Newspaper Page Text
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Tho Eminent Divine’s Sunday
Discourse.
Subject: “The !EvU of Sclfishnef>s”—Help
Others to Bear Their Burdens—It is a
Christian's Outy to Encourair® and
Aid His Cojnrades in Life’s Battle.
,, , ■ -
. I’o.Vi
„ r EXT: ____ y ? on
■ Christ. Galatian^
and , so fulfill , the law of »
2.
Every man for himself! If there bs room
for only one more passenger in the lifeboat
get in yourself. If there be a burden to ;
lift, you supervise while others shoulder thaj it.
Yon be the digit while others are
ciphers on the right hand side—nothing in
themselves, but augmenting you. In oppo
sition to that theory of selfishness Paul ad
vances in my text the gospel theory, “Bear
ye one another's burdens and so fulfill the
law of Christ.”
Everybody has burdens. Sometimes
they com* down upon the shoulders, soma
times they come down upon the head,
sometimes"they come assembly, down upon they the all heart,
Looking over hny but each seem has
Well and bright and easy, of them one have
a burden to lift, and some Paul to
more than they can lift. proposes
split up these burdens into fragments. You
take part of mine, and I must take part of
yours, and each one will take part law of the of
others, and so we will fulfill the
Christ.
Mrs. Appleton, of Boston, the daughter
of Daniel Webster, was dying after long
illness. The great lawyer after pleading
an important onse in the courtroom on his
way home stopped at the house of his
daughter and went into her sickroom. She
said to him, “Father, why are you out to
day in this cold weather without an over
coat?” Thegreat’lawyer went into the next
room and wa- in a flood of tears, saying,
* “Dying herself, yet thinking only of me.”
Oh, howmuoh more beautiful is care for
others than this everlasting taking care of
oursolve • High up in the wall of the tem
pie of Baalbec there are three stones, eaeli
weighing 1100 tons. They were lifted up by
a style ot machinery that is now among
the lost arts. But in my text is the gosnel
machinery, by which the vaster and the
heavier tonnage of the world’s burden is to
be lifted from the crushed heart ot the hu
man race. What you and I most need to
learn is the spirit of helpfulness. If he
Encourage the merchant. have a
superior style of goods, tell him so. If he
have with bis clerks adorned the show
windows and the shelves, compliment his
taste. If he have a good business he locality,
if he have had great success, if have
brilliant prospects for the future, recognize
all this. Be not afraid that he will become
arrogant and puffed up by your approval.
Before night some skopgoing person will
come in and tell him that bis prices are ex
orbitaut and that his goods are of an in
Sertor'quality and that his show wiDdow
gave promise of far better things than he
found inside. Before the night of the day
in which you say encouraging words to
that merchant there will be some crank,
male or female, who will come into the
store and depreciate everything the and haul
down enough goods from shelves to fit
out a family tor a whole winter without
buying a cent’s woVth. If the merchant
beagrocer there will be some one before
night who will come into his establishment
and taste of this and taste of that and
taste of everything else, in that way steal
ing all the profits of anything that be may
purchase-buying three apples while he
is eating one orange!
Before the night of the day when you
approve that merchant he will have a bad
debt which he will have to erase, a bad
dpbt made by someone who has moved
away from the neighborhood without destination, giv
ing any hint of the dIrco of
Before the night ot the day when you have
littered encouraging words to the mer
chant there will be some woman who will
return to his store and say she had lost
her purse; she left it there in the store, she
brought it th#re, she did not take it away,
she knows it is there, leaving you to make
any delicate and complimentary inference
that you wish to make. Before night that
merchant will hear that some style of
goods of which he has) a large supply is
going out of fashion, and there will be
some one who will come into the store and
pay a bill under protest, saying he has
paid it before, but the receipt has been
Iost. Now, encourage that merchant, not
fearing that ho will become arrogant or
puffed up, for there will be before night
enough unpleasant words said to keep him
irom becoming apoplectic with plethora
ot praise. '
Encourage newspaper men. If you
knew how many annoyances they elaborate have, if
you understood that their most
articie is sometimes flung out because
there is such great pressure on the ool
umns, and that an accurate report of a
speech is expected, although the utterance
be so indistinct the discours'd is one long
stenographic gue=s, and that the midnight
which finds you asleep demands that they
be awake, ana that they are sometimes
ground between the wheels of our great
brain manufactories; sickened at the often
approach of men who want complimentary
newspaper notices or who want newspaper
retraction; one day sent to pugilistic report a burial,
the next day to report a encoun
ter; shifted from place to place by sudden
revolution which is liable to take place
any day in our great journalistic establish
meats; precarious lire becoming more and
more precarious—it you understood it you
you would be more sympathetic. be Be affa
ble when you have not an ax to sharp
ened on their grindstone. Discuss in your
mind what the nineteenth century would
be without the newspaper and give en
couraging words to all who are engaged in
this interest, from the chief of editorial
department down to the hoy that throws
the (horning or evening newspaper into
yourbksement window.
Entourage mechanics. They will plumb
the pipes, or they will calcimine the, ceil
ings.jor they will put down the carpets, or
they fashion [will tho grain wardrobe. the doors, Be not or amongthose they will
who fever say anything to a me«hauic ex
cept lo find fault, if he has done a job
well, tell him it is splendidly done. The
book >9 well bound, the door is well grained,
the chandelier is well swung, the work is
grandly accomplished. Be anything not among to those their
employers who neversxy
einplhyes except to swear at them. Do not
bo afraid you will make that mechanic so
pufiejd wantto U I' be and arrogant with he working will never apron again or
seen
iu shirt sleeves, for heiore the night comes
of that day when yob brought praise him there
will; he a lawsuit against him
beciiise he did not finish his work as soon
as hi! promised it, forgetful of the fact that
his fife has been sick and two of ills chil
<1 re frlmve died of scarlet fever and lie has
hadfa felon on a finger of the right hand,
Dei cunced perhaps because the paint is
ver faint in color, Dot recognizing the
fact that the mechanic himself has been
che ted out of the right ingredients, and
t!;:; he did net find out the trouble in
tiffi cr scolded at bec&uho lie scams to
lav , lameda hone by urr'.' - '"?'.’! shefing,
Wbep the horro has for months h.Yd
or r gtouc or spriDghult. You feel that
you Snve the right to find fault with a me
ohmic when he ''jes il). Do you ever
praise a mechanic when he does well?
Exournge the farmers. They ceme in
to ymrstores, ; ou meet them in with' tho city
mart"'.., you often associate them
ia tie summer months. Office seekers go
tnriugh the land and they stand on politi
cal platforms, and they tell the fanners
thestorv fanner," about the independent life they of a
giving flattery where
oujbt to give sympathy. Independent o"f
wllit? I was brought up ob a farm, I
worked on a farm, 1 know all about
it I hardly saw a city until I
"rown and I tell you mat
thire are no class of people in this
will eointry who have it harder and
more need your sympathy, than
tarv.ers. Independent of what? Of the
curatlio that stings tlie ponoh trees, of
the rust In the wheat, of the long rain with
the rye down? Independent of the grass¬
hopper, of the locust, of the army wori-a, of
the potato bug? Independent of the
drought that burns up the harvest? Inde¬
pendent of the cow with the hollow horn,
or the sheep with the foot rot, or the pet
horse with a nail in his hoof? Independent
of the cold that freezes out the winter
grain? Independent c* the snow bank out
of which he must shoviw himself? Indepen
dent of the cold weather when he stands
thrashing his numbed fingers around his
body to keep them from being frosted? Ih
dependent of the frozen ears and the
frozen feet? Independent of what?
Fancy farmers who have made their
fortunes in the city and go out In the
country to build houses with all the
modern Improvements and make farming
a luxury may not ne,ed any solace, but the
yeomanry who got their living out of the
soil and who that way have to clothe their
families and educate their children and
pay their taxes and meet the Interest on
mortgaged farms—such men find a terrific
struggle. I demand that, office seekers
and politicians fold up their .gaseous independent and
imbecile speeches about substitute the word
life of a farmer and some
of comfort drawn from the fact that they
are free from city conventionalities and
city epidemics and city temptations,
Encourage the doctors, ton praise the
doctor when he brings you up from an
awful .crisis of disease, but do skillful you praise
the doctor when, through disease, treat
ment of the incipient stages of he
keeps you from sinking down to the awTul
crisis? There is a great deal of cheap and
heartless wit about doctors, but I notice
that the people who get ofT the wit are the
first to send for a doctor when there is any¬
thing the matter. There are those who
undertake to say in our day that doctors
are really useless. One man has written a
book entitled, “ Every Man His Own Doe
tor.” That author ought to write one more
book entitled, “Every Man His Own Un
dertaker.” “Oh,” says some one, “ phy
siciaus in constant presence of pain get
hard hearted! ” Do they ? The most cele
brated surgeon of the lust generation stood
in a clinical department of^one of the Now
York medical eolreges, the "students gath
ered in the amphitheater to see a very
painful operation on a little child. The old
surgeon said: “ Gentlemen, excuse me if
I retire. These surgeons can do this as
well as I can, and ns I get older^t; gives me
more and more distress to see pain.”
Encourage the lawyers. They are often
cheated out of their fees, and so often have
to breathe the villainous air of courtrooms,
and they so often have to bear ponderous
responsibility, and they have to maintain
against the sharks in their profession honored the
dignity of that calling which was
'by the fact that the only man allowed to
stand on Mount Sinai beside the Lord was
Moses, the lawyer, and that the Eneour- IJiblo
speaks of Christ as the advocate.
age lawyers in their profession of trans
eandent importance—a profession honored
by having on the bench a Chief .Tustice
Story and at the bar a Rufus Choate;
Encourage the teachers in our public
schools—occupation arduous and poorly
compensated. In all the cities when there
comes a lit of economy on the part of offi
ciais the first thing to do is always to cut
down teachers’ salaries. To take forty or
fifty boys whose parents suppose them
precocious and keep the parents from
finding out their mistake; to taicoan empty
head aud fill it; to meet the expectation of
parents who think their children at fifteen
years of age ought to be mathematicians
and metaphysicians and rhetoricians; to
work successfully that great stuffing ma
chine, the modern school system, is a very
arduous work. Encourage them by the
usefulness and tho everlastingness and the
magnitude of their occupation, and when
your children do well compliment the in
structor, praise the teacher, thank the ed
ueator. them
' Encourage all invalids by telling
[how 'ailments many "who you got have well, known and with not by the telling same
jtlieoi whether of their the color sunken of their eye or cheek asking is really- them
beetle or mentioning cases in which that
style of disease ended fatally or telling
them how badly thev look. Cheerful
words are more soothing than chloral,
more stimulating than cognac, more tonic
thafo bitters. Many an invalid has re
covered through the influence of cheerful
surroundings. by yourself
Encourage all starting in life
becoming reminiscent. Established mer
chants, by telling these young merchants
when you got vour first customer,and how
you luncheon sat behind the counter eating your
with one eye on the door. Ss
tablished lawyers, encourage young law
yers by telling of the time when you broke
down in your first speech. Established
ministers of the gospel, examination encourage of young theo
ministers by merciful
logical candidates, not walking around
with a profundity and overwhelmingness
of manner as though you were one of the
eternal decrees. Doctor established, by
telling voung doctors how fo"r you yourself
once mistook the measles scarlatina.
And if you have nothing to say that is en
eourugiug, O man, put your teeth tightly
together and cover them with the curtain
of your lip, compress your lips and put
your hand over your mouth aud keep
"still. thoughts of
Encourage the troubled by
release and reassociation. * Encourage the
aged by thoughts of eternal juvenescence. troughs
Encourage the herdsman amid the
of sin to go back to the banquet at the
father’s., homestead. Give us toties in the
major key,instead of the minor. Give us
“Coronation” instead of “Naomi.” You
have seen cars so arranged another that one car
going down the hill rolled ear up
the hill. They nearlv balanced each other,
And every man that finds life up hill ought
to be helped by those who have passed the
heights and are descending to the vale,
Oh, let us bear in one England another’s died burden^ leaving his
A gentleman The that
fortune by wilt to two sons. son
staid at home destroyed the father’s will
and pretended that the brother who was
absent was dead and buried. The absent
brother after awhile returned aud claimed
his part of the property. Judges and
jurors were to be bribed to’ say that the re
turned brother and son was no son at all,
but onlv an impostor. The trial came on.
Sir Matthew Hale, tho pride ot the English
courtroom aud for twenty years the pride
of jurisprudence, heard that that injustice
was about to he practiced. He put off
his official robe. He put on the garb of
a miller. He went to tlie village where
that trial was to take place. He entered
tho courtroom. He somehow got empan
eled as one ot the jurors. The bribes came
around, and tho man gave ten pieces ot
gold to the other jurors, but as thi» was
only a poor miller the briber gave to him
only five pieces of gold. A verdict was
brought in rejecting the rights of this *e
turned brother. He was to have no share
in the inheritance. “Hold, my lord!” said
the miller. “Hold; we are not till agreed
on this verdict These other men have
received ten pieces of gold five.” in bribery, “Who
and I have received only from?” said
are you? Where do you come
the judge on the bench. The response
was: “I am from Westminster Hall;
my name is Matthew Hale, lord chief
justice of the king’s bench. Off ot that
place thou villain!” Aud so tho inju.-tioa
was bulked, aud ro the young mau got bis
inheritance. It was ali for another that
Sir Matthew Hale took oil his robe and put
on the garb of a miller. And so Christ took
off His robe of royalty and put on the attire
of our humanity, and iu that disguise lie
wpa our eternal portion. Now are we the
sons of God! Joint heirs! We went oft
home enough, hut" _ got back
from sure we
iu time to receive our eternal inlier tance.
And if Christ bore our burden, surely we
can afford to bear each other’s burdens,
The of j the ; recent j experiments
success induced
with automobile fire engines has
til® Paris Municipal Council to cons.der
th® question of intrtj.iuelug automatic an.,
antoniobilo machines for watering aim
sweeping the streets.
GOOd
Blood!
Your heart beats over cue hun¬
dred thousand times each day.
One hundred thousand suppiiesof
good or bad blood to your brain.
Which is it?
If bad, impure blood, then your
brain aches. You are troubled
with drowsiness yet cannot sleep.
You are as tired in the morning
as at night. You have no nerve
power. Your food does you but
little good.
Stimulants, tonics, headache, I
powders, cannot cure you; but
4 P f
N?
ft!
B H will. skin and It makes bowels the liver, perform kidneys, their
| I proper purities work. from the It removes blood. And all im- it
I makes the blood rich in its life
| giving properties.
To Hasten
Recovery.
You will be more rapidly cured
if you will take a laxative dose of
Ayer’s pills each night. They
arouse the sluggish liver and thus
cure biliousness.
S WW/ai to our Bocto.ro.
have the exclusive i rvlcea of
the some United of tho States, most emlne Write ent freely physicians ail tho in
particulars Address, iu your case. DR. J. C. ATE”,
Lowell, XIaaa.
HER DECISION.
The Problem Was a Perplexing One, But She
Settled It Speedily. .7
j n charming Indecision she gazed at
t] the t two nnrtrn.lta portraits. 'Phe The nnoertnintv uncertainty in In
her heart clouded her eyes just cyiougli
to soften and Tender more bewitching
c,T 1 ) ] { , I1 (i or
"Which shall it be?” she
From one to the other of the pic¬
tures her glance wandered. Now her
countenance would for a moment
beam .with the joy of a settled choice,
only to darken again in a moment with
perplexity.
“If I could only say which one!”
A sigh fluttered within the tender
bosom and escaped from the rosy
lips.
“Will is dark. I love dark men.”
She clasped her hands and raptur¬
ously scrutinized the nearest portrait.
“But Henry is noble and goo’d.
A faint flush crept into her cheeks.
Her thoughts were with the other pic¬
ture.
“One of them I must marry.”
Itising to her feet she paced the
floor nervously. It was a life’s hap.
piness that hung trembling in the bal¬
ance.
"I am sure that both men love nje
with ail thoir hearts.”
Hand was pressed in hand, until the
blood forsook the taper fingers witn
the frantic pressure.
“Both of them—but stay.”
It was a startled look that flashed
“Yes, yes it is surely so.”
Relief succeeded anxiety, and a
smile of sweet content flittered about
her lips.
“If I marry Will, Henry—”
She leaned forward fondly toward
tiie portraits.
“Henry will give me a wedding
present. II* I marry Henry, I just
know Will would be huffy and never
give me a thing.”
She pondered a moment in silence.
“Yes,” she softly whispered at last,
“I shall marry Will.”
High resolve invested her personal¬
ity with a new Interest.—R. Apnot in
Illustrated American.
When Meats Should be Eaten.
Professor H. W. Wiley, chief of the
chemistry division of the agricultural
department at Washington, makes
some statements regarding food which
are startling to many of us V’ho buy oil
poultry alive and have it killed
the spot and insist upon having fresh
meat. He bases his statements on his
knowledge of chemistry and a series
of experiments. Meats, he says, should
never be eaten until .they have ripened
like game, a process which takes
about three weeks, Chickens should
be treated as they are in Germany,
hung out of a window until the head
falls to the ground, when they are
ready for eating. Fish and eggs should
be eaten the ilay they are taken, al
An establishment has been opened
in Paris, France, for the sale of the
water of the Kiver Jordan for bap¬
tism, when the parents desire to use it,
and can afford to purchase it
ff r. La Creole Will Restore those Gray Hairs
-•
“Ua Creole” Hair Restorer is a Perfect Dressing and Restorer. Price $1,00.
INDIAN AFFECTIONATENESS.
la tbe Family Relation Ibe Redman Shows an
Attractive Side.
Indians are not "ashamed to show
thoir affection for one another, says
George Bird Grinnell In the Atlantic.
Chums who have been separated for
any length of time are likely, when
they meet, to put their arms around
and hug and kiss one another. Often
two young men will be seen standing
or sitting close together and holding
hands, or with the arm of one about
the nock of the other. My old father
among the Blackfeet always puts his
arms around me and hugs me when
ive meet after an absence. The pure¬
ly social side of life in an Indian camp
could not fail to interest any one who
might be introduced to.it.
In tho family relation the Indian
shows a side which is attractive. He
loves his wife and family as we love
ours, and he thinks of them before
thinking of himself. But besides the
natural affection that any animal has
for its young the Indian cares for his
children for another reason. He is in¬
tensely patriotic. His pride in his
tribe and its achievements is very
strong. He glories in the prowess of
its braves and the wisdom of its chiefs;
his soul thrills as he hears told over
and over again the stories of the vic¬
tories which his people have won over
their enemies; he rejoices at the return
of a successful war party. In the chil¬
dren growing up in the camp, in the
boys shooting their bluut-hcaded ar¬
rows at the blackbirds and ground
squirrels, or yelling and shouting with
excitement in the mimic warfares
which constitute a part of their sport;
iu the girls whom he sees nursing
their puppies or helping their mothers
at their work, he recognizes those who
a few' years hence must bear the re¬
sponsibilities of the tribe, uphold its
past glories or protect it from danger,
as he and his ancestors have done.
No wonder he loves them. Indians
seldom punish their children, yet usu¬
ally these are well trained, though
chiefly by advice and counsel. When
a tiny little boy, who has Just received
his first how -and arrows, starts out
of the lodge to play with his fellows,
his mother is likely to say to him, "Be
careful, now, do not do any thing bad,
do not hit any one, do not shoot any
one with your arrows. You may hurt
people with these things, if you are not
careful. I’ay attention to what I say.”
Burglar’s Tools.
don’t suppose H there is a full kit
, tools In existence, though .
tile of burglar's plenty,”
time was when they were
observed observed an an oia old detective, aeteeuve. “The
is, burglaiy, that is, sclentiiic pioi-s
sional burglary of the real kind, is a
lost art, to be heard of no more ex¬
cept iu narratives of the past. Time
locks on bank safes Began the dis¬
appearing act for the burglar, and tne
improvement iu the manufacture of
th^ sampler safes did the rest. The
manufacture of the ordinary steel
safe has so Improved that it is next
to impossible to open them in the
limited time, that a burglar would have
to work on them. There are kits of
burglars’ tools in police museums, no
doubt, but they are like a lot of the
counterfeit money which is captured
every now and then, made for exhibi¬
tion purposes, as the money is manu¬
factured expressly to be captured. I
have seen kits of burglars’ tools that
cost more money to manufacture than
does any surgeon’s outfit. The fiaest
kind of workmanship was necessary
to turn them out. But that was thirty
or forty years ago, when a person
rarely picked up a newspaper that did
not contain an account of a bank burg¬
lary somewhere. There are robberies
heard of these days, but they are in¬
side jobs, and Are done by sneaks and
others during the daylight hours. To
open a modern bank safe it would re¬
quire a force of half a dozen men and
probably six to ten hours of work. The
metals used in it are as hard as the
tools used for drilling, and some of the
inside casting metals about the locks,
where drilling would most ykely be
done, is so placed that it wiil revolve
like a cylinder if an attempt is made
to drill it. bat behind all this is an¬
other fact, ai^d important one ^n
this connection, the bank burglar
of 'years ago is dead, and he
has no successor in his business. Like
iu all other things, it was a question
of the survival of the fittest, and the
burglar was not fit.”—Washington
Star.
The Odor of Perfumes.
Some perfumes have a stronger
scent than others, some give out their
fragrance at special times, Certain
flowers need the warmth of the sun,
some the soft rain, and others the cool
air before they venture to throw
out their redolence into the atmos¬
phere. Bartholm says: “The odor of
the rosemary indicates the coast of
Spain more than ten leagues out to
sea.” And another writer declares
that the “whole air of South Africa is
filled with the smoke and odor of per¬
fume.” In,-Capua there was one long
street called “The Seplasia,” which
consisted entirely of perfume and un¬
guent shops. And in Bombay the
greater proportion of the wares exhib¬
ited in the bazaars are perfumes of
jndless varieties.
Wickwire— I see that somebody has
invented a machine for cleaning knives
in a restaurant. Yabsley—I thought
that work was always left to the board¬
ers.—Indianapolis Journal.
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THE CREAMERY.
Butter must be sweet and clean. That is the first
requisite. It can not be perfectly sweet unless the place
in which it is made and all the utensils used in its manu¬
facture are perfectly dean.
The old rule was: “Do not use soap to clean the
churn ”—this referred to sticky rosin soaps.
Ivory Soap can be used freely; it is the best for
creameries or dairies, because it rinses easily and leaves
neither odor nor taste.
The vegetable oils of which Ivory Soap is made, and its purity,
fit it for many special uses for which other soaps are unsafe and
unsatisfactory. Cincinnati.
Copyright, 18W, by Tfce Proctor A Gamble Co.,
Wastes of Animal Life In Africa.
Although in some particulars oxen
show undoubted intelligence, in many
ways they are great fools. Thus they
seem to have no knowledge of what is
or is not good for them to eat In
Natal there grows an herb called ‘tu¬
lip,” which is nliuosit certain death to
cattle, a fact with wlich they must
have been acquainted for generations.
Yet thpy seem to eat it greedily when¬
ever they get a chance. Once I lost
twenty valuable trek oxen from this
cause alone. This and the tale of the
horse sickness, to say nothing of the
recent record of rinderpest, will show
the reader that farming in Africa is
not without its risks. Indeed, I know
no country where the waste of animal
life is so tremendous, although doubt¬
less as the land becomes inclosed and
proper buildings and winter food are
provided, it will greatly lessen.—Long¬
man’s Magazine.
Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Yonr I.ife Away.
To quit tobacco easily and forever, bo mag
netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To
Dac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men
strong. All druggists, 50c or 81. Cure euaran
teed. Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York.
The poet locks his heart to the individual
and opens it to the race.
State of Ohio. City of Toledo. 55.
Lucas County. ,
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the
senior partner of the firm of F. .7. Cheney &
Co., doin# and business in tho City of Toledo.
County State aforesaid, and that said firm
will nay »be sum of one hundred dot,ears for
each and every case of catarrh that cannot
be cured by the use of Hai.d’s Catarrh Cure.
Frank J. Cheney.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in my
presence, this 6th day of December,
<9EAT.>- A. D. 1880. A. W. (tTjEason.
C—*—) Catarrh Cure Notary Public. and
Hall’s is taken internally,
actsdirectly on the blood and mucous surfaces
of the system. Send for testimonials, free.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold Hall’s by Family DrngGrNts Pills 75c.
are the best.
If advice could be made an active principle
it . might accomplish good.
more
5o-To-Ba« tor Fifty ’Cento,
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes wealt
men strong, blood pure. 60c, SI. All druggists.
Fame is an imaginary perfume we once
d-reamed about. .
Fits permanently cured. No firs or nervous¬
ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free,
Dk. R. H. Kune, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething.softens the gums, reduces inflamma
tion,aliays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle.
Piso’fi Cure Is a wonderful Cough medicine,
rs. W. Pickbrt. Van Stolen and Blake
vps- Hrooklvu, N. Y., Oct. 26,1894.
The man Who lives for self is not missed
when ho dies.
To Caro Constipation Forever.
Take Cascarats Candy Cathartic. I0cor25c.
If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money
If you find you are being driven to despair
get out and walk.
Sour Stomach
•‘After I was Induced to try CASCA*
SETS, I will never be without thorn in the house.
My liver was In a very bad shape, and my head
ached and I had stomach trouble, Now. since tak¬
ing Cascarets, I feel flue. My wife has also used
them with beneficial results for sour stomach.”
Jos. KRIHL1NG, 1221 Congress St., St. Louis, Mo.
CANDY
av jym ? t n
TRACE MARK REOCiWRIO
Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do
Good, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe, 10c, 25c,60c.
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
Remedy Company, Chlengo, Montreal, New York. 318
NQ-TO-BAC Sold and guaranteed by all drug
gists to t lJRE Tobacco Habit.
OTTON is and will con¬
tinue to be the money
crop of the South. The
planter who gets the most cot¬
ton from a given area at the
least cost, is the one who makes
the most money. Good culti¬
vation, suitable rotation, and
liberal use of fertilizers con¬
taining at least 3% actual
will insure the largest yield.
We wiil send Free, upon application,
pamphlets that will interest every cotton
planter in the South.
GERHAN KALI WORKS,
93 Nassau St., New York.
Maisky & Company,
39 S. Broad St., Atlanta, Go.
Engines and Boilers
Steam Water Heaters, Steam Pumps and
Penberthy Injectors,
1 1
rv
r tC Bilii
Manufacturers and Dealers In
3VriIj3L.iS,
Corn Mills, Feocl Mills, Cotton GinMachin
t cry and Grain Separators.
SOLID and INSERTED Saws, Saw Teeth and
Locks, Knight’* Patent Doga, Birdsall Saw
Mill and Engine Repairs, Mill Governors, Supplies. Grate Price
Bars and a full line of
and quality of goods guaranteed. 'Catalogue
free by mentioning this paper.
IE WILL DYE FOR YOU. We have
the largest plant in the South, All kinds
of Cleaning and Dyeing done. Write for
__prices. Excelsior Steam Bye Works,
63 Decatur St., Atlanta, Ga. W. E. Hayne, Mgr,
@ ' I FOB 14 CENTS
I Wewistito gain this yearSOO, 000
„ y't , and hence offer
x new customers, Radish, l()c
1 Pkg. i:> Pay Ripe Cabbage, IOo
IPkg. 1 “ Early Earliest Red Be.et, 10c
A 1 “ Long Lighfcn’g Cucumber 10c
X ® t " Salzer's Best Lettuce, 1C.0
1 “ California Fig Tomato, 20c luc
1 ** Early Dinner Onion,
3 " Brilliant Flower Seeds, 1$l.To lie
'if jl a hi Worth Above mail great you $1.00 Plant 10 pkgs. free, , and for worth together 14 Seed e enu, $1.00, Catalogue with we will oar I
t upon receipt of thia notice A 14c and 0
postage. \Vo invite your trade A ||
know when you once get.alongwifch- try Salzer’s
seedsyouwillBover them. Onion Seed 68c. and x 9
...out ib. Potatoes *1.20 §
Sup a at 0
“ a Bbl. Catalog alone oc. No. AC
AI//.KK SEED CO., LACROSSE, M IS. A
•i
CATALOGUES OF THOUSANDS OF
PUAY« 2 PIiAYSl
SENT FREE SENT FREE
Lnre««i Auartaaeni In tho Worth AH kinds
of Books for Home Amusemeate. ladudf Tg 100 New
L’laya Just I sewed. Charades, Reciters, Children’s Works, Plays, Fairy
Negro Plays, Dialogues, Mrs. JnrleY’# Whx Cbaraclerj only,
Plays, Paper Scenery, Play* for Male Guide
Tableaux Vivanie, Make-Cp Selecting Materials, Plays, “ How Amateu to Make * Up.‘
lo the Stage, Guide to
SA.Mi'RL FRENCH, York City,
26 West 22tl Htreet, - New
npiUMifS ^^2SH5Pu5®Ofiice St.'
1« N. Pryor
DROPS Book testimonial? YSSJSs And iO <l?« J treatment
of v»
Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN’S SONS Box D, Atlanta G«;
TXT ANTED—Case of bad health that RIPANi
VV will not benefit. Send 6 cts. to Ripans Chemical
Co NewYork, for it) samples and loot) testimonials.
„
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