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JEV.DH.TALMAGE
/ a Eminent Divine’s Sunday
Discourse.
The Womlnrt of the JTnmnn
SB I Huml—Mur J’hy.loiil Slructinn 1’roof
H or Itlrlne tVl.iloin—The lCxtondeil
Utml the Symbol of In Hollo Mercy.
B [Copyright, Louth Klopech, lvuu. 1
Wasiiikotos, 1). 0.—The discourse of Dr.
lx u lesson ot gratitude for that
none of us fully appreciate and
the I) I vino Corinthian* meaning In xll., our physical "The
text, I 21,
cannot say unto the baud, I have no
of thee,”
These wotds suggest that somo time two
very Important parts of the human body got
into controversy, and tho oye became iuso-
lent and full ot’braggadoclo of tho and human said: “I
am an independent part taking sys-
tom. How farl enu see, in spring
morning and midnight auroral Compared
with myself what an insignificant thing Is
tho human baud! I look down upon it.
There it hangs, swinging at tho side, u
clump of muscles and nerves, and it can¬
not see an inch either way. It has no lus¬
ter compared with that which I beam
forth.” ‘'What senseless talk,” responds
thehand. “Yon, the eye, would have been
jult out long ago but for me. Without the
food I have earned you would have been
sightless and starved to death years ago.
You cannot do without me any bettor than
I can do without you.” At tilts part ot tho
disputation Paul of my text breaks in and
ends tlie controversy by declaring, “The
eye cunnot say unto the baud, I have no
need of thee.”
Fourteen hundred and thirty-three
times, as nearly as I can count by aid of
•concordance, does tho Bible speak of the
human baud. Wo are all familiar with tho
| band, but the man lias yet to bo born who
scan fully understand this wondrousiustru-
1 'ment. Kir Charles Boll, the English sur-
L geon, came homo from tlie battlefield of
Waterloo, where he had been amputating
■jimbs and binding up gunshot fractures,
Kind f wrote a book entitled “The Hand: Its
Ldeueii'g Mechanism and Vital Endowments as Evi-
►book that Design." But it is who so profound is familiar a
only a scientist
witli Hie technicalities of anatomy and
physiology can going understand opening it. and shut-
Bo we are all ou
ling tliis divinely constructed instrument,
tho hand, ignorant of much of tho revela¬
tion it wns intended to make of tho wis¬
dom and goodness of God. You can see i.y
their structure that shoulder and elbow
and forearm are getting ready for tho cul¬
mination in tlie hand. There is your
wrist, with its eight bones and their liga¬
ments in two rows. That wrist, with its
bands of iihres and its hinged joint and
turning oil two axes—ou the larger axis
moving backward and forward and on the
smaller axis turning nearly around. And
there is the palm of your hand, with its
(lve bones, oaeh having a shaft and two
terminations. There nro tho fingers of
that band, with fourteen bones, eacli fin¬
ger with its curiously wrought tendons,
five of the bones with ending roughened
for the lodgment of the nails. There is
tlie thumb, coming from opposite direc¬
tion to ineot the lingers, so that in con¬
junction they may clasp and hold fast that
which you desire to take. There nro
the long nerves running from the
armpit to the forty-six muscles,
so that all are under mastery.
The whole anatomy of your hand as
complex, as intricate, ns symmetrical, as
useful, as God could make it. What can it
not do? It can climb, it enn lift, it can
push, it can repel, it can affirm, menace, it can
ciucb, it can deny, it can it can ex¬
tend, it can weave, it can bathe, it can
smite, it can bumble, it can exalt, it ean
soothe, it ean throw, it can defy, it can
wave, it can imprecate, it ean pray.
A skeleton of the hand traced ou black¬
board or unrolled in diagram or bung in
medical museum is mightily illustrative of
the Divine wisdom and goodness, but bow
muoh more pleasing when in living action,
uli its nerves and muscles and bones and
fendous God and tissues and phalanges display
what invented when He invented the
human band! Two specimens of it wo
carry at our side from the time when in
infancy we open them to take a toy till in
the last hour of a long Life we extend them
la bitter farewell.
With the Divine help I shall speak of the
hand ns the chief executive officer of the
soul, whether lifted for defense, or ex¬
tended for help, or Luslod in the arts, or
offered in salutation, or wrung in despair,
or spread abroad in benediction. God evi¬
dently intended all the lower order of liv¬
ing beings should have weapons of defense,
and hence the elephant’s tusk, and the
horse’s hoof, and the cow’s horn, and the
lion’s tooth, and the insect’s sting. Having
given weapons of defense to the lowor
orders of living beings, of course He would
not leave man, tho highest order of living
beings on earth, defenseless and at the
mercy of brutal or ruffian attack. The
right—yea, the duty—of self defonso Is so
evident it needs no argumentation. The
hand is the Divinely fashioned weapon of
defense. We may seldom have to use it
for such purposes, but the fact that we are
equipped insures safety. The hand is a
Weapon sooner loaded than any gun,
soon™ ’rawu than any sword. Its Angers
bent .mo the paltn, it becomes a bolt of
. demolition.
What a defense it Is against accident!
Tflere have been limes in all our experi-
ences when we have with the hand warded
off something that would have extinguished
our eyesight or broken the skull or crippled
us for a lifetime. While the eye lias dis-
covered tlie approaching peril the hand
has beaten it back or struck it down or
disarmed it. Every day thank God for
your right hand, and it you want to hear
its eulogy ask him who ia swift revolution
of machinery his had it crushed or at
Chapuitepac or South Mountain or San
Juan Hill or Sedan lost It.
And in passing let me say that he who
has the weapon of the hand uninjured You and
iu full use needs no other. cowards
who walk with sword cane or carry a pis-
tol in your hip pocket had better lay aside
your deadly weapon. At tho frontier or in
barbarous lands or as an officer of tho iaw
about to make an arrest such arming may
be necessary, but no eitizon moving in
these civilized regions needs such reiu-
foreement. If you aro afraid to go down
these streets or along these country roads
without dagger or firearms, better ask
your graudmother to go with you armed
with scissors and knitting needle. What
cowards, if not what intended murderers,
uselessly to carry weapons of death! Iu
our two bands God gave us all the weapons
we need to carry.
Again, the hand is the chief executive of¬
ficer or the soul for affording help. Just
see how that liand is constructed! How
easily you can lower it to raise the fallen!
llow easily it Is extended to feel the in¬
valid's pulse, or gently wipe away the tear
of orphanage, or contribute alms, or
smooth the excited brow, or beckon into
safofy! Oil, the helping hands! There are
hundreds of thousands ot them, and tlie
world wants at least 1,600,000,000 of them.
Hands to bless others, hands to rescue
others, hands to save others. What aro
uli these schools and churches and asylums
of mercy? Outstretched hands. What aro
all those hands distributing tracts and blind car-
lying medicines and trylug to cure
eyes and deaf ears und broken bones and
disordered intellects and wayward sons?
Helping hands. Let each one of us through add to
that number, if we have two, or if
casualty only one add that one. If those
bauds which we have so long kept thrust
into pockets through indolence or folded
in indifference or employed in writing
wrong tliingg or doing mean things or
heaving up obstacles la the way of righte¬
ous progress might from this hour bo eou-
-aerated they to would helping others out and up and
oa, be hand* wortli being
raised on the reeurreatioe morn and wortli
clapping iu eternal gladuess ever a world
redeemed.
Tho great artists «f tho ages—Raphael
and Iioounrdo doViliul und Quentin Motor*
and Rembrandt and Albert Durer and Tl-
tlnu—have done their best In picturing the
face of Christ, but none exoept Ary Schef.
fer seems to have put muoh stress upou the
baud of Christ. Indeed, the merov ef that
baud, tho gentleness of that hand, Is bo.
yonrt uli artistic portrayal. Borne of Hlo
mirueies lie performed by word of month
and without toughing the subjeot before
Him, but most ot them tho He performed damsel
through tlie hand. Was dead
to be raised to life? “lie took her by the
band.” Was tlie blind mail to have optlo
nerve rostored? “He took him by the
hand.” Was tho demon to be cjorelsed
from a suffering man? “He took him by
thehand.” The people saw this and he.
sought Him to put Ills hand upon their nf-
llioted ones.
His own hands free, see how the Lord
sympathized with the mnu who had lost
the use of ills bund. It was n case of
atrophy, a wasting away until the arm aud
hand had beeu reduced in size beyond any
medical or surgical restoration. More¬
over, It was Ids right hand, the most im¬
portant ot ttie two, for tlie left side In all
its parts is weaker than the rtgbtside, and
we involuntarily in nay exigency put out
the right hand because wo know It had is the
best liand. Ho that poor man lost
more than half of ills physical armament.
It would not linve been so bad If it had
been the left hand. But Christ lookod at
that shriveled up right liand dangling
uselessly at the man’s side anil thou erlod
out with a voice that liatl omnipotence in,
it, "Stretch forth thy hand,” and tlie
record is, “He stretched it fortli whole as
the other.” The blood rushed through the
shrunken veins, aud the shortened
muscles lengthened, and the dead nerves
thrilled, and the lifeless fingers tingled
with resumed circulation, and the restored
man held up in the presence of the skep¬
tical Pharisees one ot Jehovah's master¬
pieces, a perfect liand. No wonder that
story is put three times in the Bible, so
that if a sailor were cast away on a barren
island or a soldier’s New Testament got
mutilated in battle and whole pages are
destroyed the shipwrecked would or wounded
man in hospital probably have at
least one of those three radiant stories of
what Christ thought ot the human hand.
How often lins the hand decided a des¬
tiny! Mary, Queen ot Scots, was escaping
from imprisonment at Loehlever in the
dross ot a laundress and had her face
thickly veiled. When a boatman attempted
to remove the veil, she put up her liand to
defend it aud so revealed tlie wiiite and
fair hand of a queen, and so the boatman
took her back to captivity. Again and
again it has been demonstrated that the
hand hath a language as certainly as the
mouth. Palmistry, or the science by which
character and destiny are read in the
lines of the hand, is yet crude and uncer¬
tain and unsatisfactory, but as astrology
was the mother of astronomy anil alchemy
was the mother ot chemistry it may ho
that palmistry will result in a science yet
to be born.
AgaiD, ns the chief executive officer of
the soul, behold tile hand busy in tlie arts!
What a comparatively without dull place without this
world would be pictures,
statuary, without music, without architec¬
ture! Have you ever realized what iifty
seeming miracles are in tlie live minutes’
lingering of piano or harp or flute? Who
but the eternal God could make a hand
capable ot that swift sweep of tho keys or
that quick feeling of the pulses of a flute
or the twirl of tlie lingers amid the strings
of the harp? All the composers of music
who dreamed out the oratorios and the
cantatas of the ages would have had their
work dropped flat and useless but for the
translations of the hand. Under the deft
lingers of tho performer what cavalries
gallop and what batteries boom and what
birds carol and what tempests march and
what oceans billow! The great architects
of Alliambras the earth might have thought out the
and tlie Parthenons and tho
Bt. Sophias anil the Taj Mahals, but all
those visions would navo vanished had it
not been for tlie hand on hammer, on
plummet, on trowel, on wall, on arch, on
pillar, on stairs, on dome.
In two discourses, one concerning the
ear aud the other concerning the eye, I
spoke from the potent text in tlie Psalms,
“He that planted tho ear, shall He not
hear?” and “lie that formed the eye, shall
He not see?” but what use in the oye and
what use in the oar if the hand had not
been strung with all its nerves and moved
with all Its muscles and reticulated with
all its joints and strengthened with all Us
bones and contrived with all its ingenui¬
ties! Thehand hath forwarded all the arts
and tunneled the mounts!',i through
which the rail train thunders and lauuobed
all the shipping and fought nil tho battles
aud built all the temples and swung all the
cables under the sea as wall as lifted to
midair the wire tracks oa which whole
trains of thought rush across the con¬
tinents and built ail the cities and hoisted
the pyramids.
Do not eulogize the eye and ear at the
expense of tho hand, for the eye may he
blotted out, as la the case of Milton, and
yet his hand writes a “Paradise Lost” or a
“Samson Agonistes;” as in tlie case of Will¬
iam H. Prescott, and yet ills baud may
write the euchanting “Conquest of Peru.”
Or the ear may ho silenced forever, as In
the ease of Beethoven, and yet his hand
may put into immortul cadences the “Ninth
Symphony.” Oh, the hand! The God
fashioned hand! Tho triumphant handl It
is an open Bible of Diviuo revelation, and
the live fingers are the Isaiah and the Eze¬
kiel aud the David and the Micnh and the
Paul of that almighty inspiration.
A pastor in his sermon told how a little
child appreciated the value of his baud
when he was told that on the morrow it
must he amputated in order to save his
life. Hearing that, he went to a quiet
place and prayed that God would spare
his hand. The surgeon, coming the next
day to do his work, found the hand so
much better that amputation was post¬
poned, and the hand got well. The pastor,
telling of this in a sermon, concluded by
holding up his baud and saying, "That is
the very hand that was spared in an¬
swer to prayer, and I hold it up, a monu¬
ment of Divine mercy.”
Again, the hand in the chief executive of¬
ficer of tho soul when wrung in ngony.
Tears of relief are sometimes denied to
trouble. The eyelids at such time aro as
hot and parched and burning as the brow.
At such time eveu the voice is suppressed,
and there is no sob or outcry. Then the
wringing of tlie liand tells the story. At
the close of a life wasted in sin sometimes
oomes that expression of tho twisted
lingers—the memory of years that will
never return, of opportunities the like of
wliioh will never again occur, and con¬
science in its wrath pouncing upon the
soul, and all the past a horror, only to be
surpassed by the approaching horror. So a
man wrings his bands over the casket of a
dead wife whom he has cruelly treated.
So a man wrings his hands at the fate of
sons and daughters whose prospects have
beeu ruined by bis inebriety und negleot and
depravity. So the sinner wrings his
hands when, after a life full of oilers of
pardon and peace and heaven, he dies
without hope. When there are sorrows lip and too
poignant for lamentation on the
too hot for tho tear glands to write in let¬
ters of crystal on the cheek, the hand re¬
cites the tragedy with more emphasis than
anything in “Macbeth” and “King Lear.”
But it is not always in such glad greeting
that we can employ our right hand. Alas
that so often wo have to employ the hand
in farewell salutation! If your right hand
retained some impress ot all such uses, it
would b» a volume of bereavements. Oh,
tlie goodbys in which your right steamboat hand has
participated! Goodby at the
wharf. Goodby at tho rail trhln window.
Goodby before tlie opeuiug of tho battle.
Goodby at the dying pillow. We all needed
grace for such handshakings, though our
hand was strong and their hand was weak,
aud we will need graee for the coining
goodbys, and that grace we had better seek
while amid the felieities of health and
homes uulirokeu, Thunk God there will
be no goodby hi heaven!
PERSISTANCE op the dutch.
The Recovery ot Submerged l.nad la Hot
land Makes a Tbrilllaf Story.
Tlie unconquerable persistence of
the Dutch race is very much in tlie
public eye Just now. Alike in peace
and war the inhabitants of the Nether¬
lands have shown their ability to pur¬
sue a project with that tireless pa¬
tience which, other things being equal,
is certain to bring success. The strug¬
gle between the people of the Nether¬
lands and tho encroachments of the
waters of the Zuyder Zee is a thril¬
ling story, and the fight evidently is
not over yet. The laud that has been
recovered lias been held, nnd now a
further and determined effort Is being
made to recover the submerged terri¬
tory, which hundreds of years ago was
Included within the coast line of the
Netherlands. Tho present attempt
does not contemplate the recovery of
the whole of the Zuyder Zee, but If
the plans do not miscarry, it Is cer¬
tain that nearly 800 square miles of
land will he reclaimed within the next
third of a century at an estimated ex¬
penditure of $48,000,000.
The scheme contemplates the con¬
struction of a huge dike across tho
Zuyder Zee, the location of which will
he determined by tho favorable con¬
junction of shallow water and adja¬
cent islands. Nine years out of the
thirty-three which is the estimated
time for the construction of the whole
scheme will he occupied merely In tho
construction of this dike, whose total
estimated cost will be $17,000,000.
When the dike is completed, the her¬
culean task of pumping dry the huge
lake thus formed will commence, and
considerations of economy will lead to
its being carried on by means of the
typical Dutch windmills which form
such a picturesque feature of a Hol¬
land landscape. Although the work of
drainage is to extend over a quarter
of a century, the returns on the enor¬
mous expenditure of the capital will
commence simultaneously with the
pumping, and as it is estimated that
the drained land, on account of its ex¬
treme richness, will have a market
price of $300 an acre, it can he seen
that this great undertaking is likely to
become a paying investment long be¬
fore it is finally completed.—Scientific
American.
Evolution ot Read Coverings.
Earliest of all forms of headgear
was the cap. The hat did not really
come into common use till the seven¬
teenth century. In the time of Charles
I, the queer, high, sugar-loaf shaped
hat came into fashion. It was wound
with a rich bund and trimmed with n
feather. Constant balancing of the
head was necessary to keep it on. This
hat was taken up by the Puritans, who
satisfied their bitter consciences by dis¬
carding the frivolous hand und the
wicked feather.
Charles II brought the French peri¬
wig into England, and the tall hat
went out to make way for a low,
broad-brim tiled thing, gorgeous with
feathers and glmcracks. These broad
brim3 became broader and broader. At
last, it became necessary to turn them
up at first, this was done at tho back,
finally according to the wearer’s fancy.
Out of this extravagant style of
headgear grew the cocked bat The
footman and liveried coachmen of
many European nations still wear this
style of headgear. During Queen
Anne’s time the cocked ha* was the
hat of the gentleman. Tk* correct
fashion was to carry it und« the arm
as much as possible.
The French revolution, wb’ch took
off so many heads that had worn the
cocked hat, took otf the cocked hat
too. In its place the crescent shape be¬
came the style, partly by force. The
direct ancestor of that dreadful thing,
the high hat of to-day, was the noble
nnd sturdy beaver. Beavers went out
of fashion largely because the supply
of material became exhausted.—New
York Press.
Our Increased Trade with China.
England can no longer compete with ns In
tho shipment of many products » China.
Our trade with the Chinese has Increased al¬
most forty per cent, within the last year.
This is merely natural. The best wins in
everything. For a like reason, llofhetter’s
Stomach Bitters, the best remedy In the
country, has for fifty years acknowledged no
superior to cure constipation, indigestion
dyspepsia and biliousness.
Shortest Days of the Year.
. “We’re having the shortest days of the
fear now.” said Tarbox. said Briggs,
“You bet we are,” as his
^.audscame out of his pockets empty.
op Ohio, City of Toledo, I „„
Lucas County. f '
Frank «T. Cheney makes oath that he is the
senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney &
to., doing business in the and City thaisaid erf Toledo, firm
County aud State aforesaid,
will nay ihesumofoxE hundred DOLLAnsfor
each nnd every case of catarrh that cannot
i»e cured by the use of Hall's Frank Catarrh J. Cheney. Cure.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in my
{—Liesepee, this tith day of December,
<SEA ],>• A. D. 188(5. A. VV. GLEASON.
('— Hall’s i —') Catarrh Cure is taken Notary internally, Public. and
Acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces
of the system. Send for testimonials, free.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, Pills 75c. the best.
Hall’s Family are
Vitality low, debilitated or exhausted cured
by Dr. Kline’s Invigorating Tonic. Free $1
trial bottle for 2 weeks’ treatment. Dr. Kline,
Ld.,031 Arch St., Philadelpba. Founded 1871.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens tho gums, reduces inflamma¬
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle.
Piso’sCxire for Consumption is an A No. 1
Asthma medicine.—VY.ll. Williams,A ntioch
Ills., April 11, 1894.
"Man wants but little h-ere below,”
’Twos e’er so from bis birth—
It’s different with the other sex;
Fair woman wants the earth.
—N. Y. Town Topics.
BkBoIISs SYRUP
COUGH Whooping-Cough
Cures Croup and
Unexcelled for Consumptives. Gives
quick, sure results. Refuse substitutes.
Dr. UvlTs Dill: cure BiUousutu. 7'ruii.xi/crsc.
A Phrenel«(lcal View of Kroftr.
An appreciation of President Kruger
Is displayed in the window of the Lnd-
gato Circus phrenologist’s, attracting
a fair share of public attention. It
seems very like an appreciation most
of us have reached without phrenol¬
ogy. “Mr. Kruger,” says tho profes¬
sor, “has a typical Boer head. It Is
wide at all points In a line drawn from
the level of the ears upward. This In¬
dicates, besides much destructiveness
or an aggressive tendency a high de¬
gree of secretiveness, cautiousness and
acquisitiveness, He is instinctively
distrustful, slow to decide, to speak,
to act. The lower part of Ills forehead
Is larger than the upper. With strong
perceptive powers, he 1ms but moder¬
ate reflective powers or Imagination.
The religious region of his head Is
large. He Is well meaning and con¬
scientious to the degree which his race
has attained. Phrenologically, we
we should say that the Transvaal ques¬
tion is one of race, and race is very
much a matter of brain development.
In this the Boer and the Briton are so
very different that the same methods
of thought and life can never satisfy
both.”—London News.
Eczema in tho F«et.
In fact, tetter, ringworm and all skin
disease* are cured by Tetterine. Mr.
Lee D. Martin, of San Antonia, Tex¬
as, says; “I am suffering with a vio¬
lent ease of eczema in my feet. Please
send me a box of Tetterine. Mr.
Moore, of Moore & McFarland, Mem-
phis, Tenn., says it cured him of a
similar case.” Sold at druggists 50c.
a box or sent postpaid by J. T. Shup-
trine, Savannah, Ga.
An Ingenious Invention.
A young man in Worcester, Mass.,
has invented a loom for weaving
straw matting that does away with
the shuttle. An ingenious contrivance
picks up the straws and pushes them
through the warp as a harness on the
loom draws the straw warp up and
down. Most of the straw mats used
in America are woven by hand in
Manila. Japan and China. Some of
the finer grades of matting come from
India. Machine made mats will be a
Lovelty in this country.
Fresh Terror.
“What a peculiar exercise the new
recruits are going through. I mean
that up and down motion with the
arms. What is it?”
“That’s the pump exercise. It’s for
use on leaky transports,”
We refund 10c for every package of Put-
>'am Fadeless Dye that rails to give satis¬
faction. Monroe Drug Co., Unionville, Mo.
Sold by all druggists.
An Old Relic.
Dr. W. W. DoIIart of Jacksonville, Fla., has
one of the most valued Confederate relics that
can bo found anywhere. It is a nicely curved
cignrholder that was once the property of Ad¬
miral Semmes, and he smoked it while In com¬
mand of the famous Confederate battleship
Alabama.
PUSH!PUSH!! PUSHIH
1 K That’s the way some cfcalers do ! Push cheap goods
t because the profits are large. Why let a man push a
cheap Buggy dollar oS on you whe c you can get the best
at only a or so more? W o you ever think about
It that way?
See our Agent or write direst fFt-OSfC l^flLslaKOCK
SPRING
HUMORS
.
I ,HE
- -
j
9} 1
m
m
m
0 {
1
tDlSEASKS
PJREi-Y
MEDIO! NAL
pRIift SO CENTS-
Observant Freddy.
Freddy’s mamma had a caller one
day who several times during her stay
said, “Now I must go,” always re¬
suming her seat, nevertheless. Upon
another repetition of the remark Fred¬
dy said, solemnly, “Don’t you believe
it till she’s gone, mamma.”
I am
Past 8o
and Not
a Gray Hair
" I have used Ayer’s Hair
Vigor for a great many eighty years,
and although I am past
years of age, yet I have not a gray
hair in my head.”—Geo. Yel-
lott.Towson, Md., Aug. 3,1899.
Have You
Lost It?
Wc mean all that rich, dark
color your hair used to have.
But there is no need of mourn¬
ing over it, for you can find it
again.
Ayer’s Hair Vigor always re¬
stores color to gray hair. We
know exactly what we are Say¬
ing when we use that word
“ always." hair
It makes the grow heavy
long, too: takes , out
an< * every
bzt of dandruff, and stops fall¬
ing of dressing the hair. table Keep and it on it
your use
every day. $ 1.00 n bottle, ah druggists.
Write the Doctor
If you do not obtain all the benefits you
desire from tho use of tho Vigor, write
the Doctor about it. He and will tell send you just
tlie right thing to do, will you
his book on tlio Hair and Scalp if you
request it. Address,
Dr. J. C. Ayer, Lowell, Mass.
J^ARTERSINK
WimA Buy it of your storekeeper.
Complete External
Internal Treatment
$ 1.25 ■ J
Consisting of CUTICURA SOAP scales (25c.), and to
cleanse the skin of crusts and
soften the thickened cuticle, CUTICURA Oint¬
ment (50c.), to instantly allay itching, irri¬
tation, and inflammation, and soothe and
heal, and CUTICURA RESOLVENT SINGLE (50c.), SET to
cool and cleanse the blood, i A
is often sufficient to cure the most torturing,
disfiguring skin, scalp, and blood humors,
with loss of hair, when all other remedies fail.
Sold ttuenghoBi lb* world. Porra* D. d G* Ottur** ftopt** Botiofe H*w to Cur* ipria* Hobmc^ \
Rumann FAc-snuu.
Malsby & Company,
30 S. l!roa<fl St., Atlanta, Oa.
Engines and Boilers
Steam Water Heater*, Steam Bump* #a*
l’enbertlijr Injector*,
h
L»N.|
i §
Manufacturers and Dealer* tn
SAW MILLS,
Corn Mill*, Feed Mills, Cotton Oln Bfachin*
ery and Grain Separator*.
SOLID nnd INSKIiTED Saws, Saw Teetb and
I ocke, Kniglit’** Patent Dog*. liirdsall Saw
3V1 ill and Kiiglne Repair*, Governor*, Orato
liar* and a full line of Mill Supp Ue*. Prlca
nnd quality of pood* guaranteed, Catalogue
free by mentioning this paper.
BOOK AGENTS WANTED FOR
the grand»’«t and futeai-seUinp book over published,
Pulpit Echoes
OU LIVING TKUTII8 FOR HE A I> AND HEART.
Contnininp rhnllitig Stories, Mr. Incidents. MOODY’S Veronal b«st Serrn#ni. with 600 told
Moody Experiences.etc., a*
By I). L.
him tel/. With r complete hUtory of hi* life by Rev. (IIAN. F.
GOSS, Pastor of Mr Moody b Chicago Church for five year*,
and an Introduction by Rev. I.YMAN AH30TT, ll.D.
Brand AGENTS new, (500 WANTED np., b*autifullj/ -Men illustrated. Women. OTT’l-OOO more
and CySalca
immense — a haircut time for Agent*. Semi for terms Ur
A. D. WORTHINGTON A CO., Hartford. Con*.
RBDsiBESSiJo!leie Be BYANT & STRATTON nTlT4^ f Bookkeeping
Lou ^ ul
IdJ Cost no more than 2d class school. Catalog free
WANTED » ■ electricity g elsbaoh city gas. Cheaper than ker¬
ur
osene 100 candlelight, cent a dav. Polished brass.
Full i'dard v guaranteed. Retails * 6 . 00 - Big moneymaker, Chicago.
Stai Gas Lamp Co., 108 Michigan St.,
Salver’s flap, ' Speltz—
gives iiich, 9, What is itl
green rood, iv i\ Catalog toil*.
at FARM
25c. a SEEDS
10 Saber’s Sw«ls are Warraiited to Pradnce.
ff/M ^ by by al growing hlonLut 250 her. bushels F..Troy,Pa., Itig Pour astonished J. the Breider, werld ’
K Uat«;
MisUtcou, \Vls., IIS bvw. barley; avid H Lo-?tpy,
RedWing, Minn-, by growing 320bash. Salzer’s corn
per acre. If you doubt, write them. We wish to gain
300,000new customers, hence will send on trial
IO E?OLLAS3 WORTH FOR lOo.
10 pkgB of raro farm seedsiTBalt Bush, the S-e&red
Corn—-Spelts, producing 80bush, food and 4 tons hay
per acre—above oats and barley. Rrocaui Iuernns
—tho greatest grass on earth; Salxtr tayt to
Rape, Spring Wheat, Ac., including our mam-
moth Pl« tut. Fruit and Seed Catalog, telling all
about Salzer’s Groat Million Dollar r I
Potato, all mailed Tot 10c. postage ; ,<v
. positively worth $10 to get a start, h
ft.. Seed Potatoes $ l.20 a bbl. and ap. a;
Please ” fvwA 36 pkg» Beeds, earliest fl.00. vegeta-
send this
adr. with ^ Av alone* 5c,
10c. to Salzer. t —
DROPSYSSSs Boole testimonial and 10 days’
cases . of treatment
Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN’S SONS. Box B. Atlanta. Ga.
Mention this Paper^^'I^K’r^^
«V •J u t u /*
f(utjcura\ cmiAf Tn;* cup* !
Ay pM*fc*er»*v ItW jjj IJl
m
CHESTER
j jm 0 TALOGU&
Send your name and address on a
postal, and we will send you our 156 -
page illustrated catalogue free.
WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO.
178 Winchester Avenue, New Haven, Conn.
"'23-(2175
'
Bnnuow FAo-snum.
,
CUBES WHE8E Syrup. ALL ELSE FAfLS. U68
Best Cough Tastes Good.
in time. Sold by
o !o z c £ a 0 z
/'
.
J
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il "MEDICINAL 1
IlfOiiVr i
j PHICEZiCCNTt j •'ll:
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