Ocilla dispatch. (Ocilla, Irwin County, Ga.) 1899-19??, September 22, 1899, Image 7

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r-r/ tv. T\*n L) r\. -r—A 1 A l I__/V\ »«-« AG r- r~ j > 'lie Eminent Divine’s Sunday Discourse. ■Subject: Mimic In Worship— I) I hi I net Ion I Between Music 111 an Art unit Music ms an Alii to Devotion—National Airs of the Kingdom of Heaven. [Copyright, Louis Elopsoh. 1899.1 I Washington, D. C.— Dr, Talmage, In this feermon, discusses ft most attractive depart ment [song. of rellglcus worship—tho servioa of His idea will be received with in terest by in all who love to lift their voices In praise the Lord’s house. The text Is Nehemiah vll., G7, "And they h id two hun dred forty and five singing men and sing ling f women,’’ [trouble. The best music has been rendered under thing The first duet that I know any of wns given by Paul und Bllas when pthey ►heard sang praises to God and the prisoners [hounded them. The Scotch Cqvenanters, [the by the dogs of persecution, sang ’they psalms of David with more spirit than have ever since been rendered. The ■ captives fn the text had music left In them. '<yid I deolaro that If they could find amid ‘all their trials two hundred and forty nnd .five singing men and singing women then in this day of gospel sunlight and free from all persecution there ought to be a great multitude of men ana women willing to sing the praises of God. All our ehurohes need arousal on this subject. Those who lean sing must throw their souls Into the [exerolse, nnd those who cannot sing must learn how, and it shall be heart to heart, voloe to voice, hymn to hymn, anthem to anthem, and the music shall swell jubilant with thanksgiving und tremulous with pardon. Have you ever noticed the construction ot the human throat as Indicative ot what God means us to do with it? In only an ordinary throat and lungs there are four teen direct muscles and thirty Indirect muscles that cau produce a very great tyarlety Kt of sounds. Wbat does that mean? means that you should slug! Do you ■suppose that God, who gives us suoh a [musical It shut? instrument Suppose as that, intends groat tyrant us to Keep ■should some ktru get possession of the musical ln ithe meats of the world and should lock up organ of Westminster abbey, and tho [organ of Lucerne, and the organ at Haar Bem, and tho organ at Freiburg, and all the ■other groat musical instruments of tho Bvorld. It You would call such a man as that monster, and yet you are more wicked if, ■with Inent the human voice, a musical instru ot more wonderful adaptation than ■all the musical Instruments that man ever ■created, you shut It against the praise of od. Let those refuse to sing Who never knew our God, But children of the heavenly King Should speak their joys abroad. ■ R*oul Music seems to have been born in the of the natural world. The omnipo ■tent voice with which God commanded the ■world into being seems to linger yet with ■Its majesty and sweetness, and vou hear it ■in ■amid the graintield, in the swoop ot the wind the mounta n fastnesses, in the ■canary’s Rthe warble and the thunder shook, in brook’s tinkle and the ocean’s paean. Krhere are soft cadences in nature, and ■loud Bat notes, some ol which we cannot hear all, and others that are so terriilo that Bwe ■ cannot appreciate them. The animalculm have their music, and ■the spieula of hay and the globule of water ■are Bfiod as certainly resonant with the voice of Birmies as the highest heavens in which the B|lctorles. of the redeemed celebrate their Strikes When the breath of the flower Bfcleaves the air and the wing of the firefly Bolly. it, there is sound and there is mel And, as to those utterances of nature ■which seem harsh and overwhelming, it is ■as when you stand in the midst of a great ■orchestra |Uar and the sound almost rends your Bilending because you are too near,to catch the Kstand of the music. So, my friends, we too near the desolating storm and r the frightful whirlwind to natch the blend I ing of the music; but when that music ; rise3 to where God is, and the invisible L being who float above us, then I suppose ■the harmony is as sweet as it is trernen ■dous. In 'the judgment day, that day B>f tumult and terror, there will be no ■dissonance to those who cun appreciate ■the Rtimes music. It will be as when some a great organist, in executing Komc strument great piece, breaks down the in upon which he is playing the ■music. ■judgment So when the great march of the day is played under the hand of ( earthquake and storm and conflagration ■ I the world itself will break down with the musio that is played on it. The fact is, we r are all deaf, or we should understand that | tho whole universe is but one harmony— I I the stars of the night only the ivory keys I of a great instrument on which God’s iln gers play the music of the spheres. I I Music seems dependent on the law of acoustics and mathematics, and yet where ■these laws are understood at all tho art is ■practiced. There are to-day 500 musical ■journals in China. Two thousand years be ■ fore Christ the Egyptians practiced ot Hermoine the art. ■Pythagoras learned it. Lasus ■ wrote essays on it. Plato and Aristotle io ■ troduced it into their schools. But I have ■ Best not much interest in that. My chief inter is in the music of the Biblo. ■ fcnerable The Bible, like a great harp with innu strings, swept by the fingers of in spiration, Kke trembles with Genesis It. So far find back the as fourth chapter of you ■first ■back organist and harper—Jubal. of Genesis So far as the thirty-first chapter All and down ■you find tho first choir. up [the Bible you find sacred music—at wed ■ dings, at inaugurations, at the treading of Ithe wine press. The Hebrews understood ■ how to make musical signs above the mus ■ical text. When the Jews came from their ■distant homes to the great festivals at ■Jerusalem, they brought harp and timbrel ■and trumpet and poured aioug the great ■Judaean highways a river of harmony un Btil in and around the temple the wealth of ■a nation’s song and gladness had accumu ated. Ic our day we have a division of in music, and wo have one man to the hymn, another man to make the another man to play it on the piano another man to sing It. .Not so iu times. Miriam, tho shter ot Moses, the passage of tho Bed Sea, composed doxology, set it to music, clapped It on n tubal and at tho same time sang it. the psalmist, was at tho same time musical - composer, harpist and singer, the majority of his rhythm goes vi through all the ageB. f There were harp In Bible cl three times strings stringed played in fret and bow; a harp of ten strings, .responding only to tho fingers of the per former. Then there wasthe crooked trum pet, fashioned oat of the horn of the ox or the ram. Then there were thesistrum and the eymbals, clapped in the dance or beaten in the march. There were 4000 Xevites, tho best men of the country, whoso only business it was to look after the,music of the temple. These 4000 Levltes were divided into two classes and offlci ated on different days. Can you imagine the harmony when these white robed Lo vltes, before the symbols of God’s pres «ncq, and by the smoking altars, and and the -candlesticks that sprang upward branched out like trees of gold, and under the wings of the cherubim, chanted the One Hundred and Thirty-sixth Psalm of David? Do you know how it was done. One part of that great ohoir stood up and chanted, “Oh. give thanks unto the Lord, for He is good!” Then the other part of tho choir, standing in some other part of the temple, would tome in with (he response, “For His mercy endureth lorever.” Then the first part would take up the song again and say, "Unto Him who only dooth great won ders.” The other part of the choir would come in with overwhelming response, "For His mercy endureth lorever," until in the latter part ol the song, the musi* floating backward and forward, harmony grappling with harmony, every trumpet louadtng, every bosom henylng, one pert of this (treat white robed oholr would lift the anthem, "Oh, (tive tlinnks unto the G»d of heaven,” and the other part of the I.evlte choir would come in with the response, “For His tnoroy endureth foreveo-." But I am (?lad to know that all Muough the ages there has Deen Rreat attention paid to sacred music. Ambroslns Augus tlue, Gregory the Great, Charlemagne Rave It their mighty Inlluanoa, and In our day the beat musical genius Is throwing Itself on the nltars of GodI Handel and Mozart and Baoh and Durante and Wolf and scores of other men and women have given the beat part of their genius to ohurch music. A truth In words is not halt so mighty as a truth In song. Luther’s ser mons have been forgotten, but the "Judg ment Hymn” he Christendom. eotnposed Is resounding yet through congratulate all I the world and tho ohureh on the advancement made In this art—the Edinburgh the societies for the Improvement of music, Swiss singing societies, the Exeter hall concerts, the triennial musical convocation at Dusseldorf, Germany, and Birmingham, England, tho conservatories of music at Munioh and Lelpslc, the Handel and Haydn and Harmonic and Mozart societies of this oountry, the academies of music In New York, Brooklyn, Boston, Charleston, New Orleans, Chicago and every city which has any enterprise. Now, my friends, how are we to decide what Is appropriate, especially for church music? There may be a great many differ ences of opinion. In some of the ohurohes they prefer a trained oholr; In others, the old style precentor. In some places they prefer the melodeon, the harp, the cornet, the organ. In other places they think these things are the Invention of the devil. Some would have a musical Instrument played so loud you cannot stand It, and others would have it played so sofr you oanuot hear It. Some think a musical instrument ought to be played only In the Interstices of worship and then with indescribable softness, while others are not satisfied un less there be startling contrasts and stao oato passages that make the audience jump, with great eyes and hair on end, as from a vision of the witch of Endor. But, while there may be great varieties of opinion In regard to musio, it seems to me that the general spirit of the Word of God ladleates what ought to be the great characteristics of church musle. And I remark, in the first place, a prominent characteristic devotion. Musio ought that to be adaptiveness to may be appropriate lor drawing a concert ball, or the opera house, or the room, may be inappropriate be in church. Glees, madrigals, ballads may as church innocent as psalms in their places. But music has only one design, and that is devotion, und that which comes with the toss, the swing and the display of an opera house is a hin drance to the worship. From such per formances we go away saying: “What splendid execution! Which Did you ever hear such a soprano? of those solos did you like the better?” When, if we had been rightly wrought upon, we would have gone away saying: "Oh, how my soul was lifted up in the presence of God while they were singing that first hymn! I never bad such rapturous views of Jesus Christ as my Saviour doxology.” as when they were singing that last I remark also that correctness ought to be a characteristic of church music. While wo all ought to take part in this service, with perhaps a few exceptions, we ought at the same time to cultivate ourselves in this sacred art. God loves harmony, and we ought to love it. There is no devotion in a howl or a yelp. In this day, when there are so many opportunities of high culture in this art, I declare that those parents are guilty of neglect who let their sons and daughters grow up knowing nothing about musio. In some of the Eu ropean cathedrals the choir assemble every morning and afternoon of every day the whole year to perfect themselves in this art, and shall we begrudge the half hour we spend Friday nights in the re hearsal of sacred song for the Sabbath? Another characteristic must be spirit and life. Music ought to rush from the audience like the water from a rook—clear, bright, sparkling. If all the other part of the church service is dull, do not have the music dull. With so many thrilling things to sing about, away with all drawling and stupidity. There is nothing that makes me so nervous as to sit in a pulpit and look off on an audience with their eyes three-fourths closed and their lips almost shut, mumbling the praises of God. Dur ing one of my journeys I preached to an audience of 2000 or 3000 people, and all the music they made together did not equal one skylark! People do not sleep at a cor onation, do not let us sleep when we come to a Saviour’s crowning. Again, I remark church music mu3t be congregational. broug'ht This opportunity must be down within the range of the whole audience. A song that tho wor shipers cannot sing Is of no more use to them than a sermon in Choctaw. What an easy kind of church it must be where the minister does all the preaching, and the elders all the praying, and the oholr all the singing! There are but very few churches where tbore are “two hundred and forty and five singing men and singing women.” In some churches it is almost considered a disturbance if a man let out his voice to full compass, and the people get up on tip toe and look over between the spring hats and wonder what that man is making all that noise about. In Syracuse in a Prosby terian church there wtjs one member who came to me whan I was the pastor of an other church in that city, and told me his trouble—how that as he persisted in sing ing on the Sabbath day a committee, made up of the session and tho ohoir, had come to ask him if he would not just please to keep still! You have no right to whole sing. Jonathan Edwards used to set apart days for singing. Let us wake up to this duty. I want to rouse yqu to a unanimity In Christian song that lias never yet been ex hibited. Come, now; clear your throats and get ready for this duty or you will never hear the end of this. I never shall forget hearing .a Frenchman sing the "Marseillaise’’ on the Champs Elysees, Paris, just before the battle of Sedan in 1870. I never saw such enthusiasm before or since. As he sang that national air, oh, how the Frenchman shouted! Have you ever in an English assemblage heard a band play "God Save the Queen?” If you have, you know something about the enthusiasm of a national air. Now, I tell you that these songs we sing Sabbath by Sabbath are the national airs of the kingdom of heaven, and if you do not learn to sing them here, how do you ever ejpect to Bing the song ol Moses and tile Lamb? I should not be surprised at ail it someof the beet anthems of heaven were mado up of some of the host songs of earth. May God Increase our reverence for Ohrlsttun psalmody and keep us from disgracing it by our indiffer ence and frivolity. When Cromwell’s army went Into battle, he stood at the head of it one day and gave out the long meter doxology to the tuue ot the "Old Hundredth,” and that great boat, company by company, regiment by regi ment, division by division, joined In the doxology: Praise God, from whom all blessings below; flow; Praise Him all creatures here Praise Him above, ye heavenly host; Praise Father, Son and Holy Ghost. And while they sang they marched, while and while they marched they fought, and they fought they got the victory. Oh, men and women of Jesus Christ, let us go Into all our confllots singing the praises of God and then, Instead of falling back, as often we do," from defeat to defeat, we will be marching on from viotory to victory. "Gloria in Excelsis” is written over many organs. Would that by our appreciation of of the goodne-s of God, and the mercy Christ, and the grandeur of heaven, we could have “Gloria iu Excelsis” written over ail our souls. “Glory to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost, as it wan in the beginning, is now and ever shall be, world without end. Amen!”__ 44 Circumstances Alter Cases/' Hi coses of scrofula, sail rheum, dys pepsia, nervousness, catarrh, rheumatism, eruptions, etc,, the circumstances may be altered by purifying and enriching the blood 'with Moods Sarsaparilla. It is the great remedy for all ages and both sexes. Be sure to get Hood's, because SaUatMdfa tiwemmiwints, - TAPE WORtHS aSiURE' .aXar on worm the aceufi eighioon after my feet taking Ions: two at ETS. This I am sure has caused my bad health for the print throe years. I am still taking CascafeU, the only oothartic worthy of notloe by sensible people ” Geo. w. Bowles, Baird, Maw. mmmmm T*ADf MARK *£OJftT2*ED Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good. Never Sicken, weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 26c. 50c ... CUKE CON8TIPATI9N. »• • Sterling Rom.fiy t'ooijfinny, CfelMfo, Montreal, Hew Y*rk. 313 MG-TO-BflG SSlWfflotff Counterfeiting In Cuba. The green goods men operating in Cuba are conducting tbeir business on such an extensive scale as to send genuine 81 bills with their circulars as samples of the counterfeiting money they have for sale. The Cubans ap pear to know enough not to be caught by the circulars, failed but in many cases they have to recognize the char acter of the inclosed bills and have turned them over to the authorities, thus in each oase relinguishing a good American dollar. Flf ty Cent* Will Stop Your Scratching:. Whether It 1» from tetter, eczema, ringworm, salt rheum, or any other akin trouble, use Tet terine, and accept no substitute, claimed by the dealer to be “Just as good.” Nothing else Is Just as good. If your druggist Shuptrine, can’t supply Savan- you, send 50c. in stamps to J. T. nah, Ga., for a box postpaid. When a map Is hungry a rare steak is less desirable than one that is plentiful. Beauty Is Blood Deep. Ciei.n blood means a clean skin. No beauty without It. Cabarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the body. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Casearets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 2oc, 50c. The mosquito never waits until the first of the month to send in his little bill. * v 11 * - iiTl m m j m ;Vj i-V ..iOH An Excellant Combination. The pleasant method and beneficial gSS o'? r,?.. Stkup Co., illustrate 7%i California Fis the value ol obtaining - the liquid laxa- be medicinally tive principles laxative of plants and known presenting to - them in the form most refreshing to the taste and acceptable perfect strengthening to the system. laxa- Lt Is the one tive, cleansing the system effectually, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers gently yet promptly and enabling one to overcome habitual constipation from per manently. Its perfect freedom every objectionable quality and sub stance, and its acting on the kidneys, laxative. figs In the process of manufacturing the are used, as they are pleasant to of the taste, but the medicinal qualities remedy are obtained from senna and other aromatic Californi/ plants, by a method known to the Fig Syrup Co. only. In order to get its beneficial effects and to avoid imitations, please remember the full name of the Company printed on the front of every package. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FEANCISCO, OAIs. LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK. N. Y. For sale by all Druggists.—Price 50c. per bottle. College of Denrsiry. DENTAL DEPARTMENT Atlanta College of Physicians State, and Surgeons An Oldbst College in Thirteenth nual Session opens Oct. 3; closes April 30th. Those contemplating the study of Dentistry should write for catalogue. Address S. W. FOSTER, Dean. 62-63 Inman Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. Making - Excuses For Him. Bridget—I can’t stand the missus, »ur. Von Blnmer (sarcastically)—It’s a pity, Bridget, that I couldn’t have se lected a wife to suit you. Bridget—Sure, sur, we all make mistakes.—Brooklyn Life. A Vacation Soliloquy. How oft to thoughts s man must turn Which mar his summer fun; It takes about six months to earn What he could spend in one. —Washington Star. I I P. 1 t t To cure, or money refunded by your merchant, so why not try it? Price 50c- • ’ CAUJTOB.NIA BAiaiW-MAXnsra. fine of the Most Interesting: Pomolo tflonl Sights In the State. The gang moves In a bunch, clipping off the translucent clusters of musca tels, arranging them upon the trays to shrink anil shrivel under the rays of the sun Into the concentrated delicacy we know. Behind them the lines of trnys lie, a basking array of shimmer ing fruit, and some one Interested is shoving the clusters together, that the tray shall be honestly tilled, for the workers are paid by the tray. After two weeks’ exposure to the dry heat tho flUed trays are ready to be turned so that the grape may be cured evenly. This is accomplished by two men, one on either side, placing an empty tray over fhc full one, dex terously reversing It, then, carrying the upper one with them, repeating the process on down the row. It Is at this stage in tho curing that the grape is most delectable. The nrnber is changing through rud dy stages to amethyst, and the sun wnrmod balls are drops of honey double distilled, so sweet tho.v make you long with great thirst for the red water tank shimmering In the sunlight forty acres away, but you must eat, and go on eating even while your pal ate Is cloying with the sweetness. In another week the dried grapes are ready for the sweat boxes. These wide, open boxes contain from 150 to 100 pounds, and as the raisins become sufficiently cured they are sorted from the others and placed therein, broken pieces In separate boxes. These are usually carried to a sweating house, a closed structure. In which they soften and moisten evenly, the drying having made the stems exceedingly brittle, or simply stacked in one corner of the packing house to await the grading and packing. BEETLES AS UNDERTAKERS. When They Find a Dead Animal It Is Bur* led • • tor » c ruture . ,, Vise. ^ People often wonder what become* of . the dead , mice and , dead , . birds, . , for, * though birds and mice are constantly dying in large numbers, hardly one la ever to be seen. The fact Is that they are burled by beetles, according to Our Animal Friends. Buchner gives a brief account of them as follows. ‘‘Several of them unite together to bury , under , the ground, i as food j and j shelter for their young, some dead aid mal, such as a mouse, a toad, a mole, a bird, etc. The burial Is performed be cause the corpse, if left above ground, tvoultl either diy up or grow rotten, or nr be eaten by other animals. In all tbesa cases the young would perish, whereas the dead body lying in the earth and withdrawn from the oter air lasts very well. The burying beetles go to work in a very well-considered fashion, for they scrape away the earth lying under the body, so that it sinks Itself deeper and deeper. When it Is deep enough down it Is covered over from above, If the situation is stony thn beetles, with united forces and great efforts, drag the corpse to soma place more suitable for burying. They work so diligently that a mouse, for instance, Is buried within three hours. B,ut they often work on for days, so as to bury the body as deeply as possible. From large carcasses, such as those of horses, sheep, etc., they only bury pieces as large as they can manage.” There can be no doubt of the intelli genoe of these strange insects, as a iXo" Zj’I S toaf j an f] f or that purpose he fastened a up.„ lb. «„p of «n upright ««. Tb. burying beetles, however, were soon attracted by the smell, and, finding that they could not reach the toad, they undermined the stick, causing it tQ f n ith the toad whlch was then aul Y hurled, Mad King’* Room. Hnlf way between ,, Munich . , and . balz- „ , burg is the third castle, Herrenchiem see> built by Ludwig II. This great structure is incompleted, fortunately f ^ alreaJ overta xed Bavaria, for no «-> "■“* •»—*«*■ have been. One room alone, the re nowned bedchamber, could not be duplicated for less than $1,000,000. The vau ited ceiling is one great allegorical p 1 a i nt i n g f (q ie rounded cornice is cov ered with a score of . richly . . , framed mural paintings, the walls are panels of hammered gold of intricate designs, and even the floor is of marvelous pat tern. The only suggestion of the purpose of this wonderful room is the $60,000 bed, with its canopy more magnificent than any that covers a regal throne. In the slsmsss through the floor when a course was finished, and in its place came up an other, set and served. He desired this so that servants would be unnecessary in the room, and the most secret state matters could be discussed in safety.— Ladies’ Home Journal. Do Your Feet Aclie and Burn ? Shake into your shoes Alien’s Foot-Ease, a powder for the foet. It makes Tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures Corns, Bun ions, Swollen, Hot, Callous, Aching and Sweating Feet. Sold by all Druggists, Grocers and Shoe Stores, 25o. Samjdo sent FEEE. Address Alien S. Oimsted, LeKoy, N. Y.________ The man who takes his whiskey straight usually t ikes his walks otherwise. To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Casearets Candy Cathartic. 10c or SSc. if C. C. C. fall to cure, druggistsrefuud money. In all stories of the wheel the punctuating period brings it to a full r-top. Hnng lip. “How far back on the family tree did he trace bis lineage?” “To the third limb.” “Why did he stop there?” “His great-great-grandfather was dangling on it.”—Cleveland Plain Dealer. DUcovery of Lift Plant. Science lmt discovered a plant so full of life that If one of its leaves be broken off and merely pinned to a war m wall another plant will grow from It. it Is these same vitalizing principles which enable Hostctter’t stomach Bitters to arouse to Ilf© and duty tho over worked stoinfV’h. the weak blood and sluggish liver. The sufferer from dyspepsia or nny stomach trouble needs Hostetter’i Stomach Bitters, See that a private Revenue Stamp covers the neck of tho bottle. it takei four weeks’hard lahnr to prepare for a two.w eeks’ summer vacati on. Con’l T eticco S|ill uni Smoke Your Lite Away. ; To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mat netic, full of lire, nerve and vigor, take No-To lia -. the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or $1. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. Poetry is what a man writes about gardens without mentioning the weeds. Judge Foote Is County .Judge At Wynne, Ark. His daughter, Mies 9allie Foote, say*: “Mr pap* has u»ed Winter smith's ChUl Onre tor over 10 years iu our family. One of my sisters had Chills for two years and one bottle of W Intersmith’s Chill i ure cured her.” Address Akthuk Peter A Co., Louisville, Ky. in Martyrdom the consists in being tho only one family who likes onions. Deafness Cannot lie Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the dlseasod portion of the ear. There Is only one way to cure deafness, and that Is by constitu tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in flamed condition of the mucous lining ot the Kustachtan Tube. When this tube gets in flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness Is the result, and Oil less the inflam mation can be taken out aAd this tube restored to fts normal condition, hearln# will be de stroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which id nothing but an In flamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that can not be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. Cermet A Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hali’e Family Pills are the best. Seme men’s Idea of praetioing economy is to preach It daily to their wives. Kdncate lour --------,— Bowels With Cascnrets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever, Wc, S5c. He.c.C.iaii.drurriet.refund money. Thp man who is anxious to buy usually gate tho wurst of the bargain, an d Health in tbY strawberry. our ;r«» ..i?tr.wb.rrySp»clali«t.. Bublicatioant.il bow tot*-tthem Klttrali.N... out. 1 tP.t; e No man knows the righ t way so well as the one who has once been misled, ------— ;iTOr , dS’? , S2-.f H 5r fl VnA , »' a Nerve Reetorer. trial bottle and treatise free, r ■ fl- * »»»■ Ltd., «ai Arch St. . Phiia., Pa. I can reoommend Pleo's < hire for Consump" don to sufferers from Asthma.—E. D. TOWS' SESD< Howard, Wis., May 4,1804. 31 ri. Winslow's Soothing Symp for children tvethiUE.softens the arum*, reduces inflamma tion.allays pain.cures wind colic. 2ac. a bottle. The saotlst la always the first to complain of egotism. No-To-Bftc for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, bleed pure. £0c, $1. All druggists. The ‘’secret service” was originated by the j Quakers. jyss& ■ A : ! Pill* acting Dizzy? well. Then You suffer your from liver isn’t bilious directly ness, constipation. liver. Ayer’s For 60 Pills act on tne years the Standard Family All Pill. Small doses cure. 25c. druggists. r T^aiatTyour mouatiohe^ beard a~beautlful^ or I brown or rich bUok ? Then uae i BUCKINGHAM’S DYE «2 r9 f | ^9- QT9, Of pRuo^sjc, pc n. »■ Hail A^Co. Nabhi^i n. h. | THE REASON WHY j For man or beast j \ | SLOAN’S j i ! j LINIMENT Excels—is that it Penetrates to the seat of the trouble im mediately and without irrita ting rubbing—and kills the pain. Family and Stable Sham Sold by Dealers generally. Dr, Earl S. Sloan, Boston, Mama. GOLDEN CROWN LAMP CHIMNEYS Are the last. Ask for them. Cost no more than common chimneys. All dealers. 1'JTTSIUJKO GI.AS* C<>.. Allegheny, Pa. MENTION THIS PaPERSUSW^ Hi DR. MOFFETT’S B Aids Digestion, fl 0- Ilfla**!? **a ASA?‘ j TeethinA Ami Regulates Makes TEETHINA Bowel Children Teething Troubles of the Any Relieves Bowels, of Easy. Age. the HB TFFTMNfi PnWnFRS i*. ________________ . ................. if not kept by’druKgists mail 35 cents to C. J i MtOFPKXX, OT. If., ST. MO. Mrs. Barnard Thanks MRS. PINKHAM FOR HEALTH. [Lima to uaa. pikkbam ho. 18,991] “ Dean Friend—I feel It my duty to express my gratitude a»d thanks to you for what your medicine has dono for me. I was very miserable and los ing flesh very fast, had bladder trouble, fluttering pains about the heart and would get so diszy and suffered with painful menstruation. I was reading in a paper about Lydia K. Pinkham’* Vegetable Compound, so I wrote to you and after taking two bottjes I felt like a new person. Your Vegetable Compound has entlrely eurod me an< J I canao* praise it enough,” —Mrs. J. O. Barrabd, MlLLTOWN, WASHINGTON Co., Me. -- ; nwl; Woman’s Convincing Itel i e^it “I tried three doctors, and tto# last one said nothing but an operation would help me. My trouble was pro fuse flowing; sometimes I would think I would flow to death. I was so weak that the least work would tire me. Beading of so many being cured by your medicine, I made np my mind to write to you for advice, and I am so glad that I did. I took Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound and Liver Pills and followed your directions, and am now well and strong. I shall recom mend your medicine to all, for it saved my life.”—Miss A. P., Box 21 Abbott, Iowa. Barters Is scientifically compounded ink of i best’materials. the Why take Nauseous Medicines? Are you suffering wJth 1ND1SEST1GH? ire you suffering with KIBNEY or BLADDER TROUBLE? Ara you subject to COLIC, FLATULENCY or FAINS In the BOWELS? Oe yeu aufTer from RBTENTldN or SI P PRESSION ot UlUNEf Do you feel LANH'OIt, auil DEBII.ITA TED in the mornlnitf WOLFE’S Aromatic Schiedam SCHNAPPS CURES THEM ALL!! Pleasant to taka, Stimulating, Bluratio, Stomachic, Absolutely Pure. THE BEST KIBNEY and LIVER MEDICINE IN THE WORLD ! ! ! Far Sale by all GROCERS u.nd DRUGGISTS. BEWARE OF substitutes. PITTS’ Antiseptic Invigoraior FOR The Stomach, The Liver, The Bowels, The Kideys, The Blood, The Nerves, Contagious "Diseases. Antiseptic Iuvigorator is a germ-killer, a | diuretic, a blood purifier, a stomach and ; nerve tonic, a stimulant for the liver and j bowels. Manufactured by PITTS’ ANTISEPTIC INVIGORATE CO., THOMSON, GA. Wa L. DOUGLAS $3&$3.5 0 SHOES union Worth $4 to $6 compared with § other makC3. Indorsed by over 1,000,000 wearers. ALL LEATHERS. ALL STYLES THU GBXUIKE ha tg TY. L. Dongla** Dome &*4 price ctamped on button. 'Take no substitute claimed to be as good. Largest makers of 43 and *3.50 shoes In the world. Your dealer should keep them—if not, vre will seu.d you a pair &n receipt of price. Suita kind of leather, size and width, O Free. plain or cap toe. Catalogue W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO.. Brockton, Mass. CIIW Bi BEPAIRS SAWS, RIBS, BRISTLE TWINE, BABBIT, &c,, FOB ANY MAKE OF GIN. ENGINES. BOILERS AND PRESSES And Repairs for same. Shafting, Fittings, Pulleys, Belting, Injectors, Pipes, Valves and LOMBARD IRON WORKS & SUPPLY CO., AUGUSTA, GA. QOTgSgHOOL BOARD & Room Tuition low. All Hooka FREE. writers. 364 Send students last year Address, frem 7 Dep't State* 22, Bin yoar. for catalogue. STRAYER’S BUSINESS C0L GE, Baltimore,Hid. If sffllcted with 1 Thompson’s Eye Water sore eyes, use 2.5 {CFS‘ Best DUDES Cough WHERE SyTup. t K astpQS In time Add hv ri mofftlta CONSUMPTION 212115;:5353