Ocilla dispatch. (Ocilla, Irwin County, Ga.) 1899-19??, April 07, 1899, Image 7

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DR. TALM AGE’S SERMON The Eminent Divine’s Sunday Disoourse. Subject: “Pcip!» oft.be Metropolis”—The Luxury onld tlie Squalor of Great Cities Thrown 1 nto Violent Contrast—Object Lessons Drawn From Experience. Text: "Wlstlom crleth without: she ut- tereth her voice In the streots.”—Proverbs 1 ., 20 . We arc all ready to listen to the voices of nature—the voices of the mountain, the voices of the sea, the voices of the storm, the voices of the star. As in some of the cathedrals In Europe there ts nil organ at either end of the building, and the one In¬ strument responds musically to thn other, so In the great cathedral of nature day re¬ sponds to day ami night to night and flower to flower and star to star in the groat harmonies of the universe. The springtime in) an evangelist tn blossoms preaching of f toil’s love, and the winter is a prophet—White boarded—symbolizing ail ready to woo against our sins. We are lLsten to the Voices of nature, hut how few of us learn anything from the voices of the nof.av and dusty street? You go to your mechanism and to your work and to your merchandise, and you come back again, and often with how different a heart you pass through the streets. Are there no things for us to learn from these pave¬ ments over which we pass? Are there no tufts of truth growing up between these cobblestones, beaten with the feet of toll and pain and uloasure, the slow tread of old nge arid the quick step of childhood? Aye, there are’great harvests to be reaped, an d now X thrust in the sickle because the haevest is ripe “Wisdom erieth without: she uttemth her voice In the streets.” In the first place, the' street impresses me with the fact that this life Is a scene of toll nnd struggle. By ten o’clock every day the ettv is Jarring with wheels, and shuff¬ ling with feet, nnd humming with voices, and covered with the breath of smoke¬ stacks. and a rash with traffickers. Once In awhile you find a man going along with folded arms and with leisurely step, as though he had nothing to do: hut for the most part, as you find men going down these streets on the wav to business, there is anxiety in their faces, as though they had some errand which must be executed at the first possible moment. You are jostled by those who have bargains to make and notes to sell. Up this ladder with a hod of bricks, out of this bank with a roll of bills, on this dray with a load of gqpds, digglnga cellar, or shingling a roof, or shoeing a horse, or building a wall, or mendinga watch, orbinding a book. In¬ dustry, with her thousand arms and thou¬ sand eves nnd thousand feet goes on sing¬ ing her song of work, work, work, while the mills drum It and the steam whistles life it. All this not because men love toil. Some or.e remarked, “Every man is as lazy as he can-afford to be.” But it is because necessity with stern brow and with uplifted whip stand over you re idv whenever you relax your toil to make your shoulders sting with the lash. ' Can It be that passing up and down these streets on your way to vrork and business that vou do not learn anything of the world’s toil and anxiety and struggle? Oh, how many drooping hearts, how many eyes on the watch, how many miles traveled, how many burdens carried, how many losses suffered, how many battles fought, how many victories gained, how many defeats suffered, how many ex¬ asperations endured; what losses, what hunger, what wretchedness, what pallor, what disease, what agonv, what despair! Sometimes I have stopped at the corner of the street as the multitudes went hither and yon, and it has seemed to me a groat pantomime, and as I looked upon it mv heart broke. This great tide of human life that goes down the street is a rapid, tossed and and turned aside, and dashed ahead* driven back—beautiful in its confusion, and confused in its beauty. In the carpeted aisles of the (forest, in the woods from which the etej/nal shadow is never lifted, on the shore of the sea over which iron coast tosses the tangled foam sprinkling tbo cracked cliffs with a baptism of whirl¬ wind and tempest, is the best place to study God, but In the rushing, swarming, raving street is the best place ts study man. Going down to your plaoe of business and coining home again, I charge you to look about—see these signs of poverty, of wretchedness, of hunger, of sin, of bereave¬ ment—and as you go through the streets, and come back through the streets, gather up in the arms ot ycur prayer all the sor¬ row, all the losses, all the sufferings, ail the bereavements of those whom you pass, and present them in prayer before an ail- sympathetic God. In the great day of eternity there will be thousands of persons with whom you in this world never ex¬ changed one word, will rise up and call you blessed, and there will be a thousand fingers pointed at you in the heaven, saying: who “That is the man, that is woman, helped me when I was hungry and sick and wandering and lost and heartbroken. That is the man, that is the woman,” and the blessing will come down upon you as Cbrlst shall say: “I was hungry, and ye fed Me; I was nuked, and ye clothed Me; I was sick and in prison, and ye visited Me; inasmuch as ve did it to these poor waifs of the streets, ye did it to Me.” Again, the street Impresses mo with the fart that all classes nnd conditions of so¬ ciety must commingle. We sometimes cul¬ ture a wicked exclusiveness. Intellect de¬ spises ignorance. Beflnoment will have nothing to do with boorishuess. 'Gloves hate the sunburned hand, and the high forehead despises the flat head, and the trim hedgerow will have nothing to do wi th the wild copsewood, and Athens be. hates The Nazareth. This ought not so to astronomer must come down from the starry revelry and heip us in our naviga¬ tion. The surgeon must como away from his study of the human organism and set our broken bones. The chemist must come away from his laboratory, where he has been studying analysis and synthesis, and help us to understand the nature of the soils. I bies3 God that all classes of peo¬ ple are compelled to wheels meet clashes on the against street. The glittering couch the scavenger’s cart. Fine robes run againsr tbr peddler’s pack. Robust health meets wan sickness. Honesty confronts fraud. Every class of people meets every other class. Impudence and modesty, pride and humility, purity and beastliness, frankness and hypocrisy, meeting on the game block, in the same street, in the same city. Oh, that is what Solomon meant when he said, “The rich and the poor meet together; the Lord is the Maker of them all.” principle the I like this democratic of gospel of Jesus Christ which recognizes the fact that we stand before God one and the same platform. Do not take on any airs. Whatever position you have gained Jn society you are nothing but a man, born of tbs same parent, regenerated by the same spirit, cleansed by dust, the same blood, to lie down in the same to get up in tlie same resurrection, It is high time that we all acknowledged not only the Fatherhood of God, but the brother¬ hood of man. with the Again, 1 the street impresses me fact tnat it is a very hard thing for a man to keep his heart right amt get to heaven. Infinite temptations spring upon us from these places of public concourse. Amid so much affluence, how much temptation to covetousness and to be discontented with onr humble lot! Amid so many op¬ portunities for overreaching, what tempta¬ tion to extortion! Amid so much display,' what temptation to vanity! Atnid so many saloons cf strong drink, what alurement to dissipation! In the maelstroms and hell gates of the street how many maxe quick and eternal back shipwreck! If bat¬ a man-of-war comes from a tle arid is towed into the navy yard, we go down to look at the splintered spars and count the bullet holes nnd look with patrlotio admiration on the j flag that floated In victory from tlio mast¬ head. But that man Is more of a curiosity i who has gone through thirty years of the j sharpshooting victor ot business the temptations life and yet of sails the J | on, over J street. Oh, how many hare gone down under the pressure, leaving not so much ns j ! the patch of canvas to toll where they per- i ishod! They never had any peace. Their dishonesties kept tolling In their oars. If | I had nn ax and could split open the beams of that fine house, perhaps I would find In the very heart of It a skeleton. In Ids very best wine there Is n smack of poor man’s ; sweat. Oh, It widows’ is strangetliat houses when n man dis¬ has devoured ho Is turbed with Indigestion? All the forces of nature are against him. The floods t.*"e ready to drown him and the earthquake to swallow him and the fires to consume him and the lightnings to smite him. But the children of God are on every street, andtn t ^ffa 0 W h ,rof f,n „ hH t ,hr n fait” them wlll^be given to thosemen who were ful to God and faithful to the souls of others amid the marts of business, proving themselves the heroes of the street. Mighty were their temptations, mighty was their deliverance and mighty shall bo their triumph. Again, the street impresses me with the fact that life Is full of pretention nnd sham, What subterfuge, what double dealing, what two facedness! Do all people who wish you good morning, really hope yon a happy day? Do allit he P»°pl® Y'j® hands love each other? Are all those anxl- ous about vour health who Inquire eon- earning it? Do all want to see you who ask vou to call? Does all the world know half as much as it pretends to know? Is there not many a wretched stock of goods with a brilliant show? Passing up and down the stroots to your business and your work, are you not impressed with the fact that society is bol'ow and that that there :in> subterfuges and pretensionsr Oh, how many there are who swagger and strut, and hew few people who are natural and walk!- While fops simper and fools chuckle and simpletons giggle, bow few people are natural and laugh! The courtesan and the libertine go down the street in beautiful apparel, while of within the heart there are volcanoes passion consuming their life away. I say these things not to create in you incredulity or misanthropy, nor do I forget there are thousands of people a great deal better than thev seem, but I do not think any man Is prepared for the conflict of this life until he knows this particular perl!. Ehud comes pretending to pay his tax to King Eglon, and, while he stands in front of the king, stabs him through with a dagger un¬ til the haft went in after the blade. Judas Iscariot/ ssed Christ. factTha^fVls^rSTld for suffering, Christian charity. There are hunger and ami want and wretchedness in the coun- try, but these evils chiefly congregate in our great cities. On every street crime prowls, and druukenness staggers, and shame winks, and pauperism Here thrusts what out is its hand asking for alms. most squalid and hunger is most leaD. A Christian man, going along a street In New York, saw a poor lad, and he stopped and said, “My boy. do you know how to read and write?” 'The boy made no an- swer. The man asked the question twice and thrice. “Can you read and write? And then the boy answered, with a tear plashing on the back of his hand. Hesaid in defiance: “No, sir, don’t read nor write, neither. God, sir, don’t want me to read and write? Didn’t he take away my father so long ago I never romombento have seen him? And haven’t I had to go aloDg the streets to get something to fetch home to oat for the folks? And didn’t I, as soon as I could carry a basket, have to go out and pick up cinders and never have no school¬ ing, sir? God don’t want me to read, sir. I can’t read nor write, neither.” Oh. these poor wanderers! They have no chance. Born in degradation, as they get they up from their hands and knees to walk, take their first step on the road of despair. Let us go forth in the name of the Lord Jeans Christ to rescue them. Let us ministers not be afraid of soiling our blaok clothes while we go down on that mission, While we are tying an elaborate knot in our cravat or while we are In the study rounding off some period rhetorically we might be sav¬ ing a soul from death and hiding a multi- tude of sins. 0 Christian laymen, go out on this work! If you are not willing to go forth yourself, then give of your and means, and if you are too lazy to go, if you too'stingy to help, then in got out dens of and the way and hide yourself the caves of the earth, lest, when Christ’s chariot oomes along the horses’ hoofs trample you into the mire. Beware lest the thousands of the destitute of your city in tlie last great day rise up and curse your stupidity and your neglect. Down to world Lift them up. One cold winter’s day, as a Christian man was going along the Battery in New York, he saw a little girl seated at the gate, shivering in the cold. He said to her: “Mv child, what do you sit there for, this cold day?” “Oh,” gho replied, and “I am waiting for somebody to come take ears of me. ’ “Why,” satld the man, S°a?d! “nay mother died last week, and I was cry- ing very much, and she said: ‘Don’t cry, dear, though I am gone and your father is gone, the Lord will send somebody to take erreofyou.’ My mother never told a lie; she said some one would come and take care of me, nnd I am waiting for them to come.” Oh, yes, they are waiting for you. Men who have money, men who have influence, men of churohes, men of great hearts, gather them in, gather them in It is not the will of your Heavenly Fattier that one of these little ones should perish. Lastly, the street impresses me with the fact that all the people are looking for- ward. I see expectancy written on almost every face I meet. Where you find a thou¬ sand people walking straight on, you only find ono stopping and looking back. The fact is, God made us all to look ahead, be¬ cause we are immortal. In thn tramp of the multitude on the streets I hear the tramp of a great ho3t, marching and marching for eternity. Beyond the office, the store, the shop, the street there.is a world, populous and tremendous. Through God’s grace, may you reach that blessed place, A great throng fills those arush boule- with vards, and the streets are the chariots of conquerors, The inhab- itants go up and down, but they never weep aud the never toil. A river flows through that city, with rounded aud lux¬ urious banks, and the trees of life, laden with everlasting fruitage, bend their branches into the crystal. No plumed hearse rattles over that pave¬ ment, for they are never sick. With im¬ mortal health glowing in every vein, they know not how to die. Those towers of strength, those palaoes ot beauty, gleam in the light of a sun that never sets. Oh, heaven, beautiful heavenl Heaven, where our friends are! The take no census in that city, for it is inhab¬ ited by “a multitude Which no man can number.” Rank above rank. Host above host. Gallery above gallery, sweeping all around the heavens. Thou¬ sands of thousands. Millions of millions. Blessed are they who enter m through the gate into that city. Oh, start for it to¬ day! Through the blood of the great sacrifice of the Son of God take up your march to heaven. “The spirit and the bride say, Come, and, whosoever will, let him come and take the water of life freely.” Join this great throng marching heaven¬ ward, All the loors of Invitation are open. “And I saw twelve gates, and the twelve gates were twelve pearls.” The Bismarcks* New Resting; Place. The bodies of Prince and Princess Bis¬ marck were placed in the new mausoleum at Friederichsruh, Germany, a few days ago, Emperor William attending the cere¬ monies. g sm p, • fjl» t 1 0 H 1 pr _ . .. lffi arsswj gfcfgofe s SSj sSi) g§? > 1 mm ;; 1 » I . mg An Excellent Combination. The pleasant method and beneficial effects of the well known remedy, SvKirr of Fins, manufactured by the California FiO SVRUP Co., illustrate the value of obtaining plants the known liquid laxa- he tive principles of to medicinally laxative refreshing and presenting the then in the form most to taste and acceptable to the system. It is th< one perfect strengthening laxa- tive, >leansing the, system effectually, dispe ling colds, headaches and fevers gent’ y yet promptly habitjial and constipation enabling one to ov income mt-feet per- mdu ' 3t V; f. ts P.|f rect freedom from 'f' P stanc*. every] objectionalle and its acting quality the and kidneys, sub¬ o.i liver and bowels, without weakening or laxative. irritating them, make it the ideal j n the process of manufacturing figs are used, as they are pleasant to the taste, hut the medicinal qualities of the remedy are obtained from senna and other aromatic plants, by Fig a method known to the California Syrup Co. only. In order ...... to got its beneficial . . , effects and to avoid imitations, please remember the full name of the Company printedlon the front of every package, CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO. CAL. LOUISVTLLE, - KT. NEW YORK, N. Y. For sale . by all „ Draggists.-Price SOc. „ per bottle. - —l———----- A Poseur. • A little seven-year-old girl of the rich, who spent a couple of months at a country house in Wiltshire, England, last summer, was walking down Mas- ^'husetts avenue the other day. She carried a tiny red whip In her neatly gloved little hand. A little-roly-poly f ox terrier pup waddled along after ; the child. The little girl stood at the street corner to wait for a carriage to pass and the fox terrier pup caught up with her. The pup, full of foolish affection for the child, reared up on its weak little ..... hind legs and clawed at i ler skirts. She turned upon the pup m her tlny / whlp upraised and a look of Infantine ; command __, m . . her eyes, _____ “Down, hounds!” she exclaimed, “Down, hounds!” The pup. looked at the child wist¬ fully for a moment, as much as to inquire, “Do I look like a whole pack of big ‘unii?” and then resumed the waddling on in the rear. “Young, for a poseur, that kid, isn’t she?” said a man who saw the child's little Imitation of an English gentle¬ woman at the hunt. “Well, what she won’t be abie to do with her eyes, an( j a f an _ an( j a lorgnette chain when she gets into long drosses.”—Washing¬ ton Post. i | ! He Weakened at Last. “They told me,” said a citizen, “that the plumber was king. Well, I didn't helievp believe it' it, so so, when wuen the rue water-Dipes water pipes i bought soldering burst I some irons an d a slow furnace, and my wife and j started to rep air the damage, “We got along famously—and when I retired that night the leaks were all mended, and we left the water run- , umg ... t0 a avoid ' olu another ' lnotnei Ireeze freeze ' “Well, when I awoke in the morning the water was still running that is, it was running from the leaks we had mended. In fact, it was running all | over the house. There were several beautiful lakes of it on four Brussels ! carpets; the upholstered chairs were fl oa tj n g around in an aimless sort of way; the piano’s legs were knee-deep in it; the kitchen stove looked like It had been wrecked in a storm, and the i.iiUp taWe was m'eservinir Preserving nn an unsteady unsteady l>nl- Dai auce m the dining room. I waded out in wrath, turned the water off aud seu j f or a plumber «r, mn Ilt _ mmcl m |nfl -' vou-tlie ou rne leaks " Jks where w Here the water escaped were those my wife had mended. 1 told her it would that way J .“-Atlanta Constitution. I Beauty Is Blood Deep. j Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar¬ tic clean your blood and keep driving it clean, by stirring up thalazy liver and all im¬ purities Danish from the body. Begin blackheads, to-day to pimples, boils, blotches, taking and that sickly bilious complexion by Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug¬ gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50e. j j Calin In AleXBnder Bowman county dropped , North dead Carolina. in Friendship Mrs. | church during services. She was Just about having her infant child baotized when death claimed her. To Cure a Cold In One Day. 'Jake Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money If It /alls to cure. 25c. In the trial of a man at Savannah, Ga., charged with embezzlement, a mistrial was ordered on account of the death of a child of one of the jurors and the Insanity of ttie juror’s wife. I am entirely cured of hemorrhage of lungs by Piso’s Cure for Mo,, Consumption.—LouiSA Lindaman, Bethany, January 8,1894. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma¬ tion.allays pain,cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle. In cultivating your virtues, be sure and uproot your vices. Fs-To-Bm for Fifty Cent.. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure, 50c. II. All druggists. At Staunton, Va., a man bad a spell of hic¬ coughing which lasted seventy-two hours. Plantation Chill Cure is Guaranteed ,-rX 'V. ' V To cure, or money refunded by your merchant, so wby not try it? Frice 50c. A New Name For It. A teacher In the sixth grade of one ot our city schools finds time, now nnd then, li\ spite of the ten thousand and one things unknown to the school ma’am of our youth which the modern teacher Is expected to teach, to give her pupils a talk on current history. Recently she told thorn, one day, some interesting things about Queen Vic¬ toria and her family. Portraits cut from various magazines Illustrated the talk. Among them was a picture of the Duke of York. The teacher held it up. Nobody in the class could tell tier who it was. “Well,” said she at last. “I will tell yon who this gentleman is. He is the Duke of York. And now can any of you tell me what he is?” Quick ns a flash the hand of a little girl jn the second row went up. “t can tell what he Is, Miss Blank,” she said proudly, “lie's the heir con¬ sumptive to the British throne.”— Washington I’ost. A Kalakaua Anecdote. When Kalakaua was postmaster of Honolulu, he rarely attended to the details of the office, as he had a faith¬ ful and accurate clerk In W. G. Irwin. At that time the postage on an ounce of letter matter was seventeen cents. While Mr. Invin was absent from the 1 office one day, Kalakaua attended to the business. A woman presented a package weighing twelve ounces. “What is the postage?” she asked. Ka¬ lakaua recalled the fact that seventeen cents was usually paid on a letter, and replied at once “Seventeen cents.” The stamp was bought and placed on the package. Mr. Irwin on returning noticed, and informed his superior at once that the postage on the package should be $2 instead of seventeen cents. Kalakaua replied that if the woman ever called at the office again, he would collect the balance due. She never called. The Pioneer Medicine is Ayers Sarsaparilla Before sarsaparillas were it known, began s__ fifty years its work. ago, Since i tkenyou can the count wgm parillas sarsa- m by the thousands with every % x variation 9 of imita¬ tion of the m L„ original, ex¬ cept They one. have ► never been able to im¬ itate the the quality pioneer. of Sills’ V/hen h Ayefs you see on / a bottle of sarsa¬ parilla that is enough; If you can have confidence at once. you want an experiment, buy anybody’s Sarsaparilla; if you want a cure, you must buy Ayers [The Sarsaparilla ^ which made Sarsa a. • filla (am us] ^ o English Barber a Bad Workman. It would be hard to find a worsq workman of his sort in any civilized land, they say, than the average Eng¬ lish barber. In the first place, English barbers have no chairs at all approach¬ ing the American barbers’ chairs for comfort. When you go Into an English shop you sit down into a common straight chair, and, if you are wise, you brace yourself for such a mauling and hauling aud pinching and scrap- ping as you won’t forget in a long day. M OTHERHOOD is woman’s natural destiny. Many women are denied the happiness of children through some derangement of the generative organs. Actual barrenness is rare. Among the many triumphs of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable SORROWS or STERBLBTY •■Dear Mrs. Pinkham— Before taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound I had one child which lived only six hours. The doctor said it did not have the proper nourishment while I was carrying it. I did not feel at all well during preg¬ nancy. In time I conceived again, and thought I woufd write to you for advice. Words cannot express the gratitude I feel NR 1 towards you for the help that your medi¬ cine was to me during this time. I m. m felt like a new person; did my work up to the last, and was sick only a short time. My baby weighed ten pounds. He is a fine boy, the joy of our home. He is now six g weeks old and weighs sixteen d pounds. Your medicine is cer- tainly a boon in pregnancy.” (m Mrs. Flora Cooper, of Doyle, S. Dak., writes: ufi “ Dear Mrs. Pinkham— ■■■ Ever since my last child I / suffered the womb, with pains inflammation in back, left of A side, abdomen and groins. My WJ & head ached all the time, I could not walk across the floor W J without suffering intense pain. MmM Ml I kept getting worse, until two Lydia for advice, years E. Pinkham’s ago and I wrote began Vegetable to taking you Compound. HP I had not finished the first bottle before I felt better. I took four bottles, and have been strong and perfectly healthy ever since, and now have two of the nicest little girls.” GOLDEN CROWN LAMP CHIMNEYS Are the beat. Ask for them. Cost no more than common chimney*. All dealer*. PITTSBURG GLASS CO., Allegheny, F». Had So Fighting Blood. “Pauline couldn’t establish her claim^ to be a Daughter of the Revolu- tion. “Weren’t her papers all right?” “Yes, but they said she was too peaceable.”—Chicago Record. Compound is the overcoming cases of supposed barrenness. This great medicine is so well calculated to regu¬ late every function of the generative or¬ gans that its efficiency is vouched for by multitudes of women. Mrs. En. Wolford, of Lone Tree, Iowa, writes: ap- FARM (fjSr SEEDS Saber's Siadi tn Warranted to Prodn:e. Lt *>/ J Mahlon Luth»r. ISO bush'U F. Troy. Big F*.. Four astonished 0*ts J. the Bruid^r. world V ^ Miahioott, V v KTovriiM bfti>y, and , H. I.ovejoy, KEM 'Vis.. 173 hush. j.cd Wing, Hum by growing 3->0 bosh. Salior * corn 3 , wish to Bra r.er acre. If you doubt, write them, "e gum Ec-fflj aOO.GOU new customers, her.ee WORTH will send FOR on triol 10c. 10 DOLLARS Sheep, IQ pkq;«iof car® f?~m seeds,Salt Bush, Rape for the $5000 Torn. ” M* Four Oats,” beardless Barley, Bromus Inerrois—ridding 7 tons hay per acre on dry 1^4 soils, etc-, “40c. Wheat. ' including our mammoth . Seed Catalogue, telling all about our Farm A k seeds, etc., a,l mailed iou upon receipt*f but JC a lOo. postage, positively worth $10. to get a start, 100,000 bbl«.Seed Potatoes A at fl.g Q andu p a bbl. cr. Plea* 35 pksrs ble earliest seeds, $1.00 Yeget ota- * o*' ^ Catal log send this i alone,' 5c. adv. along. No. AC THEDlFFERENCE between a «NEW FLORENCE AND ANY OTHER WAGON, <>■ THE NEW FLORENCE has Spring* 5 O fi Bolster in front and be- under i-ae.d which O tween the Bolster and Axle bebiml y creates a live weight,makes the Draft Ught- O er, saves the Team and prevents 76 per cent. . (5 yourdealerdoe^not °If handle this Wagon O write direct to % FLORENCE WAGON WORKS, $ FLORENCE, ALA., Q and receive full information with Cuts. % Prices and Testimonials. Saw Mills SI29 TO $929.00 With Improved Rope and Belt Feed. SAWS, FILES and TEETH in Stock. Engines, Boilers and Machinery All Kinds and Repairs for same. Sliafting:, Pulleys, Belting, Fittings. Injectors, Pipe*, Valves and LOMBARD IRON WORKSS SUPPLY CO.. AUGUSTA. GA, TIZAKURE ^INDIGESTION and DYSPEPSIA. ‘•Dyspepsia hnB been the bane of my life for sixty years, and of all the hundreds of reme¬ dies, I have received more benefit, from Tiza- kure than from any other.”—J ohn J. PearcK* D. D., Cincinnati, 0. A cure for a try. 25c. a box Ask your drug¬ gist or write for free sample to TIZAKURE CO., Tarpon Springs, Fla. BPH SI aUSi STOPPED FREE gS» 8$ NjSk Psrtnaneslly Cuiofl ill ©5 Insanity Prevented ily IL m BWTK Bfi. KUNE’S 6REAT m w gERyfc restorer UK™"! Positive cure for •» tfervcua huecae*. Fit*, iJpitapay, KgA after Spasms first and day’s St. nse. Vitus'Pance. Treatise No nnd LHs $3 or trialbottltt Nervouscea* Bgfi fre® to Kit pstienu, they paying express charges onlf KM when received. Send to Hr. Kline, Ltd, Bellevue SgQ Institute ot Medioiuc. 921 Arch St.. Philadelphia. Pa. 1883 SAWS SR ALLEY UFti. GO., Sol* M*ker», jMaaitowoe, YYtfc 0000 BICYCLES Overstock: Dust Be Closed 0«t» VifJL. STANDARD MODELS, Ijb/w guaranteed, $9.75 to JBIG. Shopworn <fc see- ond hand wheels, good as new, $3 to, $10; MM Great factory clearing sale, j varyCnt& j, ship to nnyeme on sjvprofAt ^ h. trio! without a ortitln adr EARNaBICrCLE '00 »1 mm* Wo 11 ■ ' by helping u » advert*** o our »operb line of module. giro too Rider Ajent in each t town of taepio wheel toiutroduoo thorn. Writs at one* tor K. F. Mead Cycle Company, Chicago, III* ELF REFRIGERANT 1^ I over u»«dl if) 20 refrigerator* degrees colder just than like |Af Ha j* 1 v » perfect substitute for KW** SEND FOtt CIRCULARS. AGENTS WANTED. 898 ,CNIVfiRfSAJL Flushing Avenne, HEFIlICiFKATIAC BROOKLYN, CO., N. Y. DRDPSY^SffiS Book and 10 tin fuses. of testimonial* vs’ trout moot Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN S SONS Box D, Atlanta. 0*. Our Smalley *nd Bat* tie Creek eelf-ieed Drag Sawn aro the stan idard of the world. Also ftil sizea ot Circular Saw*, and the celebrated B. V. Picket Mill Horse Powers for oper¬ ating. Silo Machinery, Food Mills, Root Cut* ters, Corn Shell ers.