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B.TALM AGE’S SERMON
'he Eminent Divine’s Sunday
Discourse.
Iec t, The Coniine Sermon—Inspiration
U Future Religion* Exhortation
For the Christ
WUIB° l» r “ wn From t,,e Idv*nK
-Theology Mu»t Take » ltack Seat.
[Copyright, Louis Klopsch. 1339.1
■So WisiirsaTON, D.C.—In this discourse Dr.
^^cseribos fuldressM all Christian w.rkers
A» what be thinks will bo tho
assumi? ol
■
while I was stated ou a piazza of a hotel
traxiiiSto*. Ky., one summer evening thVuk a
asked me, “What do you
E? the coming regard sermon?” to laupposed discourse he was
oidne mein some new
f Dr Cummiug of London, who some
times lulled nreaohed startling sermons, nnd I
“I have not seem it.” lint I found
f afterward that ho meant to ask what I
t the ohar–otertfttics of
thought would be the world, the
the coming ioftho smrraon of ser
future, tbs word “Gumming”
r"T nouu pronounced the same as tho
feord ■’’flomlng” ns “ n ndJeotiv«. But my
Ui.mkfi BnSwtlS suggested to me a very Important
theme, “The Coming Ser
Before thp world is converted th® style of
eil'teus discourse will bavo to be con
■errod Sedan You might Gettysburg as well go with, into bows the
Boderu or
mdarrows instead of rifios nnd bombshells
nd parks of artillery, ns to expect to eon
iuer this world for God by the old styles
f exhortation and sermonology, Jona
liaa Edwarde the preached in which the sermons he lived, most but
idnpted to age preached now they
fth 0“8 sermons wore
rould divide an audience into two .classes
-those sound asleep and those wanting to
to ’bu* IlOWO, discourse of the future.
thera lft a
Yho will preach it I hare no idea. In what
>attof the earth it will be born I have no
jea. In which delivered denomination I cannot of Christians That
t will bo guess.
lis-ourse of exhortation may be born in
U8country meeting house on the banks of
■hew. Lawrence or the Oregon or the Ohio
)i the Tcmudgboe or the Alabama. The
jerson who shall deliver it may this mo
nentboina oradle under the shadow of
he Sierra Nevada* or in a New England
armhouse or amid the rioeflelds of Houth
ga sit faunas, or this moment there may be
[ome young man the in juuior one of our middle theological
fminariea, in or or sen
ior class, shaping that weapon of power,
>r there may be coming some churobos, new baptism
d the Holy Ghost on the so that
ome of us who now stand in the vratoh
owersot Zion, waking to areallzatlon of
jeivea. lur presold efficiency, may preach it our
ifty That coming discourse may not be
years off. And let U3 pray God that
ts arrival may be hastened while I an
louncetoyou whntljthlnk willbethe chief
,'liaracteristics [atlon of that discourse or exhor
when it does airire, and I waut to
Date my remarks appropriate and sug
gestive to all classes of Christian workers.
First of all, I remark that that future re
Igtous disoonrse will be full of a living
Jkrist la contradistinction to didactic
feohmoallties. A discourse may bo full of
Christ [nd though hardly mentioning Hie name,
[very a sermon may be empty of Christ while
[he sentence is repetitious of His titles,
world wants a living head Christ, not a
Christ standing at the of a formal sys
tem of theology, but a Christ who means
lardon [rotnerhood and sympathy and condolence nnd
and life and heaven, a poor
■an’s laricpd Christ, a rich man’s Christ, an over
Inner’s man’s Christ, an invalid’s Christ, a
Isaa’s Christ, a merchant’s Christ, Christ. an nr
Christ, an every man’s
|A liilogy symmetrical and frno worded system of
lasses, is well enough for tho theological
but it has no more business In a
pipit l than have the technical phrases of
|aa anatomist or a psychologist or a physi
lorld in tho slokroom of a patient. The
wants help, immediate and world
■lilting, inrse and it will eoine through a dls
kwn in which Christ shall walk right
IstiBg into the immortal soul and take ever
fchtas possession of it, filling It as full of
is this noonday firmament.
[That ■ill not sermon deal with of exhortation In the of threadbare tho future
lustrations men
Is of Jesus Christ. In that com
address there will be instances of
■carious suffering taken right out of
■oryday ftmebody life, for there is not a day when
is not dying for others—as the
liyaiciau lr saving his diphtheritic patient
ita sacrificing his own life; as the ship cap
Igetting going down with his vessel while ho
his passengers into the lifeboat;
■ the fireman consuming in the burning
■ildiug lurth while he 13 taking a child out of a
■rongswimmor story window; as In summer the
at East Hampton or Long
■anch or Cape Hay or Lake George him
Pt perished trying to rescue the drown
K! as the newspaper boy one summer,
■^porting ■valid his mother for some years, his
■an fifty mother, when offered by a gentle
cents to get some special paper,
■id he got it and rushed up iu his auxiety
■ deliver It and was crushed under the
Bieels of tho train and lay on tho grass
■th only strength enough to say, “Oh,
■bnt vrill become of my poor, sick mother
■>w?” Vicarious suffering—the world is
■[lot ■somotlve it. An In Dakota: engineer “We said to me on to a
■ men seem
Bused charing to a better appreciation than
■mr to. Did you see that aocouut the
■sseugers day of an engineer who to save hi3
stuck to his post, and when he
■2 found dead in the locomotivo which
■..'upside down, ho w;’,$ found stilt sjuil
Bi M* hand on the air-brake?” And as
■olglueep ■ the air-brake said it to me ho put his hand
” j°ekod to illustrate his meaning,
nt me ahd thought: “Ton
fum be just as much a boro In fhe same
Si?.
K” ■tta lfl there will feiigioui' be living discourse illustrations of the
■et out from everyday life of vicarious
■wing—illustrations ■id the that will fcring to
■ nigh ghastlier sacrifice ot Him, who In
■Kiit places of the field, on the cross,
■ »nd out died battles, and endured our strug
■ ““de our death, ^ German sculp
■ little ohild, an Image of Christ, and he asked
» fills two years old, who it was,
Bi said, “That must be some very
■« tho The sculptor wn* displeased
■aarb’.o crltlnism, and so he got another block
Bfn chiseled away on it two or
WS ' ilDc ^ (ben ho brought in his
■*» child, va four five of and
■<t to her or yoars age,
Kfu ,“That “Who do yontliinkthatis?”
B 8 must be the One who took
■v“. , n * Then ren in arms and blessed
■> the seulptor was satisfied.
wy frieudg, what the world wants is
■ , ® °°ld Christ, not an intellectual
■ >», not a severely magisterial Christ,
■ B ' l joving Christ, spreading out Ills
Blob ni°, 0ViBfr s i 7m Pathv 1,eart to press the whole world
B. L T -
rem ark agatn that the religious
Bort B* Ur! o ^ on ° f ^ 9us 1,18 atiou future is demanded Mill have by to the be
Bi-, t live. No need of
■ts introduotions , ■we more
Bm»° ? a “Y divisions and long applications
Bio. to a discourse that
i 9 8a *^ t0 be hydra-headed. In
Bm Bj,h 0 ■ ys P u, men ft 8 °t There ah their information few
' P were books,
■ note -
were no newspapers, nnd there
Boni Bor W 9 ° U trave ^ ' i t from ^ place to plaee, half nnd
Ber.H 5 f s Hn< listen two and a
■ 1 i°, y a ’ would religious find discourse, and nnd “seveu- chip
K' ; those tliem fresh
K. I ? aa days there was enough time
take an hour to warm himself
K, knat jae subject asdau hour to cool off.
was a necessity then is a super-
2. w ledge a®" 1 ?- Congregations are full of
from books, from newspapers,
* .® *; a aD( P'd i long and continuous disquisitions intercommunl- of wbat they
1 ady
tom. wl11 not be abided. If a re
a °ber cannot compress whnt be
, to say to the people in the ot
H, . Routes, adjourn space
ot her better it to
£ ‘rouble day, is
we preach audiences into
n Christ Ian frame, and thou wo preach
them out of It. We forget that every aud
itor has go much capacity of utloutiou, and
when that is exhausted Ho la restless. That
accident on the Long Island railroad years
ago came from the fact that the brakes
were out of order, and whon they wanted
to stop the train they could not stop, and
Uetioe the casualty was terrific. In all re
ligious discourse we want looornotlve power
and propulsion. Wo want ut the same time
stout brakes to let down ut the right in
stant. It is a dismal thing, altera hearer
has comprehended the whole subject, to
hear a man say, “Now to recapitulate,”
nnd “A few words by way of application”
and “Once more," and ■“finally, 1 ’ aud
"Now to conclude.”
Paul preached until midnight,and Euty
flbus got sound asleep nnd foil out of a
Window and broke his nook. Some would
Suy, “Good for him.” I would rather bo
sympathetic, like Paul, and resuscitate
him. That accident is often quoted now in
religious oirclos ns a warning against som
noleuee in church. It is just us much a
warning to ministers against prolixity,
Eutyehus was wrong in his somnolence,
but Paul made a mlstako when he kept on
until midnight. Ho ought to have stopped
at 11 o’clock, and there would linvo been
no aocldent. If Paul might have gone on
to too great length, let all thoso of us who
are now preaching the gospel remember
that there is a llrnft to religious discourse,
or ought to b*, and that in our time we
have no apostolic power of miracles. Na
poleon in an address of seven minutes
thrilled his army and thrilled Europe.
Christ’s sermon on the mount, the model
sermon,was less than eighteen minutes long
at ordinary mode of delivery. It is not
electricity scattered all over the sky that
strikes, but electricity gathered into a
thunderbolt aud burled, and it is uot relig
ious truth scattered over and spread out
over a vast reach of time, but religious
truth flashes projected in the compact form tlmt
light upon soul and rivos its
indifference.
When the religious discourse of the
future arrives iu this laud and iu the
Christian church, the discourse which is to
arouse the world and startle the nations
nnd usher in tho kingdom, it will be a brief
discourse.
Hear It, all theological students, ail ye
just entering upon religious work, all ye
men and women who In Sabbath schools
and other departments are tolling for
Christ nnd the sulvatton of immortals—
brevity, brevity! religious
But I remark also that the
dUcourse of the futuro of which I speak
will he a popular discourse. There are
thoso in these times who speak of a popular
sermon as though there must bosometbing
wrong about it. As these critics are dull
themselves, the world gets the impressiou
that a sermon Christ is good in proportion as it is
stupid. was the most popular
preacher the world ever saw and, eon
sidering the small number of the
world’s population, had the largest au
dienee ever gathered. He never preached
anywhere without making a great
sensation. People rushed out in the wild
erness to hear Him reckless of their phys
ical necessities. So great wa? their anxie
ty to hear Christ that, taking no food with
them, they would have fainted and starved
had not Christ performed a miracle and
fed them. Why did so many people take
tho truth nt Christ’s hands? Becauso they
all understood it. He illustrated His sub
ject by a hen and her chickens, by a bushel
measure, by a handful of salt, by a bird’s
flight and by a lily’s aroma. All the people
knew what He meant, and they flocked to
Him. And when the religious discourse of
the future appears it will not bo Prince
ton-lan, not Bochesterlari, not Andoverian,
not Middletoninn, but Ollvetic—plain,
practical, unique, earnest, comprehensive
of all the woes, wants, sins and sorrows of
an auditory. exhortation discourse
But when that or
does come there will he a thousand gleam
ing scimitors to charge on it. There are in
so many theological seminaries professors
telling young men howto preach, told them- that
selves not knowing how, and I am theological
if a young man in some of our
seminaries says anything quaint or thrill
ing or unique faculty and students fly at
him and set him right and straighten him
out and smooth him down and chop him
off until he says everything just as every
body else says it. Ob, when the future re
ligious discourse of the Christian church ar
rives all the churches of Christ in our great
cities will be thronged! The world wants
spiritual holp. All who have buried their
dead waut comfort. All know themselves
to be mortal and to be immortal, aud they
want t-o hear about the great future. I tell
yon, my friends, if the people of cur great
cities who have had trouble only thought
they could get practical and sympathetic would
help in the Christian church, there York
not bo a street iu Washington or New
or any other city which would bo passable church
on the Sabbath day if there were a
on it, for all the people would proas to
that asylum of meroy, that great house of
comfort and consolation.
A mother with a dead babe iu tier arms
came to the god Siva and asked to have
her child restored to life. The god Siva
wild to her, “You go and got a handful of
mustard seed from a house in which there
has been no sorrow and in which there has
been no death, and I will restore your
child to life.” So tho mother wont out,
and she went from house to house and
from home to home looking for a place
where there had been no sorrow and where
there had been no death, but she found
none. She went buck to tho god Siva and
said: “My mission is a failure. You see, I
haven’t brought the mustard seed. I can t
find a place where there has been no sor
row and no death.” “Oh!” says the god
Siva. “Understand, your others. sorrows We are all no
worse than tho sorrows of
have our griefs, nnd all have our heart
broaks.” world laughs with
“Laugh, and tho you;
Weep, and you woep alone;
For t!:” °l*i earth must borrow its
But has trouble enough of its own.”
We hear a groat deal of dtsmifcltfon now
all over tho land hbout why people do uot
go to church, Some sny it i* because
Christianity is dying out nnd hocauso peo
ple do not' believe in the truth of God »
word, and all that. They are false reasons.
The reason Is because our sermons and ex
hortations are not Interesting and practi
cal aDd helpful. might well tell the whole
Bom# one as
truth on this subject, and so I will tell it.
The religious discourse of tho future, the
gospel sermon to come forth and shako the
nations and lift people eut of darkness,
will bo a popular wrmon, just for the sim
ple reason that it will meet the woes and
the wants and the anxieties of the people.
There are Iu alt our denominations ec
clesiastical mummies sitting around to
frewn upon the fresh youug pulpits of
America to try to awe thear down, to■ cry
out: “Tut, tut, tut! Sensational!' They
stand to-day preaching la ohurehes that
hold a thousand people, and there are a
hundred per ons present, and if they can
not have the world saved in their way it
seems as it they do not want it saved at
till. old of making
I do not know but the way
ministers of tho gospel Is better--a col
legiate education and an apprenticeship of
under the car© and home attention som*
earnest, aged Christian minister, tho young
^
service.
The printing press is to be tho great
agency ot gospel proclamation. It is blgli
time that good men, instead of denouncing
the press, employ it to scatter forth the
gospel of Jesus Christ. cities
The vast majority of people nothing in our but the
do not come to churoh nnd
printed sermon can reach them, unci cull
them to pardon and life and peace and
heaven. all „ the _ village, ...
The time will come when
town and city newspapers will reproduce
the gospel of Jesus Christ, and sermons
preached on the Sabbath will reverberate
all around the world, and, some by type and
some by voice, all nations will be evange
| lUed.
44 Do It and
Stick to It”
If yoa are sick and discouraged <o tdh im
pure blood, catarrh or rheumatism, take
Hood"s Sarsaparilla faithfully and persis
tently, and you •will soon have a cure.
This medicine has cured thousands of
others and it <will do the same for you.
Faithfully taken.
'*
Only Three Canadian Peerages,
There are now three Canadian peer
ages—those of Lord Mouiit-Steplien,
Lord Strathcona, and Baroness Earns
cliffe, the widow of the late Sir John
Macdonald. The two peers are both
Scotsmen, who worked their way up
from the lowest rungs of the ladder.
Lord Mount-Stepheu had only a par
ish school education, and was in his
youth a lierdboy. He* passed from a
drapery shop in Aberdeen to a similar
establishment in St. Paul’s church
yard, London. In his 21st year he
transferred himself to Canada, where
he made a fortune in the woolen trade.
Lord Strathcona. in his-l.Stli year, en
tered the service of the Hudson’s Bay
Company in a very humble capacity,
and worked his way up to the Gov
ernorship and the chief control of that
historical, organization. Iji liis beau
tiful Montreal mnqsion, there is what
is perhaps the finest and most valuable
private picture gallery on the Araeri
can continent. Lord .Strathcona is 80
and Lord Mount-Stephen a decade
younger.
Each package of Ixjtnam Fadeless Die
colors cither ssilk. Wool or Cotton perfectly
at one boiling, bold by ail druggists.
A Business Arrangement.
‘•‘I wonder why Fraulein Amalia always
*n\iles so pleasahtljr at Schmeizfroi, the
drntist?”
“Ob. that,’* because she has got a new set
of tea b on credit, on condition that she
passes his office every day and shows that
she hasn’t pawned them.”
sum/, By writing at ' $40 H
once
for the remarkable offer of tho South's great
est Institution of Practical Business Training,
The Ga.=41a. Easiness College,
Don’t Delay! MACON, GA.
Why take Medicines ?
(Nauseous
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HtDlSESTIQH?
Are you suffering with
KI3NEY or BLADDER TROUBLE?
Are you subject to COLIC, FLATULENCY
or PAINS In the BOWELS ?
Do you sutler from RETENTION or Sl.P
PRESHSION ot IJltlNE?
Do you feel LANGUOR, and DEBILITA
TED in the morning?
WOLFE'S
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is M handsomer All hand-painted. lamp No
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€23 915111
Those Awfully Long Words.
At 1 o’clock A. M. the night editor
shouted through the speaking tube to
the man in the telegraph room whose
business it was to supervise the dis
patches from the seat of war in the
Transvaal and to act as custodian of
the Dutch dictionary:
“Glubbings!”
“Ay, ay.”
“That last dispatch from Pretoria
will have to be cut. It’s half a column
too long. Come up here and take out a
couple of words!”—Chicago Tribune,
A Foolish Fad.
The fashion of men wearing
lets is on the increase. The Prince of
Wales is said to wear a . bangle „ . which , . . |
once belonged to Maxmilian, Emperor
Mexico. The Duke of Saxe-Coburg
Is also accredited with wearing a gold j
bracelet, while the late Duke of Al- ;
b an y j s sa id to have worn one for luck, i
m m PR Hi
m
9 1 9 9 I 9
4 t
T% IU4 v-J ■;. jgjgl
“ I»a Creole ’’ Hair Restorer is a Perfect Dressing ami Restorer. Price $1.00.
CURES WHERtALLELSET ails. Uso _
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good.
In time. Sold by druggists.
■NS-UWlfi’
To Breathe Systematically'
The supplying of oxygon Is not the
only function, although It is the most
direct nnd vital one, of proper breath
ing. A very thorough expansion
of the chest insures the proper filling
of the lungs with nir, dilates nil the
minute air cells, especially those at
the summits of the lungs, where mo
lion is least and where the seeds of
consumptlou are usudlly first planted,
and Increases the circulation of the
blood throughout all parts of these or
gans.
Still another effect of proper breath
ing is a beautifying one. The chest is
broadened, the shoulders are thrown
back, the figure is erect and the car
riage graceful.
Perfect breathing is not natural to
most men and women of sedentary oc
cupation nnd indoor life. Like all good
things, It must be worked for; and the
work must be persevered in until full
and deep respiration has become a
habit. .
The means of attaining this object
are various and .canuot be recounted
here; but they are all oased upon the
principle of removing permanently
every obstacle to the free entrance of
air into' the lungs.—Youth’s Com
panion.
From Across the Continent.
“I received the Tetterine couple of
days ago. The few applications I’ve
m(t( | e convince me that I have at last
f Q nud in this fine remedy a cure for
Eczema. I can sell a few boxes to my
friends. What discount ou one
Let me know at once. B. C. Bingley,
707 Market street, San Francisco,
Cal.” At druggists or by mail for 50
cents by J. T. Shuptriue.
The Boer and His Rifle.
In the war of 1S79-80 the Boers dis
played deadly accuracy with the rifle,
but their weapon then was very dif
ferent from the arm used at Dundee.
The rifle of twenty years ago was
built on tlie lines of the British Marti
ni. It was a hammerless arm of about
nine pounds weight, with a 30-inch
half-octagon barrel and a shotgun butt
stock. The calibre was .45, with a
bullet weighing from 405 to 450 grains.
The powder charge was 00 grains in
a brass drawn cartridge case, The
rifle was sighted up to 2,000 yards. Be
sides the usual stationary sight it had a
reversible front—that is, a sight capa
ble of being used as an ordinary front
sight, and by a single motion it was
changed into a fine pinhead sight cov
ered with a ring to keep it from being
knocked off. On an occasion where
particularly fine shooting was
ed this front globe was further cover
ed with a ...tobUNUmp.a hood, Blind
ing it perfectly. The usual standing
rear or fixed sights were on the bar
rel, while on the gun’s grip was a
turndown peep that was regulated by
a side screw to an elevation Of 2,000
yards. Tho neon and irlobe were
never used under 700 or 800 yards.
A Weed Garzen,
It is remarkable how many really
beautiful flowers are discarded be
cause ordinarily they are classed as
weeds. A woman who had plenty of
land and a taste for experimenting
made a “weed garden” this year which
is a great success. She doesn't know
the names of all the outcasts she has
gathered in, but she noticed last year
all the wild things that grew and flow
ered neglected by the wayskle, and
transplanted’ those that appealed to
her most strongly.
“The main reason,” she urges, “that
they attract so little notice whemgrow
ing wild Is that they aie not massed
and arranged as we place cultivated
flowers to get the best effect. Now,
that is what I have done. A wild
flower, or a weed, as it is scornfully
termed, that is too fragile to be
thought much of will make a delicate,
feathery mass which will be vastly
admired when planted together by the
score or more.”
Even such a despised thing as the
common ragweed is worthy of admira
tion if you happen to look at it aright,
and it is finely effective as foliage for
cut flowers.
This weed gardener has provided for
a succession of blossoms from violets
and dandelions to golden rod and late
fall grasses, and nothing has repaid
rte gardener-* efforts with better re
salts than these flbsolutely free tow
crs.—Boston Herald.
He Was His Own Dentist.
A Foxcraft man who was suffering
from a toothache while “seven miles
from a dentist,” attended to the aching
molar himself by tying a fish line
around it, fastening the other end of
tlie lino to a hook in the post of the
piazza and sitting down quickly. This
reminds a Hath man of a neighbor
of his who always extracted iris own
teeth. If an upper one he tied a string
around it, with a heavy weight at tho
other end of the line, mounted to the
haymow and dropped tho stone. If a
lower tooth was the one aching, he
stood on tlie floor and threw the
n-eight up over a door.—Lewiston , (Me.) „
Journal.
__
Wanted
necessary. For particulars Bedford address Pocahontas
Tobacco Works Co , ( lty, Vu.
He Was Slightly Elevated.
“I’m going to keep this up ail day.”
said the persevering aeronaut, as he
threw out another sandbag.—New
York Press.
_
Extraordinrry Flights of Bird*.
It is said that the bobolink* which
rear their young on the shores of Lake
Winnipeg, Canada, nnd go to Cuba
and Torto Kieo to spend the winter,
iwiee traverse a distance exceeding
.’,800 miles, or more than a fifth of
he circumference of our earth each
year, The kingbird lays Its eggs as
far north ns the 571 h degree of lntl
tude, nnd is found In the winter in
; South America. The biennial pilgrim
j mages of the little redstnr exceed 3,000
miles and the tiny hummingbird 2 , 000 .
Tnrtary Taste.
In Tnrtary oplous, leeks nnd garlic
are regarded as perfumes. A Tnrtary
lady will make herself agreeable by
nibbing a piece of freshly-cut onion on
her hands and over her countenance.
Electrlr|ty for Hi'hIii,
A European sciential claim* to hire discov
ered an nppnrntus which will stimulate the
brain It has been tried on school ,boy* f nud
consists of an eloctrlb hand. While eclontlsts
have been busy Inventing uuimtural ways
of making the brain work, ILste'.ter’s Stom
ach Bitters hns for fifty y'enr* lieen* doing It
naturally. It nnd cures builds dyspepsia >and. Invigorates *11 etom
ach troubles up and
the entire system. There is nothing "Just us
good.” _,
Nearly as Good.
“My good woman,” said the clergyman to
the vorely tried matron; “did ydu ever try
iieapiug coals. o£ lire ou your husband's
'“No. your riverence. Ot’vo thrown a
lighted lamp at him once or twice.”
How’s This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
!!?ll ; sO?:ai f rhTun – “’* t i * tktM by
P ,1. ctiRNKY A Co , Props.. Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known -p. J. Che.
noy for the last 15 years, nnd believe him per
fectly honorable in all business trahsAetlone
and financially able to carry out dot obliga
tion ntRde by their firm.
West – Ihuax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
Ohio.
Wai.pino, K inn an – Marvin, Wholesale
Hall’s Druggists. Toledo, Ohio.
Catarrh Ouro is taken Internally, not
ing directly tly.cn tho blood end murone sur
faces of the system. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold
by all Druggists. Testimonials Ires.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
Pivo’s Cure cured me o f a Throat nnd Luny
trouble Huntington, of three lad., years’ Nov. 12, standing.— 1894. E. Cai>y,
“When Greek joins Greek, theft is the tnc
of war," was written by Nathaniel Lee in 1502
i
vU
vs* e-AS-S'
– WM / w,
w
j j Piiti
headache. Food doesn . tdl-
1 yZ
| j liverl Ayer’s Pills are liver pill*,
j ' j 1 easy and safe. They cure dy 3 pep
sia, biliousness. 25c. All Druggists.
| i ! _ brown "Want"your~moustachtTor""board'a or rich black ? Then bca uttfuT
me
BUCKINGHAM’S DYE (MS,
N uu LjjVVi
Barter's 4%.... A Bring children ink it.
f your up on
THE VERY BEST
$1.50 MEN’S DRESS SHOE
ON THE MARKET,
Our flutual Friend,
Red Seal ( ni tons.
f| en ’g Sizes $ 1 - 50 .
^°^ " S j ! ,^f [ n ^LH,y^ne*of thFliest
rc anU inlhis town-ask for
Ihenn Haflc only by
J. F\. Atlanta, StiOlZ- (50.
ga.
ITALITY low, do
bill tat Ml.
or eharass
ed f r o in,
any cause
CUBED by successful]y J)R. KLINK’S since lt>71.
TONIC. Used
FREE! $1 TRIAL BOTTLE.
Pationts paying oxprwwago only o* OtUvcry.
Consultation, peraonal or by KMSk
vnI ii ablo Trcatlao FBKB. Oil. It. It.
l.NS’mvrii, tlal Srtb Street, FUlatclyMo, I*.
THIS PAPER In writing to adver
tisers. ANU 90-48
' Keep
away from the shop
- ------ --HOCK HILL” ZVGGIE8 are “A Little Higher
in Price, Ent—” they stand up, look well, and
above nil, keep away from the shop Only
a dollar or so higher then cheap work. Why not use
them when this is theewe?
A S«e or writo rSSriMrt BUGGY C9
’
m
m 45
mm I
m CvN
SUCCESSFUL SHOOTERS SHOOT
m. WINCHESTER
v Rides. Repeating Shotguns. Ammunition –nd
( Loaded Shotgun Shells. Winchester guns and
V ammunition are the standard of the world, but
P they do not cost any more than poorer makes.
I It. ^ All FREE reliable dealers Send sell and Winchester address goods. postal for 156
: name on a
page Illustrated Catalogue describing all the guns and
V ammunition made by the
WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS C0„
«/aHC0LN,N %,l 176 WINCHESTER AYE,, NEW HAVEN, GONff.
«*•#
Sick Women Advised to Seek
Advice of Mrs. Pinkham.
[L*rr*n to mm. rixxiiAu so. w, 8 oj]
*‘I Had inflammation and falling
of the womb, tad inflammation of
ovariea, and wa* in groat pain. I took
medicine prescribed by a physician,
but it did mo no good. At Inst I heard
of Lydia IS. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- I
pound, and after using it faithfully
am thankful to Bay I am a well women.
I would advise all suffering women to
seek ndvioo of Mrs. Pinkham.”— Mbs.
G. H. Cjiapfbli,, Grant l’juut, 111.
“ For several years my health was
miserable. I suffered the most dread
ful pain*, and was almost on the verge
of insanity. I consulted one of the
best physioians in New York, and he
pronounced my disease a fibroid tumor,
advising an operation without delay,
saying that it was my only chance for
life. Other doctors proscribed strong
and violent medicine, and one said 1
was Incurable, another told mo my
only salvation was galvanic batteries,
which I tried, but nothing relieved me.
One day a friend called and begged me
to try Lydia E. Finkham’s Vegetable
Compound. I began its use and took
Bevoral bottles. From the very first
bottle there was. a wonderful change
.for the hotter. The tumor lias disap
pcared entirely and my old spirits have
returned. I heartily recommend your
medicine to all suffering women.”—
MRS. Van Cl.LFT, 416 SaUNDKRS AVS.,
ClTY HEIGHTS, N. J.
A New Way.
Beggar (to gontlemiU)—“Do you happen,
sir, to have lost your purse?” prickets)—‘Nor’
. Gent (feeling In his alittla
assistance?" Beggar—‘“i hen can you )et jne have
mmrnm The best reme'dy for
4°^ n
Consumption. Cures
a V 8* IJ D Coughs, Colds, Grippe,
Bronchitis, Hoarse
* ties*. Asthma, Whooping- results.
cough, Croup. Small Constipation. tlosvs; quick, Trial sure lo/o'
nr. £1act I'dts curt , sc.
lalsljy 4 Company,
39 S. ISroud St., Atlanta, Ga.
Engines and Boilers
Steam Water Heater*, Steam Pumps and
Penbeitliy Injector*.
V ft >4
Manufacturers) and Dealers in
53 ^ -W MILLS,
Corn Mills, Feed Mills, Cotton Giti Machin
ery and Grain Separators.
SOLID and INSERTED Saws, Saw Teeth and
l ocks, KniRlit’s Patent Dogs, Birdsall Saw
Mill and Engine Kepairs, of Mill Governor*, Grate Price
liars and a full of line guaranteed. Supplies. Catalogue
nnd quality goods
fl ee by mentioning this paper.
W. L. DOUGLAS
S 3 – 3.50 SHOES jjft’gg
/ra fir\ Worth with $4 other to $6 makes. compared
t > Indorsed by over
The 1,000,000 (fenuine have wearers. W 1 -1 %
Douglas’ name and price - JraKI -kA 7 '
-jg. stamped on bottom. TaUqgSI
' 3B.no cOj
u, substitute claimed to
good. Your deal / s
““should keep them — ir A
not, we will send a paii
on kind receipt of eather, of price. she, State and width, ’‘i^ plain
or
cap toe. Catalogue C free.
W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton, Mass.
ASK Your Dealer
-FOR
W m
HP c.
TOBACCO
It’s no Joke,
YOU GET THE VALUE IN THE GOODS.
The Best Chew on the Market to-day.