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.TALM AGE’S SEIiMON
Eminent Divine’s Bunday
Discourse.
Hrt: “Bundles of Life”—Inspiration
■.{iwn From a Homely Phrase—Life,
^Blritnal ^ftited—Bundles and Physical, is Divinely Pro-
Which Are Blessings.
It: Hi “The soul of my Lord shall bo
in the bundle of life with the Lord
Hod.”—I Samuel xxv,, 29.
Hutlful Abigail. In her rhythmic pica
Hie rescue of her Inebriate husband,
Hlifid Harrior, wlthiu ton days, addresses David,
In the words of the text. She
Bests Btually that his life, physically and in-
and spiritually, is a valuable
■age K or bundle, divinely bound up aud
Be divinely protected.
les phrase “bundle of life” I benrd many
in my fathor’s family prayers. Fam-
Iprayers Jis, because you know, day have frequent repeti-
about the by day they aoknowl-
ge the same blessings and deplore
out same frailties and sympathize
th about the same misfortunes, nnd I do
t know why those who lead at household
votlons should seek variety of composl-
n. That familiar prayer becomes the
useliold liturgy. I would not give one
my old father’s prayers for fifty eloeu-
tnary supplications. Again and again,
the morning and evening prayer, I Heard
Irequest ■he that we might all be bound up
bundle of life, but I did not know
111 a few days ago that the phrase was a
■e luring phrase.
the last spell of cold weather
ire were bun les that attracted the nt-
ition nnd the plaudits of the high heav-
l, iifortabio bundles of clothing on the way from
homes to the door of the
jslon ■wbanks room, and and said ns Christ the bundles stood passed: In the
■ked, HKdone aud ye clothed me. Inasmuch as
it unto one of the least of
^Kiy brethren Tin,sc bundles ye have mnltibly- done it
^■cssings are
on those who pack them.
Hfe on those who distribute them.
^Bvhal on those who receive them,
1 -at:If 11 1 aptitude did Abigail
^B"ct speak bundle of (he Is bundle life! of Bundle life: Oh, of
>recious
■es, B5ns, bundle of hopes, bundle of
bundle of destinies! Once in
R) a man writes his autobiography,
■b ^niplaco, of thrilling interest. The story of
the story of bis struggles,
Rry tihs! of his sufferings, the story of his
But if the autobiography of the
■eventful life were well written it
■•make many chapters of adventure,
Igedy, L of comedy, and there would
tve. an uninteresting step from cradle
Idle of memories are you! Boyhood
tries, I, with all its Injustices from piay-
with all its game with ball and bat
[kite lill and sled. struggles Manhood in starting—ob- memories,
your
ps, opposition,accidents, misfortunes,
s, successes. Memories of the first
prriage you ever saw solemnized, opened, of the
k at grave you ever saw of the
[i mighty wrong you ever suffered, of
first victory you ever gained. Memory
the hour when you were affianced, mem-
w of the first advent in your home, mem-
K of roseate cheek faded and of blue
■■closed in the last sleep, memory of
and of dirge, memory of great
of slow convalescence, memory of
H BTory when alt things vrero against you,
of prosperities that came in like
■ le. full tide of the sea, memories of a life-
What a bundle!
Bundle L of hopes and ambitions also is al-
fctartlng. every man and woman, especially at
^Uiat Wlmt gains he will harvest,
^Bbliss reputation he will achieve, or
Hrin. he will reach, or what love he
What makes collegeeommenee-
Hday ^Bc scudonls so entrancing to all diplomas of us as and wo
receive their
the garlands thrown to their feet?
Fy ! will be Faradays in science; they Willard will
Irkers Tennysons In poesy* they will be
in surgery; they will be Alexander
Lmiltons [race in national finance; they will be
|l Greeleys in editorial chair; they
|) be Websters in the Senate. Or she
llins, be a Mary Lyon in educational
|y or a Frances Willard on reforma-
Ifiltals. platform, or a Helen Gould in military
Or she will make home life
■ant Binagnlflcent with helpfulness and self-sacriflco
womanhood. Oh, what a
■le of hopes and ambitions! It is a
Hie H of garlands and scepters frpm
Hmette 1 would not take one sprig of
^Bnce. nor extinguish one spark of
They who start life without
Ht Ht hopes and inspiring ambitions
Hwill as well not start at all, for every
be a failure. Bather would I add
H* Hcause bundle, aud if I open it now it will
H I wish to take anything from
that ! may put into it more eoronots
Hosannas. Hdlt)
of faculties in every man and
woman! Power to think—to think
^■upward past and through all the future, to
Hole and higher than the highest
^Bherc ol' heaven, or to think downward
Is no lower abysm to fathom.
H-to think right, power to think wrong,
H to think forever, for, once having
^Bat to think, there shall be no terminus
^Bno exercise, and eternity itself shall
power to bid it halt. Faculties to
Hmaternal H-fllial love, conjugal love, paternal
lovo, love of country, love
Kl. ^Bieate Faculty of judgment, with scales
■ and yet so mighty they can
arguments, weigh emotions, weigh
■s, Hhat weigh heaven and hell. Faculty of
can climb mountains or tunnel
H wade seas or bridge them, accepting
Hg enthronement or choosing ever-
Hha- exile. Oh, what i} is to be a man!
^Be it Is to be a woman! Sublime and
bundle of faculties! The thought
^■taggers ^Biers me, overwhelms swamps me, me, stuns Oh, what me,
Hlls me, text iu
^B.and of life Abigail of my saw
which we ought to see in every
Hn Hw, yet immortal being!
also, that this bundle of life is
Hrly Hd directed. and Many disappeared a bundle because has
Hldress its way
B; has dropped, what and city no one town can
Hghborhood examination for or
it was intended. All great
|H ■l : : ng packages companies that have they appoint so many days misdi- of
Hie to dispose of them. All intelligent
He Hble know the importance of having a
H package plulnly directed, the
Bs. of the one to whom it is to go plainly
Baggage master and expressman
to know at the first glance to whom
K bundle of life that Abigail in my
■ Bie speaks of is plainly addressed. By
Bl. penmanship it is directed heaven- earthly
Bince However long may be the
Bial it travels its destination 13 the
B city of God on high. Every mile it
Ban away from that direction is by some
or infernal fraud practiced against
■There Br are those who put it on some
Beyance, track, who misplace it in some wrong
Borne who send it off or send it back
Biat diabolio miscarriage. The value
bundle is so well known all up and
In lonest the universe that there are 1,000,000
hands which are trying to detain
livert Ihe it or to forever stop its progress
lienees right direction. There are so many
I abroad to ruin your body, mind
soul that my wonder is not that so
my It, are destroyed for this world and the
Br but that there are not more who go
Bjery irremediably.
K human being is assailed at the
Hhmdie Within an hour of the time when
Hi. of life is made up the assault
Hers First of all there are the infantile
^Bodupou that threatou the body just
HBud earth / existence. Scarlet
Huh pneumonias aud diphtherias unvl
^Bul and the whole pack of epidemics
the cradle and threaten its oceu-
^Hwas HKnd infant Moses in the ark of bull-
not more imperiled by the mon-
■E the Nilo than every cradle is imper-
ailments all devouring. In after
years there are foes within and foes with-
out. Evil appetite joined by outside al¬
lurements. Temptations that have utterly
destroyed more people than now Inhabit
the earth. Gambling saloons and rummer-
les nnd plnces where dissoluteness reigns
supreme, enough in number to go round
nnd round the earth. Discouragements,
jealousies, revenges, mnlovolenftes, disap¬
pointments, swindles, arsons, conflagra¬
tions and cruelties, which make continued
existence of the human race a wonder- j
ment. Was ever any valuable bundle ever
so Imperiled address as this bundle ot bundle life? Oh,
look at the and get that go¬
ing In the right way! “Thou shalt love the
Lord thy God with all thy heart and soul
and mind and strength.”
Know also that a bundle may have In It
more than one Invaluable. There maybe
in It a photograph of a loved one and a
jewel embroidered for a carcanet. It m ay contain an
robe anil a Dorn’s Illustrated
Bible. A bundle may have two treasures.
Abigail In my text recognized this when
she said to David, “The soul of my lord is
bound In the bundle of life with the Lord
thy God.” And Abigail was right. We
may be bound up with a loving and sympa¬
thetic God. We may be as near to Him as
ever were emerald and ruby united In one
ring, ns ever were two deeds in one pack¬
age, as ever were two vases on the same
shelf, as ever were two valuables in the
same bundle. Together In time of sorrow.
Together in time of joy. Together on
earth. Together in heaven. Close com¬
panionship of God. Hear Him, “I will
never leave thee, nor forsake thee.” “For
the mountains shall depart and the hills be
removed, but My kindness shall not depart
from thee, neither shall the oovennnt of
,JIy peace be removed, saith the Lord that
bath mercy on thee.” And when those
Bibie authors compared God’s friend¬
ship to the mountains for height and
firmness they knew what they were
writing about; for they well knew what
mountains are. All those lands are moun¬
tainous. Mount Hermon, Mount Gilboa,
Mount Gerizlm, Mount Engedl, Mount
Horeb, Mount Nebo, Mount Pisgah, Mount
Olivet, Mount Zion, Mount Moriah, Mount
Lebanon, Mount Sinai, Mount Golgotha.
Yes, wo have the divine promise that all
those mountains shall weigh their anchor¬
age of rocks and move away from the
earth before a loving nnd sympathetic God
will move away from us if we love and
trust Him. Oh, if we could realize that
according to my text we may bound up
with that God, how independent it would
make us of things that now harass and an¬
noy and discompose and torment usl In¬
stead of a grasshopper being a burden, a
world of care would be as light as a
feather, and tombstones would be marble
stairs to the King’s palace, and all the
giants of opposition we would smite down
hip and thigh with great slaughter.
Know, also, that this buudle of life will
be gladly received when it comes to the
door of the mansion for which It was bound
and plainly directed. With what alacrity
and glee we await some package that has
been foretold by letter, some holiday pre¬
sentation, something that will enrich and
ornament our home, some testimony of ad¬
miration and affection! With what glow
of expectation we untie the knot and take
off the cord that bolds it together in safety,
and with wbut glad exclamation wo un¬
roll the covering and see the gift or pur¬
chase in all its beauty of color and propor¬
tion. Well, what a day it will be when
your precious bundle of life shall be opened
in the “bouse of many mansions,” amid
saintly and angelic and divine inspection!
The bundle may be spotted with the marks
of much exposure, it may bear inscription
after inscription to tell through what or-
deal it has passed, perhaps splashed all has of
wave and scorched of flame, but it
within undamaged of the journey. And
with what shouts of joy the bundle of life
will be greeted circle. by all the voices of the
heavenly home
In our anxiety at last to reaeh heaven
we are that apt awaits to lose sight of the glee at,all. or wel¬ We
come us if we get In
all have friends up there. They will some¬
how hear that we are coming. Such close
and swift and constant communication is
there between those uplands and these
lowlands that we will not surprise them by
sudden arrival. If loved ones on earth ex¬
pect our eoming visit and are at the depot
with carriage to meet us, surely we will
be met at the shining gate by old friends
now sainted and kindred nowglorifled. If
there were no angel of God to meet us and
show us the palaces and guide us to our
everlasting residence, these kindred would
show us the way and point out the
splendors and guide ns to our celes¬
tial home, bowered and fountained and
arched and illumined by a sun that never
sets. Will it not be glorious, the going in
and the settling down after all the moving
about and upsettings of earthly experience?
We will soon know all our neighbors, king-
ly, queenly, prophetic, apostolic, seraphic,
archangelie. The precious bundle marches of life
opened amid palaces and grand I
and acclamations. They will all bo so giad
we have got safely through. They saw us
down hero in the struggle. They saw us
when we lost our way. They knew when
we got off the right course. None of the
thirty-two ships that were overdue at New
York harbor in the storm of week before
last was greeted so heartily by friends on
the dock or the steam tugs that went out
to meet them at Sandy Hook as we
will be greeted in the heavenly
world if by the pardoning and pro-
tecting grace ot God we come to celestlaL
wharfage. We shall have to tell them of
the many across wrecks that we have amid passed Carib- on
the way wild seas and i
bean cyclones. It will be liko our arrival
some years ago from Now Zealand at Syd-
ney, people surprised that we got iu at all.,
because we were two days late, and some
of the ships expected bad gone to the bot¬
tom, and we had passed derelicts anl
abandoned crafts all up and down that aw-
fulohannel—our arrival in heaven all the
more rapturously welcomed because of the
doubt as to whether we would ever get
there at all.
Once there it will be found that the
safety of that precious bundle of life was
assured because it was bound up with the
life of God in Jesus Christ. Heaven could
not afford to have that bundle lost because j
it had been said in regard to its transporta-
tion and safe arrival, “Kept by the power
of God through faith unto complete salva¬
tion.” The veracity ot the heavens is in-
volved in its arrival. If God should fail !
souh^Lhe^'pHUirs‘ 3 of ° Jehovah's^^hrone |
would fall, and the foundations of the
eternal city would crumble, aud Infinite
poverties would dash down all the
chalices, and close all the banqueting halls,
and the river of life would change its
course, sweeping everything with desoia-
tion, and frost would blast all the gardens,
and immeasurable sickness slay the im- j
mortals, and the new Jerusalem beoome
an abandoned city, with no chariot wheel
on the streets and no worshippers in the
temple—a dead Pompeii of the skies, a
buried Herculaneum ot the heavens. Lest
any one should doubt, the God who cannot
lie smites his omnipotent hand on the side
of his throne and takes affidavit, declaring,
“As I live, saith the Lord God, I have
the thought is so glorious. Bound up with
God. Bound up with infinite mercy. Bound
up with infinite joy. Bound up with in-
finite purity. Bound up with infinite might.
That thought is more beautiful and glorl ■
ous than was the heroic Abigu’l, who at
the foot of the crags uttered, “Bound in
the bundle of life with tho Lord thy God!
Now, my hearer and reador, appreciate is
the value of that bundle. See that it
bound up with nothing mean, but with the
unsullied and the immaculate. Not with a
pebble of the shifting beach, but with the
kohinoor of the palace: not with some
fading regalia of earthly pomp, but with
the robe wuslieil and made white in the
blood of tho Lamb.
A Boom at Pittsburgh
A wave of prosperity in Pittsburg started j
every mill, factory and workshop to its I
fullest capacity.
peepiMi
/
Cw st lll
Do not think for a single
moment that consumption will
ever strike you a sudden blow.
It does not come that way.
It creeps its way along.
First, you think it is a little
cold; nothing but a little hack¬
ing cough ; then a little loss in
weight; then the then a harder cough;
fever and tho night
sweats.
The suddenness comes when
you have a hemorrhage.
Better stop the diseaso wliils
It is yet creeping.
You can do it with
I
£
You first notice that you
cough less. The pressure on
the chest is lifted. That feeline
of suffocation is removed. A
cure Is hastened by placingone of
Dr. Ayer’s Cherry
Pectoral Plaster
over the Chest.
A Book Free.
It is on the Diseases of the
Throat and Lungs.
Writ a uo Frosty.
If you have a.ny complaint wb&tBV«f
and desire the best medical ndrlce you
cm freely. po*8ibly You will receive, write prompt the doctor roply,
receive a
without DR. coat. Address, iowell,
J. C. AYER, Wats.
m m '■
%
“For six years 3 was ». victimc* dys-
pepsia in its worst form, i could eat nothing
but milk toast, and at times my stomach would
not retain and digest even that. Last March I
hlve'steadiiv iuinrorcd lFfe Lrritil “ I 1 mn^as welLas “ I *
ever ™ in mv ”
David II. Murphy, Newark, O.
CANDY
CATHARTIC
TftAOt MASK eXSIOTERCO
’ifi
Pleasant, Never Pulatablo, Potent. Taste Good. Do
fiood, Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 25c. 60o.
... CUBE CONSTIPATION. ...
Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago, Montreal, New York. 311
HG-TO-MO Sold and guaranteed by all drug¬
gists to CIJ.EE Tobacco Habit.
SMALLEY MFC. CO., 8*U aUktn, Mnnitowo^Win.
SLaF sew £9 %-wF Q Y I quick N ? w relief DI8COVERY; and worst gives
cures
cases. Book of testimonials and IO (lavs’ tr reatment ______
Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S SONS. Box D, Atlanta, Ga
A Chicago Election Judge.
Election day in Chicago is product¬
ive of many amusing incidents. At an
election booth in Milwaukee avenue,
the judge was a German, whose worth
as an American citizen is not marked
b ^ an extensive knowledge ® of the
country of . . his . adoption. , ,, He { is, how-
ever, an active ward hustler, and as
such he always stands ace high with
his party during campaigns.
On election day a resident of the pre-
cinct called to cast his ballot. He was
not known to the Judge, and the latter
asked:
“There vas you born?”
“In Iowa,” was the response.
“Veil, let me se your papers,” de¬
manded the election official.
“Why, judge,” broke in one of the
cler ks, “this man doesn’t have to show
naturalization papers; he was born in
Iowa.”
“That!” exclaimed the Judge, “is
*>wa in der United Shtates?”-Chica-
go Journal.
Practical Philanthropy.
y° Tnlln un fc ., irniiaaeipman Phjindeliihiar went ^\ent t t o o a a
millionaire friend and asked pecuniary
aid to start him in business. “Do you
dl . inkr asked the millionaire. “Once
m , a while. , „ „ Stop _____„ it. Stop it. Stop
it for a year, and then come and see
nie >> xhe young man broke off the
. liabit ... at t oace > an <? at t tbe cna . 01 f T th ne
year came to see the millionaire s again, .
“Do you smoke?” asked the successful
Stop' man “Now and then.” “Stop it!
It for a year, then come and see
me again.” The young man stopped
smoking, but he did not go back again,
“jTe’d pave told me,” he said, ’ “that
now that 1 , have stopped . . drinking . , , and .
smoking I must have saved enough to
start myae if i n business, and I have.’
R san 1 Francisco raDUbLO Wave
Plantation Chill Cure is Guaranteed
r*.
To cure, or money refunded by your merchant, so why not try it ? Price 50c.
Onr Smalley and Rat*
tie Creek aelf-leed
DrSaws are the
standard of the world.
Also ail sizes of Circular
Saws, and the celebrated
B. C. Picket Mill
Horse Powers for oper¬
ating. Hilo Machinery,
Feed Mills, Root Cut¬
ters, Corn Shell ers.
LABRADOR'S QUEER POLK.
Tin White Mea Who Live There of Their Owa
Choice.
It seems strange that with freedom
to come and go civilized men should
choose to dwell In a region so terribly
bleak nnd sterile as Labrador. Yet of
the 8,700 inhabitants of that great
peninsular, 3,000 are of the white or
mixed race. They mainly are descen¬
dants of English sailors, some of whom
were shipwrecked and more of whom
probably left their ships without leave.
Finding themselves stranded on this
lonely ihore, they made the best of i
their lot, marrying Eskimo wives and
living after the manner of the country. ■
In later times some Newfoundlanders
chose rather to settle in Labrador
than make the uncomfortable trips to
and fro yearly from St. John's for the
annual codfishing off the Labrador
shores. These brought their wives
and children with them nnd intro-
duced a new strain of civilized life, j
All of these people live In little set-
tlements strung along the coast, on
Islands or in fiords, from Battle Har-
bor south to the Gulf of St. Law-
rence. They dwell In houses of stone
or logs. In winter they wear hooded j
fur garments like the Eskimos; in
summer the ordinary garb of New¬
foundland fishermen. The women :
dress in gray or blue woollen stuff,
with a gaudy gown for best. On their
heads they wear a knit hood or n
bright-colored handkerchief, and, it
may be, at out-of-door work or abroad
on the water, a man’s sou’wester.
Against the walls In their houses are
pasted such pictures ss they have
been able to clip from the few news¬
papers that fall in their way, adver¬
tising lithographs that have come with
goods to the trading stores, and pic¬
tures of thes ort issued by tract so¬
cieties. On the table or shelf in the
living room is always a Bible, reli¬
giously read on Sunday when the cod
are not biting or a fare of fish to be
dressed and flaked. It is a devout
and sober-minded community, that of
the whites along the coast of Labra¬
dor. Their religious ministrations are
provided by the Moravians, who have
several missions in Labrador; their
temperance is assured by stringent
laws forbidding the landing of any
liquors In Labrador, and these are
made effective by a thorough patrol
by the Dominion revenue steamships,
which deal inexorably with smugglers
of strong water.
American Exhibits at Parli.
Hundreds of American horseless car¬
riages and vehicles of all kinds will be
seen on the streets of Paris during the
great universal exposition of 1900.
Contracts have recently been let in
various cities in the United States,
notably Chicago, for the building and
equipping of about 5,000 electrical car¬
riages. American railroads are pre¬
paring to make extensive exhibits at
the Paris Exposition, and some of
them will be full of novel and striking
ideas. One plan, which has already
received the approval of a number of
the leading railroad companies, pro¬
vides for the construction of an enor¬
mous upright relief or profile map of
the United States, on which every line
of railroad in the country will be
marked by electrical devices.—New
York Journal of Commerce.
Rubber Shoes for Dogs.
Storm shoes for dogs is the latest fad
imported from France’s erratic capital.
The shoes are made of a superior
quality of rubber and are constructed
to order in every case. The patient
pup has had to put up with many ridic¬
ulous pamperings at the hands of mis¬
guided masters in the past, so it Is
quite likely that the newest infliction
will do him no great harm.
Beauty I* Blood Deep.
Clean blood means a clean skin. No
beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar¬
tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by
stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im¬
purities banish from the body. Begin blackheads, to-day to
pimples, boils, blotches, by taking
and that sickly bilious complexion All drug¬
Cascarets,—beauty guaranteed, for ten cents. 10c, 25c, 50c.
gists, satisfaction
The guinea pig grows more quickly than
any other quadruped.
8100 Reward. 8100.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to
learn that there is atleastonedreadeddisease
that science has been able to cure in all its
stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh
Cure is the only positive cure now known to
the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con¬
stitutional disease, Catarrh requires a constitutional
treatment. Hall’s Cure is taken inter¬
nal y, aoting directly upon the blood and mu¬
cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy¬
ing the foundation of the disease, and giving
the patient strength by building up the consti¬
tution and assisting nature in doing its work.
The proprietors have so much faith in its cur¬
ative powers that they offer One Hundred
Dollars for testimonials. any case that it fails to cure. Send
for list of Address
F. .T. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold hv Druggists. 7oc.
Hall’s Family Pills are the best.
In the pool of existence many fine natures
lurk at the bottom.
Ifo-To-Bac for Fifty Cents.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak
men strong, blood pure. 50c. SI. All druggists.
Over 1,000,000 persons visited the British
museum last year.
31rs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething,softens the gums, reuuces inflamma¬
tion,allays pain,cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle.
Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous-
n ess a fter first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Dr. R. II. Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
After physicians had given me up, I was
saved by Piso’s Cure.—R alph Erieg, Wil¬
liamsport, Pa., Nov. 22, 1893.
If advice could be made an active principle
it might accomplish more good.
To Coro Constipation Forever*
Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 26c.
If G. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money
cloak.—Ram’s Religion is the best armor, but the worst
Horn.
P ERFECT womanhood depends on perfect health.
Nature's rarest gifts of physical beauty vanish before
pain.
Sweet turn morbid and fretful.
The possessions that win good hus¬
bands and keep their love should be guard¬
ed by women every moment of their lives.
The greatest menace to woman's per¬
manent happiness in life is the suffering
that comes from derangement of the
feminine organs.
thousands of women have realized
this too late to save their beauty, barely in time to save their
lives. Many other thousands have availed of the generous in¬
vitation of Mrs. Pinkham to counsel all suffering women free
of charge.
Mrs. H. J. Garretson, Bound Brook, N. J., writes: "Dear
Mrs. Pinkham — I have been tak¬
«*= ing Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
£ Compound with the best results
ffl! and can say from my heart that
fl ■ ’ 'V your medicines are wonderful.
9ft My physician called my trouble
H |fl chronic inflammation of the left
|a i % ovary. For years I suffered very
W| much, but thanks to Mrs.
gfl jll » jjjL'si ifcsTA Pinkham’s pound am and today I Vegetable would kind a advice, well Com- wo¬ all I
man. say to
k suffering women, take
m Lydia E. Pinkham’s
medicine and your suf-
erings will vanish."
Mrs. Maggie Phil-
lippe, of Ladoga, Ind.,
AA rail A. is? writes: “Dear Mrs. Pink¬
AW ')} tion suffered ham — of For from the four years ulcera¬ womb. I
I became so weak I
could not walk across
the room without help. After giving up all hopes of recovery,
I was advised to use Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com¬
pound and wrote for special information. I began to improve
from the first bottle, and am now fully restored to health.”
Suicide (if n Canary.
.225
other day. The bird was valuable and
his wife thought the world of it. A
short time ago its mate died from old
age and ever after that the little song-
ster appeared to be morose and acted
strangely. On the day of the bird's
death Mrs. Marth gave him a dish of
water in which it daily took a bath.
Instead of doing so, and while its
mistress was out of sight, the canary
buried its head beneath the water and
drowned.—New York Press.
Facts Wanted.
Eminent Dramatist—I have just fin¬
ished a play that I think will be one
of the biggest hits we have ever had
on the American stage.
Astute Critic—What Chicago man
did you steal it from?
Don't Tobacro Spit and Smoke Tonr T.ife Away.
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag
netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To*
Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men
strong. All druggists, 50c or 81. Cure guaran¬
teed. Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York.
Head and heart are commonly more
respectable than will, but, unfortunately,
will is the manager and man-of-business of
the firm, and the'actions of the former two
partners must be guided by the latter.
To Cure a Cold in One f>ay.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c.
Conscience is not free from huUucina-
tlons by any means—we aim at personal
righteousness, for instance, and hit the
target of bigotry, conceit. fanaticism, hypocrisy and
Pharisaical
fldacate Tonr Bowels Witft Cttsoeretts.
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation refund forever.
10c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail* druggists money.
It is proposed that should the eigthieth celebrated birthday of
Queen Victoria be In a
special way.
Hi y
M •'S
'Sinai ii r
THE EXCELLENCE OF SYRUP OF FIGS
is due not only to the originality and
simplicity of the combination, but also
to the care and skill with which it is
manufactured by scientific processes
known to the California. Fig Syrup
Co. only, and we wish to impress upon
all the importance of purchasing the
true and original remedy. As the
genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured
by the California Fig Syrup Co.
only, a knowledge of that fact will
assist one in avoiding the worthless
imitations manufactured by other par¬
ties. The high standing of the Cali¬
fornia Fig Syrup Co. with the medi¬
cal profession, and the satisfaction
which the genuine Syrup of Figs has
given to millions of families, makes
the name of the Company a guaranty
of the excellence of its remedy. It is
far in advance of all other laxatives,
as it acts on the kidneys, liver and
bowels without irritating or weaken¬
ing them, and it does not gripe nor
nauseate. In order to get its beneficial
effects, please remember the name of
the Company —
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
8AN FRANCISCO, CnL
LOUISVILLE. Ki. NEW YORK. N.T.
PERFECT
WOMAN-
MOOD
VERY SUCCESSFUL
jr ' vegetables em»«r*-bo<ais«lh** berries Of
a ’
grain, b knows by experience
importance • , _ _ of having U „
J ar ** ae percentage & of
in his fertilizers. If the fer¬
tilizer is too low in Potash the
harvest is sure to be small, and
of inferior quality.
Our books tell about the proper fertilizers
for all crops, and we will gladly send them
free to any farmer.
GERriAN KALI WORKS,
* 93 Nassau St., New York*
Spalding’s
T rade-Mark ism
Means
“Standard
of Quality"
on Athletic Goods
Snsistupon Spalding’s
Handsome Catalogue Frea.
A. G, bFALDING & BROS.,
5*ew York. Chicago. Denver.
ENGRAVING.
Half Tones and
Line Etchings.
If yon want Line or Half Tone En¬
gravings of Portraits, Buildings, Ma¬
chinery, Letter Heads, Maps, Cartoons
or anything, write to
SOUTHERN ENGRAVING CO.,
Constitution Building, ATLANTA.
special Designs. Cuts for Ads.
Saw Mills
$129 TO $929.00
With Improved Hope and Belt Feed.
SAWS. FILES and TEETH In Stock.
Engines, Boilers and Machinery
All Klrds and Repairs for same.
Shafting,Pulleys, Belting, Injectors, Pipes,
Valves and Fitti ngs.
LOMBARD IRONWORKS SUPPLY GO.,
AUGUSTA, GA.
o FARM
A.
Jjf Salior’i Seeds ar e Warra nted MtonUbed to Frodnce. the world
r Mihlon Luther, K. Troy, Pa.. 1
by growing 250 bushels Big Poor Oats ; J. BreWer,
Misbioott, Vis., 173 bush, barley, 820 bush. aud Bailor’s H. Lov^Joy,
Red Wing, Minn., br growing corn
per acre. If yon doubt, write them. We wish to gain
100,000 now customers, hence will send en trial 4
I 10 DOLLARS WOil TH FOR lOo.
® 10 plcgsof rare f?-rn seeds, Salt Bush, Raps for Shsep,
» tbs*3000 Corn, “Big Four Oats," Bsardlsss Barley, dry
Bromushiermis—yielding 7 ton* hay per acre mammoth on J ,
3 soils, etc., “ 40o. Wheat." including our Farm M
Seed Catalogue, telling all about oar
seeds, etc., all mailed you upon receipt of hut Jb
100 . postage, positively worth $10, to get a A
start,100,00 0 hhla- goad Potatoes J <0
atfl.a o and~ np a bbl. o h t
earlie seeds. c; V-
send Please this V vF alone, Catalog 6c.
adv. along. S No. 10
MENTION THIS PAPER In writing toadver-
tlsSrs. And 99-11