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I^EV. DR. TALMAGE
The Eminent Divine’s Sunday
Discourse.
Subjeet: The Mission of Christ — How
Uivlne Power Will Heal the World—
Jesus the Surgeon Who 1V111 Extir¬
pate the »laenso of Sin.
[Copyright l»uu.l
Dr. Washington, Talmage D. C.-In this discourse
puts in an unusual light the
mission of Christ, and shows how divine
power will yet make the illnesses of the
world fall back; text, Matthew xi, 5, “The
blind receive their sight, and the lame
walk, the lepers are cleansed and the deaf
hear.”
“Doctor,” I said to a distinguished sur¬
geon, “do you not get worn out with con¬
stantly ken bones seeing so many wounds and bro¬
and distortions of the human
body?” “Oh. no,” he answered; “all that
A is overcome sublimer by my joy in curing them.”
and more merciful art never
came down from heaven than that of sur-
gory. the earth Catastrophe and disease entered
of the so early that one of the first
wants world was a doctor. Our
crippled for and agonized human race called
surgeon and family physician for many
years before they came. The first surgeons
who answered this call were ministers of
religion—namely, And what the Egyptian priests.
also doctors, a grand thing if all clevgymen
were all D. D.’s were M.D.’s,
for there are so many cases where body
•and soul need treatment at the same time,
consolation and medicine, theology and
therapeutics. world As the first surgeons of the
were also ministers of religion, may
these two professions always be in full
sympathy! But under what disadvanta¬
ges the early surgeons worked, from the
fact that dissection of the human body
then was forbidden, by the first by the pagans and
early Christians! Apes being
the brutes most like the human race, were
•dissected, but no human body might be
unfolded for physiological and anatomical
•exploration, and the surgeons had to guess
what was inside the temple by looking at
the outside of it. If they failed in any
surgical oneration, they were persecuted
and driven out of the city, as was Archa-
gathus because of his bold but unsuceess-
ful attempt to save a patient.
But the world from the very beginning
skill kept calling for surgeons, and their first
is spoken of in Genesis, where they
employed sacred rite, their God art for the incisions of a
of baptism, making and surgery it the again prede- in
cessor we see
II Kings, where Ahaziah, the monarch,
stepped tho palace, on some cracked latticework in
and it broke, and he fell from
the upper to the lower floor, and he was so
hurt that he sent to the village of Ekron
for aid, and Aesculapius, who wrought
such wonders of surgery that he was dei-
flrid and temples v-ere built for his wor¬
Podelirius ship at Pergamos; introduced and Epidnurus and
for the relief of the
world phlebotomy, and Damoeedes cured
the the dislocated of his ankle of King Darius and
cancer queen, and Hippocrates
put successful hand on fractures and intro¬
duced amputation, and Praxagoras re¬
moved obstructions, and Herophilus began
dissection, and Krasistmtus removed tu¬
mors, and Celsus, the Roman surgeon, re¬
moved cataract from the eye and used the
Spanish the fly: throat, ana Heliodqrus arrested dis-
ease of and Alexander of Tralles
treated the eye, nnd Rhazas cauterized for
the prevention of hydrophobia, and Perci-
val I’ott came to combat diseases of the
spine, and in our own century we have
had, among others, a Roux and a Larray
in France, an Astlev Cooper and an
Abernethy Mott and in Great Willard Britain Parker and a Valen¬
tine and Samuel
D. Gross in America, and a their galaxy of liv¬
ing surgeons What as mighty brilliant as in predeces¬ the baf¬
sors. disease progress crippled and sick
fling of of cities since the laid along the
ancient were
streets, disordered that people who had ever been
hurt or in tho same way might
suggest what had better be done for the
patients!
But notwithstanding all the surgical and
medical skill of diseases the world, with what ten¬
acity the old hang on to the hu¬
man race, and most of them are thou¬
sands of years old, and in our Bibles we
read A>f them—the carbuncles of Job and
Hezekiah, the palpitation of the heart spo¬
ken of in Deuteronomy, the sunstroke of
a child carried from the fields of Shunem,
crying, “My head! mv head!" King Asa’s
disease of the feet, which was nothing but
gout; defection of teeth, that called for
dental surgery, the skill of which, almost
the equal filled to anything molars of modern, the unrolled is ■ still Egyptian seen in
mummies; the the newly ophthalmia ripe fig, leaving caused the by the
juice ple blind of by the roadside; epilepsy, peo¬ in
as
the case of the and’oft young into man the often falling hy¬
into the fire water;
pochondria, as of Nebuchadnezzar, who
imagined himself an ox and going out to
the fields to pasture; the withered hand,
which in Bible times, as now, came from
the destruction of the main artery or from
paralysis of the chief nerve; the wounds
of the man whom the thieves left for
dead on the road to Jericho, and whom
the good Samaritan" nursed, pouring in oil
and wine—wine to cleanse the wound and
oil to soothe it. Thank God for what sur¬
gery has done for the alleviation and cure
of human suffering!
Bat the world wants a surgery without
pain. Drs. Parre and Hickman and Simp¬
son and Warner snd Jackson, forward, with their
amazing genius, came and with
their anaesthetics benumbed the patient
with narcotics and ethers as the ancients
did with hasheesh and but mandrake, and
quieted him for awhile, returned. at the return The
of consciousness distress
world has never seen but one surgeon who
could straighten the crooked limb, cure
the blind eye or reconstruct the drum of
a soundless that ear or reduce a dropsy Jesus without Christ,
pain, and surgeon was
sympathetic the mightiest, grandest, the gentlest world and most
surgeon ever saw or
ever will see, arid He deserves the confi¬
dence and love and worship and hosanna
of all the earth and halleluiahs of all
heaven. “The blind receive their sight
and the lame walk; the lepers are cleansed
and the deaf hear.”
I notice this surgeon had a fondness for
chronic had cases. patient Many brought a surgeon, when has he
has a to him,
said: “Why ago? You was bring «ot this him attended to five
years to me after all
power of recuperation there is gone. You have
waited until is a complete contrac¬
tion of the muscles, and false ligatures are
formed, and ossification has taken place.
It ought to have been attended to long
ago.” But Christ the Surgeon seemed to
prefer inveterate cases. One was a
hemorrhage of twelve years, and He stopped
it. Another was a curvature of eighteen
years, and He straightened it. Another
was a cripple of thirty-eight eighteen-year years, and he
walked out well. The ; pa¬
tient was a woman bent almost double.
If you could call a convention of all the
surgeons of all the centuries, that their com¬
bined skill could not Perhaps cure they body might so
drawn out of shape. perhaps
stop it from getting, braces any worse, which
they might contrive comfortable, by but it she
might be made more Yet di¬ is,
humbly speaking, incurable. this
vine surgeon put both His hands on her,
mid from that doubled up posture she be¬
gan to take on a healthier hue, and the
muscles began to relax from their adjust rigidity,
and the spinal column began to it¬
self, and the cords of the neck began to
be more supple, and the eyes, that could
see only the ground before, now looked
into the face of Christ with gratitude, and
lip toward heaven in transport. Straight!
After eighteen weary and the exhausting gracefulness, years, the
straight! The poise,
beauty of healthy womanhood reinstated.
The thirty-eight years’ case the was mineral a man. 1
who lay on a mattres3 near
baths at Jerusalem. There were five
brought, apartments that where lame could people the advan¬ were
of so they baths. get The stone
tage those mineral
basin of the bath is still visible, although
the waters have disappeared, probably The
through bath, 120 some feet convulsion long, forty of feet nature. wide and
eight feet deep. Ah, poor man. if you
have been lame and helpless thirty-eight
years, that mineral bath cannot restore
you. Why, twenty-eight years is more than
the average of human life. Nothing but
the grave will cure you. But Christ the
Surgeon walks along those baths, and I
have no doubt passes by some disordered patients
who have been only six months
or a year or live years, nnd comes to the
mattress of the man w'ho had been nearly
four decades helpless, and to this thirty-
eight years’ invalid said, "Wilt thou be
made whole?”
The mightiest scientists have put their
skill to its retiming, and sometimes they
stop the progress of its decadence or re-
move temporary obstructions, but not
more than one really deaf car out of 109,-
000 is ever cured.
Tt took a Cod to make the ear, nnd it
takes a God to mend it. That makes me
curious to see how Christ the Surgeon suc¬
ceeds as an aurist.
We are told of onlv two cases Tie oper-
nted on as nn ear surgeon. His friend
tempered, Christ .
Peter, insulted naturally by high by the saw of Man-
a man name
chus, and Peter let his sword fly. aiming
at the man’s head, but the sword clipped
and hewed oft the outside ear, and our
Surgeon touched the laceration and an-
other ear bloomed in the place of the one
that bad been slashed away. But ^ I s
not the outside ear that hears. That is
only a funnel for gathering sound and
pouring it into the hidden and more eiab-
orlPIo ear. On the beach of Lake Galilee
our Surgeon found a man deaf and dumb.
The patient dwelt in perpetual could not silence hear
and was speechless. He a
note of music or a clap of thunder. He
could not call father or mother or wife or
children by name. What power can waken
that dull tympanum or reach that chain
of small hones or revive that auditory
nerve or open the gate between the brain
nnd the outside world? The Surgeon put
Tfis fingers in the deaf eaVs and agitated
them, and kept on agitating them until the
vibration gave vital energv to all the dead
narts, and thev responded, and when our
Surgeon withdrew His fingers from the
ears the two tunnels of sound were clear
for all sweet voices of music and friendship.
For the first time in his life he heard the
dash of the waves of Galilee. Through built the
desert of nainful silence had been a
king’s highway of resonance and acclama¬
tion^ But yet be was dumb. No word
had ever leaned from his lip. Vocalization Speech was
chained under his tongue. impossi¬
and accentuation were to him an
bility. He could express neither love nor
indignation nor worship. Our Surgeon,
having unbarred his ear, will now unloose
the shackle of his tongue. The Surgeon
will use the same liniment or salve that
He used on two occasions for the cure of
blind people — namely, the moisture of
His own mouth. The application is made,
and lo. the rigidity of the dumb tongue is
relaxed, and between the tongue and teeth
was horn a whole vocabulary and words
flew into expression. He not onlv heard,
hut he talked. One gate of his body swung
in to let sound enter, and the other gate
swung out to let sound depart.
Why is it that, while other surgeons
used knives and forceps and probes $ncl
stethoscopes, this Surgeon used only the
ointment of His own lips? To show that
all the curative newer we ever feel comes
straight from Christ. And if He touches
us not we shall he denf as a rock and
dumb as a tomb. Oh. Thou greatest of all
artists, compel us to hear and help us to
speak! all
But what were the Surgeon’s fees for
these cures of eyes and ears and tongues
and withered hands and crooked hacks?
The skill and the painlessness of the op¬
erations were worth hundreds and thou¬
sands of dollars.
Do not think that the cases He took
we re all moneyless. Did He not treat the
nobleman’s son? Did He not doctor the
ruler’s daughter? Did He not effect a cure
in the house of a centuvian of great wealth
who had out of his own pocket built a
synagogue:
They would have paid Him wealthy large people fees,
and there were hundreds of
in Jerusalem and among the merchant
castles along Lake Tiberias who would
have given this Surgeon houses and lands
and all they had for such cures as He could
effect.
For critical cases in our time great and sur¬ in
geons have received $1000. $5000, but the Sur¬
one case I know of $50,000,
geon of whom I speak received not a
shekel, not a penny, not a farthing. know of
In His whole earthly life we
His having had but 62% cents. YVhen His
taxes were due, by His omniscience He
knew of a fish in the sea which had swal¬
lowed a piece of silver money, as fish are
apt to swallow anything bright, and He
sent IVter with a hook which brought up
that fish, and from its mouth was ex¬
tracted a Roman stater, or 02% that cents, He
the only money He ever had, and
paid out for taxes.
This greatest Surgeon of all the centu¬
ries gave all His services then and offers
all His services now free of all price” charge.
“Without money and without you
may spiritually have unbarred, blind eyes and opened
and your dumb cars your
dumb tongues loosened, and your wounds
healed, and your soul saved. If Christian
people get hurt of body, mind or soul, let
them remember that surgery is apt to hurt,
but it cures, and you can afford present
pain for future glory.
Besides that, there are powerful anaes¬
thetics in the divine promises that soothe
and alleviate. No ether or chloroform or
cocoaine ever made one so superior to dis¬
tress as a few drops of that magnificent
anodyne: "All things work together for
good to those who love God.” “Weeping
may endure for a night, but joy cometh
in the morning.”
What a grand thing for our poor hu¬
man race Akvhen this- Surgeon shall have
completed the treatment of the world’s
wounds! The day will come when there
will be no more hoepitals, for there will
be no more sick, and no more eye and ear
infirmaries, for there will be no more blind
or deaf, and no more deserts, for the round
earth shall be brought under arboriculture, for
and no more blizzards or sunstrokes,
the atmosphere will be expurgated for the of
scorch and chill, and no of more the foundry war, bent
swords shall come out
into pruning shall hooks, while the in victims the heavenly of
country we see acci-
dent or malformation or hereditary ills on
earth become the athletes in Elysian fields.
Who is that man with such brilliant eyes
close before the throne? Why, that is the
man who, near Jericho, was blind and our
Surgeon cured his ophthalmia! Who is
that ercet and graceful and That queenly the wom¬
an before the throne? was dou¬ one
whom our Surgeon found bent almost
ble and could in nowise lift up herself,
and He made her straight. Who is that
listening with such rapture to the music
bal of heaven, responding solo melting into chorus, then cym¬ him¬
to trumpet, and
self joining in the anthem? Why, that is
the man whom our Surgeon found deaf
and dumb on the beach of Galilee, and by
touches opened ear gate and mouth gate.
Who is that around whom the crowds are
gathering and with admiring looks and thanks¬
me! giving Oh, what cries He of did “Oh, what family! He did Oh, for
for my
what He did for the world!” That is the
Surgeon the aurist, of the all the emancipator, centuries, the the Saviour. oculk—,
No pay He took on earth. Come, now, and
let all heaven pay Him with worship that
shall never end and a love that shall never
die. On His head be all the crowns, in
His hands be all the scepters and at His
feet be all the worlds!
MITCHELL’S
f |CH
-A
i!
it 1 an rf
Prico, 25c.
YE SALVE
A Farmer’s Signboards.
There Is no occupation in which evi¬
dences of real success or the reverse
are so patent to all observers as that
of farming. The farmer who Is pros¬
perous doesn't have to make declara¬
tions of the fact.
The signboards which testify of his
success will be well kept roadsides,
fences in good repair, thrifty orchards,
washes in fields arrested by proper
means, pastures with abundant grass
growth but free from weeds, good
grades of stock, provision for protect-
mg stock In times of cold and storm,
poultry yard aud house in condition to
be profitable, manure intelligently
saved and wisely used, a good garden
spot, and this tilled so as to make it
pay, farm implements shielded from
summer’s sun and winter’s storm.
These signboards will Ue read by
neighbors and the casual passer by, and
yet tho buildings may not be palatial,
though we are heartily in sympathy
with the best farm home that can bo
provided without incurring debt.
To bring about these unmistakable
evidences of thrift means exercise of
brawn aud brain. The latter especial¬
ly must be put to work and worked
hard. Did you know that there are
more people who are lazy mentally
tjian there are of those who are phy¬
sically lazy? Many will do, and do it
well, a task that has been all arranged
for them, but when left to individual
resources where the exercise of mental
powers in forming plans is demanded
such mefi are utter failures. The pow¬
er to formulate wise plans and to exe¬
cute them or have them executed Is a
business faculty that is too often over¬
looked on the farm. A commercial en¬
terprise would pay what a farmer
would regard as an exorbitant salary to
a man possessing this efficiency, and
yet no business requires It more than
that of farming.—Rural World.
A Dummy Hive For Quean Bess.
For increasing the storing of comb
honey, the use of a dummy for keep¬
ing the hive full of brood is advisable.
This dummy is simply a board as long
as the hive is wide, less one-fourth Inch
at each end, and as wide a* the hive
Is deep, less one-fourth Inch at the
bottom. This is nailed to the top bar
of a frame 'and hung In the hive in
place of any frame not filled with
brood. Some queens will keep all the
frames of a hive full of brood, while
othgrs cannot keep more than six or
eight If a dummy is put In In place
of each empty frame, the bees will then
go to filling the sections, otherwise no
honey will be stored.
The llest. Prescription for Chills
and Fever Is a bottle of Groye’3 Tasteless
Chii.l Tonic. It is simply iron and quinine Price 50c. In
a tasteless form No cure—no pay.
Dangers of the Day.
“That was a mean trick Barry played Louise.”
“What was it?”
“Why, ho disguised himself as a census taker
and lound out her age.”—Chicago Record.
Have you ever experienced the will joyful if
seusation of a good appetite? You
you chew Adams’ Pepsin Tuttl Frutti.
Her Fascinating Occupation.
“Dear Mrs. Dibbs! Sbe said she had to make
a sacrifice to come to our reception.” I
‘ Oh, she was house-cleaning, suppose. —
Chicago Record.
Putnam Fadeless Etes do Dot stain
the hands or spot the kettle. Bold by all
druggists, ___
Anxieties of the Country Side.
“What a harrassed look Mrs. Wnddleton al¬
ways wears when she gets up a picnic.” afraid
“Yes: she’s either afraid around.”—ChicagoKe- of snakes or
the lemonade won’t go
ord.
___
Rev. H. P. Carson, Scotland, Dak., complete¬ says:
“Two bottles of Hall’s Catarrh Cure
ly cured my little girl.” Sold by DruggiBtB, i5c.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces Inflamma¬
tion, aiiays pain, cures wind colic. 95c. a bottle.
I am sure Plso’s Cure for Consumption saved
SL:t 5 aIKt.ToMT J Y.:-Fe T B ? 9 ;
b 7
ll H Gbkkn’s SONS, of Atlanta, Ga.. are the
only successful Dropsy Specialists in the world.
See their liberal oHer in advertisement In an.
other column ol this paper.
The Child and the Moon.
A few evenings ago a Walnut Hill little girl
caught a glimpse of the new moon and van into
the house shouting: ...
“O, mamma; mamma! Come oui and see the
moo n! It’s half undressed!”—Omaha World-
Herald.
(*«• * La Creole Will Restore those Gray Hairs
La C»<eoIe Hair Restorer is a Perfect Dressing ^nd Restorer. Price $1.00.
Obtaining An Uncracsful Carriage.
A physical-culture teacher In In¬
structing her class of school girls told
them that It Is through the continu¬
ance of small bad habits of posture
that the ungraceful aud uuhealthful
carriage Is obtained. "For example,"
she said, “girls have a trick of let¬
ting the fulness of their dresses slip to
one side or the other as they seat
theraaelves; this raises the hip slightly
on that side, and presently tho line of
the figure Is altered. The dress should
be smoothed out evenly before taking a
seat, so that Its thickness Is equally
| distributed. Similarly, girls iwnnlly
j lean upon one foot more than the oth-
I er when standing, and In this way, al¬
so, one hip is raised. If you discover
that you are standing a long time on
one foot, change to the other. In one
way,” continued the teacher, “this
condition Is encouraging. If a little
persistent practice every day of a bad
habit will show marked consequences,
it is also true that perseverance, even
a few minutes dally, In a proper exer¬
cise will work Its satisfactory result
with tho same certainty.”
The Destructive Potato Beetle.
The potato beetle attacks the egg
plant first, next the potato, and then
the tomato. It will leave the potato
to operate on the egg plant. When
egg plants are put out It will be neces¬
sary to inspect the plants two or three
times a day, as the young plants may
be destroyed in two or three hours.
This partiality of the beetle for such
food makes it difficult to grow egg
plants.
Ladies Can AVear Shoes
One size smaller after using Allen’s Foot-
Ease, a powder for the feet. It makes tight
or new shoes easy. Cures swollen, hot,
sweating, aehingfeot, 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.
Literary Ornaments.
“What Is a library, pa?”
“A library, Jimmy, la what a man has when
he gets together an awful lot of books that he
never has time to read.”—Chicago Record.
FITS permanently cured. No fits or nervous¬
ness after first day’s use of Ur. Kline’s Great
Nerve Kodtrg-er. trial bottle and treatise free.
Ur. R. li. Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
An Inquiry.
First Hen—Yes; affliction has visited our
coop My poor sister is gone. Uid
Second Hen—So sorry! she pass away
with a white man or a colored man?—Puck.
fj- •sow
Vi
L'-A
7' The summer’s awful heat will kill those
in not fit to resist it—those whose bodies are full
ia 111 ;l hi in .s^iTrns of poison because they have neglected their
iV IP bowels.
V The victims of sunstroke, or of any of the
mnL other terrible dangers of summer—diarrhoea,
Pills j l**\' '\\ dysentery, cholera morbus—are always those
a. who have been careless about keeping clean in¬
side, and as a result have their blood full of
’£ rotten filth breeding disease germs and their
:> bodies ready with weakness to succumb to the
/ v t hot spell. Dizziness, heat headaches, sick
/ stomachs, sticky oozing ill-smelling sweats,
/ restless nights, terrible pains, gripes and cramps
in the bowels, sudden death on the street, all
result from this neglect.
Keep yourself clean, pure and healthy in¬
side, disinfected as it were, with CASCAkETS
CANDY CATHARTIC, the greatest antiseptic find
sr/i bowel tonic ever discovered and you wiH
that every form of summer disease will be
effectively
PREVENTED BY
i
CANDY CATHARTIC
THIS 13 tOc. 25c.
© TABLET. THE rJ ALL DRUGGISTS 50c.
CA8-
but correct any and every form of irregularity of the bowels, including diarrhoea and dysentry. STBBLIBO Pleasant, EBMJBDT palatable, CO., CHICAGO notent. TMtenod, IfltwTP&C. do
good. If ever sicken, weaken or gripe. Write for booklet and free sample. Address or ,«0
How to Keep Co»L
Here Is a brand-new plan tor stand¬
ing off the summer heat: Convert your
clothes press Into an ice box. I have
tried It with success. Keep your un¬
dear wear, trousers, shirts and coats In
water-tight compartments as near the
ice as possible. Moths will not enter
and thieves will never think of going
there to steal. After the morning’s
tub, Jump serenely Into Ice-cold
clothes and you will be cool all day.
The average m*n, after t bath in cold
water, feeling like a fighting cock, gets
Into heated garments and Is Immedi¬
ately miserable these wilting days.
There is much virtue in ice, even at the
prevailing price.—Victor Smith In New
York Press.
Don't, Don't
keep forever taking harsh cathartics, as salts,
laxative mineral waters, and unknown mix-
tures. The way to cure constipation, bilious-
ness, sick headache, dyspepsia, and other liver
troubles is to take laxative doses of the best
liver pill you can buy, and that’s Ayer’s.
Ayer’s Pills will never
Abuse Your Liver.
They are laxative pills, purely vegetable;
they act gently and promptly on the liver, pro¬
ducing a natural, daily movement.
f 25 cents a box. All druggists.
“ For ten years I suffered terribly with stomach trouble. I never
could retain all my food and had many hard hemorrhages from the
stomach. I then began taking Ayer’s rills. They promptly cured
me, and I feel extremely grateful to you.”—J ohn Good, Pro¬
prietor Washington House, Washington, la., March 11 , 1900 .
The man who smokes
Old Virginia Cheroots
has a satisfied, “glad I have got it”
( expression his face from the time
on
he lights one. He knows he will
not be disappointed. one—Maine No Texas, matter
where he buys California—he knows or they
Florida or
will be just the same as those he gets
at home—clean—well made—burn
even—taste good—satisfying 1
Three hundred million Old Virginia Cheroots smoked this
year. Ask your own dealer. Price, 3 for 5 cents.
ALESMEN WANTED.
Just out and a splendid seller. Our New
Political History of the United States.
Complete and attractive. of Sample and
terms sent upon receipt 25 cents.
RAND, McNALLY & CO • 9
Chicago, Illinois.
AGENTS W anted for the best
selling book ever
published. Tort 1,000 de¬
livered in Co..
S. C., 1,100 in Ander-
Charleston, 1,139 in Memphis. son County, 900 in
One agent sells
250 In one week, $4.00 to $10.00 per day sure.
In answering state your experience, if any.
J. L- NICHOLS & CO.,
Vo. 912-924 Austell Building. Atlanta. Ga
nOAD Q V NEW DISCOVERY: given
I<ree. Dr. H. H. GBEEN’S SONS. Box B. Atlanta. Ga
Cl N 9
BEISTLE TWINE, BABBIT, &o.
FOB ANT MAKE OF GIN.
ENGINES, BOILERS AND PRESSES
And Repair* for some. Shafting, Pulley*
Belting, Injectors, Pipes, Valves and Fitting*.
LOMBARD 181 WORKS A SUPPLY CL
AUGUSTA, GA.
Mention this Paper' rnw, ™VimT t<ser *
2361‘s.
PISO'S CURE FOR
UUHtS WHtHc ALl tLSE PAILS. „ Use
Best Cough Syru’p. Tastes Good.
In time. Sold by druggists.
CONSUMPTION
3,5 {IS}