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DR.TAI MAGE’S SERMON
The Eminent Divine’s Sunday
Discourse.
Subject: “Hold Fust to the HIble”-Leii-
floni Drawn From the Sword of Eleazar
••As He Grasped His Weapon So Should
We Cleave to the Old Gospel*
Text: “And his hand clave unto tho
sword.”—II Samuel xxiii., 10.
What a glorious thing to preach the
Gospell Some suppose that because I
have resigned a fixed pastorate I will
cease to preach. than No, no. I expect If the to
preach more I ever have.
Lord -will, four times as much, though
in manif*ld places. . I would not dare to
halt with such opportunity to declare the
truth through the ear to audiences and to
tho eye through the printing press. And
here we have a stirring theme put before
-us by the prophet. David
a; great general of King was
Eleazar, the hero of the text. The Philis¬
tines opened battle The against cowards him, and fled. his
troops retreated.
Eleazar and three of bis comrades went
into the battle and swept tho field, for
four men with God on their side are
stronger than a whole regiment with God
against them. “Fall backl” shouted the
commander of the Philistine army. The
cry ran along the host, “Fall backl”
Eleazar, having swept the field, throws
himself on the ground to rest, but the mus¬
cles and sinews of his hand had been so
long bent around the hilt of his sword that
the hilt was imbedded in tho flesh, and the
gold wire of the hilt had broken through
the skin of the palm of the hand, and ha
could not drop this sword which he had
so gallantly s'word.” wielded. “His hand clave
unto the That is what I call
magnificent fighting for tho Lord God of
IsraeJ. And we want more of it.
I propose to sword show and you how how the Eleazar sword took took
hold of (the
hold of .Eleazar. I look at Eleazar’s hand,
and I come to the conclusion that he took
the sword with a very tight grip. Tile
cowards who fled had no trouble in drop¬
ping their swords. As they; fly over tho
rocks I hear their swords clanging in every
direction. It is easy enough for them to
drop their swords, but Eleazar’s hand clave
unto the sword. In this Christian conflict
wo want a tighter grip of the Gospel weap¬
ons, a tighter grasp of the two edged sword
of the truth. It makes me sick to 3ee these
Christian people who hold only a part of
the truth and let therest of the truth go,
so that the Philistines, seeing the loosened
grasp, wrench the whole sword away from
them. The only sate thing for us to do is to
put our '.thumb on the book of Genesis and
sweep our hand around the book until the
New Testament come3 into the palm and
keep on sweeping of our the hand around clutch the
book until the tips lingers at
the Words “In the beginning God created
the hepvens and the earth.” I like an infi¬
del a great deal better than I do one of
these narnby paraby and Christians who hold a
part of the truth let the vest go. By
miraclo God preserved this Bible just as it
is, and itis a Damascus blade. The sever¬
est test to which a sword can be put in a
sword factory is to wind tho blade around
a gun barrel like a ribbon, and then when
the sword is let loose it flies back to Its own
Bhape. So the sword of God’s truth has
been fully tested, and it is bent this way
and that way and wound this way and that
way, but it always comes back to its own
shape.. Think of itl A book written nearly
nineteen centuries ago, and some of it
thousands of years ago, and yet in
our time the average sale of this book
is more than 20,000 copies every week and
more than 1,000,000 copies a year! I say
now that a hook which is divinely inspired
and divinely kept and divinely scattered is
a weapon worth holding-a tight gripof.
Bishop Oolenso will come along and try to
wrench out of your hand the five books of
Moses, a ad Strauss will come along and try
to wrench out of your hand the miracles,
and Renan will come along and try to
wrench cut of your hand the entire life of
the Lord ot’ice .TesusVjhrist, and your associates
in the or tjie factory or the banking
house will try to wrench out of your hand
the entir e Bible, but in the strength of the
Lord God of Israel and with Eleazar’s grip
hold ou lo it. You give up the Bible, you
give u p auy part of it, and you give up par¬
don and peace aud life iu heaven.
Do not bo ashamed, young rnau, to have
the world know that you are a friend of the
Bible. This book is the friend of all that is
good, and it is the sworn enemy of all that
Is bad. An eloquent writer recently gives
an incident of a very bad man who stood
in a cell of a Western prison. This crimi¬
nal had gone through all styles of crime,
and ho was there waiting for the gallows.
The convict standing there at the window
of the coll, this writer says, “looked out
and declared, ‘I am an infidel.” He said
that to ail the men and women and chil¬
dren who happened to be gathered there,
‘I am an infidel.’ ” Andthe eloquent writer
snys, “Every man and woman there be¬
lieved him,” And the writer goes on to
say, “If be had stood there saying,’ ‘I am
a Christian,’ every man and wornau would
have sai l, ‘He is a liar!”’
This Bible is the sworn enemy of all that
Is wrong, and it is the iriend of all that is-
good. Oil, hold ou itl Do not take part
of it und throw tho rest away. Hold on to
all of it. There are so You many people now
who do not know. ask them if the
soul is immortal, and they say: "I guess it
Is; I don’t know. Perhups it is; perhaps
it isn’t.” Is the Bible true? “Well, perhaps
it is, and perhups it isn’t. Perhaps it may
be, figuratively, and perhaps it may be
partly, and perhaps it may not be at all.”
They despise what they call the apostolic
creed, but if their own creed were written
out it would read like this: ‘Tbelieve in
nothing, the maker of heaven and earth,
and in nothing which it hath sent, which
nothing was born oi nothing and which
nothing was dead and buried and descend¬
ed into nothing and rose from nothing
and ascended to nothing and now sitteth
at the right hand of nothing, from
which it will come tojudge nothing. I be¬
lieve in the holy agnostie church and in
the communion of nothingarians and in
the forgiveness of nothing and the resur¬
rection of nothing and in the life that never
Shall be. Amen!” That is the creed of
tens of thousands of people ns this day. If
you huve a mind to adopt sueh a theory, I
will not. “I believe in God, the Father Al¬
mighty, Maker of heaven aiid earth, und in
Jesus, Christ and in the holy catholic
church, aud in the communion of saints
and iu the life everlasting. Ament” Oh,
when I see Eleazar taking sueh a stout
grip of the sword in the battle against sin
and for righteousness, I come to the con¬
clusion that we ought to take a stouter
grip of God’s eternal truth—the sword of
righteousness. Eleazar’s hand I also
As I look at notice
his spirit of seltforgetfulness. He did not
notice that the hilt of the sword was eating
through the palm of his hand. He did not
know it hurt him. As lie went out into the
conflict he was so anxious for the victory
he forgot himself, and that hilt might go
never so deeply into tho palm of his hand,
It could not disturb him. “His hand clave
unto the sword.” Ob, my Christian brothers and
sisters, let us go into tho conflict
with tho spirit of self abnegation. Who,
cares whether the world praises us or de¬
nounces 113 ? What do we care for misrep¬
resentation or abuse or persecution in a
conflict like this? Let us forget ourselves.
That man who is afraid of getting his hand
hurt will never kill a Philistine. Who
cures whether you get hurt or not if you
.got the victory? Oh, how many Christians
there are who are all the time worrying
about tha way the world treats them!
They are so tired, aud they are so abujed,
and they are so tempted, had when hand Eleazar
did not think whether he a or an
armor a foot. All ho forgbt wanted was victory.
We see 1 how men themselves in
wortdly achievement. jin achieve We have worldly often seen
men who, (forget order to suc¬
cess, will all physical fatigue Just after and
all annoyance and all obstacle.
the battle of Yorktown In the America*
Revolution a musician, wounded, was told
he must have his ltmbs amputated, him and
they were about to fasten to
the surgeon’s table, for it was
long before the merciful discovery of
anaesthetics. He said: “No; don’t fasten
me to that table. Get me a violin.” A.
violin was brought to him, and he said,
“Now, go to work as I begin to plnv,” and
for forty minutes, during the awful paugs
of amputation, he moved not a muscle nor
dropped a note, while he played some
sweet tune. Oh, is it not strange that with
the music of the Gospel of Jesus Christ,
and with this grand march of the church
militant on the way to become the church
triumphant, we cannot forget ourselves
and forget all pang and all sorrow and all
persecution and all perturbation?
We know what men accomplish under
worldly opposition. Men do not shrink back
tor antagonism or for hardship. You have
admired Prescott’s “Conquest of Mexico,”
as brilliant and beautiful a history ns was
ever written, but some Of you may not
know under what disadvantages it was
written—that “Conquest of Mexico”—for
Prescott was totally blind, and he had two
pieces of wood parallel to each other fast¬
ened, and totally blind, with his pen be¬
tween those pieces of wood, he wrote the
stroke against one piece of wood telling
how far the pen must go in one way, the
stroke against the other piece of wood tell¬
ing how far the pen must go the other way.
Oh, how much men will endure for worldly
knowledge and for wordly success, and yet
how little we enduro for Jesus Christ! How
many Christians there are that go around
saying, “Ob, my hand; oh, my hand, my
hurt hand! Don’t you see there is blood on
the sword?” while Eleazar, with the hilt im¬
bedded in the flesh of his right hand, does
not know it.
Must X be carried to the skie3
On flowery beds of ease,
While others fought to win the prize
Or sailed through bloody seas?
tYhat have we suffered iu comparison with
those who expired with suffocation or were
burned or were chopped to pieces for the
truth’s sake? We talk of the persecution
of olden times. There 13 just as much per¬
secution going on now in various ways. In
1841), in Madagascar, eighteen men were put
to deatli for Christ’s sake. They were to
be hurled over the rocks, and before they
were hurled over the rocks, in order to
make their death the more dreadful iu an¬
ticipation, they were put in baskets and
swung to and fro over the precipice that
they might see how many hundred feet they
wouid have to be dashed down, and while
they were swinging in these baskets over
the rocks they sang:
Jesus, lover of my soul,
Let me to Thy bosom fly.
While the billows near me roll,
While the tempest still is high.
Then they were (lashed down to death.
Oh, how much others have endured for
Christ, and how little wo endure for
Christ! We want to ride to heaven in a
l’ullinan sleeping car, our feet on soft
plush, the bed made up early, so we oau
sleep all the way, tho blaelc porter of death
to wake 113 up only In time to enter the
golden city, We want all the surgeons to
fix our hand up. Let them bring on all the
Jiut and all the bandages and all the salve,
for our hand is hurt, while Eleazar does
not know his hand is hurt. “His hand
clave unto the sword.”
As I look at Eleazar’s hand I come to the
conclusion that he has done a great deal of
hard hitting. I am not surprised when I
see that these four men—Eleazar and his
three companions drove back the army of
Philistines—that Eleazar’s sword clave to
his hand, for every time he struck an enemy
with one end of the sword the other end of
tho sword wounded him. When he took
hold of the sword, the sword took hold of
him.
Oh, we have found an enemy who cannot
bo conquered by rosewater and soft
speeches. It must be sharp stroke and
straight thrust. There is intemperance,
and there is fraud, and there is gambling,
and there is lust, and there are 10,1)00 bat¬
talions of iniquity, armed Philistine in¬
iquity. How are they to be captured in and
overthrown? Soft sermons morocco
cases laid down iu front of an exquisite au¬
dience will not do it. You have got to call
things by their right name. You have got
to expel from our churches.Christians who
eat the saeremeut on Sunday and devour
widow’s houses all the week. We have
got to stop our indignation against the
Hittites and the Jebusites and the Gir-
gashites and let those poor wretches go
,and apply our indignation to tho mod¬
ern transgressions which need to be
dragged out and slain. Ahabs here,
Herods hero, Jezebels here, the massacre
of the intents here. Strike for God so hard
tiiat while you slay the sin the sword will
adhere to your own hand. I tall you, my
friends, we want a few John Knoxes and
John Wesleys in the Christian church to¬
day. Tho whole tendency is to refine on
Christian work. We keep on refining on it
until we send apologetic word to iniquity
we are about to capture it. And we must
go with sword silver chased and presented ride
by the ladies, and we must on
white palfrey under embroidered hous¬
ing, putting the spurs in only just
enough to make the charger dance
gracefully, and then we must send a
missive, delicate us a wedding card, to
ask the old black giant of sin if he will
not surrender. Women saved by the
grace of God and on glorious mission
sent, detained from Sabbath classes be¬
cause their new hat is not done. Churches
that shook our cities with great revivals
sending around to ask some demonstrative
worshiper if he will not please to say
“Ameu” and “halleluiah” a little softer. It
seems as if iu our churches we wanted a
baptism of cologne and balm of a thousand
flowers when we actually need a baptism
of fire from the Lord God of Penteeost.
But we are so afraid somebody will criti¬
cise our sermons cr criticise our prayers
or criticise our religious work that lost our
anxiety for the world’s redemption baud is hurt,
iu the fear we will get our
ills while hand Eleazar clave went unto the into sword.” the confect, “and
But I see in the next place whnt a hard
thing it was tor Eleazar to get his hand and
his sword parted. The muscles and the
sinews had'been so long grasped around
the sword he could not drop it when he
proposed to drop it, and his three com¬
rades, I suppose, came up and tried to help
him, and they bathed the back part of his
hand, hoping the sinews and muscles would
relax. But no. “His hand clave unto the
sword.” Then they tried to pull opeu the
lingers aud to pull back the thumb, but no
sooner were they pulled back than they
closed again, “aud his hand clave unto the
sword.” But after awhile they were suc¬ the
cessful, aud then they noticed that
curve in the palm of the hand corresponded “His
exactly witti the curve of the hilt.
hand clave uuto the sword.”
You and I have seen it many a time.
There are in the United States to-day
many aged ministers of the Gospel.
They are too feeble now to preach. In
the church records the word standing
opposite their name is “emeritus,” or
the words are “a minister without
charge.” They were a heroic race. They
had small salaries and but few books,
and they swam spring freshets to meet
their appointments, but they did in their
day a mighty work for God. They
took off more af tho heads of Philistine
iniquity than you could count from noon
to sundown. You put that old minister of
tho Gospel now inpo a prayer meeting or
occasional pulpit or a sick room where
there is some one td be comforted, and it is
the same old ring to his voice and the
same oid story of pardon and peace and
Christ and heaven. His hand has so long
clutched the sword in Christian conflict he
cannot drop it. “His hand clave unto the
sword.”
The Czar and Two Kmperora to Meet.
There will be a meeting of the Czar, tho
German Emperor and Emperor Francis theoc-
Joseph at Sciernevioe, Russia, upon
easion of a great hunting party next au¬
tumn.
FRANCK'S GREATEST NAVAL HERO.
Jean Bart's Part In Abolishing the Brutal
Code of Oleron.
Cnytain Mahan has shown how
England began her world-wide domin¬
ion under Drake and Raleigh and made
it good under Nelson. Thomas E.
Watson, the Georgia politician and or¬
ator, in his “The Story of France,”
makes the claim that, had the Grand
Monarch, Louis XIV., encouraged Jean
Kart us he deserved, the sea and the
world might have another story for us
to-day. Mr. Watson writes;
“Jean Bart is a robust figure of these
times. He came of a race of corsairs
of Dunkirk. A corsair, you must
know, was a gentleman pirate. He did
unto all ships but those of his own
couuD'y the deeds -which pirates did
unto all ships without exception.”
'Jean Bart’s grandfather was a cel¬
ebrity, known in corsair circles as the
Sea-fox. Ilis father was likewise a
semi-pirate of eminent respectability,
and accumulated a great deal of plun¬
der. Thus Jean was cradled In the
luxuries, liberties, and heroisms of le¬
galized piracy, and from his youth he
followed the seas.”
In 10(50 he served in the crew of a
man-of-war commanded by a brute
named Valbue. Even at this early age
he was a hero. In those days the cap¬
tain of a ship was master of life and
death on board his vessel. The code of
Oleron, “an eye for an eye,” was then
the guide. If a sailor drew a knife
upon another, the offending hand was
nailed to the mast with a knife. If he
killed his mate, his own body was tied
to that of his victim, and both were
cast into the sea. This simple code
was practiced for several hundred
years, because it was popular among
sailors. In trying a case the captain
took a vote of the crew, and the ma¬
jority decided.
There was one Huguenot sailor in
the crew of Calb.ue, and his religion
made him the butt of his messmates.
Valbue told a story of a miracle per¬
formed by some priest, and. when he
had finished, lie thre*vv at the Hugue¬
not sailor an insulting remark and a
tin can. The sailor appealed to the
code of Oleron. Valbue, angered by
his resistance, struck Lanoix (the
Huguenot) with a capstan. Lanoix
retreated over the iron rail which ran
across the forward part of tlio ship
and warned Valbue not to strike him
again, “for I have passed the chain.”
This was known in all ships of those
days as “the chain of refuge.” This
part of the ship was as a sanctuary on
land. Valbue declared that the law
did not apply to swine Jews and
Huguenots, and so rushed upon La¬
noix and struck him. Lanoix stabbed
the captain in the arm, and all the
crow except Joan Bart Sauret fell up¬
on the Huguenot, who killed one of
tnem with his knife.
“Bring me the hook!” shouted the
captain, and the cabin boy fetched the
code of Oleron.
“Read me the law!” demanded Val¬
bue of Sauret, putting bis finger on the
clause meant.
“I will not read it!” answered Sauret,
disgusted and indignant.
“You are not acting according to
law,” continued Sauret. “This unfor¬
tunate man (Lanois) is entitled to
three meals at which he may confess
his faults; lie is also entitled to make
]iis oath of excuse and his promise of
future obedience.”
“Hush your mouth!” shouted Val¬
bue. “Being a heretic, he is entitled
to none of these rights.
“Listen!” continued Valbue, whose
method of procedure was, in truth, di-
abolically regular and correct. “The
sailor who raises his hand against the
captain shall be fastened to the mast
by a knife, and he shall be compelled
to loose bis hand from the knife in
such a way that he shall be compelled
to lose at least half pf his hand.
After carrying out this brutal pro-
gram, Lanoix was tied to the body
the sailor he had killed, and both
were cast into the sea. Jean Bll r'
stoutly protested against this proced-
ure, and left the ship when it reached
Calais. The inhumanity of the occur-
ranee so shocked Colbert, Louis s
great minister, that he had the mail-
time code changed.
The Army Field Uniform.
There was no “rough rider costume.”
The field uniform of the United States
Army, worn by officers and men, was
of brown canvas, a “Norfolk jacket”
and knee breeches. The facings va¬
ried with the arm of the service; in
the artillery the collars and cuffs were
red; in the cavalry yellow; in the in¬
fantry light blue.
Beauty la 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 from the bodv. Begin blackheads, to-day to
banish pimples, boils, blotches, taking
and Cascarets,—beauty that sickly bilious complexion by All drug¬
for ten cents.
gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c.
The demand for American manufactures
is steadily increasing in Japan.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething.softens the gums, reduces inflamma¬
tion,allays pain.cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle.
After six years’ suffering I was cured by
Piso’s Cure. — Pa., Mary March Thomson, 19, 1894. 29}^Ohio Ave.,
Alleghany,
Fits permanently cured. No firs or nervous¬
ness after first day’s use boftleandtreatlsefree. of Dr. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer. $2 trial
DK.«lt. U. Kline, Ltd.. 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
Already 2.500 formal applications been for received. office
under the Census Director have
Wo-To-Bac Cor Fifty Cent*.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak
men strong, blood pure. 60c. #1. All druggists.
Great Britain has 2,390 magazines, 620 of
these being of a religious character.
Plantation m Chill P L :| I n.. Cure kn is * p,,n buaranTeed un ntnnH
To cure, or money refunded by your merchant, so why not try it? Price 50c.
f ft v>Jr I 1 V IV t befc|M V i
.V r f* i j *
-4 % 3J> \i i&Q in,
SSaTIbe •fa. : m.
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5
M I S GREATLY ENHANCED by knowledge of the world’s
best products, which contribute most effectually to per¬
Q sonal comfort and health, The contest of high quality
and original efforts, which give universal satisfaction, :
fC against the cheap and meretricious imitations will ever mmm
continue, and the greatest protection against mercenary -c
dealers is in being well informed. In the medicinal sphere
im- the well-known laxative remedy, Syrup of Figs, manufac¬ ||3j W§m
tured by the California Fig Syrup Co., is used by many who (
8 are enjoying good health and by many others who are seek-
2* ing health, and this is true to so great an extent that it is
Ml m often plicity Syrup called of of Figs the the combination, is remedy due not of only but the to also healthy. the the originality care The and excellence skill and with sim¬ of yjfe w
which it is manufactured by scientific processes known only
to the California Fig Syrup Co. Therefore we wish to im¬ if
press on all the importance of accepting the true and If
original remedy only. When buying note the full name—
California Fig Syrup Co.—printed on the front of every
package, as there are many imitations sold under similar
Kill tem. names The and true the and imitations original are remedy, really Syrup injurious of Figs, to is the manu- sys- y
smm see factured the name by the of know California any that other it Fig Fig is Syrup Syrup a fictitious Co. Co. printed only, company and on when any and pack¬ you has ISSl s ft
} age you may offers it is
no real existence, and that the dealer who to you
seeking by cunning and misrepresentation to take advantage //« VC
of you in order to make a larger profit.
The better class of druggists are men of high integrity,
attending strictly to business day and night and willing to
make great sacrifices, if necessary, to supply their oustom-
ers with the best of everything in their line, knowing the
11 lirM Ij Importance remedy of when Druggists When their you desiring manufactured friends of ask to that health for physicians’ and class Syrup patrons of by doing do of the prescriptions Figs. not California and so, try and They desiring to valuing give filled, Fig sell their you Syrup something or the the pure confidence. patronage Co. genuine drugs only. else itilf I
and chemicals, proprietary medicines and fine toilet articles,
you may rely upon them; but as in other callings some black
<1 ;.-r ir sheep may be found, so among druggists there are some who ■A
•if will try to impose upon and deceive their customers when A?Wa
J they can. and in order that all who are well informed may II
know them and avoid them we are publishing the facts. lh
u CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO., m
I
Louisville, Ky. San Francisco, Cal. New York, N. Y.
4 /
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ga, W s'.
z MS pi.3 ke
H ^ '1 SB WB sss ■ m. ’S m BB i A Ml ipl#
Mb' g 'SSS'* X\ v
New Discoveries at Hampton Court
Hampton Court Palace is constantly
yi e i{jing- up hidden treasures of artistic
an( j an tiquarian interest, and consider-
j.j 10 -wonderful intricacies of Wol-
g0 y, s ^ u g e chateau it is not surprising
evel .y Ilow an d again “finds” of
great historical value are brought to
H Some time ago the great Cardi-
na ,. g pr j va t e r0 om was disclosed to
p U - D j ie v ; ew , and now comes the an-
nounL , emellt 0 f an extraordinary dis-
CO y er y 0 f what may prove to be an ar-
t j st j c treasure. A large number of the
pj c j ureg there are in course of removal,
Underneath the canvas and paper with
yy-HIcIi the walls were covered was
what appeared to be painting.
Subsequent careful examination
shojwed that three sides of a room,
which measures 41 feet by 34 feet, were
adorned with very fine paintings, in a
very fair state of preservation, but dis¬
figured by hundreds of holes caused by
the nails which had been driven into
the walls to hang the pictures, The
ceiling of this apartment is painted by
Verrio, and represents Queen Anne in
the character of Justice. Whether the
paintings on the walls are by the same
artist has not transpired, but it is prob¬
able that they are. It has been decided
to fiil up the holes with suitable mate¬
rial and to engage the services of a
well-known artist to repair the paint¬
ings and as far as possible to restore
them to their original condition.—Lon¬
don Daily News.
When Kipling Was a Bore.
Mr. Iludyard Kipling tells an amus¬
ing story at his own expense. During
his stay in Wiltshire one summer he
met little Dorothy Drew, Mr. Glad¬
stone’s granddaughter, and, being very
fond of children, took her In the
grounds and told her stories. After a
time Mrs. Drew, fearing that Mr. Kip¬
ling must be tired of the child, called
her, and said: “Now, Dorothy, I hope
you have not been wearying Mr. Kip¬
ling.” ‘‘Oh, not a bit, mother,” replied
the small celebrity, “but he has been
wearying me.”
1 The Potash
QllCStlOn. e
A thorough study of the sub¬
ject has proven that crop fail¬
ures can be prevented by using
fertilizers containing a large
percentage of Potash; no
plant can grow without Potash.
We have a little book on the subject of
Potash, written by authorities, that we
would like to send to every farmer, free of
cost, if he will only write and ask for it.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
93 Nassau St., New York.
“I have been using CASCARETS for
Insomnia, with which 1 have been afflicted for
over twenty years, and I can say that Cascarets
have given me more relief than any other reme¬
dy I have ever tried. I shall certainly recom¬
mend them to my friends as being all they are
represented.” Thos. Gillard, Elgin, Ill.
CANDY
CATHARTIC
TRADE MARX RIOiaWRED
a
Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good. Do
Good, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe, 10c,25c, 50c,
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
Sitrilntr Remedy Company, Chlrago, Montreal, New York. Slfl
HO-TO-BJIC
MENTION THIS PftPERS^SSSSS
CO
39 S. Broad St., Atlanta, Ga.
Engines and Boilers
Steam Water Heater*, Steam Pumps and
Penbertliy Injectors.
1 r
MB fisifisas,
Manufacturers and Dealers In
S .A. A 7 Y. 7 - MILLS,
Corn Mills, Feed Mills, Cotton Gin Machin¬
ery and Grain Separators.
SOLID and INSERTED “aws. Saw Teeth and
Locks, Knight’* Patent Dogs, Birdsall Saw
Aril! and Engine Kepairs, Governors, Grata
Bars end a lull line of Mill Supplies. Price
and quality of goods guaranteed. Catalogue
free by mentioning this paper.
.--3
1 Overstock: Must loosed Oofc,
SYAUDAKO ’W KODKLS,
guaranteed, ®9.75 to
Shopworn <fc soc-
ond hand wheels, pood
as new, $3 to 810 :
i-C Great factory clearing sal®,
/i 1 W, *hlp to anyone on approval
trial without a cent in adrana*
EAimaBICrOlC
’R0 by helping u« advertkM Otir rutwrb lln* of
modal*. Wag-iv* one Rider Agent In aaoh town FREE USB
cf mp o whe«l Uiut ttouuc* theta- Writ* at oaoo for our epeuial offer.
K. F. Mead Cycle Company, Chicago, III.
ELF REFRIGERANT
■ over 20 degrees colder than ICE
" 8 «L& UM< perfect i i* relrin substitute era ton* for jnnt like
BEND FOR CIRCULARS. AGENTS WANTED.
UMTtR>AL KE FRIG Eli A TING CO.,
E92 Flushing Avenue, lIKOOIiXYN, N. Y.
We don’t admire a
Chinaman’s Writing.
He doesn’t use Carter’s Ink. But
then Carter’s Ink is made to use with
a pen, not a stick.
Funny booklet “ How to Make Ink Pictures ” free.
CARTER’S INK CO., Boston, Mass.
hum and Whiskey Habifca
cured at home with¬
out yam. Book of par¬
ticulars sent FREE.
B.M.WOOLLKY, M.D.
ALfinuttn. Ga. Office 104 N. Pryor St.