Newspaper Page Text
Selfish Men.
“So her husband Is a caterer.”
“Yes; he caters to almost every’
thing but her pleasure.”—Philadelphia
Bulletin. _ 11
Loyalty to His Employer.
That young man who consentad to have a
portion of his blood lei ont to save his em
ployer, set a remarkable example of heroism.
The incident shows what power there in in
good blood. blood, The* and is only that ono natural way
to get good is from the gtom
ach. It the stomach newts assistance, try
Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters. This wonder
ful constipation, medicine and ouros makes ilyapensia, rich indigestion,
rod blood.
The largest enclosure of deer is said to
bo the royal park in Copenhagen, 4200
acres.
Sec advt. of Smithdeal’s Business College
Th.Mind m.n doWt bcfcvo to iovc.t
fust sigh .
f
a
“ I first used 1848. Ayer’s Since Sarsaparilla then I j.
in the fall of y §
have taken it every spring as a 2
blood-purifying medicine.” and nerve
strengthening S. T. Jones, Wichita, Kans. M 'j
If you feel run down,
are easily tired, if your
nerves are weak and your
blood is thin, then begin
to take the good old stand
ard Ayer’s family Sarsaparilla. medicine, |
It’s a regular nerve I
lifter, a perfect blood |
builder. $ 1.09 a bottle. Alt druggists.
Ask your doctor what ho thinks of Ayor'a
old Sarsaparilla. family medicine. He knows Follow all about his advice this grand and [,j H
we will he satisfied. Lowell, b,
J. C. ATEtt Co., Mass.
l "...
I LlVer I u . j-i.... III25
ET
That’s what you need; some
thing – to cure your ' bilious-
8nd give good t
ness you Pi11c 3
Airroctinn UlgCStlOn. /V\ Auer’e CF S rills arc nrp
liver * pills. They cure con
Stipation and i » biliousness, ...
C' uentiy r lovotiiro laxative. 25c.
All druggists.
Want your moustache or beard a beautiful
brown or rich black ? Then use
BUCKINGHAM'S DYEKljau
50 cts. of Druggists, or R.P. Hall – Co., Nashua, N. H.
? I For More Tiian a Quarter of a Century 9
The reputation of W. L. v,v,
and 83.50 shoes for j_ jj
theS reputation es t
prices. This excellent has
been won by merit alone. W- L. Douglas
shoes have to give better satisfaction than
other $3.00 and§3.50 shoes because bis
reputation for tha best $3.(X) and $3.50
byways receives bee™ac?d value so for high iiis .that money the
wearer more $3.50
in the W. L. Douglas $3.00 and
shoes than he can get elsewhere.
W.D. Douglas sells more $3.00 and¥3.50
shoes than any other two manufacturers.
W. L. Douglas S4.00 Gilt Edge Line
cannot be equalled at any price. 'VMy..\V
.•,** $
---- •—J: ,-A
r -- te*.
gfegai 1
wm
::
3 !;
i
i;
j A
Wf m
m wkII
V
■■
•:'(
W. L. Qoutfas $S.®13 *nd $3.50
aftoaa ere made of the same high
leothopa u–od h » $5 and $Q
shoos and fust as 300 dm
Sold by the best shoe dealers everywhere.
Insist upon having W. h. Donglan shoes
with name and price stamped on bottom.
How to Order by 5 . 6 ml If \V. I „ Douglas
shoet are not Aold In your town, send order direct to
factory. SJioes «ent anywhere on receipt of price and
,.T 26 cte. additional for carriage. make My
custom department will yon a
» —pair that will equal $6 and 86 cus
vS\ tom made Take shoes, measurements in style, fit and of
wear. shown model; state
M * o - jf foot as on size andwidth
stylo desired; plain
■3 v usually worn; heavy, med- or
cap toe; light soles.
ium or guaranteed.
^ A fit
i'ry a pair.
Vd i ' 1 ' ' *4^.' . TSli
fktl Color Kyclets used. ilficws#
Catalogfroe. W". Is. Brocktou,
IpvOO (r. rr 1 *rv O $ 1500 A a , YtAK ,r- , i .
Wc want intelligent Men and Women as
Traveling salary Representatives or I.ocal Managers;
$900 to *.1500 a year and all expenses,
according to experience and ability. We also
want local representatives ; salary $9 to a
■week andcotuBiisskm, depending upon the time
devoted, bend stamp for full particulars and
Slate position prefers cl. Address, Dept. B.
the BEEE COMPANY.- Philadelphia, Pa.
VI Tfl 1 D ClCA STLiR i lUll 111
v
MADE BY AGENTS Elegant Premiums Free.
Artaress SCOTT REMEDY t o., Louisville, Kt.
When you write mention tUis paper.
-
Red Ripasr irr'—■ May Press
vs.., , , , lsuo.’
abU Fair, Used
ana reoouunen'iea by O-'orgia State prison farm.
V? 1 **’ .P®? ho u ,T' PuUy «r" iraQte8j -
Silvers iliioS ''–■ Vo'., ,
ileleim, Georgia,
“The fiancecbn t «i»de
McILHENNY’S TABASCO, __U
SB CUBE,,. Sff
50
...w,a,2rai®! m
- » ___j cubes where WMa ggatgmfl3 all else RAa^i.a.2%^«a fails. fca
I 8 Best _ in Cough ti Syrup. Sold bv Tastes druggists. Good. „ Use Rn
me.
REV. DR. TALMAGE.
_
the Eminent Divine’s Sunday Dis
! „ course. ,
SubJectiNothlngls Insignificant— Instances
of on What a Slondef Thread Great Be
I •ulta lliiug—A Little Thing May Decide
Your Fate— 1 Tlie Importance of Trifles.
tCopyright 1901. i
*' ASHIXGTON, D. C.—A Bible incident
n °t often noticed is here used by l)t'. TtU
mage to set forth practical and beautiful
truth; “Through text, II. Corinthians xi, 33, let
[ a window in a basket Was I
down by the wall.”
j hill, Sermons on Paul in jail, Paul on Mars
Paul in the shipwreck, Paul before
the sanhedrin, Paul before Felix, are
plentiful, basket. but in my text wo have Paul in
a
j | eye of the East,” sometimes Jo ailed the “a
pearl distinguished surrounded by emeralds, at one
! time for swords of the best
material called Damascus blades and iu>
j holstery A horseman of richest of the fabric called of Snul damask. riding
\ name
toward this city had been thrown from
the saddle. The horse had dropped under
a flash from the sky which at the same
lime w.as so bright it blinded the rider for
many injured days, his and I think so permanently of
: vision became eyesight the that this defect flesh he
1 ; thorn in the
afterward speaks of. He started for Da
| mascus that hard to fall butcher from Christians, his horse he but after
I was a
changed man and preached Christ in Da
mascus till the city was shaken to its
foundation.
The mayor gives authority for his ar
rest, and the popular cry is, “Kill him,
kill him!” The city is surrounded by a
the high police wall, and lest the pates are watched by
the Cilician preacher es
j ! cape. wall, and Many their of the houses are built on the
balconies projected clear
over and hovered above the gardens out
side. It was customary to lower baskets
out of these balconies and pull up fruits
i | and flowers from the gardens. To this
Sinai day visitors lifted at the monastery of
are and let do\vn in baskets.
Detectives prowled around from house to
house looking for Paul, but his
hid him now in one place, now in another.
He is no coward, as fifty incidents in his
life demonstrate, but he feels his work is
not done yet, and so he evades assassina
tion. “Is that preacher here?” the
that ing mob fanatic shout here?” at the one police house shout door. “Is
at
other house door. Sometimes on the
j street of clinched incognito fists, he and passes sometimes through he a
himself on the house top. At last the
furiate populace get on sure track of
Of whose home –SS– reaches the
wall. Here he is! Here he i^! oyer The vo
ciferation and blasphemy and howling
the Pursuers are at the front door.
break in. “Fetch out that prospelizer
j us ha r*„i iis „J? ead on the cit -y e at
I Where Providentially is . he? The emergency was terri
j ole. there was a good
! I stout basket in the house. Paul’s friends
\ fasten a rope to the basket. Paul steps
j into it. The backet is lifted to the edge
| of the balcony on the wall, and then while
Paul holds the rope with both hands his
friends lower away carefully and
ly, farther slowly but surely, farther down and the
j earth and down, the until the basket strikes
and alone apostle steps out and
j i starts on that famous
ary tour the story of which has astonished
earth and heaven. Appropriate entry in
! Paul’s diary of travels: “Through a
! dow in a basket was I let down by the
, j observe first on what a slender
great results hang. The ropemakers
twisted that cord fastened to that
mg basket never knew how much
depend been upon the strength of it. How if
had broken and the apostle’s
had been dashed out? What would
become of the Christian Church? All
magnificent missionary work in Pamphv
Oappadocia, CTaJatia, Macedonia, would
never have been accomplished. All
writings and enchanting that make up of.the so
a part t New
“SK m nt 6 woll u ° ulcl i.i nevcr _ htue n . v D .e en „ written. _. rit) . VT ,
The story of resurrection would
nave been so gloriously told as he told it.
T1 f -ample of heroic and
endurance at Phnippi. in the
ncan his Euroclydon, beheading would under flagellation have
at not.
| the that courage holding of 10,000 that martyrdoms. basket, how much
depended rope
on it! So again and again
1 results have hung on slender
stances.
Did ever ship of many thousand tons
crossing the sea have such an important
passenger as had once a bekt of leaves
from taifrail to stern only three or, four
feet, the vessel made waterproof by a coat
of bitumen and floating on the Nile with
the infant lawgiver of the Jews on board?
What if some crocodile should crunch it?
What if some of the cattle wading in for
a drink should sink it?
Vessels of war sometimes carry forty
guns looking through the portholes, ready the
to open battle. But the tiny craft on
Nile seems to be armed with all the guns
of thunder that bombarded Sinai at the
lawgiving. On how fragile a craft sailed
how much of historical Epworth, importance! England, is
The parsonage at
on fire in the night, and the father rushed
through the hallway for the rescue of his
children. Seven children are out and safe
Oil uie ground, but one remains in the
consu ming building. That one awakes
and, finding his bed oh fire and the build
ing crumbling, comes to the window, and
two peasants make a ladder of their bod
ies, one peasant standing on the shoulder
of the other, and down the human ladder
the boy descends—John Wesley.
If you ladder would know how much ask depended the mill
on that of peasants,
ions of Methodists on both sides of fdie
sea. {he Ask their mission stations all around
sands world. already Ask ascended their hundreds to join their of thou- foun
der, who would have perished but for the
living stairs English of peasants’ ship stopped shoulders. Pitcairn
An at
Island, and right in the midst of surround
ing cannibalism and squalor the passen- of
gers discovered u Christian colony
churches and schools and beautiful homes
and highest style of religion and civiliv-a
tion. For fifty years no missionary and
no Christian influence had landed there.
heathendom? Why ^his oasis Sixty of light years'before amid a desert ship of
and a
had met disaster, anything one of the sailors,
unable and to save took else, Bible went which to his his
trunk out a
mother the Bible had held placed in his there teeth, and the swam book ashore,
was
read on all sides until the rough and vi
cious church population started, were and evangelized, enlightened and a
was an
commonwealth established and the world’s
history has no more brilliant page than
that which tells of the transformation of
a nation by one book. It aid not seem of
much importance whether the sailor con
tinued to hold the book in his teeth or
i e t jt fall in the breaker?, but upon that
small circumstance depended what mighty
results?
Practical inference: There are no insig
nificances in life. The minutest thing is
part infinitesimals; of a magnitude. great Infinity things is made up
of things. Bethlehem an aggrega
tion of small manger
pulling on a star in the Eastern sky. One
book in a drenched sailor’s mouth One the
evangelization of a a multitude. multitude. One boat boat
of .c papyrus _______ on „„ the Ah. un. Nile freighted with «,ou
events "for all ages. let The fafe of Christen
dom in a basket down from a window
on the wall. What you do, do well. If
you make a rope, make it strong and true,
for von know not how much may fashion depend
on your workmanship. If you know a
boat, let it be waterproof, for you
not who may sail in it. If you put a Bible
in the trunk of your boy as lie goes from
home, let it be remembered in your far-reach- pray
ers, for it may have a mission sailor as earned
ing as the book which the
in his teeth to the Pitcatrn beach.
The lilaincst man’s life is au island be
tween two eternities—eternity shoulders, eternity phst rip- to
pling against his Ihe casual, tlm
come touching his brow. merely happened
accidental, that which
so, are parts of a great plan, and the rope
that lets the fugitive apostle from the Da
mascus wall is the cablb that holds to its
mooring the ship of the church ui the
storm of the centuries. unrecognized and
Again, notice nnro
corded service. Who spun that rope?
Who tied it to the basket? Who steadied
the illustrious preacher as he stepped into
it? Who relaxed not a muscle of the arm
or dismissed an anxious look from Ins
face uptil the basket touched the ground cargo?
and 'discharged fts magnificent has
Not one of their names come to us,
hut there was no work done that day m
Damascus or in all earth compared with
the importance of their work. M hat if
they had in their agitation tied a knot
that could slip? What if the sound of
the 1110 b at the door had led them to say,
“Paul must take care of himself and w.e
will take care of ourselves?” _ No, no! did
They held the rope and in doing so
more for the Christian church than any
thousand of us will ever accomplish. of their But
God knows anil has made record
undertaking. And they know.
How exultant they must have felt when
they rend his letters to the ltomans. to
the Corinthians, to the Galatians, to the
Ephesians, to the I’hilippians, to the Co
lossians, to the Thcssalonians, and when
they heard how he walked out of the prison, door
with the earthquake unlocking
for him, and took command of the Alex
andrian corn ship when the sailors were
nearly scared to death and preached off his a
sermon tliat nearly shook Felix
judgment seat ! I hear the men and wom
en who helped him down through the win
dow and over the wall talking in private glad I
over the matter and saying: “How
am that we effected that rescue! In com
ing times others may get the glory of
Paul’s work, but no one shall rob us of
the satisfaction of knowing that we held
the rope.” expected
Once for thirty-six hours the bottom we of the
every moment to go to
ocean. The waves struck through the hold the
skylights and rushed down into
of the ship and hissed against the boilers.
It was an awful time, but by the blessing
of God and the faithfulness of the men in
charge we came out of the cyclone, and
we arrived at home. Each one before
leaving the ship thanked Captain An
drews. I do not think there was a man
or woman that went off that ship without
thanking Captain Andrews, and when
years after I neard of his death I was im
pelled to write a letter of condolence to
his family in Liverpool. Everybody rec- the
ognized the goodness, the courage,
kindness of Captain Andrews', thanked but it oc
curs to me now that we never the
engineer. He stood away down in the
darkness amid the hissing thanked furnaces, doing
his whole dutv. Nobody the en
gineer. but God recognized his heroism
and his continuance and his fidelity, and
there will be just as high reward for the
engineer, who worked out of sight, as for
the captain, who stood on' the bridge of
the ship in the midst of the howling tem
pest. Come, let right and accost
those the us go up thrones.
on circle of heavenly
million Surely they must Surely have they killed in have battle been a
men. muBt
buried with all the cathedrals sounding a
dirge and all the towers of all the cities
tolling the national grief. Who art thou,
mighty one of heaven? “I lived by choice
the unmarried daughter of an hfunble
home that I might take care of my with- par
ents in their old age, and I endured
out complaint all their querulousness and
administered to £!1 their wants for twenty
years.” Let us pass on round the circle
of thrones. Who art thou, mighty one of
heaven? “I was for thirty-five years a
Christian invalid and suffered all the
while, occasionally writing-a note of sym
general pathy for confidant those worse of off than those I, who and was had
all
enough trouble, and make once in awhile I was strong
to a garment for that poor
family in the back lane.” Pass on to an
other throne. Who art thou, mighty raised one
of heaven? “I was the mother who and
a whole family of children for God,
they are out in the world Christian mer
chants, and Christian I have meeKanica, reward Christian for all
wives, had full circle of
my toil.” Let ns pass on in the
thrones. “I had a Sabbath-school class, and
and they were always on my heart,
they all entered the kingdom of God, and
I am waiting for their arrival.” But who
art thou, mightv one of heaven, on this
other throne? ,! In time of bitter persecu
tion I owned ft hoiM: in Damasdus, ft
house Christ on the wall. A man who preached street,
was hounded from street to and
and I hid him from the assassins,
when I found them breaking into my
house and I could no longer keep him safe
ly. I advised him to flee for his dear life,
and a basket was let down over the wall
with the maltreated man in it, and I was
one who helped hold the rope.” And I
said, “Is that all?” And he answered,
‘"That is all.” And while I was lost in
amazement I heard a strong voice that
sounded as though it might once nave
been hoarse from many exposures and
triumohant as though it might have be
longed “Not to one mightv, of tWe martyrs, and noble, it said,
many God not many are
called, but hath chosen the weak
which things of the world to confound base the things the
are mighty, nnd things of
world and things which are despised hath
God chosen; yea, and things which are
that not to bring flesh should to naught glory things which are,
no in His presence.
And I looked to see from whence the
voice who had came, said, and, “Through lo, it was the very in one
a window A
basket was I let down by the wall!”
Henceforth think of nothing as insig
all. nificant. Cunatder A little thing mav from decide England your
A put out
for New York. It was well equipped, but
in Putting up a stove in the pilot box ft
nail was driven too near the compass.
You know how that nail would affect the
compass. The ship’s officers, deceived by
that distracted compass, put the ship 200
miles off her right course and suddenly
the man on the lookout cried, “I/uid
ho!” and the ship was halted on Nan
tucket shoals. A sixpenny nail came
hold near wrecking destinies. a Cunarder. Small rope®
A minister mighty seated in Boston at his table,
lacking head and ft word, puts his hand behind hie
tilts back and bis chair to think,
and the ceiling' falls crushes the table
and would have crushed him.
A minister in Jamaica at night by the
kept light from of an insect called the candle fly ip
dred feet. stepping F. over Robertson, a precipice a hun- cele
W. the
brated Enj^ish clergyman, said that he
entered the ministry from a train of cir
cumstances started by the barking of ft
dog.
Had the wind blown one way oji a oer
tain day the Spanish Inquisition would
have been established iij England, but it
blew the other way, and that dropped
the accursed institution, with seventv-five
tons of shipping, to the bottom of the
rocks. sea or flung the splintered logs on the
mine. Nothing Three unimportant in yonr life or
side of the figure naughts placed on the right
and six naughts one the make right a thousand, the
figure on side of
placed one the a million, right and our nothingness
on side may be augmen
tation illimitable. All the ages of time
and eternity affected by the basket let '
down from a Damascus balconv.
SURCERY WITH A MATCH.
Painless Operation That Surprised a Clerk
in a Book Shop.
An aged, well-dressed man, with
white side whiskers and a general ap
pearance of substantial prosperity and
eminent respectability, stepped into the
retail store on Fifth avenue of a book
publisher tke other day aud asked »me
of the young clerks in a confidential
undertone:
“Have you a match?”
“Certainly, sir,” replied the young
man, producing a handful of lucifers
from his vest pocket, "but you will per
mit me to say that it is against the
rules to smoke in this shop.”
“Oh, that’s all right,” replied the old
gentleman, amiably, "I never smoke.”
With that he began to fumble in his
pockets. Not finding what he wanted,
lie asked the clerk for the loan of a
knife. Then he lit the match, blew it
out immediately and began to sharpen
the burned end into a point.
“Ah, I see you need a toothpick,” re
marked the clerk, as he watched the
whittling process. reply, but
The old gentleman made no
when he had put a nice point to the
match he again spoke.
“Perhaps,” he said, “you have a quiet
place where I could sit down for a few
moments without being observed?”
The clerk, wondering what the old
gentleman might ask for nexj, politely
led the w'ay to a corner of the store
fitted with easy chairs for the benefit
of such patrons of the firm as might
want to glance over a book before buy
ing it. The old gentleman sat down
and without a moment’s hesitation roll
ed up the left leg of his trousers to a
poin' above the knee. Then, using the
back of tlie knife as a hammer, with
a few well-directed blows he drove the
n atch into his knee. Then, readjust
ing his trousers, he handed the knife
back to the astonished young man and
said:
"I am very much obliged to you. You
ste I have a wooden leg, and one of the
pins holding it together fell out. The
match will do very nicely until I can
get home. If you happen to be over in
Newark and have anything the matter
with your leg, just step into my office
and I shall be glad t<? assist you.”
Then, as he handed the clerk a card
bearing the name of a prominent finan
cier in Newark, he smiled, bowed po
litely and walked out.— Ncvj York
Times. >
STEADILY OCCUPIED.
“It has been said that millionaires are
most unhappy through having nothing to
occupy their minds, but my friend. Der
rick D’Oily has not found himself lack
ing an occupation since he became rich.”
“No?”
“No; he is trying to get next’to society
ways, and after making a string of
blunders one day, lie spends the done.” next
wondering what he ought to have
—San Francisco Bulletin.
TALLULAH FALLS EXPOSITION
One Fare Round Trip From All Points
In Georgia
Account Blue Bidge and Tailul-in Falls
Exposition Sept. 17th, 18th and 19th. For
Information apply to B. R. ticket agent or
W. S. Erwin, Secretary, Tallulah Falls, Ga.
A single American firm has rented six
teen shops in Vienna, Austria, to sell
Yankee-made ahoes.
PuTXi.it FAim.Bss Dteh do not spot, streak
or (fire your goods drugjjfots. an unevenly dyed appear
ance. Sol d by all
_
Only 116 passengers on British ships
last year lost their lives through ship
wreck.
A horse drawing day light for loads can average
twenty miles a twenty years.
How’s Thin!
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any case of Catarrh that wsfinot be cured by
Hull’s Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Chsxey 4 Co., Props., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Che
ney for the last 15 years, and believe him per
fectly honorable in all business transactions
and financially able to carry out any obliga
tion made by their firm.
West <fc Tbuax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
Ohio.
Waldixo, Kixsax – Makvin, Wholesale
Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. internally,
Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken act
ing directly upon the blood and muoous sur
faces of the system, price, 75c. por bottle.
Bold by all Druggists. Testimonials free.
Hall's Family Pill* arc the befet.
Germany has 34,000 friendly societies
and France clubs, the United Kingdom, 22,000;
only 8000.
Beat For lbs Bowels.
Ko matter what alls yon, lieadoeh/i te a
eonoer, you will never got well until yoqr
Bbwels aro put right. Cabcahhts help produce nature,
*uro you without a gripe or pain, Just 10
easy natural movement*, cost you Cas
cents to start getting your health book.
cabeth Gandy Cathartic, the genuine, put up
tn metal boxes, every tablet has C. C. C.
stamped on it. Beware of imitations.
President Harper announces that the
University tablish of Cnicngo lias begun to es
preparatory schools in Europe.
Are Yonr Byes Weak or Sore?
If so, use J no. R. Dinkey’s Old Reliable Eye
water. It will clear and soothe the sorest eye.
Don’t hurt—feels K°od. 25 cts Dickey Drug Co.,
Bristol. Teen.
Klondike’s gold output for the year es
timated at 82Qj0flDJ)00.
See advertisement of KK-M Catarrh r.uro In
another column - the best remedy made.
Herman ELegan, of St. Louis, Mo., baa
eonstrooted -a Turkish bath house to lie
run as a trolley ear.
FITS permanen fly cured. No fits or nervous
ness after frrsi day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer. 2 trial bottle and treatise froo
Dr. R. H. gijye, Ltd., m Arch 8t„ Philo. Pa
In one sense of the word a Chinese
ktundtqwnan is a man of iron.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup forehfldrftn
teething, soften the gums, reduces inflamma
tkm,–na.r8 pain, cures wind colic. 25o a bottle
The population of Norway is about
2,200,000 soul*.
Piso’s Cure is the best medicine wo ever used
for all affections of throat and lungB.—Wii,
O. Exusuet, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10,1900.
The German army includes more than
yiJKX) musicians.
A Chance For Carnegie.
“It’s wonderful nowadays how much
money Is given away to the utterly
helpless and deserving."
“Isn't it? It wouldn’t be surprising
if some one endowed the Democratic
party.”
Reason For Rejoicing. |
Willis—You seem to have a good
opinion of the faith cure.
Wallace—Well, why shouldn’t I? It
cured me of the patent medicine habit.
0 VO.
Is the oldest and only business college in Va. own*
ing Ladies its building—a – gentlemen. grand new one. No vacations.
Typewriting, Penmanship, Bookkeeping,Shorthand, Telegraphy, –c.
“ Leading business college south of the Potomac
river.” — Pnila. Stenographer. Address,
G. M. Smithdenl. President. Richmond. Va.
CURES CATARRH, HAY 1-EVER,
ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS
AND COLDS.
The EE-M Catarrh Cure
A pleasant smoking preparation which posi
tively cures these diseases. The greatest med
ical discovery of the age. Warranted to euro
Catarrh and tUo only known positive remedy
for Hay Fever—purely vegetable. Smokers of
tobacco will And this a satisfactory substitute.
For persons who do not use tobacco the com
pound without tobacco Is prepared, carrying
same medical properties and producing treatment,One sumo
results. One Box, one month’s
Dollar, postage prepaid. i.K-Al M’h’G. CO.,
57 S, liroart street, Atlanta, Ga.
St
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“NEW RIVAL" FACTORY LOADED SHOTGUN SHELLS
outshoot all other black powder shells, because they are mad^
better and loaded by exact machinery with the standard brands of
powder, shot and wadding. Try them and you will be convinced.
ALL ♦ REPUTABLB DEALERS ♦ KEEP ♦ THEM
WESLEYAN FEMALE C0LLE6E, Macon, Ga OLDEST COIiLKGK FOR
• WOMEN IN THU WORLD.
A Diploma From it is High Honor. Its Graduates are Everywhere.
Ono of the few high grade Institutions of tlie South. A qunrter of a million dollars
invested in buildings. All modern conveniences. Ideal climate. Proverbially healthful.
AU Literary Courses of a high order, and Conservatory advantages in Music, Art and
Elocution. Literary Tuition Him board, Including laundry, only .*200.00 per year. Fall
Term begins September 13, 1901. For catalogue and full information, address
J. W. ROBERTS, A. M., 1). D., President.
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Prevented by Shampoos of CUTICURA SOAP
and light dressings of CUTICURA, purest of
emollient skin cures. -This treatment at once
stops falling hair, removes crusts, scales, and
dandruff, soothes irritated, itching surfaces,
stimulates the hair follicles, supplies the roots
with energy and nourishment, and makes the
hair grow upon a sweet, wholesome, healthy
scalp when, all else fails.
MILLIONS OSE CUTICURA SOAP
Assisted by Ccticuua. Ointment, for preserving, purifying, and beautify
ing the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, ecales, and dandruff", and the
stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and soothing red, rough,
and sore hands, for baby rashes, itchings, and cliaflngs, and for all the pur
poses of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Millions of Women oeo CUTlCCltft.
Soap In the form of baths for annoying irritations, inflammations, and
excoriations, for too free or offensive perspiration, In tlie form of 'washes for
Blceratlvo weaknesses, and for many antiseptic purposes which readily sug
gest themselves to women and mothers. No amount of persuasion can
induce those who have once used these great skin purifiers and beautifiers
jo use any others. G’uticl'UA Soap combines delicate emollient properties
lerlred from Cuticura, the great skin cure, with the purest of Cleansing
Ingredients, and the most refreshing of flower odours. No other medicated
soap Is to be compared with it for preserving, purifying, and beautifying
tlie skin, scalp, hair, and hands. No other foreign or domestic toilet soap,
however expensive, is to be compared with it for all the purposes of the
toilet, bath, and nursery. ’ITius it combines, in One Soap at One Price,
the best skin and complexion soap, and tiro BEST toilet and baby soap in
the world.
m g ! 1 2 ell 0 o i If In | I eS immm HiPjjif; IIIIIII51I Lillies eiHiiit! Stli'tK? fiRBIli
WE PAY B. R. FARE and under $5,00C
Deposit, Guarantee
"admand/
_ A HU AT
BOO FHKK SCHOLARSHIPS, no
COST. Write Quick to GA. ALA.
BUSINESS COLLEGE, MACON, OA.
-
ASTHMArHAY FEVER
•
FREc TRIAL BOTTLE
Address Dr.TAFT.79 E.I30’-" ST..N.Y. CITY
1 ONE
1
Jll SPOON
BAKING POWDER
I* TIIE UKST. TRY IT.
I.D.–R.S.ClIltlMTIA,\ CO.. RICHMOND.VA.
tesWk j.uwlniihs, nortlmnd and 1 olo
graph College, Louisville, Ky., open the whole
y« ar. Studeutsean cuter any time. Catalog t ree.
nOADCY^ DISCOVERY; give*
jj[^v jjpfc lenunonMvU S .juick »mi relief lOdav** and on t.r«ajitmenfc r«s worst
( . R nea. Book of
Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN 9 SONS. Pox B. Atlanta. Oa.
MeHtion this 1’aper In writing to advertisers
ANU-Thirty-slx-UK)l.