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DR.TALMAGE’S SERMON
The Eminent Divine’s Sunday
Disoourss.
Sabject: Tbl Flag «f Truce—Interest* <>.
Capital an.I Iatbor Are Identical, and
When They Ceaie to Antagonize Each
Other Strife Will Cease.
[Copyright, Louts Klopsch, I8».]
Washington, D. C.—In this disoourss Dr.
Talmage suggests how the everlasting war
between capital and labor may bo brought
to ail., a hapyv 21, ‘‘The eud. The text Is I Corinthians
eye oannot say unto the
hand, I have no need ot thee.”
Fifty thousand workmen in Ohloago
oeaslng the work in one day; Brooklyn stunned
bv attempt to halt Its railroad cars;
Cleveland in the throes ot a labor agita¬
tion, and restlessness among tollers all
over the land have caused an epidemic ot
strikes, and, somewhat to better things, I
apply J-iou the have Pauline seen an thought elaborate of piece my text. of;
ma¬
chinery, with a thousand thousand wheels and a
thousand bauds and a pulleys all
controlled by one great waterwheel, the
machinery so adjusted that when you jar
one part ot it you jar all parts of It. Well,
human society is a great piece of meohan-
ism controlled by one great and ever re¬
volving force—the wheel ot God's machin¬ provi¬
dence. You barm one part of the
ery of sooiety, and you harm all parts. All
profession? interdependent. All trades in¬
terdependent. All classes of people Inter¬
dependent. Capital and labor Interde¬
pendent. No such thing as Independence.
Dives cannot kick Lazarus without hurt¬
ing his own foot. They who threw Sbad-
>rax’* Into the furnace got their own bodies
scorched. Or, to come back to the figure
of the text, what a strange thing It would
be if the eye should say: I oversee the en¬
tire physical mechanism. I despise the
other members of the body; if is there Is any¬
thing I am disgusted with, it with those
miserable, low lived hands. Or, what if
the hand should say: physical I am the, boss I work¬ have
man of tho whole economy;
no respect for the other members of the
body. If there is anything I despise, the it is
the eye seated under the dome of fore¬
head doing nothing but look.
I come iu, and I wave the flag of truce
between these two contestants, and I say,
“The eye cannot say to the hand, ‘I have
no need of thee.’ ”
That brings me to the first suggestion,
and that is, that labor' and capital are to
be brought to a better understanding by a
complete canvass of the whole subject.
They will be brought to peace when they
find that they are identical in their inter-
ests. When one goes down, they lijoth both go
down. When one rises, they rise.
There will be an equilibrium after awhile,
There never has been an exception to the
rule. That which is good for one class of-
society eventually will be good for all
-classes of society, and that whioh is bad
tor one class of society will eventually and
in time bo bad for all. Eveiy speech that
labor makes against capital adjustment. postpones Every the
day of permanent labor
speech that capital day makes against adjust¬
postpones the of permanent
ment. When capital maligns labor, it is
the eye cursing the hand. When labor
maligns capital, It is hand cursing the eye.
As far as X have observed, the vast major¬
ity of capitalists are successful laborers.
If the capitalists would draw their
■glove, you would see the broken Anger
nail, the scar of an old blister, the
stiffened linger joint. The great pub¬
lishers of the country for the most part
were bookbinders, or typesetters, on small
pay. The great carriage manufacturers
for the most part sand-papered While, Wagon
bodies in wheelwright shops. on
the other hand, in all our larga manufac¬
turing establishments you will find men on
wages who once employed a hundred or
five hundred hands. The distance between
capital and labor is not a great gulf over
which is swung a Niagara suspension
bridge; it is only astep, and the capitalists
are crossing over to become laborers, and
the laborers are crossing over to become
capitalists. Would God they might sha4e
bauds while they cross. On the other
hand, laborers are the h’^hest style of capi¬
talists. Where are theii nvestments? In
banks? No! In the rail oads? Nol Their
■nerve, their muscle, their bone, their me¬
chanical skill, their physical health are
magnificent eapitall He who has two eyes,
two ears, two feet, two hands, ten fingers,
has machinery that puts into nothingness
carpet and screw and cptton factory, and
all the other implements on the laborers planet.
The capitalists were laborers, the
were capitalists. The sooner we under¬
stand that the better.
Again, there is to come relief to the la¬
boring classes of this country through eo-
-operative associations. I am not at this
moment speaking of trades unions, but of
that plan by which laborers put their sur¬
plus together affd become their own cap¬
italists. Instead of being dependent capital¬ upon
the beck of this capitalist or that
ist, they manage their own affairs. In
England and Wales there, are 813 co-opera¬
tive associations. They have 340,000 mem-
hers; they have a capital of 918,000,000, and or
what corresponds to our dollars they
do a business annually of 963,000,000.
Thomas Brassey, one of the foremost men
in the British Parliament, on the subjeot
says: “Co-operation is the one and the only
relief for the laboring populations. This
is the path,” he savs, “by whioh they are
to come up from the hand to the mouth
style of living, to reap the rewards and the
honors of our advanced civilization.” Lord
Derby and John Stuart Mill, who gave half
their lives to the study of the labor ques-
tion, believed in co-operative institutions.
“But,” says some one, “haven’t these In-
stltutions sometimes been a failuie?” Yes.
Every great movement has heen a failure
at some time. Application of the steam
power a failure, electro telegraphy a fall-
ure, railroading a failure, but now the
chief suocesses of the world.
“But,” says some one, “why talk of sur¬
plus being put by laborers the Into multitude co-opera¬
tive associations when vast
ot tollers of this country are struggling for
their daily bread and hand have no surplus?” I
reply, put into my classes of the America money for spent
by the laboring and I will establish rum
and tobacco, oo-opera-
tive associations in all parts of this financial land,
some cf them mightier than any
institutions this country of tho 9100,000,000 country. We spend In
over every year
for tobacco. We spend over 91,500,000,000 labor¬
directly or indirectly for rum. The
ing classes spend their share of this money.
Now, suppose the laboring man who has
been expending his money in those direc¬
tions should just add up how much he has
expended during these past few years, and
then suppose that that money was put into
a co-operative association, and then sup¬
pose he should have all his friends in toll,
who had made the same kind of expendi¬
ture, do the same thing, nnd that should
be added up aud put into a oo-operative
association. And then take all that money
expended for overdress part and overstyle people and
overliving on the of toiling in
order that they may appear as well as per¬
sons who have more Income—gather that
a : l up and you could have co-operative as¬
sociations all over this land.
I am not saying anything now about
trades unions. You want to know what I
think of trades unions. I think they are
most beneficial In some directions, and
they have a specific object, and In this day,
when there are vast monopolies—a thou¬
sand monopolies concentrating the wealth
of the people into the possession of a few
men—unless the laboring men of this coun¬
try and all countries band together they
will go under. There is a lawful use of a
trade union. If it means sympathy in time
of sickness, if it means finding work for
people when they are out of work, If ft
means the improvement of the financial,
the moral or the religious condition of the
laboring classes, that is all right. Do not
artists band together in an art union? Do
not singers band together in Handel and
Hadyn societies? Do not newspaper men
band together lu press clubs? Do not
ministers and ot religion band together In con*
ferences associations? There Is not lu
all tho land a city where clergymen do not
come together, many of them onoe a week,
to tnlk over afTalrs. For these reasons you
should not blame labor guilds. Whan they
are doing their legitimate work, they are
most admirable, hut when they come
around with drum and life and flag from
their then they son (foldings, nihilistic, from then their factories,
munUtlc, then are they barbaric, they then are com-
It are to they
are a curse. a man wants stop work
let him stop work, but he cannot stop me
from work.
But now banded suppose that nil the laboring
classes together for benoflcent pur¬
poses In co-operatlye (nssoolatlon, under
whatever name they put their moans to¬
gether. Suppose they take tho money that
they waste In rum and tobacco and use It
for the elevation of their families, for the
education ol their children, for their moral,
Intellectual aud religious Improvement,
what a different state of things we Would
, la )L 0 , 1° this ... country ...... and they would ,, , have
, ,D Qreat Britain.
Do you not renllze the fact that men
work oettor without stlmnlnut? You say,
“Will you deny the laboring men drink, this borne help
which they get from strong
down as they are with many anxieties and
exhausting work?" I would deny them
nothing that Is good for them. I would
deny them strong drink, il I had the power,
because it is damaging to them. My father
said: “I became a temperance man in
early life because I found that in the
harvest field, while I was naturally weaker
than the other men, I could hold out longer
than any of them. They took stimulant
and I took none.”
Everybody knows who they Indulge cannot endure
great fatigue—men in stimu-
lunts. All our young men understand
that. When they are preparing for the re¬
gatta, or the ball club, or the athletic
wrestling, they abstain from strong drink.
Now, suppose all this money that Is
wasted were gathered together and put in¬
to co-operative institutions. Oil, we
would have a very different state of things
from what we have now.
I remark again, the laboring classes of
this country are to And great rollef when
they learn, all of them learn, forecast and
providence. Vast numbers of them put
down their Income and they put down
their expenses, and If the Income meets
the expenses that Is all that Is neoessary.
I know laboring men who are In a perfect
fidget until they have spent their last dol¬
lar. They fly around everywhere until
they get It spent. A oase came under my
observation where a] |young anil man^wus
receiving 9700 a year earned it
hy very hard work. The marriage day
came. The bride had received 9500 as an
inheritance from her grandfather. She
put tho 9500 lu wedding equipment. Then
the twain hired two rooms on the third
story. Then this man, who had most ar¬
duous employment, just as much as he
could possibly endure, got evening em¬
ployment so he could earn a few dollars
more and by this extra evening employ¬
ment almost extinguished his evening eyesight.
Why did ho take this extra em¬
ployment? Was It to lay by something for
a rainy day? No! Was it to get a life in¬
surance so that if he should die his wife
would not be a pauper? Nol It was for
the one purpose of getting Ida wife a 9150
sealskin saeque. I am just giving you a
fact I know. The sister of this woman, al¬
though she is a very poor girl, was not to
be eclipsed, and so she went to work day
and night and toiled and tolled and toiled
almost Into the grave until she got a 9150
sealskin saeque! Well, the news went
abroad all through the street. Most of the
people on that street were laboring, hard
working people, this and they and were they all not went to be
outshone in way, to
work in the same direction and practically
said, though not literally: “Though the
heavens fall, we must have a sealskin
saeque!” in Iowa told that his
A clergyman me
church and the entire neighborhood had
been ruined by tho fact that the people
mortgaged their farms in order to go down
to the Philadelphia Centennial in 1R76.
First, one family would go, then another
family, and fynally.it was not respectable Philadel-
not to go to the Centennial at
phia, and they mortgaged their farms. The
church and the neighborhood ruined in
that way. Now, between such fools and
pauperism there is only a very short step.
In time of peace prepare for war. In time
of prosperity prepare for adversity. Yet
how many there are who drive on the
verge of the preoipico, and at the least
touch of accident or sickness over they go..
Ah, my friends, it is not right, It is not
honestl He that provideth not for his own,
and especially those of bis own household,
is worse than an infidel. A man has no
right to live iu luxury and have all com¬
forts and all brightness around him, tak¬
ing his family with him at that rate— lux¬
everything bright and beautiful and
urious until he stumbles against a tomb¬
stone and fails in, and they all go to the
r oorhouse. That Is not common honesty,
nm no advocate of skinflint saving. I
abhor it. But I plead for Christian provi¬
dence.
Some of the older persons remember
v«y well Abraham Van Nest, of New York,
one of its Christian merchants. He was
often called mean because he calculated
30 closely. Why did he calculate closely?
That he might have the more to give,
There was not a Bible society or a traot
society or ft reformatory Institution in the
city of New York but he had his hand in sap-
porting It. He denied himself many luxu-
ri<? 3 that he might give to others the neoes-
3 *ties. He has been many years reaping
hi 3 reward in heaven, but I shall never
torget the day when I, a green country
Jad, came to bis house and spent the even-
' n gi and at the clo§e of the evening, as I
was departing, he accompanied me to the
door, accompanied me to the steps, came
down off the steps and said: “Here, De
Witt, Is 940 for books. Don’t say any¬
thing about it.” It Is mean or It Is mag¬
nificent to save, according as you save for
a good or bad object.
I know there are many people who have
much to say against savings banks and
life insurances. I have to tell you that the
vast majority of, the homesteads in this
aountry have been the result of such Insti¬
tutions, and I have to tell you also that
the vast majority of homesteads of the fu¬
ture for the laboring classes will be the re¬
sult of such institutions. It will be a great
day for the working classes of England
and the United States when the working-
man can buy a barrel of flour Instead of
flour by the small saok; when he can buy
a barrel of sugar Instead of sugar by the
pound; when he oan pay cash for ooats
and hats and shoes rather than pay an ad¬
ditional amount for tho reason that he has
to get It all charged.
I know a gentleman very well who has
over 1000 hands lu his employ. I said to
him some years ago when there was great
trouble In the labor market, “How are you
getting on with your men?” “Oh,” be said,
“I have no troublel” “Why,” I said, “have
not you had any strikes?” “Oh, nol” he
said. “I never had any trouble.” “What
plan do you pursue?” He said: “I will tell
you. All my men know every year just
how matters stand. Every little while I
call them together and say: ’Now, boys, I
last year I made so much. This year
made less. So you see I cannot pay you as
much as I did last year. Now, I want to
know what you think I ought to have ns
a percentage out of this establishment
an d what wages I ought to give you. You
know I put all my energy in this business,
put all my fortune in it and risked every¬
thing. What do yon really think I ought
to have and you ought to "have?’ By the
time we come out of that consultation we
are unanimous. There has never been an
exception. When we prosper we will pros¬
per together. When we suffer, we all suffer
together, and my men would die for me.”
Now, let all employers be frank with their
employes. Take them into your confi¬
dence. Let them know just how matters
stand. There is an Immense amount of
common sense in the world. It is always
safe to appeal to it.
4 4 For the Sake of Fun
Mischief is Done/*
A vast amount of mischief is done, too,
because people neglect to keep their blood
pure. £ Appears in eruptions, dyspepsia,
indigestion, nervousness, kidney diseases,
and other ailments. Hood's Sarsaparilla
cures all diseases promoted by impure
blood or low state of the system.
J{o cd 6 SaU a Ul
"ever Disappoints
A Rubber Left;.
An English inventor has devised a
very Ingenious artificial leg and foot
intended for use iu eases of amputa¬
tion below the knee joint, It Is
mainly composed, aeeordlng to the
Scientific American, of a hollow rub¬
ber chamber, which Is Inflated lu ex¬
actly the same way as is a bicycle
tire. The skeleton of the foot is of
wood, and contains within it a rub¬
ber-faced joint, which permits of
movements like those that take place
at the ankle. A pair of rubber pneu¬
matic pads surround the end of tho
amputated limb, so that no undue
pressure is exerted on the tissue.
She Is Willing To Be.
If a girl says she Is to he married
‘‘In a year or two,” It means there Is
nothing definite; she has not yet land¬
ed him. -Atchison Globe.
Why Do You Scratch ?
When you can cure yourself for fifty cents?
All skin diseases such ns tetter, salt rheum,
ringworm, eczema, etc., can be surely cured by
an ointment-called Tetterlne. Any number of
testimonials shown for the asking. Nothing
else Is as good. Unless your druggist has it,
send 50c. In stamps to the manufacturer, J. T.
Shuptrine, Savamiih, Ga., for a box postpaid.
A defective hammock sometimes cau-cs
lovers to fall out.
Don’t Tobacco Spit ?nd Smoke Your Life Away.
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag¬
netic, full of life, nerve nnd vigor, take No-To-
Bae, tho wonder-worker, that makes weak men
strong. All druggists, 50c or $1. Cure guaran¬
teed. Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York.
Lies aud cats never travel in a straight
line.
CONSTIPATION
“I have gone 14 days at a time without a
movement of the bowels, not being able to
move them except by using hot water Injections.
Chronic constipation for seven years placed me in
ihis terrible condition; during that time I did ev¬
erything 1 heard of but never found any relief; such
was my case until 1 began using CASCARETS, I
now have from one to three passages a day, and if 1
was rich I would give $100.00 for each movement; It
is such % relief. ’ Aylmeii L. Hunt,
1(589 Russell St.. Detroit, Mich.
CANDY
. CATHARTIC ^
m&Mim
trace mark reoistspcd Jfit
-er «.
V
Plea-'
Uood
... CURE CONSTIPA.
Si-srlltig Remedy HotuvJbuj, Chicago, Montreal,
Sffudinedd THE ATLANTA Tt
Offfsrs thorough practical courses In Bookkeep¬
ing, and Shorthand and Typewriting. Students
placed in positions without extra charge. Re¬
duced rates to all entering school this month.
Call on or address, THE ATLANTA BUSINESS
COLLEGE, 128, 130 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga.
/Barter's ink
Is what the largest and best school
systems use.
College of Dentistry.
DENTAL DEPARTMENT
Atlanta College of Physician* and Surgeon*
Oi.debt Coli.koi in Statk. Thirteenth An¬
nual Se»»lon open* Oct. 3; closes April 30th.
Those contemplating the study of Dentistry
should write for catalogue.
Address S. MV. FOSTER, Dean.
€2-63 Inman Bldg., Atlanta, Ga.
[fig Mil
Cough Syrup. ■ LI Tastes ELSE FAILS. Dae
Best Good.
In T line, f nlfl by drugfistH.
BefeTt! fcfti j 7. l sM aF STT?
Most Popular Wedding Day.
go far as the day of the week Is
concerned, Wednesday Is the favorite
wedding day. If there were anything
In the antiquarian theory, the favor¬
ite weekday among the Anglo-Saxons
ought to be Frida#, for Frea, the Sax¬
on goddess after whom our day of ill-
luck and misfortune was named, was,
like Juno, ’ a patroness * of matrimony,
. but . no English or American . . girl, ,,, how-
ever devoid of superstition, would care
to take the risk of being married on
Friday. Frea was the wife of Woden,
who has given the name to our
Wednesday, but the transfer of the fa¬
vorite weekday for weddings from the
day of Frea, as among the pagan Sax¬
ons, to the day of Woden, was prob¬
ably caused by convenience rather
than by any regard for the feelings of
either Woden or his spouse. Wednes¬
day is the middle day of the week,
and therefore the most convenient, for
It affords time for preparation after
the preceding Sunday, and opportunity
for travel before the Sunday follow¬
ing.-^. Louis Republic.
To Cure Constipation Forever.
Take Casearets f andy Cathartic. 10c or Stir..
If C. C. C. fall to cure, druggists refund money.
The average speed of a carrier pigeon In
calm weather Is 1,200 yards a minute.
Piso’s Cure is the medicine to break up
children’s Coughs and Colds.—Mrs. M. G.
Blunt, Sprague. Wash.. March 8. 1894.
:.•■ V \
j •*
\n ,’tV # - v*
To cure, or money your ,, so
THE BLIND HAVE NOT KEENER
SENSES.
German Iconurlnst Demolishes "
l.onn-ICstiibllshed Belief.
A long series of experiments has re-
ceutly been made b.v Prof. II. dries
liacli, of Basic, upon the relative acute¬
ness of the senses of hearing, touch,
taste and smell iu the case of the blind
and those who possess normal vision.
The results are contained iu Ptluger’s
Arehlv. The observations were made
on those who were otherwise healthy.
In the differentiation of tactile Impres¬
sions no remarkable differences were
observed between the seeing and the
blind, or if small differences did exist
they were in favor of the seeing. In
those born bllud the tactile sharpness
was somewhat less than In the seeing,
and iu soC-c cases the sensorium gen¬
erally was equally defective. The
blind in particular feel less acutely
with the tip of tlie Index linger than
do those who see, and In many cases
the tactile acuteness of the two Index
finger tips differs. In the blind, espe¬
cially in the region of the hand, a
stronger impression Is required to pro-
duce a tactile impression tlinn in those
possessed of sight.
In the capability of localizing im¬
pressions \>f sound no difference exists
between the blind and , ... the seeing. , . In
both groat individual variations occur.
As q rule, both In the seeing and the
blind il irtfMise of the organ of
sides gi hys better results than the use
of one jllone. No difference In the
acuteness of hearing exists between
tho blind nnd those who see. No rela¬
tion was observed between the acute¬
ness of hearing and the power of local¬
izing sounds in cither the seeing or the
blind. No difference was observed in
the two classes in regard to the acute¬
ness of sipell.
In the execution of manual labor the
blind become fatigued sooner than do
lliose of equal age who see. The blind
are more fatigued with manual than
with mental work, which is not the
case with the seeing of the same age.
If any “difference exists in regard to
exhaustion after mental labor it Is in
favor of those of the same age who
see. Both among the blind and the
seeing, there are persons who have
many, others who have only a few,
and others again who have no illusory
or erroneous impressions of touch.
These events are in many respects
opposed to generally received opinions,
for it is usually supposed that depriva¬
tion of sight leads to exaltation of the
acuteness of the other senses, especial¬
ly of the touch and hearing.
A Centenarian Bride.
It is never too late to marry, but it
is rarely that we hear of the bonds of
matritaony being entered into when
one .of the contracting parties has
reached the century mark. The rec¬
ord in such cases was broken when
a few days ago Airs. Mary Duncan
was married to Mr. .Tames Morgan at
' 1 , Kas. The blushing bride had
through three experiences at
{the .tar, but had outlived at eighty
third of her husbands,
met Mr. Morgan she had
two years of her second
1 utfttd thJL, the and good in a old month age would of 103. have
-n( bridegroom Is thirty-two years
younger, and not a novice as a bene-
diet. He has twice assumed marital
ties and responsibilities before. But
he has not carried his years a bit bet¬
ter than the sprightly old lady who
is his new helpmeet. — Philadelphia
Times.
Moat Have a Good Head.
“And is your son going to be a good
business man?” »
“I guess so. They seem to think
pretty well of him down at the office,
anyway. They haven't said a word
about discharging him, in spite of the
fact that his handwriting is the same
as it was when lie came out of
school.”—Chicago Times-Herald.
The Bitterne** of If.
Wife of his Bosom -Socratlo, dear¬
est, what Is the matter?
Mr. S. Welled Hedd (a literary cel¬
ebrity)—At last It has come—at last!
Not a single paragraph about me In
j.ny of the papers this morning.-—
1’uncb.
_
Ask Your Dealer For Allen’s FooNKase f
A powder to shake into-your shoes; rests
the feet. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen,
Sore, Hot, Callous, Aching, Sweating Feet
and Ingrowing Nails. Allen’s Foot-Ease
makes new or fight shoes easy. At all drug¬
gists and shoe stores, 25 ets. Sample LeRoy, muiled N. Y.
FREE. Adr’s Allen 8. Olmsted,
About. , 400.000 nnn acres of ,, land , in , the ,, United IT .. ,
states are planted in Vines.
No-To-Bac for Fifty Gents.
Guaranteed blood tobacco habit MV. cure, $1. All makes druggists. weak
men st'ong, pure.
TberHsn lineof railway in En^lanr], the
pxper^* of which is nearly $10,000,000 per mile.
State of Ohio. City of Toledo. ♦
Lucas County. I
FltANK J. Chenky makes oath that he Is the
senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney Sc
Co., doinpr business in the City of Toledo,
County and State aforesaid, and that said firm
will nay 'he sum of okebundhed doll a hr for
each and every ease of catahuh that oannot
he cured by the use of Ham/s CatarkhCure.
Frank J. Cheney.
Sworn to before me and -ubscrlhed in my
— ) presecee, this 6th day of December,
SKA —'j l.> A. I). 1386. A. W. Gi.EASON.
Notary Public.
Hall’s Catarrh On re 1s taken internally, and
acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces
of the system. Send for testimonials, free.
F. .1. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druyifi-t«. Too.
Hall’s Family Pills are the best,.
Fits permanently cured. No firs or nervous*
ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great
Nerve Restorer. #2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Di:. R. 11. Kune. Ltd.. 931 Arch St., Rliila.. Da.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
• eethinc.softens the gums, redtioesinfiamum-
»Ion.allays pain.cures wind colic. 25c. a hor.nlf*.
Abont Hash.
"Hash," said the man who eats his
meals at home, “furnishes us with an
example of an end without means."
"Tea,” said the boarding house
uian, “but at my place it is'mean and
without end."—Cleveland Leader.
# ___
| Still More Couiitnrfditlng.
The* ! Secret Sorvic* hna Just unearthed an¬
other bMul of eomumfeUevH and secured a
largo .quantity of bogus bills, which nre so
cleverly executed that the avernfo person
w uld never suspect them of being spurious,
i hlngs of great value nre always selected for
lmltatl-'U, notably llostetter’s Stomach Bit¬
ters, Which has many Imitators but. no equals
for disorders like indigestion, general dyspepsia, debility. con¬
stipation, nervousness and
Always go*to of reliable what druggists ask who for. have tho
reputation giving you
Money m ikes the man only when the man
himself t/nnkes tho money.
Beauty Is Blood Deep,
riei.u blood means a clean skin. No
beauty without it. Oaseurets, Candy Catliar-
tio clean your blood and keep It clean, by
stirring up the lazy liver and driving all Im¬
purities from the body. Begin to-day to
banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads,
and that sickly bilious complexion by taking
(’nsearets, beauty for ten cents. All drug¬
gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 26c, 50e.
Facts must be feminine—at least they are
stubborn things.
Id Uhtna as Well as Many Parts
of America die mulberry is highly valued for
curing constipation, headache and liver com¬
plaint Wtuterunlth’s concentrated “Mulberry active principle Pills” con- of
taining the lnxatlve and liver
the mulberry is the best, sample
medicine yet known. To prove it a
fluent Ttamp *S> R p^ a po'”g°. n ' AdM
Abthuii Pktem & Co., Louisville, Ky.
A blind woman never squanders any money
for mirrors.
Kdiicate Your Bowels With (’ftneiirptw.
Candy Cathartic, euro constipation forever,
10 c, 25c. 111’. C. C. tail, druggists refund money.
Gold mining will soon begin in Eastern
Servhv by English and German speculators.
Carnegie Calf
Wears Like Steel. A
JUen’s $2.50 *
Boys’ $1.75 |
Youths’ $1.50
Little Gents’ $1.35
*Red Seal
Cartons.
J. L ORR SHOE COMPANY,
ATLANTA, QA.
GOLDEN CROWN
LAM? CHIMNEYS
Are the best. A«k for them. Coet no more
than common chimney,. All licaters.
riTTSUtliltG lil.ASS CO., Allegheny, F».
WANTKI) AGENTS tor our Cotton
*Book ; It begins at 8c. and runs to lie.;
figures the 16ths and 20ths from 800 to 700
pounds; a $4.00 book for only 99c. It sells
like “hot cakes;” terms liberal. Also for
the Bible Looking; Glass. It teaches tho
Bible by illustrations; agents making from
$4.00 to $10.00 per day. Write to-day.
,t. Is. NICHOLS A CO., Atlanta, Ga.
■ ■■ ---
MENTION THIS PAPER In writing to adver¬
tisers. and 99-34*
-—
Ti Wx% m CO Aids Digestion,
!> tA. m Regulates the Bowels,
T Hakes Teething Easy.
.V TEETHINA Relieves ti»
Bowel Troubles of
it Children of Any Age.
TEETHING POWDERS Costs On tly 25 Cents.
▲ak Your Druggist for 1
If not kept by druggists mail 25 cents to C* JT. TflOFFJETT, HI# D.» ST, JLOU1S, MO*
M ANY a dutiful daughter pays in pain for her mother's
ignorance or perhaps neglect.
The mother suffered and she thinks her daughter
must suffer also. This is true only to a limited extent. No
excessive pain is healthy. Every mother should inform her¬
self for her own sake and especially
INDULGENT for the sake of her daughter. Write /
to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass.,
MOTHERS for her advice about all matters
concerning the ills of the feminine
organs.
Many a young girl's beauty is wasted by unnecessary pain at
time of menstruation, and many indulgent mothers with
mistaken kindness permit their daughters to grow careless
about physical health.
Miss Carrie M. Lamb, Big Beaver, Mich., writes: “Df.ar
Mrs. Jinkham— A year ago I suffered from profuse and
irregular menstruation
and leucorrhoea. My
appetite was variable, ^St¬
stomach sour and bowels P
were not regular, and —v fjfm
was subject to pains like i?
colic duringmenstruation.
I wrote you and began to
take Lydia E. Pinkham’s rfcv/iv*'
Vegetable Compound and (
used two packages of
Sanative Wash. You can’t
imagine my relief. My
courses are natural and \
general health improved." a-
Mrs. Nannie Adkins, V
La Due, Mo., writes:
“Dear Mrs. Pinkham—
I feel it my duty to tell Sr
^ou of the good your
Vegetable Compound has
done my daughter. She
suffered untold agony at
time of menstruation be¬
fore taking yourmedicine;
but the Compound has
relieved the pain, given her a better color, and she feels
stronger, and has improved every way. I am very grateful to
you for the benefit she has received. It is a great medicine
for young girls.”
s* rr~
A 1 P
pm bad? Then
Is your breath your
best friends turn their heads aside.
A bad breath meant a bad liver.
Ayer’s Pills are liver pills. They cure
constipation, sick headache. biliousness, 25c. All dyspepsia, druggists.
Want jsiu mouiuch* ot bond a btsutKul
brown or rich black 1 Then tiae
BUCKINGHAM’S DYE «£ r .
50 H P » C^. NayU*, H. H,
(9
(2 Send your name and address on aS
postal, and we will send you our 1.56--§! §
® page illustrated catalogue free.
c> WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO. <i
178 Winchester Avonue, New Haven, Conn.jJ
Malsby & Company,
39 S. Broad St., Atlanta, Ga.
Engines and Boilers
Steam Water Heaters, Steam Pump* and
Penbertliy Injectors.
I v % >3
il y/f
OH
Manufacturers and Dealers In
MILLS,
Corn Mills, Feed Mills,Cotton Gin Machin¬
ery and Grain Separators.
SOLID and INSERTED Saws, Saw Teeth and
Locks, Knight’s Patent Dogs, Birdsall Saw
Mill and Engine Repairs, Governors, Urate
Bars and a full Hue of Mill Supplies. Price
and quality of goods guaranteed. Catalogue
free by mentioning thlA paper.
W. L. DOUGLAS
$ 3 &$ 3 5 Q SHOES » 1
,
Worth (4 to $6 compared with
other makes.
Indorsed try over
1,000,000 ireiirrrs.
ALL LEATHER8. ALL STYLES
THI GKNl’lNE li... It. 1. I)(iu,U,’
name and price stamped on lioUona.
L 1 Take no substitute claimed
JmjKudm ^ to be as good. Largest makers *
°f $8 and $8.50 shoes in tho
world. Your dealerMhouhl keep
thorn—If not, we will send you
/mMw a pair on receipt of price. State
kind of leather, size and width, plain or cap toe.
Catalogue C Fre©.
W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton. Mass.
PSUM and Whiskey Habit,
cured at home with¬
out pain. Book of pi. r
tii'ulaiNsent
__ RM.WOOI.I.KY, M.I>
Auaiii i, «.m. Office 104 N. Pryor SL