Newspaper Page Text
SUNDAY MORNING.
A SERMON FOR SUNDAY
AN ELOGUENT DISCOURSE ENTITLED
"POWER OF A CREAT IDEAL.”
The Rf?. Or. J.tVllbnr Chapman Deliver*
a Be.utifut Sermon on the Comfort and
Helpfulness of Haring an Ideal to
Anchor One to the Better Things of Life
New York City.—The Rev. Dr. J. Wil
(, napman, who lias recently resigned
he pastorale of the Fourth Presbyterian
nurcn in this city in order to devote him
*e,i to evangelistic work, has prepared the
lollowing sermon for the press. It is enti
tled “The Power of a Great Ideal.” and was
preached from the text, “I have sfet the
ix>rd always before me; because He is at
*oy right hand, I shall not be moved.”
Psalm 16: 8.
If you look at the top of this Psalm vou
will the Michtara of David. There
are differences of opinion as to the mean
***£ 9* this expression. Some have
that it means victory, and this would seem
to be true, since there is a particular
. ?a, tn bearing the same tntle, whose sub
ject matter is on various themes, but all of
which end in triumph. Psalm 56, “Thou
nast delivered my soul from death;”
I salni 57, “Mr heart is fixed. I will sing
and give praise;” Psalm 58. “There is a re-
7 wd for the righteous;” Psalm 59, “God
defense and the God of my mercy;”
- salm 60, “Through God we shall do va
liantly.” L,
There arciothers who say that the ex
pression means golden, and so we might
infei from the margin, which means that
it is worthy!of being written in letters of
gol<l. and nijiy have been in some conspicu
ous place in the temple. At any rate we
know that its truth is better than gold:
vea, than much fine gold. There are stili
others who declare that its leaning is
precious, and certain it is that it. is a pre
cious privilege to walk; with Christ ever
before us.
“So on I go. not knowing,
I would not if I might,
rd rather walk in the dark with God,
Than go alone in the light.
I’d rather walk by faith with Him,
Than go alone bv sight.”
Some teachers say that the meaning of
rhe expression is secret, and what follows
it is hidden truth. Certainly it is true
that the “secret of the Lord is with them
that fear Him.” and there is a. secret place
of the Moat High. The firet is learned
when we walk with Him. the second is
reached at the end of the journey. But if
you put all these interpretations together
you have the golden Psalm of the precious
secret, which would seem to be a fitting
introduction to all that follows This
Psalm is about Christ. We knosv it. be
cause Peter said. “For David sneaketh con
cerning Him. I foresaw the Lord always
before my face; for lie is on my right
hand, that T should not be moved." Acts
2: 25. If David could have strength by
looking forward to Christ, what may I not
have as I look back at His history and life
.n the power of His presence by the Holy
Spirit.
I.
It is the instinct of a human sou! to have
an ideal. F.very child has. The boy longs
to be like his father. The girl has a desire
to resemble her mother. What a responsi
bility rests upon each. Men and women
have whether they will acknowledge it or
not. They. long to be like someone else.
The musician has his Mendelssohn, the
Poet his Shakesneare. the artist his Da
Vanei. the preacher his Spurgeon. David
knew this and so he said. "I have set the
Lord a! ways before me; because He i* at
mv right hand. I shall not be moved.” To
imitate any one else in the world is to be
come ridiculous, but it is remarkable that
people all over the world may seek to imi
tate Christ and be the better for it. Let
it be noted that this is a definite expe
rience or Conclusion which David has
reached. I insist upon the definition of it
because it is scriptural. Notice Homans 6:
13. “Neither yield ye your members as in
struments of unrighteousness unto sin, but
yield yourselves unto God. as those that
are alive from the dead, and your members
as instruments of righteousness unto God.”
And also Homans 12: 1. “I beseech you,
therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God.
that ve present your bodies a‘living sacri
fice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is
your reasonable sendee.” The tense of the
verbs in both verses indicate definite ac
tion. It is really putting one’s self over
into the keepimr and control of Christ.
A man has n threefold nature, snirit. soul
and body, and in this order. I Cor. 6: 20.
“For ve are bought with a price: therefore
glorify God in your body and in vour
spirit, which arc God's.” Romans 13: 1.
“Let every soul be subject to the h ichor
powers. For there is no power but of God :
the powers that be are ordained of God.”
Romans 12: 1. “I beseech vou. therefore,
brethren, by the mercies of God. that ye
present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy,
acceptable unto God, which is your reason
able service.” All of which indicate that
He will fill the spirit, inspire the soul and
control the body if given the right to do it.
Then everything ha become sacred in cur
lives and living itself is a sacrament. I do
not much believe in the world’s division
of all things into sacred and secular, for
all things ought to be sacred to the child
of God, and all days ought to be holy, and
they would did T .ve but live in the spirit
of the text. Some neople meet temptation
and flv to Him. It is infinitely better to
fly to Him and then meet trial in whatever
form it may come. There is great power
in the word “because” in the text. This
is not just a flash of an experience, it is
the deliberate outcome of a long and va
ried retrospect, and will not in any true
sense be before our face until we set Him
there. It is first decision and then prac
tice, and the text must become the habit of
our lives. It certainly was in the expe
rience of David, for he said. “I have set
the Lord aKvavs before me.” There are
certain Old Testament characters which
furnish us an illustration of this text.
First. Abraham. Christ said it, John S:
56, “Your father, Abraham, rejoiced to sec
my day. Rnd he saw it, and was glad.”
The Scribes and Pharisees about Him when
He spoke of Abraham answered with a
sneer, and the Jew's said. John 8: 57,
“Then said the Jews unto Him. Thou art
not j’et fifty years old. and hast Thou seen
Abraham?” When the answer of our Mas
ter was. John 8: 58, “Jesus said unto
them. Verily, Verilv, I say unto you, be
fore Abraham was. I am.”
Tnere is something pathetic about these
words of the Jew*, “Thou art not yet fifty
years old.” In fact, He was only about
thirty. His face must have been marked
with pain and suffering. How old is He.
do you ask? There are different ways or
answering. By the record He was thirty;
in looks He must have been a thousand;
according to His work He is ages old. The
inspiration of Abraham’s life was that the
Lord was ever before Him. Genesis 12: 3,
We deny ourselves for success in business,
apparently little earing whether this busi
ness will help or hinder us in spiritual de
velopment. See the lesson in Lot’s case.
He pitched his tent toward Sodom and
then moved into the city. His family be
came identified with the life of the city,
and he a part of its government. In the
end of the story he has lost his power to
witness, all his property, his political po
sition, his influence over men, over his own
family, hnd even with God. Abraham was
verr different. God choose for him. Gene
sis 13: 14-15, “And the Lord said unto Abra
ham, after that Lot was separated from,
him, Lift up thine eyes and look from the
place where thou are northward, and
southward, and eastward, and westward.
For all the land which thou seest. to thee
will I give it, and to thy seed forever.”
How like this is to our own inheritance.
Ephesians 3: 17-19, Christ may dwell
in vour hearts by faith; that ye being
rooted and grounded in love may be able
to comprehend with all saints what is the
breadth, and length, and depth, and
height; and to know the love of Christ,
which passeth knowledge, that ye might
be filled with all the fulness of God.” The
story is told ot a man who whs confined in
a prison cell. Being an artist his paints
and brushes were given him. and on the
wail of the cell he painted the picture of
the cross with Christ on it. Over the cross
he painted the word love, at the top and
the bottom of the cross the words height
and depth, at the cross beams the words
length and breadth, and indeed, it is true
that no one ever quite appreciates what the
love of God is to him until he has this pic
ture of the cross clearly in mind.
Have you ever noticed the differences in
the ending of the lives of Abraham and
Lot? Lot’s story is written in Genesis 19.
It is an awful picture. His wife is taken
from him. his daughters are disgraced and
he is in despair, while with Abraham the
picture is exactly the opposite, and to my
mind is most beautiful. Genesis 25: 7-8,
“And these are the days of the years of
Abraham’s life which he lived, an hundred
three-score and fifteen years. Then Abra
ham gave up the ghost and died in a good
age. an old man. and full of years, and
pas gathered to his people.”
Second. Moses was an illustration of
the text. In Hebrews 11: 27. “He endured
as seeing Him who is invisible. That ex
plains the mystery of the burning bush
and this vision of Christ explains how it
was that when vour hope seemed to be
consumed and the dearest plan of your
life was burned as in the fire, you rejoiced.
David has learned the secret of happy liv
ing when he says in the text. “I have set
the Lord always before me; because He is
at my right hand. 1 shall not be moved.”
This vision enabled Moses to surmount
every difficulty. What did he care that
the mountains were on every side, certain
of the Egyptians behind him and llie Bed
Sea before him. He marched like a con
quer until the water parted in advance
of him and dry shod he went over to the
other side. But such pictures ns these
have been realized in our day when men
have passed through Red Seas of difficulty
where other men of the world have gone
down in defeat and all “because they en
dured as seeing Him who is invisible.”
Third, our Saviour is an illustration. He
always set God before Him. As He came
into the world He said. “Lo. I come to do
Thy will;” as He sat on the well curb of
Jacob’s well. “My meat is to do the will
of Him that sent Me;” as He bowed
in Gethsemnne. “Not My will, but Thine
be done.” At the beginning of His minis
try, in tlm midst of it and near to its close
He gave forth the same music. What a
life it was.
“The strong man’s strength to toil for
Christ,
The fervent preacher’s skill.
I sometimes wish, but better far,
To be just what God wills.
No service in itself is small.
None great though earth it fill.
But that is small that seeks its own.
That great which seeks God’s will.”
Fourth, Paul was certainly an illustra
tion of the spirit of our text. Hr caught
that vision in the sky as he made his wav
to Damascus and he never forgot it. Hi
said truthfully. “I was not disobedient un
to the heavenlv vision.” This made him
insensible to him surroundings. There is
really nothing more pathetic than his re
muneration of his trials. II Cor. 11: 24-27,
“Of the Jews five times received I forlv
stripes save one. Thrice was T beaten with
rods, once was J stoned, thrice I suffered
shipwreck, a night and a day I have been
in the deep; in journeying* often, in perils
of waters, in perils of robbers, in perils of
mine own countrymen, in perils by the
heathen, in perils in the city, in perils in
the wilderness, in perils in the sea. in
I>eri!s among false brethren; in weariness
and painfulness, in watchings often, in
hunger and thirst, in fastings often, in
cold and nakedness.” And yet here he
says, “I have learned with whatsoever
state I am, therewith to be content. He
was with Paul to the very end. 11 Timothy
4: 7-8. “I have fought a good fight, 1 have,
finished mv course, I have kept the faith?
henceforth there is laid up for me a crown
of righteousness, which the Lord, the
righteous Judge, shall give me at that day,
and not to me only, hut unto all them
also that love His *p>. aring.”
That was the secret of his victorious
life, and that the secret of his triumphant
death.
IT.
If He is before me no path is too hard
for me to travel, since ll< walks in every
way in which He would have me yn: nor
shall I over walk in darkness, for "He U
the light of the world, and in Him is no
darkness at all.” nor shall I ever he moved.
Have you never noticed the differences
between the second and sixth verses in the
.Sixtv-pceond Pgnlm. The second* verse
reads, "He only is my rock and my salva
tion: He is my defense; I shall not be
yreatl" moved.” And the sixth is the same
with the exception of one word. "He only
is my rock and salvation: He is my de
fense; I shall not be moved.” That word is
“greatly.'* There is deep meaning in the
omission of "greatly.” Confidence has
arown evidently. In the first, hope was
thnt the waiting heart should not be much
shaken, that the tottering fence should
not be quite thrown down; the second is
that it shall not he shaken at all.
111.
He is before me in all experiences,
whether of sorrow or of joy, but since men
are born unto trouble as the sparks flv up
ward it is well to remember that He is be
fore us in suffering. There never has been
a heart ache on the part of any of 1 tis fol
lowers that: the pain did not roach Him,
and He had fellowship with us in our suf
ferings. as we are privileged to do in His.
He shall he with its even in death. *
“Since Jesus is mine I’ll not fear undress
ing.
But gladly put off these garments of
clay,
To die iti the Lord is a covenant blessing,
Since Jesus to glory, thro’ death led the
wav.”
IV.
It is an awful thing for a life not to have
the helpful presence of God.
“Oh to have no hope in Jesus,
How dark this world would he.”
One of the ocean dangers that eafftains
fear almost more than anything else is the
danger of coming in contact with a “dere
lict,” as a ship abandoned at sea is called.
There are now supposed to be about thirty
of such vessels floating about at the will of
the currents in the Atlantic waters. They
are without pilot, have neither crew nor
rudder, arr bound nowhere and carry no
cargo to any port. One of them, which
has a cargo of mahogany on board, and is
level with the water's edge, has been drift
ing about since March. 1891.
The perils of collision at sga have been
reduced since the steamship companies
adopted what is known as the lane routes.
Now the route a steamer follows after
leaving New York is fifty miles away from
the route taken by steamers bound west.
One steamer, therefore, is little likely to
meet another and come into collision with
her. But these abandoned ships, not being
under control, and carrying no lights, are a
continual source of danger. The Gulf
Stream carries them northward and then
eastward, and the captains of incoming
ships have warned the Government of
their whereabouts. One of them has been
cut in two and the two halves are drifting
in company.
There is scarcely any peril of the pea
whieh is so terrible to the mariner. No
sound will reveal their nearness, no tem
perature of air or wave will make known
their approach. Though it carry no guns
a “derelict” is often a more deadly enemy
than a man-of-war.
The ship that steers for no port can only
have .me influence, and that is to be a
stumbling block in the way to send other
ships to the bottom of the ocean. God
help us that not one of us may become a
spiritual “derelict.” God pity that man
who has pushed God out of his life and
goes along in his journey to eternity, not
only having sorrow in his own soul, but
standing in the way of the progress of oth
ers.
STEAM CARRIAGES.
Their Advantages Set Forth In a Con
vincing Manner.
Cugnot, in the latter part of the
sighteenth century, built the first auto
mobile, and it was propelled by steam
power. It is Interesting to note at
this time that in America at least the
steam automobile is the one most
widely used. The principal reason for
this Is that a light steam carriage
?an be built for a low price, has the
power to run very rapidly and to climb
bills with a facility which is denied
gasoline motors of many times the
horse power.
Steam carriages can be run long
Distances, and are often used for tour
ing, the radius of action being de
pendent only on the size of the gaso
line tank, water being obtainable any
where. The bugbear of obtaining
water and the inconvenience of using
bad water has never hurt the steam
automobile in any way. It Is certain
ly littio inconvenience to stop occa
sionally and replenish the water tank.
The fact that this has to be done
every thirty or forty miles may seem
an inconvenience to those who v’sh to
use an automobile for long-distance
touring, but when the remarkable hill
climbing power of the steam carriage
Is taken into consideration, its ease of
manipulation and the freedom from
noise and vibration, it would seem
that the necessity of occasional stops
for water could harlly be called a
drawback, in view of such remarkable
advantages as have just been indi
cated.
This year has seen considerable use
of the gasoline carriage, and it is
really very difficult to say why it has
not been used more before. The gas
oline carriage has much to recommend
It, being particularly suitable for long
distance touring at high speed. This
demand for gasoline cars has led
some people to believe that it was co
incident with the so-cailed dropping
oft In demand for steam cars, but this
Is not the case. There undoubtedly
has been a falling off in the demand
for steam carriages as they were built,
two or three years ago. Such troubles
as buyers of steam carriages had with
these machines was not due to any
limitations of steam as a motive
power for automobiles, but was un
doubtedly caused by mechanical de
fects and lightness of construction,
both of which matters have been en
tirely overcome in the steam carriages
now on the market.
The principal advantages of steam
carriages are as follows: Entire ab
sence of any noise or vibration;
moreover, the steam carriage does not
leave behind it a trail of odor of
burnt gasoline or lubricating oil;
great ease of control, making the
carriage very suitable to run In crowd
ed localitle's; great hill-climbing
powers, and last, and perhaps most
important of all, storage of a large
amount of reserve power which can
be drawn on in case the carriage has
to be operated over a very bad stretch
of road—for instance through heavy
sand or mud, conditions which are
occasionally met with in a long run.
In other words, a light steam carriage
can surmount these difficulties easily;
such difficulties as would be trying
to a very much more highly powered
gasoline engine. It is true that a
steam carriage cannot keep this up,
but it can keep it long enough to pull
out of a deep mud hole or plough
through a bad stretch of sand. This
flexibility of the steam carriage is
what makes it so good for allround
work, and there are now thousands of
owners of steam carriages in the
United States who are using their car
riages for allround purposes, city work
nd touring as well. This is probably
the reason why steam carriages have
•old so largely and have been so pop
alar.—-Mall and Express.
Imperfect Vision.
The handicap of imperfect vision
naturally interferes with the progress
of the child in his studies, says Dr.
Grace Peekham Murray, in an article
In the Delineator on backward chil
dren. A well known oculist of New
York City states that defective vision
Is a very common cause of apparent
mental dullness in young children. A
child’s eyes should be examined when
he Is old enough to attend school, in
order to be sure that he does not suf
fer from lack of good eyesight. One
writer has said that he never met
with a case of chronic bad spelling
that he did not also find some visual
defect. It must be remembered that
trouble from imperfect seeing comes
not only from seeing words and figures
wrongly but also from fatigue of the
brain caused by eye strain.
HIS METHOD.
Madge—“ What method of courtship
does he use?”
Prue—“O. he effects to have found
the only girl in the world who under
him.”—Detroit Free Press.
B. E. B. SENT FREE.
Carea Bloort and Skin Dlse&tei, Cancer..
Itching Humor., Bone Paine.
Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) cures
Pimples, scabby, scaly, itching Eczema,
Ulcers, Eating gores, Scrofula. Blood
Poison, Bone Pains, Swellings, Itheunsa
tiam, Cancer. Especially advised for chronic
cases that doctors, patent medicines and
Hot Springs fall to cure or help. Strength
ens weak kidneys. Druggists, 41 per
large bottle. To prove it cures B. E. B.
sent free by writing Blood BaLa Cos.,
li Mitchell Street, Atlanta, Ga. Describe
trouble and free medical advice sent in
sealed letter. Medicine sent at once, pre
paid. All we ask is that you will speak a
good word for B. B. B.
According to official central market sta
tistics recently issued 800 tons of snails
were sold in Paris during the year 1901.
THE BRUNSWICK DAILY NEWS.
PEARLS AND DIAMONDS.
French and English Explanation of
Their Relative Value.
According to an expert writer in the
Petit Blue, the heyday of diamonds
has gone, at least on the continent.
Diamonds are succumbing to three
kinds of evolution:
(1) The evolution of moral taste.
It is now considered bad form for la
dies and gentlemen to advertise their
wealth by a display of diamonds.
(2) A scientific evolution. Thanks
to this, diamonds are so wonderfully
well counterfeited that they are no
longer the sign of wealth. The larger
and the more numerous the dia-’onds
the more they arc suspected of oeing
paste.
. (3) The evolution of artistic taste.
The diamond admits of hardly any
variation in shape of composition.
The great continental artists of to
day in the jewelry line use gold, silver,
even copper or iron, and produce with
them little marvels of art in which
the diamond hardly ever enters, un
less in a very minute and accessory
way, in order to ‘'animate" the whole.
The coronation year has not result
ed in the great rush for diamonds that
was expected, and the quieter-looking
but more expensive pearl has gained
an easy “lead,”
The manager of Tiffany’s told an Ex
press representative recently that the
sale of diamonds during the past year
had not been very much above the
normal, but the amount of alteration
and repair work, re setting of stones,
etc., had been extraordinarily great,
and the expert workmen bad been kept
very busy.
The chief work had bpen in connec
tion with the repair of family jewels,
while large number of Americans
staying in England ror the coronation
had had their diamonds reset and
polished by English workmen.
The American grande dame was al
ways a large buyer of diamonds, and
was particularly anxious to have them
set in the English style.
The reason for the small increase in
the sale of diamonds was the great
popularity of the pearl, which had be
come exceedingly fashionable of late
months, in spite of Its expenstveness.
The usual price for a pearl necklace
ranged from 20,000 to 10,000 pounds,
and a really fine cecklnce was not to
be had for less than 75,000 pounds.
Where a society wmaian could make
a “good show” in diamonds for 2,000
pounds, she could do very little in the
same amount in pearls.
Simplicity was the keynote of the
fashion in diamonds, and clusters of
large stones made into brooches and
pendants and other articles of adorn
ment, were far more popular and creat
ed a better effect than a large collec
tion of small diamonds set thickly to
gether.
The average price for a diamond
brooch with fine large stones was 2,-
900. and tins article found a rapid sale.
Men used diamonds less today than
they did a short time ago, nnd liked
less showy stones for their rings and
searfpins.—London Express.
lisivart oT Ointmnntn For Catarrh That
Contain Morcury,
ns mercury will surely destroy Ilia sense ol
smell and completely derange the whole sys.
t'-m when entering It through the mucous
Hurfavw. Huoli articles should never bo used
except on prescriptions from reputable phy
sicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold
to the good you can possibly derive from
them. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured
by F. .T. Cheney A Cos., Toledo, ().. contains
no mercury, and Is taken Internally, acting
directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces
of the system, fa buying Hall’s Catarrh Cure
be sure to get the genuine. It Is t aken in
ternally, and is made In Toledo, Ohio, by F.
•T. Cheney A Cos. Testimonials free.
flSTSold by Druggists; price, 75c. per bottle.
Hall’s Family Pills arc the best.
American flour is used for the bread
baked in Palestine.
FITS permanently cured.No fits or nervous
ness after first day’s use of I>r. Kline’s Great
Nervellestorer.s2trial bottle and treatisefroe
Dr.R. 11. Kline. Ltd.,981 Arch Ht., I'hila., Pa.
Some mighty stupid young men are clev
er enough to have rich fathers.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syru p for children
teething,soften the gums, rod u cos inflamma
tion,allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle
Carp are said to live hundreds of years,
and pike are also hardy old fellows.
Putnam Fadklkss Dyeh do not stain
the hands or spot the kettle, except green
and purple.
American desks and business system files
arc in use in Europe.
I do not believe Piso’s Cure for Consump
tion has an equal for coughs and colds— John
F. Ucyisa, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15,1900.
Pad habits grow rapidly without much
cultivation.
Colds
“ I had a terrible cold and could
hardly breathe. I then tried Ayer’s
Cherry Pectoral, and it gave me im
mediate relief.”
W. C. Layton, Sidell, 111.
How will your cough
be tonight? Worse, prob
ably. For it’s first a cold,
then a cough, then bron
chitis or pneumonia, and
at last consumption.
Coughs always tend
downward. Stop this
downward tendency by
taking Ayer’s Cherry Pec
toral.
Thrct *lzet: 25c., 5ic.,*11. All drocftsts.
Coocult your doctor. If ho sar It.
th*n do an h By. If ho tells you not
to take it. then don’t take it. He knows.
Leave it with him. We are willing.
J. C. aYER CO.. Lowell, Mail.
THOUSANDS OF WOMENS.DYING FROM CATARRH
PcH’iA-na Cures, That is Whv the -
t -! 1 Ail the Advertisement in the fjjl! . . 'ibmt
li' ! 1 | ||| W° rlt ' Could Noi Make Pe-ru na 1 j |! jtp||
jllf 1 Margaret Donnelly, 21 Webster | 'lijjj! I ' j
j I "Peruna was recommended to tne about j j|| !j I
tj j| been troubled nearly nil mv life, but which | || !;!j:| ijjjjj j|
ij jjj]js/'v I * ia ‘l B* von ~,e serious trouble a few month* I! 'Sjlll ’SBjn Kfl
I TANARUS 1 °^ U,, ‘ | did not have head- B Hll
November Colds Should Not Be Al
lowed to Develop Into Chronic
Catarrh. |
Pe-ru-na Cures a Cold Promptly and
Permanently.
“I am glad to recommend Peruna, as it
has done so much for me. I had been a
great sufferer from catarrhal colds until I
was urged to try Peruna, nnd I am happy
to say that it has entirely cured me. I
shall never be without it, and most cheer
fully recommend it to others who are af
flicted as 1 have been.”—Katherine Dau
ter. 239 13th St., Milwaukee, Wis.
Most people think the success of Peruna
depends upon the use of advertisements.
Undoubtedly the advertisements help
some. But by far the greatest number of
people who hear of Peruna have their at
tention called to it by a friend.
Someone gets cured of chronic catarrh
by Peruna. After he is certain of his cure
he is sure to recommend it to his friends.
Friend recommends it to friend nnd the
news spreads from tongue to tongue.
All the advertisements in the world
could not make Peruna as popular
as it is, Peruna oures. That is the
reasou people like It. Peruna cures
a very stubborn disease. That is why
everyone recommends it. Peruna
cures chronic catarrh after all other
remedies fail, which explains why neighbor
lrPj| REPEATING RIFLES
re P eat - They don’t jam, catch, or fail to extract.
WINCHESTER ammunition
WwM HbHwl Wim made for all kinds of shooting in all kinds of guns.
i FREE Send name and address on
W!NCIfESTER REPEATING ARMS Co * SEW HAVEN, conn .
Everybody Knows
That to have your Dress Fit you
yflßßffljb, must Wear the Proper Corset
mmm \Royal Worcester
BHr yßiir or Bon Ton Corsets
lfiHßMgKy arc the most stylish made
STRAIGHT FRONT
Ask your dealer to show them.
/ i Accept no substitute.
ROYAL WORCESTER CORSET CO
WORCESTER. MASS.
SArr jp3k Dili I $ Yellow Pine Stumps
Ej■ U LLv or Trees.
PuU > ors w , t | Mf j
and 1 ’ s ’ planters n4 most
You ’ ■ •"**•■*. !•▼ contractor*. It
J luma timn thr power
. - '' ’J' .'"ft r-fourmurMni-Kfei • r
' V; *iilry i. r * rxi i 1 n*
" r ‘* nt * ' v
Monmouth, 111.
rSitnatlons Secured
for grriMhiatet or tuition refunded. Writ*
at once for dialogue and apecial offers.
Massey Colleges
Leuiolll., K. Montgemwv. At*.
Houston. Tx. Cohimbut, 6a.
tlchmond. Va. Birmingham, Ala. Jacktan.lHa, Fla.
T BE ,o™™ <L Telegraphy,
Louisville. Ky., (founded in 18G4), will teach
you the profession quickly end secure position
tar vou Handsome catalogue frkk.
iragsalßl^Jlaraf'
recommend it to k
neighbor. Peruna J ‘
cures catarrh perma-
nently, and this way v ’\ *
has gained a lifelong friend. v
People who have been cured
by Peruna many years ago
have been eager to recommend Peruna to
their friends ever since. This is the wav
Peruna is advertised. It advertises itself.
Its merits are its chief advertisement. Once
cured of so distressing and exasperating a
malady as catarrh it Becomes the duty of
every one to pass it along, to call the atten
tion of those who are still victims to a
remedy that rarely fails to cure.
Beware of Cheap Imitations ot Pe
ru-na---Be Sure That You Get
Pe-ru-na.
There are no substitutes for Peruna. Al
low' no one to persuade you that there is
something just as good. The success of
Peruna lias tempted many people to devise
cheap imitations. Beware ol them. Be
sure that you get Peruna.
Miss Jennie Driscoll, 870 Putnam avc.,
Brooklyn, N. Y., writes:
“1 heard so much in praise of Peruna
L, ~ V 10 OATS’ TREATMENT FREE
U , 2V Pvninll ) rMyj4itoom-
Bm, S' pno.tion. spcclklty for twenty
'■WIV T Wra with the nett wonqertu
A . \ Inooeii. Have outed many those
/Jl- and caie..
raHW&MdiV OS. B. 3. GSESH’S COH3,
Box B Atlanta, Da.
U Auto Wear
Red Seal Shoes
NOVEMBER 16
DFSDGF
ns a specific for catarrhal pffections that
when I found my seif with a bad case
of catarrh of the head and throat
Peruna was the first thing that I
thought af. And my convictions were not
wrong, for in a few weeks after using Pe
runa systematically 1 was entirely rid of
this aggravating and distressing disease,
catarrh. . .
“If people knew how efficient rerun*
was for this trouble they would not hesi
tate to try it. I have all the faith in the
world in it, and have never known of a
case where the person was not cured in a
short time.’’—Jennie Driscoll.
If you do not derive prompt apd satisfac
tory results from the use of Peruna writ#
at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full state
ment of your case and he will be pleased
to give you his valuable advice gratis.
Address Dr. Hartman, President of The
Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio.
*3S*3>U SHOES 39?
VJ. L. D >uglas shoes are the standard of the world.
W. L. Douirlax made and sold more men's Good
year Welt (Hand St*wed Protean)shoes hi tin;first
klx months of IHO*2 than any other manufacturer.
nnn RK 'VAttl)will he paid to anyone who
I UiU JU can disprove this atatement.
W. L. DOUGLASS 4 SHOES
CANNOT BE EXCELLED.
51.10H.5201 iWSSa* 12,840,00(1
Best Imported and American leathers. Heut's
Patent Calf. Enamel, Box Calf, Calf, Viel Kid, Corona
Colt, Nat. Kangaroo. Fast Color Eyelets used*
Cant An ! The e nulne have W. L. DOUGLAS*
... . and Prtco atamped on bottom.
bhoes by mail , 2,'tc. extra. J/lns. Catalog free.
W. L. DOUGLAS. BROCKTON. MASS.
Avery & McMillan,
51 and 53 S. Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga.
ALL KINDS OF
MACHINERY
Reliable Frick Engines. Boilers,
all sizes. Wheat Separators,
all Sizes.
BEST IMPROVED SAW MILL ON EARTH;
Large Enginea and Boilers supplied
promptly. Shingle Mills, Corn Mills,
Circular Saws, Bsw Teeth, Patent
Doga, Steam Governors. Full line En.
gines and Mill Supplies. Sand tar
free Catalogue.
Q Ir, tana, add br drimrists. , ■