Ocilla dispatch. (Ocilla, Irwin County, Ga.) 1899-19??, November 24, 1899, Image 7

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TAMAGE’S SERMON. The Eminent Divine’* Sunday Discourse. Subject: Our* Father’s House — God’s Homestead, Uuilded on the Hitts oi' Heaven, Prevides Rooms For All— Vivid Picture of the Celestial Home. [Copyright, T.onis ttlopsoli, 1S99.I heavenly Washimoton, I). (J.—In a unique way the world is discoursed upon by Dr. Tuhriugtt lu this sermon under tlio figure of a homo; text, John xiv.,2, "in My Father's house are many rooms." Hero is a hoi tie of medicine that is n cure all. The disciples were sad, and Christ offered heaven as an alterative, a stimulant nod a tonic. He nhows them that their sorrows are only a dark back¬ ground felicity. of a bright picture of coming Ho lets thorn know that, though now they live on tho lowlands, they shall yet hay's a house on Win uplands. Nearly all the Bible descriptions of heaven may he heaven figurative. 1 am uot positive that in all there Is a literal orowu or liarp or pearly gate or throne or chariot. They may he only used to illustrate tho glories of the place, hut how wait they do It! The favorite symbol by which tho Bible pre¬ sents celestial happiness is a house. Paul, who never owned a house, although he hired one for two years in Italy, speaks of heaven as a “house not made with hands,” arid, Christ in our text, the translation of which is a little changed, sb ns to give tire more accurate mean lug, says: “In My Father's house are many rooms.” This divinely authorized comparison of heaven to a great homestead ot large ac¬ commodations I propose to carry out. In some lioalthy neighborhood a man build3 a very commodious habitation. Ho must have room for all his children. The room.s come to be called after the different mem- bors of t tie family. That Is mother’s room, that is George’s room, that is Henry’s room, that is Flora’s room, that is Mary’s room, and the house is all occupied. But time goes world by, and build the sons go out Into the and their own homes, and the (laughters nre married or have talents enough singly to go cut and do a good work In tile world. After a while the father and mother are almost alouo in tho big house, and, seated by the evening stand, they say, “Well, our family is no larger now than when wo started together forty years ago.” But time goes stilt further by, and some of the children are unfortunate and return to tho old home¬ stead to live, and tho grandchlldrou como with them and perhaps groat-grandeuil- drea, and again the house is full. Millehnla ago God built on the Hills of heaven a great homestead for a family in- nutneraWe, yet to be. At first He lived alone in that great house, but after awhile It was occupied by a angelic. very large The family, eher- ublo, seraphic, eternities passed on, and many of the inhabitants became and wayward and’left, nevor to return, many of the apartments were vacant, i refer to the fallen angels. Now these apartments are filling up again. There are arrivals at the old homestead of God’s children every day, and tho dny will come when there will he no unoccupied room iu all the house. As you and I expect to enter it and make tliero eternal residence, I thought you would like to get somo more particulars about the many roomed homestead. “In my Father’s house are many rooms.” You see, the placo is to be apportioned off Into apartments. YYe shall love alt who are iu heaven, hut there aro some very good peo¬ ple whom wo would not want to live with in the same room. They may be better than we .are, but We they are of a divergent temperament. would Jilce to meot with them on the golden streots and worship with them iu the teniple and wall: with them On the river banks, hut I am glad to say that we shall live in different apart¬ ments. “In^my Father’s house aro many rooms.’’ You see, heaven will he so large that if one want 3 an entire room to himself or herself it cau.be afforded. An ingenious statistician, taking the statement made in Revelation, twenty-first chapter, that the heavenly Jerusalem w as measured and found to bo 12,000 furlongs and that tho length and height and breadth of it are equal, says that would make heaven in BtzefSiS Sexnlilon 9S8 quintillion cubic feet, and then, reserving a certain portion for the court of heaven and tho streets and estimaiiug that the world may- last a hundred thousand,years, he ciphers put that there are over 5,000,000,000,000 rooms, each room soventeeu feet long, six¬ teen feet wylo, fifteen fpet high. But 1 have no faith lu the accuracy, of that calcula¬ tion. He makes the rooms too small. From ail I can read the rooms will be palatial, and those who have not had enough room iu this world will have plenty of room at tho last. I should uot wonder if, instead of’tho room that the statistician ciphered out as only seventeen feet by sixteen, it should be larger than any of the rooms at Berlin, St.. James or .Winter pnlaoe. “In my Bather's house are many rooms.” Carrying out still join further hands the symbolism (5? the text, let us and go up to this majestic homestead and golden see for our¬ selves. As we ascend the steps an invisible guardstnanSwings to open the front door, and we are ushered the right into the reception room of the old homestead. That is the plaoe where wo first meet tho welcome b£ heaven. There spirit must be a and plaee where tho departed the enters a place in which it confronts inhabitants celestial. The reception room of the new¬ ly arrived from this world—what scenes it must have witnessed since the first guest arrived, the victim.of the first fratricide, pious Abell Iu that room Christ lovingly greets all newcomer?.* He redeemed them, and He hnsjhe Whnt rightto minute theflrst when the embrace ascended on arrival. a spirit first secs the Lord! Better than all we ever rea l ujjouf Him'in Him or talked about Him or sang about all the churches and through all our earthly lifetime will be, just for one second to see Him. most rapturous Idea wo ever had of on sacramental days or at tho height some great revival or under the uplifted of nn oratorio is a bankruptcy of compared with tho first flash of appearance In that reception room. At moment when you confront each Christ looking upon you and you upon Christ, there will he an ec- thrill anil surging of emotion that all description. Look! They need Introduction. Long ago Christ chose repentar i slnutr, and that repentant chose Christ. Mightiest moment of immortal history—the first The soul ktss and of Jesus and the sou!! now into kinsfolk, that reception room pour glorified enough ot earthly to let you know them, but willi- ttioir wounds or t’loir sicknesses or troubles. See what heaven has done for them— so radiant, They,call 30 gleeful, by so lovely! you They greet you with au ardor pro- to the nuguish ot your parting the length of your separation. Mother! There is your child. Brothers! Friends! I wish you Fev years apart, together nftnln in reception room of tho old homestead. they will know you nre coming. nre so many immortals filling nil the 3 between here and heaven that news that flies llko lightning. They will ho !■ an instant. Though they were in other world on errand from God, a *"* 1 would be tLrovrn that would 8 them. Though you might at first f« t daae* and overawed at their guper- splendor, ail that feeling will be at their first couch of heavenly tntation, and wo will say: “Ob. my lost yl” "Oh, my lost companion!” ‘ ‘Oh v loot friendl Are we here together!” [hat Id homestead sceues in havo th.-. reeeptlon been wltnessedl room ot There the [el heia Joseph thnb anything and Jaaob. they finding Saw in ttnbrighter I’hsraeh’s ttlaee; David atd the iittle child for whom rr« fasted and wept; Mary mid Laz- nrus niter the heartbreak of Bethany; Timothy and grandmother Lois; Isabella Graham and her sailor son; Alfred and George Cookmnn, the mystery of the sea at last made manifest; Luther and Magda, lone, the daughter ha bomonned; Job* Howard and the prisoners whom ho go*, pelized, and multitudes without number who, once so weary and so sad, parted earth, but gloriously met in heaven. Among all the rooms of that house there Is no one that more enraptures my soul tfcun that reception room. “In my Father’s bouse are many rooms.” Another room in onr Father’s house la the throne room. We belong to tho royal family. The blood of King Jesus Hows in our veins, so we have a right to enter the throne room. It Is no easy thing on earth to get through even the outside door of a king’s residence. During tho Frunco-Gor- raan war, one eventide in the summer of 1870,1 stood studying tile exquisite scalp, taring of the gate of tlie Tuilerios, Paris. Lost in admiration of the wonderful art of that gate, I knew not tiiat I was exciting suspicion. Lowering my eyes to the crowds of people, I found myself being closely in¬ spected by complexion, the government judged metobea officials, who from my Ger¬ man and that for some belligerent purpose I might be examining the gates of the pal¬ ace. My explanation in very poor French did not satisfy them, and they followed mo long distances untit I reached my hotel and were not satisfied until from my land¬ lord they found that I wn 3 only an inoffen¬ sive American. Tile gates of eirthly pal¬ aces are carefully guarded, and if so, how much; more tho tbroneroom! A dazzling place ts it for mirrors and all costly art. No one who ever saw tho tbroneroom of the llrst and only Napoleon will ever for¬ get the letter N embroidered in purple and gold on the upholstery of chair and win¬ dow, the letter N glided chalices, on tho wall, the letter N chased on tiie the letter N flaming from the ceiling. What throneroonx a con¬ flagration of brilliance the of Cliurlas Immanuel of Sardinia, of Fordinand of Spain, of Fdizabeth of England, of Boniface of Italy. But the throneroom of our Father’s house hath a glory eclipsing all the throne- rooms that ever saw scepter wave or crown glitter or foreign embassador bow, for our Father’s throne is a throne of grace, a throne of mercy, a throne of holiness, a throno of justice, a throne of universal dominion. Wo need not stand shivering and cowering before it, for our Father says we may yet one day come up and sit on it beside Him. ‘‘To him that overcometh will I grant to sit with Me in My throne.” You see, we are princes and princesses. Perhaps now we movo about incognito, as Peter Use Great In the garb of a ship car¬ penter .*.t Amsterdam or as Queen Tirsuh in the dress of a peasant womnn seeking tho prophet lor her child’* cure, but it will be found out after a while who we are whan we get into the tbroneroom. Ayo, wo need not watt until then. We may by prayer and song and spiritual uplitting this moment outer tho throneroom. O King, live fororerl Wo touch the scepter and prostrate ourselves at Thy feet. Another room in oar Father’s house 13 the music rootu. St. John ami other Bible ■writers talk so much about tho music of heaven that there must be music there, perhaps not suclt us on earth was thrum¬ med from trembling string or evoked by touch of ivory key; bat, if not that, then something better. There are so many Christian harpists and Christian composers and Christian organists and Christian hym- nologists that have gone up from earth, there must be for them some place of es¬ pecial delectation. Shall we have music in this world of discords and no music in the land of complete harmony? In that music room of our Father’s house you will some day meet the old masters, Mozart and Handel and Mendelssohn and Beethoven and Doddridge, whose sacred poetry was as remarkable as Ms sacred prose, and James Montgomery and William Cowper, at last got rid of his spiritual mel¬ ancholy, and Bishop Heber, who sang of “Greenland’s icy mountains and India’s ooral straud,” and Dr. Baffles, who wrote of “High in yonder realms of light.’ ” and Isaac Watts, who went to visit Sir Tho Abney and wife for a week, but proved himself so agreeable a gue3t that they made him stay thirty-six years, and side by side Augustus Toplady, who has got over his dislike for Methodists, and Charles Wesley, freed from his dislike for Calvinists, and George W. Betiiune, as sweet as a songmaker as he was great as a preacher and the author of “Tho Village Hymns,” and many who wrote In verse or song, In church or by eventide cradle, and many who were passionately fond of mu 3 ic, but could make none them¬ selves, tho poorest singer there more than any earthly prirna donna and the poorest players^tbere more than auy earthly Gott- schalk. Ob, that music room, the head¬ quarters of cadence and rhythm, sym¬ phony and chant, psalm and antiphon! May we be there some hour when Haydn sits at the keys of one of his own oratorios, and David tho psalmist lingers the harp, and Miriam of the Bed sea banks clap 3 the cymbals, and Gabriel puts his lips to the trumpet and the four and tweuty elders chant, and Lind and Pareparender match¬ less duct in the music room of the old heavenly homestead! “In my Father’s house are many rooms.” Another room in our Father’s house will be the family room. It may correspond somewhat with the family room on earth. At morning and evening, you know, that is the place we now meet. Though every member of the household have a separate room, in the family room they al) gather, and joys and sorrows and experiences of nil styles are there rehearsed. Sacred room In alt our dwellings, whether It be luxuri¬ ous with ottomans and divans and books in Russian lids standing in mahogany case or there be only a few plain chairs and a cradle. So the family room on high will be the place where tho kinsfolk assem¬ ble and talk over the family experi¬ ences of earth, the weddings, the births, the burials, tho festal days of Christmas and Thanksgiving reunion. Will the children departed remain chil¬ dren there? Will the aged remain aged there? Oh, no! Everything is per¬ fect there. The child will go ahead to glori¬ fied maturity, and the aged will go back to glorified maturity. The rising sun. of the one will rise to meridian, and the descending sun of the other will return to meridian. However much we love our children ou earth, we would consider It a domestic disaster if they staid children, and so we rejoice at their growth here. And when wo meet In the family room of our Father’s house wo will be glad that they have grandly and gloriously matured, while our parents, who were aged and in¬ firm here, we shall Be glad to find re¬ stored to the most agile and vigorous im¬ mortality there. I hope none of us will be disappointed about getting there. There 13 a room for us if we will go and take It, but in order to reach It it is absolutely necessary that we take the right way, and Christ is the way, and we must enter at the right door, and Christ Is the door, and we must start in time, and the only hour you are sure of is the hour the clock now strikes, and the only second the one your watek 1 b now ticking. I hold In my hand a rail of letters inviting you all to make that your home forever. Tho New Testa¬ ment Is only a roll of letters inviting you, as tho spirit of them practically ehiid In says: “My dying yet immortal earthly neighborhood, I have built for you a great residence. It Is full of rooms. I have furnished them as no palace emeralds was ever furnished. Pearls are nothing, illu¬ are nothing, chrysoprasus is nothing, mined panels of sunrise and sunset noth¬ ing, the aurora or the northern heavens nothing, compared with the splendor with which I have garnitured them. But you must be clean before you can enter there, and so I have opened a fountain where yo» may wash all your sins away. Come nowl Put your weary but cleansed feet on the upward pathway. Do you nat see amid the thick foliage on the heavenly hilltops the old family homestead?” "In my Father’s house are many roerne.” ** . . The Best is Cheapest” We team this from experience in every department of life. Good dot hex are most serviceable and wear the longest. Good food gives the best nutriment. Good medicine. Hood's Sarsaparilla, is the best and cheapest, because it cures, absolutely CURES, when all others fail. HimiA Soa ffjKSSQZft* CURE YOUR HORSE of Spavin, Qurb, Capped Hock, Sore Tendons, Cuts, Kicks, Bruises, etc., by using Also an invaluable remedy for man. When taken internally it cures Cramps and Colic. It fs the best antistatic known. Evcrv bottle is warranted. BoM by dealers and orutfifists generally. Family size, ajc. Horae size, sec. awd . 00 . Prapsred by EARL S. SLOAN, Boston, Mass. Broker’* Pfavel French Lesson. A well known Now York stockbroker ig learning the French language In a peculiar way. His education was neg¬ lected in his youth, at least In this par¬ ticular direction, and he has always regretted his Inability to read the works of Renan, and possibly a few other authors, in the original. The broker has a great friend in a child who Is attending a kindergarten. He takes her out driving almost every day In Centre! Park, and some little time ago the child pointed at a tree and remarked, “that is un arbre.” “Eh! Whnt? That’s an elm,” said the broker. “Never heard of a tree called an arb.” “That’s French,” resopnded the child with dignity. j After the broker had recovered he elicited the information that it was the custom at the kindergarten to teach the children a few words of French every day. Ho seized upon the oppor- tunity, and now as they drive through the park the little girl repeats her daily lesson to her grown up friend. He ex- pects to be able to speak the language verv nlcelv when the child Is a few yqars older.—New York Times. ' W. h refund lflo~for that eVeiry~packag« fails u:lv« of Puv- nA m ADELEfis Dye to satis- faction. Monroe Drug Co., Unionvllle, Mo. Bold b, all druggists, A Clear Understanding. Newlywed (after the ceremony)—Do darl.ii vo u real- ■ think I ehnll make , a cood , mute, . . . Mrs. Newlywed—Oh, like you’re nil right. How do you j our captain? H Vif' It ^ Pi til Is your breath bad? Then your best friends turn their heads aside. A bad breath means a bad liver. Ayer’s Pills are liver pills. They cure constipation, biiiousness ; dyspepsia, druggists. sick headache. 25c. AU vfaat your ir.onstacno Btach or 'beard beam a a "biauSni uoauu: BUCKINGHAM’S brown or rich black ? Then u»« (rtfr* DYE '&STgEL£ (7/lTAL°GU& 6 WP pgtfry Send your name and address on a postal, and wa will send you our 156 - page illustrated catalogue free. WINCHESTER REPEATS ARMS CO. 176 Winchester Aver,us, Sw Hnvtn, /^RTEK’SIMK Makes writing a comfort. WANTED Tt AGENTS “trash.” Er&fi Exclu¬ all bound In cloth; no sive right of territory; OUTFI T FREE. J. !L. NlCHOLS & CO. # Atlanta, Ga. Don’t Pot a Bird in the Window. "Never put a bird In the window,” said a bird fancier to the reporter the other day. "I rarely go Into the street In summer, or even on a mild day In winter, that I do not see unfortunate canaries hung in the windows. Even If the sun Is not broiling the brains un¬ der the litfle yellow cap, a draft la blowing all tho time over the delicate body. People have been told a thou¬ sand times that they must not put a bird In the draft, yet how few remem¬ ber that there Is always a draft In an open window.—Berlin (Md.) Herald. 11 a V:-” ialion Chill Cure is Guaranteed To cure, or money refunded by your merchant, so why uot try it? Brice SOc. INDIGO tNDUSTBY MENACED. Cannot Compete with Dyei Produced by Modern Chemistry. The great icillgo industry In Behnr, which gives employment to hundreds of thousands of families In one of the most populous districts In northern In¬ dia, Is threatened with destruction. Twenty-five millions of dollars) or more are invested In it, and tho situation promisee to assume the proportions of a public calamity. The itebax plant- ters, who own the lands anfi cultivate mainly at ihelr own risk, about twenty- five years ago formed an asociatlon, in ccnn rt with the government which established almost ideal relations be- twoen the landowners, tho cultivators, and the factories, and has enjoyed ever since an uncommon share of peace and prosperity. Now it Is threatened with ruin because of the competition of the cheap aniline dyes produced by modern chemistry. For many years the Debar Indigo held its own by vir¬ tue of Its superiority In color and per¬ manence to the artificial product but It is now claimed that a true and pure Indigo has been chemically produced. As far back as 1881 Prof. V. Bayer showed how to build up Indigo synthe¬ tically from its component parts. But after years of costly experiment It was not found possible to produce Indigo comorcially by his method, In 1890, however, Prof. Hcvunann of Zurich carried tho research a step forward, and finally, In 1S97, artificial Indigo was bought upon the market at a price capable of competing with the natural article. The manufacture has now been taken up by the largest color works Id the world, and the planters in Behar find themselves powerless to contend against an article at once equal to and cheaper than their own, and lndepenedent of transportation. Old Case of Tetter in Toes. “Cbawfobdvilias, Fla. : Tetterino is worth more than its weight in gold to me. One application cured me of fetter in my toes of seven (7) years standing. John M. Towles. It cures all skin diseases. At druggists 50 cents a box, or by mail postpaid from J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga. REPORTER WORTH A MILLION, How Editor and Proprietor ot Ike Jersey Uty Journal. Col. Sheffield Phelps, owner of the Jersey City Journal, was the richest newspaper man in America several years ago. From bis father, the late William Walter Phelps, he inherited a fortune of several millions, and under itis active and practical management made his newspaper the foremost | Journal iVt the of end the ot State. bis first year be was j j bitterly attacked by bis political ene- mies> who brought libel suits for many hundreds of thousands of dollars (against him, but he won easily In the i courts. SiDCQ then. il 6 hfl-S boon 8 . pow- | j erful political his factor has in been Hudson signally Conn- 1 in- ! ty, and course dorsed by Gov. Voorhees. j appointment The Colonel, whose the title staff comes of from Gov. on ! Griggs, lives In one of the showy places of the State, directly opposite Now j York City, on the crest of the Pali¬ sades. The family estate comprises | more than 3,000 acres. It is probably the costliest farm in America. The | land Is worth in the neighborhood of 53,000,000 for building purposes. After his graduation from Yale, in Col. Phelps began active news¬ paper work as a reporter on the World at New York. Later be became an ed¬ itorial writer on the Mail and Express, and afterward filled the position of act¬ ing managing editoron the game paper. Once, while on the World staff, he was sent to report the wedding of the daughter of a Wall street man recently from the West. The reporters were met at the front door by a trained ser¬ vant, who quickly separated them from the guests and led them to the host’s private room, where the banker met them In person, and gave them type¬ written slips containing the lnforma- tion they were sent for. Then cham¬ pagne was opened, and the banker took some cigars from a drawer In his desk. “Have one,” he said to Phelps. “They’re genuine eonchns. I Import them myself.” "Thanks,” said Phelps pleasantly, as lie took the cigar. “Have one of mine. They’re real ascura maduras.”—Phila¬ delphia Saturday Evening Post. Willing to Imitate. “Why don't you take example from the little busy bee?” Inquired the man of unoriginal ideas. "I do,” answered Meandering Mike. “An’ I want to call your attention to de fact dat about now is when de little busy bee lays off nn’ doesn’ do no more work fur de ncx’ six months.” Wanted. Two traveling salesmen in each Southern state. $.*0.00and expenses. Permanent position. Experience Peerless not absolutely necessary. Addreas Tobacco WorJ»s Co., Bedford City, Ya. Due to Imagination. The truly pr eat man is seldom aware of his eminence. It is the would-be great man who Imagines that he obscures the perspective. No Cure, No Pay, Is the way Findley’s Eye Salve Is sold. Chronic and granulated lids cured in 30 days; common sore eyes in 3 days, or money back for the asking. Sold by all druggists, or by mail, 25c. box. J. P. Haitke, Decatur, Texas. When Japanese get msd. Inscend of swear¬ ing. they go out and slam r.he door. People Who Ll've In Nett*. Travellers who have returned from the heart of Africa and the Australian continent tell wonderful stories of nest-bulldlng people who Inhabit the wilds of those countries. In the bushmcn of Australia we And perhaps the lowest order of men that nre known. They are so primitive that they do not know enough to oulld even tho simplest form of huts for shelter. The nearest they could approach to It Is to gather a lot of twigs and grass, and taking them Into a thicket or jun¬ gle, they build a nest for a home, much as does a bird. The nest is usu¬ ally built large enough for the family, and if the latter be very numerous then tho nests are of a very largo size. snuggle Into this place curl they together all turn like and j and up so many kittens. Sometimes the foliage will grow together and form a sort of natural covering, but there is never any attempt at constructing a protec¬ tion from the rain and storms, and It Is a marvel hotv they endure them. Where there Is a particularly good piece of jungle for home sites it will bo quickly appropriated for the pur¬ pose, and sometimes hundreds of these nests will be found together in the bush, as It Is called. Left All Sehlnd, Cholly—There goes that dashing widow Brown, whose husband left her bo much real estate. Jack—Real estate! How much did bo leave? Cholly—lie left the earth.—Judge. Tea Polsonins*. Victims of tea poisoning are becoming Alarmingly prevalent. Women domand the life and variety of Hsalth, and Instead of doing it naturally by building up their systems they resort to tea. They should take Hostettor’s Stomach Hitters Instead. By strengthening and tho digestive organa this brings beauty good spirits. It ton**s up tho nerves, drives away the blues, regulates the bowels and euros all forms of dyspepsia. All druggists sell It. As An Antidote. Alt men are’not fools when they get. married. Only tho other day a hard drinker in a Western dime museum married the snake charmer. Statn op Ohio, City op Toledo, i f Lucas County. ’ Frank J. Cherry makes oath tho the is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Chf.net & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid. and that said firm will nay the sum of ore hundred dollars for «acb and every cvyb^ of catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of HALL'S Catarrh Cure. Frank J. Cheney. Sworn to before roe and subscribed in ray |ska i,j- this 0th day of December, A. D. 1880, A. W. RLE A SON. Notary Public. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces oi the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. .T. Orkney & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall’s Family Pills aro the best. The public is wiser than the wisest critic.— Bancroft. ,,,^,'*rt«Vflret’aav’B‘’os«‘ef ix Great Nerve Restorer, trial bottle and treatise free, ' KLIM ’'‘ u 1 At «> Thus., p a . Brooklyn, IvY., Nov. 14,1804. ^ W PUSH! PUSH!’ PUSH!!! 8 ‘ That’s the way some dealers do ! Push cheap goods r because the profits are large. Why let a man push a cheap Buggy dollar of on n you can get tits bast .■ . •- , it at only a i Do you ever think about that way? Soobur figont or writs dlroot Ft-dCsSC felEsEsROCK Why tak© Nauseous IVIsdicinos? firs you suffsring with IfiSiEESTiaii? Are you suffsring with KIBiiEY or BL&BBEH'TBSUBLE ? Aro you subject to COLIC, FLATULENCY or FAINS in tile BOWELS f Bo you Butter from RETENTION or St'P. FRBSSION st DKINEf Bo you feel LANGUOR, nail DEBILITA¬ TED In tbo moraiutff WOLFE'S Amaiis Seltisdam SCHNAPPS CURES THEM ALL!! Pleasant to take, Stieuilatiiig, Diuretic, Stomachic, Absolutely Pore. THE BEST K10KEY and LIVER MEBtCItJE IN THE WORLD! !! p*r gale by all GROCERS aad DRUGGISTS. BEWAIIK OF SUBSTITUTES. a >■ ’■ i WE MAKE THE LAMPO, TOD BUY DIRECT. QPP and Whiskey ITabits cured at home with¬ out pain. Book oi par¬ ticulars sent FRK8, B.M. WOOLLEY, M.D. 'Office 104 N. Pryor St fijy fl quick DISCOVERY; giTM u and euroH Worst car so. Boo* of teptimonialM *nd 10 dny S’ t>e*tmer.t Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN’S SONS. Box B, Atlanta, Oft. 3E In writing to adver" User., ako WJ-46 1 Lamps OVELY $09 0 — All hand-painted. No handsomer lamp made. Bold at mmmfaotnrer’s prices. \V« PAY 'IB FRBIOHT. Makes a most accepta¬ ble present. t±*autiful colored cat¬ alogue of hand-painted PARLOR or BANQUET ! LAMPS, free, j ' Every Lamp Guaran - teed. Monty back if you tcant it. Manufactured by Pittsburg Glass Co., Pittsburg, Pa. Mrs. Plnkham’s Medicine Made a New Woman of Mn. Kuhn. [urm to msa riKiSAM so- £4,40*] < " Drab Mbs. Pisan ax—I think it i* my duty to write to you expressing m,y sincere gratitude for the wonder¬ ful relief I have experienced by the ou of Lydia E. Plnkham’s Vegetable Coat- pound. I tried different doctors, also different kinds of mediolne. I would feel better at times, then would be as bad as ever. “ For eight years I was a groat suf¬ ferer. I had falling of tho womb and was in such misery at my monthly periods I could not work but a little before I would have to lie down. Tour medicine has made a new women of me. I can now work all day and not get tired. I thank you for what you have done for me. I shall always praiso your medicine to all suffering women.’* —Msa. E. E. Kuhn, Gnr.iii.Ko, Onto. “ I hare taken eight bottles of Lydia E. Pinlcham’s Vegetable Compound and used two packages of your Sana¬ tive Wash, also some of the Liver Fills, and I can say that your remedies will do all that you claim for them. Before taking your remedies I was very bed with womb trouble, was norvoua, had no ambition, could not sleep, and my food seemed to do me no good. How I ara well, and your medicine has cured me. I will gladly recommend your med¬ icine to every one wherever I go.”— Mbs. M. L. Shears, Gun Haesh, Mich. Sometimes a man acquires the gif t of second sight by marrying the girl he fell in love with at first sight. BeBuIIi COUGH SYtUF Cures Croup end Whooping-Cough Unexcelled for Consumptives. substitutes. Gives quick, sure results. Rcfeac Dr. Bull's Fills cu re Biliousness. Trial, so for 5c. Malsby lb Company, 39 S. liroad St., Atlanta, Ga. Engines and Boilers Strain Water Heater*, Steam Pumps and Penbertiiy Injector*, ^'T ft wBmSm. Manufacturers arul Dealers In Corn Mills, Feed Mills, Cotton Gin Machin¬ ery ftiid Grain Separators. SOLID anil INSERTED Saws, Saw Teeth acd Locks, Kuiglit’s Patent Doers, Klrrtimll Saw Mill and Enfrine Repairs, Mill Governors, Supplies. Grata Purs and a full line of Price and quality of poods guaranteed. Catalogue free by mentioning this paper. Caraeg v-rc* • e Calf Wears Like Steel £ Mea’s $2.59 Boys’ $175 I Youths’ $1.59 Little tots’$1.35 Red Seal Cartons. J. L ORR SHOE COMPANY, ATLANTA, QA. W. L. DOUGLAS S3 £k 3.59 SHOES UNION MADE. Worth with $4 other to ©6 makes. compared^ , \Indor»ed by over E?-_ I N 1,000,000 wearers. | RDougik*’ The genuine have and W. priceJ|g L.9|| name uatamped on bottom. TakeWB..... Hno substitute claimed to |»as good. Your dealer should keep them— not, we will send a pair State VSflon receipt of either, of price. si*e, and width, plain or V . ^gkind C free. cap toe. Catalogue W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE C0„ Brockton, Mast ASK Your Dealer — FOE — TOBACCO It’s no Joke, Y9U GETTfiE VALUE IN THE GOODS. The Best Chew on the Market to-day. Ls} 137251233:- «— 1 iigPSSj a sffc mssrm 7S Boat In time. Syrup. Sold rwto# Good. Uso b T d rarer!*w. la <£U US - r \ n‘-