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Numerous (Jcorffe IV.’s.
T e 1*?.^Washington,
r, n G,, contains forty George Wash-
.
mgtons, seven Martha W'ashingtons
find nineteen Mary Washingtons. “The
bearers of these names vary in color
from a light ginger-cake tint to an
ebony black that rivals the ace of
spades.”
That Terrible Scourge.
Malarial disease Is invariably supplemented
ny disturbance of tho liver, the bowels, tho
stonmcli and the nerves. To tho removal of
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ttio bill in, other remedy does, perform¬
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Ten tons of diamonds have beon mined in
bouth Africa the last sixteen years.
A Red flmided Murderer.
Tctteri no kills the germs of Tetter, Eczema,
Salt-Rheum, , Ringworm skin
and other dis¬
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ence of infinitesimal anamalculae. Tetterino
murders them at once and stops the agouizieg
itch, then it soothes and heais the skin. At
“tug J. T. stores, Shuptrine, or hv mail for 50 cents in stamps.
Savannah, Ga.
The New York woman who killed a bear up
. England
m was not properly tested for cour¬
age. Give her a mouse.
A Prose Poem.
EE-M. Medicated Smoking Tobacco
And Cigarettes
Aro absolute remedies for Catarrh,
Hay Fever, Asthma and Colds;
Besides a delightful smoke.
Ladies as well as men, use these goods.
No opium or other harmful drug
Used in their manufacture.
EE-M. is used and recommended
By some of the best citizens
Of this country.
If your dealer does not keep EE-M.
Send 13c. for package of tobacco
And 6c. for package of cigarettes,
Diroct to the EE-M. Company,
Atlanta, Ga.,
And you will receive goods by mail.
8100 Reward. 8100.
Tho readers of this paper will be pleased to
learn that thero is at least one dreaded dis¬
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its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh
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Send for list of testimonials. Address
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Hall's Family Pigs are the best.
Fits permanently cured. No fits or pervous-
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After physicians had given me up, I was
saved by Piso’s Cure.—R alph Erieg, Wil¬
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If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
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A pan of water stood in a hot oven will re¬
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USE YOUR REASON
And Profit by the Experience of Other
People.
There are thousands of people who have
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It will tone up your system, create an ap¬
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Hood’s Pills
A Fickle Monarch.
Tho fickleness of monarchs is pro¬
verbial, and is well illustrated by the
moyements of the King of Siam in
Scotland. As originally arranged.
the visit was to last a week, Edinburgh
and Glasgow sharing alike in the hon¬
or of the kingly presence. First, the
Glasgow visit was deferred, and then
absolutely abandoned, while the visit
to the Scottish capital was restricted
to a couple of days. Glasgow is feel¬
ing mightily sore over this curt treat¬
ment, but even some of the King’s
Edinburgh entertainers have reason
for some heartburning.
The royal programme on Wednes-
day included a visit to Edinburgh
Castle, wlit-eh contains the jewelled
regalia worn by the Kings aud Queens
of Seotlaud. When the party drove
up to the castle gates the King changed
his mind, evidently presuming his
treasure to be an insignificant article
alongside some of his own costly jew¬
els at home. At the Forth Bridge the
resident engineer was about to give an
explanation of the principle of eon-
traction and expansion of the bridge,
when the King interrupted him with.
the remark, ‘It’s too wet,” and re-
entered the train.—Westminster Gaz¬
ette.
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- ;
THE NOTED DIVINE’S SUN
DAY DISCOURSE.
Sacred Music, Its Importance. Power and
Influence In the Cause of Clu-istian-
ity_A Singing Church Is a Success¬
ful Church—Obstacles to Overcome.
Text: “It came oven to pnss, as the
trumpeters and singers were as one, to
make one sound to be heard in praising
and thanking tho Lord.”—Chronicles v.,
fit.
The temple was dono. It was the very
chorus of all magnificence and pomp.
1 Splendor crowded against splendor. It was
tho diamond necklace of tho earth. From
tho huge pillars crowned with leaves and
flowers and rows of pomegranate wrought
out in burnished metal down even to the
tongs and snuffers made out of pure gold,
everything was as complete as the God di¬
rected architect could make it. It seemed
as if a vision from heaven had alighted on
the mountains. The day for dedication
came. Tradition says that thero were in
and around about the temple on that day
200,000 silver trumpets, 40,000 harps, 40,000
timbrels and 200,000 singers, so that all
modern demonstrations at Dusseldorf or
Boston seem nothing compared with that.
As this great sound surged up amid the
precious stones of the temple it must
have seemed like the river of life (lashing
against the amethyst of the wall of heaven.
The sound arose, and God, as if to show
that He was well pleased .«-itlta4l»<* music
which His children make In nil ages,
dropped cloud into the midsJj/Of the temple a
o! glory so overpowering that the
officiating priests were obliged te stop in
the midst of tho services.
There has been much discussion ns to
where music was born. I think that at tho
together beginning, “when the morning stars sang
and all the sons of God shouted
for cloud joy,” the earth heard the echo. The
on which tho angels stood to cele¬
brate the creation was the birthplace of
Song. Tlie stars that glitter at night are
only so many keys of celestial pearl cm
which God’s fingers play the music of the
spheres. Inanimate nature is full of God’s
strlDged and wind instruments. Sllonco
itself—perfect silence—is only a musical
rest in God's great anthem of worship.
Wind among the leaves, insect humming in
the summer air, the rush of billow upon
beach, the oceau far out sounding its ever¬
lasting psalm, the bobolink on tbe edge of
the forest, the quail whistling up from the
grass, are music, WliilevisitingBlackwell’s
Island I heard, coming from a window of
the lunatic asylum, a very sweet song. It
was and sung I by one who had lost her reason,
have come to believe .that even the
deranged and disordered elements of na¬
ture would make musie to our ears if we
only had acuteness enough to listen. I
suppose that even the sounds in nature
that are discordant and repulsive make
harmony in God’s ear. You know that you
may come so near to an orchestra that the
sounds are painful instead of pleasurable,
and I think that we stand so near devastat¬
ing storm and frightful whirlwind we can¬
not hear that which makes to God's ear and
the car of the spirits above us a music as
oomplete as it is tremendous.
I propose to speak about sacrerl music,
first showing you its importance and then
stating some of the obstacles to its advance¬
ment.
I draw the first argument for the impor¬
tance of sacred music from the fact that
God commanded it. Through Paul he tells
us to admonish one another in psalms and
hymns and spiritual songs. Through David
he cries out, “Sing ye to God, nil ye king¬
doms of the earth.” And thero are hun¬
dreds of other passages I mignt nemo, prov¬
ing that it is as much a man’s duty to sing
it is liis duty '
as to pray. Indeed I think
there are more commands in the Bible to
sing asks than there are to voice,'but pray. God not only
for tlie human for the in¬
struments of music. He asks for the cym¬
bal and the harpfand the trumpet. And I
suppose that in the last days of the church
the harp, the flute, the trumpet und all the
instruments of music that have given their
chiofkiid to the theater and bacchanal, will
be brought by their masters and laid down
at the feet of Christ and then sounded in
the church’s triumph on her way from suf¬
fering into glory. “Praise ye the Lord!”
Praise Him with your voices. Praise Him
with stringed instruments and with or¬
gans.
I draw another argument for the import¬
ance of this exercise from the impressive¬
ness of the exercise. You know something
of what secular music has achieved. You
know it has made its impression upon gov¬
ernments, upon saws, upon literature,upon
whole generations. One inspiring national
air is worth 80,000 men as a standing army.
There comes a time in the battie when one
bugle is worth 1000 muskets. In the earlier
part of our Civil War the Government pro¬
posed to economize in bands of music, and
many of them were sent home, hut the gen¬
erals in the army sent word to Washington:
“You are making a very great mistake. We
are falling back and falling back. We have
not enough music.” I have to tell yon that
no nution or church ean afford to severely
economize in music.
Why should we rob the programmes of
worldly gayety when we have so many ap¬
propriate songs and tunes composed in our
own day, ns well as that magnificent inher¬
itance of ehurch psalmody which has come
down fragrant with the devotions of other
generations—tunes no more worn out than
when our greatgrandfathers climbed up on
them from the church pew to glory? Dear
old souls, how they used to sing! And in
tiiose days there were certain tunes tnar-
riod to certain hymns, and they have lived
in peace a great while, those two old peo¬
ple, and we have no right to divorce them.
Born as wc have been amid this great
wealth of church music, augmented by the
compositions of artists in ourday, weought
not to be tempted out of the sphere of
Christian harmony and try to seek uneon-
secrated sounds. It is absurd fora million¬
aire to steal.
Many of you ara illustrations of what a
sacred song can do. Through It you were
brought into the kingdom of Jesus Christ.
You stood out against the warning and ar¬
gument of the pulpit, but when, in tho
sweet words of Charles Wesley or John
Newton or Toplady, the love of Jesus
was sung to your soul, then you sur¬
rendered as an armed castle that could not
be taken by a host lifts its window to listen
to There a harp’s thrill.
was a Scoteh soldier dying in New
Orleans, and a Scotch minister came in to
give him the consolations of the gospel.
The man turned over on his pillow and
said, “Don’t talk to me about religion.”
Then the minfeter began to sing a familiar
hymn that was composed by David Diekea-
son, beginning with the words:
Ob, mother dear, Jerusalem,
When shall I come to thee?
He sang it to tlie tune ot “Dqndee,” and
everybody in Scotland knoivs that, and ns
he began to sing the dying soldier turned
over “Where on bis did pillow and said that?” to tlie “Why,” minister,
you learn re¬
plied the minister, “my mother taught me
that.” “So did mine,” said the dying sol¬
dier, au?I the very foundation of his heart
was upturned, and then and there he yielded
himself to Christ. Oh, it has an irresisti¬
ble power! Luther’s sermons havo beon
forgotten, hut his “Judgment Hymn” sing3
on through the ages and will keep cn sing¬
ing until the blast of the arehahgel’s trum¬
pet shall bring about that very day which
the hymn celebrates. I would to God that
you would take these songs of salvation as
messages from heaven, for just as certainly
as tho birds brought food winged to Elijah by the
brook Cherith so these harmonies,
God sent are flying to your soul with tho
bread of life. Open your mouth and take
it, O hungry Elijah! the of sacred
I have also noticed perturbation. power You
song to soothe may
liave come in here with a great many wor-
riments and anxieties, yet perhaps them in tho
singing of ths first hymn you lost all.
^ ou lmvo r ‘‘ ni1 ,n ,hB Bible ot Snul. ami
I™**™r'n^Z of hltn. molan-
out A Spanish king wus
<, ' loi y' The windows were nil closed. He
sat In the darkness. Nothing could bring
him forth until Franell camo anti dis¬
coursed music for three or four days to
him. On the fourth flay he looked up and
wept and rejoiced, and tho windows were
thrown opou and that wldoh all the splen¬
dors of the court could not do tho power
of song accomplished. It you have anxie¬
ties charm and worriment.s, try’ tills heavenly
upon them. Do not sit down on tho
bank of the hymn, but plunge in, that tho
devil of care may be brought out of you.
It also arouses to action. Do you not
know that a singing church is always a
triumphant silent church? If a congregation is
during the exercise, or partially
sllont, it is the silence of death. I( when
the hymn is given out you hear the faint
hum of here and there a father and moth¬
er in Israel, while the vast majority ara
silent, that minister of Christ who is pre¬
siding needs to have a very strong consti¬
tution if ho does not get the chilis. Ho
needs not only the grace of God, but
nerves like whalebone. It is amazing how
some charge people their with voice enough to dis¬
ail duties In the world, when
they come into the house of God ha ve no
voioe to discharge this duty. I really be¬
lieve that if the church o! Christ could
rise up and sing as it ought to sing, where
we have 100 souls brought into the king¬
dom of Christ thero would he 1003. How
was it in olden time? Cajetan 9aid,
“Luther conquered us by his songs.”
But 1 must now speak ol some of the
obstacles in the way of the advancement ot
this sacred music, and the first is that it
I has been far impressed from into the service of satan.
always am believing that music Beilned ought
to be positively religious.
art has opened places where music has
been secularized, and lawfully so. Tho
drawing room, the concert, by the gratillca-
tion of pure taste and the production of
harmless amusement and the improvement
of talent, have become very forces in the
advancement of our civilization. Music
has as much right to laugh in Surrey
gardens as it has to pray in St. Paul’s. Ira
the kingdom of nature wo have tho glad
filing of tlie wind as well as tho long meter
psalm of the thunder. But, while all this
is so, every observer has noticed that this
art, which God iqfendod for the improve¬
ment of the ear. and the voice, and the
head, and the heart, has often been im¬
pressed into the service of error. Tartinl,
the musical composer, dreamed one night
that satan snatched from his haDd an
instrument and played upon it something
very sweet—a dream that has often been
fulfilled iu our day—the voice and the
instruments that ought to have been de¬
voted to Chtist captured from the ohurch
and applied to the purposes of sin.
Another obstacle has been an inordinate
fear of criticism. The vast majority
people else singing in church never waut any¬
body to hear them sing.
is waiting for somebody else to do nis duty.
If we all sang, then the inaccuracies
that are evident when only a few sing
would bo drowned out. Go’d asks you to
do as well as you can. and then if you get
the wrong pitch or keep wrong time He
will imperfection forgive any deficiency of tho ear and
of the voice. Angels will not
laugh if you should lose your place in the
musical scale or come in at the close a bar
behind. There arfe three schools of sing¬
ing, I am told—the German school, the
Italian school and the Trench school of
singing. Now I would like to add a fourth
school, and that is the school of Christ.
The voice of a contrite, broken heart, al¬
though it may not be able to stand human
criticism, makes better music to God’s ear
than the most artistic performance when
the heart is wanting. God calls on tho
beasts, on the cattle, on the dragons, to
praise Him, and we ought not to be behind
the cattle and the dragons.
Another obstacle in the advancement of
this art has been the erroneous notion that
this part of tlie service could be conducted
by delegation. Churches have said: “Oh,
what an easy time we shall have! The
minister will do the preaching, and the
choir will do the singing, ntid wo will have
nothing to do.” And you know as well as
I that there are a great multitude
churches all through this land where the
people are not expected to sing. The
whole work is done by u delegation of
or six or ten porsons, and the audience
silent. In such a church in Syracuse an
old elder persisted in singing, and so
choir appointed a committee to go and ask
the elder if he would not stop. ITou know
that in many churches the choir are ex¬
pected to tho do all the siugiDg, and the great
mass of people are expected to be silent,
and if you utter your voice you are inter¬
fering. In that church they stand, the
four, with opera giasscs dangling at thoir
side, singing “Bock of ages, cleft for me,”
with the same spirit that, the night before
on the stage, they took their part in the
“Grande Duehesse” or “Don Giovanni.”
Music ought to rush from the audience
like the water from a rock—clear, bright,
sparkling. If all the other part of the
church service is dull, do not have the
music dull. With so ninny thrilling things
to sing about, away with all drawling and
stupidity, There is nothing makes me so
nervous as to sit in a pulpit and look off on
an audience with their eyes three-fourths
closed and their lips a wavs slmt, mumbling
the praises of God. During my recent ab¬
sence I preached to a large audience, and
all the music they made together did not
oqunl one skylark. People do not sleep at
a coronation. Do not let us sleep when we
come to a Saviour's crowning. In order to a
proper discharge of this duty let us stand
up, snve as ago or weakness or fatigue ex¬
cuses us. Seated in an easy pew we can¬
not do this duty half so well as when, up¬
right, we throw our whole body into it.
Let our song be like an acclamation of vic¬
tory. You have a right to sing. Do not
surrender your prerogative.
We want to rouse all our families upon
this subject. Wo want each family of our
congregation to be a singing school. Child-
isn petulance, •bdurauy and intractability
would be soothed if we had more singingin
the household, and then our little ones
would be prepared for tbe great congrega¬
tion on Sabbath day, their voices uniting
with our voices in the praises of the Lord.
After a shower there are scores of streams
that come down the mountain side with
voices rippling and silvery, pouring into
one river and then rolling iu united
strength to the sea. So I would have all
the families in our church send forth tho
voice of prayer and praise, pouring it into
the great tide of public worship that rolls
on and on to empty iuto the great, wide
heart of God. Never can we have our
church sing as it ought until our families
sing as they ought.
There will lie a great revolution on this
subject in all churches. God will cornu
down by liis spirit and rouse up tho old
hymns and tunes that have not been more
than half awake since the time of our grand¬
fathers. The silent pews in the church will
break forth into music, and when the con¬
ductor takes hts place on the Sabbath day
there will be a great host of voices rushing
into tile harmony. My Christian friends, if
wo have no taste for this service on earth
what will we do iu heaven, where they
all sing and sing forever? I would that
our singing to-day might be like the Satur¬
day night rehearsal for the Sabbath morn¬
ing in the skies, and we might begin now,
by the strength and by the help of God, to
discharge performed. a duty which none of us has fully
And now what more appro¬
priate doxology thing can I do than to give out the
of the heavens, “Unto Him.vho
hath loved us and washed us from our sins
in His own blood, to Him be glory forever!”
Farmers in parts of Ohio are troubled
with a plague of rats so seriouo as to threaten
heavy financial loss. They are crying for u
ratcatcher.
The rise in tallow recently was partly at-
tributed to reports that large soap makers
in the West were buying freely there, lead¬
ing to a sharp rise iu prices.
POPULAR SCIENCE.
Light from the sun reaches ns in
eight minutes, ahd is ICO times greater
than the calcium light.
Water gases from blast furnaces at
Horde, Germany, aro to be used iu gas
engines, which will drive dynamos for
light and power.
If all the coal fields on the earth
were burning at once in a vast fire the
heat emitted could not be compared to
that of the sun for even a second of
time.
By thermo-electric methods, Hoi •
man, Lawrence and Barr have found
that copper melts at 1095 degrees
centigrade, silver at 970 degrees,
platinum at 1759 degrees, and alumi¬
num at 660 degrees.
A man weighing two hundred pounds
would weigh nearly three tons on the
sun, and his own weight would proba¬
bly flatten and kill him, the force of
gravity being twenty-eight times
greater at the sun’s surface than on
the earth.
That the ether is a very attenuated
form of matter, as is generally be¬
lieved, is denied by Professor Dol-
bear. It lacks the well-known prop¬
erties of matter, is unlimited in quan¬
tity and homogeneous, does not absorb
heat, is not a transformer of energy,
and receives wave vibrations and de¬
livers them without loss.
About 4200 plants are now collected
in Europe for commercial purposes,
420 of them being sought for their per¬
fume. There are gathered 1124
species of white flowers, 951 of yel¬
low, 823 of red, 594 of blue, and 308
of violet; and 187 of the white flowers
have pleasing odors, 77 of the yellow,
84 of the red, 34 of the blue and 13 of
the violet.
An interesting if not significant
coincidence has been pointed out by
Mr. A. Gosling, British Minister in
Central America. The volcano of
Izalco, in the Republic of Salvador,
has been in active eruption for over a
century, but suddenly ceased to be so
near the middle of last December.
This was followed on December 17 by
the very unusual occurrence of several
earthquake shocks in England.
A report of the forest conservator
of West Australia shows that timber is
abundant. Nearly all Australian
woods, however, are more remarkable
for durability than ease of working,
the kauri pine of New Zealand being
the ouly wood of Australasia compara¬
ble with the pine and fir timbers of
Europe and North America. . The
principal South Australian timber is
the jaiqv h, of which the colony has
about 8,000-000 acres.
A magnified phonograph record was
exhibited by Professor M’Kendrick
during a recent address to the Edin¬
burgh Royal Society. The vibrations
occurring in half a second were spread
over a length of twenty feet, and
showed that every word is a collection
of musical or other sounds running
rapidly into each other, the musical
sounds of the vowels predominating.
“Constantinople” shows seven hun¬
dred to nine hundred vibrations. No
word can be read from the curves, and
two tracings of the same word would
rarely, if ever, be alike.
Mountain Fire,
Texas, which has so many other
queer things within its vast borders,
now has a burning mountain. Not a
volcano that does nothing but lazily
puff smoke aud a few ashes, but a
mountain actually ablaze with a flame
that may be seen for miles. Blue
Mountain, four miles northeast of
Marble Falls, is covered with a very
close growth of cedar for thousands of
acres.
Eire started in this cedar brake, it
is believed, through the work of an in¬
cendiary, aud soon spread so that noth¬
ing but a very heavy and continuous
rain would extinguish the flames. The
heat was intense and the spectacle
awe-inspiring. Huge fire balloons,
consisting of dense dark masses of
smoke and gases, would float up from
the center of the fire, drift a short
distance ou the languid wind and then
apparently burst, scattering flames
over new tracts oi timber not yet ig¬
nited. The long drought had made
everything so dry that the cedar
burned like tinder and tho flames
licked up hundreds of thousands of
dollars worth of valuable timber.
As the production of cedar lumbar is
one of the principal industries of the
district near Blue Mountain, the loss
is severely felt.
Ranchmen for miles around, warned
by the flaming mountain, drove their
cattle and sheep to places of safety.
Not since 1889 has there been a fire in
that portion of Texas of such extent or
so destructive. The loss will fall
heaviest upon J. B. Bangle and Fred¬
erick and Alexander Baubion.—Now
York World.
Tho Yellow Fever Germ,
Surgeon General Wyman of tho ma¬
rine hospital service has had trans¬
lated the account written by Dr. San-
arelli of Montivideo of his discovery
of what ho claims to be the yellow
fever germ, and which he calls the
ioteroid bacillus. He says tho bacil¬
lus was discovered in tbe second case
examined. The doctor dwells upon
the difficulty of making sure of results,
because of the numerous microbes
found in yellow fever patients. The
particular germ which he holds to be
responsible for yellow fever, Dr. San-
arelli says, is found in the blood or
tissues, and not in the gastrointestin¬
al cavity. He notes the fact, however,
that iu yellow fever, as in typhoil,
that the digestive tract is the seat of
bacilli coli, but ho does not
these with the real yeVow
microbe. He concludes there¬
that the virus of yellow fever does
reside in the intestinal tube, “and
its toxin instead of being absorbed
the intestinal walls is elaborated in
interior of these organs aud in t-he
Star.
NEGLECT IS SUICIDE.
V
Plain Words Prom Mrs. Pinkham, Corroborated by Mrs. Charles
Dunmore, That Ought to Bring Suffering
Women to Their Senses.
If you were drowning and friendly hands shoved a plank to you, ,ind you
refused it, you would be committing suicide!
Yet that is precisely what women are doing if they go about their homes
almost dead with misery, yet refuse to grasp the kindly hand held out to them!
A -{Sfv It is suicidal to go day after day with that dull, con¬
v-c stant pain in the region of tho womb and that
// \ bloating heat and tenderness of the abdomen,
, which mako the weight of your clothes an
_
Y__ < almost intolerable burden to you. It is not
I natural to suffer so in merely, emptying the
2^ bladder. Does not that special form of suf-
'<1? \ fering tell you that there is inflammation
.r’« somewhere?
-
t- STJjShall ” It is inflammation I tell you what of the it is? womb!
/- If it goes on, polypus, or tumor, or cancer will set in.
Commence the use of Lydia L. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound. Thousands of women in this condition have
been cured by it. Keep your bowels open with Mrs. Pinkham's Liver Pills,
and if you want further advice, write to Mrs. Pinkham.at Lynn, Mass., stat¬
ing freely all your symptoms—she stands ready and willing to give you
the very best advice. She has given the helping hand to thousands
suffering justlikcyourself, many of whom lived miles away from physi¬
cian. Her marvelous Vegetable Compound has cured
many thousands of women. It can be found at any
respectable drug store. ** •'
Mrs. CUAR1.E8 Dunmore, 102 Fremont St., Winter ^
Hill, Somerville, Mass., says: “I was in pain day and ^ “SuSB&BMjL
night; my doctor did not seem to help me. I could
not seem to find any relief until I had took inflammation Lydia E. Pink-ifpBSRjP''-'^ of
ham’s Vegetable Compound. I
the womb, a bearing-down pain, and the whites very
intense that I Id not sleep at ’
badly. The pain was so cou '7
night. I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for eight months,
and am now all right. Before that I took morphine pills for my pain; that
was a great mistake, for the relief was only momentary and the effect vile. I
am so thankful to be relieved of my sufferings, for the pains I had were Foir.c-
thing terrible. I am, indeed, very grateful for the good Mrs. Pinkham’s reme¬
dies have done me.”
GET THE GENUINE ARTICLE 1
Walter Baker & Co.’s
Breakfast COCOA
Pure, Delicious, Nutritious.
6 1 ' ■ • Costs Less than Be sure ONE that the CENT package a cup. bears our Trade-Mark.
111 Waiter Baker & Co. Limited,
(Established 1780.) Dorchester, Mass.
Trade-Mark.
SOUTH CAROLINA LADIES
DON’T LIE.
Inman, used S. C., says: I have
Dr. M. A. Simmons
Iaver Medicine for
years, "with the best of re-
m suits for Sleeplessness,
WJ Nervousness, Intiiges-
tion and Swollen Feet.
,1 fy It of cured a complication Miss S. Hammett of dis-
w ,«v eases; she says it saved her
lIUUIlHi <£#[ life. 1 think it far excels
"Zeilin’s” and the “Black
Draught” medicine.
The Falling of uterine of the displacement Womb.
cases ar0
Very numerous and constitute a prolific
Its cause of intense and bearing-down wide-spread suffering.
eeneatioue, symptoms pain are weakueas in or the dragging back,
or
sometimes a sense of goneness at the pit of
the stomach. It may result from too fre¬
quent childbearing, the weariug and abdomen, garments that
compress waist over¬
general lifting, standing debility. on the feet too long, and
Wc would strongly urge the use of Dr.
Simmons Squaw Vino Wino which Will
purify and vitalize the blood, give tone and
that strength to be the muscles of the uterus, facilitate so
it will kept in place. To
a mend quick and injection complete recovery, wc Female recom¬
as an our Mexican
results. Remedy, which will produce the hanpiest
MSE&Nv cJic4d&tfax&wC
Walhalla, S. C., writes* I
Wk have used Dr. M. A. Sim-
M mons Diver Medicine
W Im more than 20 years, for Tor-
|p7 pid I Diver and Dizziness.
f take a dose every two
weeks and feel all right. I
v ip Jl Mk know it is far Superior to
• “Zeilin’s Regulator,” ia my
SI case.
Woman hoodT
The health and well-being of mankind
fection depend of upon the physical health and per¬
womanhood. Among the diseases
Which most impair the female constitution
are struation, lencorrhcea, falling irregular and painful men¬
of the womb, chlorosis,
ecanty diseases or too profuse be cured. menstruation. Dr. Simmons These
can
Squaw take, Vino Win© is a delightful remedy
to entirely harmless, free from nar-
cotics, unpleasant purely vegetable and produces no
after-results. It is unequalled
as a uterine tonic and curative agent for all
female diseases, as it i3 impossible for weak¬
ness of the uterus arid generative organs to
exist When it is faithfully and persistently
used. Constipation is another bane of
woman’s life which can be cared by a sing
Dr. HI, A. Simmons Diver Medicine.
‘1 '‘Success”
Lotion......
uhhu SeedHuller
v; and
Y> llilltiilf M| Nearly Ssprate
doubles
t-lio Value
cf Seed tc the
Farmer.
PRMTI0*!, rauu ..J 0MJUCTD.
ror fell information Address
SOULE STEAM FEED WORKS, Meridian,Misk
......: -— .............—
im. arm^ am m ts a M ABBS ran be saved wit h-
Bh In IB MBS uS out their knowledge by
Full information (in plain wrapper)
E * j
ga^
The soldier, citizen and Christian hero. A gre
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THE GEORGIA TELEGRAPH SCHOOL
^£rr?: Teaches telegraphy thoroughly , and
m service. School in Only the exclusive South. Established Telegraph
nine years. Sixteen hundred suc-
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v
'-a
q
; “||j
KL >j
$4 Am, i®
:-l=
?!
TASTELESS
CHILL
TUNIC
IS JUST AS COOD FOR ADULTS.
WARRANTED. PRICE 50 cts.
Paris Galatia, Ills., Nov. 1G, 1893.
Medicine Co., St. Louis, Mo.
Gentlemen:—We sold last year, 600 bottles of
GROVE’S TASTELESS CHILL .TONIC and have
bought three gross already this year. In all our ex¬
perience of 14 years, in the drug business, bare
never sold on article that gave such universal satis¬
faction as your Tonic. yours truly,
• Abney, carr & Co.
im, W&SHIHG..
vc ..MACHINE
GREATEST IMPROVEMENT
sSf -r-» * ^ iu WASHERS in 20 YEARS.
'a % PENDULUM
■ Nn*p» 60 ecnl of labor.
per •
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mere
k .* rocking a cradle.
NO
back¬
ache
joukl wllli this
nmchina.
)f (trulera
V:,: r
V * mm 1 '-.r 4
a j V j.kick*
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S25F ULL COURSES25
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KL0NDYKE IS ALL RIGHT.
Hut why pay $i ou miles a suar- from for home? atoCL-.-.vith i.iU nothing sell but dividend' ' talk” to
back it, ana 8.000 Gold Miiu Stock * you
paving" Colorado for 15 cents a share. i»
certificates from 100 share* up. Other stock: in proportion,
Address, Broker BEN A. BLOCK. Denver, Colo.
Member Stock Exchange. Suite 306-7 Symis Building.
mm CUBED AT HOME; send stump for •
book. Dr. J. B, HARRIS &G 0 ^.
l'l&e Building, CUiciimati. Ohio.
8 .y? 5 PIscr JEEEaE cm In.
UUHtS P1KS Whlrtt ALL USE FAILS. CD
tS Best Cough Syrup, h'astes Good. Use o
In time. Sold by tlniKeist*.
SUMETJQN 1