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LMAGE’S SE-RMOiN.
a Eminent Divine’s Sunday
I Discourse.
■ijcct: A tVorlilvvldo Evil—Ilo«tit«nc» in
(Hotels lonceH Co ihIc] um-(l—Who homin’ 1 nflu-
That Surround Lifo in a Private
■ Home—CUIUircn Get in I5»d Company,
I {Copyright, Lonla Klopscli, 1899.1
II’ashinoton, Isus D. C. (Special).—Homo llto
hotel lifo is the theme of Dr. Till-
Igo’s ies sermon for to-day, the disadvan-
of a lifo spent at mtjre or less tem-
Iriu-y Isted stopping places being sharply con-
with the blessings that are found
[the ft is real Luke home, *■., 34, however 85: “And humble. brought Tho him
I an inn and took care o( him. And on
b morrow when ho departed, ho took out
fo ponce and gave them to. the host and
—lid unto 1dm, Take care of hlmtand whnt-
f soever tlioii speudest more, when I come
again I will ropay thee.”
I This Is the good Samaritan paying tho
. hotel bill o'f a man who had been robbod
I and almost killed by bandits. The good
I Samaritan had found the unfortunate on a
l lonoly, rocky road, where to this very day
Idopredatiou^ ■upon travelers, are and sometimes had committed injured
■ put the
man into the saddle, while this morciful
laud well-to-do man had walked till they
■got to tho bed hotel, and the wounded man was
■>ut to and cared for. It must have
■ioen ■dations, a very superior hotel in Its nccommo-
■landlord for, though in tho country, the
was paid at tho rate of what In
■vr ^fcenny country would bo if4 or 65 a day, a
being then a day’s .wages and tho
pennies paid ia this case about two
lays’ wages. Moreover, it was o,ne of those
!ind-henrted landlords who are wrapped
IP in the happiness of their guests, .be-
ause i the good Samaritan leaves the. poor,
’ounded fellow to his entire care, promis-
hg that when ho came that way again he
rould pay all the bills until the invalid got
(•ell.
I les. Hotels In and boardli^r "times houses are necossl-
vary ancient they wore un-
.nown, because tho world had oompara-
‘ively few inhabitants, and those were not
®mch given to travel, and private hospital¬
ity Ivhen met all the wants of sojouiwers, as
Abraham rushed out at Mamie to in¬
cite of veal, the as three, when men the to people sit down woce to posgltive- a dinner
lly |as commanded to bo giveh to hosjjttalUy,
in many places in the east these anoient
[customs fcow hotels are presided practiced over to-day. by But good we land¬ k*vo
lords and boarding houses presided over
■y ■oods, excellent villages host and or cities hostess iu all nblghfior-
and it is our edn-
■ratulatlou that those of our land surpass
(ill permanent other lands. residences They of rightly people, become such tho
(is those without many
(hose who are families, such as
who business keeps them migratory,
inch as those who ought not, for various
reasons of health or pecultarty of circum-
Itances, to take upon themselves the cares
k>f housekeeping.
| found But one in the of the fact great that evils large of this population day Is
a
lof our towns and cities are giving up and
[have |apartmonts, given that up their they homes have and taken free-
jdom may more
(or from domestic duties and more time
social life and because they like the
(thirl fend privacy of publicity of a residence better than they the quiet call
(heir can
fend own. The lawful use of these hotels
■vhile boarding-houses is for most people
"ermines they are in transitu; but as a
moralization, they are in many cases de¬
utter and complete. That Is
he point at which families innumerable
lave begun to disintegrate. There never
as been a time wiien so many families,
lealthy pd direct and abundantly able to Bupport
homes of their own, have struck
Int and taken permanent abode In these
—'In ppblic these establishments. public caravansaries, the de-mon
(of boarders gossip is apt daily to get the lull gantlet sway. of genoral All the
1 run
(inspection—how iOwn,in the morning they and look when whon they they get come in
(t night, and what they do for a living,
;nd who they receive as guests in their
:ooms, and what they wear, and what they
^hIo j^Bbey not wear, and how much tljey eat, and what
j^Uttlc eat, ami bow they cut, and how
B they eat. If a man propose^ in such
^Bilone, place to bo isolated and reticent and
H>Vlio they will begin to guess about him:
^■ongis is he? Whero did bo como from? liow
he going to stay? Hus he paid hi«
^Board? ^Bie has committed How muoh some does crime ho pay? and Perhaps does not
^■vant ^■hiug to wrong be known. about him There or ha must would bo speak. some-
^■Tha ^■business. whole They house must goes find Into out the about deteolive him.
^■rhey Hri he leave must find his door out about unlocked him right by accident, away.
Hhe ^■speeted, will find tlia.t his rooms have been in-
Iris trunk explored, his letters
■ folded differently from the way they were
■ folded when he put them away. Who is
■ he? is the question asked with, intenser In-
■ terest, until tire subject has become a
■ ■ monomania. The simple fact Is that he is
I nobody in particular, hut minds his own
business.
f I from One tho of herding the worst of so damages many people that como Into
I I boarding-houses and family hotels Is in-
fe flieted upon children. It is only another
■ way of bringing them up on the commons.
B White you have your own private house
you can, for the most part, control their
■ companionship and their whereabouts, but
■ Bsorts by twelve years of age in these public re-
■ they will have be picked up ail the bad
things that can furnished by the pruri-
■ ■ ent minds of dozens of people. They will
overhear blasphemies, and see quarrels,
■ and get precocious In sin, and what the
■ bartender does not tell them the porter or
■ hostler or will.
■ Besides that the children will go out into
■ I this world without the restraining, anchor-
lng, steadying and ail controlling memory
■ I of a home. From that none of rrs who have
[ been blessed of such memory have es-
capod. It grips a man for oighty years,
L B if he lives so long, it pulls him back from
doors into which he otherwise would enter.
■ It smites him with contrition in the very
■midst of his dissipations. As the fish, al-
■ready surrounded by the long wide not,
■swim out to sea, thinking they can go as
■far as they scale please, and with gay toss of
■ I silvery they defy the sportsman on
the beach, and after awhile the fishermen
■ begin to draw in • the net, hand over
■ ■ bund, and bund while over hand, and it
is a long before the captured
■ fins begin to feel the net, aud then they
■dart this way and that, hoping to get out,
■ Hshore, but find themselves approaching tho
und are brought up to the very feet
■ of the captors, so the memory of an early
■ home sometimes seems to relax and let
■ men out farther and farther from God, and
■ farther aud farther from shore, five years,
■ ten years, twenty years, thirty years: but
■some ■drawing day they find an Irresistibla mesh
them back, and they 'are eom-
■pelled to retreat from their prodigality
■ ■ and wandering; and though they make
desperate effort to escape the impression,
■ and try to dive deeper down in sin,
■ I after awhile are brought dear back and
held upon the Book of Ages.
I If it be possible, 0 father and mother!
let your sons and daughters go out Into
I I the world under the semiomnipotent mem-
I ory of a good, pure home. boarding About your two
I or three rooms in a house, or a
I family hotel, you can cast no snch glorious
I sanctity. They will think of these public
[ caravansaries as an early stopping place,
( malodorous with old victuals, coffees per-
I potually steaming and meats In evorlnsc-
ing stew or broil, the air surcharged with
toarbonlo "drunken acid, and corridors, along which
boarders come staggering at 1
o’clock in the morning, rapping at the
door till the affrighted wife lets them in.
Do not be guilty of the sacrilege or blas-
I L phemy of calling such a place a home.
■family A homo is four walls inclosing one
with Identity of interest and a
Brivacy from outside world inspection itself, so com-
nete that It is a In no one en-
taring except bf permlsslop—bolted and
burred quisitlvdfiess. and ahutned against all outside in-
Tlie phrase go often used
in the law books ami legal circles Is might¬
ily suggestive—every man’s bouse Is his
castle, ua much so us though it bad draw-
bridge, portcullis, redoubt, the bastion and
arm ed turret. Even officer of the law
may not enter to serve a writ, except the
door be voluntarily opened unto him; bur¬
glary, or tho invasion of it, a crime so
offensive that the law clashes its iron jaws
on any one who attempts It. Unless it be
necessary family to stay hotel for longer or shorter
time in or boarding house—
and there are thousands of Instances
in which it is necessary, ns 1
showed you at the boginning—unless
in this exoeptionnl consebt case, lot neither, wife
nor nusband to suoli permanent
residence.
The divide probability her husband’s Is that tho wife will have
to time with public
smoking or roadlng room or with some
ooquettlsh spider do In searoh of unwary files,
and, if you not outirely lose your hus¬
band, it will be hecanse he is divinely pro¬
tected from the disasters that have
whelmed thousands of husbands, with as
good intentions as yours. Neither should
tho husbnud, without imperative reason,
consent to suoh q life unless he 18 sure his
wife can withstand the temptation of so¬
cial dissipation whloh sweeps across such
plaoes with tho force of the Atlantlo Ocean
when wives driyen by a their September homes equinox.
Many give up for these
puhllo residences, so that they may give
receptions their entire and time levees, to operas, aud theatres, balls,
they are in a
perpetual round and whirl, round Uke and a round whip top spinning
loses equipoise very shoots prettily
until it Its aud off in¬
to a tangent. But the difference is, in one
oase It Is a top, aud In the other a soul.
Besides this there is on assiduous accu¬
mulation of little things around the pri¬
vate home, whioh In tho aggregate mako a
great attraction, while tho denizen of ogo
of those publlo the residences I have Is pluco apt to say:
“What is use? no to keep
them if I should take them.” Mementos,
bric-a-brac, curiosities, quaint ebair or
thousand cozy lounge, things upholsteries, that aooroto pictures in home und a
a are
homestead discarded or neglected because there is no
in which to arrange them. And
yet they are the case in which tho pearl of
domoStlc happiness Is set. You cun never
becotahas attaohed to the appointments of a
boarding-house that or family call hotel as to and those
associated tlihigs with youtaon different your own are
the member of
your household or with scenes of thrilling Blessed
is impbrt that home in your in domesiio which for history. lifetime
a whole
they have, been gathering, until every
figure In the ,carpet, and every panel of
the door, and every casement of the win¬
dow has a chtrography of its own, speak¬
ing out something about father or mother,
or son awhile. or daughter, What or friend that was with
us a sacred place it becomes
when one can say; “In that room such a
one was born; in that bed such a one died;
in that chair I sat on the night I heard
suoh a one had reoeived a great paWia
honor; by that stool my child, knelt for her
last evening prayer; here I sat to greet my
son as he came back from sea voyage; that
was father's cane; that was mother’s rock¬
ing chair!” What a joyful and pathetic
congress of reminiscences!
The public residence of hotel and board¬
ing house abolishes the grace of hospital¬
ity. Your guest does not want to come to
suoh a table. No one wants to run such a
gnntlet of acute and merciless hyperoritio-
ism. Unless you have a home of your own
you will not be able to exercise the best
r of ? w! th.iB l r ,^ 0<i grace °* a11 what , the blessing graces. came For exeroise to the
Shunnmmito In the restoration of her sou
to life because sbe entertained Elisha, and
to the widow of Zarephathinthe perpetual
oll well of the miraculous cruse because
she fed a hungry prophet, and to Bahab in
the preservation of Jericho of her life at the uemoli-
tion because she entertained tho
spies, and to Laban in the formation of an
interesting family relation because of his
entertainment of Jaoob, aud to Lot in bis
rescue from the destroyed oity because of
Ills entertainment of the angeis, and to
Mary and Martha and Zacelieus in spiriiual
blessing because tbey entertained Christ,
and to Publius In tbe island of Melita in tho
healing of his father beoauso of tho entor-
tainment of Paul, drenched from the ship-
Wreck, and of innumerable houses through-
out Christendom upon which have come
blessings from generation to generation
because their doors 3 wung easily open in
the enlarging, ennobling irradiating und
c .vine grace o iosp a i y
buyTuch aptaoteve a nif a yo S uhave 9 ffi fl on
it a mortgage reaching from base to cap¬
stone. The much apusad mortgage, which
Is ruin to a realcless man, to one prudent
and provident is tho beginning of a com¬
petency nnd a fortune for the reason he
will not Do satisfied until he has paid it off,
and all tho household are put on stringent
economies until then. Deny yourself all
superfluities and ail luxuries until you can
say, "Everything Gocf-kevery In this house Is mine,
thank timber, every brick,
every f®ot of plumbing, every doorsill.”
Do not have vourolilldren born In a board¬
ing house, and do not yourself be burled
from one. Have a place where yoar chil¬
dren can shout and sing and romp without
being overhauled for the racket. Have a
kitchen where you can do something
toward the reformation of evil cookery and
the lessening of this nation of dyepeptias.
As Napoleon lost one of his great battles by
an attack of Indigestion, so many men
have such a dally wrestle with the food
swallowed that they hare no strength left
for the battle of life, and, though your
wife may know how to play on all musical
Instruments and rival a prima donna, she
is not well educated unless she oan boil an
Irish potato and Droll a mutton ohop,since
the diet sometimes decides the fate of fam¬
ilies and
Have a sitting room with at least one
easy chair, even though you have to take
turns at sitting ln it, and books out of the
the public making library or of your family own purchase intelligent, for
of your
and checkerboards, and guessing buff, matohos, which
with an occasional blind man’s
whloh is of all games my favorite. Bouse
up your home with all styles of innocent
mirth and gather up ln your ehildren’s
nature a reservoir of exuheranoe that will
pour down refreshing streams when life
gets parohed, and the dark the days come,
and the lights go out, and laughter is
smothered Into a sob.
First, last and all tho time have Christ
In your home. Julius Ceesar calmed the
fears of an affrighted boatman who was
rowing in a stream by saying, “So long as
Caisar is] with you In the same boat, no
harm can happen,” And whatever storm
of adversity or boreavement or poverty
may strike your home, all Is well as long
ns you have Christ the King on board.
Make your home so fyrreac^iing In Its In¬
fluence that down to the last moment of
your children's life you may hold them
with a heavenly charm. At seventy-six
years of age the Demosthenes of the
American Senate lay dying at Washing¬
ton—I mean Henry Clay, of Kentucky.
His pastor sat at his bedside, and “the old
man eloquent,” life, nfter a long and oKatlantic, exciting
public transatlantic and
was back again In the soenes of
bis boyhood, and he kept saying ln
mother, his dream mother, over mother!” and over again, “My
influence May only tbe paren¬
tal we exert be not poten¬
tial, i>ut holy, and so the homo on earth be
the vestibule of our home in heaven, ln
which place may wo all meet—father,
mother, son, daughter, brother, slBtor,
grandfather, grandmother and groudelilld, ol
and tbe entire group of precious ones,
whom we must say in the words of trans¬
porting Charles Wesley:
One family church we dwell In beneath, him,
One above,
Though now divided by the stream—
The narrow stream of God, death;
One array of the Living
To His command we bow;
Part of the host have.crossed the flood
And pact are crossing now.
Are 00
Evcrx Depressed/ «
Br And Is it not due to nervous
jjp K> exhaustion? look much brighter Things when always
so we
[ are in good health. How can
L you have courage when suffer-
ing with headache, nervous
|3k prostration weakness? and great physical
W Would you not like to be rid
■ of this depression of spirits?
l How? By removing the
cause. By taking
SO
It gives activity to all parts
that carry away useless and
poisonous materials from your
body. It removes the cause of
your suffering, because it re¬
moves all impurities from your
bleed. Send for our book on
Nervousness.
To keep in good health you
must have perfect action of the
bowels. Ayer’s Pills cure con¬
stipation and biliousness.
VJrlta to oop CSoctora*
Perhaps you woultf like to coij rfult
snme condition. eminent Tbon physicians freely about alf your
write us tbe
particulars in your case. You will r®-
c#ive a prompt reply, without cost.
Address, DR. J. C. AYER,
> LowelL Mas®,
Slirewd Donkvy Boys.
The donkey-boys of the Nile deserve
a book all to themselves. Such craft!
! S &ncl1 , K>1 . fl nttorv' Such knowledge knowledge of or nu hu-
i man nature! With unerring sagacity
S they discover your nationality and give
i y 0 ur donkey names famous In your
! own countr Y- ikever will ... an _ Engllsh- .
man find himself astride “Yankee
Doodle” or “Uncle Sam,” or an Ameri-
Ca ” “ llnr P °“ , n “Totm Hull U " ”
What s the , name of , my donkey? . ,
asked my companion,
“Cleveland,”, came the answer like
.
a uas “-
We were enchanted.
“And what’s the name of mine?” I
asked
McKinley. , .,,
Then we shouted. You have no idea
how funny it sounded to hear those
t t "° f.. ral m ?. i!inr ar names na ^ es In ln such stiange
surroundings. \\ e nearly tumbled off
in our delight, and those clever little
donkey-boys are quick to watch vour
faee an( j ji V j ne y 0 ur mood.—Lillian
Bel1 ia Woman’s Home Companion,
Are You Using Alien’s Foot Ease?
It is the only cure for Swollen, Smarting,
Tired, Aching, Burning, Sweating Feet,
Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen’s Foot-
Ease, a powder to be shaken into the shoes.
Sold by ull Druggists, Grocers and Shoe
Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE- Address
,AUen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y.
Truth speaks makes and the face of that person’shine
who owns it.
Educate Your Bowels With Cascaret®.
Candy Cathartic, fail, euro constipation forever,
10c, 26c. If C. C. C. druggists refund money.
Make not thy friends too cheap to thee, nor
thyself to tl>y friends.—Fuller.
Why Do You Scratch ?
If you have Itch, tetter, eczema, ringworm or
other sktn disease, you can cure yourself with
Tetterine. No need of a doctor. Sold by drug-
gtotefor BOcts. a box, or sent by mall prejjaid for
50c. in stamps by J. T. Shupfct'ine, Savannah, Ga*
If a good face is a letter of recommenda •
tion, a good heart is a letter of credit.
Don’t Tobacco Sp4t and Smote Your Life Away.
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag¬
netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No*Tb-
Bae, the wonder-worker, that mhkes weak men
strong. All druggists, 50c or $1. Cure guaran¬
teed. BooWet mid sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York.
Waste of time is the most extravagant and
costly of all expenses.
GJbrla Bring; About a Dress Reform.
The girls working in the tin-plate
mills at Bridgeport, Ohio, and in Mar¬
tin’s Ferry have won a great victory
over the men, and full dress during
working hours is required. It has been
customary for many years for men
working around the furnaces to re¬
move their shirts during the hot sum¬
mer weather. Now, however, tbe
girls ln tin houses have to
work In the same lnclosure, and
they made indignant protests with
out avail. The girls finally got togeth¬
er on the subject, and at a secret meet¬
ing decided that the men must wear
shirts or they would quit in a body.
This ultimatum was sent to the office
by a committee, and the result was
that orders were posted forbidding
men to remove their shirts in the
rooms were tbe girls work. The young
women are highly elated over their
victory and propose to have other
dress reforms before long.
Hntafion V; 11C u re js Guaraili
}•: ‘/p C
■
\ To cure, or moae, refuuded by your merchunt, so why not try It? Price 50c
■
Carrying Hla Coffin Plat*.
Captain D. F. Penlngton, quarter¬
master of the Fourth Regiment, Mary¬
land National Guard, will have a sim¬
ple, scarcely visible, plate on the
casket In which he Is to be burled. The
plate will be a Russian coin, size of the
old-fashioned ‘‘cartwheel’’ copper pen¬
nies bo numerous years ago.
Captain Penlngton has had the face
of the coin made smooth and Inscribed
as follows: “D. F. Penlngton. Born
Septembetr 8 , 1847 . . Died-.”
This plate forms the captain's poek-
etpiocc, and ever serves as a reminder
of death. This popular Guardsman
gives his friends a genuine case of
“cold shivers” every time he exhibits
the coin—Baltimore Sun.
Half a Year’s Receiverships.
The Railway Age, of Chicago, has
compiled tko railroad receivership sta¬
tistics fer the past six months. Five
roads, with a total of 852 miles and a
bonded ami stock indebtedness of
$46,000,000, were placed in receivers’
hands from January 1 st to June 30th
of the present year. Of this sum, one
road, the Kansas City, Pittsburg and
Gulf, contributed nearly $43,000,000,
and it was also accountable for all the
mileage except seventy miles.
No-To-Bac for Fifty Cent®.
Guaranteed tobacc® habit cure, makes weak
men strong, blood pure. 50c, $1. All druggist®.
ter Happiness is. ie not the end of life; charap-
Mrs. Wlnglow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething,sgftans Uon,allay® pgin,ciir©€ the gum#, wind reducesinfiaiama- colic. 36c. bottle.
a
Fits permanently cur*d. No f fit® or nervous-
u ees after fl ret day’s use of Dr. Rlin«’s Great
Nerve Restorer- *2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Dr. K. R. Klims, Ltd., 9B1 Aroh St., Phi la., Pa.
Piso’s Cure cured me of a Throat and Lung
trouble of thru® years' standing.— E. Cady,
Huntington, Ina., Nor, 13, liW4.
Albert Burch, West Toledo, Ohio, says:
“Hall’sCatarrh Ouro saved my life.” Write
him for particulars. Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Tho kind of man-who gets off a train nnd
leave® his valise thinks be is indispensable.
To Cure Constipation Forever.
Take Oascaret® Candy Cathartic. 10c or 95c.
Jf C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money.
ing Nevor make other a fool fool's of patent. your®alf by infring¬
on some
AR LOADS % OF
Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic
Shipped Annually to the Malarial sections of the United States.
T /. -'•a
P t
This ML
f. f ■h TASYSS 1S3 55 H-B. wBS «»^»
OHIO. WM (HU MW 2M
a 131
■I
<308 « TTW , jism
J .s*
S •JX-
m ■-
m
The largest Jobbers report that their sales on GROVE’S TASTELESS CHILL
TONIC is three times more than all other Chill Tonics combined.
What MEYER BROS. DRUG CO., of St. Louis, write about GROVE'S:
PARIS MEDICINE CO., St. Louis, Mo., GentlemenWe wish to congratulate you on the increased sales we ar«
having on your Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic. On examining our record of inventory under date of Jan. 1 st,
we find that we sold during the chill season of 1898 2660 dozen GpOWO*& Tonic * Please rush down order enclosed
, RfSEYER BROS. DRUG CO.
herewith, and oblige, Yours truly,
Wliy SI*a Blnahed.
Of course she was indignant when it
dawned upon her that some one was
trying to flirt with her. Yet there was
no denying the fact that the man be¬
hind her had kept steadily after her
ever since she had left the street car.
“And he’s old enough to be ln bet¬
ter business,” she said to herself, In¬
dignantly. “I'll cross the street Just
to maks sure whether he Is really fol¬
lowing.”
She crossed the street and so did he.
Then she tinned on him.
“Sir,” she said, “why do you persist
in following me?”
He started, as If disturbed ln the
midst of aome abstruse mental calcu¬
lation, and for a minute seemed be¬
wildered. Then he bowed courteously
and said:—
“Madam, why do you persist ln pre¬
ceding me?”
Two doors further on he turned ln,
producing a latchkey as he did so, and
showing in other ways that he had
reached his destination. She turned
back and went round the block rather
than pass that house and her face
was still red when she reached home.
—Chicago Post.
A Eeiu.rk.bie Elephant.
Elephant intelligence Is about “up
to the limit" In animals, and an Eng¬
lishman tells ef one that was accus¬
tomed to receiving pennies that it
would drop Into a slot for a biscuit.
If given a half-penny the elephant
would throw it back contemptuously,
but one day a boy gave it two half-
pennies at the same time. For sev¬
eral minutes the animal held them la
his trunk as though pondering over
their value. At last he dropped the
two together into tne slot, with the
result that he got the biscuit. He ap¬
peared to know that he had made an
unusual discovery and frisked around
In the greatest delight.—Detroit Free
Press.
7SP ~r.'S V
-■ y i
m ,j
m v fi ** || _ i i I
TT wm
a a I
VI . K
i*
|
| 1
An Excellent Combination.
The pleasant method and beneficial
effects of the well known remedy,
Svnup of Fios, manufactured by the
Califoknia Fio Syrup Co., Illustrate
the value of obtaining the liquid laxa¬ be
tive principles of plants known to
medicinally laxa-tive and presenting to the
them in the form most refreshing It
taste and acceptable perfect strengthening to the system. laxa¬
is the one
tive, oleansing the system effectually,
dispelling colds, headaches and fevers
gently yet promptly satnsBSrc; and enabling one
srsTiu 1
every ........ objectionable quality and „, 1( i sub- K .,u_
stance, and its acting on the kulneys,
liver irritating and bowels, without make it weakening the ideal
or e them,
, laxative. ,
III the manufacturing’ . tigs
process OI
are used, as they are pleasant to tie
taste, but the medicinal qualities of the
remedy are obtained from senna and
other aromatio plants, by a method
known to the California Fig Syrup
Co. only. In order to get its beneficial
effects and to avoid knltations, please
remember the full name of the Company
printed on the front of every package.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAD.
.LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK. N. Y.
For sale by all Druggists.—Price 50c. per bottle.
GR. MOFFETTS Aids Digestion,
Resales the Bowels,
Makes Teething Easy.
TEETHINA Relieves tla
Bowel Troubles of
Children Oui of Any ail druKglstB Age.
TEETHING POWDERS v25c. A 25 t Dr,
If nor.-mall cents to Mo,
C. J. Moffbtt, St, Louis,
F RFECT 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
lire#. Many ether thousands have availed of the generous in¬
vitation of Mrs. Pinkham to counsel all suffering women free
of charge.
Mas. H. J. Garretson, Bound Brook, N. J., writes: “Dear
Mrs. Pinkham —I have been tak¬
ing Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound with the bast results
and can say from my heart that
your medicines are wonderful.
My physician called my trouble
/» chronic inflammation of the left
J* ovary. For years I suffered very
much, but thanks te Mrs.
j Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
A jp r ^ m pound and kind advice, I
am today a well wo¬
3£ i man. I would say to all
H suffering women, take
r f I Lydia E. Pinkham’s
WM % medicine and your suf-
m erings Mrs. will Maggie vanish." Phil¬
lips, of Ladoga, Ind.,
writes:
xA “Dear Mrs. Pink¬
ham— For four years I
suffered from ulcera¬
tion of the womb.
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. ”
•PITTS’
ANTISEPTIC INVIGORATOR.
The moet eminent physician® of thlfl und
I other countries believe 1» the oxletw e of boo*
i terla («r germs) In the human syetem. Any
i remedy that will destroy tills poison without In*
| Jury to the patient will meet a long felt want,
ANTISEPTIC INVIOOKATOtt not only ellmi-
| nates all hut bacteria is fine poisons toolo olsons also. fn from It tho diseased all
system, a cures
STOMACH AND BOWEL TROUBLES,
Kidney and Bladder Dleeasaa, Ac., Blood and Hkln
TrotiBl®®, NerTonsneB®, medicines, <fcr. In fact, It la of a
i sofentrfle combination of each
| which doe® It® ®p®ciflo work on each separate or*
i gau of the body It nerdr falls te rbiu h the dis-
cased organ und always does ftfi work well.
A 8®f® and Kvliatd« Ho»MAeJ»®ld Bemedy.
For Sale by Druggists Everywhere.
Cl Will M Repairs SAWS, RIBS,
BRISTLE TWINE, BABBIT, &o. f
FOR ANY MAKE OF GIN.
ENGINES. BOILERS ANH PRESSES
And Repairs for same. Fitting®. Rulloys,
Belting, Injector®, Pipes, Valves aft«
LOMBARD IRON WORKS i SUPPLI CO.,
AUGUSTA, ©A.
lod °b-
T Tallulah „ Falls Reservation epous ter guests
July 1st Dirertiv ou dtaud Chasm, *,000 i«e»
abuv. ler-i Ev-rythinv n.v. eiAetrlclixhts
and balls, sanitary plumhln*, ho« and cold por.
oslatn baths, music, ashing, driving, M0 fast
remnda space, specially Tallulah fin# cuialne. Ihre#
hours from Atlanta. Pall® railway
trestles rebuilt and road in splendid condition,
Both midday and ia<e dlnn-rs. For special
'MMa^T/llulah Fails, Go.
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT,
Tulane University of Louisiana.
Its advantage® for practical instruction, hospital bom
1» ample laboratories and abundant
’JETtf! «KS
and go ,000 patients annually. Special instruc¬
tion to given daily at tb® bndeldo of the sick.
The next session begins October 19th, 1899. For
catalogue nnd information address
Prof. S. E. CHAILLE, M. I>., Dean,
P. O. Drawer 261. NEW ORLEANS, LA.
PERFECT
WOMAN¬
HOOD