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About The Rockdale banner. (Conyers, Ga.) 1888-1900 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 22, 1896)
tallage. niviinsrs SUNDAY P pUCOPBS® rmas:e dd0D ’” b ct: , A together in Arrna of a mountain that bis upoB^ioriii tWU V arffiou. the neatest f has ever -seen. that the w mtes; there I 'o^ h !r.,' Canaa Jostah S.*^ •ji n it PS - there whol« jjuradtnsrJrf- y The «**“ows% aI1(l the Arraaged Ui geographically, name from it, ““‘tttoc but VH forth the idea tJi world’s closing battle, a compared With « battle?, and all - f t hi S century insignificant. because wrhS Timber of and combatants the greater en b«“- p CTpat vlrtorv do f r date of that battle we Tte f a exact locality is uncer *® e isja Europe. Africa, or E‘ Tb ?‘Lt i such battle wil t that a eternal . eertain as God’s the superlative degree in npnluse m Lmine conflict. 1 do not forget ^ve re b ‘ll bTen wars Marathon all along MH- on As when at ^fhr pia nn Ms men, not in the ordinary horee ® “ full ruD, upon archers of ^ an d the black Luring scattered them, and crying, Are!” set into flame the u T As when Pizacro over J^verPortugal. ®? w hen Philip the the Second Huns l i°l As when iSflced f is when three hundred a at Thermo ft themselves took Ag u-hrn the Carihagenians headed the t ILnhX«. As when Alexander Hannibal in |t P As when & t«e of Hasting^! Battle of ISdiao! ■ Rsiileof Arbela! Battle of Tours! lltoino' Battle of Lucknow! Bat Battle of Fontenoy where L- I*" slain! saered! Battle or Battle Chalons of where Herat mits destroyed 1,600,000 ■ iB-rte Genghis Khan Neisbar where 1,747,000 |m of 1.816,01-0 slain Troy! to death! at Lean battles, their too near awful us grandeur now to fcto faitanw*, appreciate who were there. liDNorth except you the South! But or facing battles I have named put together Uequal in numbers enlisted, or flerce Urundeur, or triumph, or Whether rout, the it 1 Arraftcertdon contest. t fought with printers’ type or keen fhrther by biain or muscle, whether or carbine, whether by booming ean ■tbanders of Christian eloquence, I do and you may take what .1 say as Ire or literal, but lake as certain wliat id in his vision on the rocks of the a archipelago, is pleased to call “Ar on.' ■eri"-n trill first mention ■ ■v ; be engaged in the conflict; then Biles: something of the commanders on and then speak of the battle Hal Bth the tremendous issues. Begin those who will fight on the wrong a ■ first mention the Regiments Dia ■ In this very chapter from which my ■taken ■ we are told that the spirits of Boo trill bn there. How many millions ■nail one can tell, for the statistics of ■wdthe 1 dominions have never been re Hilbeen roll of that host has never ■nticentui,and called; but from the direful, ■ready p anetary work they ■iff-inian doue, and the fact that every Be and child on earth has a there must be at least sixteen hun ■Brillions of evd spirits familiar with Borld, Perhaps as many more are en B on especial enterprises of abomii"'. ■aons the Nations and empires of the ■ Beside that there must be an ineon ■fe number of inhabitants in realms ■Mine, ■capitals staying there to keep the of sin going from age to age. ■ of them once lived in heaven, but ■ia?in conspiracy to put Satan on the ■e.they were hur.ed out and down, ana ■ftnow among the worst thugs of the ip". earth Having and been hell,—they in three have worlds,— all the pungesof great experience. Their power, I speed, their cunning, their hostility ier.iilbeyond ■adon all statement! In.the Ar they will. I doubt not, be present f I,sot iarray. all They will have no reserve will be at the front. There will |o>yos soldiers in that battle who can p and aimed at, but troeps intangible impost corporeity, and weapons may [trough fc with what shout them of without defiance giving will them fop the ladders of fire they pigments of asbestos and leap from into the last cam L ^ aul ’ bravest of all men, l^sscd PS we wrestle with their might for evil when out not against flesh and l- against principalities,and against iimm R ^ ainst Hie rulers of the dark Hf ^ 1 **” r ‘d. against Oh, what spiritual agitating wicked an • ^he ranks diabolic move up ^.thtar places for conflicts in the Ar rT who will Alcoholic. march into the ieinvu# ownle! f the b ’ They r^ rewerS e °mpanies, dis S'ui.'rh^K .“' ‘ hundr RIiic{ll0r . ,® , fls ot balers’ millions associa- of their ", 5 T , ® millions iagj, e of victims of aico . 'he u, th« .l millions .of the victims of MsiATh Arabia, ntUOtts and li( Egypt, l uor of and Ohina Ceylon, and *«w?s swho s,ae * u i ~ march be the into Kegi- the P 5 IflSdei <io L’ave ' but revelation ! «human ' one *t>2 tn rac ^ ^ ! aud these men have been io ro-r hhTT Mhd the Kites - v of books, 11 ? 5rstw P ers through per / v,. > ^tiea lwr»K becom<1 ,ttanity * some of the » H % t”, p The recruiting agen-ies ' o',“ en eote ; Voltaire, greatest brigadier » who closed drearD Christianity by writ • i J h0U r and only pain is "■*KiI fe * 1 l t so lof ciguty-four ^■L b: 1 T -v*lf ^evitable better ptan and than to reflect to re *s a-o 5 U t0 bB devoured fttssato k t»- r:r”' E d by by spid era * ; ^- r r care. I wish born. ’ Ob. the God-lor ;Letit ■f-ft their li?i anta Jof,<le,3 g° n > ’*ingthe who, atier onlyin- hav •''-rtr.n.v that cm, i h 1 make the ; earth better, r and their rile sneer v to ldl0c y and their horrible , , in tw part “gainst God and '*» L-,.;! - ” an At the will t. th. Beni •- •• - *. hundred present time OB cSUSS’ ilos and seventy a lheir d p!ata , : ' possesrinn » t mean earth wonoanhooc, raa/v !,f in the inter the*U» iw' Peretitton, o1 ttfty and moral ia ,* thousand Ar 'vi* 8 or three years is onlv ‘ ? 1 t0 devastate the » «ed but themselves. So . ti atunl,*!* li® earth their Pat D,ld together KOrt ■ St0 ilr T e : P or we wiil make Htat long before that last battle of which I speak, the Turkish Government, and with it Mohammedanism, may be wiped out of existence. The Turkish power of the last four hundred years has been the mightiest hindrance on earth to re¬ ligious liberty and moral improvement. Her extermination is prophesied in the Book of Revelation in the figure of the drying up of the River Euphrates, aud she is going rapid¬ ly. thank God! But if the Bible prophecy concerning the drying up of the Euphrates is not fulfilled before the- battle mentioned in my text. Mohammedanism will march in with sword, and poison, and torch to take her part in the great Armageddon. Yea! to show the magnitude ot the forces on the wrong side, I have to tell you what is left of heathenism at that time will march into the conflict. There are one hundred and flfxy million ietish idolators, two hun¬ dred and twenty million Brahmins, foui hundred million Buddhists. Through the sublimest movement of this century, th« missionary movement, all the time gather¬ ing in momentum, I believe all, or nearly all. of that seven hundred and seventy mill¬ ions of heathendom will - be converted to God. But that which is not converted will come into the Armageddon on the wrong side. Other regiments on that wrong side will be made up of offenders of all sorts—the de¬ frauders, the libert.nes, the dynamiters, the Anarchists, the oppressors and the foes of society, the criminals of all Nations, by whatever name they are now called, or shall then be called. They may not before that have openly taken sides, but then they will bo compelled to take sides. With what venom, with what violence, with what des¬ peration they will fall into line at the great Armageddon! Is it not of appalling, earlh. these be uncounted regiments the to joined by the uncounted regiments from perdition? Can any power cope with them? Especially when I tell you who their com¬ mander is, for so much in all wars depends upon the chieftain. Their leader will not be a political accident or a military “hap¬ pen so.” By talent, and adroitness and courage, and unceasing industry he has come to thv bad eminence. H« disputed but the throne of heaven with the Almighty, no one has ever disputed the throne of eter¬ nal night with this monarch who will in the last battle take the field in person. Milton calls him Luctfer. Goethe calls him Mephls topheles, the Hebrew call, him Abaddon, the Greek calls him Apollyon. He is the imper¬ sonation of all malevolence, of ait oppres¬ sion, of all cruelty. The summing up of all falsehood. In his makeup nothing bad was left out and nothing good was put in, and he is to be the General, the Commander-in Chief of all the forces on the wrong side of the great Armageddon. He has been ia more battles than you have ever read about, and he has gained more victories than have ever been celebrated in this world. But I guessL this old warrior of Pandemonium will not have an undisputed field. I guess there wll 1 be an army to dispute with his forces. I have mentioned the supremacy of this world. I guess our troops will not have to run when, on the day mentioned in my text, all the Infernal batteries shall be uulimbered. AVo have been reviewing the troops diabolic. We have been measuring the calibres of their guns. We have been ex¬ amining their ammunition wagons. Now let us look at the forces to be marshalled in the Armageddon on the right side. First of all, I mention the Regiments Angelic. Alas! that the subject of demon¬ ology seems better understood than the subject of angetology. But the glorious spirits nround the throne and all the bright immortals that fill the galleries and levels of the universe are to take part jn that last great fight, and the Regiments Angelic are the only regiments capable of meeting tho Regiments Plutonic. To show you some¬ thing of an angel’s power. I ask you to consider that just one of them slew one hundred and eighty-five thousand of Sen¬ nacherib’s hosts in a night, and it is not-a tough arithmetical question to solve, if one angel cart slay one hundred and eighty-five thousand troops in a night, how many can five hundred millions of them slay? The old Book says that “They excel in strength.” It is not a celestial mob, but a discipted host, and they know their rank. Cnerabim, seraphim, thrones, principali¬ ties aiiu powers: Ana tae leaaer ot tnose regiments in Michael the Archangel. David saw just one group of angels sweep past, and they were twenty thousand charioted. Paul, wno in the Gamaliun college had his faculties so wonderfully developed, con¬ fesses his incapacity to count them by say¬ ing, “Ye are come to Mount Zion and an innumerable company of angels.” If each soul on earth has a guardian angel, then there must be sixteen hundred million angels on earth to-day. Beside that, heaven must be full of angels, those who stay there; not only the twelve angels who, we are told, guard the twelve gates, but those angels who Help in the worship, aud and go on mission from mansion to mansion, help to build the hosannas and enthrone the hallelujahs and roll the doxologies of the service that never ends. But they all, if re¬ quired, will be in the last fight between holiness and sin. Heaven could afford to adjourn, just one day, and empty all its temples, and mansions, and palaces, and boulevards into th&t one battle. The next regiments that I see marching into the fight will be the Regiments Ecclesi¬ astic. According to the last accounts, and practically only in the beginning of the gos¬ pel movement which proposes to take the whole earth for God, there are four million six hundred thousand Methodists, three million seven hundred and twenty-five thou¬ sand Baptists, one million two hundred and eighty three’Presbyterians, thousand three hundred and thirty one million two hundred and thirty thousand Lutherans, and six hundred and forty thousand Episcopalians. But the present statistics of churches will b» utterly swamped when, after all the great denominations have done their best work, the slowest of all the sects will have more numbers than the present enrollment of all denominations throughout Christendom. T. see them moving into the ranks, carrying a standard striped and starred; striped hea as sug¬ gesting Him by whose stripes promise we are that those ed, and starred as with the who turn many to rignteousness shall shine as the stare, forever and ever. Into that battle on our side will roll those mighty engines of power, the printing presses of Christendom. Into that battle will also move the mightest telescopes, that shall bring the stars in their courses to fight for our God. Again, the Regiments Elemental will come into" 5 that battle showed on what the right He could side. do with The winds! God them when the splintered timbers of the ships of the Spanish Armada were strewn on the rocks of Scotland, Norway and the Hebrides. The waters! He showed wbat He could do with them when He pur the whole earth under them, leaving it subaqueous one hundred and fifty days. The earthquake-! He showed what He eoa.’d do with them when He let Caracas drop into the open month of horror and the isiaad* of the sea went into entomoment. The lightnings! He showed what He conld d> with them when He wrapped Mount Sinai in flame, and we have all seen their flashing lanterns moving with the chariots of themidaight hurricane. AH the Regiments Elemental will eoine in out ride in the great Armageddon. Come and let us mount and ride along the line, and review the troop* of Emanuel* aud find that the Regimeats Terrestrial and Celestial that come into that barile on the right side are. com- parea witn tnose on the wrong side, two to one, a hundred to one, a thousand to one. But who is the Commander-in-Chief on this side? Splendid armies have been ruined, caught in traps, flung over precipices, and annihilated through the incompetence or treachery of their general. Who com¬ mands on our side? Jehovah-Jireh! so called in one place. “Captain of Salvation,” so-called in another place. King of kings. Lord of lords. Conqueror of conquerors. His eye omniscient. His arm omnipotent. He will taka the lead. He will draw the sword. He will give the command. And when He plants His foot for the combat, the foundations of the earth will quake, and when He shall give the battle shout, all the gates of hell will tremble. But do not let us shout until after we have seen the two armies clash in the last strug¬ gle. Oh, ray soul! The battle of all time and all eteruity opens. “Forward!” “For¬ ward!” is the command on both sides given. The long lines of both armies waver, r.'d swing to and fro. Swords of truth agaia.-i engines infernal. Black horse cavalry of per¬ dition against white horse cavalry of heaven. The redemption of this world and the honor of tbe throve of God to vindicate, h .w tre¬ mendous is the battle! The army of right¬ eousness seems giving away; but no! It is only a pari of the manoeuvre of the infinite fight. It is a dep.oy of the host celestial. What a meeting in this field of splendor and wrath, of the angels, and of the diabolic, of hosanna and audthe blasphemy, oi song and curse, of thedivine satunie. Thu thunderbolts of the Almighty bur.-t and blaze upon the foe. Boom! Boom! By the torches of lightning that illuminate 1 the scene I see that the crisis of the Arma¬ geddon has come. It is the turning point of this last battle. The next moment will decide all. Aye! the forces of Apollyon fly! are breaking ranks. See! See! They Some on foot, some on wing; ihey fiv. Back over the batf laments of perdition i hey go down with infinite ctash. all the Regi¬ ments Diabolic! Back to the mountains andeavesthe armed, hosts of earth, crying as they retreat to the rocks and mountains, “Fall on us and hide us from the face of Him that sitteth upon the throne, an 1 from the wrath of the Lamb, for the great day of His wrath has come, and who shall be able to stand.” And while Apollyon, ru« prisoner of war, is being dragged in chains to his dungeon, and our Conquer jr is re¬ mounting His throne, I look off mini the battlefield, and among the slain 1 find the carcasses of Mohammedanism, and lhi nan¬ Dis¬ ism, and Atheism, and Infidelity, amt sipation, and Fraud, and multitudinous Wrong, strewing the plain, and I hear the angel that standeth in the sun crying in *d>e Words of Revelation, to all the fowls mat fly in the midst of heaven—the eagles, and the vultures, and the hawks, and. the alba¬ trosses—“Come and gather yourselves God, to¬ gether unto the supper of the great that ye may eat the flesh of kings, and the flesh of captains, and the flesh of mighty men, and tfle flesh of horses, and of them that sit on them.” The prophesied Armageddon of the text has been fought, and Christ and His follow¬ ers have won the day. The kingdoms of this world have become the kingdoms of our Lord and His Christ. All the Christian workers or our time, you, my ncarers, anil you, my readers, and all the Christian work¬ ers of all the ages, have helped on the magnificent result, and the victory is ours as much as theirs. This moment inviting ail outsiders, through the ransomed blood of the everlasting Covenant, to get into the ranks of the conquerors, and under the ban¬ ner of our Leader, I shall not close the service with prayer, as we usually do. but immediately give out the Moravian Hymn, by James ‘Montgomery, appropriate when written in 1819, but more appropriate in 1896, and ask you, with full voices, as well as with grateful hearts, toehautit. Bee Jeliovah’s banner furl'd, tisdona Sheathed Hissword; He speaks— world And tbo kingdoms of this Are the kingdoms of His Son. STEAMER WRECKED And Thirteen of the Passengers and Crew Drowned. The Oregon Coal and Navigation Company’s steamship Arago, Captain Reed, was wrecked Tuesday morning on the Goose bay bar and four passen¬ gers and nine members of the crew were drowned. The vessel was endeavoring to enter the harbor at Empire City and the en¬ gineer slowed down while the bar wes being crossed. A strong tide carried the vessel on the submerged rocks of the partially constructed government jetty. She struck so hard that a hole was knocked in her bottom directly under the engine room and a few seconds later the vessel sank in eight fathoms of water. The deckhouses and upper works were carried away, as were also the life rafts and boats. In the midst of the confusion the passengers and crew clung to whatever debris they could reach. Two boats were captured and into tl, e 8e eigteen persons climbed, leaving the captain and five of the crew cling¬ ing the rigging which was still above water. For two hours the boats en¬ deavored to make land through the breakers. them A huge wave capsized one of and all its nine occupants were drown¬ ed. The other boat was finally piloted safely into the bay and the life-saving crew notified. With much difficulty the captain and remaining seamen were removed from the rigging, which was rapidly being submerged. The seamen afterwards floated ashore in safety on life rafts and all the passengers and crew are now accounted for. The Arago was the first steel ship ever built by the Union iron works, of San” Francisco. She was 947 tons gross, 200 feet long, thirty feet beam and six¬ teen feet deep. Speaker Reed i» 111. Speaker Thomas B. Reed of MAtu’*, who spoke atFort Wayne, Iod.,Thurs¬ day night, is confined to his hotel with sickness and is nnable to resume bis t-peaking tour. His voice has given out and he is unable to speak above a whisper. His engagements at Cam¬ bridge City and Peru have been can¬ celled. _________ The man with a secure income doesn’t worry much about the out¬ come. i FULLY RESTORED. A TRAVELING MAN MADE WELL AND HARPY. Attached by the Two Fiend*, Rhemna* t *m and Kidney Trouble, but the Plot* of Both are Foiled by the Pink Pill*. From the Republican , Caribou , Me, If the term miracle can be applied to any cures in the nineteenth century, surely the list of such cures must contain that of Mr. O. A. Shepard, of Caribou, Me., who was so af¬ flicted with kidney trouble and rheumatism that he was on the verge of giving himself up as incurable and was plunged to the dark A*t depths of despair. But let him tell the story in his own words. “Early Id the fall of 1894 I had fastened on to me, as I supposed, that blight of blights, that heretofore sure destroyer, kidney trouble, and it was slowly and surely making headway in undermining my health for I was fast beooming unable to attend to my duties as a traveling salesman, my back seaming about ready to break after riding any dis¬ tance in buggy or sleigh. The bad feeling had been growing in my back for a period of five or six years, but I had not given it much attention, not supposing it to be anything but what would wear off. But in the fall above mentioned I was compelled to give my attention to it, for I had to stoptraveling efforts and go to doctoring myself. My seemed fruitless. I grew worse aud worse. My weight was decreasing. My blood was apparently growing poor and less in quan¬ tity. ray another should make its beat off one disease appearance and successfully gain a foothold in my already weakened constitution. Tne last disease is one that most physicians con¬ sider enough to do battie with aud tv foeraan worthy their mixtures. It was consumption. nutil I be¬ From bad to worse I oontinuod came unable to be around and at last I was utterly helpless. I only looked forward to the time when I might be released from my sufferings by the one deliverer from all ills. “Many were the remedies I tried and faithfuliy, but to 1 no tried purpose. had All effect the what¬ stuff for internal use no ever on the slow aud steady progress of the diseases. The external appliances all. My and suf¬ de¬ coctions did me no benefit at ferings were fast beooming unbearable. My hope was ebbing away. “Just at this time, a friend, and he was a friend indeed, advised me to procure some of Dr. Williams’ Piuk Pills and with little faith that they would do me any good, but out of respect for my friend’s advioe, (I thought it would do no harm at least) I or¬ dered six boxes. I took them. My blood at once began to increase and I for the first time in many weeks hud a good night's sleep! My improvement w is noticeable from the start! My weight began to increase! My appetite grew! Happy? Well I think I was! 1 at last had found just what my system needed to defeat the robbers preying on my health and I thought it the time to be merry. “I purchased another half dozen boxes and when they were gone, two more, which effectually cured me. I increased in weight until from what was almost nothing for me, I tipped the scales at 196 pounds, my present weight, and I owe it all to the Pink Pills. May the knowledge of them be brought tc all suffering ns I did, for I know they will be benefited and cured, and l deem it a pleas¬ ure to recommend them. “I have traveled for thirty years and have heard of many strange things, miracles, etc., but I think my own experience stranger than them all. early “Now I can drive hard nil day, from feel it. I morning Jo late at night and not a;n just as well as I ever was. Ho sir, I uever felt any bad effects from their use at all. It was a gradual but sure fight nnd the Pink Pills were victorious. Long may they wave!” Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills contain, in a con¬ densed form, all the elements necessary to give new life aud richness to the blood aud restore shattered nerves. They are an un¬ failing specific for such disease* as loco¬ motor ataxia, partial paralysis, Bt. Vitus’ dance.sciatica, neuralgia, rneumatism, nerv¬ ous headache, the after effoot of la grippe, palpitation of the heart, pale and sallow complexions, all forms of weakness either in male or female. Pink Pills are sold by all dealers, or will be seDt postpaid on receipt of price, 60 cents a box. orsix boxes for $2.50 (they are never sold in bulk or by the 100) by addressing Dr. Willi ims’ Medicine Com¬ pany, Schenectady, N. Y He Ought to Knoxv. “Wsb it whisky that brought you here?” asked the prison visitor. “I think, lady, from the way the copper smelled,” answered Dismal Dawson, “that it was gin.”—India¬ napolis Journal. Dobbins’ Electric 8o»p Is cheaper tor you to n**, If you follow direetioni, than any other soaps would b-,. if viven to you, for by its use c/othei are laved. Clothes cost more than soap. Ask your grocer for Dobbins’. Take no other. There nre said to be ninety thousand bar¬ maids in England. FITSstopped freeand permanentlycnred. No fits after first day’s us* of I)n. Kline’* Gubat N xnVKRfcBTOUKK. Free$2trial bottleand treat¬ ise. Send to Dr. Kline. Wt Arch 8t.. Phil*., Pa. OasCakets stimulate 1 ver, kidneys end bowels. Never s ck<*,^ weaken or gripe. lUc. State or Onto, Citv op Toledo, I Lucas Oouki V, ) Frask J. I'MENr.y make, oath that be is the icuior partner of the firm of F. J. < n*f»EV & (Jo.,doing bu»ines« in thyCity of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, snd that said firm wiil pay the sum of oxr. nuNuttso dollar, for me t and every case o. catakuii that cannot b* cured by the use Hall’s Cataukr Cure. Frank J. chbnet. Swora to before me and. subscribed in sny 1 ; presence, this 6th day Gleason, of December, SEAL A. D. 1686. A. W. —, -- in Notary internally, Public, and Hall’s Catarrh Cure taken acts directly <>u the b.ood and mucous surface* of the system. Fend tor testimonials, free. F. J. CnsMtr 76c. & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggi-t,, Filia tho best. Uali’a Family are When bilious < r costive, cat a Cascaret, candy cathartic, cure guaranteed, 10c., 25c. &■* r. f '$} & ANDY CATHARTIC it* 3sf m & ■■ % 2/r ^ CURE CONSTIPATION T M « :4m Sr;‘ * ~ % ,10 9 5 * SO * D£UG<3IST5 - . , v - | lABSOLDTELT GUARiKTEED ffJSSyiSSSSSSS2S5!U*SJ5Sa Oricasro. Moatryet. Cia.. IGw l ark. j pie »~1 booklet free, li. 8TT.BU5 G KEHKDI CO., m tit, How Merit Count*. “My father rot a box of Tettbrine from a friend who had obtained it somewhere in the West. He has had eczema very had a long time, and Tettbrixe is the only thing that has ever benefited him. . half-dozen , “Please send by express C. O. D. boxes. I’ve no doubt but it will be the mean* of selling a great deal of it here." \ ery truly, Mrs. L. C. Malcolm, 691 Cranston St., Providence, R. I. 1 box by mail for SOe. in stamp •. J. T. Sruptrink. Savannah, Ga. In the world’s pn duet ion of beer for ISOS' Germany leads with 56 243,763 hectoliters. Don’t Tobaceo SpH nn.l f-moUo Your I.ID* If you want to quit tobacco using easily and forever, regain lost manhood, be made well, strong, magnetic, lull of wonder-worker new life and vigor, that lake No-To-Bac. the makes weak men strong. Many gain Buy ten pounds in ten days. Over 400,000 cured. No-To-Bac from your own druggist. Under absolute guarantee to cure. Book Co., and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Chicago or New Yor k. _ Piso’s Cure for Consumption has no equal as a Cough medicine.—F. -U. Annorr, 383 Seneca St., Buffalo, N. Y., Ma y 9, 18S4, Mrs. Winslow’s dooming syrup for children teething,softens the gums, reduces inflamma¬ tion, allays pain.eures wind colic. 26c. a bottle. Just try a 10c. box of Casoarets, the finest liver and bowel regu.ator ever made. i-' •li 5*5 iS. Wm m mu' 1 m m SHHslS vm w I I! Vf, m rfVi/r: ■ 11ji 1 p. i Gladness Comes 4 VV With a%ettf r understanding- of the transient nature of the many phys¬ ef¬ ical ilia which vanish before proper forts—gentle efforts—pleasant efforts— rightly directed. There is comfort in the knowledge that bo many forms of sickness are not due to any actual dis¬ ease, but simply to a constipated condi¬ tion of the system, which the pleasant- prompt¬ family laxative, Syrupof Figs, only ly removes. That is why it is the remedy with millions of families, and is everywhere esteemed bo highly by all who value good health. Its beneficial effects are due to 1 he fact, that it is the ono remedy which promotes internal cleanliness, without debilitating the organs on which it acts. It is therefore all important, in order to get its bene¬ ficial effects, to noto when you pur¬ chase, 1 hat yon have the genuine article, which is manufactured by tho California Fig Syrup Co. only, and sold by till rep¬ utable druggists. ('tijoyment of good , , health, If in tho laxa¬ and the system is regular, then tives or other remedies are not needed. If afflicted with any actual disease, one may be commended to the most skillful physicians, but if in need of a laxative, then one should have the best, aud with the Figs well-informed stands highest everywhere, and is most Syrupof largely used and gives most general satisfaction. iYODWPMiiK ,i,n |, ——— ATLANTA, UA-. For the bffX. Typewriter ever made. I're tt $60. Wa will buy your old machine at it* lull value for cash, or exchange for a N w Hart¬ ford. Write for catalogue today. We buy, eel) and • xchange Typewriter- 1 , ail kind*. Wa carry a full line of Supplies for all Maclhnes. I ill* interesting, esneclally whom it tells welt ail about the NEW FRUITS as as the old ones, nnd offer-t all at very low price*. It’s Free. Send for It. Addres* W. D. BEAT1E. Atlanta, ca. DON’T BE CUT ». We can cure you with ut it. if you have the piles use piantor’aPlio Ointment. VVe (juat'aniee to Hive instant and permanent reiiet. S* nd nve two cent stamp* to cover portage and urea we will Dept. mail FREE A. package. Ad-Jjajjnjgt 1 New Spencer Medicine Co., MKjjHl CHATTANOOGA. TKNN. —>—-*• EVERY MAN His Own Doctor, ||y J # HAMILTON AYEUHf M. I>. A C00 page IHu^trated Book, containing valuable information p* rtainifff todteeascH of lb** human fry»»em. fcliowiiVz how io tr» at and cure with Minpiest oi medicines. Will b© mailed, po*t ( aid. to any ad *fes» on receipt or price. SIXTY CE NTH. Address Atlanta Publishing House, 116 Loyd rit., ATLANTA, GA. MONEY hObU. .•-JLVKR. ... ....BOOK rilBK. Dsn Daueiiy, Columbn*, «. OPIUM snd WRitKY habits cured. It.ok not Free.Dr B.M.Woolixt.atlaeta.oa. Beet Cough Syrup. Taste* Good. Use in time. *o.'d by druggist?■_ A. N. 0 .......Forty-three, ’SH