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HALE’S I J •d M 1 %s8 r i *i
YOL. 13.
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KNOWLEDGE
Brim's comfort and improvement and
° personal enjoyment when
tends to used. The who live bet¬
rightly many, with
ter than others and enjoy life more, promptly
less expenditure, world’s by best more products
adaptin" the to
the needs of physical being, will attest
the value to health of embraced the pure liquid the
laxative principles in
remedy, Syrup of Figs
Its excellence is due to its presenting
in the form most acceptable and and pleas¬ truly
ant to the taste, the refreshing perfect lax¬
beneficial properties of a
ative ; effectually cleansing the system,
dispelling colds," headaches curing constipation. and fevers
?nd permanently given satisfaction to millions and
It has approval of the medical
met with the Kid¬
profession, because it acts on the
neys, Liver and Bowels without weak¬
ening them and it is perfectly free from
every objectionable substance.
Syrup of Figs is for sale by it all drug
ilists in 50c and'$l bottles, but is man
ufectured by the California printed Fig Syrup
Co only, whose name is on every
package, also the name, Syrup of Figs,
and being well informed, you will not
accept any substitute if offered.
Ask my agents for \V. L. Boiifrlae ask Shoe*.
If not to- sale in cnfalogiie, youv place yeur tho
denier lo *en<l for secure
ttttcttcy, aud «ct them tor you.
fir take no substitute.
Y
m
m
I,
W. L. DOUGLAS
S3 SHOE GENTLEMEN
W. BEST SHOE M THE WORLD FOR THE MONEV?
It is a seamless shoe, with no taclcs or wax thread
to hurt the feet; made of the btst tine calf, stylish this
aud easy, and because tcc make more shoes of
grade than any other manufacturer, it equals hand
sewed shoes costing from $4.00 to $5.00.
(tC 00 Genuine Hand-sewed, $5.00; equals the finest Fr< encl; calf
shoe ever offered for
Imported shoes which cost from $ 8.00 to $ 12 . 00 . calf,
&/} 00 Hand-Sewed Welt durable. Shoe, fine The best
stylish, comfortable tin's price and grade
shoe ever offered at ; same as cus¬
tom-made shoes Police costing Shoe; from Farmers, $0.00 to $0.00. Itailroad Men
€2<® JpWfl 50 all fine calf,
and Letter Carriers wear them;
seamless, smooth Inside, heavy three soles, exten¬
sion edge. jO One pair calf; will wear better a shoe year. offered at
ffO fine no ever
wa this price; one trial will convince those
who want a shoe for comfort and service.
(fift ‘<£5 mid 84.00 Workingman’s durable. shoes who
Vmi are very strong and Those
have given them ft trial will wear no other make.
DUJ3 84.00 and 81.75 school shoes sell aro
thcTr merits, worn the by the increasing boys everywhere; sales show. they
on as
B tad 83.00 Dongola, Ifaud-Ncwed stylish; equalsF shoe, reneb best
a very
Imported shoes costing from $4.00 to 81.75 $6.00. 75 shoe
Misses Ladle*’ £.50* 8^.00 and for
are the best fine Dongola. Stylish and durablo.
Caution.—See that W. L. Douglas’ name and
price are stamped on the bottom of each 3hoe. MaSfc
W. L. DOUGLAS- Brockton.
WORK FOB SIS
a few days, aud you will lie startled at the unex¬
pected success that will reward your efforts. We
positively have the best business to offer an agent
that can be found on tlio face of this earth.
•45.00 profit on 875-00 worth of business is
hundreds being easily and honorably women! made by and paid to
of men, boys, and girls in our
employ. You can mate money faster at work for
jtts easy than to (earn, von have and any instructions idea of. so The simple business and plain, is so
Shat all succeed from the start. Those who take
(hold of the business reap the advantage that
rises from the sound reputation of one of the
ldest, most successful, and largest publishing
•louses that tlie in business America. Secure for yourself handsomely the profits yields.
Mi beginners succeed so readily grandly, and and than
more
ealizo; y It find their exactly greatest expectations. tell them. There Those is plenty who
as we
i room for a few more workers, and we urge
loved, >cm to but begin have at once. If you are jdready cm
a few spare moments, and wish
o ii-e them to advantage, then write us at once
for this is your grand opportunity), and receive
«il TRUE particulars & fO., by return mail. Address,
Uox Jfo. 400, Augusta, Me.
PERFECTED
CRYSTAL LENSES
TRADE MARK.
Saaliiy First aad Alvars.
Jgtt'W
lliiik'Jis 2^1
• wT WEAVES,
COMPOUND.
A recent discovery by an old
physician. Successfully used
monthly by thousands of safe La¬
dies. Is the only perfectly
and reliable medicine discov
_ ered. druggists Beware who of offer unprincipled inferior
C Trio f np ., pIace , of this. Ask for Cook’s Cotton
. fwC and
fji OT ' XD ’ take substitute ,orinclosefl
„vk"bostage j n letter, and we will send, seated, pla
•a i in
" -* WBS&l&Sfr*.
JfO. 3
Just Plain Helen French.
When tho Yankee sclioolmarni got owt
to Devil’s Gulch she found things a little
rough, hut eo ono was rude to her. In
deed, so markedly chivalrous were the
male inhabitants that she said to herself
over and over again: “Well. I wish the
young men of Beacon street could corr.t
out hers for while. They would learn
a lesson in politeness which some of them
need very, very much.”
Determined not to bo outdone in po¬
liteness Miss Nellio was very careful not
to express surprise at anything she lies;
or saw. If she heard bad language i:
Bob Lacy's faro ranch she never turncx.
a hair—to say nothing of her pretty head
And when she saw a man shot down i:
the street she simply smiled and said to
herself that these people were delight
fully frank and primitive in their ways
—quite Homeric, indeed, ahe said—fo;
Miss Nellie had been educated at Smith
college and knew Greek from alpha to
Idaho. She had pluked it up by the
roots, so to speak.
■When the young lady first faced her
,ass she was prepared to hear spun
pretty hard names. And she was not
disappointed, for the nomenclature ol
Devil’s Gulch is both forcible and pictur¬
esque. Some of the miners struct richer
leads in children than they did in gold
and silver, and their elation or their dis¬
appointment often found vent in names
that were rather startling to Boston
ears. Star of Hope Jones and Don't
Giveadam Henrietta Baldwin were sam¬
ples of names gi $.n her when sho started
to make out her rollbook.
At last she came to a diminutive speci¬
men who wore a drcs3 of prints and
nothing else, and whoso hair was combed
on Christmas and tho Fourth of July, be¬
cause her mother •‘believed in keeping
holy days.”
“Now, then, my little one, what is your
name?” asked Miss Nellie with her sweet¬
est smile.
“Helen French,” said the child.
"Eh?”
“Helen French,” the child repeated.
“Yes, dear, I know it is hell in French.
Now tell me what it is in English, please."
—New York Herald.
Tho Stature of Adam and Eve.
“I see that some distinguished anthro¬
pologist has figured out that Adam \Vas
128 feet tall,” said Dick Godwin, a cloth
salesman with headquarters at the Lin
dell. "lam sorry the old man is dead.
1 would like to sell him a carload of
doth fora pair of trousers. Eve, r.c
cording to this believer in Edenic Broh
dingnagians, was 118 feet from her dainty
pink toes to tho top fluff of her blond
bangs. And this pair of gigantic epi
cures divided an apple between them!
It were equal to Mrs. Parvenu making
two bites of a cherry. Eve's neck must
have been at least six foot long, and her
month an opening of a linear yard! Sho
could carry a Saratoga trunk in each
cheek with as much ease as her degener¬
ate daughters transport a wad of spruce
gum. Think of poor Adam trying to fill
that mouth with caramels at one dollar
a pound!
“Tho precious pair must have stripped
every fig tree in paradise to make them
aprons. But I am inclined to believe
that the industrious theory builder is
mistaken. Our first parents were far
more likely to have been pigmies than
giants. Instead of man degenerating
physically he is steadily improving. Ite
verso tho process of reasoning by which
the conclusion is reached that Adam was
128 feet tall—apply the true theory of
progression instead of the falso one of
retrogression — and we have for otrr
primal progenitor a gentleman who
might, without removing his tail hat,
walk beneath the huge legs of tho late
lamented Tom Thumb.” — St. Louis
ft i *,h''. n*»,i «uii‘Q f
Two educated negro women a? Vasten
have begun the publication of the first
newspaper in the Congo Free State. ‘
X lliic'S.
They Were Very Critical.
A Yankee girl teaching in tlie south
recently introduced into her school a lit¬
tle nonpartisan publication called Cur¬
rent News, intended for schools. One
half of the reading class of 10 objected
to it because it contained an address of
Ohauncey M, Depew. The chief stirrer
up of strife in the place she found to bo
the village doctor, who sent word that
his daughter was not to have any book
out of the school library that had paper
covers. He evidently considered sncli
covers an earmark of the evil one. Tho
doctor bleeds all his patients, by the way,
and drugs them with calomel. Another
parent sent back a copy of “Alice In
Wonderland,” taken out by her daugh¬
ter, saying “she didn’t want her children
to learn about witches.”—Boston Tran
script.
A Boston Solecism.
Solecisms are frequently indigenous
to certain localities, as witness the Bos¬
ton aberration of the tan colored shoes.
The Bostonian fanatics wear them with
the tall hat. No one as yet has had the
hardihood to combine them with tlio
full dress suit. But they were worn to
funerals, combmed with the regulation
curriculum of mourning attire.—Cloth¬
ier and Fm nisber.
Columbian Postage Stamps.
The complete set of Columbian postage
stamps, which includes a cent, 2-cent,
3-cent, 4-cent, 5-cent, 6-cent, 10-cent, lu¬
cent, 30-cent, 50-cenfc, $1, $2, $!, $4 and
$i5 stamp, cost a collector at pax $16.26.
*2 gSa fPBS mfk A Bs 9RBNESC & HW.0 NOISES CURED M
Em -■ Peck’s INVISIBLE TU8UIAR EAR
CUSHIONS- Whispers he*»d Com¬
fortable. Successful where ail Kemedie* tail. IH*. book&
or »r««. A4dm# I. ittttOSf 863Stw
CONYERS, GEORGIA, SATURDAY APRIL 20, 1893.
A QUESTION OF VALUES.
“Kisses fire cheap,” eUM Bob .’Male©,
Flashing a wicked glance ;u tnc,
“Cheap I call* when a gii l so St*. fair
Stoopa to be kissed by John Clair.”
Ne'er a word do I derm to rep*/
As 1 watch the sunset fade and die.
And in the shadows t’o: \ fay. about
Much of life's sweetness Micas shut. out.
Ke kissed me. yes, ere he wont away;
’Tiva.s a memory, la* said, he could keep fo;
aye;
Aral Bab don't know. Ah, what man could
Guess one-half that a woman would?
A year later, with softened tread,
Bob comes in and says, “lie's dead”*
“St. ClairV” l ask, and now tbvvv. line
A wondering question in Bob's blue eyes.
"I thought—you know—Iiess, Is it true
Thr.t the fellow was really nothin:: to you?"
I raise my eyes; they are stern anti coiti;
Bob's arc not—they’re ablaze and bold..
“Mydarlingl Mine! Ah, at this late day -
For I know now why lie went away.”
“But my ki.-res are cheap— 1 remember,
you see.”
“They are more than untold wealth—to
me."
—Vankeo Blade.
A Costly Bible.
The most expensive illustrated book
yet made is said to be a Bible now owned
by Theodore Irwin of Oswego. It is
valued at $10,000, for Mr. Irwin paid
that sum for tlio work. The original
was in seven volumes, 1 Omo., and by the
'<A inches, which occupy 17 feet of space
on the shelves. This remarkable booh
contains 8,000 peh and pencil drawings;
etchings, engravings, lithographs, oil
and water color paintings and mezzo
tints. Among the illustrations.are parte
of tho “Great Bible of Cramncr.” print
odin 1388; parts of the “Bishop’s Bible."
printed in 1508; parts of the "Nuvvm
burg Bible,” tho first illustrated Bible
published, printed in 1718, and of “Lo
ther’s Version” and tlie “Breeches Biblo
The extender lias brought together no.
only all that could be found of tho best
and rarest efforts at illustrating tho text
of the Bible, but also the art of modern
„,d
..........
Very few years ago uothing would
but glass blown to the utmost
thinness, either plain or engraved with
ornamental designs, but now we have
returned lo Ute heavy faceted decanters
and goblets, which wo wero brought up
to despise. Which is the -stricter taste?
Undonhteuly tint which we have just
discarded for the special quality of glass,
which can be rivaled in no other mate
rial, is blown Its transparency and capacity' for
being into exceeding lightness,
When cut ,into facets, the former quality
is impaired, the latter ia not displayed.
and the object depends for beauty on its
brilliancy, in which it competes at a dis¬
advantage with rock crystal. The virtue
of an art consists not less ia bringing oqt
tho highest quality of material than in
revealing tho mind of the artist.—Slack
wood's Magazine.
Tho Use of Sudden Wealth.
The disposition toward mad estrava
ganceno often seen in wealthy young
men is not always the result of means
to gratify ovevsU-e.ng tterires, but the
positive foolishness, or raeutal incoinpe
fence, which, under tha prossrffo of nar
row means, would not only never have
developed itself,hut never lweexisted.
“I l"’vo succeeded u ” said a vei*v arcat
1 •' *
SSRitoST , , _ ,
"° v "
Ti„; eiliy mniam 0»M tmxmdly
mako aro in just tho sarno way tno result
not of loss of judgment, but of a weak
oiling ot tno resisting power or the will,
The consequences of Unexpected wealth
are, however, as often fortunate as un¬
fortunate, for they aro the products of
the natural character.
\Yo have seen a man who inherited n
fortune, very large for his wants, be¬
come during the remainder of bis life al¬
most or quite miserly, but that was only
on a large scale the result of the impulse
to save, which on a small ono had been
pronounced a “wise economy,” aggra¬
vated a little, it may be, by a foible
timidity about spending, which 13 con¬
stantly noticeable also in men wh» were
bora rich.—London Spectator.
Going Out by Degrees.
Brignoli was so careful of his voice
when he liad to sing that ho would not
sj’eak at all and was in the habit of
writing his wishes on'a piece of paper.
During the last 30 years of'his life he
lived at the Everett House when not on
the road. It took him at least three
quarters of an hour to go from his room
to the sidewalk. He must get used to
the changes very gradually. Leaving
the room, he would pace up and down
the hall for 10 or 15 minutes, until thor¬
oughly “acclimatized,” as he himself
would say, and from there would go to
the lobby lower to experience for 20 minutes a
slightly degree of temperature.
At the end of half an hour he usually
reached the vestibule, where he would
pass another quarter, opening the outer
door occasionally to get a taste of the
fresh air. When thoroughly acclima¬
tized here, he buttoned his greatcoat
close about him and stepped out on the
pavement.—New York Tribune.
A pRrUamentRty Joke.
Lord John Russell never made an nn
parliamentary joke, and that recorder'
by Mr. Torrens is no exception. A telle
was absent on his honeymoon, at whicl
some unkindly grumbled. “No, no!'
said Sir John, “no man is hcranu to kiss
and tell.”—London Academy.
Ait Ir.TCYcsiiRrj Silver YVcflO.hu;. j
Ten days ago a woman in this city cel-!
obrated her silver wedding anniversary ;
in some rather remarkable emu-1- !
stances. Sho wore tho dross, viva \
•veil and flippers of tho initial fete. Her
mother also eppeaved in the same cos
velvet with point boo
flouaccs-.which had graced her drugh
tweiriy-flvo '
tor's marriage years ago.
Her four bridesmaids and four grooms
men -wero cl] present. Her two eons
cams home from Yalo for t'm OinneK
With'the cscopthm of the death of S'
young infant in her car®y.».fcrvi«l huftffv UM
there had been no break Y:i yoafe-^S* {He
circle for those twenty-live
—Her >«d for which i; one v;<sv,nu may New well York bo jurats Times. LilS.
u
I nflm i—nt h i firi ji.c'i-;
Disease germs lurk in every cubic inch
of tho material which is being vised to
fill in West Harrison street between
California and Homan, aycmiesi James
McGrath, one of the residents qf the dis¬
trict, and several of ms ‘neighbors de¬
cided 1 to tako epneerfed a.atioh in tit?
matt*. It was dark night before last,
and it was cold. Armed with pickax
and spade James McGrath, T. IT. Utley
and J. F: Sheehan met at 0 o’clock at
West Harrison street and Homan avenue.
. ,, _.. Utley the heavies , man
was m
casting aside whatever ^material they en¬
countered which they did not thiidc
made good pavement. When tin •y
counted, . , tho result ,, showed , . they .. had , ,
“If? 7 fits, 1 section ot Mai
cat to Which hcmfvas f Angora attached. cat to 1
ff Y (mongrel), t,ul U rabbit?, "t f ! ^y 1 goat, 2 “yallcr 1 wire
.‘" sUe ‘ 1 Smarter ot bay liorso bad
wed. though frozenJ.-Olucago
Keeping Fp with tho Procession.
h/S'S"" 1 VS^Jr. P: ?i*
’SSd“!?r±ri 33 ,
accelerated motion of the carriage,
p vc ; t y soon it came near upsetting
Looking out we found that we hail run
through wrerJgoing the bars into h plowed field and
furiously across it, making
for a ditch. Tho driver meanwhile was
standing up and plying the whip will]
both, hands. 1 cried, ‘Sum, are your
horses running away? wlLt ‘No, sir,' was
tj u^acrosg 10 rapiy, ‘Well, aro you driving
lots for? ‘Well, sir, the horses
attached to tho hearse have run away
and up in this country it is the custom
f or the bearers to follow the hearse.
jj ow Yoj-jj World,
rity f«r tho I’rofoRfilon.
Judge , , Prisoner r.t the | bar, , have „ you
anyth.ng to say for yourself?
Prisoner—\os mind. I admits 1 m a
v a gab on un« a tliiec, but yt*r o ugh ter be
werry thankful Tin here end let nw orf
IMitlv ‘"judge-How
do you make tbit out?
Prisoner-Well, suppose wo blokes
went on strike and turned honest, what
would yer IndsWp and rich as you do
fur ji-idge a livin?
(severely) - Uni - five years
penal servitude.-London Tit-Bits.
, iwi «aa«esn"arern nmri Baa rr.r.q
,I',tl, ’ll rtrtil.'' Vll
Use fifth rouT1(1 be b ,, g . ltl .
.. , To bo w not to be; that is the (JU0S .
fio'i ’■” *
A grizzly old fellow rose to his feet.
“Well, look here, mister," he said, “ef
that is the question 1 move that you
ain't,’land lion with a wild whoop the mo
was unanimously carried.-Detroit
Free Press.
Electricity and tho Christmas Tree.
The prettiest Christmas tree in town
borrows its splendor from the electric
hghtfovthepIcasni-eofoBesinall maiden.
when U?n electric hgnt was put mine
house Christmas was remembered and a
special attachment provided. The tr<*i
towers to the ceiling and at a touch blue,
blossoms into buds of flame—red,
, , , , -j -j
fog the hohdays, and many small payers
on lire. New York Evening bun.
During his connection with The Revue
do Deux Mondea, tho late orientalist,
Renan, published an interesting essay on
the myth of Prometheus, which he traced
to East Indian legend, where tho inveu
tion of fire is ascribed to tho spite of a
cunning demon.
“Ih it quite certain,” asks M. Renan,
“that tho ancients regarded tho doom of
the inventive Titan as undeserved? li
a debating dub of scholars sliould dis
the question whether fire has, on
the whole, been a benefit to tho human
T ^ ce it might surprise the audience how
strong a case could be made out on the
negative side.”
'The progress of civilization is of course
inseparable from tho use of tiro. Lut
the‘problem whether the phenomenon
of combustion, in its various
tions, has been a blearing rather tlum a
curse is a very different question, and
might bo impartially answered—as to
the interest of individuals and ringlo
centuries, yes; as to mankind and the
result of a series of centimes, no.—ban
Francisco Chronirte.
Opina) a C if; From tad.
At a iuc 'ii uc of 14c woman's mission
sr " confavree „ in . T.rwuo _ .Hro , . ! m,; . ;
'“Y. :1 —g 05 ‘•r.U'.a, t-pofec r >' 11 “. w f”
WW. <>'•.. v- : 1!! " -f 8 °f oi-mm l y
the natives ,t fact country. Bm ssm ,,
*«* 1 ^ , ' , ! akl : 1 Y V; Y f l :
f«tug ytomr.aliood laml uvnizah >n ban
r 'i 1 '- ; -' ; ‘ t’-o 1 1 1 .
lnfu rt ' tc-re were onongi, woain, <1 m-i
*?)! to rehevo Ue nguraui wawu women
svher r.r.d must Lvov vidtont tr-a.aiem.
•'•expensive. AH women t:::.o
1 ■ A / b “ b ^ aro - b "“SScd v,r,!u . mat
, bttlu > vives aro mlav<;<1 l V. *«
“1 have Ftets,” Buiil Miss Beatiy, “a
little L jnvl rf Y.J with her own baby on
r lap. It was drugged aud.no trouble
lo her. IWw could it ho when it ws]
while little Agjiras/frso % l‘ile ftre from present tlio caro awful of state her
one.
of India, opium is
eombjfcJsiatfLif *• thaftlr God for.”—Homo'
Journal/ ••
Sho IaOVcs Dogs.
Those who have heal'd JUiss Marion A.
Heming • play the piano agree that she !
was not tauqriit in vain by tho great
muster, Liszt. When n young girl,
scarcely m her teens, sno watf sent to
Germany end had the benefit of excel
lent ioachiru. Her tliougiit hniguage
becquio tlio German, and those who
know her well say sho has many of lUc
characteristics of (ho Teutonic race.
Her fad ia do^s, and V.'hen tho cauii'cs
are on exhibition in Madison Squate
garden the pianist can often be seen
there, going from keitnel to kennel, ad
miring them with clalest the critical
acumen of a professional dog fourier.
New York Commercial Advertiser.
Positions For Youn?c Doctors,
lb is the ambition of the average yon ag
2 ?&
«»s....... fho approval r'trS ol_lhc «hqxntiueiit ml r‘ ts ch.n.- on
tu
Bos and eorrtcGon. Che d< T m tm< ,u lu.,
n P. t th ° ^ nvu i'D ’' ’ ' '
Pf. "f. ( , ’ ,s l0 " tl " e ' J ;'° ‘ ' l ‘ !, ; ' ^
1 ,n . . , J 2 'V' ,. l V
•
jjussioiws say the best wau ivltt aj .. , a ms
1 •: ;y Britton mjs that a iwyor.tj
" f B”* a,pvointrcsj:ome from the BOiu.i.
A Curious Navul Law.
A curious discovery was some years
jairo made fimom? tbe areltives r.t B > ;!h
Htnpta* of n box coiifcH.niji# tiie ori.^iiml
naval laws of ib,at port as rai’^ ;is tl:o
fourteenth conlimy. Uno of tViorn \vi;,a
that if the majority of the sailors of
::?el on tlio poiift of sailing were of (ho
opinion that (be wind was unfavorable,
* i;b ;t afterward,
thf . veRS) ,j v . as v , v , ,
, , e!:;<t;tiu l was cesponrihle for the value
o( lbe ° dli yi. Louis ItopubUc.
ft 'tl\« „ V* «v< f.,lvvanwtn. ,
A w 5 tdopharrt winch y.uus employe Uo
nrjrrwyri-M; vi nic :u usl bu.ine..
• ‘f' 1 1 U:0 } u " U ‘ u 1otie ilt ;
tmaodhy ropes y. , .em, o„ cn mg r. , ,s.‘t
„
^ ^ ; IT 1,;; cd 10 y ju'uiiud an-in*
i,oI:r i; « V ’ :Vi
tv >' ! "': n '" rt v f .'”i°;' J '
jumped . bwnpeu its hwla. Ait.r
ami a.
fiinujug some nuies, Ii,.e a * eg v.itli a
( . ,
i “" 1 ,lmv
without, pret at.—London B)) n i'tutor.
A Sure Bi.gn.
Y’l.cn a young man talks about the
business of “our firm” in a pitch of voice
‘ hllt , }'° , , beard , , from one end , id
riveet ear io thoolner. (tu u sure np
tbatlus wagro have been raised to a
week.-Now York Ih raid.
Convinced.
Judge—Prisoner, do you acknowledge
1 pri^nci—No, mnli?
my lord. The speech for
^ def.-use h-.s convinced oven meof uiv
iimoconce.—Exchange.
“Happiness in Heir' is f bo startling
tiilo of' an artido contributed hy Mr. St.
George Mivart to Tho Nineteenth Cen
“Ito
j i phyFical Bnfferings “Leave suggested hope in behind, Dante’s
famous line, every
y0 wlvo eute v here," is traced by Mr. Mi
yiii't to (ho necessarily coarse symbolism
0 f early times. In Uio view of
tWs writ er regards an “the most author
Native and dogmatic Christian
“ thes0 Bufferings lie mainly in con
Eciousnoss of having lost “tho
vision. Even for the worst of those wlro
inl!a i )it “that obscure sojourn,” the
church, according to liis ingenious soph
i B try, holds that existence is acceptable
al!(l ; s by them preferred to nonexist
ence jfj, ,
i st George Mivei-t concludes
_
, tj, e extraordinary passage: “Hell in its
j ! widest sense—namely, as including all
aws0 blameless souls who do not .enjoy
; vision—must be considered as for
them an abode of happiness
j a ;i our most vivid anticipations,
that man’s natural capacity for happi
ness is there gratified to the very utmost,
nor is it even possihlo for tho
. theologian of tho most severe and rigid
school to deny that, thus considered,
there is, and there will for all eternity
be. a real and true happiness in hell."
NO. 10.
, Wiim
'V
'
m
/
i
ill's ! 'irabi'ih Messer
Bullitnore, Mil.
Ress!!ei! from Death
AU Said Sho. Could Not Live a
Month
Now Alive and Well — Thanks fo
11 ood ’.s' Sdrsa pa villa.
“J must praise Hood’s Sarsaparilla, for it is
wonderful mediomo. \ suRercd 10 years with
Neuralgia and Dyspepsia
n, ‘d fuicainu-j; » noSjN. Sometimes I would
lmt I did not aiivh'-aeUl. until my daughter
A Picturo of Misery
Evcr y ou0 "’ho r;v\v uu» Umuglvt 1 couM not
live another month, r.m i hcaan to improvo
nv rllla, once ami aU.*r have brahmins with llmxVs Sarsapn
r idu .i.'v ;r;iiuod until I suu now
^
m HOO£» ci Oai’S&pai'lila 4 e> -m
S
Insto.-nl ot ln-in-r <i."ni now , T am alive and
Mehsku,
HOOD’S I'tliLS r.ro ptirely ve^etablp, por«
tcctly liuruiioss. tthvaya rolluLlo atul bonoflclal.
§L
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