The Cordele sentinel. (Cordele, Ga.) 1894-????, March 14, 1902, Image 7

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A LOOK AHEAD. , Wel l. Charley, has your wedding . been set?” 'Yes, old chap. I had my fiance tee to be married on her birthday.” (■That does have a little romantic Ivor ,f wasn’t the idea, I hTiiat L you see. thinking that one present would fewer for both anniversaries.”—Now Irk Herald. A Convict Makes Silver Dollars. L ,, on vict employed in the boiler room, f-eeded in perfeoting a die for making t uniting dollars without detection, outside and was dis them through muoh accomplices, r officials were about as who surprised [this discovery as the person receives substitute artiole in place of the genuino Letter's stomach Bitters, the only sure fro Id for indigestion, Don’t dyspepsia, fail to try constipation it. Our ’ biliousness. is the neek of tho Ivate Plo Stamp over fttle. ■People jeDsely who live on tick seem to be im tickled about it. A T SHAKESPEARE’S HOME. Lj «« Stratferd-on-Aran.” am finishing a tour of Europe; the best liEK I’ve had over here is a box of Tettorine Ibrought [„ from home.’’—0. of H. Chicago. McConnell, Ill. r Economical Drug skin Co., troubles. 60}. fctterine Ex cures itching Shuptrine, Savannah, a la., by mail from J. T. if your druggist don’t keep i t. Ut If you can t back up your assertions, the best thing is to back down. Lr Tyner's Dvspepsia Remedy Cures Irregu Heart A ction. At Druggists, 5 0 cents. You can’t make the father of twins be eve that a man cannot serve two masters. rs. J. II. Haskins, Chicago of Chicago, Ill., President Arcade Club, Addresses Comforting Regarding Words to W omen Childbirth. “Dear Mbs. Pinkham: — Mothers ieed not dread childbearing- after they :now the value of Lydia E. Pink lam’s Vegetable Compound. Yhile I loved children I dreaded the irdeal, for it left me weak and sick A m mm T m I r I. MBS. J. H. HASKINS. for months after, and at the time I thought death was a welcome relief; before my last child was born a pood neighbor advised Compound, LydiaE.Pink- and ham’s Vegetable I used that, together with your Pills and Sanative Wash for four months the child’s birth; — it brought me wonderful relief. I hardly had an ache or pain, and when the child was ten days old I left my bed strong in health. Every spring andfallT nowtake abottle of Lydia E.Pinkham’s Veg etable Compound and find it keeps me in continual excellent health.”— Mrs. J. H. Haskins, 3248 Indiana Ave., nial Chicago, genuine. Ill. — $5000 forfeit if above testimo Is not Care and careful counsel is what the expectant and would-be mother needs, and this counsel she can secuue without cost by writing; to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass. RIRANS One day an old friend said: “Are you troubled with dys pepsia?” I said: “Yes, and I don’t ever expect to be cured.” He told me to go across the street and get a box of RipansTabules. After using Ripans Tabules for three weeks I was satisfied I had at last found the right medicine, the only one forme. At druggists. enough tor The Flve-Cent The packet faintly Is boFile, M an cents, oocasion. fur a a year. i»‘ e Fruit. v Its quality influences the selling price. m Profitable fruit I growing insured only ' when enough actual Potash is in the fertilizer. Neither quantity possible nor good quality Potash. without Write forour free books QJPJ giving: details. german kali works, fJxP) 93 Nassau St., New York City. sewing. Agents make 05.00 w«>kly Yew a yorx; htoVaTIC NEEDLE DD/>nCV UpSOr'CS YqmcU NEW DISCOVERT; «orrt relief ui cnr« cases- Book of teetinionia s and 10 da.ya ti-cfi!SO’U Free. Dr. H. R. auxin's SO»B, BciB. At.anU Ga. DR.TAUIAGE’S SERflON The Eminent Divine’* Sunday Discourse. Subject: Temptation* For the Young—The Aiialltnti of Virtue and Honesty Are Numerous— Need For Ulvlne l’rotectton —God’s Orac* Brlugeth Salvation. tration Washington, from the barnyard D. C.—A familiar illus is employed in this discourse by Dr. Talmage to show the comfort and protection that heaven af fords to all trusting souls. The text is Matthew xxiii, 37, “Even as a hen gather eth her chickens under her wings, aud ye would not.” Jerusalem was in sight as Christ came to the crest of Mount Olivet, a height of 700 feet. The splendors of the religious capital of the whole earth irradiated the is landscape. There is the temple. Yonder the king’s palace. Spread out before His eyes are the pomp, wealth, the wick edness and the coming destruction of Je rusalem, thought and He hursts into tears at the of the obduracy of a place that He would gladly have saved and apostro phizes, how saying, "O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, children often together, would even I have as a hen gathered gathereth thy her chickens under her wings, and ye would not?" Why did Christ select hen and chickens as a simile? Next to the appositeness of the comparison, I think it was to help all public teachers in the matter of illustra tion to get down off their stilts and use comparisons that all can understand. The fowl. plainest bird on earth is the barnyard red Its only adornments the are the comb in its head-dress and wattles un der the throat. It has no grandeur of genealogy. All we know is that its ances tors came from India, some of them from a height of 4000 feet on the side* of the Himalayas. like eagle’s It has no pretension has lustre of nest of the eyrie. It no plumage like the goldfinch. Possessing anatomy that allows flight, yet about the last thing it wants to do is much to fly, and in retreat uses foot almost as as wing. Musicians have written out in musical scale the song of lark and robin redbreast and nightingale, yet the hen of my text hath nothing that could be taken for_ a song, but only cluck and cackle. Yet Christ in the text uttered while looking upon doomed Jerusalem declares that what He had wished for that city was like what the hen does for her chickens. Christ was thus simple in His teach ings, and yet how hard it is for (is who are Sunday-school instructors and editors and preachers and reformers and those who would gain the ears of audiences to attain that heavenly and divine art of sim plicity! We have to run a course of lit erary disorders as children a course of school phy sical disorders. We come out of and college loaded down with Greek my thologies and out of the theological learned semin ary weighed down with what the fathers said, and we fly with wings of eagles and flamingoes and albatrosses, and it takes a good while before we can come down to Christ’s similitudes, the candle under the bushel, the salt that has lost its savor, the net thrown into the sea, the spittle on the eyes of the blind man and the hen and chickens. I am in warm sympathy with the unpre tentious old fashioned hen because, like most of us, she has to scratch for a living. She knows at the start the lesson which most people of good sense are slow to learn—that the gaining of a livelihood im plies work, and that successes do not lie on the surface, hut are to be upturned by positive and continuous effort. The rea son that society and the church and the world are so full of failures, so full of loaf ers, so full of deadbeats is because the people lesson are not wise enough to take which any hen would teach them that if they would find for themselves and for those dependent upon them anything worth Solo having thev must scratch for it. mon said, “Go to the ant, thou sluggard. sluggard. In I say, Go to the hen, thou the Old Testament God compares Himself to an eagle stirring up her nest, and in the New Testament the Holy Spirit Christ is compared to a descending dove, but in a sermon that began with cutting cr sar casm for hypocrites and ends with the paroxysm of pathos in the text compares Himself to a hen. One day in the country we saw sudden consternation in the behavior of old Dom inick. Why the hen should he so dis turbed we could not understand. We looked about to see if a neighbor looked s dog were invading the farm. We up to see if a storm cloud were havering. that could We could see nothing on the ground nothing the terrorize, and we could see in air to ruffle the feathers of the hen, which but the loud, wild, affrighted cluck brought all her brood at full run under her feathers made us look again around and above us, when we saw that high up and far away there was a rapacious bird wheeling round and round and down and down, and not seeing us as we stood in the shadow, it came nearer and lower un til we saw’ its beak was curved from base to tip and it had two flames of fire for eyes, and it was a hawk. But all the chickens were under old Dominick s wings, and either the bird of prey caught a glimpse of us or not able to find the brood huddled under wing, darted back into the C! Scfchrist calls Why, with what great is earnestness the matter. to all the voung. sunlight, and there be It is bright can no danger. Health is theirs. A good home is theirs. Plenty of food is theirs._ Pros pect of long life is theirs. But Chnst con tinues to call, calls with more emphasis and urges haste and says not a second ought to b« lost. Oh, do tell us what is the matter. Ah, now I see; there are hawks of temptation in the air, there aie vultures wheeling for their prey, there are beaks of of death allurement ready ready to plunge, to clutch. there are claws peril. Now I understand Now I see the the only safety. the urgency. Now I see take Would that Christ might this day our sons and daughters into His shelter “as a hen gal hereth her chickens under ^The* fact is that shelter the most unless of while them they will never mind the matter of are chickens. It is a simple of those in exorable statistics that most who do not come to Christ in youth never for come the at all. What chance is there young without divine protection? the gamb- I here are the grogshops, there are ling hells, there are the infidelities and immoralities of spiritualism, there are the bad books, there are the impurities, and there are the business rascalities, so wonder numer ous are these assailants that it is a that honestv and virtue are not lost arts. The birds of prey, diurnal and nocturnal, of the natural world are ever on the alert. Thev are assassins of the sky; they have the varieties of taste. The eagle prefers vulture flesh of the living animals; the prefers the carcass; the falcon kills with one stroke, while other styles of beak give prolongation of torture. And so the temptations of this life are various. Fathers, mothers, older brothers and sisters and Sabbath-school teachers, be quick and earnest and prayerful under and im portunate and get the chickens wing Mav the Sabbath schools of America and Great Britain within the next three months sweep all their scholars into the kingdom. Whom they have now under charge is un certain. Concerning that scrawny, puny child that lav in the cradle many years ago the father dead, many remarked, chUdf^And if the Lord would take the the mother really thought BU But what a good became thing that work God reA that child, for it re e( j jn Christian literature and one of p U0Q£ nf Ta most illustrious servants Joilll My hearers, if we secure the present and everlasting welfare of our children, roost other things belonging to us are of but lit tle comparative importance. Alexander the Great allowed his soldiers to take their families with them to war, and he accounted for the bravery of hia men by the fact that many of them were born in camp and were used to warlike scenes from the start. Would God that all the chil dren of our day might be born into the army of the Lord! all need the protecting , wing. If But we when entered you had known you ahead upon manhood or womanhood what was under of you, would vou have dared to take life? How much you have been through! With most life has been a disap pointment. They tell me so. They have not attained that which they the expected physical to attain. They have not had and mental vigor thev expected or they have met with rebuff* which they did not anticipate. Y'ou are not at forty or of fifty or sixty or seventy or eighty years be. 1 age where you thought you would do not know any one except myself to whom life has been a happy surprise. I never expected anything, and so when anything came in the shape oi human fa vor or comfortable position or widening field of work it was to me a surprise. I was told in the theological seminary by some of my fellow students that I never would get anybody to hear me that preach when un- I less I changed my style, did so hear found that some happy people surprise. come Hut to most me it was a people, according to their own statement, nave found life a disappointment. In deed, we all need shelter from its tem pests. The wings of my text suggest warmth, and that is what most folks want. The fact is that this is a cold world whether vou take it literally or figuratively. We kave a big fireplace called the sun, and keep it has a very hot fire, and the stokers the coals well stirred up, but much of the year we cannot get near enough tc this fireplace to get warmed. This world s extremities are cold all the time. Forget not that it is colder at the South Pole than at the North Pole, and that the Arctic is not so destructive as the Antar tic. Once in awhile the Arctic will let explorers come back, but the Antartic hardly ever. When at the South Pole a ship sails in, the door of ice is almost sure to be shut against its return. So life to many millions of people at the south and many millions of people at the north is a prolonged shiver. But when I say that this is a cold world I chiefly mean figuratively. If you want to know what is the meaning of the ordinary term of receiving the “cold shoulder,” get out of money and try to borrow. The conversation may have been almost tropical for luxuriance of thought and speech, but suggest your necessities and see the thermometer drop to fifty till de grees below zero, and in that which a moment before had been a warm room. Take what is an unpopular position friends on some public question and see your fly as chaff before a windmill. As far as myself is concerned, I have no word of complaint, but I look off day by day and see communities freezing out men and \qomen of whom the world is not worthy. Now it takes after one and now after an other. It becomes popular to depreciate about and defame and execrate and lie some people. This is the best world I ever got into, but it is the meanest world that some people ever got into. The worst thing that ever happened to them was their cradle, and the best thing that will ever happen to them will be their grave. Thus at sundown, lovingly, safely, So, com- if pletely, the hen broods her young. we are the Lord’s, the evening of our life will come. The heats of the day will have passed. There will be shadows, and we cannot see as far. The work of life will be about ended. The hawks of temptation that hovered in the sky will have gone to the woods and folded their wings. Sweet silences will come. The air will be redo lent with the breath of w-hole arbors of promises sweeter than jasmine little or even- chill, ing piimrose. The air may be a but Christ will call us, and we will know the voice and heed the call, and we wil. come under the wings for the night, the strong wings, the soft wings, the warm wings, and without fear and in full sense of safety, and then we will rest from sun down to sunrise, “as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wing.” My text has its strongest the application for people who were born in country, wherever vou may now live, and that is the majority of you. You cannot hear my text without having all the rustic scenes of the old farmhouse come back to you. Good old days they were. You knew nothing much of the world, for you had not seen the world. By law of asso ciation you cannot recall the brooding hen and her chickens without seeing also the barn and the haymow and the wagon shed and the house and the room where you played and the fireside with the big back-log before which you sat and the neighbors and the burial and the wedding and the deep snowbanks, and hear the vil lage bell that called you to worship and seeing the horses which, after old pulling clapboara- you to church, stood around the ed meeting house, and those who sat at either end of the church pew and, indeed, all the scenes of your first fourteen years, and you think of what you were then and of what you are now and all these thoughts are aroused by the sight of the old hen coop. Some of you had better go back and start again. In thought and return the to that place and hear the cluck see outspread feathers and come under the wing and make the Lord your portion and shelter and warmth, preparing for everything that may come, and so being classed among those described by the closing words of my text, ‘as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, and ye would not.” Ah, that throws the responsibility upon us. “Ye would not. Alas, for the “would note. If the wan dering broods of the farm heed not their mother’s call and risk the hawk and dare the freshet and expose themselves to the frost and storm, surely their calamities are not the mother’s fault. “Ye would not!” God would, but how many would not? When a good man asked a young woman who had abandoned her home and who was deploring her wretchedness why she did not return, the reply was: I dare not go home. My father is so provoked he would not receive me home. then, said the Christian man, “1 will test this. And so he wrote to the father, and the re ply came back, and in a letter marked out side “Immediate” and inside saying, “Let her come at once; all is forgiven bo God’s invitation for you is marked Im mediate” on the outside, and inside it is written, “He will abundantly pardon. Oh. ye wanderers from God and happiness and home and heaven, come under the sheltering wing. A vessel in the Bristol Channel was nearing the rocks called the Steep Holmes. Under the tempest the vessel was unmanageable, would and change the only be hope was that the tide fore she struck the rocks and went down, and so the captain stood on the deck, watch in hand. Captain and crew and passengers were pallid with terror, fak ing another look at his watch and another look at the sea. he shouted: “Thank God, we are saved! The tide has turned! One minute more aud we would have struck the rocks!” Some of you have been a long while drifting in the tempest of sin and sorrow and have been making for the breakers. Thank God, the tide has turned. ]):, you not feel the lift of the billow? The grace of God that bringeth salvation has appeared to your soul, and, in the words of Boaz Ruth, I commend you to “the Lord God of Israel, under whose wings thou hast come to trust,” I 'opyritfht, 1902, L. Klopscb.1 BELGIAN HARES IN AMERICA. A Warning From the Department of Agriculture With Regard to Them. Any one who reads the advertise mentB in agricultural and poultry pa pers will see not a few notices insert od by importers and breeders of Bel gian hares which in the past three or four years have been introduced into the country in considerable numbers. The Belgian hare is an unusually large specimen of his kind and is highly valued both for meat and fur. Some American breeders are becoming known as hare fanciers, taking par ticular pains to breed only from the finest specimens and priding them selves on the superiority of their stock. The Interest in the Belgian hare that has developed within the past four years is observed in most parts of the country, but especially In Cali fornia, Colorado and other Western states. Our department of Agricul ture has thought it necessary to call the attention of breeders to the fact that the introduction of these animals in large numbers is accompanied by a certain element of danger which should not be overlooked. The department says that some of the hares are sure to escape. The State Board of Horticulture of Cali fornia estimates that several thousand of the animals are already at large in that state. If they increase as rapidly when at large as they do in captivity, they will undoubtedly become a source of danger. The department Intimates that It may become necessary to adopt strin gent measures to keep the animals un der control. They breed as rapidly as rabbits. Everybody knows what a terrible infliction rabbits have become in Australia and New Zealand, where all efforts to exterminate them have thus far been Ineffectual, though mil lions of them are killed every year, their skins being shipped to England. The Department of Agriculture also says that the question of the accli matization of the Belgian hare In Porto Rico has excited much more interest and expresses the opinion that the in troduction of the animal into the is land would be dangerous. Hare meat is not so much in favor in this country as in Europe, where it is greatly relished. Those of our peo ple who are interested in the breeding of hares for meat are largely persons of foreign origin, who were accustom ed in their native land to see the hare used very generally as food, The animals are an enemy of fruit trees, being likely, in winter, to feed upon fhe buds of these trees. They are al so very fond of cabbages, lettuce and some other vegetables, fatten them selves in oat fields, and in fact, are a great nuisance if not kept under ex cellent control. Our farmers certainly do not care to invite such an infliction as that which Australia has suffered through the introduction of rabbits. THE YOUNG MAN’S DILEMMA. There was a young man named Ig natius Who lived In an attic quite spacious. When he tore his apparel He’d sit in a barrel Until he could mend 'em—My gra cious!—Indianapolis News. NO PROTECTION. First Lady—Dear me, I never say Mrs. Potts look so pale. Second Lady—Nor I; she’s probably been out In the wet without au um brella.—Pearson’s Weekly. •loo Reward. SIOO. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded dis ease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Core ia the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter nally, acting directly upon the blood and mu cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy ing the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the con stitution work. The and proprietors assisting have nature much in doing faith its in so its curative powers that they offer One Hun dred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Bend for list of testimonials. Address F J. Chibey A Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 76c. Hall’s Family Pills are the best. Conscience is a good deal like an alarm clock. We get so used to it that we don't mind. ___ See advertisement of EK-M Catarrh Cure lu another column—the best remedy made. Love letters are eagerly scanned by the male inspectors. Best For the Bowels. No matter what alls you, headache to a can cer, you will never get well until your bowel* are put right. Cascabets help nature, oure you without a gripe or pain, produce easy natural movements, cost you just 10 cents to start getting your health back. Cascabets Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up In metal boxes, every tablet has C. C. C. stamped on It. Beware of Imitations. don't Consistency is the only about. jewel that women seem to care much Earliest Russian Millet. Will you be short of hay? If so, plant a plenty of tills prodigally prolific millet. 6 to 8 tons of rich hay per acre. Price, 60 lbs., $1.00; 100 lbs., $3.00; low freights. John A. Salcer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wls. A Some people play the piano as though they were doing it for exercise. Putnam Fadeless Dyes do not stain the hands or spot the kettle. Sold by all drug gists. _______ More people have died from colds than were ever killed in battle. FITS permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kiine’3 Great Nervoliestorer.#2 trial bottle and treatisefree Dr. B. H. Kline, Ltd.. 931 Arch St., P hila., Pa. The trouble with a friend in need is that he is always that way. I do not believe Pino's Cure for Consump tion has an equal for coughs and colds—J ohn F. Boyee, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15,1900. A little change in the pocket is better than a decided change in the weather. FOLLOWING A GOOD EXAMPLE. ” “This is my son Frederick, Mr. Stevens," said MrB. Saunders intro ducing her five year old son. “Well. Frederick,” said the visitor, “do you always obey your mama like a good boy?" “Yes, sir,” replied Frederick promptly, “and so does papa.”—Stray Stories, CURES RHEUMATISM AND CATARRH. To Prove It—Msillelne Fr«tI Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) kills tho poison in tho Wood which onuses rheuma tism (bono pains, swollen Joints, sore mus cles, aches and pains) and catarrh (bad breath, deafness, hawking, spitting, ringing in the ears), thus making a permanent cure after all else falls. Thousands cured. Many suffered from 80 to 40 years, yet B. B. B. cured them. Druggists |1 per largo bot tle. To provo it cures, sample of B. B. B. sent free by writing Blood Balm Co., 12 Mitchell St., Atlanta, Ga. Describe troublo and tree medical advice given, B. B. B. sent at onoo prepaid. No woman thinks another woman 'a baby quite up to the mark. Many Imitators. No Equals. J /- / Royal : * Worcester I – and Bon Ton Corsets v } 1 Straight front. JHl that is Smart. Healthful and up to date. Ask dealer to order for you. Accept no other. 7 Royal Worcester Corset Co., Worcester, Man. \ r ljALI“ C a ■ eco’sSuperior Fodder Plants VICTORIA RAPE About lOmileaaheadof Dwarf Eu*exRapein fJ C-> fcxbushinesa, in vigor and nourishing quality. It make* it possible to irrow * wine and sheep 'A—3 and cattle all over America at lc. alb. It is *SrmarTelauBly prolific. Salzer's catalog tells. II . Giant Produces Incarnate luxuriant crop three Clover feet tall I fm Mg L_ a IBP 'i Ea wttlUn six weeks after seeding and lota \Vj7\ and lots of pasturage all summer long ,zZjt Zmt besides. Will do well anywhere, l’rlce [\ dirt cheap. vH W Grass, Clovers and ^ J Fodder Plants E3S lr Our catalogue la brimful of thoroughly tested farm seeds *-iff such as Thousand Headed Kale; Teosinte, producing so tons of FRIEND green fodder per acre; l*ea Oat^ Kprltr., with itaso bushels of grain Safier’s Crass mixture a Yielding • tons of magnificent hay and an endless amount of pasturage on any farm In America. Bromum Inmrmist S tone ef May per Mere The rr«*t itawi of the century, growing whcrerci soil la found. Our great catalogue, worth $100 to any wido awake American gardener or farmer, ia mailed to yon with many farm aeed aamolea, upon receipt of but 10 cents postage. Catalog alone 6 cents for postage. JOHN A. SALZER SEED COMPANY. La Crosse, Wis. mm NOTE PE AN "Z^ae/cEs™ THERE IS B!C RErEREMCES MONEY W/T CA - BOOK – BIBLE MOOSE' ATLANTA Malsby 41 S. Forsyth – St. Company, Atlanta, G t ft. Engines and Boilers Meant Water Heaters, Steam Pomps an>' Fenberthy Injectors, ilf 1 Manufacturers and Dealers In SAW MILLS, Corn Mills, Feed Mills,Cotton GlnMnchlo ery and Grain Separators. SOLID and 1NSKKTKD Saws. Saw Teeth an.) I ca ke, Knight’s Patent Hogs, Btrdsall Saw Mil) and Knglne Repair., Governors,Grate Kars and a full line of Mill Supplies. Brice and quality of goods guaranteed. Catalogue free by mentioning this patter. EE-M Catarrh Componnd Cures Catarrh, Asthma, Bronchi tis and Colds. A MILD, PLEASANT SMOKE, PURELY VEGETABLE. We give an iron-clad guarantee that it* proper use will cure CAX’AICKH or your inonev refunded. For tobacco opera we make KE-IVf Medicated Cigars and Smoking Tobacco, carrying same medical properties the compound. Sam plea Free. One box, month’s treatment, one dollar, postpaid. Your druggist, or EE-M Atlanta, Qa. Capudine Cores ALL Headaches, LaGrippe, Colds, etc. back If It falls. 15ft25c.AH Drugstores DID YOU EVER Consider the Insult offered the Intelligence is made that of thinking people when the claim any one remedy wfll cure ail dl*e*i«8R No, well, think of It and »enu for our book ipedal telling dla all ■ boot 2ft Special KemedU# for eased condition*, and our Family Medicine O»»«•*. A poataJ card will aeeure the book find a sample of I)r. Johnson’* “After Dinner Pill.” « Agents wanted. The noi Co., Austell Building. Atlanta, Ga. Cold Medal at Buffalo Kxpoaftloa. jitciLHENNY’S TABASCO weak afflicted eyee, with use Thompson’s Eys Water Asthma “One of my daughters had a terrible case or asthma, We tried almost everything, but without re lief. We then tried Ayer’s one-half Cherry Pectoral, and three and bottles cured her.” — Emma Jane Entsminger, Langsville. O. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral certainlycuresmany cases of asthma. And it cures bronchitis, hoarseness, weak lungs, whooping - cough, croup, night winter coughs, coughs, and hard colds. Thrs* slits: He., 80c.. $1. All drnKUts. Consult yonr doctor. If he «I* take It, than do as he says. If he tells you not to taka It, then don’t take It. He knows. Leave it Mm , f >^o\d by StoresN Douglas 1 n . and the best \ shoe dealer* everywhere. U \\ CAUTION! \\ The genuine haveW.L. mL 11 Dougina’ I!* |1 II price name and on II bottom /} .■I J°BatS Tl iff yjnnLO-M i mm® 11 M + MADE. * UNION ■ 1 Notict increase of sales tn table below : I8t»^148,7Qg P»lr>, BiiS wa. 1901—1,506.720 Pairs. Business More Than Doubled In Tour Years. THE REASONS I and sells \V\ L. Dougin, makes more men s $3.00 and $3.60 shoes t hau any other two man ufacturers In tho world. placed W. h. Douglas $3.00 and $ 3.60 shoes side by fi le with $6.00 and $C.(>0 shoes of other makes, are found to be Just as good. They will outwear two pairs of ordinary $3.00 and $3.60 shoes. Made of the best leathers, including Patent Corona Kid, Corona Colt, and National Kangaroo. tl.il. F,*t C.I.r By. 1,1* «»A Alw,y. BUefc Hook, W. L. Douglas $4.00 “Gilt Edge Line cannot be equalled at any price. CaUloxfree. Shoe, hy until SSNc. oxtrit. llms. _W. J,. ISougla.. Brockton, E. J. Vawter’s Carnations are the Best /vHOlCE From the famous “Vawter out artificial heat, .ent postpaid, Plant* for on receipt USoj S of price. 6 Tarnation Vlolctafor26ct8 Prince of U alea Oanna i'll,lb. for 25c; 3 Talla Lily Bulba for*5c Order* filled In rotation. Order now. Address Pvk* Flooai. Co., (Inc.], ockas 1'abx, Cauvoosia. * 4* 8 Mention this Paper hi writing to adnertism'x and- eleven-1902. 25 —' _| C13; Best Cough Syrup. 'Pastes Good. in time. Sold bv druggists. CONSUMPTION .2V5_Cj,sv.'