The Fitzgerald leader. (Fitzgerald, Irwin County, Ga.) 19??-1912, August 12, 1897, Image 3

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    Advantage of Weep.
In reply to the question, Is it wise
for a man to deny himself and get
along with a few hours sleep a day, to
do more work? Tesla, the great elec¬
trician, is said to have replied; “That
is a great mistake, I am convinced.
A man has just so many hours
to be awake, and the fewer
of these he uses each day the
more longer days he will last; that is, the
lie will live. I believe that a
man might live two hundred years if
he would sleep most of the time. That
is why negroes often live to advanced
old age, because they sleep so much.
It. is said that Gladstone sleeps
teen hours every day.
Next to an Approving: Conscience,
A vigorous stomach is the greatest of mundane
blessings. Sound dfgesticp is a guaranty of
quiet nerves, muscular elasticity, a hearty ap¬
petite and n regular hab.it of body. TTloughnto
always a natural endowment, it may be ac¬
quired through the agency of Hostetler’s Stom¬
ach Bitters, one of the most effective In vigor ants
and blood fertilizers in existence. This tine
tonic also fortifies those who use it against,nm-
laria. and remedies biliousness, constipation
and rheumatism.
The seamy side of a city is where the resi¬
dents get along only sew sew.
Maple Syrup.
Attention is called to the Maple Syrup adver¬
tisement in this paper, wnieh has the endorse¬
ment of Governor Taylor of Tennessee. Rev.
Sam Jones and others. This syrup with the su¬
gar made from it has been manufactured and
sold by a company extensively through the
wholesale and retail trade, but it ran too high
for the people by passing through so many
hands. It is now proposed to let the people
have the formula and make it at first cost, and
they will make a mistake if they do not take
hold of it. It lias been pronounced equal to the
“only p Ur o old Vermont” which sells at $1.30
per gallon.
The average school boy prefers a tanned shoo
to a tanned back.
I believe Piso's Cure for Consumption saved
my bov’s life last summer.—Mrs. ALLIE Doug¬
lass, LeRoy, Mich., Oct. 20, ’94.
ELIZABETH COLLEGE. ^
FOR WOMEN.
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
EQUAL TO THE BEST
high Colleges grade for College men with every feature added. of a
for women
A FACULTY OF 15 SPECIALISTS
From schools of international reputa¬
tion, as Yale. Johns Hopkins, Amherst,
University of Virginia,Beriin,New Pari?, &c. Eng¬
land Conservatory,
THREE COURSES
Leading to degrees.
GROUP SYSTEM
With electives.
MUSIC CONSERVATORY
With coarse leading to diPipe
dofin. Organ,Piano, Violin, Guitar, Banjo,Man*
Vocal.
ART CONSERVATORY
Full course to diDloma--a.il varieties.
FULL COMMERCIAL
Course—Teacher from Eastman.
A REFINED HOME
With every modern convenience.
CLIMATE
similar to that of Ashbville.
COLLEGE BUILDING,
172 ft. frontage,143 ft. deep, 4 stories hltrh,
built of pressed brick, lire proof, witli
every modern appliance.
Catalogue sent free on application.
Address,
REV. C. B. KING, President,
Charlotte. N. C.
1 : 1 ! GomPress
Full and Half Circle
II § HAY PRESS.
3ri I Best Made.
^in^Send for circulars..^
HENRY COPELAND, Chattanooga,Tenn
MAPLE SYRUP
Made on your kitchen stove in a few minutes al
a cost of about 'Z5 Cents Pet Gallon, by a
new process, which sells at $ 1.00 per gallon.
“I want to thank you for the Maple Syrup
recipe which I find Is excellent. I can recoin-
mendlthighly to any and every one.”—R kv •
Sam P. Joshs, Cartersvllle, Ga.
Sends; and get recipe—or stamp and inveati-
gate. Bonanza for agents,
j. x. I.OTSVK KJH, Morristown, Tenn.
F rflMCTII LuNoUf- TBTinsil I A i lull ! 8
m hr rm“r^d f S
dren. Successfully treated. Rheumatism,
Lungs. Diseases peculiar to women. Prolap.
mean Life and Happiness, s. Bld’g., t. whitak.-r, Atlanta. Ga. M .
1)., Specialist, 205 Xorcross
CLAREMONT COLLEGE,HICKGRY.N.C.
1 Girls and young
j I women. titan noted Loor,-
a
li® i Ten’scheSfm
!U 1 0110 . *400 Piano
fv.usL t0 e e u'
8 m&itM g- ^ ad
; ate.
1 mis flfiraS and Mountain For air
water.
catal’g address
S. Y. Hatton,
A. M. f l J re 8 .
DU _ — U -v“v I o 9. r- U o , IvJ /-» V I vJi
I* fv
A complety novel, good paper and lai-sw type, anil
Actual value, tci cents. N. Y.
B. E. LAY. lOS Park Row, New York.
fl H liftCECUKKD — _ AT p
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MFNT IUH flNTHlS i mu r PflPfRtEJrs nr LB Users. AMj.n fvc 07-32
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“ I lost Sgisfis
my wife ami t wo I \
I children from the ef-V
/ / scrofula- feet, of hereditary My third \ \
I / fectecl child was with dangerously scrofula: af- He 1 \ ; ”•
I I was unable to walk, his left \
foot being covered with run -1
f ning sores. Physicians hav-V
ing failed to relievethc others V
•of my family, I decided to try \ _
I Ayer's Sarsaparilla. I am\
I pleased to say the trial was suc-\
ecssful, and my boy was restored \ i,
to health. I a/n confident that my l v
.
child would have died had he not - \
used Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.”—J as. M.
I)ye, Mintonville, Ky., Aug. 5, 1895.
i 1 A
\
WEIGHTY WORDS
FOR - ^ ,
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.
ODD HITS or INFORMATION.
The first museum of natural history
was established in London in 1681.
It is estimated that American trav¬
elers annually spe: d £20,000,000 in
Europe.
The greatest length of England and
Scotland, north and south, is about
080 miles.
Tbe deepest English coal shaft is at
! ^"° . colher Ashton-rtopth . , .
8S v ’ near
-
| ,eet +
’
i Tbe hair of criminals is allowed to
! P discharged, ro ' v f<ir three months before they are
j Philadelphia has a greater mileage
of electric railways than the whole of
j ; Germany.
Of 1,000 persons only one reaches
the age of 100 years, and not more
thau six that of 65 years.
Fires are much more frequent, in
proportion to population, in New York
than in either London or Paris.
Handel used, when traveling, to
order dinner for three, or if hungry,
for live, in either London or Paris.
France, with a population of 39,-
000,000, lias a fighting force of 2,000,-
000, able to appear in the field at very
short notice.
During the past year 1,820 acres of
land were planted to canaigre in
Arizona, and the acreage will be much
larger the coming year.
Nearly every man, woman and child
in Egypt is a smoker of cigarettes, and
a pipe is hardly ever seen in the mouth
of a native.
Lands near Watsonville, Cal., that
formerly went tenantless at $3.50 per
acre, now lease for $7 per acre for
cultivation of the sugar beet.
The fastest trains on the continent
are the expresses of the Northern Rail¬
way Company of France. Their speed
is thirty-six miles an hour.
There are 48,000 artists in Paris,
more than half of them painters. The
number of paintings sent in to the ex¬
hibition last year was about 10,000.
It is computed that all of the houses
in London and New York could be
built of the lava thrown out by Vesu¬
vius since the first recorded eruption
in A. D. 79.
Tar coal, when used for dyes, yields
sixteen shades of blue, the same num¬
ber of yellow tints, twelve of orange,
nine of violet and numerous other col¬
ors and shades.
Tariff Laws Compared.
The comparison of the present tariff
law with the Wilson act authorized by
congress has been completed.
It was made by Charles H. Evans,
who has been engaged in the prepara¬
tion of all the tariff’ bills with which
congress has dealt since 1872. The
comparison is made in rates expressly
named expressed in ad valorem terms
between the present law and the Wil¬
son law. The statement places the
average duty rate under the law at
54.66 ad valorem as against an average
of 40.10 under the Wilson law, the
averages being figured upon the basis
of values in 1896. The schedule shows
the following increases in percentages:
Chemicals from28.53 to30.67; wools
and woolens, 47.62 to 86.54; silks from
46.96 to 53.41; earthenware and glass-
I i ware 35to52.47; metals,38.11 to 49.24;
sugar, 41...1T ... q, to l. - 14.10, i le . i Tonacco, n v n „.„ 1no 10,1.110 or.
. ! 121.90; agricultural products, 22.44
to
i t T0 *q 4 .). c,Grits splI US pto eIC fi] 54 to 68 83-
cotton manufactures, „ ’ ’> 42.10 ,„'L. to ; 52.
00 .
i Some of the increases expected in rev¬
enue : are as follows: Chemicals from
S5,619,239 to $8,423,084; earthenware
amI glassware from $8,006,839 to
j $12,303,149; metals from $13,196,416
to 817,487,482; woods from 8605,709
j to $2,439,536; sugar from 829,910,703
! to $54,207,642; agricultural products
, from $7,727,614 to $14,587,600.
1 These estimates are based upon the
l supposition that the value and volume
f imports will rema in the same.
Moses and Pharaoh’s Daughter.
A New England divine once, preach-
in rr on the perils which surround
' youth, illustrated his. subject by de-
; scribing the dangers to which the in-
rant Moses «as exposed in his little
wicker boat on the banks of the Nile,
saying; goodly eliild, but lie
“Moses was a
wns 1 1 ,laced bv bis parents where be
Y, ' as surrounded by mnumeraole dan-
gers—tbe fang oi the serpent, the jaw
J t k 11 i tor, the tooth of the hip-
popotamus I F ami tJie ^ claw of the vult-
ure. „
It is a little surprising that the
i htor of Pharaoh 7L wl, should Lh have
chosen , su ° h „ a ‘ laa « el0U8 a oeaoil * for 01
bathing.—Church Economist. .
--.
REV. DR. TALMAGE.
THE NOTED DIVINE’S SUN
DAY DISCOURSE.
He Preaches on the Wonderful Personal
Magnetism of the Saviour—.The Sor¬
rows or Jesus, Hi# Miracles and Hi#
Inflnito Sympathy for A1I Mankind.
Tkxt: “His name shall bo called wonder¬
ful.”—Isaiah ix., 6 .
The prophet lived in a dark time. For
some 3000 years the world had been getting
worse. Kingdoms had arisen and perished.
As the captain, of a vessel in distress sees
relief coming across the water, so the
prophet, lived, amid the stormy times in which he
put the telescope of prophecy to his
eye and saw, 750 years ahead, one Jesus ad¬
vancing to tho rescue. I want to show that
when Isaiah called Christ the Wonderful
be spoke wisely.
In most houses there is a picture of
Christ. Sometimes it represents Him with
face effeminate, sometimes with a face
despotic. I have seen West’s grand sketch
of tae rejection of Christ. I have seen the
face of Christ as cut on an emerald, said to
he by command of Tiberius Ciesar, and yet
I am convinced that I shall never know
how Jesus looked until, on that sweet Sab¬
bath morning, I shall wash the last sloep
from my eyes in the cool river of heaven.
I take up this book of divine photographs,
and I look at Luke’s sketoh, at Mark’s
sxotch, and John’s sketch and at Paul’s
sketch, full” and I say, with Isaiah, “Wonder-
f think that you are all interested in the
s.ory of Christ. You feel that He is the
only one who ean help you. You have un¬
bounded admiration for the commander
who helped bis passengers ashore while he
himself perished, but have you no admira-
tl seif “?/°, failing r Him back who into rescued the waters our souls, from which Him-
He had saved us?
Christ was wonderful in tho magnetism
of His person.
After tho battle of Antietam, when a gen-
orai rode along the lines, although the
soldiers were lying down exhausted, they
rose with great enthusiasm and huzzaed
As Napoleon returned from his captivity
hts first step on the wharf Bhook all the
kingdoms, standard. and 250,000 men joined his
It took 3000 troops to watch him
in his exile. So there have been men of
wonderful magnetism of person. But hear
me while I tell you of a poor young man
who oame up from Nazareth to produce a
thrill such as has never been excited by
any other. Napoleon had around him the
memories of Austerlitz and Jena and Bada-
ios, but here was a man who had fought no
battles, dished who wore no epaulets, who bran¬
no sword. He is no titled man of the
schools, Imd for He never Went to school. He
hands probably never seen a prince or shaken
with a nobleman. The only extraor¬
dinary person we know of as being In His
company was His own mother, and she was
so poor that in the most delicate and solemn
hour that ever comes to a woman's soul sho
was obliged to lie down amid camel drivers
grooming I imagine the beasts of burden.
Christ one day standing in the
streets of Jerusalem. A man descended
from high lineage is standing beside Him
and sayg: “My father was a merchant
prince. He had a castle on the beach at
Galilee. Who was your father?” Christ
from answers. “Joseph, the carpenter.” A man
Athens is standing there unrolling his
parchment of graduation and says to Christ,
"Where did you go to school?” Christ ans-
w,iES > "I never graduated.” Aha! The idea
of such an unheralded young man attempt-
mg to command the attention of the world!
As well some little fishing village on Long
Island shore attempt to arraign New York,
Ye. no sooner does He set His foot in the
towns or cities of Judma than everything is
in commotion. The people go out on a pic-
nio, taking only food onougn for the day,
a 3 US0 with Christ that, at
the k risk of. starving, they follow Him
into the wilderness, out
A nobleman fails down
flat before Him and says, “My daughter is
dead." A beggar tries to rub the dimness
from his eyes and says, “Lord, that my eyes
may be opened.” A poor, sick, panting
woman I pressing through the crowd garment.”’ says,
must touch the hem of His
than Children, who love their mother better
any and one olse, struggle to get into His
arms, to kiss His cheek, and to run their
flngers through His hair, and for all time
tliat putting Jesus so in love with the little ones
there is hardly a nursery in Christen-
ing: jloin “I from must which have He does not take one, say-
them. I will fill heaven
with these. For every cedar that I plant in
heaven I will have fifty white lilies. In the
hour when I was a poor man in Judaea they
were not ashamed of Me, and now that I
have come to a throne I do not despise
them. Hold it not back, oh, weeping
is mother; the lay it on my warm heart! Of such
What kingdom of heaven.”
is this coming down the road? A
triumphal procession. He is seated, not in
pie a chariot, but oil an ass, and yet the peo-
take oil' their coats and throw them in
the way. Oh, what a time Jesus made
among the the fishermen, children, among the beggars,
among among the philoso-
phers! You may boast of self control, but
if you had seen Him you would have put
your arms around His neck and said, “Thou
art Jesus altogether iovely.” I
was wonderful in the opposites and
seeming antagonisms of His nature. You
want things logical and consistent, and you
sav, “How could Christ be God and man at
the same time?” John says Christ was the
Creator. “All things were made by Him,
and without Him was not anything made.”
Matthews says that He was omnipresent,
“Where two or three are met together in
My name there am I in the midst of them."
Christ declares His own eternity, “I am Al-
pha and Omega.” How ean He be a lion,
under His foot crushing kingdoms, and yet
a lamb licking the hand that slays Him? At
W h a t point do tbe throne and the manger
touch? If Chris* was God, why flee Into
Egypt? Why not stand His ground?
W»y ^ ol bearing the cross, not lift
uo His right hand and crush His assassins?
Wily stand' and be spat upon? Why sleep
on the mountain, when He owned the
palaces of eternity? Why catch fish
£or His bl6ak!a ^ on the beach in the chill
morning, His when ail the pomegranates are
und all the vinevards His and all the
oat tle His and ail the partridges His?
Why walk when weary and His feet stone
bruised, when He might have taken the
splendors of the sunset for His equipage
and moved with horses and chariots of fire?
Wliybega drink from the wayside, when
out of toe crystal chalices of eternity He
poured the Euphrates, the Mississippi and
tho Amazon, and dipping His hands in the
fountains of heaven and Blinking that hand
over the world, from the tips of Ills fingers
dripping the great lakes and the ocean?
Why let the Roman regiment put Him to
death, when He might have ridden down
the sky followed by all the cavalry of
heaven, mounted on white horses of eternal
victory? You’
oaunot understand. Who can?
You try to confound me. I am confounded
before you speak. Paul said it was un-
searchable. He went climbing up from
argument to argument and from antithesis
to antithesis and from glorv to glory and
then sank down in exhaustion as he saw
far above him other heights of divinity un-
scaled and exclaimed “that iu all things
He might have tbe pre-eminence.”
Again, Christ was wonderful in His
used teachings. The people had been
to formalities and technicalities.
Christ upset all their notions as to how
this, preaching ought to be done. preaching—tbe There was
people peculiarity about Ills
knew what He meant. His illustra-
tions were taken from the hen calling her
chickens together, from salt, from candles,
from fishing tackle, from a hard creditor
collaring a debtor. How few pulpits of
this day would iiave allowed Him en-
trance?’He would have been called un-
dignified and familiar in nis style of
preaching. hear Him. And yet the people went to
Thoso old Jewish rabbis might j
have preached on the side of Olivet fifty
yen *3 and never gnt an audience. The
nlviloaopher-' sneered at Ills ministrations
and said. "This will never do." The law¬
yers beard caricatured, but the common neopie
Him gladly. Suppose you that, them
Suppose Were any sleepy that people In His audiences? who
mixed you any woman oyer
bread was ignorant of what He
meant when Ho compared the kingdom of
heaven with lea von or ysatt? Suppose you
that the sunburnt fishermen, with fish
scales upon their hands, were listless
when He spoke of the kingdom of heaven
as a net? Wo spend three years in college
studying ancient mythology, and three
years in the theological seminary learn¬
ing how to make a sermon, and then ws
go out to save the world, and if we can¬
not do it according to Claude’s ‘'Sermon¬
ising.” or Blair’s "Rhetorio.” or Karnes’
“Criticism.” we will let the world go
to perdition, If we save nothing
else, Wft will savo Claude ami
Blair. Wo see a wreck in sight. We
must go out and save the crew and pas¬
sengers. We wait uutil we get on our line
cap and coat and find ourehining oars, and
then we push out methodically and
scientifically, while some plain shoresman,
in rough fishing smack and with broken
oar lock goes out and gets the crow and
passengers and brings them ashore in
safety. and We throw down our delicate oars
say: “What aridiculous thing to save,
men in that way! You ought to have done
it scientifically and beautifully.” “Ah."
says the shoresman, “if those sufferers had
waited until you got out your fine boa'
they would have gone to the bottom.”
The work of a religious teacher is to
save men. and though every law of gram-
mnrshould he snapped in the undertaking,
and there be nothing but awkwardness and
blundering in the mode, all bail to the
man who saves a soul.
Christ, in His preaching, sympathetic! was plain,
earnest dragoon and wonderfully info We
cannot men heaven. We
cannot drive them in with the butt end of a
catechism. We waste our time in trying of"
to catch flies with acids instead the
to sweet honeycomb apples of do the gospel. We try
make crab the work of pome¬
granates.
Again .Tesus was wonderful in His sor¬
rows. The sun smote Him and the eokl
chilled Him, the rain pelted Him, thirst
parched Him and hunger exhausted Him.
Shall I compare His sorrow to the sea? No,
for that is something hushed into a calm.
Shall I oompnre it with the night? No, for
that sometimes gleams with Orion or kin¬
dles with Aurora. If one thorn should he
thrust through your tempio you would
faint. But here is a whole crown made
from the rhamnus or spina Christ—small,
sharp, stinging thorns. The mob make a
cross. They put down the long beam, and
on it they fasten a shorter beam. Got Him
at last. Those hands that havo been doing
kindnesses and wiping away tears—hear
the hammer driving the spikes through
them. Those feet that have been going
about on ministrations of mercy—battered
against the cross. Then they lift it up.
Look, look, look! Who will help Him now?
Come, men of Jerusalem—ye whose dead
He brought to life, ye whose sick He healed
—who will help Him? Who will seize the
weapons of the soldiers? None to help.
Having carried such a cross for us, shall ws
refuse to take our cross for Him?
Shall Jesus bear the cross alone
And all the world go free?
No; there’s a cross for every one,
And there’s a cross for me.
You know the process of ingrafting. You
bore a hole into a tree and put-In the
branch of another tree. This tree of the
cross was hard and rough, but into the
holes where the nails went there had been
grafted branches of the tree of life that now
bear fruit for all nations, The original tree
was bitter, but the branches ingrafted were
sweet, and now ail the nations pluck the
fruit and live forever,
Again, Christ was wonderful in His vic-
torles.
First, over the forces of nature. The sea
is a crystal sepulcher. It swallowed the
Central America, tho President and the
Spanish Armada ns easily The as any fly that
ever floated on it. inland lakes are
fully as terrible in their wrath. Galilee,
when aroused in crouched a storm, is overwhelming, His
and yet that sea in presence
and licked His feet. He knew all the waves
and winds. When He beckoned, they came,
When He frowned, they fled. The heel of
His foot made no indentation on the soliui-
fled water. Medical science has wrought
great changes in rheumatic limbs and dis-
eased blood, but when muscles are entirety
withered no human power cah restore
them, and when a limb is oneo dead it is
dead. But here is a paralytic—his hand
lifeless. Christ says to him, ’“E—retch forth
thy hand,” and he stretches it forth,
In the eye infirmary how many diseases
of that delicate organ have been cured?
But Jesus says to one born blind, “Be
open,” and the light of heaven rushes
through gates The that have never before been
opened. frost or an ax may kill a tree,
but Jesus smites one dead with a word,
Chemistry can do many wonderful things,
but what chemist, at a wedding, when the
refreshment gave out, could change a pail
of water into a cask of wine?
Behold His victory over tho grave! The
binges of the family vault become very
rusty because they are never opened except
to take another in. There is a knob on the
outside of the sepulcher, but none on the
inside. Here comes the conqueror of death,
He enters that realm and say 3 , “Daughter
of Jairus, sit up,” and she sat up. To Laz-
nrus, “Come forth,” and he came forth,
To the widow’s son He said, " 6 -et up from
that bier,” and he goes home with his
mother. Then Jesus snatched up the keys
of death and hung them to His girdle and
cried until all the graveyards of the earth
heard Him: “Oh. death, I will be tlry plague!
Oh, grave, I will be thy destruction!”
But Christ’s victories have only just be-
gun. This world is His, and He must hate
it- What is the matter in this country?
Why ail these financial troubles? There
never will bo permanent prosperity In this
land until. Christ rules it. This land was
discovered for Christ, and until our cities
shah be evangelized and north, south, east
and west shall acknowledge Christ as King
and Redeemer we cannot have permanent
prosperity. What is the matter with Spain,
with France, with ail of the nations? All
the congresses of the nations cannot bring
quiet. When governments not only
theoretically but the practically acknowledge
the Saviour of world, there will be
will peace havo everywhere. ships In than that day the sea
more now, but there
will not be one “man-of-war.” The foun-
dries of the world will jar with mightier
industries, but there will be no molding of
bullets. Printing presses will fly their
shall cylinders forth with greater speed, but 1 there¬ laws.
go no iniquitous trash, in
in constitutions, on exchange, in scientific
laboratory, on earth as in heavan, Christ
shall be called wonderful. Let that work
of the world’s regeneration begin in your
heart, oh, bearer! A Jesus so kind,a Jesus
so good, a Jesus so loving—how can you
help but love Him?
It la a beautiful moment when two per-
sons band wlio stand have in church pledged and each have otherbeart tbe banns and
of
marriage jiroclaimed. Father and mother,
brothers and sisters stand around the
altar. The minister of Jesus gives the
counsel, the ring is set, earth and heaven
witness it, the organ sounds and amid
many congratulations they start out on
the path of life together. Oh, that this
might be your marriage day! Stand up,
immortal soul. Thy beloved comes to get
His betrothed. Jesus stretohes forth His
hand and says, “I will love thee with an
everlasting love,” and you respond, “My
beloved is mine, and I am His.” Iputyour
hand in His; henceforth he one. No trouble
shall part you, uo time cool your love,
Hide by side on earth, side bv side in
heaven. Now let the blossoms of heavenly
gardens fill the the hou9e with their redolence
and all organs of God peal forth the
wedding march of eternity. Hark! “The
voice of my beloved. Behold He cometh
leaping upon the mountains, skipping upon
tho hills.”
Tannins: Hides.
Tanning is an art best clone by
ports, but hideei treated >ih follows will
answer very well for many purposes:
Bury in wood ashes till the hair will
001,16 s e 0,,t °R„b f s y- flSh^e , Rel ? ove ttwonSy .J* air an .‘}
the
with equal parts of pulverized would alum
and salt. Smoke hide as you a
ham. As it dries rub and work it well
to make it soft. It must be stretched
v. y nailing it on a smooth surface.
There are many long and tedious
methods, but this is the shortest and
simplest that we know.—Excnange.
Claiming' (lie Credit.
“It is really remarkable,” said Mr.
Meekton, “to note how many eminent¬
ly successful men were regarded as
stupid when they were in school.”
“Yes,” replied his wife, in a sifinifi-
cant tone, “and the most interesting
point is that most of them did not be¬
gin to acquire a reputation for beiug
smart until after they vere married.”
—Washington Star.
Comfort Costs 50 Cents.
Irritating;, aggravating:, agonizing Tetter, Ec¬
zema. Ringworm and all other Itching skin dis¬
eases are quickly cured by the use of Tetterine.
It is soothing, cooling, healing. Costs 50 cents a
box. post paid—brings comfort atonoe. Address
J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga.
The road to fame is full of quicksands, ra¬
vines and mountains.
How’s This ?
We offer One Hundred Dollir- Reward for
any ca e. of Catarrh that cannot b.- cured by
Hair? Catarrh Cure.
F. J. undersigned, ChunkV <fc Co., Props., Toledo, F. J. Che¬ O.
We, the have known
ney ior the ia-t 15 years, and believe h<m per¬
fectly hon ir «ble in all business t'an-actions
and financially able to carry out any obliga¬
tion ru de by their firm.
West & Tkuax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
Oh o.
Warding, Kin nan <fc Marvin, Wholesale
Druggists, Toledo, Ohio.
Hall's Catarrh ('me is taken inernally, act¬
ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur-
laees of the system. P»ic , 75c. pe bottle. Sold
by all D uggists. Testimonials free.
Hall’s Family Pills are the best.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma¬
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle.
Fits permanently cured. JNo fits or nervous-
ness after first day's use of I)r. Kune’s Groat
Nerve Restorer. trial bottle and treatise free.
Dr. R. H. Kline. Ltd.. 931 Arcli St., Rhila., Pa.
[MONEY ‘ J¥l IS NOT given APPRECIATED. away
BUT.....
When you can earn it easy and rapidly it is a
good thing. For HOW TO no IT, address
TH E H. G. LIN HERMAN CO., 404 Gould
Building, Atlanta, Ga.
DRUNK ARDS can be saved with¬
out tbeir knowledge by
Anti-Jag the marvelous
cure for the drink habit.
Write Renova Chemical
Co., 66 Broadway, N. Y.
Full information (in plain wrapper) mailed free.
Ij
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\ » A
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P O
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L‘S
NATURE’S MODERATION.
The human cbnjtitution is very much like n fire, an<l the way many people try to take care of
their health may be compared to the way a careles3 kitchen girl looks after the cooking-stove. One
minute it is raging red-hot, and then suddenly, first sadden, thiug yon tremendous know, tbe effect firs is oat. Pe reople are
sometimes led to believe that a medicine which has a must be t ruly won*
derful. They forget that it maybe merely a tremendous *' draught” it which than imparts before. a temporary false
effect of brightness and “ fire ” to the system, but suddenly drops lower
There is no sudden overwhelming effect about Ripans Tabuics. Seme people thick the prescribed
dose is too slow, and double it to get a quicket effect. But nature herself is slow t moderate and
regular in accomplishing her best work The Tabules relieve acute headaches, indigestion and
nervous depression almost instantly. But their effect on the bowels is more gradual; yet it is
sure and thorough. Ripans Tabules act in accordance with nature, and their results like nature’s are
complete and permanent.
or the live cent cartons (120 tabules) can be had by mail by ponding (xxn forty-eisrht coots be to tho Ripans ('kemioai.
No. 10 bpruce Street, New York—or asintfle oarton yabcl.es> vrlU sent tor flvo aenta.
“Success”
GottOR......
Seetiliulier
and
Separator.
'
P Nearly
donblee
tbe Value
of 6 eed to tbe
Farmer,
All nji-to-date Ginners ase them hecanee tbe Grow¬
ers give their patronage to such gins. Holler is
PRACTICAL, RELIABLE and GUARANTEED.
For full infon/ation Address
SOULE STEAM FEED WORKS, Meridian,Miss
advertised tho Weak leu- a
m m and a Fully short restored time. One m
box tablets $1- T
y all tried remedies doctors. I SSFKCIFICCO. Three $2.'0. HAGGARD’S to By boxes mail. : B Specific M
I 1 Atlanta, Ga.
COMPLETE C0 T.u 0 a;<fTJrtm? e r ST '
IVEXXjXj 0'CJT i '>F , I*2?S.
Also Gin, Press, Cane Mill and
Shingle Outfits.
Cast every day; work 180 hands.
LOMBARD IROX WORKS
AKD SUPPLY COMPANY,
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
Augusta. Ga. Actual businea*. No text u
bq oUs- Short time. Cheap board- Send for catuJojua.
1111 MJ\ ™"'' TUC, SKA Ipi’M $S£ oca ' I.
II8 luUil B 0 R , ’ ull<1 » old” »i‘ and^ot w*ak. run * n .
u partieu mg.
nPfi&EO ULflWO?re1itZn Writofor lars
U 6tl! ' KE1:
. , .*
MELZ A REMEDY CO.,Atlanta l Qa.
notice:.
si m&mwsm*
R
0 s-svl
H f, _ H ll IK &T. //■. ifirj
0 mm
I!
!;
(l J IT^i55?AiTS ettles the Stomach
H
r> PnnUArt 12 1 WmCH KAKtS UFEA
, - -'
i> < I Shrinking KmtiRS^iaS^FU- M am e rs.i
S e H m H soli iliil 4'J
K r \7l SM
< gCTjiimj
G 5TMimMi2ESTn?if/r ITlS«
b
feSS 5 #!SSR?*S t!(TIRtlY f1w?iLt55
4 5 - -s* uttmmo vegetable.*- i
p
* BTHtgPAUggSrT H. 1 * AfTffl RESULTS.
ti |(MUCHITMKtDWIUra , ...
r; CORRECTS SHOULD THE t APPEAR)* „ a BJ H? 5 r
4
0
H m BhI
is
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h iPROPRI ETOBS.-..............ST. LOUIS.
I- t
l
$75.00 For $37.50 To fie obtained at
WHITE’S Cain BUSINESS St., ATLANTA, COLLEGE, GA.
IS K.
Complete Business and Shorthand Course Com-
lined. $7.50 Per Month.
Average time requi red five months.
Average cost $37.50. This course
Would cost $75.00 at any other reputable school.
Business practice from the start. Trained
Teachers. Gourde of study unexcelled. No va-
cation. Address F. B. WHITE, Principal.
FR2CSC COMPANY
ECLIPSE ENGINES
*
<r
m
1 * ^ ; ^
’
Boilers, Satv Mills, Cotton Oi ns. Cotton
Presses, Grain Separators.
Chisel Tooth and Solid Saws. Saw Teeth. In¬
spirators. Injectors, Engine Repairs ami
a full line of Brass Goods.
ZW~Send jor Catalogue, and Prices.
SOUTHERN MANAGERS.
.
Nos. 51 & 53 S. Forsyth St., ATLANTA, GA.
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 rates. your Address policy, and ,we will bo pleased to quote
TheErghsli-Araericaii Loan and TrnstCo,.
No. 12 Equitable Building, Atlanta. Ga.
LWl
II ™ UURtS WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS.
^ Best in Cough time. Syrup. Sold by Tastes (rood. Use
druggists. m
f5B5T3toUlli*i !l tfYSY?r ~