Newspaper Page Text
Tt.TALM AGE'S SERMON
t* Bmlnv&t Divine'* Sunday
Diaoourae.
The Miracle at Cane-LeMon of
Lilian King the Water Iuto Wine—Christ.
Teaches Thai We Should Not Shadow
Joys of Others With Our Own Griefs*
[Copyright uwu,|
Washington D. C. — A remarkable
ustration of the ubiquity ol English
speaking people is furnished by the re-
meats that have reached Dr. lalmage m
Northern Europe for a sermon in out-of-
the-way places, where lie did not expect tq
find a single person who could understand
him. There, as here, lie presents world religion
as a festivity and invites all the to
come as guests and join in its holy merri-
Iment; good text, wine John until li, 10, “Thou hast kept
I S the invites now. to marriage
f This chapter It is wedding us in a
celebration. plain people a having pledged common each
| A life, two hand and heart, and their friends
f other, in for congratulation. The
1 having come the less because there is
joy is not they no pre-
5 tension. In each other find all the
future they want. The daisy in the cup
on the table may mean as much as a score
; | of artistic garlands fresh from the hot-
house. When a daughter goes off from
| home with nothing but a plain father’s
blessing and a plain mother’s love, she is
[ missed It as much as hard, though after she were the a prin-
cess. sheltered seems her eighteen parents that
have for years
in a few short months her affections
| I should have been carried olf by another,
I but her mother remembers how it was in
her own ease when she was young, and so
she braces up until the wedding lias passed
and the banqueters alone. are gone, and she has
a cry all
Well, we are to-day at the wedding mother in
Cana of Galilee. Jesus and His
have been invited. It is evident that there
are more people there than were expected.
Either some people have come who were
not iawited or mors invitations have been
sent out than it was supposed would te ac¬
cepted. Of course there is not a sufficient
supply of wine. You know that there is
nothing more embarrassing to a house-
keeper than a scant supply. Jeaus sees
the embarrassment, and lie comes up im¬
mediately to relieve it. He sees standing
six water pots. He orders the servants to
fill thorn with water; then He waves His
hand over the water, and immediately it
is wine—real wine. Taste of it and see for
yourselves; but no logwood in it, no strychnine
in it, first rate wine. I will not now
be diverted to the question so often dis¬
cussed in my own country whether it is
right to drink wine. I am describing the
scene as it was. When God makes wine
He makes the very best wine, and 130 gal¬
lons of it standing around in these water
pots—wiTie so good that the raler of the
feast tastes it and says: "Why, this is
Thou really hast better than anything we have had!
Beautiful kept the good wine until now.”
miracle! A prize was offered to
the person ivho should write the best es¬
say about the miracle in Cana. Long man¬
uscripts but were presented in the competition,
a poet won the pria by just this one
line descriptive of the miracle: “The con¬
scious water saw its God and blushed.”
We learn from the miracle, sympathy in the first
place, that Christ has with
housekeepers. You might have thought
that Jesus would have said: “I cannot be
bothered with this household deficiency of
wine. It is not for Me, Lord of heaven
and of earth, to become caterer to this this
feast. 1 haue vaster things than to
attend to.” Not so said Jesus. The wine
gave out, and Jesus, by miraculous power,
came to the resou^. Does there ever come
a scant supply in ye*ir household? Have
you to make a very close calculation? Is it
hard work for you to carry on things de¬
cently down and and respectably? Don’t If so, don’t sit
cry. go out and fret, but
go to Hfm who stood in the house in v! ana
of Galilee. Bray in the parlor! Pray in
the kitchen! Let there be no room in all
your bouse unconsecrated by the voice of
prayer. I, you have a microscope, put
under it one drop of water and see tli e m-
sects that God floating makos about, them and and when you see
cares for them
and feeds them come to the conclusion that
He will take care of you and feed you.
A boy asked if he might sweep the snow
from the steps of a house. The lady of
the household said, “Yes; you seem very
poor.” He says, “I am very poor.” She
says, “Don’t you sometimes get discouraged
and feel that God is going to let you
starve?” The lad looked up in the wom¬
an’s face and said, “Do you .think God
will let me starve when I trust Him and
then do the best I can?” Enough theo¬
logy for older people! Trust in God and
do the best you can. Amid all the worri-
ments of housekeeping go to Him. He
will help you control your temper and su¬
pervise your domestics and entertain your
quests and manage your home economies.
There are hundreds of women weak and
nervous and exhausted with tie care of
housekeeping. Jesus Christ I commend you to the Lord
as the best adviser and the
most efficient aid—the Lord Jesus who
performed housekeeper. His first miracle to relieve a
; ’ I learn also from this miracle that Christ
does things in abundance. I think a
small supply of wine would have made up
for the deficiency. I think certainly they
must have had enough for half the guests.
One gallon of wine will do; certainly live
gallons will be enough; certainly ten. But
Jesus goes on, and He gives them thirty
gallons and forty gallons and fifty gallons
and seventy gallons and 100 gallons and
just 130 gallons like Him—doing ot the very best wine. It is
largest and everything on the
most generous scale. Does
Christy leaves ! our He makes Creator, them go by forth the whole to make for¬
est full notched like the fern or silvered
like the aspen or broad like the palm,
thickets m the tropics, Oregon forests.
Does He go lorth to make Hoirers? He
makes-plenty the hedge, they of hang them. from They the flame from
blossoms, top of the
grapevine in they roll in the
blue Wave of the violets, they toss their
white surf in the spiraea—enough ; ' ‘ for
„„„ ever/ child . , hand , , flower,
s a enough to
make tor every brow a chaplet, enough
with beauty to cover up the ghastliness of
all the grave. Does He go forth to create
water. He pours it out not by the cup-
ful, but by a river full, a lake full, an
ocean lull, pouring it out until all the
earth has enough to drink and enough with
which to wash.
Does Jesus provide redemption? It is
Inot a little salvation for this one, a little
tor that and a little for the other, but
ienough come.” for Each all. ‘Whosoever will, let him
man an ocean full for him-
self; old, promises lor the for young, promises for
the promises the lowly, promises
for the blind, abandoned: for the halt, for the outcast,
for the for pardon all, heaven for all, com-
fort for all, mercy of gospel for all—
toot merely a cupful the supply, but
bentance 130 gallons. Aye, all gathered tears of godly re-
are up into God’s
throne, bottle, and will some lift day, standing of delight before the
we our cup anil
ask that it be fiUed with the wine of
heaven, and Jesus, from that bottle of
tears, will begin to pour in the cup, and
We will cry: “Stop, Jesus; we do not want
to drink our own tears!” And Jesus wilt
say, “Know ye not that the tears of
earth are the wine of heaven?” Sorrow
may endure for a night, but joy cometli
in the morning.
I remark, further, Jesus does not
shadow the joys of others with _ His own
griefs. wedding He and might said: have “I sat have down in much that
so
trouble, so much poverty, so much persecu-
tion, and the crass is coming. I shall not
rejoice, find the Bloom of My face and of
My Borrows shall be east over all this
group.” Himself: So "Here said not Jesus. He said to
out in married life. are Let two it persons be joyful starting
a oc¬
casion, I will hide My own griefs. I will
kindle their joy.” There are many not so
wise as that. 1 know a household where
there are many little children, where for
two years the musical instrument has been
kept shut because there has been trouble
in the house, Adas for the folly! Parents
saying: “We will holiday have no Christmas tree
this coming because there 1ms
been trouble in the house! Hush that
laughing joy up stairs! has How can much there bo
any when there been so trou¬
ble?” And so they make everything con¬
sistently doleful and send their sons and
daughters to ruin with the gloom they
throw around them.
Oh, my dear friends, do yon not know
those children will have trouble enough
of their own after awhile? Be glad, back they
cannot appreciate all yours. Keep daughter's
the cup of bitterness from your
lips. When your head is down in the
grass of the tomb poverty may come to
her, betrayal to her, bereavement to her.
Keep hack the'sorrows as long as you can.
Do you not know that that son may, after
awhile, have his heart broken? Stand
between him and all harm. You may not
tight his battles long. Fight them while
you may. Throw not the chill of your own
despondency Jesus, who over his soul. the wedding Rather be hiding like
came to
His own grief and kindling the joys of
others. So f have seen the sun on a dark
day struggling amid clouds, black, ragged
and portentous, but after awhile the sun,
with golden pry, heaved back tlip black¬
ness, and the sun laughed to the lake, anil
the lake laughed to the sun, and from hori¬
zon to horizon, under the saffron sky, the
water was all turned into wine.
I learn from this miracle that Christ is
not impatient with the lnxuries of life. It
was not necessary that they should have
that wine. Hundreds of people have been
married without any wine. We do not read
that any of the other provisions fell short.
When Christ made the wine it was not a
necessity, but a positive luxury. I do not
believe that He wants us to eat hard bread
and sleep on hard mattresses unless we
like them the best- I think, if circum¬ the
stances will allow, we have a right of to and
luxuries'of dress, the luxuries diet
the luxuries of residence. There is no
more religion in an old coat than in a new
one. We can serve God drawn by golden
harness as certainly as when we go afoot.
Jesus Christ will dwell with us under a
fine ceiling as well as under a thatched
roof, , Chi¬
What is the difference between a
nese mud hovel and an American home?
What ie the difference between the rough
bearskins of the Russian boor and the
outfit of an American gentleman? No
difference except that which the has gospel caused. of
Christ, directly or indirectly, vanquished all the
When Christ shall have
world, I suppose every house will be a
man sion, and every garment a robe, and
every horse an arch necked courser, and
every carriage a glittering vehicle, and
every man a king, and every woman a
queen, and the whole earth a paradise, the
glories of the natural world harmonizing
with the glories of the material world un¬
til the very bells of the horses shall jingle
the praises of the Lord,
I learn, further, from this miracle that
Christ has no impatience with festal joy;
otherwise He would not have accepted certainly the
invitation to that wedding. He
would not have done that which increased
the hilarity. There may have been many
in that room who were happy, but there
was not one of them that did so mueb tor
the joy of the wedding party as Christ
Himself. He was the chief of the ban¬
queters. When the wine gave out, He sup¬
plied it, and so, I take it. He will not deny
us the joys that are positively festal.
Who was it that sen), the raven tapping
on the window? The same God that sent
the raven to feed Elijah by the brook
Cherith. Christ in the hour extremity! You could
You mourned over your sins.
not find the way out. You sat down and
said: “God will not be merciful, lie has
cast me off.” But in that the darkest hour
of your history light broke from the throne
and Jesus said: “Oh, wanderer, come In
home! I have seen all thy sorrows.
this the hour of thy extremity I offer time
pardon and everlasting life!”
Trouble came. You were almost torn
to pieces by that trouble. You braced
yourself up against it. You said, "1 will
be a stoic aud will not care.” liut before
you had got through making the resolution
it broke down under you. You felt that
•all your resources were gone, and tnen
Jesus came. night,’ (he
“In the fourth watch of the
Bible savs, “Jesus came walking an ’.he
sea.” Why did He not come in the first
watch or in the second watch or in the
third watch? I do not know. He came
in the fourth And gave deliverance to His
disciples. Jesus in the last extremity!
I wonder if it will be so in our very
last extremity. We shall fall suddenly
sick, and the doctors will come, but in vain.
We will try the anodynes and the stimu¬
lants and the bathings, but all in vain.
Something will say, “You must go.” No
one to hold us back, but the hands of eter¬
nity stretched out to pull us on. What
then? Jesus will come to us, and as we
say, “Lord Jesus, I am afraid of that wa¬
ter; I cannot wade through to the other
side,” He will say, “Take hold of My arm,”
and we will take hold of His arm. and then
He will put His foot in the surf of the
wave, taking us on down, deeper, deeper,
deeper, and our soul will cry, “All Thy
waves and billows have gone over me.
They cover the feet, come to the knee and
pass the girdle and come to the head, and
our soul cries out, “Lord Jesus Christ, 1
cannot hold Thine arm any longer.” Then
Jesus will turn around, tlffow both His
arms about us and set ns on the beach far
beyond the tossing of the billows. Jesus
in the last extremity! is The
That wedding scene lost, gone the now. tankards
wedding ring has been
have been broket, the house is down, bui,
Jesus invites us to a grander wedding.
You know the Bible nays that the church
is the Lamb’s wife, and the Lord will af¬
ter awhile come to fetch her home. There
will be gleaming of torches in the sky, and
the trumpets of God will ravish the air
with their music, and Jesus will stretch out
His hand, and the church, robed in white,
will put aside her veil and look up into the
face of her Lord the King, and the Bride-
groom will say to the bride: “Thou hast
Seen faithful through all these years. Thou The
mansion is ready. Come home. are
fair, my love!” and then He shall put upon
her brow the crown of dominion, and the
table will be spread, and it will reach
across the skies, and the mighty ones of
heaven will come in garlanded with beauty
and striking their cympals, and the Bride-
groom and bride will stand at the head of
the table, and the banqueters, looking “That up,
will wonder and admire and say: is
Jesus, the Bridegroom. But the scar on
His brow is covered with the coronet, and
the stab in His side is covered with a
robe,” and “That is the bride! The weari-
n es- of her earthly woe lost in the flush
of this wedding will wine triumph!” enough at that wed-
There be
ding, not coming up from the poisoned of God
vatB of earth, but the vineyards clusters, and the
will press their ripest
cups and the tankards will blush to the
brim with the heavenly vintage, and then
all the banqueters will drink standing. bac-
Esther, having come up from the
chanalian revelry of Abasuarus, where a
thousand lords feasted, will be there. And
the Queen of Sheba, from the banquet of
Solomon, will be there. And the mother
of Jesus, from the wedding will in Cana, will the
be there. And they all agree that
earthly feasting was their poor compared with that
that. they Then, shall lifting the chalices Lord in of the
light, cry to
feast. “Thou hast kept the good wine until
now.”
your hair
split end? at
Id the m
Can you [l r
W / ull out a Ij
andf u 1
by run - 11
pi ., fingers through " in 8V°“f it? &
:-3 Does it seem dry and f
k 1 ? 1 lifeless?
► fl Give your hair a
chance. Feed it.
The dead; roots they are weak not [,
are §
because they are | I
starved—that’s all.
The
best
ha r
f o o d
■ i s —
\
f If you don’t want ; i
your hair to die use
Ayer’s Hair It Vigor
once the hair a day. maxes
grow, stops
druff. falling, and cures dan¬
It always restores
color to gray or faded
hair; it never fails.
$1.00 & bottle. All druggist*.
•topped “ Ono bottle hair of Ayor’a from failing Hair Vigor
xny out,
and started i t to grow again AY nicely.”
JULIUS ITT,
March 23, 1309. Caaova, S. Dai. F
cured “Ayer’s from Hair dandruff, Vigor with completely which f L
me
I was greatly a it! ictod. The growth of
my hair since its use has been some¬
thing wonderful.’,’
LknaG. Greene,
April 13,1809. New York, N.Y.
«8 If you do not obtain all the benefits
• isj vl toh Vigor, expected write the from Doctor the use about of the it. Hair
lot . J. C. AYER, Lowell, Mass.
An Accommodating Clock.
“Do you remember the old-time song
about grandfather’s clock, that stop¬
ped short, never to go again, when the
old man died’?’’ asked a man employed
In the clock department of a Chestnut
street jewelry store. “Well, there’s a
family living on South Fifteenth street
that has a rather mysterious clock. It
used to be on the sitting room mantel,
but some time ago it was moved down¬
stairs to the parlor. It has never kept
good time, aud when changed to its
new quarters it refused to go at all.
For three months It has been purely
ornamental, but one evening last week,
while the master of the house was
seated fh the parlor, he was surprised
to hear the clock strike 9. He pulled
out his watch and found that It was
just exactly 9 o’clock, to the fraction
of n minute. He got up and wound
the clock, and it has been keeping good
time ever since. Strange, Isn’t It, that
when it did make up its mind to start,
it should have started just exactly at
the right time?”—Philadelphia Record.
A Doctor’s Advice Free!
About Tetterine. Ilr. M. L. Fielder
of Eolectio P. O., Elinors Co , Ala.,
says: ‘‘I know it to be a radical cure
for tetter, salt rheum, eczema aud all
kindred diseases of the skin and scalp.
I never prescribe anything else in all
skin troubles.” Send 50e. in stamps
for a box of it, postpaid, to the man¬
ufacturer, J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah,
Ga., if your druggist doesn’t keep it.
Conductors Have the Trolley Eye.
A new affliction has come upon the
long suffering trolley car conductors.
Perhaps you have noticed how many
of them are wearing smoked glasses.
That’s because they claim the incan¬
descent lights hurt their eyes. Head¬
aches arising from strained optic
nerves have become so common that
several of the afflicted ones some time
ago consulted eye specialists, aud were
told that the ailment was due to the
incandescent lights in the cars. Dark
glasses were prescribed to insure tem¬
porary relief, and poiv there’s a great
demand for goggles among the conduc¬
tors, while caps with long visors are
generally worn down over the eyes.
Conductors on the new cars, which are
of greater length than the old ones, are
said to be the greatest sufferers from
the “trolley eye."—Philadelphia Rec¬
ord.
Tlte Best Prescription for Clillls
and Fever is a bottle of HaOVK’s Tastki.kss
Cuiu, Tonic. It Is simply iron and quinine Trio© 5uc, lu
h tasteless form. No euro—no par*
Willing to Make ths Risk.
“I have seen It stated that any girl
Who marries a man under twenty-tive
years of age Is taking big chances,”
he casually remarked.
“I do so love to gamble,” she an¬
swered enthusiastically.
the ••horae-shoe” 300THEEHIH0FACTOM on every can. CO., ^ fifctooral. _ Vt
Imfaetand b; THE
-r*. ;,v-
03 sCG - oa ^■ j^V”! cy IXJ CD
: -L
O u e o T £ C T? -< =0 -it e C a. a. tr < is e 2 u V c t ar * > ■■■ ~Q -t « ?
A HOT WEATHER DANGER.
Dcatfc Larki Beblit ice Cream, Soft Drink*
sod Summer tumrlea
Beware of Ice cream and soft drinks,
fruits and Ices, for behind them lurk
death!
More than twice as many persons
died last year from Inability to curb
their appetite for these summer lux¬
uries than were carrier! to their graves
from dread consumption and fevers
(soldiers Included). A clipping bureau
and a medical Journal’s statement tell
a tale of dire disaster from these evils,
well they may be called.
While consumption killed forty in
one state, nearly one hundred died from
eating too much ice cream. In Chica¬
go and vicinity, malaria proved fatal to
thirty, while ninety persons were mur¬
dered by swallowing peach and cherry
stones. In the state of New Jersey ten
died from heart disease, while Ice cold
drinks killed twice that number.
A man In Canton, O., died from eat¬
ing cherries and Ice cream at the same
time, the acid fermenting with cream.
In Oshkosh, Wls., a young woman at¬
tended a dance, and after eating eigh¬
teen plates of Ice cream fell dead. Her
name was Mary Blake. But ravenous
appetites for cold stuff on a hot day is
not all the evil there Is to soft drinks.
A number of well-known red drinks
are known to contain poisonous acids.
The soft drink habit is more fatal to
yomv? women than to the men. This
Is attributed to feminine weakness and
the manner in which they consume
their drinks, namely, through a straw.
A well-known doctor said to a New
York Journal correspondent:
“I know of several girls who have
died from sipping ices through a straw.
This Is the reason: In sucking the ices
up th* cold substance strikes the palate
of the mouth aud cools the head. Then
when the young women walk In the sun
and exert themselves the cold reacts,
giving them a severe headache, which
Is later followed by a fever, and in some
cases death has resulted.”
The doctor says men are not so easily
affected. Fruit Ices are also said to be
very unhealthful.
Asking and Receiving.
The tramp had been unsuccessful
and returned to the road from the
house empty-handed.
“Aw,” he growled, “that iDman's no
good. I asked her for bread and she
gave me a stone.”
“That’s nothing!” said his companion.
Ladies Can Wear Shoes
On* size smaller after using Allen’s Foot-
Ease, a powder for the feet. It swollen, makes tight
or new shoes easy. Cures hot,
sweating, aching feet, ingrowing nails, corns
and bunions. At all druggists and shoe
stores, 25e. Trial package FREE by mail.
Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Boy, N. Y.
Laying Out a, Celebration.
“Freddy, tell pu what you want for your
birthday.”
“Oh, pa, I want a tent in th’ back yard, an’ a
pun. an’ a grea’ big cigar store Injun.”—Minne¬
apolis Journal.
Every spring you clean the house you
live in, to get rid of the dust and dirt which
collected in the winter. Your body, the
house your soul lives in, also becomes filled
I up during the winter with all manner of
filth, which should have been removed from
% i [• LT'*’ day cleaning to kidneys day, inside. but was If full your not. of bowels, Your putrid body your filth, needs liver, and
sa I you your don’t clean are them out in the spring,
you’ll be in bad odor with yourself and
fh, U W 1 everybody else all summer.
DON'T USE A HOSE to clean your
.'s \ .1 body inside, but sweet, fragrant, mild but
positive and forceful CASCARETS, that
work while you sleep, prepare all the filth
collected in your body for removal, and
drive it off softly, gently, but none the less
surely, leaving your blood pure and nourishing, your stomach and bowels clean and
lively, and your liver and kidneys healthy and active. Try a 10-cent box today, and if
not satisfied get your money back—but you’ll see how the cleaning of your body is
MADE EASY BY
CANDY CATHARTIC
*0c. s ALL
25c. 50c. I m DRUGGISTS
To any needy mortal suffering from bowel troubles and too poor to buy CASCARETS we will send a box free. Address
Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago or New York, mentioning advertisement and paper. 423
Persistency of Acquired Habit.
Yardmaster—What’s the matter with
that new engineer, is he crazy?
Assistant—Why?
Yardmaster—I’ve noticed that If a
man ever gets In his way he keeps
right on, and never rings his bell, while
a chicken or a dog makes him stop
every time.
Assistant—Yes; you see, he used to
be an enthusiastic wheelman.—Phila¬
delphia Press.
Wherever inflammation exists,
there you may use with
perfect safety
■m ■
3
Mitchell’s EycSalve
although
the Salve Is chiefly rec¬
ommended for diseases of
the eye.
Price 25 cents. All druggists.
HALL fit RUCKEL,
New York. 1848. London.
i FREE
„ Our l6o
,
j illustrated cata-
) I Jofriie
I | ■ FB9FF MMfctfEr
Satisfaction
is unusual with "Five-Cent cigar
smokers/' but it has been the every-
day experience of hundreds of thou-
sands of men who have smoked
Old Virginia Cheroots
during the last thirty years, because
they are just as good now—in
better than when they were first made.
Three hundred million Old Virginia Cheroots smoked this
year. Ask your own dealer. Price, 3 for 5 cents. a
“LONG-WINDED” AXLE!
Wheel does not hare
to be taken off to oiL
Will run 2 to G months
wl thou t re-oiling. Axles
will la*t as long as the
buggy. Our Don’t Patent. cost any
more. A
mechanical wonder.
ROOttflU. Simple. order. t’ao*t get sample out
of See
with our acent. Don’t
buy this a buggy until you
see axte.
ROCK HILL BUGGY C0., BW<
CONTRACTORS’ AND
U ^BUILDERS’
AND _MILL SUPPLIES.
Coatings, Bolts, Rods, Steel Weights, Beams, Columns Tanks, and Chan¬
nel Towers, Ac.
Steel Wire and Manila Rope, Hoisting Engines
and Pumps, Jacks, Derricks, Crabs, Chain and
Z3TCwst Hope Hoists. Day.
Every Make Quick Delivery.
LOMBARD IRON W0RK8XSUPPLY CO.
AUGUSTA, GA.
Malsby & Company,
39 S. Uroiul SI., Atlanta, Oa.
Engines and Boilers
Water Heater**. St emu Uumpft and
Penberthy liijeetor*.
'A }
f >)
Manufacturers and Dealers In
SAW MILLS.
Corn Mills, Fe«d Mills, Cotton Gin Machin¬
ery ami Grain Separators.
SOLID and INSERTED Saws, Saw lilrcUall Teeth jaw ajid
l ocks, Knight’* Patent I>og»,
Mill and Jin trim* Repair*. fioveruon,
Hare and a full line of Mill Supplies, l'rtoo
and quality of poods guaranteed. Catalogue
free l>y mentioning this paper.
WINCHESTER,
SHOTGUNS ;
and i
FACTORY LOADED SHOTGUN SHELLS j
the winning combination in the field or at I
the tTap. All dealers sell them. J
WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO. j
iSo Winchester Avb., New Haven, Conn. (
■MS ■ H sap A STOPPED FREE
■ E* Permanently Cured by
I I U NERVE RECTORER
•■■R I Ho fits *fter Brit d*jr * ait.
. Consultation. periwniJ er bv mail; treMi** » n «
9Z TRIAL BOTTLE FREE
ME to FU pfttienti who p*y e*pr<*»a«« onlv on delivery.
■■ WM Permanent (,\trs, not tuily lemvor&rr relief, for ail .Ver-
vans Disorder*, SpMtn*. St. Vitim' D*nee,
M ■* Debit Dr. Arch Kibeu.tioo. I>R. U. 1 I.HLIN 2 , Ld.
93t Street. Philidelphla. Founded u>il
nDADQY l/ll VI HP ■ quick NEW relief DISCOVERY; and cures worst #i
cases- Book of testimonials and 10 days’ treatment
Free. Dr. H. H. OBEBN’B SONB. Box B. Atlanta, da
Mention
SOOH!
\ ;
! ft** lo«tad \
i shotgun shells, ‘ J
j “LEADKR-,”and ..NEW RIVAL,”
i *
| 44 REPEATER.*’ j
[ * ««*i p™e ;
, their superiority. <