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PRACTICAL OPTICIAN,
sans;
TBUlTMEHT.-fa3HcrtXM.TTD jin. M. n„ ti w
HARRIS REMEDY CO., Kro Chemist*,
»TI«lo»«,7jSp^anoBt l, S*vSwTb : rtn»l
CURB
Malaria, Dumb C
Fever and Ague,
Colic, Bilious Att
H. N. WILLOOX.
INSURANCE AGENT,
1Ota,ar Ala, Soda nrater, gamyartlla,OaoriU Pear Cider, Etc. Manufactoredsnd for Mia b/
WOOD FOE SALE!
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^rar^'oSR^HUNTKn.
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rntatiodoa spyUctlop. Isiapboos Ho.
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THE BANNER-WATCHMAN, ATHENS, MAY, 17 1^7.
TIIE THIRD WATCH
THE TIME WHEN CRIMINALS DO
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II acts with axtraordinary efficacy oa (ha
T1VER, K|DNEY8,
I ^ AND Bowels.
AM EFFECTUAL SPECIFIC FOR
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Hental Depression, Colie.
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will save many an Lour of suffering. ant
mao, a dollar la lima and doctor*’ blli*
THERE I* BUT ONE
oa front of Vfrappar. Praparnd only by
J. H.ZEILIN & CO.,SolaProprietor*
Pkiladalpkla, P* MUCK, BUM.,
nprld l£«vtf.
SALVO
TREATMENT.
ThfrWttrofttoMtlve sad tonic. Hash en used
for many years with remarkable r« suits, and is
gusrsnteed to cur* Ms* young or middle sirtd,
whs have by their Indulgences or ludise stlon
brought upjn them* Ives
NERVOUS DEBILITY,
producing some of the f llowlug effects: Ner-
vi uyuets, Ljss of energy end power, went of am-
bitioa, lack of Mess, mental sni physical >• oak-
ness, aversion t» society, U'tfltneas to marry
m*Unduly, t. lilng memory, orrfioic weakuees,
impovcr shed blood or over-worked brrlo, ana
all 1 bote dtp weeing «llra»nte, ronwquent on lm-
palled vitality or defectiveorganic action, which
lends the sufferer to early decay or iusauity,
which *s worsothsa d at**.
To the msny meu, married or single, who are
throwing their monty *way on humbug telle,
worth mm* “wondvful cure s.*' or wo'se, quack
d< rtors, ws ask you to give the 8ALV0 TREAT
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nliqlx’d by tne leading pnjsietans in this
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Young men s iff ring from the effects of youth'
f»l Imprudence, cmiely ana pnuanent cure
No matter •’hat yo>< bar taken, or who has fail d
to enre you 8U.V0 TRE »T.uENT wc GU»K-
. ANTRKtoOURtC VOt»
GENTLEMEN
Halvo Treatment ■» now nr p ret. Is plans n
to taka, and smIidI •*'* » readily v t h ih- fof d in
the Mots .eh. No minerals contained in the tiest-
m.-nt A part of the treatment is composed o(
isvtn dlffen-nt r.-oisand hr te, always prepared
ia a fresh *tat>,and the most valush*- medieir ~
known'to modern srisuce. The b an o 1
trsstmentls pu> up In small pill li*m- pWasuu
to tats and handy to carry in the ) wusot. lie
complete treatment !• put up in p usages, and
contain* all uicdic u -s uecerssrv.T r over oiul -
mourn* home treatment Hundred* of cutes have ,
been cured whh our package ( ne month’s treat-
menu) Full directions bow to exercise, diet,
btthe.rtc . scconip* n’eseach pickace. ffiice»er
imr-kate. *2 “ »nrse p ck-tcee #'.*0 Bent p epald
and securely sealed on receipt cf price.
KuoW n<a'we drih*gr>-Mt cm* live effects of
6sIvo Trastiu m, ve.witl |
guarantee:
With each o r dvr fc three pseksg ■ (3 months
treatment) eooMwta/ 9b.'0, we wj)j send our
WRITTEN OU4KaNTKE io icfund the money
if the treatment does not effect a cure.. -
T re# packages se-1C 0.1>. on receipt of |2.00,
to aeeurc us agstn-t loss.
Sen l m ney by »*. o. ney Order, Registered
tetter, Kxpm* or Pank Draft s' our risk
. Address, eALVu CHEMICAL00..
No. I A * Pi th Street. 8t. Louis, MO.
Air iso O'* MALVO TREATMENT.contaln<
Ingle si flitb fr m eminent physicians si to
. *- * - Stive pro
• Iru ft- »- rindpai curative proper*L a of
c m-nt.-■ft fro-.-. (BeeUd.) msrlCil&wtf.
SEASONABLE
ANO
REASONABLE
WE HAVE NOW ON DUPLAY
Wire Dish Cows and Fly Traps,
ICE CREAM EKEEZEBS
AN®
LEMON SQUEEZERS.
Tilt LATEST AND BEST FLY FANS.
No Key nqnlred. Oraatly Improved.
Garden and Ian Vases
Ca|l aaA aaa oar awk.
MADDREY & JONES,
ATHENS, QEOR »*A.
Bov. Dr. Talmage Exhorts Bis Hearers
to Dive Money to the Foot Rather
than Trnets—Gamblers the Host Heart
less of All Evil Doers. .
Brooklyn, May 15.—At the tabernacle this
morning there were the same great throngs of
people as usual, overflowing the main audi-
ence room into the corridors, and from the
corridors into the street, This, the largest
church in America, is more and more inade
quate to bold the people, as the years go by.
Tho pastor, the Rev. T. De Witt Tahnage,
D.D., took for his text this morning: “Watch
man, what of the nightf’ Isaiah xxi,2L He
saUl:
When night came down -on Bablyon,
Nlnoveh, aud Jerusalem, they needed care
ful watching, otherwise the inceudiary*s
torch might hare been thrust into the very
heqrt of the metropolitan splendor; or enemies,
marching from the bills, might have forced
the gats*. All nightlong, on topof the wall
and in front of the gates, might be heard the
measured step of the watchman oh hii solitary
lieut; silence hung iu air, save as some passer
.by raised the question: “Watchman, what
of the hightr*
It is to me a deeply suggestive and solemn
thing to see a man standing guard by night
It thrilled through me, as at the gate of an
nraeual in Charleston, the question once smote
ino: “Who comes thereP* followed by the
sharp command: “Advance and give the
countersign.” Every moral teacher stands
on picket, or patrols the wall as watchman.
Ufa work is to sound the alarm; and whether
it bo in the first watch, in the second watch,
iu the third watch, or in the fourth watch, to
be vigilant until the daybreak flings its
“morning glories” of blooming cloud across
the arching trellla of the sky.
The ancients divided their night into four
(arts—the first watch, from fltoS; the second,
from U to 12; the third, from 12 to 3; the
fourth, from H to 0,
I speak now of the city in the third watch,
or from 13 to 3 o’clock.
1 never weary of looking upon the life and
brilliancy of the city Iu the first watch. That
is the hour when the stores are dosing. The
1 during men, having quitted the scaffolding
and the shop, are on their way home. It re
joices me to give them my seat in the dty
car. They have stood and hammered away
all day. Their feet are weary. They are ex
hausted with the tug of work. They are
mostly cheerful. With appetites sharpened
on the swift turner’s wheel and the carpen
ter’s whetstone, they seek the evening meal.
The derks, too, have broken away from the
counter, and with brain weary of tho long
line of figures, and the whims of those who
go a shopping, seek the face of mother, or
wife and child. The merchants are unhar
nessing themselves from their anxieties on
their way up the street. The boys that lock
up are heaving away at the shutters, shoving
the heavy bolts and taking a last look at the
fire to see that all is safe. The streets are
througed with young men setting out from
the great centers of bargain making.
Lot idlers dear the street, aqd give right of
way to the besweated artisans and merchants.
They have earned their bread, and are now
on their way home to get it
The lights in full jet bang over 10,000
**" atvl patronizing air. and- nnucwnntaM# In- ^ I felt ns If I could weep teal* of Wood.
, f „ r ,"(1- ' forest nl-mt your nvlfnre mid entertainment; On one sfilo (tie pulpit sat Ins little diiM .
WtoWalt? -god yp p»rWo ft-ai^t., Yoo at* a fool If you cannot m-o tlirongfc it Ayea^ a»»-«t, lwmtlful little girl, tint
S o?I?wifX£ r -They want your money. bad seen bin, bug convulsively In hia better
In Chestnut street, Phllmlclpbla, white I moments. He |mt on her nil jewels, nil ,Jh-
noflre. nobreed, no bone. Bblveriltg Intbo Uving In that city, an incident occurred nionds, m,d gavo her ail pictures nudtoyr,
evening repasts—the parents at eitlier end of
tbo table, the childrp' 1 itetween. Thank God,
“who setteth the solii-.y in families.”
Jt law .Lmasw LA.. »»4 salt 4k* r Uw. «•
amusement, good ami bod, are In full tida.
Lover* of art, catalogue In band, atroll
through the galleries and discuss the pict
ures. The ballroom Is resplendeut with the
rich apparel of those who, on either side of
the white, glistening boards, await the signal
from tho orchestra. The footlights of the
theatre flash up, tho bell rings, end the cur
tain rises, and out from the gorgeous scenery
glide the acton, greeted with the vocifera
tion of the expectant multitudes. Concert
halls art lifted into enchantment with the
warble of one eongstreae, or swept out on a
tea of tumultuous feeling by the blast of bra
zen instruments. Drawing rooms are filled
with nil gracefulness of apparel, with all
tweetneaa of sound, with all splendor of man
ner figBirmrs are retching up ami multiplying
the scene until It seems ss It In infinite corri
dors there were garlanded groups advancing
and retreating.
The outdoor air rings with laughter and.
with the moving to of thousands on the great
promenade* The dashing span, adrip with
,thu foam of the long country ride, rushes past
t you halt at the curb ston*
Mirth, revelry, beauty, fashion, magnifi
cent* mingle in the great metropolitan pict
ure, until the thinking man goes home to
think more seriously and the praying man to
pray more earnestly.
A beautiful and overwhelming thing It the
city 111 the first and second watches of tbf
Jut the clock strikes 13, and tbs third watch
has begun.
The thunder of the city has rolled out of
the air. The slightest sounds cut the night
with such distinctness as to attract your at
tention. Tbs tinkling of tho belinf the (treat
car In the distance and the baying of the dog;
the stamp of tbs hone in the next street;
The slamming of a saloon door; tho hic
cough of the drunkard; the shrieks of tbs
■team whistle, five miles sway—Oh, how sug
gestive, nay friend* the third watch of the
nigtitt 1:
There are bonast men passing up and down
the street. Here is a city mMonaiy who
has been carrying a scuttle of coal to that
poor family In that dark place Here is an
undertaker going up the slope oi * uuihling
from which there comee a bitter cry, which
indicates that the deatroyifig angel has smit
ten the first bom. Here it a minister of re-
llgiesi who ha* been giving the sacrament to
a dyiug Christian. Here is a physician pass
ing along in meat baste, the messenger a few
steps a bead hurrying nit to the household.
Nearly all the light* have gone out In the
dwellings, for It Is the third watch of the
hi. That light In the window Is the light
of the watcher, for the medicines must be ad
ministered, and tlw fever mu* be watched,
and the restlees tossing off of the coverlid
must be restated, and the ic* must be kept on
the hot temple* and the perpetual prayer
most 30 ap from lwerte aoon to be broken.
Ob, the third watch of the nlghtl .What
stupendous thought—a whole city at rust I
Weary arm preparing for to-uiorrow’s toil;
hot brain being cooled off; rigid muscles
relaxed; excited nerves soothed; the white
hair of the octogenarian in thin drifts across
the pillow; fresh fall of flakes on snow already
fatten; childhood with, its dimpled hands
thrown out on the pillow, and with every
breath taking hi a new store of fun and frolic.
Third watch of the nlghtl Godh sluroberias
l Let ono great wave of ref rep
lug slumber rollover the heart of the great
ara, and anxiety, and
lot tlw city steep; But, my friend* he not
... ~ There will 1« thousand! to-night
prbo Will notweepatelh Go up that dark alter
mid ha drathreewhore yon tread lettyaffUl
over the prostrate form of a drunkard lying
es Us osen doorstep, lax* about you. Ns*
yoafssl the garroisrt hug. Look through
they say: “What a pity that ao generous a
man should be destroyed." No. Did they
tlghrepentlngly over what they had-done!
No; they sat there, looking as vulturon look
at the carcaa of a lamb wboea heart they
have ripped out Bo they eat and looked at
the coffin lid, and i told them the judgment
of God upon thorn who had destroyed their
fallow* Did they reform! I was told they
how merciless men are, especially after they
have destroyed you. Do not look to Sen for
comfort or help Look to God.
Bat there Is a man who will not reform.
He eaye: “I won't reform." Well, then,
how many acts are there In a tragedy) I be
lieve five
Act the fleet of the tragedy: A young man
starting off from horn; parents and listers
weeping to have him go. Wagon rising over
the hill. Harewel] kiss flung back. Bingtbe
bell and let the curtain fall.
Act the second; The marriage altar. Null
organ. Bright light* Long white veil trail
ing through the ala]* Prayer and congratu
lation. and exclamation of “How well she
looks!"
Act the third: A woman waiting for stag
gering step* Old garments stuck Into the
broken window-pan* Marks of hardship on
the fee* The biting of the nails of bloodless
finger* Neglect, and cruelty, and despair.
Bing the bell and let the curtain drop
Act the fourth: Three graves in a dark
place-grave of the child that died for lack of
medicine, grave of the wife that died of a
broken heart, grave of the man that died of
dissipation. Ob! what a blasted heath with
three graves I Plenty ot weeds, but no
flower* Ring the bell and let the curtain
drop.
Act the fifth; A destroyed soul's eternity.
No light. No music. No hop* Anguish
coiling the serpents around the heart. Black
ness of darkness forever. But I cannot look
any longer. Wool woel I clow my eyes to
this last act of the tragedy. Quick! Quick I
Ring the bell and let the curtain drop “Re
joice, O, young man, in thy youth, and let
thy heart rejoice In the days of thy youth;
but know thou that for all thaw things God
will bring you Into judgment.” “There Is a
way that seeraeth right to a man, but the
end thereof is death.”
Wl.v ,Ion’S sh.v ■ saloon, UMlf an av property, men uiew ui» suauie—a rum w vuo curreouon ui uie no
WbydMi’ttterdjavcr themrelvre oveflto bn** out, and before the blood was washed Phe looked up wooderingly. Bho know
^ ^ ^ from thodloof by the maid the comrades were what 1 tall meant.' She wm not old enough
shuHling cards again. You wa there is more taundentend the awrosv of an orphan child,
a child when told that he must gototheelms- hiercy in tho highwayfcan for the belated | On the other aide the pulpit sqj tho men
Vrihi" ™ *,w . traveler on whose body bn heap* the stone* who hadnlned him; they were thiSmen who
thmrfmn*th P00 '.^ there,.!* more mercy In the frost for tb« bad pooredthewpimwoodlnto the orphan's
not deserve our- sympathy, flower that it kills, there is more lueivy liithe cap; they were tbo men who had houndJilm
Are thVTfatori Jomuchmore yed-Uyy httrrlame 3iVe» the steamer on the ha£d and foot I knew them. Howdldthey
Sh?m P TheJSr Long Island coast than there Is mercy in the seem to feell Did they woepi No. Did
heJtdf.gmnbterfork!.victim. ~~ '
Se 3rm ^mdot^I I In the third watch of the night, ateo, drunk-
toL «nn«»doeait» wom. The drinklnff will bo
*” rsepectable at 8 o’clock In the evening, a Uttla
Yol? fltohed at 0, talkative and garrulous at 10, at
£ It blasphemous, st 13 the hat fall, off, at 1
’rfu? Stri™ the man falls to the floor asking for more
trouble on themselve* I reply, where IglTs strewn through the drinking saloons
ten prayers for the Innocent who are suffer- 0 , the city, father* brother* husbands, son*
^ wS”.’w* nty Pmen tm g0lltJ ««<»>« you are by nature, perhaps better.
llie&banaanfwhcn be seas a vmscldash-1
tag into the breakers, come* out from hie but fjSJSteJ?* hS'f«ltew y
mid wrap, the -armeet flannels mound thow tariiSShlifSS
who are mo* chilled and mort bruised and
most battered in the wrack; and Iwant you . D ? 1 ^ tw » k *
wreck ot the soul—shipwreck for time, ship S^taai^sndtt^num
wreck for eternity. Pity, by oil means, the 7. h tio '?" n to “f e *‘ h ® *!™ in a ” d ?• ““
innocent who are suffering, but pity more the bocoIn ?* ‘•“■roughly tremlcd. Such none
wnw,i.wm,ui»n f ,uo|» ) ianiie came home, having been ahaent for eome
IJ. on through the alley. Open the door. 1
ua n „„ ui, i. 1^,1,-j n xv— i, died, and sbo lay In tho noxt room prepared
0 r_r for tb* oh*qul<s, *nd he wentinauddrigged
locked. It has never been locked# JSo , • • .1,—o# , _
Only a broken chair rtand. against the door. I Oh when rum touche. Uie brain you can-
Shove it back. Go in. Steike a match. not h f h
Now look. Beastliness and rag* ‘ See those y0 \, tbe ^
glaring eyeball* Be careful mw what you ** Yon _do not see the won*
ray. Do not utter any Insult; do not utter In the midnfghtmeetlng. at London a great
any suspicion, If you value your Ilf* What nmlUtade ha. been «v«l. We want a few
Is that red mark on the waUt It is the mark hundred Christian men and women to come
of a murderer’s hand! , down from the highest circles of society to
Look at those eyes rising up out of the toi J?T‘'? 1 tll “ e , F,‘ u I d “'"5^and destitute ones
darkness mid out from the straw in the cor- “ d h |nd1 ' “P a «*•“ the dark alley, even
ner, coming toward you, and as they the gladnaw of heaven
come nem- you your light goes out. Strike 1 , Do not «° w ™PP« t ‘" 1 yo ” ® Da and
another match. Ahl this Isa babe, not like from your well fllled table, with the Idea that
thow beautiful children presented in baptism. ^ *• ^ ln « *° ,to P “>» Pawing of an
This little one n*ver emllod; it never will «»Pty »toniach or to warn, rtoeklnglM. feet.
.mil* A flower flung onen awfully barren Take bread, take raiment, take medicine as
beach. Ohl heavenly Bhepheni, fold that well a. take prayer. There is a great deal of
little one to Thy arm* Wrap around you common wnra in what the poor woman raid
your shawl or your coat tighter, for the cold th ? c “ y ”‘*' lon ?f5 r , was teliing
wind sweeps through. her how As ought to love God and wrve
Strike anothermatch. Ahl I. it powlble Hl ?- "Oh," she raid ”Jf you were as poor
that that young woman’s scarred ud bruimd and » ld * [ •». , and “ h ““PT. T°“ «>“ ld
face ever was looked intoby maternal tender-, thtak of nothing else. ■
neast Utter no scorn. ITtra, »»«.-i A. gfeat deal of wbat is called Christian
_ .. ... . .. .. f work ffoe* for nothing, for tho simple reason
No ray of hope ever will dawn on that brow. „,, nQt prBctIcJll . „ aftar the battle ( An .
» g0 “'"t D ° Z ‘ tietrnn a man got out of mi ambulance with a
another light It would be a mockery to ^o, tracte. and he went distributing the
r U *.. P ^*.r* y tn£t* and George Stuart, one of the bert
Poss out and pass down tho street Our C | )rjitian men in thIs country nid to him:
clties of Brooklyn jrnd New York and our « W hat are you distributing tracts for now!
«"** , 0f r* , . < T“; Z 1 , Tl»re are 3,000 men bleeding to death. Bind
woret time the thM wateh of the night I their wounds and then distribute the
Do you know it i* in this third watch of the tr a cta."
night that crlminals do their woret work?, We want mon KnM in Christian
ItUthocriminalX watch. . ' work, taking the bread of this life in one
At 8:30 o'clock you wfll find them to the h>nd and t f e bread of the next life in the
drinking raloonbut towardW they goto ot herhan d. No such Inapt wort as that done
their garret* theyget out their tools.then by th, Christian man who, during the la*
they start on tho street Wetchtag on slther J , nto a b oqiltel with tract* and,
Irt^Thtete «mt*>« *o th. bed of a man whom lep had
U fk b !f* la ri!u d *p5? f? - ® been amputated, gave him a tract on the tin
key will soon touch the store lock. Thte te an or^cog. I rejoice before God that never
This is an assassin, and to-morrow morning indulged. f n but it te blomed.
there will be a dssd body in oa. of the vacant , There tea place in Switrarhuid, I have been
lot* During the daytime tboee vlllmn. in toUi „h«re the utterance of one wort wfll
our dtiae lounge about, eome aaletpand some bring back a seer* of echoes; and I have to
awake, but when the third watch of the night teU you g,,, morn j ng that a sympathetlo
arrive., their eye keen, their brain cool, thsir word> a w „ d word- a gener ous wort, a help-
arm strong, their foot fleet to fly or pursue, tllI wor d uttered in the dark place, of the
they are ready. I town will bring back 10,000 echoes from all
Many of these poor creature, were brought the thrones of heaven,
up in that way. They were born in a thieves’ | Are then In this assemblage this morning
garret Their childish toy was s burglar's those who know by experience the tragediec
dark lantern. The flnt thing they remember In the third watch of the nlghtl I am not
was their mother bandaging the brow of their here to thrust you back with one hart wort,
father, .truck by the police dub. They be- Take the bondage from your bruised soul slid
gan by robbing boy’s pocket* end now they put on it the soothing salve of Christ’s gospel
have come to dig the underground passage to ando f God's compnraion. Many have come,
the cellar of the bank and are preparing to i M ot hers coming to God this morning,
blast the gold vault. tired of the sinful lif* Cry up the news to
Ju* so long os there are neglected children heaven. Set all the bells ringing. Spread
of the street just so long we will have three tba banquet under the arches. Let the
desperado.* Borne one, wishing to make a ' crowned heads comedown and sit at the Jubl-
good Christian point and to quote a passage p*. I tell you there 1s more dsllgbt in
of Scripture, expecting to get a Scriptural heaven over one man that gets reformed by
passage In answer, raid to one of then poor the grace of God than over ninety and nine
lad* cast out and wretched: “When your fa- that never got off the track,
ther and your mother forrak. you, who then . ; could give you the history, In a minute,
will take you opr And the boy said: “The of one of tbs best friends I aver had. Out
radical tho parlicel ' gij© of my own family. I never hn4 a better
In the third watch of tho night gambling friend. He welcomed me to my borne at the
doss Its worst work. What though th* hoots west. He was of splendid personal appear-
be slipping away, and though tba wife bo once, but ha had an ardor of soul and a
waiting in tba chrarlaas home! Stir up the warmth of affection that made me love him
fir* Bring on mom drinks Put up more like a brother. I raw men coming out of the
■take* That commercial, bouse that only a saloons and gambling ball* and they sur.
iltli* white ago put out a sign of copartnership, rounded my friend, and they took bun at the
will this winter be wrecked on a gambler's weak point, his social nature; and I saw him
Uhl* There will be many a money till that going down, and I had a fair talk with him—
will spring a leak. A member of congress for I never yot raw a man you could not talk
gambled with a member elect and won . with on tbesflbjectof his habits, if you talked
*130,000. The old way of getting a Ur- with him in the right way. Isold to him:
log is so slow. The old way of getting a “Why don't you give up your bad habits and
fortune te so stupid. Com* 1st us tom become a Christian P I remember now ju*
up and as* who shall bars la And so tba how he looked, leaning over his counter, as
work gom oo, from tha wheeling wretches be replied: “I wish f could. Ob, sir, I should
pitching pennies la a ram grocery np to the Uks to baa Christian, but I bar. gone so far
millionaire gambler In tha stock market, [ astray I can’t get back.”
In the third watch of the night, pass down I So the time went on. After awhile tho day
the streets of these cities, and you hear the of deknam cam* I was summoned to bis
click of the dice and the sharp, keen stroke of sickbed. I hastened. It took me but a vary
the ball on the billiard tabL At tbrar placet tew moments to get mere, i wm sarpneea
merchant prince, dismount, and legislator* ss I went in. I raw him in hte ordinary drea*
tired of making law* take a respite la fully dressed, lying on top of the bed. I gave
breaking them. An classes of people are him my hand, and ha salted It convulsively,
robbed by this crime—the Importer ot for- and said: "Oh, how glad 1 am tores you! Sit
eign silks and tbs dealer In Chatham street down there” I rat down and be raid: “Mr.
pock* handkerchief* Th* clerk* of the Tslmage, just where yon sit now my mother
store take a hand after the shutter* are pot sat last night. She has been dead twenty
np, and the officers of the court white awsy years Now 1 don’t want yon to think 1 am
their time while th* Jury te out. ont of my mind, or that I am euperetltloue;
In Baden-Baden, when that city me the bat, sir, she ret there hut night just m car-
of! = ~
won Tarrant’s
faaslieeu trteit.
„ , ioe (or _ ^,
ter red who C*n furnish tliolr own hones and
give) their whole lime to the buslocss. Spare
111■ • m>*iits may »«• j.roiitatily eni|.loyeJ a'ao. A
few vacancies In town* and cities. B. F.
jmnwotf a i’Or, 1018 Main St., Richmond, Va.
and Wlilxltey Hat>»
1 ta cured dt hensa with
out pain. Book of par
ticulars sent F1KKE*
_ B. M. WOOLLEY, M.D.
Office G5& Whitehall St.
obtain an needed li
I ropoted line of AdvertislL. _
papers. 176 pige pamphlet, 30c.
ewYo ,
■■■(•formation about any
rertislpg in American New* ■
—v,-s—§7dim.
CAN llV» ft hO?n». finil rnaka inoro
. money at work tor ns, than at anything
else in thi* world. Capital not needed;
yon are started free. Both sexes? *11 age*.
Any «oe can do the work. Large earning* rare
from first start. Costly outfit and term* free.
Better not delsy. Costa yon nothing to send ns
yourtddnss a:.d find out; If you ore wise you
W
return to us, and we will sand you
free, something of gr at value and
Importance to you, (hat will start
ses« which will bring you ia more
you In business wMch will bring you I
money rlubt away Utah auythinx else m mis
world Any. ono can do the work and live at
home. Either sex; all rges. Something new,
that just coins money tor all workers. We wlh
start you; capita) not needed. This Js one of
the genuine, Important chances of a lifetime.
Those who are ambitious and emerprlsing will
WORKING CLASSES
now prepared to turniih all classes with empjoy-
inent nihome, the whole of the ttme.’prfor te
spare moments. Business new, light and profit
able. Persons of otUier sex easily earn from 60
cents to 15.00 per evening, and a proportional
sum by devoting all their time to the. business.
hoyi and (Iris earn nearly as much as men.
That all who see tblsmay send (heir address, end
test the business we make this offer. To such
as are not well satisfied we will send one dollar
to pay for the trouble of writing. Fill partlcul-
-rs and outfit free. Address *
GEORGE STINSON A GO.,
dee23dd&wtf. Portland. WMoe.
SWIFT’S SPECIFIC
Rev. C. T. dark, a member of tha Booth Georgia Methodist Conference, writes from
Tut nail County, Ua.: N Ouu year ago I wa* taken With rlicumnti«»n. and l*c«me almost
helpless for over three months. All tho rvmedie* used seemed t» toil until X commenced
the use of 8wift’s Specific. I have taken five bottler, and nra perfectly bound and well
•gain. I would have written sooner, bat waited t*» s. s if tbs cuis «»« permanent. And
iow I unhesitatiofly recommend 8. B. 8. as a safe and reliable remedy for rheumatism.
I have all confidence in its virtue.”
! CURES RHEUMATISM I
hr ore. taro rssre I .uflcfafl Intmrel, with rotiMular rh.:iTn»li,ra. 1 bream. slmMS
halslm sod bad to b. halpel out of led. At liras. 1 »u un.bl. io lorn rajMlI io ted,
ood had to bo hsodled ss und.rl, s. so lof.nl. Mr el>».t «»• ln»ol.rt, and lb. p.i*
was Istolsrslila at tims* All tbs old sod wtU-knowo noradteo ».rt sskiortad, bot o*
panaaocot reli.f vs. obtslosd. Aboat s .virago I vaa Indued b, a friend te try Swift's
-—IS* Tbs sffect has bsso marital. Js, friaoda asarnl. raooimii, me. Hyrhanou.
te snUral, too* sir ErvaralWltli I. anperb, aod I am kal«liiD« thirty pouods more
vbto I cvmmruced tobfof T. S. S. I sm abl. to attaod to all of lolaisterisl wotk.
I dtvooU, srat'lul foe mynstoretteo t* health, which low., nodartlisblsastotaf
X am d.rooUy .
Ood .to Uwlft'a Hpreifls.
Hampton, Oa., April 1* II
XWofte. art Bl—4 red 6
Iter. J. M.LOWSX.
JRamaare weal It* fm.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC co., Atlanta, Oa.
J. E. SILVER