Newspaper Page Text
Don’t Worry.
Not long before his death General
Neal Dow, who was nearly 07 years
pld, life. was He said asked it the secret that he of had his long
was never
worried.
I Similar remarks have been made by
Other men who reached an advanced
and happy old age.
In this explanation there is the es¬
sence of philosophy. There is no doubt
that worry drives many men and, per¬
haps, more women to premature
graves. It is impossible, however, for
some persons not to worry. They are
so constituted that the slightest trou¬
ble, or even inconvenience, makes
them miserable. They fret over imag¬
inary ills- as well as real ones. The
habit grows and its wearing effect
becomes worse constantly until the
physical frame weakens and breaks
under it.
But the habit of worrying like any
other habit can be resisted with more
or less success. The battle against it
should begin early in life; it should
be part of the self-education of every
individual, Natural tendencies can
often be checked and in many cases
entirely overcome.
We have all seen persons who have
exceptional reasons for worrying and
yet were the gentlest and sweetest tem¬
pered of our acquaintances, These
illustrations of self-conquest should be
Inspiring to us all. Most of us are apt
to look for trouble. When things are
going reasonably well with us we wor¬
ry because they are no better. When
there is no real trouble in sight we im¬
agine that there is plenty of it just be¬
yond the reach of our vision, and make
ourselves unhappy without cause.
It has been said that we suffer more
from dread of troubles that never
come than from any actual experience.
Old General Dow has given us a
valuable hint and if we use it rightly
it will conduce to our comfort and hap¬
piness and to our prospects of long
life.—Atlanta Journal.
A Long Way Round.
5 Necessity is the mother of inven¬
tion, and the hungry Frenchman, told
about in a biography recently publish¬
ed in England, illustrates the old ad-
age anew.
j S He was in an English ° restaurant,
j Iliad an:! , forgotten wanted eggs the English for breakfast, word. but So
'.he h 7 got around the difficulty in the fol-
.lowing way.
‘ aiterre, vat _ dat valuing . de
V is in
f* fvard?”
“A cock r ; ■ »
I j * .... Ail! , And ’ yat you call de , cock , , s
vife?”
“The hen ’ sir” ’
“ii And vat . you call ii deshildrens oi » do -j
coek"and his vife?”
“Chickens sir ”
•** r r»
ciey . are stricken?
“Eggs, sir.”
t4 Prino’ m<“ 4 -wo * ”
°
Changed the Name.
called „ _ chaperones .
“They are not any
more.”
“What are they called?”
* ‘Promoters. ”—Chicago Record.
deputations Made in a Hay
Are precious scarce. Time tries the worth, of
a man or medicine. Hostetrer’s Stomach
Bitters is a forty-live years’ growth, the and crevices like
those hardy lichens that garnish perennially
of Alaska’s rocks, it flourishes
and its reputation has as firm a base as the
rocks themselves. No medicine is more high-
lv regarded as a remedy for fever and ague,
bilious remittent, constipation, liver and kid¬
ney disorders, nervousness and rheumatism.
Some people are like nails. They have to bo
thumped on the head to make them go
straight. _______
Chew Star Tobacco—The Best.
Smoke Sledge Cigarettes.
The newer a man’s watch the oftener he has
to consult it.
Heafness Cannot Be Cured
by local applications, as they cannot reach the
diseased portion of the ear. There is only one
way to cure deafness, and that is by constitu¬
tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in¬
flamed condition of the mucous lining of the
Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets in¬
flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper¬
fect hearing. and when it is entirely inflam¬ closed
Deafness is the result, and unless the
mation can be taken out and this tube re¬
stored to its normal condition, hearing will be
destroyed forever. Nino cases out of ten are
caused by catarrh, which is nothing hut an in¬
flamed condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any
case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that can¬
not be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send
for circulars, free. & Co., Toledo, O.
F. J. Cheney
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
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.
I have found Piso’s Cure for Consumption 1305
an unfailing medicine.— F. R. Lotz, Scott
St., Covington, Ky., Oct. 1, 1894.
Rheumatism
Caused Croat Suffering—A Woll
Man Sines Taking Hood’s.
“I was aflUetad with rheumatism and
hare been a groat sufferer with this dis¬
ease and also with stomach and heart
troubles, but thanks to Hood's Sarsapa-
rilla I am now a well man. My wife has
been cured of kidney disease by Hood’s
Sarsaparilla.” Auo. Schkeixeis, 317 West
fl9th Street, New York, N. Y.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Is the best—in fact tho One True Blood Purifier
_____________..—.—------
Hood’s Pills cure all liver ills. 25cents.
GRAVELY & MILLER, t
• • • DANVILLE, VA. 0
-MANUFACTURERS OF-
KIDS p luc and KIDS plug cut
TOBACCO.
Save Tags and Wrappers and get valuable
premiums. Ask your dealer, or write to us
for premium list.
~
r PATENT CLUSTER SCAUP PIN
Heavy Gold Plate. Ruby Centre.
Surrounded by 8 Fine Brilliants.
Sample 15c,D- M. Watkins & Co*
Catalogue Fuej Providence^ Hi I*_,
a i Thompson’s Eje Water
MENTION THIS FAP£RK™SS3o
TIIE GOLDEN RULE.
SERMON BY REV. CHARLES 8. VED-
BER, OF CHARLESTON, S. C.
“The Golden Utile” Is the Title of the
Third of the New York Herald’s Com¬
petitive Sermons—Preached by Itev.
Charles S. Vedder, of Charleston, S. C.
Text: ‘‘Let us consider one another."—
Hebrews x., 24.
Here is the Golden Rule, expressed in the
terms of familiar speech and practical ac¬
tion—the way in which the command to do
unto others us we would that others should
do unto us may be made effectually oi >era-
tivo. Here is the sursum oorda of all dls-
content with the proclamation inequality of of human con¬ all
ditions; the the peace solution in
strife of human opinions; and labor; of
the dition problem harmony of capital in all human relations. the con¬
of
The two noble brothers of the Hebrew tra¬
dition, secretly sharing the sheaves of their
barley harvest with each other to make up
what each conceived that the other lacked
of the elements of happiness, exemplified
it. Sir Philip Sydney did no more when,
wounded to the death, he gave the draught
of water hardly obtained for his own con-
suming thirst to a stricken private soldier,
saying, “Thy necessity is greater than
mine.”
The words of the text were world spoken by one
of the great teachers of the to those
who had associated themselves for worship
and work, and whom he would fain incite
to the highest and purest and kindliest life.
“Let us consider ono another.” We would
better receive the full meaning of the ap¬
peal should wo use the similar, familiar
and expressive word “considerate”—“Let
us he considerate of one another.”
Among the potential agencies of the
world are those which are directly ad¬
dressed m the text and those akin to them
in spirit and purpose—organizations which
seek to promote human welfare, whether
they be called churehes, charities or by
whatever name else. In all of these there
are possibilities of difference and; division
which will defeat or retard their useful¬
ness and vake. If we would knowhow
these possibilities may be met and over¬
come we need but conceive of one of these
instrumentalities for good in which each
member is “considerate” of every other.
Then we should see the strong bearing
With the infirmities of the weak; the weak
not stumbled with the larger liberty of the
strong; the rich sympathizing with the
maniiold trials of the poor; the poor con¬
siderate of the crowding cares and calls of
the rich and zealous that both may he
poorer in spirit and richer in the graces of
character. Wo should see the old mindful
of the enthusiasm of their own youth and,
remembering its errors, gently guiding and
tempering—not frowning upon and the re¬
buking—the ardor of the younger;
young would be seen sitting at the feet of
the old to learn and rising from them to do,
not rejecting the counsels of the hoary
head as fossil theories of a buried genera-
tion but acknowledging that “days should
speak and the multitude of years teach
wisdom.” If with increase of age infirmity
had come, its very decrepitude earlier would lie
honored as the wound of an war-
fare. Parents would be then children not forgetful
that they were once children; that
duty to parents is duty to God and that
they one day may need a parent’s immuni-
ties. We should see the wise gentle to the
ignorance of the ignorant and patie.nt to
instruct it; the unlearned, it need be, tol-
erant of the irritability of incessant share thought
and exacting study and eager to the
fruit of such toil, and all estoeming it
roore blessed to give than to receive for-
bearance and extenuation.
Had any “fallen,” all would think how
ra,rj'“ri.:K l X'EVr
thus beset, that any would have remained
steadfast. Repentance before God would
give the offence to oblivion in the sight of
men, save to kindle a deeper sympathy for
the frailty that had yielded. There would
bo the constant summoning of that charity
i which “seeketh not her own, thinketh no
evil, hopeth ail things, endureth all
things.” seemed duty, the fact would
If reproof
not be overlooked that
Some hearts there are so perilously fash¬
ioned
God’s touch alone hath tenderness enough
To waken, and not break, the thrilling
strings.
“Let us be considerate of one another!”
How benignant a law this for social inter¬
course! How happy would bo the com-
munity in which it reigned! We iearn very
early in this life that the secret of peaceful
and pleasant living is n generous recogni¬
tion of the differences between us and
others and a full allowance of the right to
differ. In different ages and climes differ¬
ent definitions have obtained as to what
constitutes “refinement.” There is ono
element in which all ages and climes agree!
A true good breeding is that which is con¬
siderate of the feelings of others, of what¬
ever class or condition.
Why is it that sometimes even the sacred
circle of homo is darkened \Vtli the cloud
of painful differences, but that some with¬
in it lack thoughtfulness of the feelings
and even the failings of others? Rigid in
their own ways, they are intolerant of the
different ways of others. Why is it that in
the same circles of society variances
come, which grow to settled alienations,
but that in some though!ess moment a
word, look or act has wounded the sensi¬
bilities of another, or even slighted his
prejudices, and when regret acknowledg¬ came some
retaliatory word forbade
ment?
Employer ‘be and employed! Are they al-
wavs to at odds? Yes, until each “con¬
siders” the other and not himself alone.
Wliat is there which would banish from
the intercourse and rivalries of business
the personal antagonism which is often en¬
gendered, like tearing down the ghastly
legend from the marts of trade, “Every
man for himself,! 5 and writing there in¬
stead the kindly motto, “Let us be con-
sideratc of ono another?”
Still, still in mutual sufferance lies
The secret of true living;
Love scarce is love that never knows
The sweetness of forgiving!
Rev. Charles S. Vedder, D. D.,
Tastor Huguenot Church, Charleston, S. C.
GOD AMONC ORCHARDS.
Eev. Dr. Talmage on the Pomology o f
tlxe B ble.
Text: “The fruit tree yielding fruit
after its kind.”—Genesis i., 2.
Beginning with the Garden of Eden ns
thellrst spontaneous, magnifleent orchard,
and the expulsion from it of the first pair
because they tasted of the forbidden fruit
of tho tree of knowledge, Dr. Talmage
continued:
This story of Eden is rejected impossibility, by some as
an improbability, if not an
but nothing on earth is easier for me to
believe than the truth of this Edento story,
for I have seen the same thing in this year
of our Lord 1897. I could call them by
name if it were politic and righteous to do
so, the men who have sacrificed a paradise
on earth and a paradise in heaven for one
sin. Their house went. Their library
went. Their good name went. Their field
of usefulness went. Their health went.
Their immortal soul went. My friends!
there is just one sin that will turn you out
of paradise if you do not quit and it. You
know what it is and God knows, you
had better drop the hand and arm lifted
toward that bending bough before you
pluck your own ruin. When Adam stood
on tiptoe and took in his right hand that
one round peach, or apricot, or apple,
Satan reached up and of pulled down resi¬ the
round, beautiful world our present
dence. Overworked artist, overwrought
merchant, ambitious politician, avaricious
speculator, better take that warning from
Adam’s orchard and stop boforo you put
out for that one thing more.
But I turn from Adam’s orchard to Solo¬
mon’s orchard. With his own hand he
writes: “I made me gardens and orchards.”
Not irrigated depending on the natural fall of rain,
he those orchards. Pieces of the
aqueduct and that watered those gardens I have
seen, the reservoirs are as perfect as
when thousands of years ago, the mason’s
trowel smoothed the morturoverthoirgray
surface. No orchard of olden or modern
time, slaked. probably, The "largest ever had it3 thirst 1 so well is
of these reservoirs
582 foot long, 207 feet wide, and fifty foot
deep. when he These reservoirs “I made Solomon pools of refers to
says: therewith me water,
to forth water the wood that ride bringeth
trees.” Solomon used to out to
that orchard before breakfast. It gave
him an appetite and something to think
about all the day. Josephus, the historian,
represents him as going out “early in tho
morning from Jerusalem, to tho famed
rocks of Etam, a fertile region, delighted
with paradises nnd running springs. rode"
Thither the King, in robes of white in
bis chariot, escorted bv a troop of mounted
archers chosen for their youth and stature,
and clad in Tyrian purple, whose long hair,
powdered with gold dust, sparkled in tho
sun.” After Solomon had taken his morn-
lng ride in these luxuriant orchards, ho
would sit down and write those wonderful
things in the Bible, drawing his illustra¬
tions from the fruits he had that very
morning plucked or ridden under.
What mean Solomon’s orchards and Sol-
the onion’s gardens? for they seem underfoot, to mingle
two into one, flowers and
pomegranates overhead. To me they sug¬
gest that religion is a luxury. They mean
that our religion is the lusolous, the aro¬
matic, the pungent, the aboreseent, the
efflorescent, the foliaged, tho umbrageous.
They when he mean declared: what Edward “If Payson meant
tinues to increase, I my happiness con¬
cannot support it much
longer.” It means what Bapa Padmanji,
a Hindoo convert, meant when he said: “I
long for my bed, not that I may sleep—I
lie awake often and long—but to hold com¬
munion with my God.”
You think religion is a good thing for
a funeral. Oh, yes. But Solomon’s orchard
means more. Beligion is n good thing
now, when you are in health and prosper¬
ity and the appetite is good for citrons,
and apples, Beligion and for apricots, the funeral. and promegran- Oh,
atos. yes;
but religion for the wedding breakfast: ro-
ligion for the brightest spring morning
and autumn’s most gorgeous sunset. Ke-
ligion for the day when the stocks are up
just as much as when stocks are down.
P.eligion tho when last inspiration when is easy, as well
as for gasp; the temperature
is normal, as well as when it reaches 104.
It may be a bold tiling to say, but I risk
it, that if al! the people, without respect to
belief or character, at death passed into
everlasting happiness, religion for this
world is such a luxury that no man or
woman could afford to do without it. Tho
dear old book opened with Adam’s orchard
and closes with St.. John’s orchard. St.
John went into tho orchard through a
stone gate, the black basalt of the Isle of
Patinos, to which he had been exiled.
That orchard which ho saw was and is
in heaven. One person will err in speak¬
ing of heaven as all material, and another
person describes heavon as all figurative
and spiritual, and both are wrong. Heaven
is both material and spiritual, as we are
both material and spiritual. While much
of the Bible account of heaven is to bo
taken figuratively aud spiritually, it is plain
to me that heaven has also a material exist¬
ence.
How much was literal and how much was
figurative, I cannot say, but St. John saw
two rows of trees on each side of a river,
and it differed from other orchards in the
fact that the trees bore twelve manner of
fruits. Tho learned translators of our com¬
mon Bible say it means twelve different
kinds of fruits in one year. Albert Barnes
says in means twelve crops of the same
kind of fruit in ono year. Not able to de¬
cide which is the more accurate transla¬
tion. I adopt both. If it mean twelve dif¬
ferent kinds of fruit, it declares variety in
heavenly joy. If it means twelve crops of
the same kind of fruit, it declares abun¬
dance in heavenly joy, and they are both
true. Variety? Oh, yes! Not an eternity
with nothing but music—that Oratorio
would be too, protracted. horses—that Notan eternity would
be of procession long in on tho white stirrups._Not eternity
too an
of watching the river—that would be too
much of tlie picturesque. Not an eternity
of plucking fruits from the tree of life—
that would be too much of the heavenly
orchard. But all manner of varieties, and
I will tell you of at least twelve of those
varieties: Joy of divine worship; joy over
tho victories of the Lamb who was slain;
joy over the repentant sinners; joy of re¬
counting our own rescue; joy of embracing
old friends; evangelists joy at recognition of patriarchs, joy of
apostles, and martyrs;
ringing harmonies; joy of roknittingbroken
friendship; joy at the explanation of Provi¬
dential mysteries; joy at walking walls the boule¬
vards of gold; joy at looking at sapphire, green and
with emerald, and blue with
crimson with jasper, and aliash with ame¬
thyst, entered the through swinging gates,
their posts, hinges and their panels of
richest pearl; joy that there is to be no sub¬
sidence, no reaction, no terminus to the
felicity.
While there is enough of the pomp of tlie
city about heaven for those who like the
city best, I thank God there Is enough ia
the Bible about country scenery in heaven
to please those of us who were born in tho
country and never got over it. Now, you
may have the streets of gold in heaven,
give me the orchards, with twelve manner
of fruits, aud yielding their fruit every
month; and the'leaves of the troes aro for
“the healing of the nations; aud there
shall be no more curse, but the throne of
God and the Lamb shall be in it; and His
servants shall serve Him; and they shall
see His face, and His nume shall be in
their foreheads; and there shall bo no
night there; and they need no candle,
neither light of the sun, for the Lord
God giveth them light; aud they shall
reign for ever and ever.” But just think of
a place so brilliant that the noonday mantle of sun
shall bo removed from tho tho
sky because it istoofeeble a taper! Yet most
of all am I impressed with tlie fact that I
am not yet fit for that place, aDd nor you
either. By the reconstructing need sanc¬ bo
tifying grace .of Christ we to
" getting
made all over. And let us be our
passports ready if we want to get into
that country. An earthly passport is a
personal matter, telling our height, our
girth, the color of our hair, our features,
our complexion, and our uge. I canuot
get into a foreign port on your Each passport, of
nor can you get in on mine. ono
us for himself needs a divine signature,
written by the wounded hand of the Son of
Go;l, der tlie to laden get into branches the heavenly of which, orchard, in God’s un¬
good time, we may meot the Adam of tho
first orchard, and the Solomon of the sec¬
ond orchard, and the St. John of the last
orchard, to sit down under the tree of
which the church in tho Book of Canticles
speaks when it says: “As the apple tree
among the trees of tho wood, so is my
Beloved among the sons. I sat down un¬
der His shadow with great delight and His
fruit was [sweet to my taste;” and there it
may be found that to-day we learned tho
danger of hankering after one thing more,
and that religion is a luxury, and that
there is a divine antidote for all poisons,
aud that we had croatod in us an appetite
for heaven, and that it was a wholesome
and saving thing for us to have discoursed
on the pomology of the Bible, or God
among the orchards.
Trolley Slaughter of Egyptians-
It is said that the electric railroads at
Cairo, Egypt, are beating those of Brooklyn
in the record of numbers of people killed.
The Egyptian roads have been running a
little over injured a year, and their 140 people during were the
killed or by cars
first twelve months.
WALSH CAPTURES MAYORALTY.
Result of a Most Exciting Municipal Flsfht
in A tigustn, Oa.
Wednesday. The result was a victory
for the Hon. Patrick Walsh. Here-
ceived the mayoralty plum by a good
P 1 ” al I t 7-
Fictitious J . and . flimsy ,. opposition ...
which had appeared real ana subs an-
hal was swept away with start mg
suddenness by a grand swell of silent
strength.
The triumph of Mr. Walsh and his
absolute vindication came in a way
more emphatic than had been counted
on.
In the fourth ward, the largest in
the city, Kerr claimed 1,500 before the
election, and when he visited the polls
there at noon and saw inevitable de¬
feat staring him in the face, he fainted
and was sent home in a carriage.
The success of Mr. Walsh is attrib-
utnble to three causes—superior gen-
eralship in the capture of the polling
places; the large number of silent
voters who had not cared to be con-
spicuous in the preliminary battle,and
the tireless efforts of a loyal host of
friends, many of the most prominent
citizens, who crowded in among gangs
of colored voters all day.
The flutter of crisp flve-dollar bills
was a telling element and the Walsh
people had a barrel on tap at every
precinct. Mr. Kerr did not make the
race which his supporters counted on.
He was handicapped from the jump
and never recovered. He accepted his
defeat in a philosophical way and ac¬
counts for his failure in the predomi-
nance of Walsh money. It was not ex¬
pected that Mr. W. M. Dunbar would
run heavy. He used 110 money and
kept out of the scramble for negroes
which the friends of the other candi-
dates resorted to.
The day was notably free from seri-
ous difficulties. The most conspicu-
ous incidents were the active attitude
taken by city officials and the open pur-
chase of ballots everywhere. It was late
at night bifore the final count was an-
nounced. This showed that Walsh
had a plurality of 824 votes.
The total vote cast was 7,502. Of
this the white vote was: Walsh, 1,500;
Kerr, 1,087, and Dunbar, 1,428.
COLONEL CHIPLEY DIES.
Prominent In Political amt Business Af-
fairs I 11 Florida.
A Washington special says: Colonel
W. D. Chipley, of Florida, who has
been ill at a hospital in this city for
some weeks following an operation for
carbuncle,died at 4 o’clock Wednesday
morning. The remains will be removed
to Columbus, Ga., for interment.
Colonel Chipley was a native of Ala-
bama and was about sixty yeais of
a^e. He engaged in mercantile pur-
suits with success at Columbus, Ga.,
until late in the seventies, when he
removed to Pensacola, Fla., where he
has since resided. He became prom-
inently identified with the building of
railroads in Florida and at the time of
his death was president of the Pensa-
cola and Atlanta railroad.
He represented his county in the
state senate for several years and was
one of the most prominent men in the
state, both in business and social
circles.
O’FEKRALL ON LYNCHING.
He Proposes Remedy To Correct Evil In
His Message To Legislature.
In his message to the general Richmond, assem¬
bly, which convened at
Gov. O’Ferrall, of Virginia, discusses
the lynching question and proposes
legislation to correct the evil.
He urges that a heavy pecuniary
penalty he imposed on each county
and city in which a lynching occurs; be
that wherever the military may
called out to protect a prisoner in a
county Or city, such county or city be
charged with the expense thereof and
that officers who allow prisoners to be
taken from their custody without first
having exhausted all possible means
to protect their prisoners, be summa¬
rily suspended until the question of
dismissal shall be determined by a
jury. penalty
Also that there be only one
for rape, and that death.
EIGHT YEARS FOR MOORE.
Nebraska’s Ex-Auditor Is Sentenced For
Embezzlement.
At Lincoln, Neb., Tuesday, Eugene
Moore, ex-auditor of the state, was
sentenced by Judge Cornish to eight
years in the penitentiary for embezzle¬
ment of insurance fees amounting to
$23,000.
COURTMARTIAL FOR CARTER.
He Will Be Tried In Savannah on the 5th
of January.
A Washington special says: The
secretary of war Thursday ordered a
courtmartial for the trial of Captain
O. M. Carter, corps of engineers, on
charges of unofficer-like conduct in
“Jto'oourt .111 «..t S»™»».h
Wednesday January 5. In order to
avoid possible criticism, it was ar-
ranged that the court should be equal-
ly divided between graduates of the
military academy and officers appoint¬
ed from civil life.
BANKER RECEIVES SENTENCE.
Spalding to Serve Time For Ftnbezzlement
of Bank’s Funds.
At Chicago, Wednesday Charles
Spalding, ex-president of the D Lobe
savings bank, was sentenced to an in-
determinate term in the penitentiary.
He was charged with embezzling funds
of the University of Illinois, of which
he was treasurer.
The court proceedings which termi-
ahShly dramatic o’rder. UtenCe ^
SLEEP AFTER EATING.
Is It Beneficial, or Does It Retard Diges¬
tion. Results of Experiments.
“^Ib lmmcd iately after eating.
the proprlety ofsuch a habit
human beings bids fair to be an
open question for some time to come,
0n(? authorlty ha8 recently added
hfs m , te tQ the collec tion of statistics
upon tuls interesting subject by mak-
lng ft ser!eg of exper j me nts upon two
persons of normal digestive abilities,
The stomachs of these two persons
W ere emptied a few hours after meals,
fome o£ whlch had been followed by
sleep and others not, and the contents
analyzed.
The normal stomach acts upon its
contents by churning them about, and
in this manner subjecting every parti-
,le to the action of the digestive fluids,
The above mentioned investigator
found, as the result of his experiment,
tha( . the col - ls t a nt effect of sleep is to
weaken the churning movements of
gfQj^ acb( while the acid quality of
tbe digestive juices is at the same time
illcreased .
0n the other hand, he found—what
j g q U jte as interesting—that simple re-
pose in a horizontal position stimu-
lated the motions of the stomach with-
out j nore asing the acidity of its juices,
The conclusion reached by this ex-
per j me nter was that while a recumbent
posit i on after eating is not to be re-
garded as harmful, one should be cau-
tious about sleeping directly after a
meal. Especially should this caution
be observed in cases where there is an
0 veracidity of the digestive fluids,
When all is said, however, the above
experiment proves little more than
that in such matters each person is a
j aw un t 0 himself; that the after-dinner
Bap differs in no respect from other
habits, which can be indulged in with
impunity by some, while they work
havoc with the health and happiness
0 f others. Rest after eating is cer-
tainly beneScial, both from a rational
an d a physiological standpoint,
Whether sleep can be advantageously
indulged in is a question that must be
determined by the individual himself
by careful experiment.
Shakespeare to Hate.
“Everybody went crazy over our
Thanksgiving presentation of ‘As Y'ou
Like It.’ ”
“What made it so popular?”
“We worked Orlando into a football
game instead of the usual tiresome
wrestling match.”
if it Only iteiped a Little
terrible h'-rit lUng^it -h mVtt!r
is worth more than a whole box of Tetterine
,«• by
mail from J. T. .Shuptrine, Savannah, Oa.
Eve did not do eo had a thing in bringing
sin into the world. Were it not for reflecting
virtues.
To cure a Cold in One Day.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
Druggists refund money H it fails to cure. 25c-
It is a mistake to say that a man is known
by the company he keeps. The company he
intimately. refuses to keep apparently knows him most
Fits permanently cured. No fits or ne rvous-
ness atter first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s G reat
PTKu-s
Vegetable Sicilian
% MIR REHEWER § %
fij^i J$kl| Qeanscs puts the life scalp into and the fJR
new \w
®f/ hair. It restores the
lost color to gray
hair. It means
youth and beauty.
GET THE GENUINE ARTICLE i
__
Walter Baker & Co.’s i
Breakfast COCOA j!
<
Pure, Delicious, Nutritious.
lV Costs Less than ONE CENT a cap.
•
: fill A
Be sure that the package bears our Trade-Mark.
TIi ft Walter Baker & Co. Limited,
r ;t‘ (Established 1780.) Dorchester, Mass. >
Trade-Mark. «44> *<- «<
Fruit
Trees and Vines become
hardier, and their products bet-
ter colored and better flavorcd
’» hOT Ubcrall >’ treated "' lth
fertili2ers containing ° at least
Tn o/ actual
Potash.
TKCC ICO CC An illustrated book which tells
wh^t potashJs.^and^how it
^ applicauts . Send your address,
german kali works.
9J Nassau St > Ncw y ott
K^ATCMTQ MH H* * » ”£ s»l<i. t Are An.«i#uabie. Ca7 r ie
Jf •
A LETTER TO WOMEN.
A few words from Mrs. Smith, of
Philadelphia, will certainly corroborate
the claim that Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound tl is woman . s ever
reliable friend,
“I cannot praise Lydia E P nk-
ham's Vegetable Compound too highly.
“For nine ?
weeks I was in
bed suffer-
Rig with in-
flammation
and tion conges- of the Mr /k.„ 1
ovaries. I
had a dis-
charge all w
the When time. lying vvr ™ 1 I
down all 1 — ” /
the time, I
felt quite
comfort-
able; but as soon as I would put my
feet on the floor, the pains would
come back,
“ Every one thought it was impossi-
b ] e for me to get well. 1 was paying §1
per day for doctor’s visits and 75 cents
a day for medicine. I made up my mind
to try Mrs. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound. It has effected a complete cure
for me, and I have all the faith in the
world in it. What a blessing to wo-
man it is!”— Mbs. Jennie L. Smith, No-
324 Kauffman St., Philadelphia, Pa.
ALABAMA'S BRAVE WOMEN.
Jenifer, Ala., says: I have
jjk used Hr. B5. A. Simmons
Liver Medicine SO years,
and know it wlli cure River
Dlseaso, Nervousness,
Bowel and Stomach
. Troubles. I like it bet-
ter than "Black Draught’*
ftesp?!? or “Zeilln’B” medicine.
Parenthood.
Children bind husband and wife mow
closely than the wedding* ceremony itself.
One-half growing physical of married weakness misery of women, is doc to wmett tug
makes chiid-bearing a dreaded burden anil
prevents those close relations between hus¬
band and wife, without which then happiness It
cannot exist. How be brought important pencct is »
that the woman to as
condition of health, of which she is capable,
eo that she can give to her offspring out ge
her abundance of life and spirits. ® T i
Simmons Squaw Vino Wine will do this,
it will purify tier blood, tone up her nervous
system and iyo ber courage and assur¬
ance of safet to go through the ordeal of
Childbirth.
Ashland, Ala., writes: 3aV9
$ used Dr. M, A. Simmons
River Medicine 10 years
•Mg, 11*152* for Colds, Diarrhoea,
“ ‘if Complaint with
W Summer
children. It gives better
satisfaction than “Thed-
N •ye ford’s Black Draught,” or
>\ I “St. Joseph’s Regulator,”
'or anything we can get.
Dimtieho o* Vision.
Incases of weak and should, imperfect if possible, vision* bo
the causes ascertained, of disease that they bo
correctly far •possible obviated so and guarded may
as as functional
against. Where the trouble is
and arises from some constitutional de¬
rangement or debility, each as torpid morbid liver
or inactive kidneys, organism, producing constitutional a
condition in the Liver
treatment with Dr. M. A. Simmons
Medicine will produce the happiest results*
When caused indulgences, bv prolonged abuse nursing, of stimu¬ exces¬
sive sexual of the too
lants, the excessive use eyes much on sleep
bright or too minute objects, which too produce de¬
or other circumstances blood the head, Dv*
termination of to
Si mm ons Squaw Vino Wino quickly cures*
OSSORNE’8 (/
udinedd c ® oueae
WtfiiNia, Ga. Actual business. No text &
books- Short time. Cheap board- bend for catalosru*.
H^Axe result of Contracted NASAL Nostril*. SIT K AT Drug* OK Cannot 5 cte.
Chive. Hand 50c. for IN or
for pamphlet to G. B. Fabmm,.P e rth, Out., Canada.
SEXTON’S PA LUIE'f TONE both ceres iiver,
kidney ami g'enito-urinary troubles, i*-xes
o yj wwm % mm
X.
CO
^ j 4
4
o| 4,
uj m oUl
Si
‘
^
_ ^
6 PIUM, permanently cain; J , Fobacco MORPHINE, cured and by SnufT-Dippius HARMLESS WHISKEY.CO- HOME Habits
TB EATMENT. My book, 1)R, containl HOFFMAN* j? full infor¬
mation, mailed free._ J.
Room I Isabella Building, Chicago, 111.
B.&s. Business College, Louisville, lCy.
SUI’ERI OR AD VANTAGES.
Book-kkkpinq. Shorthand and
Telegraphy. Beautiful Catalogue Free.
H LUdES Wl'tRE ALL EL_ ST FAILS. in
fciifl Dost Cough Syrup. Taetes Good. Use O
Erf in time. Sold hy drug gists. vP
GON S UMPTlOtt