Newspaper Page Text
*R E V. *D*R. T A LM AG E
The Eminent Divine’s Sunday
Discourse.
Subject: Profligate Literature—Evil Pnb-
11 out lone tlie Greateat .Scourge of flie
World—It Fllle tlie Prlaona anil In
aane A ax luma—Power of the Press.
fCopyright lituu.1
-the Washington, D. C.—Dr. Talmage sends
following report of a discourse, which
will be helpful to those who have an ap¬
petite for guide literature and would like some
rules to them in the selection of
books and newspapers; text. Acts xix,
ID “Many of them also which used curi¬
ous burned arts brought before their hooks togetiier and
them all men, and thev
counted the price of them and foumi it
50,000 Paul pieces of ailrer.”
had been stirring up Ephesus with
some place. lively sermons about the sins of that
Among the more important results
was the fact that the citizens brought out
their bad books and in a public place made
a bonfire of them. I see the people coming
■out with their arms full of Ephesian liter¬
ature and tossing it into the flames. I
hear an economist who is standing by
saying worth of “Stop books. this waste!. Here are $7500
Do you propose to burn
them all up? If you don’t want to read
them yourselves, sell them.” “No’,” said
the people; “if these books are not good
for us, they are not good for anybody
else, and we shall stand and watch until
the hist leaf has burned to ashes. They
have done us a world of harm; and they
shall never do others harm,” Hear the
flames crackle and roar!
Well, my friends, one of the wants of
the cities is a great bonfire of bad books
and newspapers. We have enough fuel
to make a blaze 200 feet high. Many of
the publishing houses would do well to
throw into the blaze their entire stock of
goods. Bring forth the insufferable trash
and put it into the fire and let it be
known in the presence of God and angels
and men that you are going to rid your
homes of the overtopping and underlying
course of profligate literature.
The printing press is the mightiest agen¬
cy on earth for good and for evil. The
minister of the gospel standing in the
pulpit has a responsible position, but I
do not think it is as responsible as the
position of an editor or a publisher. At
what distant point of time, at what far
■out cycle of eternity, will cease the in¬
fluence of Henry J. Raymond or a Hor¬
ace Greeley, Watson or Webb, a James Gordon Erastus. Bennett, Brooks,
or a or an
or a Thomas Kinsella? Take the over¬
the whelming aailv and statistics weekly of the circulation and of
newspapers then
cipher, down if you can. how far up and how far
and how far out reach the influ¬
ences of the American printing presses.
What is to be the issue of all this?
I believe the Lord intends the printing
press to be the chief means for the world’s
rescue end evangelization, and I think
that the great last battle of the world
will not be fought with swords purified and guns,
but with types and presses, a and
gospel down literature and triumphing over, tramp¬ that
ling crushing out forever
which is depraved. The only way to
overcome unclean literature is by scatter¬
ing abroad that which is healthful. May
God speed the cylinders of an honest, in¬
telligent, aggressive Christian printing
press! bless¬
I have to tell you that the greatest
ing that elevated ever came literature, to the nations the is that
of an and great¬
est scourge has been that of unclean liter¬
ature. This last has its victims in all
occupations and departments. It lias
helped to fill insane asylums and pene
tentiaries and almshouses and dens of
shame. The bodies of this infection lie
in the hospitals and in the graves, while
their lost eternity! souls are The being London tossed over plague into a
was
nothing to it. That counted its victims by
thousands, but this modern pest has al¬
ready shoveled its millions into the car¬
nal house of the morally dead. The long¬
est train that ever ran over the tracks
was not long beastliness enough or large putrefaction enough to
carry the and the
which have been gathered up in bad books
and newspapers in the last twenty years.
Now, it is amid such circumstances that
I put a question of overmastering impor¬
tance to you and your families. What
books and newspapers shall we read?
■You see 1 group them together. A news¬
paper is only a book in a swifter and
more which portable apply shape, book and reading the same will apply rules
to
to newspaper reading. What shall we
read? Shall our minds be the receptacle of
everything that an author has a mind to
write? .Shall there he no distinction be¬
tween the tree of life and the tree of
death? Shall we stoop down and dring
out of has the filled trough with which pollution the wickedness and shame? of
men
Shall we mire in impurity and chase fan¬
tastic will-o’-the-wisps across the blooming swamps
when we might walk in the For the
gardens of God? Oh. no! sake
of our present and everlasting welfare we
must make an intelligent and Christian
choice. •
Standing, as we- do. in chin-deep ficti¬
tious literature, the question that read young
people are asking is, “Shall we nov¬
els V’m I reply there are novels that are
putfe, good, Christian, elevating to the
heart and enobling to the life, but I have
still further to say that I believe that
seventy-five out of 100 novels in this day
are baleful and destructive to the last
degree. A pure work of fiction is history of
and poetry combined. It is a history and
things around us, with the licenses
the assumed names of poetry. The world
can never pay the debt which it owes to
such writers of fiction as Hawthorne and
McKenzie and Landon and Hunt and
Arthur and others whose names are famil¬
iar to all. The follies of high life were
never better exposed than by Miss Edge
worth; the memories of the past were never
more faithfully embalmed than in the writ¬
ings of Walter Scott. Cooper's novels are
healthfully redolent with the breath of
the seaweed and the air of the American
forest. Charles Kingsley has smitten the
morbidity of the world and led a great
many to appreciate the poetry of sound
health, strong muscles and 'fresh air.
Thackeray did a grand work in caricatur¬
ing the pretenders has to gentility and high
blood. Dickens built his own monu¬
ment in his books, which are injustice, a plea for and the
poor and the anathema of
there are a score of novelistie pens to-day
doing mighty work for God an d righteous
ness.
Now, I say, books like these, read at
right times and read in right proportion
with other books, purifying, cannot help but be en¬
nobling and impure literature but, alas, that for the
loathsome anu has
come in the shape the of novels like a freshet
overflowing all banks of decency and
common sense! They are coming publishing from
some of the most celebrated
houses; they lie on your centre table to
curse your children and blast with their
infernal fires "books generations in the desk unborn. of the school You
find these
miss, in the trunk of the young man, in the
steamboat cabin, on the table of the hotel
reception reception room, room. You xou night. see see a a You light ngnv suddenly in in your your
child’s ro'om late at doing?”
go in and say, “What are you
“I am reading. “What did are you reading?” it?” “1
“A book.” “Where you get
borrowed it.” Alas, there are always those
abroad who would like to loan your son or
daughter a bad book! Everywhere, I charge every¬
where, all unclean literature!
upon it the destruction of 10,000 immortal
souls, and I bid you wake up to the magni¬
tude of the evil.
1 charge you, in the first place, false to
stand aloof from all books that give
pictures- of life. Life is neither a tragedy knaves
nor a fflrce. Men are not all either
J r heioes. Women are neither depended angels nor
furies And yet, if you upon
much oL the literature of the day, you
would get the idea that life, instead of be¬
ing something earnest, something practi¬
cal, is a fitful and fantastic and extrava¬
gant that thing. How poorly prepared the are du¬
young man and woman for
ties of to-day who spent last night wading
through brilliant passages descriptive of
magnificent knavery and wickedness! The
man will be looking all day long for his
heroine, in the office, by the forge, in the
factory, in the counting room, and he will
not find her, and he will be dissatisfied.
A man who gives himself up to the indis¬
criminate reading of novels will Af nerve¬
less, inane and a nuisance. He will be fit
neither for the store, nor the shop, nor the
field. A woman who gives herself up to
the indiscriminate reading of novels will
lie unfitted for the duties of wife, hair mother, dis¬
sister, daughter. There she is.
heveled, countenance vacant, cheeks pale,
hands trembling, bursting into tears at
midnight over the fate of some unfortu¬
nate lover; in the daytime, whon she
ought to busy, staring by the half hour at
nothing; biting her finger nails into the
quick. The carpet that was plain wandered before
will be plainer after all night having long in tessel¬
through lated balls a romance of castles. And indus¬
your
trious companion will be more unattrac¬
tive than ever, now that you have walked
plumed in the princesses, romance through lounged parks in the arbor with
or
with polished desperado. Oh, these eon
firmed nov 1 readers! They are unfitted
for this life, which is a tremendous dis¬
cipline. They know not how to go
through the furnaoes of trial they through
which they must pass, and are un¬
fitted for a w*rld where everything long we
gain we achieve by hard and continu¬
ing Again, work. abstain from all those books
which, while they have some evil. good You things, have
have also an admixture of
read books that had two elements in
them—the good and the had. Which
struck you? !Fhe bad. The heart of most
people is like a sieve which lets the small
particles of gold fall through, awhile hut there keeps
the great cinders. Once in is
a mind like a loadstone which, plunged
amid steel and brass fillings, gathers But up
the steel and repels the brass. it in
generally exactly the through opposite. hedge If you of
attempt to plunge blackberry, a will
burs to get one you get
more burs than blackberries. Y'ou cannot
afford to read a bad book, however good
you are. You say, “The influence is insig¬
nificant.” I tell you that the scratch of
a pin has sometimes produced lock-jaw.
Alas, if through curiosity, book as many curiosity do,
you pry into an evil your
is as dangerous as that of the man who
would take a torch into a gunpowder really blow mill
to see whether it would up
or not!
In a menagerie in New York a man
nut his arm through the bars of a black
leopard’s cage. The animal’s hide looked
so sleek and bright and beautiful. He just
stroked it once. The monster seized him,
and he drew forth a hand torn and man¬
gled and bleeding. Oh. touch Though not it evil
with the faintest stroke! may
be glossy pull forth and beautiful, soul touch and it not bleed¬ lest
you your torn
ing under the clutch of the I find leopard.
“But.” you say, “how can out
whether a book is good or bad without
reading it?” There is always something
suspicious about a bad book. I never
knew an index exception—something suspicious This
in the or style of illustration.
venomous reptile always carries a warning
rattle.
Much of the impure pictorial literature
is most tremendous for ruin. There is no
one who can like good pictures better
than I do. The quickest and most con¬
densed way of impressing the public mind does
is by by a brush picture. for What few the favorites painter the
his a en¬
graver’ does by his knife for the million.
What the author accomplishes by fifty
pages the artist does by a flash. The best
part of a painting that costs $ 10,000 you
may buy for ten cents. Fine paintings
belong to the democracy of art. You
do well to gather good pictures in your
homes.
But what shall I say of the prostitution
of art to purposes of iniquity? These
death warrants of the soul are at every
qtreet corner. They smite pollution. the vision Many of
the young man' with
a young man buying a copy has bought his
eternal discomfiture.
There may be enough poison in one bad
picture to poison one soul, and that soul
may poison ten the and fifty and thousands the fifty
hundreds and hundreds
until nothing tell but the height measuring depth light of
eternity can the and and
ghastliness and horror of the great undo-
5’he work of death that the wicked
author does in a whole book the bad en¬
graver may do on a half side of a pic¬
torial. Under the guise of pure mirth the
young man buys one of these sheets. He
unrolls it before his companions amid
roars of laughter, but long after the paper
is gone the result may perhaps be seen in
the blasted imaginations of those who
saw it.
The queen of death holds a banquet
every night, and these periodicals are the
invitation to her guests.
Young man, buy not this moral the strych¬
nine for your soul! Pick not up nest
of coiled adders for your pocket! Pat¬
ronize no newsstand that keeps them!
Have your room bright with good en¬
gravings, but for these outrageous pictori¬
als have not one wall, one bureau, not
one pocket. is better than the pictures
A man no
he loves to look at. If your eyes are not
pure, your heart cannot be. At a news¬
stand one can guess the character of a
man by the kind of pictorial he pur¬
chases.
When the devil fails to get a man to
read a bad book, he sometimes succeeds
in getting him to look at a bad picture.
When satan goes a-fishinj;, he does not
whether it is a long line or a short
line if he only draws his victim in. Be¬
ware of laeivious pictorials, young man,
in the name of Almighty God, I charge
you!
Cherish good books and newspape ers;
beware of bad ones. The assassin of L ord
Russell declared that he was led into
crime by reading John one vivid romance. The
consecrated Angell James, than
whom declared England in never his old produced a he better had
man, age that
never got over the evil effects of having
for fifteen miuutes once read a bad book.
But I need not go so far off. I could tell
you of a comrade who was great-hearted, studying for
noble and generous. He was
an honorable profession, but he had an
infidel book in his trunk, and he said to
me one dav, “De Witt, would you like
to read it?” I said, “Ye 3 ; I would.” I
took the book and read it only for a few
minutes. I was really startled with what
I saw there, and I handed the book back
to him and said, “You had better read destroy
that book.” No; he kept it. He it.
He reread it. After a while he gave up
religion as a myth. He gave up God as
a nonentity. He gave up the Bible as a
fable. He gave up the church of Christ
as a useless institution. He gave stringent. up good
morals I have as heard being of him unnecessarily but twice
in many
years. The time before the last £ beard
of him he was a confirmed inebriate. Thfe
last I heard of him he was coming and out of
an insane asylum, in body, mind soul
an awful wreck. I believe that one infidel
book killed him for two worlds.
Go home to-day then,' and look through your'
library, and having looked through
your keep library, pictorials look on and the stand where and you
your Christian newspapers laid
apply down the this hour. If principles there is anything I have in
your home that cannot stand the test, do
not give it away, for it might spoil an
immortal soul. Do not sell it, lor the
money you get would be the price of
blood, but rather kindle a lire on your
kitchen hearth or in your back yard and
then drop the poison in it, and the bon¬
fire in your city shall be as consuming
as that one in Ephesus.
coatea
I
Look at your tongue.
Is it coated? ►
Then you have a bad ►
► taste in your mouth every
< morning. Your appetite ►
► < is poor, and food dis¬ ►
tresses you. You have
< frequent headaches and >
►< are often dizzy. Your
stomach is weak and ►
► your bowels are always
4 constipated. i>
► 4 There’s
an old and re¬
;■ 4 liable cure: ►
►
>
>
<
> ft 4
< ►
N 4
►
4
4 ►
► 4
4 ►
- 4
<!
4 Don’t take a cathartic
► dose and then stop. Bet¬
4 ter take a laxative dose
► each night, just enough ^
4 to ^
► cause one good free move¬ 4
4 ment the day following. ►
► You feel better the 4
4 day. Your ^
very next ?
► 4 appetite returns, your 4
dyspepsia is cured, your p
► headaches pass away, 4
< your tongue clears up, ►
your liver acts well, and 4
4 your bowels no longer *
V give trouble. /
4 you
Price, 25 cents. All druggists. 4
4 t>
4 “ I hare taken Ayer’s Pills for 35
years, and I consider them the best N
made. One pill does fine more good
◄ than half a box of any other kind I
have ever tried.”
Mrs N. E. Talbot,
March 30,1899. Arrington, Kans.
? ™ AT V ▼
L Jf^ A ^ A Jk. A Jk
:
At Large. I
"Do you mean to tell me that that
man-eating lion of yours got loose and
wandered out into the streets!”
Yes,” answered the proprietor of the
show; “and a lot of trouble he made
us.”
“Did you have difficulty In catching
him?”
“I should say so! It was hours be¬
fore we could get near enough to lead
him back to his cage. You see, some
of the bad boys of the town had tied
a tin can to his tall.—Washington Star.
Why Do You Scratch I
When you can cure yourself far fifty
cents? All skin diseases, such as tetter,
salt rheum, ringworm, eczema,etc., can
be surely cured by an ointment called
Tetterine. Any number of testimonials
shown for the asking. Nothing else is
as good. Unless your druggist has it,
send 50c. in stamps to the manufactu¬
rer, J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga.,
for a box postpaid.
Beets As a Late Crop.
Beets may be planted as late as July
for a successive table crop. Ground
that has been well limed suits well.
For stock the sugar beet Is considered
one of the best. Mangel wurzels grow
to large size, but contain more woody
fibre and are coarser than sugar beets,
though they give larger yields.....
Do Your Feet Ache and Burn?
Shake Into your shoes Allen's Foot-Ease,
a powder for the feet. It makes tight or New
Shoes feel easy. Cures Corns, Ingrowing
Nails, Itching, Swollen, Hot, Callous, Sore
and Sweating Feet. All Druggists and
Shoe. Stores sell it, 25c. Sample sent FREE.
Address, Allen 8. Olmsted, LeBoy, N. Y.
Familiar Experience.
Cutton—Were you careful when you took
your bicycle apart and cleaned it not to loae
any nf the parts?
Dryde—-Not to lose any of them? Why, when
I put the machine together again I had nearly
a dozen pieces left over.
The Best Prescription for Chills
and Fever Is a bottle of Gkotb’s Tast«lkss
Chill Tonic. It, is simply iron aftd quinine in
a tasteless form. No cure—no pay. Price 50c.
A Word to Brides*
One little simple song we sing,
To brides but newly wed;
Just make the best of everything—
Especially of bread Free Press.
—Detroit
Carter’, Ink ---
Is so good and so cheap that no family
afford to be without it. Is yours Carter’s
Accounted For.
“Jimmy, take this awful looking cabbage
Btratght back to the grocer, and tell him to
send me a respectable one.” •‘He wtn’t take
it back, ma; me and Dicky Jones played Jour¬ ball
with it all the way home.”—Indlnapolis
nal.
Each package of Putnam Fadeless Dt*
colors • ifther Silk. Wool or Cotton perfectly
at one boiling. Sold by all druggists.
Looks Probable.
Magistrate (to prisoner)—Did you really call
this old gentleman an imbecile and an idiot
last night?
Prisoner (trying to collect his thoughts)—The
longer I look I at him the more probable it seems
to me that did.
If you want “good digestion to wait up¬
on your appetite” you should always chew
a bar of Adams* Pepsin Tutti Frutti.
Friends Keunited.
“What’s your, game?” asked the man with
the b g cigar In the Pullman.
“If you mean my profession,” of replied books.” the
other with dignity. “I’m k maker
“And I’m a bookmaker,” oiled the first hearti¬
ly. “Shake!”
$ i lantation Chill Cure is Guaranteed
■?■ To CufeaLMojuv Ri fhY Your Merchant, so WhY Not TrY II ’ Price Soi-.
mm
Wkerc It Wai Needed.
“Madam,” ho began, as the door
opened, "I am selling ft new book on
‘Etiquette and Deportment. • tt
‘Oh, you are?” she re sp o nd ed. ‘‘Go
down there on the grass and clean the
mud off your feet!”
“Yes’m. As I was saying, ma’am,
I am sol-”
“Take off your hat. Never nddress
a strange lady at her door without re¬
moving your hat!” admonished the
young woman.
“Yes’m. Now, then, as I was say—”
“Take your hands out of your pock¬
ets! No gentleman ever carries his
hands there!”
“Yes’m. Now, ma’am, this work on
•Etl-’"
“Throw away your pipe. If n gen¬
tleman smokes he Is careful not to dis¬
gust others by the habit.”
“Yes’m. Now, ma’am, In calling your
attention to this valuable -"
"Walt! l’ut that dirty handkerchief
out of sight, and use a comb for your
hair In future. Now you look a bit
decent. Y'ou have a book on ‘Etiquette
and Deportment.’ Very well. I don’t
want It. I am only the servant girl.
Go up the steps to the front door and
talk with the lady of the house. She
called me a downdrlght, outright, no
doubt-about-it Idiot this morning, and
1 think the book you’re selling is Just
what she requires.”
Corby's Pole Fair.
One of the most eurious of Whlt
monday customs is that which Is ob
served once In every twenty years at
Corby, Northamptonshire. The In
habitants assemble at an early hour,
stop up all roads and byways In the
parish and demand toll of all who de
sire to pass through the village on that
day. In case of noncompllance, the
traveler is placed on a stout pole and
carried vl et armis through the streets,
escorted by the shouting populace.
“Pole Fair,” as it is called, Is not with
out historical interest. It appears that
Queen Elizabeth granted the inhab
itants of Corby a charter to free them
from serving on juries at Northampton,
and to free the knights of the shire
from the militia law. The custom of
taking toll has been observed every
twenty years In commemoration of the
granting of the charter, and it will be
Interesting to note whether it will be
allowed to fall Into desuetude when
next due, in 1902 —London Chronicle.
CONSTIPATED
m Means misery on the evr. of life. Nine out
/ of ten old people are constipated because the
% muscles of their intestines have become
I weak, worn out and flabby. Constipation
mm I is the curse of old age, causes bile and
m acid poisons to remain in the blood, making
ism the skin yellow and wrinkled, the eyes
E Ml WsS bleary and causing the. “bones to ache.”
r& Keep the bowels strong, healthy and regular
i % % and old age loses all its terrors and weak¬
qV a 2 nesses. grandma No shouldn't reason have why bright grandpa eyes, and and
Vi clear ruddy skin and feel lively and active,
li if they will only keep their bowels open and
£ A vigorous with CASCARETS CANDY
j CATHARTIC, the greatest bowel tonic
ever heard of. Try them to-day—a tOc
box—and find that the tortures of consti¬
pated old age are
PREVENTED BY ^
▲
r w
CANDY CATHARTIC
THI5 13 •It 10c. 25c.
TABLET. THE §T FOR THE ALL DRUGGISTS 50c.
CASCARETS are absolutely harmless, a surely vegetable compound. No mercurial or other mineral pill-poison in CASCARETS. CAS¬
CARETS promptly, and effectively and permanently cure bowels, eyeiy disorder including of the diarrhoea Stomach. and Liver and Intestines. Pleasant, palatable, They Sot potent. only cure T constipation,
hut good? correct any sicken’v^aJten every form of irregularity of the free sample. Address dyeentry. STERLING RBMBBTCO., CHICAGO HEWYoiX. aste g ood, do
Hever or gripe. Write for booklet and or m
Roentgen Rays to Detect Smuggling.
Those who would take any improper
advantage of the Kngllsu mails must
reckon with the Roentgen rays. Ac¬
cording to a member of the Roentgen
Society, the officials are now making
great use of the rays In looking Into
the contents of parcels sent through
the post. The examination can be made
with lightning rapidity. Some time
ago watches were smuggled inside
Bibles. The rays have done away with
that profitable source of Income.
Piso s Cure for Consumption Is an Infalli¬
ble medicine for coughs and colds.—N. W.
Samuel, Ocean <>rovt\ N. J., >eb. 17,1S00.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma¬
tion, Allays pain, cures wind colic. &>c. a bottle.
W Tells INCH BUM all about CATALOGUE Winchester Rifles, ESTER Shotguns, FREE end Ammunition
Send name and address on a postal now. Don’t delay if you are Interested.
WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO.
ito WINCHESTER AVENUE - NEW HAVEN, CONN.
Cigar Dealers Like
to have their regular customers smoke
Old Virginia Cheroots
because they know that once a man
starts smoking them he is “fixed/’
and that he will have no more trouble
with him trying to satisfy him with
different kinds of Five Cent cigars.
Three hundred million Old Virginia Cheroots smoked this
year. Ask your own dealer. Price, 3 for 5 cents.
.
1
u LONG-WINDED AXLE!
Wheel does not have
to be taken off to oiL
Will run 2 to 6 months
without re-oiling. Axle*
will l&bt an long as th#
buggy. Don’t coat anf
more. Our Patent. A
P mechanical wonder.
R0GK.HILL Simple. Can’t get out
of order. See sample
with our aifent. Don’t
buy this a buggy until you
see axie
\f f O ROCK HILL,
*>
SOUTHERN DENTAL COLLEGE.
DKNTAL DEPARTMENT
Atlanta College of Physicians and Surgeons
Oldest College in State. Fourteenth An¬
nual Session opens Oct. 2; closes April 30th.
Those contemplating the 6tudy of Dentistry
should write for catalogue.
Address S. W. FOSTER, Dean.
fVJ-03 Tmr»nn ftulldiner, Atlanta. Oft.
Value of a Good Appetite,
Mrm. Skinner—I’m glad to hear you say you
have such a good appetite. generally fear
Mr. Newhoarder—Landladies
a good Skinner—I appetite. don’t. When
Mrm. a man has a
good appetite he eats almost anything.
Hovr’m Tills ?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
Han’s Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Cheney & CO., Props., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Che¬
ney for the last 15 years, and believe him per¬
fectly honorable in all business transactions
and financially able to carry out any obliga¬
tion made by their firm.
West Iruax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
, Ohio.
WALDING, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale
Druggists. Toledo, Ohio.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, act¬
ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur¬
faces of the system. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold
by all Druggists. Testimonials tree.
Hall’s Family Pills are the best.
CITS STOPPED FREE
Permanent!, Cured by
DR. KUNE'S GREAT
NERVE RESTORER
P __ 4
H ^'“^/XrBlVTTLK FKkV* delirnry.
to FU p»u«r»u who pay txpreaaage onlv on
H Permanent Curt, not only umporary rellof. for nil Ner
vow Dieorderi, Epilepsy, Spaam>, 81. VItn• Da Q«.
ml ™ Debility. Kxhauition. I>ft, B- M.HLIsIJlE, Ld»
931 Arch Street. Philadelphia. F.und*d isn.
ENGINES -AND
BOILERS.
Tanks, Stacks, Stand-Pipes and
Sheet-Iron work; Shafting, Pul¬
leys, Hearing, Boxes, Hangers, etc.
Cast every day; work 180 hands.
LOMBARD IRONWORKS
AND SUPPLY COMPANY,
Augusta, Georgia.
nDHDQY (Jr |\ VP I 43 M quick NEW rnli.r DISCOVERY; and cures wen! «iv«
cases- Book of testimonials and 10 days’ treatment
Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S SONS. Box E. Atlanta. Qe,
That Littia Book For Ladios,
ALICE MASON, Rochxstkb, N. Y.
Mention this Papar lnwri ^mT ttse ^