Newspaper Page Text
REV. DR.
THE NOTED UIVINKVS SUNDAY
COUK8K.
God’s PerFccfc Harmony and the Discord
That Was Made by Bln-The Time is
Coming When the World Will Again
Resound to Heavenly Harmonies.
Text: “Who laid tho cornerstone thereof,
when the morning stars sang together?”-
Job 38, 6, 7.
We have all seen the ceremony at the lay¬
ing of the cornerstone, of church, asylum or
Masonic temple. Into the hollotv of the
stone were documents, placed scrolls of history and im¬
portant to be suggestive if. 100
or 200 years after, the building should be
destroyed by fire or torn down. We re¬
member the silver trowel or iron hammer
that smoto the square piece of granite into
sanctity. We remember some venerable
man hammer. who presided wielding the trowel or
We remember also the music as
the choir stood on the scattered stones and
timber of the building about to be con¬
structed. The leaves of the notebooks
fluttered in the wind and were turned over
with ,a great rustling, and we remember
how the bass, baritone, tenor, contralto
and soprano voices commingled. They had
for many days been rehearsing the special
programme that it might be worthy of the
cornerstone laving.
In my text the poet of Uz calls us to a
grander ceremony—the laying oT the foun¬
dation of this great temple of a world.
The cornerstone was a block of light, and
the trowel was of celestial crystal. All
about and on tho embankments" of clouds
stood the angelic choristers unrolling their
librettos of overture, and other worlds
clapped shining cymbals while the cere¬
mony went on, and God, the Architect, by
stroke of light after stroke of light, dedi¬
cated this great cathedral of a world, with
mountains for pillars and sky for frescoed
eei\ing and flowering fields for a floor and
sunrise and midnight aurora for uphol¬
stery. “Who laid the cornerstone thereof,
when the morning stars sang together?”
The fact is that the whole universe was a
complete cadence, an unbroken dithy¬
ramb, a musical portfolio. The great sheet
of immensity had been spread out, and
written on it were the stars, the smaller of
them minims, the larger of them sustained
notes. The meteors marked the staccato
passages, the whole heavens a gamut with
aU sounds, intonations, modulations, the
space between the worlds a musical in¬
terval, trembling of stellar light a quaver,
the thunder a bass clef, the wind among
trees a treble clef. That is the way God
made all things a perfect harmony.
But one day a harp string snapped in tho
great orchestra. One day a voice sounded
out of tune. One day a discord, harsh and
terrific, grated upon the glorious antiphon.
It was sin that made the dissonance, and
that harsh discord has been sounding
through the centuries. A\1 the work of
Christians and philanthropists and reform¬
ers of all ages is to stop that discord and
get all things back into the perfect har¬
mony which was heard at the laying of the
cornerstone when the morning stars sang
together. Before I get through, if I am
divinely helped, I will make it plain that
sin is discord and righteousness harmony;
that in general things are out of tune is as
plain as to a musician’s ear is the unhappy
clash of clarinet and bassoon in an orches¬
tral rendering.
The world’s health out of tune; weak
lungs and the atmosphere in collision, dis¬
ordered eye and noonday light in quarrel,
rheumatic limb and damp weather in strug¬
gle; neuralgias, and pneumonias, and con¬
sumptions, and epileptics in flocks sweep
the neighborhoods and cities. Where you
find one person with sound throat, and keen
eyesight, and alert ear, and easy respira¬
tion, and regular pulsation, and supple
limb, and prime digestion, and steady
nerves, you find 100 who have to be very
careful because this or that or the other
physical function intellect is disordered.
The human out of tune; the
judgment leaky, wrongly swayed, or the memory
or the will weak, or the temper in¬
flammable, the well balanced mind excep¬
tional.
Domestic life out of tune; only here and
there a conjugal outbreak of incompata-
bility of temper through the divorce courts
or a filial outbreak about a father’s will
through the surrogate’s court, or a case of
wife beating or husband poisoning through
the criminal courts, but thousands of fami¬
lies with June outside and January within.
Society out of tune; labor and capital,
their hands on each other’s throat; spirit
of caste keeping those down in the social and
scale who are struggling to get up,
putting those who are up in anxiety lest
they have to come down. No wonder the
old pianoforte of society is all out of tune,
when hypocrisy, and lying, and subterfuge,
and double dealing, and sycophancy, and
charlatanism, and revenge have for 6000
years been banging away at the keys and
stamping the pedals.
On all sides there is a shipwreck of har¬
monies—nations in discord without realiz¬
ing it. So wrong is the feeling of nation
for nation that symbols chosen are fierce
and destructive. In this country, where
our skies fire full of robins and doves and
morning larks, we have our national sym¬
bol, the fierce and filthy eagle, as cruel a
bird as can be found in all the ornithologi¬
cal catalogues. In Great deer, Britian, where
they have lambs and fallow their sym¬
bol is the merciless lion. In Russia, where
from between her frozen north to her
blooming south all kindly beasts dwell,
they chose the growling bear, and in tho
world’s heraldry a favorite figure is the
dragon, the fabled winged serpent, fero¬
cious and dreadful. And so fond is the
world of contention that we climb out
through the heavens and baptize one of
the oilier planets with tho spirit of battle
and call it Mars, after the god of war, and
we give to the eighth sign of the zodiac
the name of the scorpion, a creature which
is chiefly celebrated thes#symbols for its deadly sting.
But, after all, are expressive
of the way nation feels toward nation—dis¬
cord wide as the continent and bridging
the seas.
I suppose you have roticed how warmly
in love dry goods store ,\ are with other dry
goods stores, and how highly grocery men
think of the sugars of the grocery man on
the same street, and in what a eulogistic
way allopathic and homeopathic doctors
sometimes speak of each other and how ministers wilr
put ministers on that beautiful
cooking instrument which the English call
a spit—an iron roller with spikes on it and
turned by a crank before a hot fire—and
then, if the minister being roasted cries out
against it, the men who are turning him
say, “Hush, my brother; we are turning
this spit for the and glory of God and tlio good
of your soul, you must be quiet, while
we close the service with:
‘Blest be the tie that binds
‘Our hearts in Christian love.’ ”
The earth is dinmetered and circumfer-
enced with discord, and the music that was
rendered at the laying of the world’s cor-
nerstone when the morning stars sang to¬
gether is not heard now, and though here
and there from this and that part of so¬
ciety and from this and that part of the
earth there comes up worship, a thrilling solo of
love, or a warble of or a sweet
duet of patience, theywre drowned out by
a discord that shakes the earth.
Paul says, “The whole creation groan-
eth.” And while the nightingale, and the
woodlark, and the canary, and the plover
sometimes sing so sweetly that their notes
have been written out in musical notation,
and it is found that the cuckoo sings in the
key of D and that the cormorant is a basso
in the winged choir, yet sportsman’s gun
and the autumnal blast often leave them
ruffled and bleeding or dead in meadow or
forest. Paul was right, for the groan in
nature drowns out the prima donnas of the
Tartini, the great musical composer,
dreamed one night that he made a contract
with satan, the latter to be ever in the
composer's service. But ont? flight ho
handed to satan a violin, on which Diabo-
his played such sweet music, that the corn-
noser was awakened by the emotion and
tried to reproduce the‘sounds, and there¬
from was written Tartini’s most famous
piece. “The Devil’s Sonata.” a dream in¬
genious. but faulty, for all melody de¬
scends from heaven and only discords as¬
cend from hell. All hatreds, feuds, con¬
troversies, backbitings and revenues aro
the devil’s sonata, are diabolic fugue, are
demoniac phantasy, are grand march of
doom, are allegro of perdition.
But, if in this world things in genoral are
out of tune to our ftRil ear. how much
more so to beings angelic and deifle! It
takes a skilled artist to fully appreciate
disagreement of sound. Many have no ca¬
pacity to detect a defect of musical execu¬
tion, and though there were in one bar as
many offenses against -harmony as could
crowd in bet wren the lower F of the bass
and the higher G of the soprano it would
give them no discomfort, while on the fore¬
head of the educated artist beads of per¬
spiration would stand out as a result of the
harrowing dissonance. While an amateur
was performing on a piano and had just
struck the wrong chord, John Sebastian
Bach, the immortal composer, entered the
room, and the amateur rose in embarrass¬
ment, and Bach rushed past the host, who
stepped forward stopped to greet him, and before his
the keyboard had vibrating put
adroit hand upon the keys and changed
the painful in Bach harmony into glorious
cadence. Then turned and gave salu¬
tation to the host.
But, the worst of all discord is moral dis-
cord. If society and the world are pain-
fully discordant to imperfect man, what
must they Vhat be to a perfect God? People try
to define sin is. It seems to mo that
sin purty^wi^hiV^e is getting oat of harmony with God. a
wit^^hTcommands!
our will clashing with his will, the finite
dashing against the infinite the frail
against the puissant, the created against
the creator. If 1000 musicians, with flute
and cornct-a-piston and trumpet and vio-
loncelly, the hantboy and trombone and
all the wind and stringed instruments that
ever gathered in a Dusseldorf jubilee should
resolve that they would play out of tunc
and put concord to the rack and make the
place wild with shrieking and grating and
rasping sounds, they could not make such
pandemonium as that which rages in a sin¬
ful soul when God listens to the play of its
thoughts, passions and emotions—discord,
lifelong discord, maddening discord.
The world pays more for discord that it
does for consonance. High prices have
been paid for music. One man gave $225
to hear the Swedish songstress in New
York, and another $fi25 to hear her in Bos¬
ton, and another $650 to hear her in Provi¬
dence. Fabulous prioes have been paid for
sweet sounds, but far more 'has been paid
for discord, The Crimean War cost $1,700,-
000.000 and the American Civil War over
$9,500,000,000. and the war debts of pro¬
fessed Christian nations are about $15,000,-
000.000. The world pays for this red ticket,
which admits it to the saturnalia of broken
bones and death agonies and destroyed
cities and plowed graves and crushed
hearts, any amount of money satan asks.
Discord! Discord!
But I have to tell you that the song that
the morning stars sang together at the lay¬
ing of the world’s cornerstone is to resound
again. Mozart’s greatest overture was
composed one night when he was several
times overpowered with sleep, and artists
say they can tell the places in the music
where he awakened. So the overture of
the morning stars spoken of in my text
has been asleep, but it will awaken and be
more grandly rendered by the evening
stars of the world’s existence than by the
morning stars, and the vespers will be
sweeter than the matins. The work of all
good churches men and women and of all good
and all reform associations help
to bring the race back to the original har¬
mony. The rebellious heart to bo attuned,
social life to be attuned, commercial ethics
to be attuned, internationality to . be at¬
tuned, whole* hemispheres to be attuned.
The world must also be attuned
by the same power. I was in the Fair¬
banks weighing scale manufactory of Ver¬
mont. Six hundred hands, and they never
had a strike! Complete harmony between
labor and capital, the operatives of scores
of years in their beautiful homes near by
the mansions of the manufacturers, whose
invention and Christian behavior made the
great enterprise. So, all the world over,
labor and capital will be brought into
euphony. You may have heard what is
called the “Anvil Chorus,” composed by
Verdi, a tune played by hammers, great
and small, now with mighty stroke and
now with heavy stroke, beating a great
iron anvil. That is what the world has got
to come to—anvil chorus, yardstick chorus,
shuttle chorus, trowel chorus, crowbar
chorus, pickax chorus, gold mine chorus,
rail trad: chorus, locomotive chorus. It
can be done, and it will be done; so all
social life will be attuned by the gospel
harp. a’new
Heaven is to have song, an entirely
new song. But I should not wonder if, as
sometimes on earth, a tune is fashioned out
of many tunes, or it is one tune with the
Variations; so some of the songs of the re¬
deemed may have been playing through
them the songs of earth. And how thrill¬
ing, as coming through the great anthem with of
the saved, accompanied by harpers
their harps and trumpeters with their
trumpets, if we should hear some of the
strains of “Antioch” and “Mount Pisgah”
and “Coronation” and “Lenox” and “St.
Martin’s” and “Fountain” and "Ariel” and
“Old Hundred!” How they would bring to
mind the praying circles and communion
days, and the Christmas festivals, and the
church worship in which on earth we min¬
gled! I have no idea that when we bid
farewell to earth we are to bid farewell to
all these grand old gospel hymns which
melted and raptured our souls for so many
years. Now, if sin is discord and righteous¬
ness is harmony, let us get out of the one
and enter the other.
O Lord, our God, quickly usher in the
whole world’s peace jubilee, and all islands
oftheseajoin the five continents, and all
the musical instruments of all nations
combine, and-all the organs that ever
sounded requiem of sorrow sound only a
tolled grand for march burial of joy, ring and for all the bells that
resurrection, and
all the cannon that ever hurled death
across the nations sound forth eternal vic¬
tory. And over all acclaim of earth and
minstrelsy of heaven and there will be heard
one voice sweeter mightier than any
human or angelic voice, a voice once full of
tears, but now full of triumph, the voice of
Christ saying, “I am alpha and omega,
the beginning and the end, the first and
the last.” Then, at the laying of the top
stone of the world’s history, the same
voices shall be heard as when, at the lay¬
ing of the world’s cornerstone, “the morn¬
ing stars sang together.”
CAUCHT A CHILD ON THE FLY.
Hurled From a Kunavvay Buggy, But
Saved by a Bystander.
The most fortunate catch ever witnessed
in Elizabeth, N. J., was made a few after¬
noons ago, hy a young man who refuses to
give his name.
John Conard, of Elizabeth avenue, was
out driving with his three-year-old child.
The horse took fright and ran away. In
trying to stop the animal Mr. Conard was
thrown out. Ho was cut and bruised but
not seriously. The child remained in the
buggy until the horse crashed into a lamp-
post. The shook brought the. runaway to
a standstill and shot the child into the air
as though thrown from a catapult. The
little one was but a few feet from the win¬
dows of Horning’s drug, and was thrown
straight at them, but, while in the air, a
young man who had been standing in
front of the store, caught the child. The
force with which the child was moving
threw the young man against the window,
but did not break it. The child,was badly
scared but unhurt.
CURIOUS FACTS.
Groat Britain has a 500-acre or¬
chard.
A grasshopper can spring more than
200 times its own length.
There are twenty-three acres of land
to every inhabitant of the globe.
The first printing press in America
was established at Cambridge, Mass.,
in 1639.
More than 2000 people mysteriously
disappeared from London every year,
and are never heard of again.
New Zealand has adopted a law pre-
venting the importation of consump-
tive or vitally diseased persons.
The Indian buffalo, which in Hin-
dustan is the substitute for the^omes-
tie ox has horns eighteen inches ill
j girth and two and four feet long.
Wasli-a-Kie, a “poor Lo” of tho
Shoshones, now ninety-three years old,
lias embraced Christianity. He was
baptized at Cheyenne, Wyoming.
In the British Museum library tho
books that are presented are yellow in
color, those that are purchased are red,
and those bound in blue denote that
they came by copyright.
The ro[ l en t family, owing to the
gv^nt , number , of ,. skins, . :v .. holds .
numer-
ically the highest position in the fur
| trade. The squirrel belonging to this
important contributor,
Russian doctors are hereafter to
weat as „ diploma 1 a little zuak, or
badge, , , silver oval , plate , , inch , and -
a an
a half long by an inch vide, on which
j a B design of two intertwined ser-
pents.
Bengal was in 1770 devastated by a
fearful famine, during the course of
which nearly one-half of the inhabi¬
tants died, the trade becoming disor¬
ganized and the revenues remaining
uncollected.
Scissors which can be used as a ham¬
mer and screw-driver have lately been
patented and a measure being also
placed on the inner surface of the
blade; when the blades are opened to
their widest point the edges form a
square.
A resident of Trimble, Tenn., taught
his pointer to remain in the yard hy
punishing it when it went outside. The
pup took the lessons to heart, and one
day when it saw the family cat go
across the street and sit down, it ran
over, caught the cat by the neck and
brought it home.
The etymology of the word “whisky”
is a subject that has been frequently
discussed, but the British name for
water, wyog, pronounced wusk, gives
the derivation of the word hy which
the famous Caledonian beverage is
known. The Scotch Gaelic word for
water is very similar to the British, be¬
ing uisgue, pronounced whisky.
A souvenir collector lives in Brook¬
lyn whose weakness is for bills of fare.
There are over 4000 in his collection,
and it embraces everything in the
menu line from the cracked slate of a
mining camp dugout to the lists of en¬
trees with which Queen Victoria re¬
galed her subjects on jubilee day and
the Czar gorged his starving subjects on
his coronation festival.
Indians Evict Palefaces.
Tlie Tarratines, a tribe of Indians,
have decreed that every white person
now living on the reservation, which is
a Maine island in the Penobs, ot, shall
immediately leave the reservation and
And quarters elsewhere.
This final edict has been brought
about by the marriage of Mine. Bishop,
the white soothsayer of the tribe.
Mme. Bishop is well known through¬
out the State, and has many followers
who thoroughly believe in, her proph¬
ecies. Her mother gave her to the
Indians that they might adopt her.
She grew up there and married an In¬
dian, and is the mother of a large
family. A few years ago she became a
widow, and from that time until re¬
cently she has had a respected place in
the councils of the tribe. She has for
many years made trips through tho
State, telling fortunes by a peculiar
system, entirely original.
While she remained a widow the In¬
dians were proud of her, hut she mar¬
ried a white man, and by that incurred
the displeasure of the Indians, which
increased when she had a fine resi¬
dence erected on land leased from the
tribe and took her new husband there
to live.
The Sachems in solemn council have
declared her residence and all her
property forfeited, and have ordered
her to leave the island without delay.
All other white persons living on the
island must go, too. Many white per¬
sons who have married Indian braves
or squaws, and are living on the reser¬
vation, will be greatly inconvenienced
by the enforcement of the edict. The
tribe sent a delegation to Town, Me., to
consult Judge E. Whiting in regard to
using force in banishing the palefaces
from the reservation, but he declined
to act as counsel.—Chicago Record.
A Blind Card Flayer.
J. J. Chase, of Lewiston, Me., a
blind veteran of the war, and son of
Uncle Solon Chase, plays cards with
remarkable facility and ability. But
he uses his own pack of cards, and the
edges are notched in a distinguishing
way understood only by himself, He
is told what cards his competitors play,
and chooses his own by running his
finger quickly along the edges.—New
York Times.
A Preacher Teaching Boxing.
In Waterloo, Me., there is a pastor
who used to be an expert boxer in his
college days, and last winter he gave
lessons in the manly art to the youths
of his neighborhood.
Bill Posting hy Machine.
A’bill-posting machine, which sticks
bills on walls, even as high as fifty feet,
without the use of ladder or paste pot,
is doing successful work in Paris.
Theatrical people are delighted with it.
A Legai Problem.
I A curious little problem In law ana
ethics came up for solution the other
day at Hazleton, Penn. A man was ar¬
rested there for practicing medicine
without having been registered, as the
law of Pennsylvania and most other
states requires. He confessed his guilt
and admitted that he was well ac¬
quainted with and approved of the
regulation he had violated. Then he
proceeded to assert and to prove by
documentary evidence that he had been
graduated from the medical school of
| St. Petersburg University capital and for had prac¬
ticed In the Russian years,
; Ho waB therefore quite eligible for
registration in this country, hut on
reaching Hazleton he had found him-
-self penniless and without friends,
After he, his wife and his three chil-
| d ren had gone hungry for several days
he determined to risk imprisonment in
order to supply the wants of his family
and incidentally to earn enough money
j to pay tho register’s fee. Immediate
denunciation and arrest followed. In-
vestigation showed that the man’s
story was true in every particular.
His wants were supplied, and he is
! now openly and successfully following
! tlfe practice of which made him a tech¬
nical criminal. Now, admitting that
this Russian could not have borrowed
money to meet the law’s requirements.
| a perfect admissible supposition, what
was he to do? Was or was not his
offense a necessary one?—New York
Times.
I Poor Fellow.
I Bacon—Cousin says lie can count
all of his relatives on his two hands.
Egbert—Well, I don’t see why he
shouldn’t; that’s where he seems to
have them most of the time.—Yonkers
Statesman.
Weight Doesn’t Count.
A large brain does not signify in¬
tellect. The brain of an illiterate
person in a low station in life has
been found to outweigh those of the
most celebrated scientists, poets and
philosop hers.
___
Baky’s Sore Head
and chafed skin are quickly cured hy Tetterine.
Don’t let the poor little thing scream itself into
spasms when relief is so easy. Every skin
trouble from a simple chafe or chap to the
worst case of Tetter or Ringworm is cured
quickly and surely by Tetterine. At druggists,
or by mail for 50c. in stamps by J. T. Shuptrine,
Savannah, Ga.
Reported discoveries Yuma, of gold Ariz. ore have started
a very lively hooin in
When bilious or costive, eat a CaScaret,
candy cathartic: cure guaranteed: 10c., 25c.
MRS. CURTIS, NEW YORK,
Tolls Her Experience With
Ovaritis.
A dull, throbbing pain, accompanied
by a sense of tenderness and heat low
down in the side, with an occasional
shooting pain, indicates inflammation.
On examination it will be found that
the region of pain shows some swelling.
This is the first stage of ovaritis, in¬
flammation of the ovary. If the roof of
your house leaks, my sister, you have
it fixed at once ; why not pay the same
respect to your own body ?
Do you live miles away from a doc¬
tor ? Then that is
all the more reason rai
why you should at- Tj®
tend to yourself at s
once, or you will
soon be on the flat (
of your hack.
,You need
not, you ❖
ought not (
to let your-
self go, \
when one of
your own
sex holds out the help¬
ing hand to you, and
will advise you without money and
without price. Write to Mrs. Pinkham,
Lynn, Mass., and tell her all your symp¬
toms. Her experience in treating female
ills is greater than any other living per¬
son. Following is proof of what we say;
“ For nine years I suffered with fe¬
male weakness in its worst form. I
was in bed nearly a year with conges¬
tion of the ovaries. I also suffered
with falling of the womb, was very
weak, tired all the time, had such
headaches as to make me almost wild.
Was also troubled with leucorrhoea,
and was bloated so badly that some
thought I had dropsy. I have taken
several bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound, and several of
her Blood Purifier, and am completely
cured. It is a wonder to all that I got
well. I shall always owe Mrs. Pink-
ham a debt of gratitude for her kind¬
ness. I would advise all who suffer
to take her medicine.” — Miss. Annie
Curtis, Ticonderoga, N. Y.
IPS piipumn^ & £
m
mm
ft) Every ingredient in II
|j Hires Rootbeer is health'I x
J giving. The blood is
| improved, the nerves
soothed, the stomach!
benefited by this delicious
beverage.
HIRES
Rootbeer
I Quenches the thirst, tickles
the palate; full of snap, sparkle
and effervescence. A temper¬
ance drink for everybody.
Hade o nlj by The Charles E. Hires Co., Philadelphia.
A package makes live gallons.
A Method of Measurement.
“There is sncli a thing as becoming
too much devoted to the bicycle,”
said the young woman thoughtfully.
“I was riding with a friend of mine
who demonstrated that fact.”
“Did she talk continually about the
wheel?”
No. She didn’t talk about any¬
thing until I asked her if she knew
what the hour was. She looked down
at her cyclometer and said we’d better
hurry home, ns it was two miles and a
quarter past dinner time.”—Washing¬
ton Star.
I
ANDY CATHARTIC
robcaAew
CURE CQttSTIRATlON i
10 * ALL I
25* 50 * ’A* DRUGGISTS
__
ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED
1 <le and booklet free. Ad. STERLING REMEDY CO.. Chicaso, Montreal. Can., or New York. an.4
w**» <m h m ***m » *mo*»m* * *m»M |»» * * m » » » »m * **»* * * » »m » » »*»
REASONS FOR USING
Walter Baker & Co.’s
| Gp Breakfast Cocoa.
! 1. Because it is absolutely
i pure.
2. Because it is not made by the so-called Dutch Process in
! I which chemicals are used.
3. Because beans of the finest quality are used. !
1 i i 4. Because the it exquisite is made natural by a method flavor and which odor preserves of the beans. unimpaired
Pf m feu 5. Because it is the most economical, costing less than one cent
I pi a cup.
Be sure that you get the genuine article made by WALTER
BAKER & CO. Ltd., Dorchester, Mass. Established 1780. ,
*
v ft
£> ft
ft
ft ft
V ft
V <5
ft ft ft ft ft ft Bo lore -,v <3 v ft
ft
ft O'
ft O’
ft O'
ft ft
ft 0 0
ft 0
ft O'
ft It is business ^
ft our ft
I& to help i , i business . men| ft
ft
ft | to do more business |! |
Drop a Postal ,o
ft Fowler Correspondence College of Advertising ft
ft Tribune Building, New York Gily ft
WRITE FOR Siet^cuue
In Actual Business. Railroad Fare Paid.
Positions Guaranteed. Students of both
sexes admitted daily. No vacations. Average
course throe months.
Georgia, Business C ollege, ’
MACON, GEORGIA.
0 *u ^ v/2* p ct' Hf#
1 -rim r: a m I m
THE STANDARD PAINT for STRUCTURAL PURPOSES.
Pamphlet, "Suggestions for Exterior Decoration," Samplo Card and Descriptive Price List free by mail.
Asbestos llootir.fx, liui.'dtng Felt. Steam Packing:, Boiler Covering's, Fire-Proof Paints, Etc*
Asbestos Non-Comliictiug and Electrical Insulating Materials.
H. W. JOHNS MAINUFACTTJBING- CO.,
IOO William Street. New York.
CHICAGO: 240 & 242 TvandcIpU St. PHILADELPHIA: 170 & 172 North 4tli St. BOSTON: 77 & 79 Tearl St.
„ / IDSL //
3M.E. A
It'i II-
mm, 1 / Fi
i I
M
'A i|,
v
/ i m
i2 iff
u] ■
:> n :
i 7\ uA '/M i-& tg film
A Colorado Editor says of Ripans Tabules:
“ For heartburn, dizziness and headache I have
never found the equal of ....... .
R*I*P*A#S Tabules
And other members of my family use them for
various ills with excellent results. I cannot afford
them, to keep house nor run a print shop without .
nor do I believe any one else can afford
not to use them. They are a wonder/’^j*^*^
BUCKINGHAM'S I
DYE
For the Whiskers,
Mustache, and Eyebrows.
In one preparation. Easy to
apply at home. Colors brown
or black. The Gentlemen’s
favorite, because satisfactory.
It. r. H all & Co., Proprietor*, Nwhu*. N. XL
Sold by all Druggists.
GROVES
if
faiLon m
i ,,j
l\l ft
<3
H m ft- llua
i m
TASTELESS
ma n f| | | | | LL n
Bga jg wftgs g|| pax fM! g if I j|pSS|§|
IS JUST AS GOOD FOR ADULTS. 50ctsJ ,
WARRANTED. PRICE
GALATIA, ILLS., NOV. 10,18SL
Faria Medicine Co., St. Louis, Mo.
Gentlemen:—We sold last year, 000 bottles ©t
GR OVE’S TASTELESS CII1LL TONIC ami h av»>
bought three gross already this year. In all our ei-
perienco of 14 years, in the drug business hare
abney,car**<».
MENTION THIS PAPER in writing to adver
Users. ANU97-2I