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>Funted Directions.
Dr. F-ntle—There’s nothing serious
the matter with Patsy, Mrs. Muleahey.
I think a little soap and water will (lo
him as much good as anything.
Mrs. Muleahey—Yds, doothor, ’tin
will Oi give it t’ him befoor oor Hither
his males?—Judge.
Sfwrrld Torture.
This 1s often felt in every joint and muscle of
’the body by turns, by people who, experiencing
tho earliest twinges of rheumatism, neglect to
arrest Hostetler's tho malady, Stomach as they may easily do, with
Bitters, a professionally
authenticated remedy for the agonizing com¬
plaint. Recollect that rheumatism unchecked
often lasts a lifetime, or abruptly terminates it
when tho malady attacks the heart. The Bit¬
ters also remedies chills and lever, dyspepsia
and liver complaint.
It makes the old boss sheep smile when he
sees iamb chops on a restaurant bill of tare.
No-To-Uac for Fifty Cents.
Over 400X00 cured. Why not let No-To-Bac
Saves regulate or remove your desire for tobacco?
Cure money, makes health and manhood.
druggists. guaranteed. 50 cents and $1.00, at all
»Tust. wait till about August when tho sun
If it is hot enough for you.
Life Isn’t Worth Living
to one who suffers tho maddening agony of
diseases, Eczema, 1 Totter and such irritating, itching skin
simple chap Every roughness of the skin from of a
' to Tetter and Ringworm even
long standing is completely, quickly aild surely
cured by Tetterine. Is comfort worth 50 cento
to you? That’s tho price of Tetterine at drug
stores, or by mail for price in stamps from J.T.
bliuptilnc. Savannah, via.
How’s Tliis?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
nnv case of Catarrh that cannot be, cured by
Hall's Catarrh Cure. ’
F. J. Cheney & Co., Props., Toledo, O.
Wc. the undersigned, have known F J. Che-
neyiortho last lo years, and believe him per-
feetly honorable in all business transactions
and financially able to carry out any obligation
made by their firm.
West »fc Truax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo.
Ohio.
WalPino, gists. Toledo, Kinnan Ohio. & Martin, Wholesale Drug¬
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act¬
ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur¬
faces of the system. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold
by all Druggists. Testimonials free.
Hall’s Family Pills are the best.
Cascarets stimulate liver, kidneys and
bowels. Never sicken, weaken or gripe: 10c.
CANCERS,TUMORS, DROPSY AND FTTS
Chronic DU cases Successfully Treated or
Money Returned.
Cancers permanently removed, “roots and
all,” in 10 days, for $10.00. All other chronic
diseases treated for $5.00 per month. Noqi uacks.
No humbugs. Fifteen years’ experience i n this
city. Absolute guarantee. Send money with
full description of case to Dk. O. Henley
Snidku. Office and Dispensary, 5 to 9 North
Boulevard, Atlanta, Ga.
When bilious or costive, eat a Cascaret,
cancly cathartic; cure guaranteed; 10c., 25c.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens tho gums, reduces inflamma¬
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 23c. a bottle.
Fits permanently cured, No fits or nervons-
ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Dk. R. H. Kline, Ltd.. 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
I cannot speak too highly of Pi-so’s Cure for
Consumption.—Mrs. Frank Mobbs, 213 W. 22 U
St., New York, Oct. 29, 1894.
Just try a 10c. box of Cascarets, the finest
liver and bowel regulator ever made.
i rue Purifier E!ood
Such a medicine you need at once to remove
the impurities which have accumulated in
your blood during winter. Such a medicine is
Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Therefore take Hood's
Sarsaparilla now. It will do you wonderful
good. It will purify your blood, give you an
appetite, and cure all humors.
Hood’s SarsapanlSa
Is sold by all druggists. Price $1, six for $5.
Hoad’s Pills are prompt, efficient and
easy in effect. 25 cents.
35S
r at laugn ihe Sun %y if
Drink r
CMsit xx mm Moot beer.
---X 5 «\x iws. . sg
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m 8 X"
IWeH-DrinM '/Keep%»
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WMES ® ti3ee IQuench^s
i; a o yyour thirst
mnES
SMootbeer.A
MORPHINE, bit
Jlonarch Home Cu.-e Co., New Albany, Ini>.
The The Tho
Best lest.
Thoro are two kinds of sarsaparilla: The best — and the
rest. Tho trouble is they look alike. And v.-lien the rest
dress liko the best who’s to tell them apart ? Well, “ the tree
is known by its fruit.” That’s an old test and a safe one.
And tho taller tho tree tho deeper tho root. That’s another
test. What’s tho root,—tho record of these sarsaparillas ? Tho
one with tho deepest root is Ayer’s. The one with the richest
fruit; that, too, is Ayer’s. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla has a record of
half a century of cures ; a record of many medals and awards—
culminating in tho medal of tho Chicago V.’oild’s Fair, which,
admitting Ayer’s Sarsaparilla as tho best—shut its doors against
tho rest. That was greater honor than tho modal, to be tho only
Sarsaparilla admitted as an exhibit at tho World’s Fair. If you
want to get tho host sarsaparilla of your druggist, hero’s an
infallible rule: Ask for the best and you’ll got Ayer’s. Ask
for Ayer’s and you’ll got tho best.
ltEMARKABLE KELDVERi
Of a Young Liulf of Gasport, No-.v York,
from Aimomia.
From th<e Courier , Buffalo , N. Y.
Miss Lulu Stevons, daughter or George
Stevens, the well-known blacksmith, of Gas-
port, Niagara, County, New York, has sur¬
prised her neighbors considerably, by not
dying five mouths ago, when the physicians
said ahe could not live.
This was quite a remarkable case. The
young wommif who is very well known, on
account of her musical ability, had be*-n a
very healthy girl, until about one year ago,
when she began to fail, and grew so pule
aud apparently bloodless and so weak that
after a few mouths she was given, up to die.
Last winter a physician wno was a visitor
at Gas port met Miss Stevens, aud seeing her
emaciated condition, and hearing from the
local doctors that the disease was anaemia,
prevailed on the girl's mother to make her
try Dr. Williams’Pink Pills. Directly she
commenced the treatment she began to
mend, and now since February, when she
decided to take thorn, she has become well
and strong and the picture of good health.
The mother of the girJ, Mrs. Stevens, says:
■“Every Tills one Lulu, in Gasport knows that thankful P.nk
cured and i feel very
that we heard of them in time to save my
child's life.”
densed Dr. Williams 1 Pink Pills contain, in a con¬
form, nil the elements necessary to
give new life and richness to the blood and
restore shattered nerves. They are also a
specific for troubles peculiar to females,
such as suppressions, irregularities and all
forms of weakness. They build up the blood,
and restore the glow of health to pale and
sallow cheeks. In men they affect a radical
cure in all cases arising from mental worry,
overwork or excesses of whatever nature,
Pink Pills are sold in boxes (never in loose
bulk) at 50 cents a box or six boxes for
$2.50, and may be had of all druggists, or
tlireCt by mail from Dr. Will urns’ Medicine
ComDau company, y s sem,noni. c h«neemdv N Y
THE GREAT FEUD AND ITS END.
It is seldom in this workaday age
that one encounters a genuine family
feud, inherited from sire to son through
no less than six centuries. Such a feud
actually existed in the dominions of
Queen Victoria until a short time ago,
and its final settlement was brought
about by the ingenuousness of a boy
of nine.
The two leading Anglo-Irish families
in Ireland have long been the Fitz¬
Geralds and the Butlers. From being
comrades in arms of the invading
strongbow, they became by degrees ri¬
val barons, and fierce contestants for
the vice-sovereignty of their adopted
country. In the wars of the roses
the Butlers sided with the white rose
of Lancaster, the Fitz-Geralds with the
red rose of York. Factions gathered
around in two great houses; and the
bitter feud brought forth death and
bloodshed from as early as 1250 down
to the Williamite wars. Butlers, whose
chief had obtained the dignity of earl
of Ormonde, succeeded in crushing the
power of the elder branch of the Fitz¬
Geralds, earls of Desmond. It is told
of a warlike Desmond that while being
borne prisoner on the locked shields
of his feudal foe’s clansmen, the But¬
lers taunted him with the bitter words:
‘‘Where is now the proud Fitz-Ger-
ald?”
To which the indomitable earl ans¬
wered :
“Fitz-Gerald is where he ought to
be—on the necks of the Butlers.’*
This proud reply will give an idea of
the intensity of the strife.
Now it happened that her majesty’3
Irish viceroy gave a garden party in
the viceregal lodge at Dublin, and
thither were bidden by,accident the
marquis of Ormonde, head of the But¬
ler family (familiar to the Americans
through his yachting interests) and the
little duke of Leinster, boyish chieftain
of the house of Fitz-Gerald. With the
duke, who was not quite nine years of
age, came his widowed mother, one of
the beautiful Duncombs sisters.
The duchess of Leinster lost sight
of her son for a space, and in going to
look for the lad, found him engaged in
earnest conversation with a tall, elder¬
ly gentleman, in whom she was sur¬
prised to recognize the marquis of
Ormonde. What was her horror when,
on approaching nearer, she distinctly
heard the youthful Geraldine remark
in somewhat slangy phrase:
“Well, I suppose I ought to punch
your head on account of the feYid, but
I say, you know, you’re too jolly decent
a chap for that. Can't we shake hands
and call it square?”
With the utmost gravity Lord Or¬
monde grasped the small hand of his
hereditary foe, and when the amused
mother came to congratulate them on
the happy settlement of GOO years of
bitterness, she found young hopeful
perched, like his famous ancestor, on
the neck of the Butler.
Thus ended a feud, undoubtedly one
of the oldest, and possibly the bloodi¬
est in the world.—Atlanta Constitu¬
tion.
REV. DR. TALMAGE.
THE NOTED DIVINE’S SUNDAY DIS¬
COURSE.
Subject: “An Everyday Christ.”
Text: “She, supposing Him to be the gar¬
dener.”—John xx., 15.
Here are Mary Magdalene and Christ, just
atter His resurrection. For 40»0 years a
grim and ghastly tyrant had boon killing
people and had drugging them into his cold pal¬
ace. He a passion for human skulls.
For torty centuries ho had been unhindered
In his work. He had taken down kings and
queens and conquerors and those without
fame. In that cold palace there were
shelves of skulls and pillars of skulls and
nltars of skulls and evou the chalices nt the
table were made of bleached skulls. To the
skeleton of Abel he had added the skeletons
of all the ages, and no one had disputed his
right until one Good Friday, about 1867
years ago, as near as I can calculate it, a
Mighty Stranger came to the door of that
awful place, rolled back the door, and went
in, and seizing the tyrant, threw him to the
pavement and put upon the tyrant’s neck
the heel of triumph.
Then the Mighty Stranger, exploring all
the ghastly furniture ot tho place and walk¬
ing through the labyrinths, and opening the
dark eellars of mystery and tarrying under a
roof the ribs of wliioh were made of human
bones—tarrying for two nights and a day,
the nights very dark and the day very dis¬
mal, He seized the two chief pillars of that
awful palace and rocked them until it began
to fall, and than, laying hold of the ponder-
ous front gate, hoisted it from its hinges and
marched forth crying, “I am the resurrec¬
tion.” That event we celebrate this Eastar
morn, Haudelian and Beethovean miracles
of souud added to this tioral decoration
Whioh has set the place abloom.
There are three or four things which the
world and the church have not noticed in re¬
gard to the resurrection of Christ. First,
our Lord in gardener’s attire. Mary Mag¬
dalene, grief struck, stands by the rifled sar¬
cophagus of Christ and turns around, hop¬
ing she can find the tracks of the sacrilegious
resurrectionist who has despoiled the grave,
and she finds some one in working upparei
come forth as if to water the flowers or up¬
root the weeds from the garden or set to re-
climbing the falling vine—some one in
working apparel, His garments, perhaps,
haying tho sign of the dust and the dirt of
the occupation.
fresh Mary Magdalene, on her face the this rain work¬ of n
shower of weeping, turns to
man and charges him with the desecration
of the tomb, His when, !o! the stranger responds,
flinging whole soul into one word which
trembles with all the sweetest rhythm of
earth and heaven, saying, “Mary! tile In that
peculiarity of accentuation all incognito
fell off, and she found that instead of talking
with an humble gardener of Asia Minor, she
was talking with Him who'owns all the hang¬
ing gardens of heaven. Constellations tho
clusters of forgetmenots, the sunflower the
chief of all, the morning sky and midnight
aurora, flaring terraces of beauty, blazing
like a summer wall with coronation roses
and giants of battle. Blessed and glorious
mistake of Mary Magdalene! “She, suppos¬
ing Him to be the gardener.” What’does
that mean? It means that we have an every¬
day Christ for everyday work in everyday
apparel. Not on Sabbath morning in our
most seemly apparel are we more attractive
to Christ than we are in our everyday work
dress, managing our merchandise, field, smiting
our anvil, plowing our tending the fly¬
ing shuttles, mendingthe garments for our
household, providing food for our families
or toiling with weary pen or weary pencil or
weary chisel. A working day Christ in work¬
ing day apparel for us in our everyday toil.
Put it iDto tho highest strain of this Easter
anthem,“Supposing Him to be the gardener.”
If Christ had appeared at daybreak with a
crown upon His head, especial that would have for
seemed to suggest sympathy
monarebs. If Christ had appeared in chain
of gold and with robe diamonded, that would
affluent. have seemed If Christ to be especial had appeared sympathy with for sol¬ the
dier’s sash and sword dangling at His side,
that would have seeinod to imply especial
sympathy for warriors. But when I find
Christ in gardener's habit, with perhaps the
flakes of the earth and of the upturned soil
upon His garments, then I spell it out that
He has hearty and pathetio understanding
with everyday work and everyday anxiety
and overyday fatigue.
Boll it down in comfort all through these
aisles. A working day Christ iu working
day apparel. Tell it in the darkest corridor
of the mountain to the poor miner. Tell it
to the factory maid in most unventilated
establishment at Lowtll or Lancaster. Toll
it to the clearer of roughest new ground in
western wilderness. Tell it to the sewing stitcii
woman, a stiieh in the side for every
in the garment, some of their cruel em¬
ployers having no right to think that they
will get through tho door of heaven any
more than they could through the eye of a
broken needle which has just dropped on tho
hare floor from the pricked and bleeding
fingers of the consumptive sewing girl.
Away with your talk about hypostatic union
and soierioiogy of the council of Trent and
the metaphysics of religion which would
freeze practical Christianity out of the world,
but pass along this gardener’s coat to all
nations that they may touch the hem of it
and feel the thrill of the Christiy brothor-
hood. Not supposing the man to be Cassar,
not supposing Him Him the to gardener.” be Socrates, but “sup¬
posing to be helped Joseph
toiling Oh, that amid is the what and the Wedgwood,
heat dust of the
potteries, until he could make for Queen
Charlotte tho first royal table service of Eng¬
lish manufacture. That was what helped
James Watt, scoffed at and caricatured until
he could- put on wheels the thunderbolt of
power which roars by day and by night in
every furnace of the locomotive engine of
America. That is what helped Hugh Miller,
toiling amid the quarries of Cromarty, until
every rock became to him a volume of the
world’s biography, aud he found the foot¬
steps of the Creator in the old red sandstone.
Oh, tho world wants a Christ for the office,
a Christ lor the kitchen, a Christ forthe shop,
a Christ for tho banking house, a Christ lor
the garden, while spading and irrigating tho
territory! Christ Oh, of course we want to see
at last lu royal robe and bediamonded,
a celestial equestrian mounting the white
horse, but from this Easter of 1897 to our
iast Easter on earth we most need to see
Christ as 3Iary Magdalene saw Him at the
daybreak, “supposing Him to he the gar¬
dener.”
Auoiher thing which the church and tho
world have not noticed in regard to t he res¬
urrection of Christ is that He made His first
post mortem appearance to one who had been
tho seven deviled Mary Magdalene. One
would have supposed He would have made
His first posthumous appearance ton woman
who had always been illustrious for good-
ness.
There are saintly women who have always
been saintly—saintly in girlhood, saintly iu
infancy, always saintly. In nearly all our
families there have been saintly auncs. In
my family circle it was saintly aunt Phebe;
in yours saintly aunt Martha or saintly aunt
Ruth. One always saimly. But not so was
tho one spoken of in the text.
While you are not to confound her with
the repentant courtesan who had made her
long locks do the work oi towel at Christ’s
foot washing, you are not to forget that she
was exorcised of seven devils. What a capi¬
tal of demonology she must have been! What
a chorus of all diabolism! Seven devils—
two for the eyes and two for the hands and
two for tho feet and one for the tongue.
Seven devils; yet all these are extirpated,
and now she is as good as once she was bad.
and Christ honors her with the first posthu¬
mous appearance. What does that mean?
Why, it means for worst sinner greatest
grace; it means those lowest down shall
come, perhaps, highest up; it means that the
clock that strikes 12 at midnight may strike
12 at inidnoon; it means that tho grace of
God is seven times stronger than sin, Mary
Magdulene the seven deviled became Mary
Magdalene tho seven anceled. It menns
that when tho Lord meets us at last Ho will
not throw up to us what we have been. All
He said to her wus, “Mary!” Many people
having met her under such clreumstanqes
would have said: “Let me soe, how many
devils did you have? Oue, two, three, four,
five, six, seven. What a terrible pleoe you of
were when I first met youl” Tho most
the Christian women in our day would have
nothing to do with Mary Magdalene even be
after her conversion, lest somehow they
compromised. The only thing I have to Bay
against women is that they have not onough
mercy for Mary Magdalene. Christ put all
pathos and all reminiscence and all anticipa¬
tion and all pardon and all comfort ami all
heaven into one word of four letters,
“Mary!” Mark you, Christ did not Hannah appear
to some ruble E'izabeth or Bible or
Bible Esther or Bible Deborah or Bible Vnsh-
ti, but to Mary; not to Mary against whom
nothing was .said; not to Mary the James; mother of
Jesus; not to Mary the mother of not
to Mary the slater ol Lazarus, hut to seven
deviled Marv.
There is a man seven deviled—devil oi
avarice, devil of pride, devil of hate, dovil
of indolence, devil of falsehood, devil of
strong drink, devil of impurity. God can
take them all away, seven or seventy. Irodo
over the new cantilever bridge that spans
Niagara—a bridge 1)30 feet long, 831) feet of
chasm 1rom bluff to bluff. I passed over It
without any anxiety. Why? Because twen¬
ty-two locomotives and twenty-two cars
laden with gravel had tested the bridge,
thousands of people standing on the Can¬
adian side, thousands standing on the Ameri¬
can side to applaud the achievement. And
however long the train of our immortal in¬
terests may be, we are to remember that
God’s bridge of mercy spanning the chasm
of sin has been follv tested by the awful ton¬
nage of all tho pardoned sin of all the ages,
church militant standing on one bank,
church triumphant standing on Ihe other
bank. Oh, it was to the seven deviled 31 ary'
that Christ made His first post mortem ap¬
pearance.
There is another thing that tho world and
the church have not observed in regard to
tills resurrection, ani that is, it was the
morning twilight.
If the chronometer had been invented and
Mary had as good a watch as some of the
Marys of our time have, she would have
found it was about half past 5 o’clock a. m.
Matthew says it was iu the dawn; Mark says
it was very early in the morning; John says
it was while it was yet dark. In other words,
it was twilight. That was tho o’elo-k at
which Mary Magdalene mistook Christ for
the gardener. What does that mean? It
means there are shadows over the grave on-
lifted—shadows of mystery that are hover¬
ing. Mary stooped down and tried to look
to tho other end of the crypt. She gave hys¬
teric outcry. She could not soe to the other
end of the crypt. Neither can you see to the
other end of the grave of your dead. Neither
can we see to the other end of our own grave.
Oh, if there were shadows over the family
plot belonging to Joseph of Arimathea, is it
strange that there should be some shad ■ w -
over our family lot? Easter dawn, not Easter
noon.
Shadow of unanswered question! Why
were they taken away from us? Why were
they ever given to us if they were to betaken
so soon? Why were they taken so suddenly?
Why could they not have uttered some fare¬
well words? Why? A short question, but a
whole crucifixion of agony in it. Why?
Shadow oa the graves of good men anil
women who seemed to die before their work
was done. Shadow on all the graves of
children because we ask ourselves why so
beautiful a craft was launehed at all if it Was
to he wrecked one mile outside of the harbor?
But what did Mary Jiagdalene have to do in
order to get more light on that grave? She
had only to wait. After awhile the Easter
sun rolled up, and the whole plnee was
flooded with light. What have you and I to
do in order to get more light on our own
graves and light upon the graves of our
dear loved ones? to wait.
Charles Y. of Strain, with his servants'and
torches, went down into the vault of the
necropolis where his ancestors were buried,
and went deeper, farther on until he came to
across arouud whioh were arranged the
caskets of his ancestors. He also found a
enskek,.''.attaining the body of one of his own
family. He had that casket opened, and there
by embalmer’s art he found that the body was
as perfect as eighteen years before when
it was emtombed. But under perished. the explora¬ Oh.
tion his body and mind
my friends, do not let us morbidly
struggle with the shadows of the sepul¬
cher. What are we to do? Wait. It is
not the evening twilight that gets darker
and darker. It is t ho morning twilight that
gets brighter and brighter into the perfect
day. I preach it to-day. Sunrise over
Pore le Chaise, sunrise over Greyfriars
chnrhyard, sunrise over Greenwood, over
Woodlawn, over Laurel Hill, over Mount
Auburn, over Congressional burying ground,
sunrise over ev-ry country graveyard, sun¬ the
rise over tho catacombs, sunrise over
sarco phagl where the ships lie buried. Halt
past 5 oY’lock among tho tombs now, but
soon to be the noonday of explanation and
beatitude. It was in the morning twilight
that 3Iary Jiagdalene mistook Christ for a
gardener. world
Another thing the and the churchj
have not observed—that is, Christ’s pathetic
credentials. How do you know it was not
a gardener? His garments said He was a
gardener. The flakes of the upturned earth
scattered upon His garments said He was a
gardener. How do you know He was not a
gardener? Ah! Before Easter had gone by
He gave to some of His disciples His three
credentials. He showed them His hands and
His side. Three paragraphs written in ri gid
or depressed letters. A scar in the right
palm, a scar in the leit palm, a scar amid
the ribs—scars, sears. That is the way they
kueiv Him. That is the way you and I will
know Him.
Alter Christ’s interment every cellular
tissue broke down, and nerve and artery and
brain were a physiological wreck, and yet
He comes np swarthy, rubicund aud well.
When I see utter such mortuary silence such
radiant appearance, that settles it that
whatever should become of the bodies of
our Christian dead, they are going to come reil-
up, the nerves restrung, the optio nerve
luminod, the eardrum a-vibrate, the whole
body lifted up, without its weaknesses aud
worldly uses lor which there is no resurrec¬
tion. Come, is it not almost time for us to
go out to meet our reanimated dead? Can
you not hear the lifting of the rusted latch?
Oh. the glorious thought, the glorious
consolation of this subject when I find
Christ coming up without any of tho lacera¬
tions—for you must remember He was lac¬
erated and wounded fearfully in the eriiei-
llxion—coming up without one! What does
that make me think? That the grave will
get nothing of us except our wounds aud
imperfections. Christ went into the grave
exhausted and bloodless. All the current of
His life had poured out from His wounds.
He hud lived a life of trouble, sorrow aud
privation, and then Ho died a lingering
death. His entire holy hung on four-
spikes. No invalid of twenty years’suffer¬
ing ever went into the grave so white and
ghastly and broken down as Christ, and yet
l;cre He comes up so rubicund and robust
she supposed Him to be the gardener.
Ah, all the sideaehes, and the headaches,
and the baok aches, and tho leg aches, and
ihe heart aches we will leave where Christ
left His! The ear will come up without its
heaviness, tile eye will come up without its
dimuess, the lungs will come up without op¬
pressed respiration. Oh, what races we will
run when we become immortal athletes! Oh,
what circuits we will take when, all earthly
imperfections substrac-ted and all Celestial
velocities added, wo shall set up our resi¬
dence in that city which, though vaster than
all tho cities of this world, shall never have
htandiiig obsequy! morning round the shattered
this
of our Lord’s tomb, I point you to
world without hearse, without muffled
drum, without tumulus, without catafalque
and without a tear. Amid all the cathedrals
ot the blessed uo longer ihe “Dead March
in Saul,” but whole libretti of “Halleluiah
Chorus.” Oh. put trumpet to lip and finger
key and loving forehead against the
bosom of a risen Christ! Halleluiah, amen!
amen!
Motherhood.
A mother who is in pood physical condition transmits
to her children the bloamngs of a good constitution. & Y
The child fairly drinks in health from its mother’s
robust constitution before birth, and from a healthy ,
mother's milk after. t
Is not that an incentive to prepare for a healthy
maternity'^ of what ,4
I)o you know the meaning
is popularly called those “long¬
ings,” many women or cravings, (luring which pregnancy? beset so * f /V*rJ —'r
mother’s There is blood. something Nature lacking cries in out tho lyM
and will he satisfied at all hazards. L ii
One wants sour things, // / 7 //
woman &
another wants sweets, another WffXry i
wants salt things, and so on.
The real need all tho time is to
enrich nourishment to build the blood the for entire another so as generative to life, supply and Pxxv'* * * ssi
up J m
system, so that the birth may bo I v3
possible and successful. mothers would fort¬ A 1 * N 4S.
If expectant v * l V mj
ify themselves with Lydia E. Pink- V itf- /
liam's Vegetable Compound, which 1ft
for twenty years has sustained
thousands of women in this condition, there would he fewer disappointments
at birth, and they would not experience those annoying “longings.”
In the following letter to Mrs. Pinkham, Mrs. Whitney demonstrates the
power of the Compound in such cases. She says:
“ From the time I was sixteen years old till I was twenty-three, I was
troubled with weakness of the kidneys and terrible pains when my monthly
periods came on. I made up my mind to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound and was soon relieved. After I was married, the doctor said I
would never bo able to go my full time and have a living child, as I was
constitutionally weak. I had lost a baby at seven months and a half. The
next time I commenced at once and continued to take your Compound through
the period of pregnancy, and I said then, if I went my full time and the baby
lived to be three months old, I should send a letter to you. My baby is now
seven months old and is as healthy and hearty as one could wish.
“ I am so tliankfui that I used your medicine, for it gave me the robust
health to transmit to my child. I cannot express my gratitude to you; I
never expected such a blessing. Praise God for Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound, and may others who are suffering do as I did and find relief, and
may many homes be brightened as mine has been.”—M rs. L. Z. Whitney, 5
George St., E. Somerville, Mass.
ANDY CATHARTIC
CURECONSTIMTION^
Xx m; ?*ai
50 4 ^ all
l 25* SO* _____ D8UGGIST5 *2*
| * ABSOLUTELY free-. GUARANTEED Art. STERLING RF.MKBY €0.. Chirarro, Montreal. Can.. or yew Yor k. en .»
Ip pie ' npii bnoWet
^ cr C»C' in, !»C|.iSy Q» CfCn
WU ALABASTINE.*
HllgSS » TEMPOBL Wall P JT ISY, aper WON’T is MOTS, Unsanitary. BUBS RUB OFF KALSSOMIMJE OFF. AXIS SCALES. ISJ \
$ Mi AlABASnHE,£*acaH !WSS \
felspSS , _ For Sale by Paint Dealers Everywhere.
Tl ee-bSIotSS ilG
o W. job m g*jflg®gg^ fcSSt
1U? S3 ./; P-S SjMp? «
THE STANDARD PAIP4T FOR STRUCTURAL PURPOSES.
Pamphlet, “Suggestions for Exterior Decoration,” Sample Card .and Descriptive Price List free by mail*
Asbestos Roofing, Building Non-Conducting Felt, Steam Packing;, and Electrical Boiler Coverings, Five-Proof Faints , Etc.
Asbestos Insulating Materials*
n. W. JOHNS M Ai\ LTACTUBING CO.,
87 Maiden Lane. New York.
CHICAGO: 240 k 242 Randolph St. PHILADELPHIA: 170 & 172 North 4th St. BOSTON: 77 fz 79 Pearl Rt,
Corn
is a vigorous feeder and re¬
sponds well to liberal fertiliza¬
tion. On corn lands the yield
increases and the soil improves
if properly treated with fer¬
tilizers containing not under
7% actual
Potash.
A trial of this plan costs but
little and is sure to lead to
profitable culture.
All about Potash—the results of its use by actual ex¬
periment on the best farms in the United States—is
told in a littl e book which we publish and will giadly
mail free to any fanner in America who will write for it
GERMAN K.ALI WORKS,
93 Nassau St., New York.
SAW MILLS.
LIGHT and HEAVY, and SUPPLIES.
-OCHESPEST AND BEST.O-
$5° Cast every day; work 180 hands.
LOMBARD IRON WORKS
ANI) SUPPLY COMPANY,
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
HF’qie* Men Only.
Diabetes, Bright’s Disease and all chronic af¬
fections of the genito-urinary system are cured
by HAGGARD’S SPECIFIC TABLETS.
They not only cure but Invigorate and re¬
store. 1 box $1.00, 3 boxes $2.50, by mail. Ad¬
dress HAGGARD SPECIFIC COMPANY.
310 Noreross Blri’g., Atlanta, Ga. LAMAR
& RANKIN DRUG CO., Wholesale Agents.
OSBORNE’S /
uunedd eueae
book?s. Augusta. Short Ga. Actual business. No text
tune. Cheap board- Send for catalogue.
SLffSFARM in TEXAS»
your gains. own terms, write me. I handle nothing but bar¬
and can locate you in any county in the State.
ROBERT C. CARMAN, - Austin, Texas.
lbfi. Best Granulated Sugar $ 1.00
Shipped to anybody. Send no
money, but enclose stamp to
CoMotldatod Whole*.!, 8. Co.,215 S. Clinton 8t.,Wopt. 28Cblcaso
AGENTS We 7 n ' 0511 111 County
article cn earth. We pav Washington, ajl expense; AVtdress
GLYZA Cllliir. CO., I). V.
FRBCSC COMPANY
ECLIPSE ENGINES
k
Boilers, Saw Mills, Cotton Gins, Cotton
Presses, Grain Separators.
Chisel Tooth and Solid Saws, Saw’ Teeth. In¬
spirators, Injectors, Engine Repairs and
a full line of Brass Goods.
K2T Send for Catalogue and Prices.
Avery J & McMillan
SOUTHERN MANAGERS.
N 08 , 51 & 53 S. Forsyth St., ATLANTA, GA.
DOUGLAS
SHOE
BEST !H THE WORLD.
mmk S: \ 1m 1.000.000 tbST wearers over ' as
Mwapj-::::':;;;;:. : the best, in style, lit
iilld durability of
. iiii ; 3 : & : s|g any shoe ever offer-
aNraHr-U-Vv UiiHib \ \ “ *\'| i every amt styles variety and of of
leatner.
One dealer in a
town given exfilus-
ivo sale and adver¬
tised in local paper
I on receipt order. of reason-
able Write
v\vwv- -v . 'y for catalogue to
\v«LuLfc*.V •A W. Kroeklon, I.. IXXTtil.AS, Mnm.
.
1,340,000
CONSTANT WEARERS.
MENTION THIS PAPER- In tisers. writing ANU97-16 to adver¬
B^i^*!iSe!gg<ptS»S lil ALL ELS; FAILS. ^g
Boat CLIRtS Syrup. Tastes Good. Use
Cough IMlIlMf"",
in time. S old by druggists.
£ fcgEffiS
#SCIFE.