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wlartgert in Writing inks.
TtsomBetimes happens, says the Lon¬
don LanMoet, that a trifling scratch or
punctures danpe®rous made septicaemia, with a pen due gives te the rise lia¬ to
a
bility of ■ ink to contain pathogenic bac¬
teria. freshly-If KNigrosin ink, taken from a
g|bo<h opened bottle, was found to
contain liT-jed saphrophytes and bacte¬
ria. numeroSus %>d bine inks also yielded
bacteria. In two instances
Dr. froj®i MnBrpmann succeeded in cultivat¬
ing ■Ratal nigrosin ink a bacillus which
'proved inM to mice within four days.
This had stood in an open bottle for
three lnB nths, and the inference to he
drown frl rim the inquiry is that ink used
in selioo! Is should always be kept cov-
erediwliq Ti not’in use.
A Stout Backbone
Is as- csj HiPiitial to physical health as to political
consistci ■ncy. For weakness of the back, rheii-
matlsmi and dlei ■etic H Riul action disorders of Hostetter'a of tho kidney St tomach s. the tonic Bit-
t.ers : Is ti ■ie one thing needful. The stomach is
vigor the mai ■stay-of Wg every other organ, and by in-
all the digestion 'with this preparation,
the iif# spljl lial thetlcally column, strengthened. and all its dependencies, The dyspeptic are
'f-y ii
•an * dilous'Will findic^a pure vegetable stimu-
h|P and tonic.
[ It Is mutch better to*be crippled in limb than
m soul.
■T. S. Patker, Fredehia, N. Y.. snys: “Shall
not call cm. v you for the $100 reward, for I believe
P\Hall 3 s Catarrh Cure will cure any case of oa-
tai Was very bad.” Write him for particu-
■ lars. *%, Sold by druggists, 75c.
Ifrrave Men.
Al< McClure-of the Philadelphia Times
says: ® “The two boldest men he knows .'ire
Jobfijji Till Haynes Wannamaker of Boston. of Philadelphia Both went to New and
Yor Mr. Wannamaker took the Stewart
worb property, and the Mr. finest dry goods took store the in the
Broa , Central Haynes the great
tbeqJSty. way Hotel, largest in
of ty&ieso magnificent But dry rot had crept and into both
dirami properties no one
to grasp them, until John Wanna-
ma&iLer took one and Tilly Haynes the other.
A mplete and unqualified success has
cf«owned the efforts of both. Verily a good
re P^«tation is better than riches.”
EEL WIFE—HAPPY HOME !
^ Heai«|h* Restored '■of By the the South. Leading Specialist
Fei o Weakness, Uterino Trouble*, Lost
Chronic Energy% 1 ^Diseases, etc., speedily Dropsy, cured—after Rheumatism. others Blood fail.
■
Poison ar 'I. private troubles permanently cured.
Medicine sent for $5.00 per month. Cancers
permane all,'"'.witholut; ifitly knife removed caustics. in 10 days, Absolute “roots and
Diet. or guar¬
antee. O. Henley Snider, Atlanta, Ga.
dren's Piso’s Confghs Cugre is and the medicine Colds.—Mrs. to break M. G. up Blunt, chil¬
Sprague) Vi/ash., March 8, ’94.
Fits after pernfianently |first cured. of No Dr. fits Kline’s or nervous¬ Great
Nerve ness Restorer. day’s use bottle and treatise free.
$2 trial
Dr. R. H. Kj line. Ltd.. 951 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
Mrs. WiB^siow-s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, tens the gums, reduces inflamma¬
tion, allays ffe*ain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle.
Health Soon, succeed weak¬
ness and languor when
Oireflgin J .. "Hood’s Sarsaparilla is
taken to purify, enrich
and vitalize exr’feis the blood. Hood’s Sarsapa-
■rilla the germs, of scrofula, salt
rlieurr* and other poisons which cause so
touchbuffering ^be-general'health. and-sooner or later under-
ffiine It strengthens
the syst em'While it eradicates disease.
Hood’s *53 parllia fgg* ...
Is the hestt—-in fact the One Drue Bloo lood i arifier.
’ ■’Sold .'Soldbyaljji bv a l -il drtigirists. SI; six for S6.
HoodS
/fHona'fed JjfFSSi&eyi f* -44
hot
ttfday Hires
JUfRoot’beer
m stands be- X
W tween you m
g and the dis- \\ m
5^ "Lre-asAng ffets ef- ' ‘(g
iof the heat. ”
IH Rootbeer 1 RESI
cools the blood,
ill tones the stom¬
ach , invigorates
the body, fully
satisfies the thirst.
A delicious, spark-
ling, temperance III
drink of the high- ly
i : : est medicinal value ,
Made only by i
The Cb#xi»s E. Hires Co., Pfcfi*. ;
J A pae’kftge makes 5 gi allocs.
'SSbW- every where.
'
PI. I CD
'Cwf ’BrigM’sTMsease. Diabetes, Stricture, — eet
all •chronic or acuto affections of the genito-
feiry *yste>n. Restore weak organs and im-
V f Aig-c-r to hotih body and mind. One box
I): £hr*>e boxes j.$ 2.50, by mall. Prepared by
\\! |;GARI» &ky biwnsar SPECIFIC & ltankin CO., Atlanta, Drug: Co. Ga.
t-
4m '■A
v' .f
“For \
1 some years I was I !
quite out of health, anil 1
took much medicine *
/ which did me no good. 11
I was advised by a friend tol
I / try Ayer’s Sarsaparilla! dozen! i
/ which I did, taking’s
or more bottles before stop -1
I j ping. The result and was strong! that
I felt so well \
that I, of course, think there ij i
I no medicine equal to Ayer’s Snr-\ L
/ saparilla, ami I take great pains V <■ \{
I to tell any suffering friend of it and l
what It did for me.”—Mrs. L. A.
MurtaAV, Kilhourn,Wis.,Feh.ll,l8ne.
1 ti \
WEIGHTY WORDS ,1
1
FOR
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.
ANIMAL CUNNINC.
A Fox Came to Life After Being Killed, Bit
Its Captor and Escaped.
Two cases are on record of foxes be¬
ing discovered in hen-houses. In each
case the fox not only completely de¬
ceived the finder, but allowed himself
to be dragged out by the brush and
thrown down. In each instance the
fox then jumped up and ran away.
Another example fa that of a fox which
dangled across a man’s shoulder as it
allowed itself to bo carried along a
road for more than a mile. At feast it
bit the man and tv as promptly dropped.
A cat was observed to carry a weasel
lrome tin its mouth, the weasel dang¬
ling helplessly. The door of the house
was closed aud the cat, in ooeifortuity
with its usual habit, mew eel to gain
admission. To mew, ^however, it hat
to set down the weasel, which jumped"!
up and fastened on its nose.
Tbe following instance was observed
by tire late Professor Romanes: Acorn-
crake had been retrieved by a dog,
and, (having every appearance of being
dead, was put iin a man’s pocket.
Presently violent struggles were felt
and the man drew the bird out. To
liis astonishment it again hung in his
liandilinrp and apparently lifeless. It
was then set upon i.the ground and
watched from ’behind some cover. In
a short time it raised its head, looked
around and decamped at full qpeed.
A singular fact that must not be over-
looke.ddn connection with this phenom¬
enon :is that -some animals have been
found to be.actually dead which 'were
at ffast’.thought to be -shammipg. Ro¬
manes, for instance, found this’to he
the ease with.a squirrel which he had
caught in a cloth and with which he
wanted to experiment with regard to
feigning of death.
Sir E. Tennent also relates, :in liis
book on the “Natural History of Cey¬
lon,” that the wild elephant sometimes
dies when being taken from the corral
by tame -elephants. Further, lie re¬
lates a ease in which, being convinced
that .an elephant was dead, he had its
leashings taken .off, he and a friend
leaning against rit the .while to rest.
Hardly had they left lit when it rose
hurriedly, .and trumpeting vocifer¬
ously, rushed off in the jungle. The
fact, however, -that a squirrel or an ele¬
phant whe» captured unhurt will die
is sufficient to show that a. most pow¬
erful nervous derangement of some
sort is induced.
When the late Joseph Thompson
lectured on hie African experiences he
related how -the first buffalo he shot
tossed him, ond how, when he came to
himself and tried to sit Tip, he found
his antagonist .glaring at him a few
yards away. He told how he reeol-
lected that a buffalo does not try to
toss, a creature which shows no signs
of life, and how he let his head sink
slowly back, .and lay shamming death.
Pheasants, in flying across wide
stretches of watea', have been noticed
suddenly to fall. In this way they are
apparently drowned. It is perhaps
,j aI 1 g erotl8 to assert positively that fear
is kere the active cause of death; yet,
that a paroxysm of fear can produce
sudden death. The squirrel and the
elephant may have died of fright; cer-
toinly death in man can be produced
by sudden fear, and although man has
a much more sensitive nervous mech¬
anism, the lower animals have an ex¬
tremely active instinct of fear.
Professor Lloyd Morgan mentions
the case of a surfaceman working in
the Severn tunnel who was nearly
killed by a train. It is stated that
“his attention was so riveted that he
was unable to make, or rather he
felt no desire to make, the appropri¬
ate movements;” that he could not
help watching the train, but felt no
terror. With tha greatest difficulty he
managed to shake himself free of his
fascination. In describing bis feelings
when the danger was past he is re¬
ported to have said: “I came over all
in a cold sweat and felt as helpless as a
baby. I was frightened enough then.”
This may perhaps be taken as a
■cataleptic condition without fear.—
Scotsman.
The Speed of Camels.
Extraordinary stories are sometimes
told of the speed with which camels their
,ean travel in. the desert, and of
wonderful endurance of fatigue. But
.according to recent statements there
has been much exaggeration on this
subject. One writer asserts that the
speed of a camel does not exceed about
seven-miles aud a half per hour, and
that even that speed is not ordinarily
maintained longer than two hours at a'
streteh.
It nt?V liT* t I'll-? T' JL A A T *4/1*1 \I l\ \ C*
THE NOTED DIVINE’S
DAY DISCOURSE-.
Ho XK'flnroa NVomivu v First Sin W*s
r.1,1
la Hie Garden «f Si, den ttwt Its Asr^Tui
StesultH <*«> S\u , e*eedtng Generations*
"Tear: "And when the woman saw that
the tree was good tor food, «md that it was
pleasant to the eves, and a tree to be do-
sired to make one wise, she took ef the
fruit thereof, and -(lid eat, and gave also
into her husband with her/und he did eat.”
—Genesis ill 6 ■
It , Is (he first Saturday afternoon In tho
world’s'existence. Ever since sunrise Adam
has been watching the brilliant pageantry
of wings and scales and clouds, and in his
first lessons in zoology and ornithology
and ichthyology he has noticed that the
robins fly theair in twos, and-that the fish
swim the waters in twos, and that the lions
walk the fields in twos, and in the warm
redolence of that Saturday afternoon he
falls-off iutcr.slumber, and, as if by aUegory
to teach nil ages that the greatest of earth-
)y blessings is sound sleep, this paradisal-
ine part oi auam ot a corresponding in-
the telligeDce just landed on a now planet. Of
•i,.! mother.of all the V Uvino living 1 I speak cent i.-,,,, Eve,
the first,'the fairest , : and the best.
I r make inaKi me nm n a garden. enrde,, T J inlay ini«» th» the n.du paths
With mountain moss, and I border them
Go\co P lS H°ere C QI d s“ m< nd8 r ? m
w,w“to nda and th«re ? •' f f ‘ lta t 11
ttln mfu.ui th .? ... u “ Ji £ ht 1 that ! ripple 1 under ,
K l th swana - 1 gather me
™ k.tf'i, fi Al J ! LEdta l, | 0 t 11 ’ ™ and-orange aK ndsfromGoyaz. groves
ImSti! i'f 8 '" n V ■ an<1 “ nd , h0 !^ T arred ysu !; kle spaniels f'hinb-
v?re fSa?, .*!!? i ‘i? th e ? rass Ida
tome - *
blml.rll'th.-’.lsaf j?’ 0 ?? '* r d ? e tke , 8 . the r °hin6,and , ! , arks > and all . ^ the i e
iVif:n ° f “? aven > ani ’ they stir the
7i" ¥ T n inllmte chirp and carol. And yet
?; a ,? ls a d es< -“ rt; filled with darkTiess
amt death as compared with the.residence
oi tne woman or the text, the subject of my
story. «ever since have such skies looked
uown through such leaves into such waters,
Never has river wave had such curve and
-jieen Havilah, ana the bank bihon as adorned and the Hiddekel, the Pison, the
even
tv? :? bdellium and onyx stone.
'that Irnlts, f wita no curculio to sting the
rmcl. IVhat flowers, with no slug to gnaw
tne root. What atmosphere, with no frost
to chill and with no heat to consume!
Drignt colors tangled m the grass. Per-
iumem theair. Music in the sky. Great
scene of gladness and love and joy.
lght there under a bower of leaf and
V? Auam . took the 0<! hand , cur^ I ,5,1 of the this first immaculate marriage,
aaugliter or (joq and pronounced the cere-
raony when he said, “Bone of my hone, and
flesh of my flesh A forbidden tree stood
in the midst of that exquisite park. Eve,
sauntering the out one day alone, looks up at
tree and sees the beautiful fruit and
wonders if it is sweet and wonders if it is
sour, and standing there says: “I think I
will just put my hand upon the fruit. It
will do no harm to the tree I will not
take the fruit to eat but I will just take it
down to examine it.” She examined the
fruit. She said, “I do not think there can
auy ha ™ la “7 just breaking-.the rind
of it.” She put the fruit to her teeth, she
tasted, she allowed Adam also to taste the
fruit, the door of the world opened, and
the monster sin entered. Let the heavens
gather blackness, and the winds -Sigh on
the bosom of the hills, ami cavern, and
desert, and earth, and sky join in due long, iL
lost''’’ deep hell-rendtoe how! ’ “The ' worm
Beaststhnt I before 0 were wer0 harmless ess a and n 1 fu toll 1
SnS^nafc rhiei wt 1 „x h, x -® f trds M whet 1 their > St K beak n ^, a , for nd x t00th prey,
Clouds troop m the sky. Sharp thorns
shoot up through the soft grass. Blastings
on the leaves.. All the choids of that great
harmony home tore snapped. Upon the brightest
this world ever lnd saw our first narents ^
turned their tL haclr hrhrenhe^rt^d tod ml ^do’ P< i re th
of sorrow rid brokeI1 ‘toavted mjnads -of a
ruined
Tie -von not coo re „ o -.a P* aee .| .... be dnh- .
gerofa' wanted^K rmnrlv reonlnto \- q
Sh? She ^ vearehive th« tooTored
tound out tat i' ore d
thnv nnluMilriifiilonrivsito ™\Ta Y Hea It il fulou / 1 . '
a S£6at deni \ « for l letters, for
v
L,. ® i ; pths °t the earth
?e‘ h -:.? ° giSt to’ md 8e ?u n ? rs j ; tdla P‘
i„f,l?. ., ^ rat / en .®f a eS i T e ltb cr engraving itten “ . the on b00k rock, natur and it . e
stood with the antiquarian while he blew
tne trumpet of resurrection over buried
Herculaneum and Pompeii, until from their
2“loiter and amphitheater. there came Healthful up shaft curiosity and terrace has
the tcleseopto vision of the as-
™ >L until worlds hidden in the dis-
to!to„!i ivo?<?hcd , n,rm 1 ?f?!toto „to Ve !>r f re ?,,??' 0pe th ?, ? f0 ? P th 0 rd and P , la ha i ' et ,e
lLsooed a n f W1 ! d , ®st V Ppmet
en ?tovire' ‘ A V hl? s 8 0Be o d BIlt p wa . aw and ’, found Healthful the
, S , tL th ' G °*i ln the PP'U' 1
undovYi ni Itv { 10 fi* 8tcat 1 Jehov.Ji , b0 J aa encamped andt| to
Ti W "a t ’in i ? < th ? ? s Pp ts °l, the th3 sun, dahHa ana ',
the tor v ?f olllea . a “ d 110
ler ’
? n , ! fWto hi. 11 • ; oon dor pitching terrible from Cnim- eye
as studied the myriads of ani-
veto-! t mike « p the p!liosphorcscence
to. Liin. S S '?.h? e aIld ml 8kty ^maze of
'
?,.Uvto5ti ,to,i 0 r reT S and ppusteUations^aiul
'&.„iretof .,lto ! e ? m L h0 ar 'll' ° f ttod '
n ^ T aS e 5 e b 'dden ,re , b y tl \ for e mvea ages ‘
shuttles—forces "i 1 ® 018 a ? that d levers fly the and shafts swim and
air or
the sea or cleave the mountain until the
e rth jars and roarh and rings and crackles
and booms with strange mechanism, and
ships with nostrils of hot steam and yokes
of fire draw the continents together.
I say nothing against healthful cun-
osity. May it have other Leyden jars, and
other electric batteries, and other voltaic
piles ana other magnifying glasses, with
Which to storm the barred castles of the
natural world until it shall surrender its
last secret. We thank God for the geological
curiosity of Professor Hitchcock, and the
mechameal curiosity of Liebig, and tho
zoological curiosity of Cuvier, and the to-
ventive cunosity of Edison, but wo must
admit that unhealthful and irregular in-
quisitiveness has rushed thousands and
tens Eve of just thousands tasted into the ruin. fruit. She (
was j
curious to find out how it tasted and tha'
curiosity blasted her and blast jd ail ;
nations. So there are clergymen in this i
day, inspired bp unhealthful inquisitive-j
ness, who have tried to look through the
keyhole of God’s mystenes -mystories that I
were barred and bolted from all human m-
spection—and they have wrenched their
whole moral nature out of joint by trying
to pluck fruit from branches beyond their
reach, or have come out on limbs of the
tree from which they have tumbled into
ruin without remedy. A thousand trees of
religious knowledge from which we may
eat and get advantage, but from certain
trees of mystery how many have plucked
their ruin! Election, free agency, trinity,
resurrection—in the discussion of these
subjects hundreds and thousands of people
ruin the soul. There are men who actually
have been kept out of the kingdom ol’
heaven because they could not understand
who Melchisedec was not.
Oh, unhealthfurinquisitiveness! how many have been destroyed by
an It is seen
in all directions. There are those who
stand with the eye stare and mouth gape of
falsehood, curiosity. They are the first to high hear and a
build it another story
add two wings to it. Aboutotber people’s
apparel, about about other financial people’s condition, business,
other people's
about other people’s affairs, they are over¬
anxious. Every do’or, niee piece of gossip
stops at their and they fatten and
luxuriate in the endless jound of the great
world ol tittle tattle. They invito and
| «u»ptuoualy (W.oiu‘1 TwtuuUo entertain at Chitchat t.Vdr house
| Governor Nnmlltitlfcs :uvd F,v.\\uro Whoever and
hath aa in-
but cut fruit that dodfc belong ‘ttg
not to
them-. Men quit#' well known as mathema-
m | n u ft curiosity equals minding vonr own
affwiTH
Then, how many young men through
curiosity Pmioh go through the whole realm of
novels, to see whether they are
really as bad as moralists have pronounoed
them. They come near the verge of the
preeipieo far just it really to look off. They want to
see how is down, but they lose
their balance while they look and fall Into
’remediless ruin, or, catching themselves
clamber-up bleeding curs!* and ghastly on the
irock gibbering with or groaning in-
effectual prayer inquisitiveness, By all means ail encourage
healthful bv means dis-
courage ill reirulsted euriositv
rj'hat one Edenic transgression did not
« e em to thisBav be much but it struck stagie7 a blow
which to consequences* makes fhe earth that*
To “ find out the of one ?o
, vou mvc o ompe the world
threw open all its prison doors and disnlav
the crime, and throw open all its hospitals opln
“ d dis ^ disease and throw all
the insane end usylums and show the wretch-
e dnes» open open all an the rue sepulchers sepuitners and and
show the dead, and open all the doors of
the urn lost josi world worm and anu show snow the meaainnea. damned That that
one Edenic transgression stretched chords
of misery across the heart of the world and
* truck them w,th dolor£ms *»»»“(». and
has seatedrthe plagues upon the air and the
shipwrecks upon the tempest and fastened,
like a leech, famine to the heart of the sick
and dying nations. Beautiful at the start,
horrible at the last. Oh, how many have
experienced there here it! those who
Are are votaries of
pleasure? Let me warn you, my brother,
your pleasure boat day is far ending from shore, and
your summer Is roughly,
f or the winds and tho waves are loud
voiced, and the overcoming clouds are all
awrithe and agleam with terror. You are
p a9 t the Narrows and almost outside the
Hook, and if the Atlantic take thee, frail
mortal, thou shalt never get to shore
again, Put back; row swiftly, swifter,
swiiter! Jesus from the shore easteth a
rope. Clasp it quickly, now or never. Oh,
are there not some of you who are freight-
j n g all your loves and joys and hopes upon
a vessel which shall never reach the port
of heaven? Thou nearest the breakers, one
heave upon the rocks. Oh, what an awful
crash was that! Another lunge may crush
thee beneath the spars or grind thy bones
to hoard powder for amid life, the overboard! torn timbers. Over-
your Trust not
that loose plank nor attempt the wave, but
quickly clasp the feet of Jesus walking on
the watery pavement, shouting T until he
hear beautiful thee “Lord ’the save mo or npri«h sail, m
g| u nt start—ob, how
how distressful, at the last! The ground
over which it leads you is hollow poison! The
f ru it it offers to your taste is The
ungodly promise it makes to you is a sword lie. Over that
banquet the keen of God’s
judgment hangs, and there are ominous
h-iudwritings on the walls
Observe also in this subject how repelling
5i n is when Eve’s appended’to death great attractive-
ness guJh Since there has been no
suggest perfection of womanhood A'ou could
not an attractiveness to the body
0 r sutrircst anv refinement to the manner ^ Alt'
Y ou could add ?o no gracefulness “eye to the
no luster the no sweetness to the
voice Y to^be^^The Derfect God ™mnanion^„ made her ? a nerfect S?rf»?r
woman horn? f enttoena^
man vtoratod^in^^acc“d to a perfect wfththe and her
tare Ill re vipiaiea in aecoru wientne beautv Deauty and and
song of paradise. But she rebelled against
SOvernment, plucked and with the same hand
with which she the fruit she
launched upon tln> world the crimes, the
wars, the tumults that have set the universe
m ‘ wAUiiMf
A terrible offset to all whcnweflndmfn' her attractiveness
We are not sitonrised
an(1 women nat naturally ralto vulgar v, to ir creim. going into tore
tr a " 8 Sression. the ditch We slmU expect that people who
live in have the manners of
the ditch, but how shocking when we find
sin appended to of superior social life. education and to
the refinements The accom-
of Mary Queen of Scots make
ber Patronage of Darnley, the profligate,
the more appalling. The gemus of Cather-
ineI1 of Rnss ia only sets forth in more
powerful contrast her unappeasable ambi-
tiou. The translations from the Greek and
the Latin by Elizabeth, and her wonderful
qualifications her for capriciousness a queen, make the more
disgusting of of affection
and her hotness temper. The greatness
0 f Bvron’s mind makes the more alarming
Byron’s sensuality.
L a t no one think that refinement of man-
ner or oxquisiteness in of taste or superiority
of education can any wise apologize for
ill temper, for an oppressive spirit, for un-
kindness, for any kind of sin Disobedi-
ence Godward and transgression manward
can give high no excuse. Accomplishment
heaven is no apology for vice hell deep,
■ My subject also impresses me with the
regal influence of woman. When I see Eve
with this powerful influence over Adam
and over tho generations that have fol-
lowed, it suggests to me the great power all
women have for good or for evil I have
no sympathy, nor have you, with the hol¬
low flatteries showered upon women from
the platform and the stage. They mean
nothing; they arc consist? accepted as nothing. exereiSe
Woman's nohilitv in the
ot „ C u rlstlan tofluence, and when I see
this powerful influence of Eve uoon her
husband and upon the whole human race I
make up my mind that the frail arm of
woman can strike a blow which wi i l resound
through ail eternity, down among the dun-
geons or up among the thrones,
() f course I am not speaking of represen-
tative women-of Eve, who reined the race
| JV ono f ru it picking; of Jael, who drove a J i
spike through the head of Sisera, the war-
rior . of Esthcr , w ; 10 overcame royalty; of
Abigail, who stopped a host by her own
beautiful prowess; of Mary, who nursed
the world’s Saviour; of Grandmother Lois,
immortalized in her grandson Timothy; of
charlotte Corday, who drove the dagger
through the heart of the assassin of her
jover. or of Marie Antoinette, who by one
] 00 k from the balcony of her castle quieted
a njob, her own scaffold the throne of for-
gi ve ness and womanly courage. 1 speak,
not of these extraordinary persons, but of
those w bo, unambitious for political
Saughters, power, as wives and mothers and sisters and
attend to tho thousand sweet
0 jfl e b s of home.
When at last wo come to calculate the
forces that decided the destiny of nations,
p w pi be found that the mightiest and
grandest tofluence came from home, where
jbe wife cheered up despondency and fa-
tigue and sorrow by her own sympathy,
and the mother trained her child for heii-
ven, starting the little feet on the path to
the celestial city, and the sisters by their
gentleness refined the manners of the
brother, and the daughters were diligent in
their kindness to tho aged, throwing
wreaths ot blessing on the road that led
father and mother down the steep of years.
Clod bless our homes. Aud may the home
on earth be the vestibule of our home
to heaven, in which plaeo we may all
meet—father, mother, son, daughter,
brother, sister, grandfather and grand¬
mother and grandchild, and the entire
group of precious ones, ot whom we must
say, to the words of transporting Charles
Wesley:
One family, we dwell in Him;
One church above, beneath.
Though now divided by the stream—
The narrow stream of death—
One army of the living God,
To His command we bow.
I’art of the host have crossed the flood,
And part are crossing now.
Did Farm Work at 106.
Reuben Walker, an East Tennessee pio-
neer, died near Knoxville, Tenn., aged 108.
Ho was able to do hard farm work until a
few weeks before his death
THE CURE OF DIABETES.
A Cabo Nuceewfully Tr«at«*«l in Madison
From recommendation *inL oi a m‘, r
On the William
Woodman, of South Hamilton, New York,
that Mr. Amos .laquays, a resident of Col-
"umbus Oentre, Now York, bo Interviewed
regarding his extraordinary trouble, embracing recovery from dia-
advanced kidney
b f‘f <“ “» worst form Mr Joq.mys was
visited and willingly mado the accompany-
mg statement:
"‘“ m lm Y y, ' arH °* *8°. aml "Y? ? ea ”
. with In , the back
ago began to suffer fho pains the kidneys.
aad weakness in region of
and ' bad a tremendous flow of urine.
Strange to say my appetite increased to an
extraordinary degree, but instead of giving
me strength my food seemed to make me
weakor and thinner, and I was terribly
constipated. My mouth was pasty, I had
continuous heartburn and pain across the
lower part of my stomach and frequent
J’ omi ,t. ln K- Indeed neorI T?“ m >’
functions , became deserted impaired, my sight was
dim - memory me, and life became
irltsorae ’ 1 consulted the best medical
talent ,n tho count y' and <“ diagnosed
my " ase as « u K ar diabetes In its most
iffier ^“ I aTuie.l waffnsulto phystolai ad^per
ondUion th» of
was caned i,„t but their tneir „nod good offices omces did aia me me no no
good, and I looked forward to death with
satisfaction as a * the tue onlv only loncii relief I could couiu expect expect.
“My old friend, , William Woodman, npout
! this time came to visit me and from him I
| q rs t heard of Dr Williams' Pink rheum’ Pills
which he declared had cured him of
, | atism, with which lie had suffered all Ills
! life, and he believed they would of diabetes do mo
good, as he had read of a case
being cured by their use. I believe it was
, next day ufter Mr. Woodman’s visit that
i Mr. F. Hyde, of South Hamilton, New York,
| called on me, and I was told by him that
Pink Pills had saved his life and he advised
| mo by all means to try them.
| “This settled the question and I at once
j began a course of home treatment with Dr.
Williams’ Pink Pills. Within a week the
medicine began to do its work, the eon-
stipation was relieved, my skin, which had
been dry and hard, assumed its normal
Iceland appearance, I no longer had the
| ] insufferably bad taste almost in my helpless, mouth, and the
j though still weak and
pain in my back and kidneys began to
j abate, and the flow health, of urine and built decreased.
j But I was far from very
few hopes on permanent cure, though I
continued to take the pills constantly for
the next year and a half, growing slowly
but surely during that time better and
I better. Then I began to reduce the daily
| dose, and kept mending until six months
a 8°, when I discontinued them, and I was
.
entirely cured. cold which is to
“I am still subject to keep apt Pink
S6tt 'e 1" my kidneys, and always round
Pihs by me, as they bring me very
quickly. In all, I have, I believe, taken
fltty boxes of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills,
shall never be without them as long as I
| hav e half » < 1 ''| lar - * have recom-
j mended , them to all my suffering friends,
and they seem to be good for any disorder
of the system as they have never failed to
do thelr work in any case that I know of,
j an ,d 1 some f ert,fy were the pretty abov low e «‘ a ‘emont to be
i I , true in Particular, . and if I eom-
ever Y
™ an dcd stronger language, I should use it
ln P ra,9mg Dr ' Williams Pink Pills
AMOb
Mr ‘ Ja< ! ua Y s Is a *»g hl .Y respectable and ,
w «“-‘o-do farmer and builder, and highly
connected in Madison County. •
Th « Proprietors of Dr. Williams’ Pink
r »'« state that they are not a patent medi-
? ine but a P resorlptian ,,sed to F maLV produced years
by eminent practitioner . who
an
the most wonderful results with them, cur-
ing , v)1 forms of weakness arising ?hatt«‘rpd from a
witi-rv eondiHon two^roittul of th« blood or
causes of almost every
m m to * 0 which wmcii flesh nesn is is heir neir. The lnopms uills an, are ,u, also o
? specific for the troubles peculiar to
,emales ’ s ' ,eb fts suppression all forms of
7 eakness .' ohr ° mc oonstipation, bearing-
down pains, etc., and in the case of men
will give speedy relief and effect from mental a per-
manent cure ln nil cases arising
worry, overwork, or excesses, of whatever
nature. They are entirely harmless and
can be th? given to weak and sickly children
with greatest good and without the
slightest danger. Pink Pills are sold by all I j
dealers, or will be sent post paid boxes on receipt !
of price, 50 cents a box or six fpr* 2.50
(they are never sold in bulk or by the 100),
byaddressini'Dr.Wiliiams’MedicineCom- Y.
pany, Schenectady, N.
BE BEAUTIFUL I IF YOUR BLOOD IS BAD
YOUR FACE SHOWS IT.
It's nature's warning that the condition of the blood needs attention
before more serious diseases set in. Beauty is blood deep.
HEED THE
RED FLAG
OF DANGER,
Ytuki«u» ptmples
When you see and liver
spots on your face.
A Make the COMPLEXION Beautiful, by Purifying the BLOOD, i
t If the blood is pure, the skin is clear, smooth and soft. If you take r
I our advice, you will find CASCARETS will bring the rosy blush of I
i l health to faded faces, take away the liver spots and pimples. Help J
nature help youl YOU !F YOU ONLY TRY. | f
i CAN, Vo 25fi
Agents Everywhere!
For the Lovell “ Diamond
Cycles, and we stake our Business
Reputation of over 55 years that the
most perfect wheel yet made is the
Lovell Diamond ’97 Model.
INSIST ON SEEING THEM.
nGENTS in nearly every City and Town. Examination will prove
M their superiority. If no agent in your place, send to us.
CPEC1AL—A large line of Low Priced and Second-
^ hand wheels at unheard of figures.
SEND FOR SECOND HAND LIST.
BICYCLE CATALOG TJE FREE.
We have the largest line of Bicycle Sundries; -Bicycle and Gymna¬
sium Suits and Athletic Goods of all kinds. Write US what you Want
and we’ll send you full information. If a dealer, mention it.
JOHN P. LOVELL ARMS GO., 131 Broad St., Boston.
Headquarters for Guns. Rifles and Revolvers, Fishing Tackle, Skates and
Sporting Goods of Every Description.
AS-8END FOR OUR LARGE ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE.
nniiiifl/ 11K11N K
RJ Ij || 9 W 9 wa Write^ Renova Chemical
Full information (in filain wrapper) mailed* free.
12538.:
CURES WHtHE AL1. E1SE FAILS-
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use
In time. Sold by druggists.
siy
2.53%
Sot Our.
"When the nu\l> attacked Prince Con¬
stantine’s house at Ackaia there was
no one to repel, the assailants by read¬
ing aloud some’of the American poems
written in praise of the prince.—Pitts¬
burg Chronicle*Telegraph.
A \Titur »nil » Vico,
Vanity and ajproper regard for the feel legs of
others should Doth jirge you to get. rid or that
^^Xn'Vchaplfr l “^um orThln:"r”n'^ r
,, hrf , nl( . „ f Tetter or Ringworm,
Tetterlne will positively, Infallibly cure It, Cure
it so It will stay cured, too. 60 cents a box nt
drug stores, or by Bjall for 60 cents Irf citoh or
stamps from J. T. Shnptrlne. Samunab, <■».
Not AJraitl of Kilts,
“While Alatitda was talking at the
society today some had boys threw a
mouse through’the window.”
“What did Matilda do?”
“Matilda had on her magnifying
glasses, and as they made the mouse
look like a wharf rat she didn’t cate.”
—Cleveland Pkiindealer.
BI CYCLE EXCITEMENT.
tion The greatest the sensa¬ in
of season has
the been bicycle occasioned market by
four of tho leading
manufacturers com¬
bining to protect the
retail trade from be-
ing imposed upon who by
4 agents and others
c, * have no reputation to
-'r. lose, as bicycle deat-
era. This combina-
®vX"; tion.of which the John
P. Lovell Arms Co.
pp the moving forced spirits. the
have down
price of high grade there
wheels so that
is now no reason why ride
bf.nj . s. novELT., a cyclist should *
Treas. Lovell Arms Co. anything but a first-
class, guaranteed wheel, and at prices charged
from the nameless and unguaranteed wheels.
There ie considerable opposition to this com¬
bination on the part of those who handle
low grade wheels, but the public will l>e the-
catalogue \vinner8, thanks to the Lovell Arms Co. A
of our regular bicycle stock and a
special Combination list of mailed wheels issued by the Big Four
free on application.
FRICK COMPANY
ECLIPSE ENGINES
. A
j h F x.'
4
rv rV Wm
Hoilers, Saw Mills, Cotton Gins, Colton
Presses, Grain Separators.
Chisel Tooth and Solid Saws, Saw Teeth. In.
spirators. Injectors, Engine Repairs and
a full line of Brass Goods.
Send for Catalogue and Prices.
Avery 1 & McMillan
SOUTHERN MANAGERS.
Nos. 51 & 53 S. Forsytli St.. ATLANTA, GA.
MAPLE SYRUP
Made on your kitchen stove In a few minutes at
«- cost of about 25 Cents IVr Gallon, by a
process, which sells at $1.00 per gallon.
“ x to thaiit you for tho Maple syrup
recipe which I find la excellent. J can recoin-
] mend P. it Jones, highly CartersvUle, to any and Ga. every one.” Knv.
sax
Send stamped envelope and see what it to.
j, LOTSFEICH, Morristown, Teiui.
Building, Bridge, 1 « 11 a ATlIIAA I
Factory, Furnace II M \ I Sj
, K,, i 1 ,-,.,,,1 ll 9 Is 8JP
f“ ,, ,. It™ ’Bon V|] . v Pa? . . , , Ink" . „
Sl ne Oneto! t nc or a ' iToo P
Fmingv eto
tsre'ast everyday: work 180 hands.
IuM ».nn IRAN A WAUKS k
1 X 1 ) SUPPLY COMPANY,
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
w E MAKE LOANS on }
LIFE INSURANCE POLICIES.
If you have a policy in the New York Life,.
Equitable Life, or Mutual Life and would
like to secure a Loan, write us giving number
of your policy, and we will be pleased to quote-
rates. Address
TfteEMlisH-Ainerican Loan am Trust Co,.
No. 1 2 Equitable Building, Atlanta, Ga.
MENTION THIS PAPER in tisers? writing Anu9T-24* to adver¬