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USELESS.
Mr. D- Speptic— My dear, I wish
jou’d prepare something occasionally
;o tempt my appetite.
His Wife—The idea! Why, you
javen’t any appetite to tempt.—Cath
,Uc Times.
Now U»o For Petrolenm.
I pdpntiflo is investigation far superior to has coal proven for fuel, that
petroleum so
that we need not worry should the coal sup
ucts L[ V give find out. that In nearly as soon all as of one Nature's material prod- be
Icomes we another is discovered to take
scarce exception, however.
its place. There is one
Lad Nature’s that is Hostetter’s remedy Stomach for dyspepsia, Bittors. indi- It
Is own
igestion, constipation and malaria, fever and
0–U6. Don’t fail to try it.
The prodigal son of the hard-working
heu is generally a bad egg. ,
A Noted Teacher.
Prof.Walter Wilson, of tho Savannah High
School, says: “I feel It my duty to testify to
the wonderful curative properties of Tetter.
lne. It cured in a few days my son,whoso feet
were affected with stubborn skin trouble,
after using other remedies without any bene
fit.” 50c.a box by mail from J.T. Shuptrine,
Savannah, Ga., if your druggist don ’t keep it.
If ignorance were bliss, what a lot of peo
ple would be happy.
Tyner’s Dyspepsia Remedy Cures Sour
Stomach and Headaohe. At Druggists, 60c,
There are still districts in Italy where
the peasants live on chestnuts and acorns.
There is more Catarrh in thi3 section of the
country than All other diseases put together,
and until tho last few years was supposed to
be incurable. For a great many years doctors
pronounced it a local disoase and prescribed
local remedies, and by constantly failing to
cure with local treatment, pronounced it in
curable. Science has proven Catarrh to be a
constitutional disease and therefore requires
constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh
Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney A Co.,
Toledo, O., is the only constitutional cure on
the market. It is taken internally in doses
from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It aots direct
ly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the
system. They offer one hundred dollars for
any ease it fails to cure. Send for circulars
and testimonials. Address F. J. Cheney <fc
Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 75e.
Hall’s Family Pills are the best.
Ship rats, which are propagators of the
plague, have been thoroughly exterminated
at Marseilles by the use of liquid carbonic
acid.
Host For the Bowels.
No matter what ails you, headaohe to a can
cer, you will never get well until your bowels
are put right. Cascahets help nature, euro
you without a gripe or pain, produce easy
natural movements, cost you just 10 cents to
start getting your health back. Cabcabetb
C andy Cathartic, the genuine, put up in metal
boxes, every tablet has C. C. C. stamped on
It. Beware of imitations.
The rich man traveling abroad doesn’t
have to be a linguist. Money talks in
every language.
The average man returns a borrowed um
brella when it’s worn out and he wants an
other.
PTT. -
FITS permanently cured. No fits ornervous
ness alter first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great
NerveRestorer. $2 trial bottle and treatisefree
Dr. It. H. Kline, Ltd., 931 ArchSt., Phlla., Pa.
Practice makes perfect, but it doesn’t re
quire much practice to make a perfect fool.
H. H. Geeen’s Sons, of Atlanta, Ga„ are
^srsFSsrJsffsss:
ment in another column of this paper.
When a fellow carries a picture in his
watch there is usually a woman in the case.
We refund 10c. for every package of Put
nam Fadeless Dye that falls to give satis
faction. Monroe Drug Co., Unionvllle, Mo.
New York City is the chief manufactur
ing city in the United States.
Piso’s Cure cannot be too highly spoken of
as a cough cure.—J. W. O’Bbien, 322 Third
Avenue, N„ Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6,1900
That man is lacking in diplomacy who
tries to guess a woman’s age.
Coughs
“Mywifehad adeep-seated cough
for three years. I purchased Pectoral, two
bottles of Ayer’s Cherry
large size, and it cured her com
pletely.” J. H. Burge, Macon, Col.
Probably you know of
cough medicines that re
lieve little coughs, all
coughs, except deep ones!
The medicine that has
been curing the worst of
deep coughs for sixty
years is Ayer’s Cherry
Pectoral.
Three sizes: 25c., 50c. f $1. All druggists.
Consult your doctor. If he says take it,
then do as he says. If he tells you not
to take it, then don’t take it. He know*.
Leave it with him. We are willing. Lowell, Mas*.
J. C. AYER CO„
rii o
1® \ Corn
a
removes from the soil
large quantities of
wm Potash.
The fertilizer ap
0 plied, must furnish
m enough Potash, or the
land will lose its pro
ducing power.
Read carefully our books
ISSi on crops —sent frte. WORKS,
GERMAN KALI
#1 J 93 Nassau St., New York.
Geld Medal at Buffalo Expo«1tton.
McILHENNY’S
DR.TALflAGE’S SERHON
The Eminent Divine’s Sunday
Discourse.
Subject: Every Man Has a Lion to Fight
—When Contending Against nn Ehll
Habit You Stand in an Immense Circle
of Sympathy—Clouds of Witnesses.
Dr. Washington, lahnage D. This discourse of
is full of inspiring thoughts
for those who find life a struggle, and
shows that we have many celestial sym
pathizers; texts, Hebrews' xii, 1, “Seeing
we also are compassed about with so
great a cloud of witnesses;” I Corinthians
xv, 32, “I have fought with beasts at
Ephesus.” Crossing
the Alps by the Mont Ccnia
pass or in through few hours the Mont Cenis tunnel, Vero
you are a set down at
na, amining Italy, and of in the a few minutes begin of the ex
the one Amphitheatre. grandest ruins
world, building The whole
sweeps around you in a circle.
You stand in the arena where the combat
all was once the fought or the tier race above run, and on
sides seats rise, tier, un
til you count forty elevations or galleries,
as I shall see fit to call them, in which sat
the Senators, the kings and the 25,000 ex
cited spectators. At the sides of the arena
and under the galleries are the cages in
which the lions and tigers are kept with
out food until, frenzied with hunger and
thirst, they are with let his out sword upon and some alone, poor is
victim, condemned who, them. I think that
to meet
Paul himself once stood in such a place,
and that it was not only figuratively, but
literally, that he had “fought with beasts
at
The gala day has come. From
world the people are pouring into Verona.
Men, women and children, orators and
Senators, great men and small, thousands
upon thousands come, until the first gal
lery is full, and the second, the third, the
fourth, the fifth—all the way up to the
twentieth, all the way up to the thirtieth,
all the way up to the fortieth. Every sweeping place
is filled. Immensity of audience
the great circle. Silence. The time for the
contest has come. A Roman official leads
forth the victim into the arena. Let him
get his sword with firm grip into his right
hand. The 25,000 sit breathlessly watch- of the
ing. I hear the door at the 6ide
arena creak open. Out plunges the half
starved lion, his tongue athirst for blood,
and with a roar that brings all the galler- the
ies to their feet he rushes against know
sword of the combatant. Do you
how strong a stroke a man will strike
when his life depends upon the first thrust
of his blade? The wild beast, lame and
bleeding, slinks back toward the side of
the arena; then rallying his wasted
strength he comes up with fiercer eye and
more terrible roar than ever, only to be
driven back with a fatal wound, while the
combatant comes in with stroke after
stroke until the monster is dead at his
feet, and the 25,000 clap their hands and
utter a shout that makes the city tremble.
Sometimes the audience came to see a
race; sometimes to see gladiators fight each
other, until the people, compassionate for
the fallen, turned their thumbs up as an
appeal that the vanquished be spared, with wild and
sojpetimes the combat was
beLiis.
To one of the Roman people amphitheatrical Paul refers
audiences of 100,000 compassed about
when he says, “We are -witnesses.” The
with bo great a cloud of
direct reference in the last passage is made
to a race; but elsewhere having discussed
that, I take now Paul’s favorite idea of
the Christian fact that life as a combat'! Christian has
The is every man
a lion to fight. of Yours is a bad temper,
The gates the arena have been opened, _ ,
St* fcafed °^u°wf
and again, but in the strength of God you
have arisen to drive it back. I verily the be
lieve you will conquer. I think that
temptation is getting weaker and weaker.
You have given it so many wounds that
the prospect is that it will die, and you
shall be victor, through Christ. Courage, the
brother! Do not let the sands of
arena drink the blood of your soul!
Your lion is the passion for strong drink.
You may have contended against it for
twenty vears, but it is strong of body and
thirsty of tongue. You have tried to wine fight
it back w j t h broken bottle or empty With
flagk Nay> t hat is not the weapon. the
_ will seize thee by
one horrible roar be limb.
threat and rend thee limb from
Take this weapon, sharp and keen—reach
up and get it from God’s armory—the
sword of the Spirit. With that thou may
est drive him back and conquer! and
But why specify when every man
woman has a lion to fight? If there be one
here who has no besetting sin, let him
speak out, for him have I offended. If
you have not fought the lion, it is because
you have let the lion eat you up. This
very moment the contest goes on.
The Trajan celebration, where 10,000
gladiators fought and 11,000 wild
were slain, was not so terrific a struggle
that which at this moment goes on in many
a soul. The combat was for the iife of the
body; this is for the life of the soul. That
was with wild beasts from the jungle; this
is with the roaring lion of hell.
Men think, when they contend against all
an evil habit, that they have to fight it of
alone. No! They stand in the centre
an immense circle of sympathy. Raul :;i ’
been reciting the names of Abel, Lnoeh,
Noah, Abraham, Sarah, Isaac, Joseph,
Gideon and Barak and then says,
compassed about w r ith so great a cloud of
witnesses.” I get through , _ I will show , you
Before in around which
that you fight galleries an above arena, each other, all
circle, kindling in and all the sympathetic
the the eyes and at every victory
hearts of ages, down the thundering
gained there comes multitude that man
applause of a great no
can, number. “Being compassed^ about
with so great a cloud of witnesses.
On the first elevation of the ancient am
phitheatre, on the day of a celebration,
sat Tiberius or Augustus or the reigning
king. So in the great arena of spectators
that watch our struggles and in the first
divine gallery, as I sha.ll call it, sits our
King one Jesus. On His head are many
crowns. The Roman emperor got his
place by cold blooded conquests, but our
King hath come to His place by the bro
ken hearts healed and the tears wiped
away and the souls redeemed. The Ro
man emperor sat, with folded arms, indif
ferent as to whether the swordsman or
the lion beat, but our King’s sympathies conde
are all with v.s—nay, unheard of
scension! I see Him come down from
the gallery into the arena to help us in the
fight, shouting until all up and down His
voice is heard: “Fear not! • I will help
thee! I will strengthen thee by the right
hand' of My power!” to the in the arena in
They gave men blood,
the olden time food to thicken their
so that it would flow slowly and that for a
longer time the people might gloat over the
scene. But our King has no pleasure in
our wounds, for we are bone of His bone,
flesh of His flesh, blood of His blood.
In all the anguish of our heart
The Man of Sorrows bore a part.
Once in the ancient amphitheatre a lion
ivith one paw caught the combatant’s
sword and with his other paw caught his
shield. The man took his knife from bis
girdle and slew the beast. The king, sit
ting in the gallery, said: “That was not
fair. The lion must be slain by a «word.”
Other lions were turned out, and the poor
victim fell You cry. “Shame! shame!” at
curb meanness. But the King in this case
•„ nur brother, and He will see that we
have fair play. He will forbid the rushing
out of more lions than we can meet. He
will not suffer us to be tempted above that
we are able. Thank God! The King His heart is in
the gallery! His eyes are on us.
iN with ns. His hand will deliver us.
“Blessed are they who put their trust in
Him." the gallery of the
I look again and I see
martyrs. Who is that? Hugh apologize 1-atimer, for
sure the truth enough! he preached, He woujd and not he died, the
so
night before swinging from the bedpost emancipa- in
perfect glee at the thought of
tion. \v!\o is that army of (ifififi? They arc
the Theban legion who died for the faith.
Here is a larger perished host in for magnificent Christ in array, the
884,000, who
persecutions of Diocletian. Yonder is a
family group. Felicitas, of Rome, nnd her
children. While they were dying for the
faith she stood encouraging them. One
son was whipped to death by thorns; an
other was flung from a rock; another was
beheaded. At last the mother became a
martyr. There they are together, John a family Brad
group in heaven! Yonder is
ford, who said in the lire, “We shall have
a merry supper with the Lord exclaimed to-night!”
Yonder is Henry Voes, who as
he died, “If I had ten heads, they should
all fall off for Christ!” The great throng
of the martyrs! They had hot lead poured
down their throats; horses were fastened
to their hands and other horses to their
feet, and thus they were pulled by apart; red
they had their tongues pulled sewed out in the
hot pincers; they were then thrown up the
skins of animals and to
dogs; they were daubed with combustibles
and set on fire! If all the martyrs' stakes
that have been kindled could be set at
proper distances they would make the mid
night all the world over bright as the noon
day! And now they sit yonder in mar
tyrs’ gallery. them the firbs of persecution have
For
gone out ; the swords are sheathed and the
mob hushed. Now they watch us with an
nil observing sympathy. They know anguish, all
the pain, all the hardship, all the privation. all the They
all the injustice, keen still. They “Courage!
cannot cry;
The fire will not consume; the floods can
not drown; the lions cannot devour. Cour
age down there in the arena!”
Whg.t? Are they all looking? This hour
we answer back the salutation daughters they of give the
and cry, “Hail, sons and
fire!"
f look again and I see another gallery—
that of eminent Christians. What strikes
me strangely is the mixing in companion
ship of those who on earth could not agree.
There is Albert Barnes and around him
the presbytery who tried him for hetero
doxy! r ! Yonder are Lyman Beecher and
the church court that denounced him!
Stranger than all, there are John Calvin
and James Arminius! Who would have
thought that they would sit Whitefield so lovingly and to
gether? There are George let
the ministers who would not him come
into their pulpits because they thought
him a fanatic. There are the sweet sing
ers Toplady, Montgomery, Charles Wes
ley, Isaac Watts and Mrs. Sigourney. If
heaven had had no music before they went
up, they would have started the singing.
And there the band of missionaries—
David Abeel, talking of China redeemed; and
and John Scudder, of India aborigines saved;
David Brainerd, of the evan
gelized; and Mrs. Adoniram Judson, by
whose prayers for Burma took heaven
violence! All these Christians are nothing looking
into the arena. Our struggle is to
theirs! Do we in Christ’s cause Greenland’s suffer
from the cold? They walked
icy heat? mountains. They sweltered Do we in suffer tropics. from Do th^
we
get fatigued? They cannibals. fainted, with Are none to
care for them but we per
secuted? They were anathematized. And
as they look from their gallery lions and I see us
falter in the presence of the seem
to hear Isaac Watts addressing us in his
old hymn, only a little changed:
Must you be carried to the sides
On flowery beds of ease
.While others fought to win seas? the prize
Or sailed through bloody
Toplady shouts in his old hymn:
Your harps, ye trembling willows saints, take;
Down from the
Loud to the praise of love divine
Bid every string awake.
■While Charles Wesley, the varied:,..... Methodist,
breaks forth in words a little
H A charge to keep you have,
A God dying to glorify, soul
A never to save
And fit it for the sky! gallery of
I look again and I see the other our
departed. Many of those in the
galleries we have heard of, but these we
knew. Oh, how familiar their faces! They the
sat at our tables, and we walked to
house of God in company. Have they for
gotten us? Those fathers and mothers
started us on the road of life. us? Are they And
careless as to what becomes of
those children—do they look with stolid
indifference as to whether we win or lose
this battle of life? They remember the
day they left us. They remember the
agony of the last farewell. faces. Though They years
in heaven, they know our re
member our sorrows. They speak heaven. our
names. They watch this fight for
Nay, I see them rise up and lean over and
wave before us their recognition and full. en
couragement. That gallery is not
They are keeping places for us. After we
have slain the lion they expect higher!” the King
to call us, saying, “Come up
Between the hot struggles brow in and the arena stand
I wipe the sweat from my
on tiptoe, reaching up my right hand to
clasp theirs in rapturous handshaking, from
while their voices come ringing down
the gallery, crying, “Be thou faithful unto
death, and you shall have a crown!
But here I pause, overwhelmed with the
majesty and the joy ,of the scene! Gallery Gallery
of the King! Gallery of angels! Gallery of
of prophets and saints! apostles! Gallery of friends mar
tyrs! Gallery of light
and kindred! O majestic circles of
and lovel Throngs, throngs, throngs!
How shall we stand the gaze of the uni
verse? Myriads of eye3 beaming sympathy on us! for
Myriads of hearts beating in again?
us! How shall we ever dare to sin
IIow shall wc ever become discouraged
again? How shall we ever feel lonely
again? With God for apostles us and angels and for the us
and prophets and for us
great souls of the ages for us and our glo
rified kindred for us—shall we give up the
fight and die? No, Son of God, who didst
die to save us! No, ye angels, whose wings
are spread forth to shelter us! No, ye
prophets and apostles, whose warnings
startle us! No, ye loved ones, whose arms
are outstretched to receive us! No; wa
will never surrender!
Sure I must fight if I would reign,
Be faithful to my Lord, the pain,
And bear the cross, endure
Supported by Thy word.
Thy saints in all this glorious war
Shall conquer though they die;
They see the triumph from afar
And seize it with their eye.
When that illustrious day shall rise
And all Thine armies shine
In robes of victory shall be through Thine. the skies,
The glory
My hearers, shall we die in the arena or
rise to join our friends in the gallery?
Through Christ we may come off more than
conquerors. A soldier dying in the hospi
tal rose up in bed the last moment and
cried. “Here, here!” His attendants put
him back on his pillow and asked him why
he shouted “Here!” “Oh. I heard the roil
call of heaven, and I was only answering
to my name!” I wonder whether after
this battle of this life is over our names
will be called in the muster roil of the
pardoned and glorified and, with the joy of
heaven breaking upon our souls, shall cry,
“Here, here!”
l [Copyright, I3C2, L. Klopsch.J
AKE APPEALING TO ROOSEVELT.
Carolinians Go to Washington to Urgo
President to Visit Charleston
Exposition.
A Washington special says: Strong
appeals are being made to President
Roosevelt from all parts of South Car
olina urging him not to abandon his
intention to visit the Charleston ex
position. The white house Is being
flooded with letters, telegrams and ed
itorial comments from southern news
papers assuring the president that the
fair-minded people of the southland
have no sympathy with the disgrace
ful performances of the two South
Carolina senators, and they also de
precate the rude action of Lieuten
ant Governor Tillman in connection
with the proposed presentation of a
sword to Major Jenkins on the occa
sion of the president’s proposed visit
to Charleston.
The authorized statement from Ma
jor Jenkins to the effect that he is
no party to the intended insult to
President Roosevelt, and his refusal
to receive the sword procured for him
through the efforts of Lieutenant Gov
ernor Tillman, meets the hearty ap
proval of everybody in Washington.
The prompt refusal of Major Jenkins
to be a party to any move which sav
ors of a reflection upon the president
meets the unqualified approval of the
South Carolina colony in Washington.
Coupled with Major Jenkin’s refusal
to accept the sword at the hands of
Lieutenant Governor Tillman is an
official statement from the managers
of the Charleseton exposition to the
effect that they disavow any respon
sibility for Lieutenant Governor Till
man’s officious telegram to the presi
dent.
Charleston at Capital.
Mayor Smyth and Aldermen Rhett
and Kollock, representing the city,
President Wagener and Director
Hemphill, of the exposition) board,
left Charleston Sunday afternoon for
Washington, to urge the president to
carry out his promise to visit Charles
ton.
A special from Columbia says: The
latest incident in the Tillman-McLau
riu incident has stirred South Caro
lina as much as any former sensa
tion. The report printed Sunday
morning that Senator Tillman had in
timated to Senator Platt, of New
York, that it might he unpleasant, if
not dangerous, for President Roose
velt to visit Cnarleston, was stagger
ing.
During the day something in the
way of confirmation was received in
Columbia. Governor McSweeney de
clared, however, he could not believe
Senator Tillman had made such a
gestion. The only feeling ever
tained against the president was In
connection with the Booker Washing
ton incident, and that had passed
away.
“There is now,” said the governor,
“no warrant whatever to believe there
will be the slightest discourtesy shown
the president. He will be honored as
the chief executive of the great na
HENRY VISITS SOUTHLAND.
Brief Stops Made at Chattanooga,
Nashville and Louisville.
Prince Henry of Prussia went
Lookout mountain, at Chattanooga,
Tenn., Sunday and after viewing the
ground where the union and confeder
ate armies met in conflict and hearing
afresh the story of the battles, resum
ed his journey to the north and west.
Leaving Chattanooga over the Nash
ville, Chattanooga and St. Louis rail
road, his train ran through a corner
of Alabama and then turning to the
north hurried across Tennessee with
short stop at Nashville, through Ken
tucky, with brief stays at Louisville
and Bowling Green and up into In
(liana wit h another brief halt at In
dianapolis. At Indianapolis the course
was changed to the westward again,
and on the tracks of the Vandalia his
train ran on to St. Louis. His
tion at the south was hospitable and
demonstrative.
There was a great crowd at Chat
tanooga and the people presented the
prince with a handsome souvenir
his visit. Nashville also made a
monstration. of friendliness, as did
Louisville and Indianapolis.
TURKEY OR BULGARIA?
One or the Other May Be Called to Ac
count For Work of Brigands.
It is understood at Constantinople
that the United States will soon take
steps for he reimbursement of the sum
cf $72,500 paid to brigands as a ransom
for Miss Ellen M. Stone and Mme.
Tsilka, holding Turkey responsible.
The question of responsibility may
iiave serious developments, since Tur
key emphatically disclaims responsi
bility and lays the blame on Bulgaria.
DEATH SENTENCES COMMUTED.
Governor Aycock Shows Mercy to Two
Condemned Burglars.
Governor Aycock, of North Carolina,
has commuted to life imprisonment
at hard ]abor the deat h sentence of
Russell Gales, white, and Harry Mills,
colored, two of the four burglars who
attempted to rob Emma postoffice and
nearly . , killed t11 , Postmaster Sam Alexa
der. They did not enter the building,
but stood guard outside while Dudley
Johnson, white, and Ben Foster, col
ored, entered. Johnson and Foster
will hang.
IV 7, !>’
TT
i.
I
is !
m I m
y
iw^-jyv » . w > > th ><*’ t >r< t WajVt J
Mrs. L. A. Harris, a Prominent Member
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hundred dollars and costs, and included in the costs are pain, and
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my only chance of life. My sister had been using Lydia E. Pink*
ham’s Vegetable Compound for her troubles, and been cured,
and she strongly urged me to let the doctors go and try the Com
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DO YOU SHOOT? address postal ca rd for s
If you do you should send your name snd on a
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_ TRIPLE INCOME CORN
^ ■vf^Well, How 8alzer'scorn would 250 bushels sorts will per produce asrc suU.tou thla i for i at you the In present 1902. Catalog prices of tell*. corn?
J Fodder Plante, Graemes and Clover
3 Ws have the largest array ©f fodder pli mate found in any catalogue
in America. We have the flaest varictl •*, the biggest yielders aud ft.
surest croppers. Our Giaut Incarnate Clover produoes 8 scrap of hay * per' 1
high In six weeks after seeding. Our P Pea Oat gives tons
acre; our Teosinte is good for 80 to as of green fodder; our Thousand
Headed Kale and Dwarf Victoria Rapd m ake sheep and twine snd cattle
growing at 1c. a pound possible. We warrant our grass mixtures te
furnish a luxuriant cron of hay on every s toil nhere planted.
(Or cr i,000,000 pounds sold the past few years).
VEGETABLE SEEKS
We are the largest growers. Choice enlon seed at but 80c. and op a fs
lb. We have a tremendous stock of fipe vegetable sveds, such a*
earliest peas, «w eet coru radishes, beans and many other money
, the kind the market
making regetabli *s. Our s eeds are money makers,
gardener and farmer waste.
For lOc—Worth $10.
Our i great catalog with a large number of rare farm seed
samp :des is mailed to you upon receipt of but 10o. in
stamps. These seeds are positively worth $10 togetastart.
JOHN A. 8ALZER SEED CO.,
HfflB La C rosse, w ig. 1
9S in
fjfjf KE – ; ill sS U) i J ’
6 f 1 /
ULM uUJ Wf
m s
DID YOU EVER
Consider the insult offered the Intelligence made of
thinking people when the claim 1* that
any one remedy will cure all dteeaseg? No,
well, think of ft *nd aena for our book telling
all about 18 Special Kemedlea Family for special Medicine dl»
eaued conditions, and our
Caeefl. A postal card will seou re the book
and a sample of Dr. Johnson’s**) After Dinner
PU1.” «. Agent* wanted. The Home Remedy
Atlanta, Ga. s»
THE LANIER SOUTHERN
S$admedd
MACON, OA.
Thorough In all appointment*.
recognize our diplomas as a testimo
of ability and worth All brnnohes taught.
Full Information cheerfully furnished.
,:’2:–'c‘t§éf
m § 7 / .WORCESTER ROYAL 3!
%
g and
I. % BON TON
'•ilr s vFi / CORSETS
1 - 1 \
r V5 A k STRAIGHT FRONT
oL'J (. Are the result of 50 years of experience
v; 0 - in good corset making. Do Ask your take dealer
S to show them to you. not any
vC' S others.
i ROYAL WORCESTER CORSET CO.
I Worcester, Mass.
lPJSQ £ mm ELSE t FAILS. t o r
GUHtS Wn£H£ All Good, Dse
Best Cough fcyrup. Toateft druggists.
in time. Hold by
CON S U M R TIQN
ro
CJ!
3
f<t
E. J. Vawter’s Carnations are the Best
/vHOICE From the famous “Vawter
1 ALIFORNIA Carnation Fields,” Ocean
v ARNATIONS Park, Cal. Hardy rooted
out artificial heat, cuttings, sent postpaid, propagated on receipt r with
of price. 6 Carnation Flanl.for for‘2 5r;3 C.nna 25c| 5
Frlnceof Wales Vloleta Bulba
III,lb.for HSr; 3 Calla I.llj- for25«
Orders filled In rotation. Order now. Address Ocka*
l ist l L0K4L Co., [Inc.]. Ocean Cask, Cautobsia.
II IFm» ^Red^eaiShoes ^ * * I 7 1 .
DROPSY HEW DISCOVERT; give*
qmck relief and cures worst
cases- Book of testimonials and IO dnye* treatment
Free. Dr H. H. GREEK'S BOMB. BoxB. At'anU Ga
Mention this Paper In writing to advertisers.
ANp-ten-lSOZ.
Self-Threading Sewing Machine Needle 1
P.-ndS'c and we will .end you sample package assorted
needle.. Give name of machine. Agents wanted. N«.
tional Automatic fu.. lfci Hus»uSt..N. X. City