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EICHT YEARS OF TORTURE.
No suffering more keen than kidney
suffering. Sick kidneys make bad
blood; cause weak, stiff and aching
‘backs; cause blind, sick and dizzy
theadaches, lack of appetite and loss of
sleep; keep you all tired out and spoil
digestion.
To have perfect health you must cure
the kidneys. Read how one map was
cured by Doan’s Kidney Pills after
<ight years of torture.
/Y Henry Soule, of Pult
'(7: ney St., Hammonds-
U port, N. Y., says: “For
eight years I suffered
f 4 constant agony from
oK% oy kidney complaint. I
7 . B\\ encdured the worst tor
¢ B S ture from gravel and
¥ EY (. ¢ the Kkidney secretions
\ & "l wereexcessive and con
-1 tained sediment like
f “1 brick dust. I had to
¥ [IF/§ get out of bed from ten
5 :‘. to twenty times a night
: ¥® and the loss of sleep
wore me out. Indiges
tion‘came on, and the distress after
eating was terrible. Doan’s Kidney
Pills effected a complete and lasting
«cure, and after the symptoms of kid
ney trouble were gone my stomach be
gan to work as it should. This lasting
cure, especially in a person of my age,
proves the great value of Doan’s Kid
ney Pills more convincingly than could
any words of mine.”
Doan’s Kidney Pills sold by all drug
gists; price, 50 cents per box, or mailed
on receipt of price by Foster-Milburn
<Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Write for free trial.
STOCK.
Miss Gaysett—l believe they come
of good, old New England stock.
Mr. Ticker—Yes? Common or pre
ferred 7—Puck.
8 .
must have a sufficient supply of
in order to develop into a crop.
No amount of Phosphoric
Acid or Nitrogen can compen
sate for a lack of potash in
_ o A fertilizers [for
| LRy .
M7\ TR
NV grain and all
'A/ S 8 é other crops].
« , /-u ¥
S ) /' ~ o
;"c:. ‘lf{ g ,u/é"%&'\“h We shall be glad
x,f,)i" WA Qfié‘:fi to send free to any
’,1,&. \'{ by “ ,‘s?3—: farmer ourlittle book
;\{ Ok ,o""{, /~ which contains valu
\v'\“\*f‘ e able information
M about soil culture.
~ GERIMAN KALI WORKS,
New York—9B Nassau Street, or
Atlanta, Ca.—22l; So. Broad §t,
“T have used your valuable Cascarets and find
them perfeot. Eouldn’: do without them. I have
used them for some time for indigestion and bil
fousniss and am now completely cured. Recom
mend them to everyone. Once #ried, you will
never be without them in the family.”’
Edward A. Marz, Albany, N. Y,
Best For
The Bowels ‘
T CANDY CATHARTIC .
H o SLEE
E 1 1
QAT LA
Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good, Do Good,
Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe, 10c, 25¢, 50c. Never
gold in bulk. The genuine tablet stamped CCC.
Guaranteed to cure or your monevy back.
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 602
ANNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES
* Our Latest Im
-9 AW I LLS proved Ctreu
= lar Saw Mills,
with Hege’s Universal Log Beams,Rectilin
ear, Sipultaneous Set Worksand the Hea
oocifing Variable Feed Works are unex
celled for ACCURACY, SIMPLICITY, DURABIL
ITY AND EASE QF OPERATION. Write for full
dosorl&tlvo eirculars. Manufactured by the
SALEM IRON WORKS,Winston-Balem,N.C.
A THOROUGH UNDERSTANDING.
“Would you want me,” the heiress
asked, “if I were penniless?”
“Would you want me to want you,”
the flabby looking Earl replied, “if I
had no title?”
Then they agreed to lay the matter
before her pa without further consid
eration.—Chicago Record-Herald.
Cortland county has 19 granges,
with 1,600 membership. The most
of them have been organized for
more than 25 years. The Pomona
FIT }nermanently eured. No fits ornervous
ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline's Great
Nerve Restorer.s2trial bottleand treatisefree
Dr.R. H. KrLiNE, Ltd., 931 Arch Bt., Phila., Pa
The heart of a woman can stand more
bruises than she is willing to admit.
10,000 Plants For 16c¢.
This. is a remarkable offer the John A.
Salzer Seed Co., I.a Crosse, Wis,, makes,
Th? will send you their big plant and
seed catalog, together with enough seed
to grow
1,000 fine solid Cabbages.
2,000 delicious Carrots,
2,000 Blanching, nutty Celery,
2,000 rich, buttery Lettuce,
1,000 splendid Onions,
1,000 rare, luscious Radishes,
1,000 g!orxoustlly brilliant Flowers,
"Phis great offer is made in order to in
duce iou to try their warranted seeds—
for when Kou once plant them you will
grow no others, and
& ALL FOR BUT 16C. POSTAGE,
providingl you will return this notice, and
3 fou will send them 20c. in postage, they
will add to the above a packi{;e of’ the fa
mous Berliner Cauliflower. [A.C.L.]
There are 190,227 professional beggars in
Spain. Begging is recognized ag a legiti
mate business.
I nmsurePiso'SChre forConsumptionsaved
my life three years ago.—Mßrs. THoMAs Roß
£ins, Maple St., Norwich, N.Y., Feb. 17, 1900,
Bitter medicine, like bitter experience,
is usually the best.
PurNaMm FADELEsSS DYES cost but 10
cents per padkage. S
More men would have indigestion if
forced to eat their words. :
—————————————
Write us a postal card, for a free sample of
STUART'SGINANC BUCHU.
We cheerfully send it to all sufferers of Kid
ney, Liver, H};art. Bladder and Blood diseases
on reguest. It will do all that we claim for it.
Full directions with sample sent. Mention
this gn}{:r. Address STUART DRUG M'F’G.
CO., 28 Wall Strees, ATLANTA, GA.
WANTED —ln each state salesman to sell
large line tobacco; permanent position;
Central Tobacco Works Co., Penicks, Va.
Srshae ea S S e e
8 2 .
= The Genuine TOWER S
2 POMMEL
£t i
(A SLICKER
i ‘ \ = HAS BEEN ADVERTISED
5 B G\ AND SOLD FOR A
R L QUARTER OF A CENTURY.
\ /LY LIKE ALL
\\ N gfi@%wmum
¢ s d ",'""Y " ;
WPEO Zams (LOTHNG. |
B 8 Y It is made of the best
N = materials, in black or yellow,
\ fully guaranteed. and sold by
: reliable dealers everywhere.
; 22 STICK TO THE
4 SIGN OF THE FISH.
TOWER CAMADIAN, €O Lot 4, TOWER C 0:
MALsBY & Co.
4| South Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga.
))\ 52
v
b Rs TR
E\ T B e
DD L B DAL
oSP R L P TITE T L S .
Portable and Stationary
® s
Engines, Boilers,
® i
Saw Mills
Complete line carried in stock for
IMMEDIATE shipment.
Best Machinery, Lowest Prices and Best Terms
Write us for catalogue, prices,
etc., before buying.
e o mite Thompson's Eye Water
: b ¥/ ;.\_\ \‘
1o ’ N D -
| I\d%
.{L . £ X &
Rreakid
oable
0 G
AR s '
An Evening Thought,
Softly, as when a mother’s hand
Tucks in her little ones at night,
The darkness folds the drowsy land, X
And fades and fades the lingerin¥ light,
On velvet slope and glimmering fel
The tender shadows rest like iove, .
And wheresoe’er God’s children dwell
His peace is shed their lives above.
God’s children! Bird upon the bough,
And lambkin lying on the hill,
And wild goat on the mountain’s brow,
And ea ?e where the great winds thrill,
And all t%ne wayward, wandering ones,
The tribes of men, or near, or far;
God keeps the whole, ‘neath stars or suns
Where ’WW‘J&:&MH%,
If precious be the rocking nest g
Knd guard He hath for hidden lair,
Are we not yet more truly blest,
And closer in His sleepless care? |
So may we shut our eyes and sleep;
So may we have no tryst with fear;
The dear Christ stoops our souls to keep,
As Christ’s own life, our souls are dear.
Lo! through the dusk I seem to see
The lifting of an awesome cross, )
Where once He hung for you and me
His ransom paying for our dross. .
Lo; through the dusk I hear the song
That never ceases where they stand .
The countless glorious white-rebed throng
Who praise Igim in Immanuel’s land.
—Margaret E. Sangster, in The Interior,
The Word of God.
Charles Darwin, being asked, in his lat
ter days, whether science supported the
Christian’s faith in the being of God, re
fi]ied that science presented probabilities
oth for and against it, and that the “de
ciding vote” had to be given by each indi
vidua%, according to his personal make-up.
Neither the being of God nor the inspira
tion of Scripture, says the Chicago Inter
ior, can be proven as one proves a problem
in geometry. Moral ratiocination starts
not with axioms, but with postulates; not
with premises which it is impossible to
deny, but with assumptions which men of
exemplary life are bound to accept. What
it is impossible to prove to a scoundrel, it
is unnetessary to prove to a saint. The
norma, soul has its perceptions as truly as
the normal body. You do not need if t 5
demonstrate the beauty of the rainbow to
the unclouded eye, or the obligations of
virtue to the heavenly mind.
To the Christian the word is a living
presence, from which he cannot escape. It
speaks to him with a voice exceeding in
authority that of any earthly state or sov
ereign. It restrains his passions, curbs his
appetites, moderates his conduct, forbids
indulgences and proffers satisfactions which
are most real and vital experiences. He
may not be able to define inspiration, but
he responds to it. He is not expert in
questions of canonicity, but he knows the
flower by its honey. What he is, the Bible
has made him. It found him in “the slip
pery paths of youth,” pursuing pleasure,
as Addison says, “with heedless feet,” and
it arrested him, turned him about and
“brought him up to man.”
He believes in the word of God, more
over, because men he abhors do not believe
in it. He knows it to be the word of God,
because the minions of the pit hate it. He
gives it the place of honor in his home be
cause it is kicked out of the saloon; he
sends it forth with his blessing beecause
the gambler curses it; he pillows his dying
head upon its promises because in every
age every son of Belial has hastened to
consign it to the flames. Against a faith
so founded waves of adverse eriticism beat
in vain. The word of God rests not upon
tradition, but upon our hearts,
Keeping Fit,
Any one does his best work and does it
most easily when he is physically fit for it.
It therefore follows, says Wellspring, that
he should keep himself fit for it, so far as
he knows how, and there are very few who
do not know that over-rich food and eat
ing, staying up late of nights, indulging in
sweets and smoking and drinking are sure
in a measure to unfit one for taxing duties,
Young people may be sure that they will
need all their physical resources to meet
the demands that will be made upon them.
Some are so full of vitality now that they
are as careless of their health as some
foolish peoole are with their money—scat
tering right and left that which would be
their stay later on. The editor does not
think that one should always be anxiously
concerned over each little symptom he may
have; he oaly suggests that one should not
knowingly transgress the plain- rules of
right living. When one is in good condi
tion it is easy to keep so; it is hard to re
cover health when it has been lost. To en
joy life, work hard, be abstemious in mere
pleasure eating, avoid dissipation, play vig
orously when you can without slighting
your obligations.
There is such a thing, too, as keeping
morally fit for what one has to do. Tgere
are certain things which one caunnot do
without a spirifual le‘tfin’g down. "The soul
needs communion with God just as much
as a plant needs sunshine. Anythins
which interrupts that communion shoul
be promptly put aside, if you would be
equal to the ethical emergencies which you
will have to meet. Here is one who read
ily yields to temptation. Why? Because
he was not in a spirit to resist it. If a .
great temptation should come to you, are
{;m sure that it would not overcome you?
ou may save yourself from awful shame
and disgrace by becomin% morally fit to
cope with life’s daily problems and then
keeping so.
Joy That is Ours,
Dr. A. T. Pierson says regarding the joy
that is ours in the contemplation of eternal
life: “Do you know what eternal life is?
One of the grandest cqncegtions ever put
before the human soul is the idea of criti
cal life. It is much more than immortality,
which is by no means synonymous with
eternal life. Eternal life has no beginning.
and it has no end. If you love God and
serve Him you shall partake of the eternal
past of His bein%, as well as the eternal fu
ture. Just as when you put a scion into a
tree, the scion begins at once to get the
benefit of all the past years of that tree’s
e @IS 10s present vigor and power
and fruitfulness, so if fitou are ingrafted
into God all the eternal past of God con
tributes to your gresent security, your
present strength and to your future victory
and glorsui¥ternal life 1s bliss; eternal life
is Kovyer;"eet east’a is glory; eternal life
is holiness, none ve . 1 u things are necese
sary in immortality.” 2
Without God.
I may be angry with a man who might
carve statues and paint pictures if he spent
his life in making mock flowers out of wax
and paper, but when a man who might
have God for company shuts up and dis
owns those very doors of his nature
through which God can enter, and lives
without God, his loss is too dreadful to be
angr¥ with. You merely mourn for him
an on%and try to help him if you can,~
Phillips Brooks. v
T N :
1o live is more than to make a living.—e
Ram’s Horn. s
A Contemptible Marquis.
The marquis of Bute, one of the few :
unmarried Englishmen with splendid
titles, is reported to be planning a
trip to this country. His lordship is
only 22 years old, and he has never
publicly declared that he has no inten
tion of marrying. But unfortunately
the marquis has no castles that need
recofing or in which the plumbing re
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quires repairs. His vast estates are
free from inortgages and he <oesn’t
dnd it necessary to hide froin his tail
ors. In fact he owns great estaies in
England, Scotland and Wales, is esti
mated to be worth $75,000,000, and is
coming over here, not in seavch of a
beautiful heiress, but for the purpose
of shooting big game in the Rocky
mountains. Of what use is such a
miserable marquis in this world, any
way ?—Chicago Record-Herald.
Ia Jaypan the nose is the only feat
ure which attracts attention. It
determines the beauty or ugliness of
the face, according as it is big or
small. This is probably due to the
fact that difference in noses consti
tutes between one Japarese face and
another. The eyes are invariably
black, the cheek bones high and the
chin receding. In Japan a woman
who has a high proboscis is always a
great beauty and a reigning belle.
There are a few large noses among
the natives, and lucky is he or she
upon whom nature lavishes one. In
all Japanese pictures representing
the sipposedly beautiful woman the
artiet invariably improves on nature
by deplicting this feature as abnormale
ly davekyped.
Brooklyn’s public school taachers
to the number of 3,543 have formally
petitioned the Board of Education to
have restored to them the ancient
privilege of applying the birch to the
insubordinate voung American.