds not yet occupied. It says: with “Give keys me all east the Mississippi, the of the church and with the Christian printing presses—then give me Wyoming, give me Alaska, give me Montana, give me Colo rado, give mo all the States west of the Mississippi, and I will take those places and keep them by right of possession long be toro the gospel can be fully intrenched.” .But there is another suitor that presents j 1 ' 6 claim for the hand of this republic. He * 9 mentioned in the verse following my text where it says. “As the bridegroom re joiceth over the bride, so shall thy God re joice over thee.” Lefore Columbus and his 120 men embarked on the Santa Maria, wonderful the Rinta, and the Nina, for their voyage, what was the last thing they did. They sat down and took the holy sacrament of the Lord Jesus Christ. After they caught the first glimse of tris country and the gun of one ship had announced it to the other vessels that land had been discovered, what was the song that went up trom^ull the three G loria ia excelsis. After Columbus and bis . 120 men had ground, stepped from the ship s deck to the solid what did they do. They all knelt and con secrated the new world to God. What did the HuguenCjS do after they landed in the Carolinas. What did the Holland reiu„ees d? a£t e 1r .! ia< ^ laa ded in New York, landed . . in , New Pl] England. gn . ra W ith bended knee an d uplifted lace and beav en besieging prayer, they took po^ession of this conti nent tor God. How was the fir. t Americuji Congress opened By prayer in the name of Jesus Christ. From its birth tLi nation was pledged for holy marriage with Cnrist. And then seo liow us Just open the map of the continent - immeasurable ;lud see how it isshaped tor ot any other l.„«, meree. Look at the great ranges of moun tains timbered with wealth on the top and ^“led One h ^ ® f 1 0 hundred and eighty thousand square miles of iron. The land so contoured that extreme weather hardly ever j as t s more than three days—extreme the heat or extreme cold. Climate for ™*t ad Wain * frrtt ’ d$>lariig mine™ “' , ^“T“"*„ Scener ant?y y an tu P friends e that no land ° to rival. No American earthquake. No Scotch xizss- juam ™° m ony ® y of every [ man that lias traveled r d For t 10 poor more sympathy, j or tll0 industrious more opportunity, and oil bow good God was to our fathers, howgood He has been to us and ourchil dren f To Him, blessed and bo His triumph, mighty to niime _ to Him of cross Him whostili remembers the prayer of the Hu uenots arid Holland refugees and the fat hcts, to Him shall this land be oh you Christian patriots, by ur contrlbut |„ n s-and your prayers, ] ias ten on the fulfillment of tho text, ' While some people may stand , at . the .. gates of the city, saying, Stay Pack, to foreign populations, I press out as far be yond those gates as l ean press out beyond them and beckon to foreign nations, say ing, “Come, come all ye people God who are honest and industrious and loving. But say you, “I am so afraid that they will bring Mr pre u^ , forforeign gov ernmeirts and plant them neie. Aosuru. They are sick of the .TduLTwant have oppressed them and they want Hee iree America! Give them the great gospel of w'come. Throw around^^ a 1 Cbrls tian diistrv hospitalities mu cl bard P earned wages L, to t ' tb tni.. l country, and then we will dedicate all to Christ nuU %he altar be’ But ^ . RocayMounfnlns marr ine when', through artificial and mighty irrigation, all their tops shall be covered, as they and will wU 1 be be with w n vineyards j and orchards Bostons and the Pacifi^ and the Charlestons of the coast come to the marriage altar onon^ on one side, and then let the Bostons and and the chllr , es tons of Atlantic coast come to the marriage qji t(l0 othef sif | e . and there be tween them let this bride of nations kneel, thunders and then if the organ of the loudest that ever shook the Sierra Nevados on the one side or moved the j oun( j ul j 0ns 0 j the AlleghaniCs on the wedfinB nareh that organ of'^’hunders of thunders v ,-ould take the hand of this bride of nations, At | that marriage ^^^ndthttaJestry^ofTmerica^manu. s ssas gro . congratulations from all , land .ball be married. Correct. Mamma—Bessie, liow many sisters has your schoolmate? Bessie—He has one, mamma. He tried to fool me by saying that he had two half-sisters, but he didn’t know that I’ve studied arithemetic. Victoria Getting Young. In view of the fact of the Queen's nppronoh ing visit to the continent, Englishmen are especially Interested 111 her majesty’s health. It Is announced that her hearing has grown acute and her eyesight keener, Youthful faculties In old ago depend merely upon the health. The hlood should he kept pure and the stomach sweet with Mostetter's Stomach bitters. It cures Indigestion, constipation, hlllonsness, nervousness, liver nnd kidney troubles, ns well ns malaria nnd foyer and ague. It keeps people young. The Lieut. Governor of South Carolina when presiding wears a purple robe of office. No-To-Ilac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. !S0e, $1. All druggists. An electric fire engine is one of the new attractions of Paris. It runs 15 miles ftn hour. 44 Pride Goeth He fore a Fall/' Some proud people think they Are strong, ridicule the idea of disease, neglect health, let the blood run down, and stomach, kid neys and liver become deranged. Take Hood’s Sarsaparilla and you will prevent the fall and save your pride. '* ■fZkrw>iii National Forever. A writer in Cornhill gives some humorous notes of English school ex aminations. Apparently national characteristics come out ns vividly as individual ones, at these encounters between the learned and the unlearned. One day, an examiner was listening to a class of Irish boys, in London, as they repeated Macaulay’s “Horatins.” “Would three soldiers, nowadays,” he asked, “be likely to hold a bridge against a whole army?” “No, sir,” the boys answered. “Would three Englishmen, for ex ample?” he continued. “No, sir,” said the class. “Would three Scotchmen?” They again dissented. “Would three Irishmen?” ’ “Please, sir,” shouted an excitable little fellow, “one Irishman would do it!” j] %MlJ if Ml id THE EXCELLENCE OF SYRUP OF FIGS is due not only to the originality and simplicity of tlie combination, but also to the care and skill with which it is manufactured by scientific processes known to the California Fig Syrup Co. only, and we 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 manu factured 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, Cul. LOUISVILLE. Kv. FEW Y9KK.N.V. GOLDEN CROWN LAMP CHIMNEYS Are the best. Ask for them, Cost no more than common chimneys. All dealers. PITTSBURG GLASS CO., Allegheny, Pa. ANTED— Case of bad i will not benefit. Sepd I> cts. to Ripans Chemical Co.. NewYork, for lo samples and louii testimonials. ?%TTSi.‘ USE CERTAIN CORN CUREi MENTION THISWERrS l O 1 T AN0 M - 23 Refuted. na bure, nr Mrs. Mulcaney, t i n tnev do -j A , be a payin', ma’am, thot ye’re a two-faced Fwhat s thot? Shure, I’ll ha r e .i*. ve arrestea if ye say a thing •__i-i, like thot forninst me!” “Faith, Mrs. Muleahey, ma’an:, I didn’t Kay it at all! Why, I stood up for ye! 7 I said it wasn’t so, 1 bekase if cud A .. two faces, , d tii , ye nave ye wear other one mighty quick.—New York Herald. Dl Plantation n Kifnti'n »-» PLi*ll Chill Cure P , 111 ril is Guaranteed :y. \4 ■ •t. y.' rr To cure, or money refunded by your merchant, so why not try it? 1‘rice 50c. CURES WHERE ALL ELSE EAILS. Use Best Cough 8 yrup. Tastes Good. in time. Sold by drugpists. Paying Double Prices I f°r plensant. everything i» it? is llut not V y .r—- A ... £â€“ x; i dob,*, i?v™ w here. Did you think it ^ possible to buy a ? $ 50.00 Cat- V X bicycle for$i 8 . 75 tells nil V Price, $18.75. nlogue No. 59 V X about Bicycles, Sewing *J V Machines, Organ* and of Pianos, fine *• ^ £ What do you think a X V y suit of Clothing, guaranteed made-torvoilr- fit nod X measure, to V express paid to your station X "{* for $5.50? Catalogue i’ks of clothing No 57 JAAW J X .*. I ’ h T\ 33 satT1 ♦ and shows many bargains in Jrl^J A •j* Shoes. Hats ami Furnishings. . * •j* Lithographed Catalogue No. A ^!l\ \\ 4 J, ❖ ?i 7 er« 0W and Tlr^CmuinsfTn 1 ftXJ ' % y hand-painted colors. chs'ge.^ IVe pay f | S furnish lining X B ’l* X What do you I X i W think of a JMS. jj i II / ♦♦♦ A ( I 'Drv-idr F«m- ^ X .5. A f iiv"Refrigera A A J iT is'buf one of over 8000 Gen-A bar- X gains contained in our A I alid Household r "" Ure I Goods. o.t. * X jRMWil I We save you from 4 o to 6 ... 1 „ Addr^hT^- t Price, $3.95, : >JUL.US HINSS – SON. Baltimore, Md. Dept. 501Y Transaction Between Quest and Clerk.' Joe Walsh, night clerk, was a party to a deal the other night which made him $3 richer aud which he is still studying about. It was getting along toward the theatre hour when one of the guests of the hotel came down stairs with his valise, aud, after pay ing his bill, requested that the clerk keep his valise until he came back from the show, as he was going out on a late train. He also pulled a $5 hill ©ut of his pocket and asked the clerk to change it. Walsh looked in his cash drawer, hut found he did not have it. “Well,” said the guest, “just keep the $5 for security and lend me a dollar.” The clerk did so and the guest de parted. He came back about 11 o’clock and, being in a hurry to catch the train, rushed up to the desk. He threw down four silver dollars and the clerk gave him the .$5. It appeared all right. W’henthe guest had gone Walsh looked over his cash and found himself $3 ahead. : "Well,” said Walsh, after he had j puzzled his head for a while to see how it happened, “that man needs a bookkeeper. It was lucky for me he didn't make a mista ke the o ther way.” Expjnsive Plovers’ Eggs. A French contemporary grumbles be cause, owing to tlie greediness of the English, plovers’ eggs cost 25 cents apiece in Paris. But the complaint need not be taken seriously, as the same authority quotes $1 per egg as the price current in London, asserting, moreover, that as much as $15 was bid for a couple of specimens recently. On the Continent the eggs of the plover are not by any mean? so highly appre^ dated as with us. The late Prince Bismarck, however, was particularly fond of them, and his admirers used to send them to hiifi by the thousand from the plains of North Germany.— London Chronicle. 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. by stirring up tho lazy liver and driving all im purities from the body. Begin to-day to banish pimples,, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion All by taking drug Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. A Frenchman pronoses to print papers by exposing the original copy to the X-ray. Try “TIz-a-Kure” for Dyspepsia. This Is a grand new remedy for all stomach troubles. Many people suffer all the lime, ■when they can easily he relieved and cured. This remedy is In tablet form in u small box easily carried in the vest pocket, ready ata mo ment's notice to be taken when distress is folt. If your druggist does not have it send 25c, or if' you prefer to try it first, send for free sample. Tizakure Co., Tarpon Springs, Fla. Cocoanuts come from the East the Indie=. West Indies and other islands near equator. Educate Your Bowels With Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. lCc, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. By experiments with bail bearings on streetcars the savin got' power was 35 per cent. Hall’s Catarrh Cure directly is a liquid the and blood is taken and internally, snd acts of the system. on Write for tes mucous surfaces timonials, free. Manufactured by F. J. Cheney – Co., Toledo, O. A three-day trial of heavy traffic vehicles Will begin at Liverpool. England, July 31st. Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men | strong. All druggists, 50c or $1. Cure gunran Booklet and sample free. Address ' j Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York, _ Hnzel nnts grow in Europe. Russia, Asia, North Africa and North America. Skin Diseases In Young or 01(1. ! Tetter. Eczema, Ringworm, and Sold kindred druggists trou | Ides, are cured by Tetterine. at ! for 50c. a box. or prepaid for same price by J. T. ; Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga. Voluntary letters j tdessing us for cures, from all over the country, | are on file, and we are glad to show them. Lots of people are willing to do any kind of but really want an easy job. teething.softens Winslow'S Soothing reduces Syrupforehtldren inflamtna the gnrtts. | tion.allays pain.cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous nh* After fltot day s use of Dr. Kline’s Great 1 / e8 {-° r ^.' * y rl, 93i'Arci^st tr 1 e,r 6- 1 I } . t q pw iii p I heliere Piso’s Cure forConsumption saved my bov’slifelastsummer.—Mrs. Ali.ie Ooug lass. Be Koy, Mich., Oct. 20,189L ------- Queen Victoria’s Dressmaker's bills would be modest for a woman in ordinary society. *° Cure Con.tlpation Forever. T Take C asearets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c. if v. c. u. fail to euro, druggists refund money. Nothing bores a man more than an expla nation of something about to be explained. Our Bridge Builders In Africa. Between Khartoum anil Alexandria the Nile flows for 1,800 miles, anti in nil that distance it receives only one tributary, the Atbava, which comes from the Abyssinian highlands. In building the railroad from the Lower Kile to Khartoum, hundreds of miles along the right bank of the river, It is necessary therefore to erect only one bridge. This bridge will be an iron and steel structure over a Quarter of a mile in length, and a Pennsylvania Ann of bridge-builders are now turning t tl material, ’ which will be shipped Kg.Vpt nild , tmilSpOl'tod . . up tllO V MIe iio tO * 0 ^jie banks of the Athfu'a. The force of l*hiladelphltt artisans who will erect the lir i titr0 } iav «- sailed for Egypt, and hope to have the foundations ready for the siiperstnicture by the time it ar rivos The British Government is having thig bridgt , bllllt i„ America because tliere is prt'ssing need for It to obviate cons i dpra bi e delay in the completion of tlie railroad, and we can turn It out quickly than British builders would agree to do. The prodigious work of developing Africa will require bn K« and manS fac ture r 8 are perfectly able to com pete successfully with the rest of the world for the supply of many of these products.—New York Sun. Concerning the Shape of an Anaesthetic. It is a Bath physician who tells the following: “Some time ago I happened to spend the night in a country town not far from Bath, and it happened that there was stopping at the same hotel an itinerant eye specialist. "We drifted inlo a conversation, and during the course of the eveniifjg he told me of some of the marvellous operations he had performed on tlie eye. One ease in particular he spoke of that caused me considerable aston ishment, for I didn’t know, I confess, that the operation had been success fully performed. He said he had re cently taken out a patient’s eye, scraped the back of it and returned it to its proper place. The patient, lie said, was never troubled by bad eyesight after ward. “ ‘That was a difficult operation, doc tor,’ said I. : ‘Yes,’ said he, ‘it was.’ s ‘I suppose you found it neoassary to employ an anaesthetic?’ Do Your Feet Ache and Burn? Shake into your shoes Allen’s Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet, it makes Tight or New New Shoes oboes leei feci aasy. Fhsv cures (hires Corns corns Dun Run tons, Swollen, Hot, Callous, Aching and Sweating l eet. Sold by all Druggists, Grocers and Shoe Stores, 2Go. Sample sent FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y. __________ A half-mihion-dollar electric cotton mill is to be erected in North Carolina. V v • 31 H ) : >4 i l If you are young you nat- t urally If appear so. old, why you are ap pear so? I Keep young after inwardly, we will look the out ■< wardly. need longer I You not worry about those little streaks of gray; advance agents of age. „ vMH- t I I o ’< will surely hair; restore it will color also to ( gray and ■i give your hair all the wealth K and gloss of early life. I I Do not allow the falling of your longerwith hair to threaten you baldness. Do not i be annoyed with dandruff. H We will send you our book M on the Hair and Scalp, free upon request. Wrtto to tho Doctor . If yon do not obtain all thebane fits you expected from tho use of the vigor, write the doctor about It. Probably there is some difficulty with your general system which may be easily removeo. DR. J. O. AYER, Address, Lowell, Mass. DR, MOFFETT S Aids Digestion, Regulates the Bowels, I Makes Teething Easy. TEETHINA Relieves the Bowel Troubles of {5*>, 1 Children of Any Age. TEETHING POWDERS Costa Only Druggist 25 Cents. for ifr '* V Ask Your jffappy 9/Jot/ier s Sratitudo a [LETTER TO MRS. PINKHAM NO. s6,78s] “ Dear Mrs. Pinkuam— I have many, many thanks to give you for what your Vegetable Compound has done for me. After first confinement I was sick for with . prolapsus of ... the womb, , nine years of hack, had pain in left side, in small a groat deal of headache, palpitation I of heart and leucorrhica. I felt so weak and tired that I could not do my j work. I became pregnant again and J took your Compound all through, and ! now have a sweet baby girl. I never j before had such an easy time during labor, and I feel it was due to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I am now able to do my work and feel better than I have for years. 1 cannot thank you enough. —Mrs. Ed. Eh linger, Devins, Tex. Wonderfully Strengthened. “ I have been taking Lydia E. Pink* ham's Vegetable Compound, Blood Purifier and Liver Pills and feel won derfully strengthened. Before using your remedies I was in a terrible state; felt like fainting every little while. I thought I must surely die. But now, thanks to your remedies, those feel ings are all gone."— Mrs. Emii.ie Schneider, 1244 Helen Ave., Detroit Mich. “For six years I wns a vlritm of nothing dys pepsia in its worst form. I could eat would but milk toast, and at times my stomach not retain and digest even that. Last March I .began taking CASCARETS and since then! have steadily improved, until I am as well as 1 in life.” ‘ ever was my H. Murphy, Newark, . O. David CANDY 1 CATHARTIC JL ! tWW TRADE MARK REGISTERED ; Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe, 10c, 2oc. 50o. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. .. Sterling Remedy Cumpcny, Chieegn, Montreal, New York. 311 K 0 T 0 -EAG Sold and gurrautced by all drug gists to CD It K Tobaeoo Hubit. j THE ONLY PRACTICAL METHOD \iXil Cabbage Bug is described in: "The Use of the Gasoline Torch in Fighting InROct*. a book written a]l(1 copyrighted by Fred Rclnlein, Mt. Vernon. 111., which will be mailed on receipt of The method it describes will be found to be also by far the simplest way of lighting ( lilnch bugs. Squash bugs, i’lant Lice and Scale insects. SALESMEN WANTED. CHAM’S MAGNIFICENT TWENTIETH CKN I DRY MAP OF UN IT ED STATES and WORLD j ust com pleteil. ( .argest, latest and most accurate map ever printed on one sheet iutbe world Shows nil recent changes. Bells at sight Price low. Exclusive territory given. of I Big profit to'salesmen. Also Handsomest Line | Low-Priced. Quick-Selling Books HDDGINSPDB- and Family Bihics evor offered Address j DISHING CO., Kiser, Building, Atlanta, Ga. * Hartford and Vedette Bicycles. Public appreciation of the un equaled combination of quality and price embodied in these machines is shown in the present demand for them which is entirely without pre cedent. NEW MODELS. Chainless, . . . CO --i tn Columbia Chain . . cn o Hartfords, . . • co Vedettes, c ty 25, e# . . A Umitari number of Colombia, Models 45, 46 and 49 (improved) and Hartford3, Patterns 7 and 8, at greatly reduced prioes. SEE OUR CATALOGUE. POPE MFQ. CO., Hartford, Conn. ' p- I REPAIRS SAWS, RIBS, BRISTLE TWINE, BABBIT, –c,, FOR ANY MAKE OF GIN. ENGINES, BOILFRS AND' PRESSES And Repairs for same. Shafting, Pulleys, Belting. Injectors, Pipes, Valves and Fittings. LOMBARD IRON WORKS k SOM CO, AUGUSTA, GA. ‘ELF’REFRIGERANT IS over used pci*leet In 20 retrigerators degrees sitbslitute colder lor just than like ICE a WANTED. SEND FOR CIRCULARS. AGENTS UNIVERSAL HE FRIG HR ATI Ml DO., Y. 2112 Flushing Avenue, BROOKLYN, N. If afflicted w2t)i } Thompson’s Eye Wator sore ayes, use HPnDCY dm *** 1 quick NEW relief DISCOVERY; and cures worst gives cases. Book of testimonials and f O (Invn’ treatment Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN S SONS, Box D, Atlanta, Qa.