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R E V. DR. T A L/V\ AG E
Tba Imminent Divine’s Sunday
Discourse.
Salijeot: Tho Mission of Clirlst — It Was
to Touch tho World That Cod Is I.ove
— The Sympathy and Compassion of
the Almighty King.
fuopvtlghfc 1HIHU
Dr. Washington, Talmage D. C.—In this discourse
describes in a new way the
sacrifices made for the world’s disentrn.ll
ment and deliverance, His text is I. John
iv, 18, “God is love.”
Perilous undertaking would it he to at¬
tempt a comparison between the attributes
of God. They are not like a mountain
range,-with here and there a higher peak,
nor like the ocean, with here and there a
infinities. profounder We depth. would We not dare cannot whether measure
His omnipotence say
or omniscience or omni¬
presence justice or love immutability or wisdom or
or is tho greater attribute.
But the one mentioned in my text makes
deeper impression upon us than any other.
It was evidently a very old man who wrote
the chapter from which I take the text.
John was not in his dotage, as Professor
Eichhorn asserted, but you can tell by the
repetitions in the epistle and t.he rambling
style, and that he called grown people
“little children,” that the author Was
probably an octogenarian. Yet Paul, in
midlife mastering an audience of Athenian
critics on Mars Hill, said nothing stronger
or John more when important than did the venerable
he wrote the three words of
my text. “God is love.”
Indeed, the older one gets the more he
appreciates this attribute. The harshness
and the combativeness and the severity
have gone out of the old man, and he is
more lenient and, aware of his own faults,
is more disposed to make excuses for the
faults of others, and he frequently ejacu¬
lates, “Poor human nature!” The young
minister preached three sermons on God, the
justice of God and one on the love of
but when he got old he preached three
sermons on the love of God and one on
the justice of God.
Far hack in the eternities there came a
time when God would express one emotion
of His nature which was yet unexpressed.
He had made more worlds than were seen
by the ancients from the top of toe Egyp¬
tian pyramid, which was used as modern an obser¬
vatory, and more worlds than as¬
tronomy has catalogued or descried
through teiescopic lens. All that showed
the Lord's almightiness, but it gave no
demonstration of His love. He might
make fifty Saturns and 100 Jupiters and
n'ot demonstrate an instant of love. That
was an unknown passion and the secret of
the universe. It was a suppressed emo¬
tion of the great God. But there would
come a time when this passion of infinite
love would be declared and illustrated.
God would veil it no longer. After the
clock of many centuries had run down and
worlds had been born and demolished,
on a comparatively obscure star a race of
human beings would be born and who,
though so bountifully provided for that
they ought to have behaved themselves
well, went into insurrection and conspir¬
acy and revolt and war—finite against in¬
finite, weak arm against thunderbolt, man
aea inst God.
If high, intelligences looked down and
saw what was going on, they must have
prophesied extermination offenders — complete Jeho¬ ex¬
termination—of these of
vah. But, no! Who is that coming out o£
the throneroom of heaven? Wiio is that
coming out of the palaces of the eternal?
It is the Son of the Emperor of the uni¬
verse. Down the stairs of the high heav¬
ens He comes till He reaches the cold air
of a December night in Palestine, and
amid the bleatings of sheep and the low¬
ing of cattle and the moaning of camels,
and the banter of the herdsmen, takes His
first sleep on earth, and for thirty-three
yeai’3 invites the wandering race to return
to God and happiness and heaven. They
were the longest thirty-three years ever
known in heaven. Among many high intel¬
ligences what impatience to get Him
back? The infinite Father looked down
and saw His Son slapped and spit on and
supperless and homeless, and then, amid
horrors that made the noonday heavens
turn black in the face, His body and soul
parted. And all for what? Why, allow
the Crown Prince to come on such an er
rand and endure such sorrow aud die sueh
a death? It was to invite the human race
to put down its antipathies and resist¬
ance. It was because “God is love.”
Now, there is nothing beautiful in a
shipwreck. We go down to look at the
battered and split hulk of an old ship on
the Long Island or New Jersey coast. It
excite* our interest. We wonder when
and how it came ashore, and whether it
was the recklessness of a pilot or a storm Hu¬
before which nothing could bear up.
man nature wrecked may interest the in¬
habitants of other worlds as a curiosity,
but there is nothing lovely in that which
has foundered on the rocks of sin and
sorrow. Yet it was in that condition of
moral break up that heaven.moved to the
rescue. It was loveliness hovering over
deformity. It was the lifeboat putting out
into the surf that attempted its demoli¬
tion. It was harmony pitying discord. It
was a living God putting His arms around
a recreant world.
The schoolmen deride the idea that God
has emotion. They think it would be a
divine weakness to he stirred by any
earthly spectacle. The God of the learned
Bruch and Schleiermacher is an infinite
intelligence without feeling, a cold and
cheerless divinity. But the God we wor¬
ship is one of sympathy and compassion
and helpfulness and affection. “God is
love.”
In all the Bible there is no more con¬
solatory statement. The very best peo¬
ple have in their lives occurrences inexpli¬
cable. They are bereft or persecuted or
impoverished or invalided. They have
only one child, and that dies, while the
next door neighbor has seven children,
and they are all spared. The unfortunates
buy at a time when the market is rising,
nnd the day after the market falls. At a
time when they need to feel the best for
the discharge of some duty they are seized
with physical collapse. Trying to do a
good and honest and useful thing, they are
misrepresented and belied a 3 if they had
practiced a villainy. There are people
who all their lives have suffered injustices.
Others of less talent, with less consecra¬
tion, go on and up, while they go on and
down. There are in many lives riddles that
have never been explained, heartbreaks
that have never been healed. Go to that
man or that woman with philosophic ex¬
planation, and your attempt at comfort
will be a failure, and you will make mat¬
ters worse instead of making them better.
But let the oceanic tide of the text roll in
that soul, and all its losses and disasters
will be submerged with “I blessing, understand and the
sufferer will say, cannot
the reason for my troubles, they but do I will some
day understand. And not come
by accident. God allows them to come,
and ‘God is love.’ ”
But for this divine feeling I think onr
world would long ago harm been demol¬
ished. Just think of the organized wick¬
edness of the nations! See the abomina¬
tions continental! Behold the false reli¬
gions that hoi 3 t Mohammed and Buddha
And Confucius! - Look at the Koran and
the Shastra and the Zend-Avesta, the Holy that
would crowd out of the world
Scriptures! Look at war, digging its
ttrenches for the dead across the hemi¬
spheres. See the great cities with they 1
holacaust of destroyed manhood and wom¬
anhood! What blasphemies assnil the
heavens! What butcheries sicken the cen¬
turies! What processions of crime and
atrocity and woe encircle the globe! If
justice hnd spoken, it would have said:
"The world deserves annihilation, and let
annihilation come.” If immutability had
spoken, it would have said: “I have always
been opposed to wickedness and always
will be opposed to it. The world is to me
an affront infinite and away with it!” If
omniscience had spoken it would have
said: “I have watched that planet with
minute and all comorehensive inspection,
and I cannot have the offense longer con¬
tinued.” If truth hnd spoken it would
have said: "I declare that, they who offend
the law must go down under the law."
Hut divine love took a different view of
the world’s obduracy and pollutioh. of the earth. Tt
said: "I pity all those woes
I cannot stand here and see no assuage¬
ment of those sufferings. I will go down
and reform the world. T will medicate its
wounds. I will calm its frenzy. I will
wash off its pollution. I will become in¬
carnated. I will take on My shoulders and
upon My brow and into My heart, the con¬
sequences of that world's misbehavior. C
start now, and between My arrival at
Bethlehem and My ascent from Olivet I
will ween their tears and suffer their
griefs and die their death. Farewell, My
throne, My crown, My sceptre. Mv angelic
environment, My heaven, till T have
finished the work and come back!” Rod
was never conquered but once, and that
was when TTe was conquered by His own
love. "God is love.”
In this day, when the creeds of churches
are being revised, let more emphasis be
put upon the thought of my text. Let it
appear at the beginning of every creed
and at the close. The ancients used to tell
of a great military chieftain who, about
to go to battle, was clad in armor, helmet
on head and sword at side, and who put
out his arms to give farewell embrace to
his child, and the child, affrighted Then at
His appearance, ran shrieking away. caused
the father put off the armor that
the alarm, and the child saw who he was
and ran into his arms and snuggled have against much
His heart. Creeds must not too
iron in their make up, terrorizing rather
than attracting. They must not hide the
smiling face and the warm heart of our
Father, God. Let nothing imply that
there is a sheriff at every door ready to
make arrest, but over us all and around
us all a mercy that wants to save and save
now.
If one paragraph of the creed seems to
take you, like a child, out of the arms ol
a father, let the next paragraph put you
in the arms of a mother. “As one whom
his mother comfortetli so will I comfort
you.” Oh. what a mother ive have in
God! And my text is the lullaby sung to
us when we are ill or when we are mal¬
treated or when we are weary or when we
are trying to do better or when we are be¬
reft or when we ourselves lie down to the
last sleep. We feel the warm cheek of the
mother against our cheek, and there sounds
in it the hush of many mothers, “God is
love.”
Out of vast eternity He looked forward
and saw Pilate’s criminal courtroom and
the rocky bluff with three crosses and the
lacerated body in mortuary surroundings,
and heard the thunders toll at the funeral
of heaven’s favorite, and understood that
the palaces of eternity would hear the
sorrow of a bereft God.
What do the Bible and the church litur¬
gies mean when they say, “He descended
into hell?” They mean that His soul left
His sacred body for awhile and went
“afirs!Bfi“« lash
chain of captivity and felt the awful
that would have come down on the world’s
back, and wept the tears of an eternal
saer ifice, and took the bolt of divine indig¬
nation against sin into Himself and, hav¬
ing vanquished death and hell, came eternal out
and came up, having achieved an
rescue if we will accept it.
Read it slowly, read it solemnly, read it
with tears, “He descended into hell.” He
knew what kind of pay He would get for
exchanging celestial splendor for Bethle¬
hem caravansary, and He dared all and
came, the most illustrious example in all
the ages of disinterested love.
nothing of fatigue, nothing of money, noth
ing of sacrifice, nothing of humiliation,
But the most expansive movement that
the heavens ever made was this expedition
salvatory. It cost the life of a King.
It put the throne of God in bereavement.
It set the universe aghast. It made om
nipotence weep and bleed and shudder. It
taxed the resources of the richest of all
empires. It meant angelic forces detailed
to fight forces demoniac. It put three
worlds into sharp collision—one world to
save, another to resist and another to de
stroy. It charged on the spears and rang
With the battleaxes of human and diabolic
*
Had the expedition of love been de
feated the throne of God would have fall
en, and Satan would have mounted into
supremacy, and sin would have forever
£S^“ a Tra. , s! d b£r rf l s'
martyr of the heavens were only a part of
the infinite expense to which the Godhead
went when it proposed to save the world.
Alexander the Great, with his host, was
marching on Jerusalem to capture and
plunder it. The inhabitants came out
clothed in white, led on by the high priest,
wearing a miter and glittering breastplate
on which was emblazoned the name of
God, and Alexander, seeing that word,
boived and halted his army, and the city
was saved.
And if we had the love of God written
in all our hearts and on all our lives and
on all our banners at the sight of it the
hosts of temptation would fall back, and
we -would go on from victory unto victory
until we stand in Zion and before God.
guided I.eander swam across which the Hellespont
he’id by the light Hero the and fair
from one of her tower windows,
what Hellesponts of earthly struggles can
we not breast as long as we can see the
torch of divine love held from the tower
window's of the King! Let love of God
to us and our love to God clasp hands this
minute. 0 ye dissatisfied and distressed
souis who roanj the world over looking
for happiness and finding none, why not
try this love of God as a solace and inspir¬
ation and eternal satisfaction? When a
king was crossing a desert in caravan, and no
water was to be found, and man beast
were there perishing from thirst. the bones Along of the
way were strewn cara¬
vans that had preceded. There were harts and
or reindeer in the king’s procession,
some one knew their keen scent for water
nnd cried out, “Let loose the harts or rein¬
deer.” It was done, and no sooner were
these creatures loosened than they went
scurrying in all directions looking for
water, and soon found it, and the king
and his caravan were saved, and the king
wrote on some tablets the words, which
he had read some time before, “As the
hart panteth after the water brooks so
panteth my soul after Thee, 0 God.”
Some have compared the love of God
to the ocean, but the comparison fails, for
the ocean has a shore, and God's love is
boundless. But if you insist on compar¬
ing the love of God to the ocean put on
that ocean four swift sailing craft and let
one sail to the north and one to the south
and one to the east and one to the west,
and let them sail on a thousand years, and
after that let them all return, and some
one hail the fleet and ask them if they
have found the shore of God’s love, and
their four voices would respond: “No
shore! No shore to the ocean ot bod’s
mercy!”
CREAT SCHOOL IN SOUTH AFRICA,
Two Nations Learning Lessons Side by
Side -Many Trades Taught.
In the rugged country northeast of
Cape Town Is one of the most remark¬
able mission stations In the world. The
fame of Lovedale has spread far in
Africa and blacks who are anxious to
learn come to It from as far away as
Lake Nyassa, a thousand miles. It is
said to be the largest mission station
in existence. The school contains
nearly . 1,000 , non students , , , who , are Instruct- . , ,
ed by a staff of forty teachers. The
fees are little more than nominal, for
the average charge s only $25 a year,
wl. oh includes board, lodging and edu
cation There s no better place to
s udy the ethnology of Africa, for the
students represent many tribes, some
of them from as far north as Galli
land and near the Bed Sea.
In the main Lovedale is a school fov
colored young folks, but the whites are
also admitted, and it is the only place
in Africa where the two races study
side by side. Three lines of instruc¬
tion are given to the natives—religious,
educational and industrial. Teachers
are trained for the missionary schools,
preachers are prepared for the native
congregations and a general education,
literary and technical is given to all
who want it.
Among the trades that are taught
are carpentry, wagon making, black
smithing, printing, bookbinding, teleg¬
raphy and others. The girls are taught
to sew, to wash and iron and to keep
house. While the aim of the institu¬
tion is to civilize through Christianity
the Instruction is entirely non-sectar
ian, and the Bible is the only religious
book that is read and taught.
Tho books that are printed and
bound at Lovedale are excellent speci
mens of the book-making art. The
technical Instruction is of the most
thorough character. Visitors from Eu
rope have often said that nothing has
astonished them more in Africa than
the excellence of the Lovedale work
shops. Miss Violet K. Markham, who
is prominently Identified with educa
tion In England, has recently written
that not a few technical institutions
of her own country are entirely out
stripped by this remote establishment
in the heart of British Kaffraria.
n0 “ VaSL
that this institution is doing. ! The
hundreds of students who leave it
every year after enjoying its advan
tages for from four to six years are
scattered among the millions of South
Atiica . , . and . tribes , living ...
„ even among
far north of the Zambesi. They are be
coming the educators of their people.
Thev 7 are teachim? “aching their uieir tribesmen tnoesmen the the
useful , trades they have acquired.
j They carry to many barbarous peo
p) es proofs of the advantages of civil
i “ ti “““»»»«««r
’- v testimony the whites can give,
When there are more Lovedales scat
tered through the vast field of mis¬
sions the results of missionary effort
will be far more encouraging than
they are now'.—New York Sun.
A Soldier’s Funeral.
The private theatricals arranged for
fine evening were postponed until af¬
j ter New Year’s, for something sad
j j had happened. That morning one of
c ap tain Gunn’s men returned to the
been <» killed in the skiimish. Next day >■»?
just before retreat he was bfiried with
military honors in the pretty little
cemetery just J over the hlI1 . The C as~
*
wrapped in large flag _ ■.
"was a anti
borne on a caisson to its last resting
place, while the band played a dead
marcll , Tlie procession, a long one,
included . the .. offiteis and men of t .e
dead warriors own covipany, and his
favorite horse, which was led, with
his rising boots reversed in the stir
rupg> Hla helmet rest ed upon the cas
^et. At the grave a simple service
was read by the chaplain, a volley of
three blank cartridges was fired over
tlle i owere fl casket, and, last of all, a
*«■« army calls, ™»r taps. r?, Holiday ,t vVeek ? “! at
an Army Post, by Harriet A, Lusk, in
the Woman’s Home Companion.
A Model Cirl.
A Kansas girl graduate, who de¬
serves a place in the Hall of Fame,
•was given the time-worn theme, “Be¬
yond the Alps Lies Italy,” and produc¬
ed the following:
“I do not care a cent w-hether Italy
lies beyond the Alps or in Missouri. I
do not expect to set the river on fire
with my future career. I am glad that
I have a good, very good, education,
but I am not going to misuse it by
writing poetry or essays about the fu¬
ture woman. It will enable me to cor¬
rect the grammar of any lover I have,
should he speak of ‘dorgs’ in my
presence, or say he went ‘somewhere,’
or ‘seen’ a man. It will also come
handy when I want to figure out how
many pounds of soap a woman can get
for three dozen eggs at the grocery.
So I do not begrudge the time I spem
In acquiring it. But my ambitldns
do not fly so high. I just want to mar¬
ry a man who can ‘lick’ anybody ol
his weight in the township, who can
run an 80-acre farm and who has no
female relatives to come around and
try to boss the ranch. I will agree to
cook dinners for him that won’t send
him to an early grave, and lavish upon
him a whole lot of wholesome affec¬
tion, and see that his razor has not
been used to cut broom wire when he
wants to shave. In view of all this
1 do not care if I do get a little rusty
-m the rule of three and kindr'
" ’ p, vf' 0 ’”’
we La Creole Will Restore those Gray n mm - , a Hairs \
La Crcole Hair Restorer is a Perfect Dres^i nq and Restorer. Price.41.00.
The Buitid of Mathematics,
A subject that Is exciting consider¬
able discussion In European scientific
circles Just now Is “Where Is the
bump of mathematics seated?” Gall
placed it at the highest and outer part
of the orbital edge. Moeblus agreed
with him, from the fact that a por¬
trait of his grandfather (a noted geo
metrienn) exhibited this development.
I This view receives additional weight
from the fact that a distinctive fea
ture of the female skull is the poor
j development of the orbital edge and
nrtdltlonal fact that me n whose
, h ^ re8emble womon < 8 in this re
arc usijaUy aa poor at figures
as are „ of women. The
k> of Goethe nnd Beethoven are
d flS nitrations of this fact,
Moeb , however , g0 es further and
locatC(J the niaftelnatlca i seat in the
th , rd fl . ontal c ,evolution, This
circumvolution, prominent in man, is
missing in animals, but the back part
of It being known to belong to articu¬
late speech, and as animals are equally
deficient in speech and mathematical
ability, Moeblus claims that its ah- .
senee in animals and Its presence in !
man nm.i rmlnt point to to n It hvirallv logically as us the uit seat seal I
of the faculty In question. This, how- j
ever, remains to he proved, and as the
opportunties for autopsies on dis¬
tinguished mathematicians are ex¬
tremely rare it may be long before the
question is satisfactorily settled. In
the meantime our phrenological
friends may find it a fruitful theme for
study and discussion.—Health Maga
zine.
Perforated Watch Pockets,
"Writing from Roseland, N. C., a sub
scriber says: “For the last year or
two I have had in mind the benefit to
be derived from a pocket for carry
ing a watch either In waistcoat or
trousers, which had perforation in the
bottom, for the purpose of letting all
dust, particles of sand, lint or dirt of
ax iy kind pass through. Scarcely any
01lej 0 n taking a watch from the
pocket and turning the latter inside
put, ean f a q to find a greater or less
quant ity of such dirt. This is not good
for me watch, as comparatively few
watch cases are absolutely dust proof,
Carrying a watch in such a lot of dirt
flnd dust , s BUre t0 result in some of
! thp dirt working through the case.”
New York Tribune,
j
: : F, re a Shot 20 Miles,
T be united States will tiro a thousand
J record-breaker pound shot twenty for the miles distance. which will The be a
; gun
from which it is to be fired will be a marvel
j of Another American ingenuity, of American and workmanship, ingenuity is
marvel
: Hostetter’s isiomach Bitters. For fifty years
It has been the only medicine to cure con-
8tipatiollj indigestion, dyspepsia, kidneys bilious
; ness and by its direct action on the
prevents rheumatism.
An Unprejudiced Welcome.
Come, Oom Paul Kruger, o’er tha sea:
Our country’s great and wide and free;
home folk will give you empathy
And tho^e who don't will let you be.
'1 lie I5e»t. Prescription for Chill*
Mid Fever is a bottle of Gkovk’s I’astklws.'J
t liii.LT onic, ft is simply iron and quinine in
h utaielesb form. No cure —no pay. Prieeo M.
His Stock In Trade.
“A writer of historical novels has to show a lot
of history, d e&n’t lio?’’
k *Ni-t a, ail hut : he can’t get along without a
lively imagination.
PuTNAti Fadei.zssi j)VEB do not spot, strean
or give your goods au unevenly dyed ap
oearanee. Bold tjy all druggist*.
Hie Funlelmient.
Sho-I’d never have married you If I’d have
known you would baeome deaf,
lie—I* should have never become deaf If I
hadn’t married you.
Carter’s Ink has a good deep color and it
does not strain the eyes, carter’s doesn’t lade.
night in Hi* Wne.
-‘She always mild she was going to marry a
military man.”
“Oh, woll, the one eh* got is pretty good at
‘soldiering,’ Phiiadophia Bulletins.
Best For the Bowels.
No matter wlmt alls you, headache to a
cancer, you will never get well unlit your
bowels are put right. CABCAitrra help
nature, cure you without a gripe or pain,
produce easy natural movements, cost yon
ju*t 10 cents to start getting your health
hack. C'ascarets Candy Cathartic, the
genuine, put up iu mstal boxes, every tab¬
let has O.C.C. stamped on it. Beware of
imitations.
Tragedy.
She—If you had no idea when we could get
mai rled why did you propose t» me?
“ 1 o 1 ell the tru h, darling, I hud no idea you
would accept me.”
How’* This?
We offer Ono Hundred Dollars Reward for
any case of < .-itarrh that cannot be cured by
Hull’s Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo, O.
We, the unde signed, have known F J. Che¬
ney tor the ln,st 13 years, nnd believe him per
lec ly honorable in all business transactions
at d financially able to carry out any obliga¬
tion mr d* by their firm.
West & Tru ax, wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
Ohio.
Walping, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale Drug¬
gists, Toledo, Ohio.
iialCs Cotarrh Cure is taken internally, act
itier dlrectlv upon the blood nnd mu ous sur
fa es of the system. Testimonials sent free.
Price, 75c. per bottle Sold by all Druggists.
Hall's Family 1‘ills are the best.
No Barrier.
‘•I shouldn’t think you would care to be en
gap d to such an elderly man.”
Why not? It. doesn’t interfere with my other
engagements.”
Plso's Cure for Consumption Is nn infalli¬
ble medicine lor cou.hs and colds.—N. W.
Samuel, Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb 17,190a.
A I'eeullar Case.
“Bobbins left a fine record; he was every¬
body s friend.”
“Yes, and he wasn’t in politics either.”
,Vrf». Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for chll^reti
teething, softens the gums, reduces iuflamma
<i«u. alias s pain, cures wind colic, ittc. a bottle.
Conscious Guilt.
Asklt—I* loafer a lazy man?
Tellit Lazy? Why, he has killed so much
time he Is ashamed to look, a cloch in the face.
Moved by Electric Power.
A house lu WellsvIUe, Ohio, whs re¬
cently moved by electric power taken
from a trolley line. The house was be¬
ing moved along the street where there
was an electric car line. Two cars
were hitched to the house by a rope,
and it was quickly pulled to its new i
destination.
Views.
Owing chiefly to their blindness,
men hold many and varied views.—
Detroit Journal.
It is confidently asserted that (he largo
decrease in infant mortality in this country
during the past decade has been brought
about in no small measure by tho universal
use of Castoria—it being in almost.every
home.
The Wife’s Gentle Reminder.
If you pivo a man a list,
Less his memory fail to prick him,
Put It In his pocket—hlstl
Pin It in so tho pin will stick him.
To Cure m Cold in One Day.
Take Laxatiyb Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
druggists tt. refund the money If it fails to cure
W. Ukove-s signature is ou each box. siac.
A Scientist at. Work.
„ How m you come t0 b0 ft proleiilon „ p og .
“- 1 a 1 "’ 4 n0 professional boygar I’m em
rlyod l0 glt up statistics on how many heart
i,. ss people tbeyisln tills town.”
Don’t drink too much water when cy
cling Adams’ Pepsin Tutli Frutti is an
excellent substitute.
What He Old.
Kentuckian—lie called me a liar, sir.
New Yorker Anti what did you do?
Kentuckian—I went to tho funeral.
4
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FREE
Our 160 page
illustrated cata
logue.
FREE
John Bright's Clothes,
John Bright, admonished by a
daughter for lack of care of his per¬
sonal appearance, said: “It does not
matter; nobody knows me in London,
so I can dress as I like.” “But you
dress just as badly in Rochdale,” was
the reply. “Yes, my dear; but in
Rochdale everybody knows me, so it
matters still less how I dress there.”—
Anglo-Saxon Review.
Almost Ferpetuai Motion.
A new electric motor for automobiles
has been devised which restores en¬
ergy to the storage battery when the
vehicle is running down hill.
Or. Bull’s Cough
Cures a cough or cold at once. Syrup
Conquers and croup, bronchitis,
grippe consumption. 25c.
SeK
iaSpEg}
S 5 1 eg
\VY m
Every cotton planter should
write forourvaluable illustrated
pamphlet, “ Cotton Culture.”
It is sent free.
Send name and address to
GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau St., N. Y.
ENGINES --AND
jftgjl BOILERS.
Tanka, Stacks, Stand-Pipes and
Sheet-Iron work; Shafting, Pul¬
leys, Gearing, Boxes, Hangers, etc.
g£$~l'ast every day; work 180 hands.
LOMBARD IRONWORKS
AND SUPPLY COMPANY,
Augusta, Georgia.
nOADCY I 1 quick NEW relief DISCOVERY; and cures worst *ir®
case*. Book of testimonial* and 10 days* treatment
I ree. Dr H. H. OBEEN SSON8. Box B. Atlanta. G*
Mention this Paper*
5.221615
FOR GOUT, TORPID LIVER AND CCNSTIPATiOW.
No medicine in the world can relieve you like the Natural
Mineral Laxative Water, provided by nature herself and dis¬
covered more than 30 years ago and now used by every
nation in the world.
SB
Recommended by over one thousand of the most famous
physicians, from whom we have testimonials* as the safest and
best Natural Laxative Water known to medical science.
Its Action fs Speedy, Sure and Gentle. It never gripes.
Every Druggist and General Wholesale Grocer Sells It.
60 for the full name,
“ Hunyadi Janos.”
Sole Importer, Firm ol Andreas Saxlchaer, 130 Fulton St., N. Y.
WINCHESTER
shotguns
and
FACTORY LOADED SHOTGUN SHELLS
the winning combination in the field or at
the trap. All dealers sell them.
W1NGHESTER repeating arms co.
FISQ\S CUR E FOR
bunco vincnc Syrup. all T CLOU i AILOt Use
B eet Cough sates Good.
in time. Sold by druggists.
CONSUMPTION
Sfl;
Qvsickly
C\ires Colds
Neglected colds always lead
to something serious. They
run into chronic bronchitis
which pulls down your general
health; or they end in genuine
consumption with all its uncer¬
tain results.
Don’t wait, but take
Ayer's
Cherry
Pectoral
just as soon as you begin to
cough. A few doses will cure,
you then. But it cures old
colds, too, only it takes a little
more time. We refer to such
diseases as bronchitis, asthma,
whooping-cough, consumption,
and hard winter coughs.
three sizes: 25 c.. 50 c., # 1 . 00 . All drug¬
gists. J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass.
I BLUE Label with
Red Centre Panel.
mem tea is—~«r UHjON MADE ^ -
cannot any 84.00 S3.50 with Jj. The O ur Douglas price. real ©4, other to shoes he Gilt 85.00. worth Over equalled compared Edge *3.00 makes 1,000,- of TAno and Y7. at is 0
000 satisfied wearers.
a-* WE \a. WixK: Stxr '
use v»v Ono prir cf W. 1. Douglas
a,:. Ifa5t EYELETS COLo^Cb W 1 U wiM $3 or positively $3,50 shoes outwear will
two pairs $3 of ordinary $3.50
or
We are the largest makers of men’s 83
and 83-50 shoes in the world. W© make
and sell more 83 and 83.50 shoes than any
other two manufacturers in the U. S.
BEST
$ 3.50
SHOE.
TSaE SrittA&ol* mure W. L. Douglas $3 anu - M
shoes are sold than any other make is because T’SSjEIT
AKI2 TSU53 WEST'. Your dealer should keep
them 5 we give one dealer exclusive e&le in each town.
Douglao r jT»fce no with nubstitute! Jnsiet stamped on having bottom. W. L.
shoes name and price on
If your denier will not get them for you, stnd direct to
factory, kind enclosing leather, price size, and and width, 2.So. extra plain for carriage.
State of or eap toe.
Our shoca will reach you any wh- re. Catalogue. Fixe,
X»V. L. Dougins Shoe Co. Brockton, Bail,
Malsby & Company,
39 S. Broad St., Atlanta, Oh.
er ngines and Boilers
Mvftiu Water Heater*, Steam Pumpti and
Penberthy Injector*.
IT 1 &
tv
sslr m %
a
Manufacturers and Dealers In
£► A ~S7KT TUE X 3L. X*
Corn M His, Feed fi ills. Cotton Gin Machlo
erv and Grain Separator*.
SOLID and INSERTED Saws, Saw Teeth and
Locks, Kniplit’* Patent I)ops, Bird'*all Saw
Mill ai d Engine Repair*, Governor*, Grate
liar* and a full line of Mill Supplies. Price
nnd quality of poods guaranteed. Catalogue
free by mentioning this paper.
/' FREE! CATALOG
-
SPORTING GOODS
RAWLINGS SP0RTIK6
GOODS COMPANY,
620 Locust 8 t., ST. LOUIS* Mo.
Use CERTAIN fi
^Chester
Factory loaded
shotgun ° shells,
„ NE W RIVAL,”
“LEADER,"and
“REPEATER.”
The reputation of W. L.
Douglas $3.00 and IS.fiO shoes for
style, everywhere comfort, throughout nr.d wearie the known world.
They have to give better satieiac¬
tion than other makes because
the Ftandflrd Ins always been
than ££5 they get elsewhere.
can
nrftT DEu
g
$3.00
SHOE.
■£