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REV. DR. TALMAGE
THE BROOKLYN DIVINE’S SUN¬
DAY SERMON.
THE SIN OK BOUUOWING TROUBLE.
Text: “ Sufficient unto the day i»
evil thereof ."—Matthew vi.. 34.
The life of every man, woman and child is
as closely under the divine care as though
such person were the only man, woman or
child. There are no accidents. As there is
»law of storms in the natural world, so
there Is a law of trouble, a law of disaster,
a law of misfortune, but the majority of the
troubles of life are imaginary, and the most
of those anticipated never come. At any
rate, there is no cause of complaint against
God. Bee how much He hath done to make
thee happy; His sunshine Ailing the earth
with glory, making rainbow for the storm
and halo for the mountain, greenness for the
moss, saffron for the cloud and crystal for
the billow, and procession of bannered flame
chaffinches through the opening rivers gates of glitter, the morning,
to sing, to seas to
chant, and springs to blossom, and over
powering all other sounds with its song, and
overarching covering all other all splendor with its tri¬
umph, up other beauty with its
garlands, and outflashing all other thrones
with its dominion—deliverance for a lost
world through the Great Redeemer.
I discourse of the sin of borowing trouble.
First, such a habit of mind and heart is
wrong, because it puts one into a despon
dency that ill fits him for duty. I planted
two rose bushes in my garden. The one
thrived beautifully, the other perished. 1
found the dead one on the shady side of thb
house. Our Expectancy dispositions, like our plants, need
sunshine. of repulse is the cause
of many secular and religious failures. Fear
of bankruptcy has uptorn many a fine busi
ness and sent the man dodgmg among the
note shavers. Fear of slander and abuse has
often invited all the long beaked vultures of
scorn and life, backbiting. Many if of the misfor
tunes of like hyenas, flee j’ou ‘ courage
ously meet them
How poorly prepared for religious duty is
a man who sits down under the gloom of ex
pected misfortune! If he pray, he says, “I
do not think I shall be answered." If he
give, he says, "I expect they will steal the
money.” Helen Chalmers told me that her
father, Thomas Chalmers, in the darkest
hour of the history of the Free Church of
Scotland, and when the his woes of said the land
children, seemed to “Come, weigli upon let heart, and play to ball the
us go out
or fly kite,” and the children only difficulty iu the
play was that the The could not keep up
with their father. McCheynes and the
Bummertields ot the church who did the
most good, cultivated sunlight. Away with
the horrors! they distill poison; they dig
graves, aud if they could climb so nigh, they
would drown the rejoicings of heaven with
sobs and wailing-.
Yon will have nothing but misfortune in
the future if you sedulously v.-atoh for it.
How shall a man catch the right kind of fish
if he arranges his line and hook and bait to
catch lizards and water serpents? Hunt for
bats and hawks and bats and hawks you will
flndreCridh ° b '“ “f St 0,le nl ? h ? y n ° U ea Wil1 = il3
unuseu a? to it? the , night was hercebattie « no v. matcu ; , th ! for 0 Kite au
owl, which is most at home in the darkness,
and the king of the air tell helpless; but the
the night hawks and the bate
came a second time to the combat; now. the
a stroke of his
teTons and a great cry cleared the air, and
with^lood^’tumbled'iuto the^hickets^ l Yd» are
the children of light. In the night of de
Pi «p t:rs;
rZ
overlook present blessing To slake man’s
thirst, the rock is cleft, and cool waters lean
into his brimming cup. To feed his hunger
the fields bow down with bending wheat,
and the cattle come down with full udders
from the clover pastures to give him milk,
and the orchards yellow and ripau, casting
their juicy fruits into his lap. Alas! that
amid such exuberance of blessing man
should growl as though he were a soldier on
half rations, or a sailor on short allowance
that a man should stand neck deep in har
vests looking forward to famine; that one
should feel the strong pulses of health march
ing with regular tread through all the ave
nues of life Kic’-n/e. ani yet tremble at the expected
fcS assault pleasanThomt^Vlarfulto^t of 0
•wil/som“ dev vntrle rho Kwam^fh wuld ^SeSuant 8asb
'te Si,’ hi - **¥• shl tL ,f eJals ° w t F 0 ; 1 '
the huugei into
the v,ri rwn/in fe 1, by
Him who u b °u?
oect to star vr- hRno^,vTi b0in ^ ( 0< \. 0V S
and siirronridK win, l l ° U '. au4 i
-with ane-eiic mother)v* escort fnnS° K- VelS T 6 '" Vl b
En‘ more than heritage t^rT'’ S ° Uld jj bd u
Has^God fm a bird of
shouldst bi forebodto been d v wf e 3 , taat - ns , tbou
board” Has He covered thee
Hesnread ile spread tiaps tnms for thy feet, and galled thy m
“nrmtml ’ aud w I?° k0d * aea
S w-fh bT tuee with a
fdl wlier/gold'aud
brother come into vour bank
silver are stmn^eTcomt lying about vou do not watch
thff l£
« enttoe on’+iim bv ‘’° U
keen vour eve ey o° UlllU1 ' f 4 you do not ku°iv
a lousiy FathSn toward ; InuTaKWS Him, though they
as were
afraid He would steal something.
It is mgfi tima you began to thank H God
Vo^XlJfeT youi cnuaien, n hauDv nappyj S ouovaut ouojaut a and a nd h^md bound- r
mg. Praise Him for your home, with its
fountain of song and laughter. Adore Him
for morning^ light and evening shadow,
Braise Him for fresh, cool water bubbling
from the rock, leaping in the cascade, soar
mg mthe mist, falling lu the showor, dasii
mg agamst the rock and clapping its liands
m the tempest. Love Him for the grass
that cushions the earth, and the clouds that
curtain the sky, and the foliage for that Belle waves
in the forest. Thank Him a to
read, and a cross to gaze upon, aud a (5a viour
to deliver.
Many Ghristians think it a bad sign to be
jubilant, and their work of self-examination
is a hewing down of their brighter exoeri
ences. Like a hoy with a new jackknife,
hacking everything he comes across, so their
self-examination is a religious cutting to
pieces their hands of the greenest They things they can lay
God’s on. imagine they they are do
ing service when are going about
borrowing trouble, and borrowing it at
thirty per bankruptcy. cent., which is always a sure pre
cursor of
Again, the habit.of borrowing trouble is
wrong because the present is sufficiently
taxed with trial. God sees that we all need
a certain amount of trouble, and so Hu ap
portions it for all the days aud years of our
life- Alas for the policy of gatnering it all
up for one day or year! Cruel thing to put
upon the back of one camel all the cargo in
tended for the entire caravan. I never look
at my memorandum book to see what en¬
gagements aud duties are far ahead. L?t
every week bear its own burdens.
The shadows of to-day are thick enough,
why implore the presence of other shadows? halloo
Tha cup if already distasteful, why to
disasters far distant to come and wring out
more gall into that, bitterness? having Are the we belt such in
champions won forth chal¬
former encounters, we can go to
lenge ai! the busiuess future? just able
Here are men to mauage
affairs as they now are. They can aud pay their
rent, and meet their notes, manage
affairs as they now are, but what if there
should come a panic? Go to-morrow and
write on your daybook, “Sufficient on your ledger, the on
your money safe, unto day
is the evil thereof.” Do not worry about
notes that are far from due. Do not pile up
on your counting desk the financial The God anxieties
of the next twenty years. who has
taken care of your worldly occupation,
guarding your store from the touch of the
incendiary and the key of the burglar, will
he as faithful in 18111 as in 1881. God’s hand
gamblers, is mightier than the plots machinations political of Rtock
or the of dema¬
gogues, or the red right arm of revolution,
and the darkness will fly and the storm fall
dead at His feet.
So there are persons in feeble health, and
they are worried about the future. They
make out yery well now, but they are both¬
ering themselves about future pleurisies and
rheumatisms and neuralgias and fevers.
Their eyesight is feeble, and they are wor¬
ried lest they entirely lose it. Their hearing
is indistinct, and they are alarmed lest they
become entirely deaf. They felt chilly to¬
day, and are expecting an attack of typhoid.
They have been troubled for weeks with
some perplexing malady, and dread becom
ln k bfefong invalids. Take care of your
health now and trust God for the future,
Himdo ,^ e ,10t take guilty of of the blasphemy while sleep of asking witli
care you you
y° ur windows tight down, or eat chicken
*ala i at 11 o’clock at night, or sit down ou a
£ a4c ? ot ..'? 9 C A' 1 o11 - Be prudent and tnen
a!JL°?,lists' ( So, i 19 U st °? fU tl, e sickest was s ?. people A 111 *
^ay sot b who d'ed deaths daily, i and , Robert
“ ’ ” ko st0 P ln ^e midst of his
. V 1 '} be t *°' vn 011 tl >e pulpit sofa to
® b aud then go on again. . Theolore Fre
Jmghuysen had an a great d thea horror T of ... P eau dying « fl,ll till .L
, a ^ e out car for ? oythete'esent itself. , sufficient an i w let unto the the future
^ the evil thereof. ’
Again, a . the ,. habit . ., of .* , borrowing . misfortune . „
is wrong because it unfits us for it when it
actually smooth sailing. does come. Life’s J* e path cannot will always sometimes have
tumble among declivities and mount a steep
and be thorn pierced. Judas will kiss our
cheek and then sen us for thirty pieces of
silver. Human scorn will try to crucify us
between two thieves. We will hear the iron
gate of the sepulcher creak aud grind as it
shuts in our kindred. But we cannot get
ready for these things by forebodings. They of
who fight imaginary woes will come, out
breath, into conflict with the armed disas
ters of the future. Their ammunition will
have been wasted long before they Boys come
under the guns of real misfortune. in
attempting to jump a wall sometimes go so
far back in order to get impetus that when
tney come up t-uey are exhausted; and these
vaulttoouble dreadfu°reaUty brii” ourTtren-th ^“LTto^the
Fjnady. theLb| with oZorro^ Mne trouble is
wron S because it is unbelief. God has prom
ised to take care of us. The Bible blooms
with assurances will Your bealevut’ri hunger will be fed
your b4ealed sickness slurfalyour - feJt wraw
will smooth and yourpaS God and w U ^ouglyfrowS and
crag opening grave sound the voices of
victory s£m and thSnder' <-ood ch-er The summer clouds
that
their bosom harvests of wheat, and shocks
^f presT"’The great Itorm wrathful'"wavTwuf waller 0?r Hss^the feet
the Joshua
«
Your way may wind along dangerous bri
tile paths and amid wolfs howl and the
scream of the vulture, but the andTtrees way still
winds upward till angels guard it,
of life overarch it, aul thrones line it, and
crystalline fountains leap on it, and the
pathway ends at gates that are pearl and
streets that are gold, am 1 temples that are
always open, and hills that quake with per
petual song, aud a city mingling forever
Sabbath and jubilee and triumob mpu ana aud eoro- coro
nation.
bet pleasure chant her siren song,
! fis not the song ior me;
To weeping it will turn e’er ’an?,
For tals is hcaven ’ s decree. ,
But there’s a song the ransomed sing. '
To-Teens, their exalted king,
w ‘' h heart and tongue,
Oh, tha-s the song for me:
„ Courage, my brother! The father does
not give to his son at school enough money
hlrn several years, but. as the bills for
tuit,!on ami , board and clothing and books
comem, pays them, feo God will not give
y° u g ra ce ail at once for the future, but will
Through f earnest YOUr exi prayer, ^ rici ^ trust as Him. come, Put
everything m God’s hand, and leave it there.
interest money to pay will soon eat up
a farm, borrowed a store, an estate, and the interest
on troubles will swamp anybody. thereof!’’
“Sufficient unto the day is the evil
-
A SCORCHER.
__
fearful Heat Experienced tn
NfiW «6W York lOTK Pit tlty. v
A dispatch of Monday states that fifew
a oik City is experiencing tne hottest
iveather in twenty years. The city seems
as a furnace seven times heated
At noon Monday the beat was un
, beat able, , , and between that hour , and , 4 .
o’clock in the afternoon ambulances were
brisky engaged in c>u'rying to hospitals
many human beiucs ® nrostra’ed V bv ^ heat '
A , continuance . - , of r such weather duilng j
Hie week means ail enormous iDCica.se of
mortality, especially in the crowded ten
cment J, distr-ct fo!L,i These ,! unfortunate moo ?
pl® nr(5 forced r fiom „ their • close , quarters
an( x seek sleeping room on the tops of
t-lie buddings, and on the siveet.
--——_
T AjtruiVJiD fVniTPD T Llftll TITT? TOUICirv WnidAl,
-
Blit It WHS HOTSe Liniment 4 and U
p rrOV6u j Po+ol Jralffi.
4
A dispatch of Tuesday ^oel from Lowell,
Ttfass ^ ass savs- says.^ Rnnd«v (Sunday, Noel Reunite,) Beaulieu,
->
liarr y c beacault, Joseph Charrette, stole Btracy
St. George and one Hacourse a bot
tie of horse liniment from a barn, believ
in.r I, it to be linuor and drank “n! it hetween between
” T
them. B „ aulieu 18 dead, i Charrette is
dying and the others are in a serious con
dit.ion, but they may recover. The
mother v^f of Beaulieu also drank a small sTck
** ouantit uanllt y or the tile imimeut nhnent ana ttn douite is quite sick.
r •
THIS FHIIII Hill. ARP
Who Dilates Upon the Love of a Mother.
Mrs. Arp's Fight With the Croup.
Remedies World Without End. The
Philosophic Fair Discussing Medicine
_ vARTERSVILLE, GA., „ August 1.—The most
vital, humanity providential is and the beautiful nuternal trait in
our in
stinefc.
The love and care which a mother has for
her offspring is the saving grace of child
hood.
Without it the little helpless things would
perish in their infancy, and the world become
depopulated. For and I have watche 1 these
years years and wondered—and
mothers—watched to my
mind there is no greater proof of t he love of
God to the human race mother than the intense, all
absorbing love of a for her child.
This love is not founded in any phllosoahy
that we can understand Why she loves one
child more than another? Why Jove her
own ill-favored, fretful, troublesome off
spring more than the beautiful, affectionate
child of her neighbor? There are 65,000 00)
people in the United States, and ever one of
them had a mother-I reckon-though t e
scriplures do speak of “man that is horn of
woman." like there might be some other sort
somewhere. Perhaps 64,< during 00,.000 infancy, of them had
a mother’s lovo and care and
if that love and care could have leen ex¬
clusive, influences uninterrupted what and world unprejudiced of good by
outside a peo¬
ple we would hav-.
I was ruminaiiiig about this the other
night, bfcause about midnight, “when deep
sleep falleth upon n iran,” but not upon a
woman with an infaut child, there was an
alarm up stairs, and my wife st uek a match
and hurried up to find the little grandchild
suffering with the croup. There is nothing
in the world sharp th it metallic, comes so unnatural suddenly, and
with such a CTOW
ing sound that death seems right at the door,
and what is to be drne must be done quickly
or not at all.
The anxious mother trembles and piteous
ly begs for help-help Arp to save her child, her
only the child; but courting Mrs. time has raised and ten from have
cradle to they
all had the croup, a good soldier: deal of but croup, and
it is hard to scare an old still she
has a holy horror of this insiduous, night
loving, treacherous disease, and she goes to
fighting it like killing snakes. Syrup of ipe
cac is her favorite re medy, but she uses
warm lard and turpentine, and flaxseed, and
onion juice, and calomel, and Dover’s pow
der, and liniment, and warm water, and Jo
belia ani nitrate of silver and some ether
things when and necessary, them according always to circum- do
stances, some ot the
work and bring relief, and I have thought
that if a small portion of all these remedies
was put in a bottle and well shaken before
taken, it would Cure most any infirmity J that
flesh is heir to.
W « were talkingabout 1 the alarm that we had
he ° the 1 ' ni S bt and remarked the in
« fa™“X““h-- , ° f ^
“It the^rouD wls croun ’ ^ said d Mrs M Arn A P ’ “the h rhihl h J
kad croup ,; ’
“Ofcourse” said I “but yott . , know, my
Sembrene^ . ^ T' t hat when ^ tra obstructed ?\ ea an ^ bronchial
-<xhe lne child cimn had nail tne the croup, croUD ” said said she she. “Ti It
es*ent“^t^t c^slalcesL raSof „
be suffused with absorbents, and the outer
b?cqu . T J C ^ untel ' lrrite '‘ ts
"
jag?a thaneither ’”
4 ’asajKSff fr.Sn.^.“a; ssss,zrssx b u
=s %rs LE
and
f a, r drug stor,. All that I n have to do in
*dch emergencies is to stand around and be
bandy, and move with alacrity and wait on
ber, and fire up the stove and bring hot wa
*» r . and spill some of it on my bare feet and
never flinch. If croup was the onlymfan
tde trouble our conjiigHnifewouW there has have been hifl
8 fair share ot felicity, but the
wear and tear und anxiety and of teething and
col, c and scarla ma whooping cough and
mt .as l6 s and mumps and wounds and bruises
Z 6 ^"sMd^br crop is laid by. We we ^renlarin^Datrf are playint. patri
. archs now, and helping these young mothers
wben we ® an - but we bave b>t iots of rest
and our old age is . calm and serene. Mrs.
Arp is, I knew, for she is <n the go more
than I ever knew her, and hasent any car
riage to go in either, and she is pres dent of a
miSriomwy s ciety, and little takes mifsTonary too, and pa
pers, and takes all my money,
the tennis court is right close to the church
where the missionaries meet,and I never know
where she is exactly, and last night she went
to th* blind man’s concert, and t Had to stay
at home with the young mother and her
child for fear of accident
That is all right Mrs. Arp she would
stay if I wanted to go, but she dident say it
very strong, and I me-kly told her I dident
care to go, so it’s all right. I wanted the
young mother to go. too, and leave the child
with me, but she wouldent looked surprised leave and child so id: for
“No, indeed, I world.” my
all the shows in the
And that’s why I was iurmDating over the
The't’orld would keep re tliese
city mothers more at home, instead of going night
to the theaters and operas nu-st every
woman has r^o little children, and w*nts to
preach or exhort or do something io provided reform
mankind, nobody oiuht to object,
»he is fit for the business; but tlune are not
many of that kind m this part of the coun
try—not enough to surprise and alarm the
press or peopje—rnd so we will not make
any fuss about it. Kinety-nine out of a
hundred had rather be mothers at home than
speakers abioad and always will, I reckon,
It i-the imuenml instinct that mak*s wo
men the b^sfe tca^hefn in our schools where
*!>« omuls ui-,, o-^nm-aiu- of teuttor
Tender is the word—the rtglit worn. When
8 boy gets tough iie should be taught by a
rnfln—and he generally i«. A tough, rough
boy has no business in a woman’s school. It
is fit chit a woman should teach and train
the young c-h Idivn. Her kind manners and
womanlysympaMiyrefines ihemaudsuppli- lack of
ments their moiher’s training little or rl loves
beP training ,1 ol at h-une, Jasfc as love a cliild—nny- g
body’s , b W1 woman little a boy doesn't
child. Ju>tas a
love a doll, so does not man love other peo
pie’s children 'l lmnks to the human pitt¬ ebil
«**, women are now the oiiucators of
dren on all this broad land. Tlrieisuoth
ing in the calling tint militates again t their
modesty or purity of thought, or seclusion
from contact with the wund, but how far
beyond th s a woman can go aud yet pre¬
BerVfi ht .,. W(aIl , au ^ oat sty, her self-respect
and the respect of the opposite sex, I do not
know.
We rea ! that the war-’en of S ng Siirg ask'd was
mtarv-iewo . ithe other day, and
was
What Wi S ,^' te > wi ?‘ 0 l ' au “ ,bat ! ho
prisoueis Uwro. It >eeu« that thi law makes
■.
-i.» - .
it bis duty to obtain a short biography "The of
every one, and he answered home promptly: and moral
lack of parental control at
training in the schools.” who their
And yet there are fathers turn
boys loose at an early age, and if a conscien¬
tious teacher tries to restrain them it pro
vokes a war and raises a rumpus all over the
town. The old landmarks are better than
the new ones in this regard. There are little
sons of respectable parents who go by and my I
house every day smoking c’garettes, passing
have seen them beg them of a negro,
and yet those parents wouldent believe it if
told, and perhaps would be very indignant
if they were punished for it by the teacher.
What man would give those boys a place in
his r\r his or his flhnni What
man would trust them with his accounts?
It is hard upon a taxpayer who has no chii
dren to be compelled to help educate other
people’s children, and he is only reconciled
and submits because it is best for the state
that all her children shoutd he educated.
There is a growing, increasing doubt upon
this subject, especially considering the tax
that is upon us to educate the negro childrtn,
and the iiitle good and less thanks we get for
it- There are ninny conservative thinkers who
object to being taxed to educate the children
of the wealthy, but who would submit
I ebeerfnllv to a tax for the nnnr. Private
6Cn °? w a re warning more popular tnan
P ubbc schools v because there is more heard
«them and better associations, but if jve
m»»8thave public schools let the parents
£? nd by te^Mfs and sustain them,
They are the best watched board of people trustees m the
™.’ the every
. ? hlId 18 “ detefdiv l and ® v ? ry mother a sen
^ lne °.? * ed j 6 outlK)?t ?‘ to ttlease I® caK them ?? a sn all. ? art 1118,1
or a ^‘ £ BlLL woman Arp ln Atlanta Constitution,
’
COLORED LABORERS.
The Tradesman Prints Some
Statistics.
A Chattanooga dispatch its says: issue The oi
Tradesman loth published complete in aud thor¬
August reliable a very the of
oughly resume of status
negro labor in the south. The article is
the result of facts and statements ob¬
tained from about two hundred labor
employer?, and every southern state is
represented. These employers give work
to nearly 7,500 colored persons. The
highest wages reported as paid to skilled
negro workers is $3,00 per day, the (
lowest $1.10, and the average w’agis
$1.75, and 987 skilled negro laborers are
reported as under employment. The
highest wnges reported as paid $1.50 to 831
unskilled negro laborers was per
day; the lowest 60 cents and the average
$1.10 per day. Being asked if colored
labor is as good as white, twenty
seven employers of the 1,370
colored laborers say they see
no difference; thirty-five, hiring 1,447,
prefer white labor, and forty-nii e, em¬
ploying 3,214, prefer them to white la¬
bor. The question, “Is the negro in¬
creasing in efficiency as a laborer?” was
answered in the affirmative by sixty-seven
employers of 2,413; in the negative and by
forty-three, rvho employ 2,279, fif¬
teen who give work to 1,369, say they
see no change. Another question was.
“Do you intend to continue the employ¬
ment of colored labor?” Two thousand
one hundred and nine, employing 6,670,
answer “yes,” two each employing 1,000
say “no” and sixteen hiring 411, are in
doubt. The most interesting part of the
article relates to the effect which educa¬
tion has had on the younger generation
of the colored race as to their
efficiency as laborers and also as tc
what effect education has had on the race
generally as laboring men. To these
questions 139 reples were received, and
every southern state is represented,
Thirty employers, having 2,860 colored
workmen, say the education the younger
generation has received has been benefi¬
cial to them as laborers, and that educa¬
tion has been of aid to the laborers of the
race in in doubt general; the thiiaeen subject, employing and ninety- 392
are on
six who employ 3,829 say that tuch edu
Cition as the younger of the colored race
h ive received has not been of benefit to
t’v. m as laborers, and that generally
speaking it detrac’s from a negroe’s effi¬
ciency as a laborer to educate him.
TEXAS’ FIVE AMENDMENTS
Were Favorably Decided at the
Polls.
A Saa Antonio dispatch s-iys: The
amendments ! ' ! to the constitution constitution upon
.
J hlch , the P e ?P , Ie of , T-xasycted 1 ues
da A weru x hv<i , 18 number. The first pro
Videi for the registration of voters in
c tics of 10,000 luh .bitants and over.
aRden, P 0 w-r 8t hc 'egislatureto make
| cb 'U jes l-i the b illow laws. The secoud
! a;, thor zes the legislature to o1 take fuad 1 per
Cent ° f the P erm;,neat sch ° a “ d
p'acc it to the credit of the school fund.
Tuo third provides that the legal rate of
interest shall not be more than 10 per
Cent per annum, and in contract", where
the rate is not stated, it shad be 6 per
cent. The Farmers’ alliance is at the
bottom of this. The fourth gives more
extended facilities for adopting and en¬
forcing loc d prohibition. The fifth pro¬
I , vides for the creation of additional courts
id . criminal appeals,
1 a
MEXICAN ECONOMY.
President Diaz Will Allow No
More Subsidies.
A dispatch of Sunday There from truth the in City
of Mexico says: is no the
report of the resignation of the minister
of finance, although what may happen
in, connection with that office is un¬
Transatlantic known. A representative of the Spanish
obtain Steamship line of has been
trying to a renewal the sub¬
vention of by which the line was bene¬
fited, but President Diaz will not recede
from the plan for economy upon which
he has entered, und it is considered that
the era of subsidies to railroads and
stcanuh'p companies is past in Mexico.
For Dyspepsia, Indigo t-tiort, un i Stomach
disorders, use Brown’s Iron Bitters. Tiie
Best Tonic, it rebuilds the system, eleiins the
Blood and Strengthens themuscle-. A splen¬
did tonic for weak and debilitated persons.
The coffee palaces of Melbourne are said to
be the finest In the world.
IHyney the Year Round.
Miss Smith says: “(Jan I make 825 per week
In the plating business?" Vos. f make $4 to
If! i>er clay plating tableware and jewelry and
selling platers. II. K. Delno * (Jo., Columbus,.
O., will give you full information. A plater
costs $5. Business is light and honorable andl
makes money the year round. A Reader.
VanWikkk Gin and Machinery Co.. Atlan¬
ta, Ga., manufacture Cotton Gins. Feeders, Ir.e
Condensers, Presses, Cotton-Seed Oil Mills,
Machinery, Shafting, Pulleys, Tanks, and Pumps,. dlsc’ts.
Wind-Mills, Etc. Write for prices
If You Have a Daughter to Educate
WritetoOtisMaivlnSutton. Pres. Mary Sharp*
College, “the Woman’s University of the
South,’’Winchester, Tenn. Mention this paper..
I f afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
son’s Eye-water.DrUgglsts sell at25c per bottle..
Headache
Indigestion, Biliousness,
Dyspepsia Troubles,
And all Stomach
Are cured by
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla.
“August Flower”
For Dyspepsia.
A. Bellanger, Propr., Stove Foun¬
dry, Montagny, Quebec, writes: “I
have used August Flower for Dys¬
pepsia. It gave me great relief. I
recommend it to all Dyspeptics as a
very good remedy.”
Ed. Bergeron, General Dealer,,
Eauzon, Levis, Quebec, writes: ‘‘I
have used August Flower with the
best possible results for Dyspepsia.’'
C. A, Barrington, Engineer and
General Smith, Sydney, Australia,
writes: “August Flower has effected
a complete cure in my case. It act- ■
ed like a miracle.”
Geo. Gates, Corinth, Miss.,writes:.
“ I consider your August Flower the
best remedy in the world for Dys¬
pepsia. I was almost dead with
that disease, but used several bottles
of August Flower, and now con¬
sider myself a well man. I sincerely
recommend this medicine to suffer¬
ing humanity the world over.”
G. G. GREBA, Sole Manufacturer,
Woodbury, New Jersey, U. S. A,
DONALD KENNEDY
Of Roxbury, Mass,, says
Kennedy’s Medical Discovery
cures Horrid Old Sores, Deep
Seated Ulcers of 40 y ear s r
standing, Inward Tumors, and
every Disease of the Skin, ex¬
cept Thunder Humor, and
Cancer that has taken root.
Price, $1.50. Sold by every
Druggist in the United States
and Canada.
U DON’T”
buy a ten-ceut cigar when you can get as good a ontf*
for FIVE cents. I)ON’ T cigars are made of Havana™
cuttings irom 10-cent cigars, and are the best ntcKefc
cigars in the world. If your dealer does not keep
them, send, us 6 cents In stamps and we will mail yotb
five samples FRkE to try.
W. B. ELLIS & Winston, CO.. N. C.
KING COTTON
Buyorsell your Cotton o r JOI^T]ES
jK 11 5-Ton Cotton Scale.
Wr NOT CHEAPEST BUT BEST.
tgl H is JONES F°r OF terms BINGHAMTON, address
M v
V BINGHAMTON, N. Y.
A High Price for Eggs
can be secured by preserving them when prices are
low until higher prices are o eretl.
A formal ft for preserving eggs rne year, so that
they cannot be told from fresh-.'aid eggs, will be*
sold lo any person for $1, upon receipt of agreement
not to selior make known the information toothers.
A. <*\ COl/MIlK, I). C.
14^5 N« Y. Av©., vi a*liiuffton,
ti RED EYE” tobacco Is TUB ItKKT for
.*0.5 Mi[d, 8vveet CHKW, No .. ui<,Aic HhAiU’BUUN i tsukin iora*SA71f- nor
Semi 10 CCflfM KEEP /St.'uuos IT. TA VLOA
your dealer does not N. C.
, MAKurACTUiuais, \\ iusun:,
i
AIL ABOUT TenncHsee’s FINE
(JI^IMATE and great Resources in
KNOXVILLE .SENTINEL; daily 1 mo.,
50c.; weekly 1 year, $1; samples 5c.
m • BUY Bit#’ GUI DP. V*>raQ<*. V20
i Illustrations, Colored mate. 15 Cents.
KKNNEliPs, Ulemeutoti, N. J
m >-«/* HUNTER, No Fes.
!PI If. C.
UNGTOK, - 1).
m Washington. 40-»u«e W. T, Utzjurold, book D. free. C.
m