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THE PULPIT, *
AN ELOOUENT SUNDAY SERMON BY
THE REY. CORTLAND MYERS.
Theme: TUncle Sam's Mark on the
World. :
Brooklyn, N. Y.—That the oppor
tunity afforded to men residing in the
Bedford section to hear the Rey.
Cortland Mpyers, pastor of the Bap
tist Temple, was appreciated, was
evident from the large audience
which filled every part of the Associa
tion Hall of the Bedford Branch of
the Y. M) GLA " Dr I?yers' theme,
also, was popular, being: “Uncle
Sam’s Mark on the World.” He said,
among other things:
When I was asked to come here
and tell you semething of my recent
tour around the world it seemed an
impossibility, there was so much to
be said. Where shall a man begin or
end? Well, we crossed this conti
nent, which is in itself enough for
one tour for any man; we visited the
Hawaiian Islands, touched at the
Philippines, saw China, Japan, the
Malay Islands, Burmah, India, Cey
lon; then through the Red Sea, past
Arabia, to Egypt, to Palestine for the
second time, across the = Mediter
ranean, through Europe and Great
Britain and finally home to America
—God’s own country!
The one thing that we noticed
everywhere in the world was that
there has been a tremendous amount
of progress, and that the progress of
civilization has been greater in the
last ten years than in the hundred
Yyears previous; and that the greatest
element in this world-wide progress
is the influence of American institu
tions and ideas. The eyes of the
whole world are turned to the Amer
ican Republic, the world’s purest and
|greatest democracy. The -civilized
nations of the earth are interested in
the things we have here, and they are
saying: “We must have the same
things as America; we must know
the principles of the American democ
racy, and we must apply them to our
oOwWn governments.”
In the past few years Japan has
adopted and applied the principles
of democratic government, and China
‘'has awakened and is demanding the
institution of democracy, and God
lonly knows what is going to take
Pplace there. The Empress of China is
dead, and thank God she is, for,
though she was a remarkable woman,
worthy to be ranked with Catharine
of Russia or Queen Elizabeth of Eng
land in many respects, her policies
have been dealing death blows to
any chances for advancement ‘which
China may have had in the past. We
do not know yet what the outcome
Wwill be, but, in the province of God,
we believe that mighty and marvelous
things are soon toc happen in that vast
and ancient empire, and especially in
the next decade. Already the un
‘heard of and well nigh inconceivable
thing has happened. As the result of
‘what has transpired, the Chinese peo
ple are demanding a constitution,
and they will get it sooner or later.
It is the same in India, rd Minto,
the Governor-General of fi;)at colony,
is writing back to England that its
250,000,000 natives are demanding
representation and a greater share in
the government of their land, and all
the English newspapers and period
icals are talking about the possibility
of a 2 mutiny on 'the part of the Indian
native army of 100,000 men, which
will make Lucknow and the Sepoy
rebellion look like child’s play. The
watchword of the people is now
“India for the Indians, with repre
sentative and constitutional govern
fment!” Persia has caught the spirit
of the Western World and clamors
for similar rights. The Turks, the
iYoung Turks and all the Turks are
saying: “We will have constitutional
Eovemment,” and the Sultan knows
that they are going to have it, in
spite of the fact that his promises are
not believed and his efforts to put it
off as long as possible.
Now the greatest, the most potent
Influence in all this world-wide agi
tation for liberty and human rights
is the American influence of which I
have spoken. When we were com
ing through the Mediterranean, we
met one of those ignorant fellows on
our ship who “know it all” and are
constantly displaying their ignorance;
and he said to me: “Have you seen
that picture back of you on the wall?
iWell,” he continued, “that is the
greatest and finest clubhouse in the
world!” His mother told him to just
keep still, but he went on talking
about it, showing his ignorance, till
his mother informed him that it was
2 picture of the home of the Presi
dent of the United States; then I had
my turn and I said to them: “Yes,
that’s right! That's tfie biggest club
house in the world; that’s the home
of the ‘Big Stick.””” That “big stick”
has had a wholesome. influence over
the entire civilized world!
. My friends, the one great mark
that Uncle Sam has put on this world
and aM around the planet is the prin
ciple of individual responsibility.
[This is the mark of civilization, and it
sis the mark, especially, of Christian
civilization. The mark of heathenism
is the clan, the tribe, the class, the
family, the bunch: it puts a lot of
hleads together, and when it has them
all together, they don't amount to
much anyway; but the mark of civil
ization is the individual man, his
rights and his responsibilities. To
the citizens of this country of ours,
Uncle Bam says: “You are citizen
kings; you have a crown, wear it;
You have a throne, climb up on it;
your have a scepter, wield it; you
have an individual responsibility, use
it!” That is the glory of a Christian
civilization; that lies at the centre of
it, and it reaches tosthe very core of
the religious life of the citizen; that
i 8 the fountain-head out of which all
the streams of his life as a gitizen
must flow; it is a principle, more
over, which comes to us directly from
the teachings of Jesus Christ, and a
man’s personal relation to Jesus
Christ is what brings him into right
relation to God. This is the heart of
the Gospel, and it is the secret of the
Christian civilizations of the world.
Jesus said, “If a man will do His will,
he shall know of the doctrine.” I
You want to take the right path, you
Will not be long in learning what the
right path is. Man’s condition does
not depend on the question of man's
gnorance, because every one kuows
many times as much and better than
he puts into practice,
It is a question, rather, of the
man’s will. Now, follow me: Next
to the omnipotence of God is the
will of man; the sovereign wili of
man is the mightiest force in humx\n
life; it is the absolutely fundamental
power in personality, the executive of
the individual life. Every man is a
small army of faculties, but the will
is the commander, the pilet that runs
the ship, who ecan bring it safely
through the stress of weather and
wave to its destined harbor. The will
Is the king on the throne of the soul!
We are not led into right relations to
God in our religious life through the
feelings or the intellect; it is not
what a man knows, or what he feels,
but what he wills to be and do, that
makes him a Christian and a man!
oy ¥ou want something that is going
tq ush you immediately up to the
h}gher levels of life and give you a
‘kingly attitude before God and man,
listen to this: You are what, your
will is, not your knowledge or feel
ings. At the Battle of Waterloo,
both Napcleon and Wellington knew
that the old farmhouse at Hougou
mont was the strategic point in the
conflict; whoever held Hougoumont
would win Waterloo! Sc a man wins
moral rule over.the world just as he
is in possession of his will and .its
conscious exercise. To lose his will
is to lose the most divine element in
his nature; to lose it is to be insane.
A friend of mine in good circum
stances—good enough to take me
riding in his own carriage—got the
Wall Street fever; he presently sold
out his business and went on the
“Street;” but the “Street” soon sold
him out! That’s Wall Street’s way, |
The man was beside himself, ‘When
I met him, he explained how it was.
He said: “The one difficulty is that
I have no will; I have lost my will,
not my reason, not my love for my
family, or my interest in life, but my |
will!” T urged him to hold on, to
attempt the exercise of choice; but it |
was of no help to him, and to-day
he is in an insane asylum, where he |
will probably remain for the rest of
his life. So every man who has lost
his will is practically insane, too; just ‘
as every man who has the power to
will has the power to win in the bat- |
tles of life and assert his manhood
under any circumstances. |
The true Christian is the kingly
man everywhere in the world, in
Japan and America alike! |
When you begin to talk about a
man, it is a question of his will, not
of his ignorance or hig unbelief. If
a man is not a Christian it is because
he is unwilling to give up sin, I will
tell you—although you know it your
self,God knows it and the devil knows
it—your sin, something in your life
you are unwilling to give up, alone
keeps you from God: it is something
that lies deep down in your heart,
and you don’t want to drop it out. |
If a man has the habit of sinning
he may become so used to it that ke
sins mechanically, and may cease to
regard it as sin. If religion is to be
real and practical, a man must say “I
will—Tl will give up my sin!?” !
The second thing I want to talk
about is, “Unwillingness to do God’s
Will.” When you know the will of
God you begin to see the hideousness
of sin, and you will curse the hour
that you turned your heart away
from God and good; you will wish
you had never seen the vision or His
love. Think of the grand message of
God to man, of its beauty, of its ten
derness, and you’ll wish you never
had seen the vision of it at all unless
you turn from your sin. Here it is:
“Whosoever will, may come.” “If a.
man will, he ‘may take of the Water
of Life.” And the most pathetic
words Jesus ever uttered are these: |
“Ye will not come unté Me that ye
might have Life!” Oh, how black is
sin when it will draw forth such |
words from the Son of God. When
you left the wife and the home, and ‘
went away to meet sin, you put your |
foot out and crushed the beautiful
flower of the Father's love! We .
think of such a case; she told us of it |
herself. I had married them myself. |
She was a beautiful Christian girl; |
but he had gone away to sin, and
had come home again and damned
her whole physical life. I do not
think there is a hot enough corner
in hell for that man who is willing
to wreck the soul of wife and child
and taint their blood with the counse
quences of his sin!
In closing, let me speak to you of
the highest and holiest experience in
my life. One Sunday afternoon some
months ago I was in Jerusalem, with
leisure to do as I pleased for ten days
or more. So I went through the
Damascus Gate that day, and climbed
to the crown of Calvary, that green
hill outside the wall of the ecity.
There I read the whole story of re
deeming love, prayed over it, wept
over it; then I went to the foot of
the Mount of Olives and into the
Garden of Gethsemane, where, to my
delight, I found myself alone. From
thence I passed down the Damascus
Road along which they brbught my
Lord, and through the gate once more
into the city, and over the Via Dolor
osa to Pilate’s Judgment Hall. In
imagination, I saw the soldiers bring
Him before His judge, followed by
the priests and city rabble; and I
heard their voices demanding His
crucifixion, though Pilate said, “I
find no fault in Him at all!” I heard
them clamor for the release of Bar
abbas, and saw Pilate surrender Him,
the King of Glory, to their cruel will,
Barabbas they freed; but Jesus. they
crucified on Calvary! This is the
question before you men to-day:
“Jesus or Barabbas” -— holiness or
sin! Every man who turns his back
to-day on Jesus Christ takes Barabbas
and lives in his sin! Which will you
choose?
Depends Upon the Motive,
The morality of an action depends
upon the motive from-which we act.
1f I fling half-a-crown toabeggar with
intention to break his head, and he
picks it up and buys:victuals with it,
the physical effect is good; but, with
respect to me, the action is very
wrong.—Johnson, g
e e e e e W 8 i
The Highest Product. =~ '
Man is the highest product of his
cwn history. The discoverer finds
nothing so grand or tall as himself,
nothing so valuable to him. The
greatest star is at the small end of
the telescope, the star that is looking,
not looked after mor looked at.—
Theofore Parker. . tosam—au
COUGHS AND wm
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o 804 TENTH ST 7 l"l
“WASHINGTON, D.&./l Jji
by
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Peruna as an effective cure for coughs and
colds. .
You are authorized to use my photo with
testimonial in any publication.
Mrs. Joseph Hall Chase.
804 Tenth St., Washington, D. C. s
Could Not Smell Nor Hear.
Mrs. A. L. Wetzel, 1023 Ohio St., Terre
Haute, Ind., writes: s
“When 1 began to take your medicine I
could not sme%},nnor hear a church *bell
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“gWhen 1 began your treatment mg_ head
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took Peruna as you told me. Naw I might
say I am well.
%I want to go and visit my mother and
see the doctor who said I was not long for
this world. I will tell him it was Peruna
that cured me.”’
Peruna is manufactured bLThe Peruna
Drug Mfg. Co., Columbus, .Ohio.
Ask yowr Druggist for a Free Pe
runa Almanac )qm- 1909,
e ————————— i
Prayer Was Short,
A Scotch lawyer had to address the
Caledonian equivalent of our Supreme
Court. His “pleading” occupied an
entire day. After soven hours of al
most continuous oratory he went
home to supper and was asked to con
duect family worship. As he was ex
hausted his devotions were brief.
“I am ashamed of ye,” said the ‘old
mother. “To think ye could talk for
seven hours up at the court and dis
miss your Maker in seven minutog.”
“Ay, verra true,” was the reply.
“but ye maun mind that the Lord isna
sae dull in the uptak as the-Judge-
Lodies.”—Bellman.
An Eye Opener,
+ Dr. Mitchell’s Eye Salve is white in
appearance and odorless, A posiddze
and ready cure for sore, weak, in
flamed, swollen, smarting eyes and
granulated lids. Just apply to the
eyelids and rub in well. At all stores,
Price 25 cents. Try a bottle. *
When starvation stares a man in
the face it furnishes him with food
for thought.
__Ttch cured in 30 minutes b Woolffird’s
Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. yAt druggists.
Better be a cup of fine crystal to
be shattered by rough handling than
an iron pot and never to know del
icate service.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softensthe gums, reduces inflamma
tion.allays pain.cures wind colic, 25¢ a bottle
HE DID NOT PRACTISE.
The Minister—Then you don’t think
I practise what I preach, eh?
The Deacon—No, sir, I don’t. You've
been preaching on the subjed’ o’ res
ignation fur twa years, an’ ye hivna
resigned yit.—Tit-Bits.
Only One “%romo quglno"ho L
i tive Bromo Quinine, 0.
rflt":}xl'atthe“ sigL:a‘t:xro of K. W, QQrove. gued the
World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25c.
Canon Fleming handed over the
whole of the money he received for
copyright of certain sermons to the
British Hospital for Incurables and
the Gordon Boys' Home. -
HUl‘%‘"&.-& WRECK.
100 A
Kidneys Badly Inj.. md Health
Seriously Impawped.. -~~~
William White, R. 5 man, 201
Constantine St., Three Rivers, Mich.,
says: “In a railfoad
e collision my kid
neys must have been
Y hurt, as I passed
bloody wurine with
pain for a long time
\ s after, wag weak and
¢ ’ ) 4', thin and so I could
% ",,‘ Y% mnot work., Two years
W 77 after 1 went to the
. ——— hospital and
remained almost six months, but my
case seemed hopeless. The urine
passed involuntarily., Two months
ago I began taking Doan’'s Kidney
Pills and the improvement has been
wonderful. TFour boxes have done me
more good than all the doctoring of
seven years. I have gained so much
that my friends wonder at it.”
Sold by all dealers. 50c. a box,
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
STAKED ALL ON HIS WIFR'S
VANITY.
She—Did you forget today s my
birthday?
He-—Sure! Didn't you want me
to?—Yonkers Statesman.
‘You Look Prematurely Old
. BEFORE THE STORM.
. “You seem to manage remarkably
well on your housekeeping money.”
“Yes; the storekeepers haven't
sent in their bills yet."—Stray
Stories. ’
Cured of Persistent Case of
Eczema,
St. Louis, M 0.,, Sept. 1, 1905.
Mr. J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga.
Dear Sir:—l have been a very great
sufferer from eczema for four or five
years, and have used many remedies and
have been treated by the most prominent
specialists here for gkin diseases without
success, Some time ago, my sister, Mrs.
Eiton, formerly of your city, induced me
to use Tetterine, and after usinf same
a few weeks, I am grateful to realize that
I am at last cured of the tormenting,
burning eczema., So valuable a remedy as
Tetterine should be known of by the
thousands throughout the country who
are suffering as 1 have heen, and I shall
take pleasure in recommending it wher
ever an opportunity presents.
Very respectfully,
‘(Signed) Miss A. B. ¥ing, 5839 Vernon St
Tetterine cures Eczema, Tetter, Ring
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Skin Disease. Tetterina 50c; Tetterine
Soap 26c. Your druggist, or by malil from
the manufacturer, The Shuptrine Co.,
Savannah, Ga. TGN
ONE SIDED. 9
“Yesn,” said the old peer, “my son
fs willing to stand for Parliament.
‘“Unfortunately,” he added, after a
slight pause, “Parilament does not
reciprocate.”—Youth’s Companion.
HANDS RAW AND SCALY.
~ltched and Burned Terribly—Could
Not Move Thumbs Without Flesh
Cracking — Sleep Impossible —
Cuticura Soon Cured Eczema.
“An itching humor covered beth my
hands and got up over my wrists and even
up to the.elbows. The itching and burning
were terrible. My hands got all scaly and
when 1 scratched, the surface would be
covered with blisters and then get raw.
The eczema got so bad that I could not
move my thumbs without deep cracks ap
pearing. I went to my doctor, but his
medicine could only stop the itohing, At
night T suffered so fearfully that I could
not sleep. I could not bear to touch my
hands with water. This went on for three
months and I was fairly worn ous. At last
1 got the Cuticura Remedies and in a
month I was cured. Walter H. Cox, 16
Somerset St., Boston, Mass., Sept. 25, 1008.”
Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sola Props.
of Cuticuta Remedies, Boston, Mass.
‘When a man gets the hig head it is
astonishing how many fools ke finds
among his friends.
Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days.
Pazo Ointment is guaranlped to cure any
cave of lt.cbini, Blind, Bleeding oy Protruding
Piles in 6to 14 days or money refunded. 50c.
A MBERE TRIFLE.
They say that (Cholly has lost his
mind.” *“ls that s 0? Does he know
it?'—Boston Courier.
Garfield Tea, the Herb laxative, agree.
ably stimulates the liver, corrects constiy&-
tion and relieves a clogged system. Write for
samples, Garfield Tea Co., Brooklyn, N, Y,
' THE REAL BOWERY.
Its Day Is Passing, and Few of Us
Have Known Its Inmost Com
: . plioations.
The real Bowery has never been
written up, and probably it never will,
because it is swiftly passing. Hun.
dreds of attempts have been made by
those who have not even penetrated
the surface of its reserve. Its heart
and soul—for the Bowery has both,
ag well as reserve—are a gealed boolk
to the writers. It is a Sargasso Sea
littered with derelicts of all worlds,
drifting back and forth with the end:
less ebb and flow of the tide, while
all about them is the ceaseless activ
ity of commerce, of development, muy
ing onward and upward despite tha
ceaseless cross current, which no it
erary mariner, cruising in these un:
charted waters, can understand.
Those who know it best, and have
some skill in writing as well as some
understanding, are so overwhelmed
by its endless complications, its in
finity of comtradictions—its astonish
ing goodness and its frightiul deprav
ity—the baffling mystery of itsywon.
derful humanness, and its fantastic
mystery, that they do not dare at
tempt to write even what they know.
Only one man in all literature could
have interpreted the Bowery-—and Bal
zac 18 dead.
Most of us know the Bowery
through fugitive newspaper sketches
and fearsome, lurid melodramas, The
gkotches present certain phases more
or less intelligently, but the melo
dramas, endlessly repeated, have bullt
worthy even of being scoffed at, so
far as any consideration of truth s
concerned. But these cheap melo
dramas, endlessly repeated, have built
up a fictlon that has come to be ac
cepted as the reality—From Every
body’s.
Old Nord Alexis.
The wonderful old president gen
eral, Nord Alexis, then at least nine
ty-three years old, and possibly nine
ty-eight, resisting the advice of his
minilsters to flee and stubbornly
maintaining that his troops would
defeat Gen. Simon’s forces in the bat
tle expected, and prevent their ad
vance upon the capital. It is almost
impossible to number the revolutions
and civil wars that have ravaged the
republic and prevented all progress
during the 104 years since Dessalines
led the victorious slaves to over
throw the power of France, but sure
ly there never was a more stirring
or dramatic situation than that in
which, the half-blind 2ld president is
such a picturesque figure—~New York
Herald.
—‘——w
B'OMAM.thosl Ugly, grizzly, gray haire. VUee LA CREOLE' HAIR RESTORER, Price, SI,OO, retall,
.FAMOUS VESSEL WRECKED.
Barge Dessoug, wrich Brought “Cleco
patra’s Needie,” Ashore.
The barge Dessoug, once famous as
the palatial yacht of the Khedive of
Hgypt and later celebrated as the ves
sel that brought from Egypt to New
York the obelisk known as ‘Cleo
patra’s Needls,” which stands in Cen
tral Park, ended her career by found
ering below the Delaware Capes, 12
miles east by north of North Beach
life saving station. Her orew of four
men was rescued by the revenue cut
ter Onondaga and landed at Norfolk.
Few vesseis have had a more check.
ered career than the Dessoug. Built
at Denton, Seetland, in 1864, for the
Khedive of Egyp: she enjoyed fifteen
years the' distinction of being one of
the most palatial royal yachts afloat.
In 1879 she was bought by Willian
H. Vanderbit to transport the fa
mous obelisk. The government spe
cially detailed Lieutenant Commander
Gorring, U. 8. N, to take command
of tha ship on the voyage from Igypt.
It was impossible to get the obetisk
into the Dessoug’'s hold, so the yacht
was placed in drydoek and a hole
20 feot long and 12 feet wide was
cut in the starboard bow below the
water line. Through this aperture
the immense stone was rolled and
made securs. On June 12, 1880, the
Deassoug left Hgypt for New York.
She narrowly escaped foundering in
a terrific storm which broke her pro
peller shaft. She was navigated safe
ly to port by the use of sail after
it was believed she had been lost.
Mr. Vanderbitt had no further use
for the craft once the obelisk was
landed, 8o he sold her teo the QOcean
Steamship Company, For many years
she plied between Philadelphia and
Savannah, but again she was disposed
of to the American Towing and Light
erago Company, of Baltimore. Sinco
1901 she has followed the course of
antiquated craft and beenm clagsed as
a barge. She was bound from Balti
more for Portsmouth, N. H., with «
cargo of coal when lost. The Dou
soug broke adrift from the tug Buc
caneer in a gtorm, but was seen as
late as Wednesday off the Delaware
Capes by the Clrde liner George W.
Clyde. When abandoned by the orow
she had five feet of water in her hold.
—New York Times.
! Why He Didn’t Have to Work.
“But,” said the good old lady, “why
don’'t you go to work?”
Why, ma'am” began the disreputa.
ble old loafer, “yar see, I got a wife
an’ filve children to support——-"'
“But how can you support them
¥ you don’t go to work?”
“As I was a-sayin’, lady, I got a
~ wife an’ five ohildren to support me.”
—Catholic Standard and Times.
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eoncia FARM LANDS
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ANY BIZE TRACTS. TERMB GIVEN,
lam the pioneer real estate man of South
Georgin, l{,:"e loonted thousands of people
here from other seetions. I know the paople
and the country. I have farms that must 0o
sold, If you want the chance of your life to
buy a home cheap, address |
J. R. MONROE, Abbeville, Georgia.
1 E II 0 .t.
|
i —For Desirable Locations on the Line of the—
ATLANTA, BIRMINGHAM & ATLANTIC RAILROAD
! TRAVERSING PRODUCTIVE GEORGIA AND ALABAMA.
| There is no section in the country offering better op
portunities for farming, manufacturing plants, fruit grow
ing and stock raising,
The A. B. & A. furnishes unsurpassed transportation
facilities, operating from Birmingham and Atlanta to
Brunswick, Thomasville and Waycross, affording through
Brunswick, Steamship freight service on quick schedules
for New York, Boston and other eastern markets.
| Should you desire to locate in this ‘“‘Garden Spot of
'the South,”” it will pay you to communicate with either
' of the undersigned.
'J. R. ROWLAND, W. H. QUIGG,
Traffic Manager, General Freight Agent,
. W. H. LEAHY, General Passenger Agent, Atlanta, Ga.
RI & |
¥ Throa’ and Lungs et
EHEM necd just the protection against cold i
S 5 and disease that is obtained from EOG
K 4 Piso's Cure. If you have n‘Mt\
Ry or cold, slight or serious, begin tak- E@J
o 8 ing Piso’s Cure today and econtinue
phkg until you are well, 6ure the cough EElll
L() while it is fresh, when a few doses PR3
PR of Pieo’s Cure may be all that you S 8
AN will need. Famous for half & gen- |
MM tury. Pleacsat to taste. Free from
W opiates anc harmful ingredients.
aiaßd At all druggists’, 25 ets,
Y AR | R e ;
i G &}
m
The man who thinks talk is cheap
hasn't been up against the long-dis
tance telephone,
. . N —— —————————————————
It Removes
Relieves the aches and faverishness.
Contalns No Acetanilido
. —————————
HELP Insist on Having
von l)r,l;.#lAmEL’s Preparation
WOMEN @ "be Siaadard Komedr.
send for book, “Reliet tor Women”
YRENCH DRUG CO., 30 W, 324 §t,, N. Y. City.
et s, .3¢ Yo
§ _Weßuy _oOR% ‘
IFU R s b 'e‘ ‘ f'"!)\
Hides and 0 %
f Wool ' s
i Feathers, Tallow, Beeswax, Ginseng, {O3
Golden Seal,(Yellow Root), Mey Apple,
i Wild Ginger, etc. We are dealers; o
established in 1856--""Over half a century in “
Louisvilla""—and can do better for you than
agents or commission merchants, Reference,
| any Bank in Louisvill. Write for weekly
price list and shipping tags.
: M. Sabel & Sons,
227 E. Market Bt. LOUISVILLE, KY.
' ] AR O| A 4
e ———————————— . e S
LOOKEep 8
It buys m Strict & >
EWCIM; v [,;:
MACHINE MONES
i H Lo
! And has all the up-to-date improvements that
Thorsughly dependabls materisl sns Bonoumiels
u (
?;R:Lefl. l{?a::lc&gunt&l{&?p ufibfim
tlon how to tw them, and (he. outdt will be oond
i you “Froight Free” cn
(|9O DAYS FREE TRIAJ
) . T W IRECT at ONB
e ) I‘l§(m"[‘?mvlnz you ::
P KA Jobber's, )lmmflor'l
\ ..\_,"{f / f&n-nt'lpr u;m solle
3 BT, T y u!nfi'
\flg;.‘.‘*‘m&s \ a'fi?"::.‘;::'fn'}chm they
\.\.‘_JlW h - ;‘g‘ima ;/end :‘t O;l%’lfi for Ofi
N 7 ) g‘y[ €Ol Ji BIG NOW URER
t[/ ‘” SEWING MACHINE
) .\{ ) CATALOGUR |
Jd,, 0 Most complote and z
R Y et Yook ot
| e ) |ed in the Bouth, Itm&
! ; : i ures and dnorlbuova
part and particular
: ‘Gb*rea.tesc line of postiively High-Grude Bewlog
Bl Machines ever offered. Weo are the largest &m
| Machine distributors in the Sowih, and, at
asked, for guatity guaranteed. our Machines are une
matohabler This catalogue describes and prices
high-grade Pianos, Organs, Bteel Ranges, €
fltnven. Heeting Stoves, Phonographs, flq"\‘l:?a
Tollet Bets, Prompt shipments, safe dcl‘:xg.l
satistaction guaranteed, or your money
MALSBY, SHIPP & CO.,
BN Dept, 3. 418. Forsyth Streot, ATLANTA, GEORGIA
e R
I'W.L‘;b’bfifc%’ms I
S3OO SHOES $3 50
e, ) S r‘ .
V 3 |
Y LA |
S \ = v\ 4
4W, 4 )
P " " - ~‘
£ o | 1Y)
N NS e I
ke R 0. ‘/;7 o
s e e/ (5 !
. o W ey
&Y ne [
Al BOY'S SHOES ~
%1.00 T0%3.00 Voot
The Roason I Make and Sell More Men’s $3.00
& $8.50 Bhoes Than Any Other Manufacturer
is because I give the wearer the benefit of the most
complete organjzation of trained experts and skilled
shoemakers in the country,
The solectlon of the leathers for each part of the shoe,
and every dotall of ths mnklnli in every department, is
looked after bg the best shosmakers in the shoe industry.
If I could o owdou how carefully W, L. Dol‘::ll shoes
are made, g.ou would then understand why th:xn d thelr
shape, fit Detter, and wear longer than any of make,
My Method of Tanning the Boles makes them Mors
Flexible and Longer Wearing than any others.
Shoes for Every Memhér of the Family,
Men, Boys, Women, Misses and Childrens
For rale by shoe dealers everywhere,
BAUTION ! None genuine without W, L. Donglas
name and price stamped on bottom,
Feat Color Eyelets Used Exclusively, Catalog malled free,
W. L. DOUGLAS, 167 Spark st., Brockton, Mass.
—————————————— — 4 so———
¥ nfMicted ’l‘h 5 E w t
saew wenk LIOMPSON SLYE waier
“—“
(At-2'09)