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EV.OK.TALMAGEf
• Eminent Divine’s SuncUy
Discourse.
bject: Christ Oar Kafaffe — 4 Meisairo
of Comfort, Cominsndluir the HeVmv.
Jor of the I>lsclples to Tho«o Who Are
JItmlened With Sorrow,
[Copy Hr tit luou.j
SVasiiington, following D. C.—Dr. which Talmngc, in
i- dist -urse, nc has sc i
' publication this week, gives a prescrip-
in for all anxiety and worrimeut, and
[strates in the kind divine of struggle. sympathy ' The for all who
■Fhtthew any xiv, 12, “Anil tort is
ilia disciples went
■nil told Jesus.”
■ An outrav-ous assassination had just
Saken place. To appease a revengeful
■'•oman ■hat noble, King self-sacriticng Herod ordered the death of
PUie Baptist. The ot prophet, the disciples John
[were thrown into grief group
and dismay. They
rfelt themselves utterly defenseless. There
was peal, no and authority to which they could ap¬
yet grief must always tind ex-
pression. If there be no human ear to
hear it, then the agonized soul will cry it
•aloud to the winds anil the woods and the
waters. But '•here was an ear that was
willing tiios and to listen. the There is a tenner pa-
at same time a most admir¬
able picture in the words of my text,
“They went and to J Jesus.” He could
understand all their grief, and He imme¬
diately soothed it. Our burdens are not
/ndre than half so heavy to carry if another
fcshoulder is put under the other end of
■hem. Here we find Christ, His brow
Shadowed with grief^pstanding amid the
■roup violent of discmle:, who, with tears ant
Bands gesticulations and wringing of
and outcry of bereavement, are ex-
Bressing Bk[htul brush, their woe. Raphael, with his
patting of upon the wall of a
I ace some scene sacred story, gave
so skillful a stroke as when the plain
■d of the evangelist writes, “They went
■ told Jesus.”
■he old Goths and Vandals once caire
■vn fee, upon and they Italy from the north Eu-
upset the gardens, and
K.v broke down the statues and svent
vay ill. everything So there that was good and beau-
is ever anti anon in the
story of all the sons and daughters of
\r race an incursion of rcnigh handed
cables that come to plunder and ran-
ick and put to the torch all that men
billy lift into prize. There is no cave so deeply
the mountains as to afford ns
|dter, ■not bear and the beyond foot of the fleetest quick pursuit. courser
us
■ arrows they nut to the string ily with
■rring ned dart until wo fall pierced and
tecL that I bring to you a most appro¬
^Br bate griefs message. into I bundle mean and to bind set them up all
H a on
^^Bscription with a spark from (Jrd’s altar. The
^Bipies that cured the sorrow of tho
■’c will cure all your heartaches. T
^Biy lead marched that hen Godfrey Jerusalem. and his
Hphey out to capture
Ppih came over the hills, at the first
city, the of the pinnacles had of marched that beautiful in si¬
army that
lence lifted a shout that made the earth
tremble. Oh, you soldiers of Jesus Christ,
marching vn toward heaven, 1 would that
to-day, Tiod’s by some and God’s ekam from the palace might of
lifted ir.crcy rejoicing strength, and you that
be into great as
the prospect of its peace breaks o- your
enraptured hosanna gaze Lord! you might raise one glad
to the
In the first place I commend the beha-
vior of those disciples to all burdened
souls time who almost are unpardoned. man’s history There comes when
in every
feels from some source that he has an
nature. The thought may not be have only
heft as to fell him. It may
the flash in an. evening cloud just after
verv hot summer day. One mar. to get
Hkither of that impression will go to praver,
and will another stimulate himself will dive by ardent deeper
man
secularities. But sometimes a man can-
not get rid of these impressions. Tht*fact
is, when a man finds out that his eternity and
is poised upon a perfect uncertainty, foot slip,
that the next moment his may
he must do something violent to make him¬
self forget where he stands or-else fly for
refuge. Some of crouch under yoke, and
. you a
k-ou fnight bite the dust when this moment you
rise up a crowned conqueror. Driven
and perplexed as you have been by sin, go
and tell Jesus. To rtilax the grip of death
from your soul e-id plant your unshackled
feet upon the golden throne Christ let the
tortures of the bloody mount transfix
Him. With the beam of His own cross
He will break down the door rf your dun-
£eon. From the thorns of ills own crown
He will pick enough gems to make your
brow blaze with eternal victory. In every
/tear on His wet cheek, in every gash of
His side, in every long, blackening mark
of laceration from shoulder to shoulder, storming
in the grave shattering, heaven
death groan I hear Him say, “He that
cometh unto Me I will in nowise cast out.
“Oh,” but you say, “instead of curing
my wound you want to make another
wound—namely, that of conviction!” Have
you never known a surgeon to come and
find a chronic disease and then with sharp
caustic burn it all out? So the grace of
God comes to the old sore of sin. It has
long been rankling there; but, by divine
grace, it is burned out through these fires
of conviction, “the flesh coming again as
the flesh of a little child;” “where sin
abounded, grace much more aboundeth.”
With the ten thousand Jesus. unpardonable sins
of vour life, go and tell
You will never get rid of your sins in
any other way, and remember that the
broad invitation which I extend to you
.will fred, not always bo extended. timepieces King Al¬
Hkpted. before modern were m-
used to divide the day into three
eight hours each, and then had three
candles. By the time the first candle
burned to the socket eight hours had
ffHned llBe, and the when socket the another second candle eight hours had
to three candles
gone, and when all tho
gone out then the day lmd passed,
that some of 11 s, instead of calculating
^Bhly ■ days and nights and years by them any
v timepiece, might calculate
’
SHwhich JtBhe numbers burning of opportunities down and and burning mer-
H are relighted,
never to be lest at last we
■■amid tl^Br the foolish out!” virgins who cried,
V^Bain. lamps have gone the
I commend the behavior 01
I les to all who are tempted. I have
men in mid-life say they bad never
ri led into temptation. If you have
felt temptation, it is because you have
; t.icd to do right. A man hoppled and
tdcuffed, as long as he lies quietly, does
I test the power of tho chain, but when
rises up and with determination re-
•dt> to snap the handcuff or break the
Lie then he finds the power been of the for iron. ten
I I there are men who nave
twenty and thirtv years bound hand
I I foot by evil habits chain who because have never they
the power tried of the. break it. It is
r I never to very
to go on down with the stream and
li li the wind lying on your oars, against but just the
[d around and try to go will find
liferent and the tide, and you it is
matter. As long as we go down
f current of our evil habit we seem to
along quite smoothly, but if after a
lie we turn around and h "1 the other
E, hen, toward oh, then Christ how and have pardon to lay and to
we
It oars! You will have your tempta.ica.
fv, have one kind, you another, you an-
[gain, not one commend person escaping. the behavior of the
I
liples to all those who are abuced an!
[the lod put slandered John and to death, perrccuted. the disciples When
|w If cD that their know own that heads were John not has safe. a
Cod? you every life who do
There are persons in
Uvish you very well. Tour Through misfortunes their
honeycomL- to them.
teeth they Him at you, misinterpret your
motives, and would be glad to see you up¬
set. No man gets through life without
having a pommeling. Some slander comes
after you horned and husked and hoofed
to gore and trample you, and what are
you to do? I tell you plainly that all who
serve Christ must suffer persecution. It is
the worst sign in the world for you to he
be able to say, “I have not an enemy
the world.” A woe is pronounced in th#
Bible against the one of whom every txxlr
speaks the world well. and If everybody you are at likes peace with aud au
work, it is because you
approves idler your you are
an in the Lord’s vineyard and are
not doing your duty. All those who have
served Christ, however eminent, all have
been maltreated at some stage of thtir ex¬
of perience. You know it was so in the time
invited Ceorge Whitefield into when be stood and
men the kingdom of God.
What did the learned Dr. Johnson eey M
him? He pronounced him a miserable
mountebank. How was it when Robert
Hall stood and spoke as scarcely any unin¬
of spired heaven? man ever did speak of the glories
And ns he stood Sabbath af¬
ter Sabbath oreaching on these themes
his face kindled with the glory. T ohn
Foster, a Christian njan. said of this man,
“Robert Hall is only acting, and the smile
on his face is a reflection of bis own van¬
upside ity." John Wesley turned reform, all England and
down with Christian
yet the punsters were after him, and the
meanest about jokes in England What were perpetrated of the
John Wesley. is true
pulpit is true of the pew: it is true r * the
street; it is true of the shop Christ and Jesus the fitc|*e.
All who live godly in must
suffer persecution.
And I set it down as the very worst sign
in all your Christian experience with all the if you world. are
any of you at pence
The religion of Christ is war. It is a
challenge to “the world, the flesh and the
devil," and if you will buckle on the whole
armor of God you will find a great host
disputing your path between this and
heaven.
Again, I commend the behavior of the
disciples to all the bereaved. How many
in garb of mourning! How many emblems
of sorrow you behold everywhere: God
has His own Way of taking apar' a fam¬
ily. We must get out of the way for com¬
ing generations. We must get off the
stage that others may come on. and for
this reason there is a long procession reach¬
ing down a’J the time into the valley of
sliadows. This emigration from t ; me into
eternity ia so vast an enterprise thac we
cannot understand it. Every hour we hear
sod the dang be of broken. the sepulchral The ground gate. The be
must must
plowed be for resurrecticn harvest. Eternity
must eyelids. peonled. “i*t is aopointed The dust, must press all our
unto men
once to die.” This emigration from time
into families eternity of the keeps earth three-fourths desolation. of The the
in
air i.3 rent with farewells, and the black
tasseled vehicles of death rumble through
every street. The body of the child that
was folded so closely to the mother’s heart
is put away in the cold and the darkness.
The laughter freezes to the girl’s lip, and
the rose scatters. The bov in the harvest
field of Shunem says. “My head, my
head!" and they c.*rry him home to die on
the lap of his mother. Widowhood stands
with tragedies of woe struck into the pal¬
lor of the check. Orphanage cries in ram
for father and mother. Oh. the grave is
cruel! With teeth of stone it clutches for
its prev. Between the closing gates of the
sepulcher our hearts are mangled and
crushed.
But Christ is always near—before you,
behind you, within you. No mother ever
threw her arms around her child with such
warmth and ecstacy of affection as Christ
has shown toward you.
Close at hand, nearer than the staff upon
which you lean, nearer than the cup you
chief put to with j'our which lip. nearer wipe than the handker¬
I Him you away your tears,
preach an ever present, all sympa¬
thizing, compassionate Jesus. How can
you 9tay away one moment from Him with
your griefs? Go now. Go and tell Jesus.
It is often that friends have much no power
to relieve us. They would very like
to do it, but they cannot disentangle our
finances, they cannot, cure our sickness
and raise our dead, but glory be to God
that He to whom the disciples went has all
power in heaven and on earth, and at oui
call He will balk our calamities and at
just the right time, in the presence of an
applauding will earth dead. and a resounding mightier heaven,
raise our He is than
Herod. He is swifter than the storm. He
is grander than the-sea. He is vaster than
eternity. And every sword of God’s om¬
tho nipotence will of leap infinity from be its exhausted scabbard rath- and
resources
ct than that God s child shall not be de¬
livered -when he cries to Him for rescue.
much Suppose would your child endure was in trouble. him How out?
you to net
You would say, “I don’t what it will
cost. I must get him out of that trouble.”
Do you think God is not so good a father
as having you? all Seeing you ivifl are He not in trouble stretch and out
His and power, deliver you? He will. He is
arm
mighty to save. He can level the mount¬
ain the and fire divide and the sea, the and soul. can Not extinguish dim of
save
eye, not weak of arm, not feeble of re¬
sources, but with all eternity tell and the uni¬
verse M- at His feet. Go and Jesus. Will
you/
Ye whose cheeks fire wet with the night
dew of the grave, ye who cannot look up,
ye whose hearts are dried with the breath
of sirocco, in the name of tho religion of
Jesus Christ, which lifts every burden and
wipes away every tear and delivers every
captive and lightens and every tell Jesus. darkness, I im¬
plore little you now child go with her father,
A went a
sea captain, to sea, and when the first
storm came the little child was very much
frightened, and in the night “Where rushed out of
the cabin and said, is father,
where is father?” Then they told her,
“Father is on deck guiding the vessel and
watching the storm. The little child im¬
mediately returned to her berth and said,
“It’s all right, for father’s on deck.”
world, O ye who are tossed and driven in this
up by the mountains and down by
the valleys and at your wits’ ends, I want
you to know the Lord God is guiding the
ship. Your Father is on deck. He will
bring you through the darkness into the
harbor. 'Trust in the Lord. Go and tell
Jesus.
If you go to well. Him Everything for pardon will and bright¬ sym¬
pathy, and all is joy will to the heart, and
en up, come
sorrow will depart, your sins will be for¬
given, and your foot will touch the up¬
ward path, above and the what shining is done messengers here will
that report
tell it until the great arches of God re¬
sound with the glad tidings if now with
contrition and full trustfulness of soul you
will only go and tell Jesus.
But I am oppressed as I think of those
who may not take this counsel and may
remain unblessed. the destiny I cannot of these help people. asking
what will be
Xerxes looked off on his army. There were
2,001),000, perhaps the finest army ever mar¬
shaled. Xerxes rode along the lines, re¬
viewed them, came looked b;)ck, off and the stood 2,000,- on
some high and point, burst into tears. upon At that
000 men supposed he would mo*
ment, when every one
be in the greatest exultation, he broke
down in gTief. They asked him why he
wept. “Ah,” he said, all “I this weep host at will the be
thought that so soon these popula¬
dead.” So I think of vast
tions of immortal men and women and re¬
alize the fact that soon the places which
know them now will know them no more,
and they will be gone—whither, whither?
There is a stirring idea which the poet
put in very peculiar verse when he said:
’Tis not for man to trifle; life is brief,
And sin is here; of !< -1,
Our age is but the dropping falling a
A tear.
Not many lives, but only one have we—
How sacred One, stiould only that one; one life ever be-*
That narrow span! _________
Hi- / ZZZ2
<
►
Look in
your mirror >
c <
Mr today. Take > <
a last look at
-
your gray
hair. It sure¬ i 4
■ ly may be if >
the last i
you want >
YEARS 4
needn’tleep 0 u >
gray ►
-your 4
hair a week longer than ► 4
► you wish. There’s no >
I guesswork about this; b <
► it’s sure every time.
< To re-
> n
« store
► color to
*
► gray hair
use— 1
using for Af te it r visor
4 two
or threwceks notice how ►1
4 much younger you ap¬
4
pear, tec years younger *■
least, 4
i at ►
h Ayer's Hair Vigor also 4
curQfi dandruff, prevents ►
u falling of the hair, makes ►
hair grow, and is a splen¬ ◄
► did hair dressing. *4
It cannot help but do
these things, for it’s a u
hair-food, when the hair
A is but well fed,it cannot help U
H grow. scalp 4
It makes the K
i healthy %od this cures
the disease that causes
- dandruff.
► 4
i $1.00 * bottle. All druggist,. ►
“ My hair wa* ©oming out badly, the 1
4 hut falling Aver’s and Haijr has wade Vigor mv stopped hair very
thick and much darker than before.
I I think there is nothing like it for
tho hair.” Coha 2u. Ljsa,
4 April ’tf, 1800. Yarrow, I. T.
< Writ* tho Doctor* U
If yon d !> rot obtain all tho benefits
you (Ittslro from the use of Address, tho Vigor, •<
write the doctor about it.
Da. J. C. AYER, Lowell, Maas* u
-
’v t v v v
A Setting ot Eggs.
Most people, when ordering » sotting
of eggs, ask and expect the seller to
send fifteen, and when they arrive the
entire lot is placed under one hen, re¬
gardless of her size.
Now, this is a great mistake, and the
seller would have less complaint if he
Ttould refuse to send more than thlr-
tK®, and twelve would be bettor.
A hen that wilt cover more than this
number is too large to set, and will
Weak some of the eggs during the first
few days, while the smaller hens can¬
not cover all of that number, and some
of the eggs are left unprotected and
get chilled.
Hens that will weigh from four to five
pounds make the best setters, and one
Of that size will cover not more than
eleven eggs; and I venture to say that
they will hatch out more strong,
healthy chicks than will a hen that is
given from thirteen to fifteen eggs.
Atlanta, Da., Oct. 1st, ’99.
Allow me to thank you for the good
your Tetterine has done me. Four
boxeB cured me of a case of Tetter,
lifter trying specialists and spending
several hundred dollars and getting no
benefit from them.—Henry W. John¬
son, 281J Marietta street. 50 cents
box at druggists, or by mail from J.
T. Shuptrine, Savanuah, Ga.
Instructed the Queen.
A hitherto unrecorded anecdote of
the queen is the following; One autumn
afternoon, many years ago, her majesty
was going out to sit on a hillside and
watch some of her relatives fishing In
the river below her, when she found
that she had no thimble In her pocket,
so could not work, as she had intended,
at the sewing she wag carrying. Turn¬
ing out of her way to Mrs. Symond’s
shop, she bought the smallest thimble
there, which was, however, many sizes
too big for her. There was an old
Scotch dame at the counter. Impatient¬
ly waiting to make her own purchases.
Not recognizing the queen, she broke
into the conversation with a “Hoots,
but it’s a rare fuss an’ faddle you’re
makln’. Blow intae It weel an’ It’ll
stick.”
That phrase, the latter part of the
sentence, amused her majesty Immense¬
ly and became quite a proverb lu the
royal family.—Scottish American.
Or* MlUlon, T^ireo rfumirt<J amTTw«i^ ) 4 Artt of
muhI, One Hundred end Sixty ( 1 JA 160 Pound#
**0000 LUCK" Baking Powder was sold and shipped
to the wholesale trade during the month of December,
1809, or at the rate of sixteen mllJJoo pounds Eiiaal.lt. a year.
ImMmUi m SCUTUM J IHOftOTSUfiCO,
ci n mm
BRISTLE TWINE, BABBIT, &c.,
FOR ANY HAKE OF QIN.
ENGINES, BOILERS AND PRESSES
And Repairs for sams. Shafting, Pulleys
Belting, Injectors, Pipes, Valves ana Fittings.
LOMBARD IRON IRKS & SUPPLY CO.,
AUGUATA. GA.
Plantation Chill Cure is Guaranteed
i. To Cure.or-Mone» RefundtH hY Your Meyehfc.nl, so Whv NotTrY lt? Price Sou.
Children's Cravings for Sweet Things.
Children have a natural craving for
nweet things, and the sugar of milk,
which makes up from four to six per
cent, of It, forms an Important part of
baby’s first nutriment, taking the place
of starch until the child's stomach Is
able to assimilate It; so that a two-
yeur-old child drinking two quarts of
milk a day, consumes lu this way, nbout
three ounces of sugar. Owing to Its
ease of digestion, nud the fact that It
supplies heat and energy to the body,
sugar would seem to be a natural food
for children anil Is more acceptable to
most children than fat, which usually
supplies heat and energy to adults. The
question whether the use of too much
sugar by children does not pervert their
tastes from less highly-fluvored and nu¬
tritious foods has to he considered.
A lump of sugar contains as much
nutrition as an ounce of potato and Is
far more easily assimilated. In times
of great exertion, as are likely to oc¬
cur In army life, this feature is par¬
ticularly valuable. In warm countries
sugar takes the place of fat, and either
sugar or sweet fruits, as dates, figs,
etc., are eaten In large quantities in
tropical climates. As a source of mus¬
cular enegry sugar is rapidly becoming
recognized, so that training diets are
sometimes made to include large quan¬
tities of it, as, for instance in the row¬
ing clubs of Holland.
Fresh Water Three Miles From Land.
Every little schoolboy and girl ih
America has learned from the geo¬
graphy that the fresh water current of
the Amazon extends into the ocean
twenty miles from the mouth of that
noble river, so that ships or# able to
get drinking water from the ocean
when out of sight of land- But even
among the grown folk it Is not gener¬
ally known that Americans have a riv¬
er In which they can take similar pride.
On still, calm days the crew of the
lightship anchored three miles south¬
west of the mouth of the Columbia
River, Oregon, are able at strong ebb
tide to send a. bucket over the side and
bring up water so palatably fresh as to
be used for drinking. This fresh water
spreads out over the surface of the
ocean in the shape of a fan, tho apes
being the mouth of the Columbia. It
is only about two feet la depth, and If
the bucket te allowed to sink below
that the water with which it Is filled Is
strong with ocean brine.
Medical Hook Free.
“Know Thyself,” a book for men only, male
sent Free, postpaid, this sealed, to any post¬
reader mentioning paper; Co. Self-Preser¬ for
age. The Science of Life, or
vation, the Gold Medal Prize Treatise, the
best Medio il Book of this or any age, 370
pp., with engravings and prescriptions.
Only 25c., >aper covers. Library Edition,
full gilt, $1.00. Address the Peabody Med¬
ical Institute, No. 4 Bulflnch St., Boston,
Mass., the oldest and best in this country.
Write to-day for these books; keys to health.
Quickly Subdued.
“Daughter, I notice that Harry isn’t a bit gal¬
lant to other women.”
“No, indeed, mo; l broke him of that right
after wo were married.”—Indianapolis Journal.
Are You Using Allen’s Foot-Ease?
It is tho only eure for Swollen, Smarting,
Tired, Aeh ng, Hot, Sweating Feet, Corns
and Bunions. Ask for Allen’s Foot-Ease,
a powder to be shaken into the shoes. Cures
while you walk. At all Druggists and Shoe
Stores, 25c. Sample sent FBEE. Address
Allen S. Olmsted, LeKoy, N. Y.
Little Encouragement.
’eonvenlenee, He—Would you mind a little temporaryln-
dear; a few years of poverty when
you marry me?
She—Good gracious! Don’t you expect to live
any longer than that?”—Life.
To Cure a Cold In One Day.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
druggists refund the money if it falls to cure.
E. \V. Grove’S signature is on each box. 25c.
How It Happened.
“So you war© defeated for the senatorahlp?’’ "Oh,
"Yes.’’ "How did It liappen?’’ it was a
pur* case of forgetfulness. I had m y plans all
made, bus when I jot to tho eapltel Just before
the voting began, I found I’d forgotten my
checkbook, $20,000 and pocket.”—Chicago I hand’t more than Evening $15,000 Post. or
in my
Unci© 8©m usss th» best of everything.
Uncle Sam uses Carter’s Ink. He knows.
Natural Sequence.
"They sayHobort Grant’s story ol 'Unleaven¬
ed Bread’ I« selling extensively."
"Yes, It naturally brings In the dough." —
Cleveland Dlaln Dealer.
FITS permanently cured. Nofltsornervous-
noss after Aral day’s use ol Dr. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free.
I)r. IS. H. Klixb, Ltd., 981 Arch St., Phlla., Pa.
Thb eyeballs whit© becadse the bloodves¬
sels that feed its substance are so small that
they do not admit the red corpuecles.
Atlanta College of Pharmacy.
Well equipped laboratories; exoellent
teachers. A free dispensary where hun¬
dreds compounded of proscriptions by thehest students. physicians
are daily by the Stu-
donts obtain flrst-elass practical instruction There
as well as that of a theoretical nature.
is a greater demand for our graduates than
we can 48J^ supply. Address Dr. George F. Payne,
Dean, Whitehall street, Atlanta, Ga.
E. B. Walthall * Co., Druggists, Horsa Cave.
Ky., say: "Hall’s Catarrh Cure cures every
one that takes It." Sold by Druggists, 75ct
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens tho gums, reduces Inflamma¬
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle.
Electric Ton(ue Puller.
One of the well-known rules for first
helps In ease of apparent drowning Is
to rhythmically draw the unconscious
person’s tongue forward and backward
by grasping it between the fingers. Ac¬
cording to the Western Electrician, a
French physician, Dr. Laborde by
name, has arranged a device, run by
an electric motor, which when attach¬
ed to the apparent drowned or suffo¬
cated person’s tongue, produces this
Ungual traction at regular intervals.
An Infrequent Cause of Nervous Troubles- •
If the average woman tried all the
time to look as pleasant at her hus¬
band as she does at the photographer,
she would die of nervous prostration
In two weeks.
Proof Positive,
Hix—I guess your friend Meeks ie
coming out on top, after all.
I)ix—How so?
Ilix—I saw him purchase a bottle
of hair restorer in a drug store the
other day.—Chicago Nows.
World to Knil Tills Year.
This is the recent decision of one of tho
prominent societies of the world, but the ex¬
act ilny has not yet been fixed upon, and
while there are very fow people who bell eve
this prediction, there are thousands of others
who not only believe, but know that llostet-
tor’s Stomach Ritters is the best medicine to
euro dyspepsia,indigestion,constipation,bili¬ and troubles. A fair
ousness or liver kidney
trial will certainly convince you of its vulue.
Slightly Mixed.
Manager—“Well, have you the program all
flxe<l Assistant—’’The for next Monday’s concert?” but
program’s all right,
there’s another row among the artists.”
Manager—“What are they fussing about?”
Assistant—“About whose turn it is to be too
ill to appear.”—'1 Id Bits.
Tlic II,-Ht Prescription for Cl,111.
.ml lover Is n bottle of GhOvk’s TxsTBhass
Chill Tonic. It is simply iron and quinine In
. tasteless form. No care—no pay. Rrice 50c.
Vice Versa.
A railway brakoman does both the coupling
slid the switching, while a clergyman does on¬
ly the coupling, »nd the coupled ones do the
switching later.
Dyeing Is ns simple as waabiDg Sold when you
use Putnam Fadeless Dies. by all
druggist*. _
Thu Pennsylvania railroad Is said to have its
.yes on the south as a fine field for railroad en¬
terprise. Trie.indicate* that tho Pennsylvania
people know a good thing when They see ft.
If you want "good digestion to wait up¬
on bar your of appetite” Adams’ Pepsin you should Tnttl Frutti. always chew
a
To a average duration of marriages In F.twt-
land Is twenty-etght years* tn Franco and Ger¬
many, twenty-Slx; Norway, twenty.four; Russia,
thirty.
___
I am sure Plso’s Ouro for Consumption saved
my life rhree years ago.-M rs. Taos. Rob¬
bins, Maple St., Norwich, N. Y„ Feb. 17, 1900.
His SeW Life.
“Madame,” said the tramp, “I was
oncet a member of the legislature."
"And are yon sure,” she asked, in¬
clined to believe him, “that your re¬
formation is complete?”—Philadelphia
North American.
r*
What a relief from the pain and
inconvenience of diseases of
the eye when
m
MitchcII’sEycSalve
has been
properly applied! Sufferers
have felt it was worth a hun¬
dred times the slight cost of
this Salve to experience such
relief.
Price 25 cents. All druggists.
HALL & RUCKEL,
New York. 1848. London.
BOILER ^ FLUEC ^
Pipe*™ Fittings
Six Car Loads In Stock.
Cut and Ship Quick.
LOMBARD
Foundry, Machine and Boiler Works and
Sopply Store, ■ • Augusta, Ga.
INC HESTER
l“NEW RIVAL”
FACTORY LOADED SHOTGUN SHELLS
No black powder shell, on the market compare with the •• NEW RIVAL” In uni¬
formity and atrong ©hooting qualities. Sure Hr, nod waterproof. Get the genuine.
WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO. t • New Karen, Conn,
991
There is no end of
Old Virginia Cheroots
to waste, as there is no finished end to
cut off and throw away. When you
buy three Old Virginia Cheroots for
five cents, you have more to smoke,
and of better quality, than you have
when you pay fifteen cents for three
Five Cent cigars.
Tiree hundred million Old Virginii Cheroots smoked this
- year. Ask your own dealer. Price, 3 for 5 cents. «
42 MINUTESI4 SECONDS
HE reason we can sell the best at only a dollar or so
more than cheap work is because we make so many
4 °* them. We averaged last year a complete buggy profit
every that 4S minutes and Why M seconds. $1.00 per job the beet
at is in reach race of counte. T pay big profits when
____ tj- __
u o\r you
See onr Agent or write direct. ROCK HILL. ROCKTllli^.C,
TO WOMEN WHO DOUBT.
Every Buffering W.oim Bhould ltvad thU
1-fftt.r and b. Convinced that Lydia X.
Plukham'a Vef.tabl. Compound JDoaa
Cur* Yamoia Wt»ku«n.
11 1 have been troubled with female
weakness in its worst form for
about ten years. I had leuoorrhoeo
and wus se weak that I could not
do my housework. I also had fall¬
ing of tho womb and inflammation of
the womb and ovariea /“
and at menstrual I & I.
periods I suffered ter-
ribly. At times my
back would ache
very hard. I oould ^
not lift anything _
or do any heavy
work; was notable
to stand on my feet.
My husband spent k
hundreds of dollars
for doctors but
they did me no
good. After a time
I concluded to try your medicine and
I can truly say it does all that you
cfaim for It to do.
Ten bottles of Lydia E. Plnkham’*
Vegetable Compound and seven pack¬
ages of Sanative Wash have made a
now woman of me. I have had no
womb trmible since taking the fifth
bottle, a weigh more than X have in
years ; can do all my own housework,
sleep well, have a good appetite and
now feel that life is worth living. I
owe all to Lydia E. Ptnkham’s Vegeta¬
ble Compound. I feel tBafcit has saved
my life and would not be without it for
anything. I am always glad to recom¬
mend your medicine to all my sex, for 1
know if they follow your directions,
they '"will be cured.”— Mbs.' Annib
Thompson, South Hot Springs, Ark.
Malsby & Company,
SO S. Broad St., Atlanta, On.
Engines and Boilers
Steam Water Heater*. Steam Pump* anil
Penberthy Injector*.
I k
Mill HP
Manufacturers and Dealers In
SAW MILLS,
Com Mills, Fevil Mills, Cotton Gin Machln-
ery and drain Separators.
SOLID and INSERTED Saws, Saw Teeth antf
Locks, Knigirt ’b Patent I>og», Blrdoall Satr
Mill and Engine liepftir*, (Inventor*' Grate
Burs and a full line of Mill Supplies. Priea
and quality of goods guaranteed. Catalogue
free by mentioning this paper.
ForCram’ft AGENTS MogTlilicentTwentieth WANTED Century
Map of United states S4ti<l World. LargC90
and most beautiful Map “publication ever
printed on one eheot. It abrtwB all the’ recent
changed. Price low. Exotoeive territory. Bi&
Profit to Salesmhn. Ateo the finest line of
beautiful, quick selling Charts. Statu Maps
nud Family Birles ever issued. Write for terms*
and circulars shovrtng Yrhat onr salesmen are
doing. Hudgins Publishing Co., Atlanta.*Ga.
n D 8 V D I vP ■ qnffek NBW relief DISCOVERY and cure# ; worst sriv®*
CIIM6S . Book of testimonials and 10 <Jnya’ treatment
FTC©. Dr. H. H. GBEEN’8 80N8. Box B. Atlanta. G*-
E 3 ia time. Sold by drugglsta * g f
Mention this Paper In writing to atloertisers.
ANU-1900-28