The Brunswick news. (Brunswick, Ga.) 1901-1903, December 21, 1902, Image 5

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SUNDAY MORNING. A- SERMON FOIL SUNDAY ENTITLED "AND THE TWELVE gates WERE TWELVE PEARLS.” to Brilliant Language the Iter. I)r. J. TV, Chapman Describes tlie Celestial City, |n Which There is Neither Sickness i*Or Sorrow, Death Nor Crying. • New York Crry.-The Rev. Dr. J. AVil *pr Chapman, who has recently resigned the pastorate of the Fourth Presbyterian. |By church in this city in order to devote him te.f to evangelistic work, lias prepared the SS ['''"Owing sermon for the press. It. is er.ti tied "And the Twelve Oates Were Twelve ' f carls,” and was preached from the text. And had a wall great and high, and had y twelve gates, and at. the gates twelve an "v, .and tiames written thereof which * re the names of .the twelve tribes of the ”s thi.dveit of Israel.” Revelation xxi.: J‘J. i ,;' , IVhen La Fayette last visited this enun §>: ', r y,the people gave him a royal reception. ■ - A fleet of vessels went out to meet him. the band played “Hail to the Chief.” and is. [he national music of France, and it is told that he was unmoved. As he came ashore land and water t rem ap* hed with the. power of artillery. Old sol ,, uiferjj Saluted him as they shouted his wel come; and he was still unmoved. With "’avmg banners and under triumphal arches he was taken to Castle Garden, where most of the great men of the nation £ wor<* gathered together to give him greet m Ann he was still not moved. But when he had taken his seat in the great amphi* g* theatre, and when the curtain was lit ted v he saw before him a perfect rtiifeatnfcution f- of the plrce in France where he tvns born t and brought up, and vh n n he saw the old fe-. home so filled with tender memories, the {£ home v. In re his father and mother had ■ lived and died, it is said that the great m pin was touched, and bowing his face in L his hands he wept like a child. If l could B only draw aside the veil which separates B the seen from the unseen, so thWfc you B epuli behold that city which hath foimckt ■ tions. there would be no need for me to m preach, for in the very thought of heaven f you would be almost overwhelmed. I have f read descriptions of cities both in ancient B and modern times, hut never such a cle* B scrip tion as this; adorned like a bride for ■ her husband; a city in which there is ■ neither sickness nor sorrow. death nor cry* ■ ing; a city of walls and gates; on the east if three gate?, on the west three gates, on I tlt® oAiifj* '’ate.' or*" tkr north three | pates, and the walls had twelve founda | tions, and in them the names of the twelve | aposf.es of the Lamb. The angel that | male the revelation had a golden rod in K bis hand with which he was measuring the A city, and found that (ho length was equal I to the breadth, and that the wall was 144 ■ cubits; that the building of the wall was m of jasper; that the city was pure gold, and skthat the twelve gates were twelve pearls. Jit is said that they were wide onen nv day ■F—there is no night there, and in that city ■ therewaa no.viced of the sun, for the glow " , oof the **q-d did lighten it, and the Lamb * 'v Ls The lid it thereof. y It comes to me like an inspiration that ;.V one day T shall enter that city. Can you say it? Your children are going in, vour . parents are going in, your husband is going I it. rour wife is going in; are you going in? : , It is a great joy to know that the things 1 , that bring us the representations of heaven are an substantial. Some people tell ns Ihat heaven is a state, not a nlaee. What then did Christ mean when He said, “I go to prepare a place for von.” and what again when He said. “In My Father’s bouse there are many mansions?” What i the doctrine of the resurrection? Ts it that only the spirits of men are raised? - This is not our teaching. There must he some place for the resurrected body. When Christ went out with T]is anost’es to Retb nnv and a cloud received Him out of their fight. He arose bodily from their presence. It is certain, absolutely certain, that heav en is a place.* Perhaps some may question, at first, the meaning of the text, and yet I am verv sure if we only had the mind of the Spirit wc would find in it much of beauty, sweet ness and power. WHAT IS HEAVEN? It is a place of overpowering brightness. Everything that ever came from thence tells us so. Chariots so bright that the only thing to which they could he likened was fire. Angels with faces shining so that men must veil their eyes before them. Moses and Eiias so surrounded with glory that the three disciples were overcome with the vision on the mount of transfig uration. The walls are like a great jewel, the street -of pure gold and every single gate a pearl. You know the brightness of > one little gem as it sparkles on your , finger, but 01 the wonderful thought that [iSj every gate is a pearl, and the day will come when we may go sweeping through the gates if we v.-di. Cod has done everything that He could do. and our entering in now rests upon ourselves. But the brightness cf heaven, aside from the presence of Christ, is not due to the gales, nor to the ..Trails, nor to flic streets, bat to the pres ence of those who have been redeemed. I have been to'il that the deeper the water the larger the pearl. Whether that he true or not I can not tell, but 1 know that from the greatest depths Cod fame time! takes His brightest jewels. It is no cause for discouragement if you have been a prrat sinner. Paul was a persecutor, Bunyan a blasphemer, Newton a libertine, and yet they shine to day as the jewels of Christ. Geologists tell us that the diamond is only crystallised carbon, charcoal glorified. This book tc-lls us something better than that, that “though vour sins be as sgariet, they shall be as white as snow, though they be red like crimson, they shall be as wool.” Heaven is a place of unutterable sweet nes= Can yon imagine the number of lit tle children there? Can any one describe the sweetness of a child’s song? And when, you remember that your own little one may be <Here 1 What wonderful sing ing it, is us their lips are touched by the finger of ( hrist, and their hearts arc thrilled with His presence. ''O, the jov3 that are there mortal eye hath t not seen, O, the tongi they ring there with hosan nas between. O, the thrice blessed sen; of the Lamb and of Mo-cs, O, the while tents of peace where the rapt so.il repots. O, the waters so still and the pastures so green, There, there they sin" songs with basen na between!" The boy who v.as blind makes the best | expression of heaven to me. The doctor had cut, away the obstruction from his eyes, and the bandages placed there were removc'F one by one, until after a little they had all been taken off. When he opened hie, eyes in siieht wonder as if a . Itew world-had been opened to him, be be held his mother, and yet be did not know tfcp.t it was she. Finally he heard her fa* asking hi: ■ “My ; i, can you sprang into her arm-, rxnlaim* | mflß mother, is tb hat i r definition. Heaver, is -ecing eye knowing even as we arc known. If there is one word which better than an other wilt describe heaven to me it is an exy'anation. . ?d a little child, mee she smiled. rare oppressed, caves at last is red his art— ike his raptured ion! of 6 re, his lyre. I asked the Christian waiting his release, A ham ’round him, low he answered, ‘Peace.’ >So all may look with hopeful eyes above, ’Tis heautv, glory, joy, rest, peace and J ' ? A CITY OF GATES. There is something significant in the fact that heaven is a City of gates. The idea must be that there is some special way td get in. We can r.ot live just as we please and at the last enter heaven; we might if it were not enclosed. The Bible tells us that we may cOme in from the north, the south, the east and west, but we are obliged to pass through the gates, and it is not always easy. “Straight is the gate and narrow is the way,” one might be liable to’ miss it. “Strive to enter in,” says the Billie; so one must lie very earnest. Christ said, “I am the way. the truth', the life:” “I am the door.” and again. “No man eoni eth unto the Father but bv Me.” Some people think that God is so merciful that -after awhile they, may stand til His pres ence but Hd is just as, well as.merciful; and He has provided the war ,bv which every one must enter heaven. It is through the gate. Reformation will not do, mora’- ity can not answer; it is giving up yourself to Him. putting your hand in His and lct timr Him lead you all the journey of life, until von pass through the gates. A child, dying said to his father; “I wouldn't be afraid to cd if mamma would eo with me.” “But.” he said, “littld or.e, she can’t go.” Then the child said, T want you to go,” and he said, “my dar ling, I can’t go.” Then when the child had prayed to Him who had promised to walk through the valley of the shadow, after a little whi’e he said, “I am not afraid now. for Christ has said that He will ha with me. and He will.” Lift up your heads, oh, ye gates, lift them up, for the time is coming when with Jesus wo shall pass through! GATES OF PEARL. I am sure that there is some meaning in the fact that the gates are of pearl. Do you know the history of pearls? Humanly speaking it, is a history of suffering. When discovered it is at the risk of the pearl fisher's life. It is said that pearls are formed by the intrusion of some foreign substance between the mantel of the mol* hisk and its shell. This is a source of irri tation, suffering and pain, and a substance is thrown around about that which is in truded to prevent suffering, and thVis the pearl is formed. Do you begin to see the significance of the fact that the gates are of peart, and not of gold? There was a time when there was no entrance into heaven for us; sin had closed it: man had grievously sinned, he had broken every law of God. and there was no hope for him at all. Then it was that the Babe was cra dled in the manger, became a youth, grew to manhood, endured thirfv-lhree years of suffering, culminating in the agony upon Calvary, when in the tremendous tension His heart broke. Then it was FTe died, the just for the unjust, the innocent, for the guilty; then it was that He arose from the dead, went out unto Bethany, ascended into heaven to swing wide open the gates. And tlni3 it is thev are onen to-day, and one never hears of the gates of pearl but he must realize in some measure what sal vation cost, not eo much to you and to me, but to Him—-humiliation, sorrow, suffer ing. death, and' do you realize that every one who refuses allegiance to Him is ar rayed against Him. for He said. “You arc cither for Me or against Me, there is no middle ground?” TWELVE GATES. How full the word of God is! In its teaching beauty and sweetness come from it with every touch. It is a rock; you can not touch it but the water of life will come forth. It is a flower; you can not come near it, without being blessed by its fragrance. There is something to mo-even in the number of heaven’s gates. The twelve gates were twelve pearls, three on i very side, and the city lieth four square. Ia this not nfl that God has made abundant provision for our entrance into the city above? It is man who has narrowed down the way. The Bible iuvi tetion is, “Whosoever will, let him come." The provision is abundant. No one can stand at the judgment and nay anything but this, "Lord, I might have entered, but I would not.” Twelve gates, and if von are not in it, it is your fault alone. God has done alt that He could do. The Trin ity has been exhausted, almost, on a sinful world, and He will do no more; it is for us ourselves to choose to enter in, it is very easy to be saved. In one of the schools of a great city by the falling of a transom a cry of fire was started. The children were panic-stricken, nud the teachers as well. -In rushing from the building many were injured; some were killed. When it was found that the alarm was false, returning to her room one of the teachers found sitting at, her desk a young girl who had not stirred. When asked the reason for her braveness, she • aid. “My father is a fireman, and he toid me if ever there was an alarm of fire Tn thy building just to sit still where I was and lie would save me. My father is a fire man and he knows, and I just trusted him.” That confidence in Jesus Christ would bring salvation. Said a man in Glasgow to a distinguished evangelist. "I am very anxious to be saved; what must. I do?” The evangelist quoted many passiges of Scripture to him, among them John iii.. Ifl: “For God so loved the world that He gave His onlv be gotten Son that whosoever believeth in Him,” and when he had gone this far the man stopped him, saying, “But I do be lievo.” Then the evangelist quoted the sixth chapter of John and the forty-sev enth verse, Christ’s own words: "Verily, veriiv, I say unto you, he that believeth mi Me hath everlasting life.” The man saw it in a moment and cried put rejoic ing. “J have got it, I have got it.” That kind of acceptance of God brings everlast ing life. Twelve gates, and every gate a pearl, and every gate exactly alike, so af ter all there is only-one way. THE GATES ARE OPEN. I am so glad that the gates arc open to day. Wc read that they shall not be shut at all by day. and as there is no night there the conclusion is that they are open constantly. They are open now. Some h ire been going in since we have been speaking-; at every tick of the clock a soul - , i ♦-• away. I wish that I might go as did Alexander Cruden. seventy years of age, giving to the world his concordance, dying in want because he had given so freely to others. Going into his room they found him kneeling, his face buried in the Bible, his white hair falling down npon the chair, his spirit gone, the very a’.ice’s filling the room where he had been. T wish that I might, go as did Daviif Liv in -stone. They looked into his tent door* and slid one to another, “Keep silence, the great leader is in prayer,” for he was o-i hi knees. After a little while they • r.me back, and he seemed to be still pray ing; then half an hour later again, and ben they touched him they found that Livingstone was dead. The. chariots of God had halted while he prayed, and Liv ingstone. entering in, was caught up into trie skies. Ob, (he joy of such an entrance into heaven! Dr. Pierre, returning to France from In dia afier a long journey, said that his men when they came in sight of their native land were unfitted for duly. Some of them wistfully gazed upon the land they loved. Some of them shouted, some prayed, some fainted, and it is said that when they came near enough to recognize their friends on shore that every man left bis post of dutv. and it was necessary for help to come off the land before the vessel could be anchored in the harbor. Oh! the iov of thus entering heaven. Welcome v roa the gates, welcome from our friends long cone, welcome from every angel in the sit es. The jov, the joy of one day sweeping through the gates! Prussian blue paint is made from the ashes of the burnt hyofa of BENEVOLENT ASSOCIATIONS Of America Use Pe-ru-na For All Catarrhal Diseases. ....... —| j MBS. HESRlgri A A. - MARSH. I Woman** Benevolent Association of Chicago. Mrs. Henrietta A. S. Marsh, President Woman’s Benevolent Association, of 327 Jackson Park Terrace, Woodlawn, Chi cago, 111., says: “i suffered with la grippe for seven weeks, and nothing helped me until I tried Pcruna. I felt at otice that I had at last secured the right medicine and kept stead ily improving. Within three weeks I was fully restored.”-—Henrietta A. S. Marsh. Independent Order of Good Templars, of Washington. Mrs. T. W. Coffins, Treasurer I. 0. G. TANARUS., of Everett, Wash., has used the great catarrhal tonic, Pcruna. for an aggravated ease of dyspepsia, Blie writes: "After having u severe attack of la grippe, 1 also suffered with dyspepsia. After taking Pcruna I could eat my regu lar meals with relish, niv system was built up, niv health returned, and 1 have re mained in excellent strength and vigor now for over a year.” Mrs. T. W. Collins. If you do not derive prompt and satisfac tory results from the use of Pernna write 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. Britons Play Too Much. After the Englishman remarks com placently: “It will come ont all right,” he is apt to leave his office for the rest of the afternoon and go to a foot ball or cricket, game. While he works he accomplishes as much as any one can, but, at most, business hours limit his endeavor. Ho will not work night and day, as many Ameri can wealthy men are In the habit of doing. He does business, but he doesn't mean business. He is not eager for the “joy of achievement.” He throws his heart into the play on the ball field rather than into the work at the office. Mr. Kipling’s lines about the “flanneled fools and the muddled cats” struck the center —somewhat harshly, perhaps—of a great truth. The newspapers arc full of the latest news about the royalty. These wor thies are usually at the race courses or the games in the afternoon. They are at the theatre in the evening, and if there is a choice between a ballet at the Empire and “Faust” at the Ly ceum, they are likely to pass Irving by for the ballet. The newspapers have a way of publishing what they call “stoppress news," news that is im portant enough to stop the presses to Insert. It is almost entirely sporting news, cricket, football, racing and the like. And Kipling isn’t the only Eng lishman who sees the tendency.—The World's Work. DISSATIFIED. Maria —So you’ve left your place, have you? Nora—Oh, yes; I could never qtay there. "What’s the matter?” “Oh, they are such awfully hard people to get acquainted with!”—■ Yonkers Statesman. Long Hair “About a year ago my hair was coming out very fast, so I bought a bottle of Ayer’s Hair Vigor. It stopped the-falling and made my hair grow very rapidly, until now it is 45 inches in length.”—Mrs, A. Boydston, Atchison, Kans. There's another hunger than that of the stomach. Hair hunger, for instance. Hungry hair needs food, needs hair vigor —^Ayer’s. This is why we say that Ayer’s Hair Vigor always restores color, and makes the hair grow long land heavy, $!.<W * bottle. Alt aregs'tts. If your druggist cannot supply you, send as one dollar and we will express you a bottle. Bo sure ond give the nan,® of your nearest express office. Address, J. t'.AV lift CO., Towel!, Mass. IT PAVC TOWRm[ roH fAT * SFKiAI KTJS 11 IAI 3 SITUATIONS yfCURED ran ORAOUATES.Ofi SONET RETtIffNECWf PATRF.ff MASSEY BIRMINGHAM. ALA. RICHMOND.VA, HOUSTON.TEX. Geuoine stamped CC C. Revcr sold In balk. Beware of the dealer who tries to sell “something just as good.” Thompson’s Eye Water THE BRUNBWICK DAILY NEWS. The Gulf Stream flows at the rate c.i about two and a half miles an hour. Five miles is exceeded in some places, and the rate varies much with condi tions of weather and tide. A crab lias been found in the Pat ii East Indies that climbs to the top of a sixty-foot palm 1o feed on young cocoa nuts. They have also been seen climb ing mangrove trees for the fruit. A decoction of coffee husks lias been used as a remedy for malaria by Pi. Restrepo, of Medellin, in the State of Antioquin, Colombia. It was found ef fective iu eases where quinine failed, and in other diseases as well, such as enteric colic and chronic dysentery. The Commissioner of Street Clean ing in New York City recently made a bacteriological lest of the air in 1 lie host, and also iu the worst, residence quarter of the city. The test was made with gelatine plates, which were ex posed for half an hour. Those exposed in the best parts of the city captured ten or twelve colonies of bacteria, while those exposed in the tenement districts captured from seveniy-flve lo a hundred thousand. The tremendous power exerted by water in violent motion is well shown 1 y some experiments carried out by English engineers to determine ilia stress exerted upon the foundations of a lighthouse. Thomas Stevenson dis covered that at Skerryvore and Bell Rock pressures of 0083 pounds per square foot, and 3013 pounds, respect ively, were to Be encountered in ordi nary weather. This is only about for t.v two pounds per square inch, and is dauntless much exceeded la sever* storms. Prof essor raul Haupt. of Johns Mop kins University, has just returned from a tour of research abroad. He says that the mines of Tarshish. where King Solomon got. his gold and silver and precious stones, were situated in what is now the southwestern part of Spain. Baron Rothschild now owns the mines, but lie gets out of them no gold or pro eious stones, as they contain only iron ore. Professor Haupt found in the old workings many specimens of cryolite of great beauty, and he believes that Solomon used much of this to orna ment his temples. An engineer named Omori has he come familial 1 with the apparatus used In detecting and registering earth tre mors through his service on the Impe rial Earthquake Commission of Japan, lie was thus led to consider the ques tion of utilizing seismometers for an other purpose. Some of the strains to which bridges are subjected, especially the ordinary bending from stationary loads, can be easily computed in ad vance. But another set, due to moving loads, are not so readily ascertained. These are vibrations, up and down, crosswise or endwise. They have more to do witli the security or insecurity of a given structure than the bending strains. Air. Omori has tried bis seis mometers on bridges long enough to prove that they are so delicate that they will afford valuable Information, lie advises making tests at regular in tervals. as in this manner warning would be given when a bridge was weakening through age. Overland to Chinn. A conference of the directors of the Chinese Eastern Railway and of vari ous European systems was held In Berlin on the Bth and decided that through trains from Paris and Berlin to Pekin would be started early in the coming year when the Chinese Eastern Railway will tie open for traffic. For the next, few years the journey from Western 1 Europe to Pekin will consume from eighteen to nineteen days, and to Chinese and Japanese ports front twen ty to twenty-one and one-half days, which is practically ten daya less than the journey from Hamburg or England via the Suez canal or via Vancouver re quires. In 190 G the new roadbed of the Trans-Siberian Railway will be com pleted, and the Increased speed that this will allow will shorten the jour ney by three or four days more. At present the cost of tlie trip from ton don to Shanghai, food Included, is, via America, first-class, 1694 francs ($338.80); second-class, 1007 francs ($213.40); via Brindisi and the Suez canal, first-class, 1974 francs ($391.80); second-class, 1094 frgucs ($219.80). Ily 1 lie land route across Siberia, the price of tickets, including fourteen francs per day per person for tneals and the additional charge for express trains will be 1067 francs ($213.40), first-class, and 881 francs ($170.20), second-class. For third-class passengers the differ ence will he still greater. The sen journey from Shanghai costs third class about 001. francs ($120.20). By land it will cost hut 297 franca ($53.40). riillcj. Arc Disappearing. The economies and convenience of distributing power through a factory in tlie form of electricity rather than by pulleys and belting are becoming more apparent every day, and in towns like Buffalo, where electric power Is applied on a large scale, it is said tin? pulley men have ceased to push their w ires very vigorously. Still, the old power transmission system's represen tatives pretend that their business has not liven hurt appreciably. A New Cattle Food. “Molascuit” is the name of anew .cattli food made In the West Indies. It consists of eighty to eighty-five per .cent, of molasses and fifteen to twenty per cent, of cush-eusb, the finest part of the fiber of sugar cane. , y"\ „ ' i .' .. ;• t-.*WV • ■ 1 VrtfrV.v I -i"V.•■ -:-v*3 r r-: l \ , Vv>'A--!';‘ , l <, >9' -. :■: M -i 1 ,"'f'. .* •; y- : vry" •y -'-••*AvVWcj-v-- —■-•"-^- • “ j.w* ...UHiLrfii mVKU^ /f THE CHILDREN ENJOY fU Life out of doors and out of the games which they play and the enjoy- c^vja^p^ V < /-k'-v. nient which they receive and the efforts which they make, comes the f~"x rZ&''.’W greater part of that healthful development which is so essential to their Js > happiness when grown. When a laxative is needed the remedy which is •" r' ff given to them to cleanse and sweeten and strengthen the internal organs \\ •tf'X'' /f/ on which it acts, should be such as physicians would sanction, because its - ~v/‘" /ff component parts are known to be wholesome and the remedy itself free from r%.,-.;ii jy I tf every objectionable quality. Tlie one remedy which physicians and parents, > |well-informed, approve and recommend and which the little ones enjoy, '*V-.' Vu because of its pleasant flavor, its gentle action and its beneficial effects, is— /'!}., Syrup of Figs—and for the same reason it is the only laxative which should - ! 'J~> JtfiG, be u=cd by fathers and mothers. Jhyifc'feis ' ■ Syrup of Figs is the only remedy which acts gently, pleasantly and . naturally without griping, irritating, or nauseating and which cleanses the d'p'-V yC:.' system effectually, without producing that constipated habit which results twuftf ff l from the use of the old-time cathartics and modern imitations, and against A '/} \* v which the children should be so carefully guarded. If you would have them f'3^. !**• /■.■} grow to manhood and womanhood, strong, healthy and happy, do not give '£>{!■'■ '„A them medicines, when medicines are not needed, and when nature needs ...i assistance in the way of a laxative, give them only the simple, pleasant and gentle—Syrup of Figs. rls’iW-: 3 Us quality is due not only to the excellence of the combination of the / laxative principles of plants with pleasant aromatic syrups and juices, but ’S; also to our original method of manufacture and as you value the health of * ■l -V'Se ’% the little ones, do not accept any of the substitutes which unscrupulous deal- * | "V i*-* '■ era sometimes offer to increase their profits. The genuine article may be \ \ bought anywhere of all reliable druggists at fifty cents per bottle. Please k. \ to remember, the full name of the Company— ./ 7 ~ r-f CALIFORNIA FIG SYR-UP CO.— is printed on ).'T3NA _ the front of every pack- .. r“'\ \/' / v a S e - In order to get its \V/\ beneficial effects it is al- . P A 'S''/ ,-*.... W r if} iu| i j )“t {W~ #!%.: r l -, *'" 7 r I? * Animal Sencc Perceptions. In the course of an article on ani mal sense perceptions, in which spe cial attention is directed to nauseous or offensive odors as a means of pro tection, the editor of the Zoologist warns his readers against regarding animal etimoiogy too much from the human standpoint. Because animals can’t speak, we must not assume that they have no modes of communica tion; it is by no means certain that the ordinary explanation of “warning colors is the true one, while the evil smell of the durian fruit does not ren der it distasteful either to the orang or to man himself—Scientific Ameri can. HELPFUL. “Mr. Bliggins 13 very proud of his boy.” “That child who is always asking questions ?” "Yes. He sgys the youngster helps him immensely with his work. Blig gins gets up the answers to corres pondents’ column and it sometimes gets very hard for him to think of absurd questions to ask himself.” — Washington Star. Hw> Till*? W® offer Ono Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cafmot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. F. J. OnrxFY ,V Cos., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, havo known F. J. Cheney for tho last 16 yearn, and believo him perfectly honorable in all business transac tions and financially able to enrry out any obligation made by tbeir firm. West A Tiuiax Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Waldino, Kinxas A llaiivin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, not ing directly upon tho blood and mucous sur laces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Hall’s Family Pills are the best. The average wrecks in the Baltic Sea is one every day throughout the year. FITS permanently oured.No fits or nervous nessafterflrst day’s use ot Dr. Kline's Great NerveP.ostorer.Fitrlalbottlonnd troatlsefrea Dr.li. H. Kline, Ltd.,931 Archßt., Phlla., Pa. Tho sun gives us 30,000,000 times as much light as all the stars put together. s^o Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing SyrupforohUdran teething,sof toathe gums, reduces Inflamma tion,allays pain,cures wind colic. 250. abottte Orange juice is one of the best dressings for black shoes or hoots. Carpets can he colored on the floor with Putnam Fadeless Dyes There are only 800,000 white people in British South Africa. 1 do not believe Piso’s Cure for Consump tion has an equal for coughs and colds —Jona F. Boter, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15,1900. The chance of two finger prints being alike is not one in 04,000,000. Capsicum Vaseline Put up in Collapsible Tubes. A Substitute for and Superior to Mustard or anr other plaster, and will not blister the most delicate skin. The pain allaying and curative qualities of this article are wonderful. It will stop the toothache at once and relieve head ache and sciatica. We recommend it as the best and safest ex ternal counter-irritant known, also as an ex ternal remedy for pains In the chest and stom ach and all rheumatic,neuralgic and gouty com plaints. A trial will prove what we claim for It, and It will be found to be invaluable In the household. Many people say “It Is the best of all vour preparations. Price IB cents, at all druggists, or other deal ers. or by sending this amount to us in postage stamps we will send you a tube by mail. No article should be accepted by the public unless the same carries our label, as otherwise It is not genuine CUESEBRQUGH MANUFACTURING CO., 1 7 State Street, New York Cltx. SOUTHERN MADE for SOUTHERN MAIDS The Best Ladles’ Shoes in America for st,so TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. IF YOUR DEALER E* NOT i A it It V THEM, A POSTAL CARD TO lift WILL TUI.I. VOL WHERE YOW CAN DET THEM, O O O O CRADBOCK-TERRY CO.. riAKERS. LYNCHBURG, VA, WITH NERVES UNSTRUNG AND HEADS THAT ACHE WISE WOMEN BROMO - SELTZER TARE TRIAL BOTTLE lO CENTS CAPUDINE' CUR.ES Siok He.dach,o, Nervousness sand Feverishness. ... . ,jy-‘ NO EFFECT ON. THE HEART Sold by 0.11 Druggists. mtamm —nm mmww iiwu mrrmm.emm rwwsmsap.7*" rA Golden Rule of Agriculture: Be good to your land and your crop I will be good. Plenty of Potash I PAY SPOT CASH FOB mil b t o a cn\y land warrants laraed to soldiers of any war. Also Addi tional Homestead Rights. Write me at one®. Veglb, Mi ?* - Soto. DECEMBER 21 -Mals# & cm 4| South forsjtk St, Atlanta, Ga. awl Htollonar, Jlrfg-ines, Boilers, Saw Mills AND ALL KINDS OF MACHINERY Complete line earn'd in stock for , IMMEDIATE Shipment. Best Machinery, Lowest Prices anti Best TornUll Write us for catalogue, prices* etc., before buying. J “^DROPSY yj 10 CAYS’ TREATMENT FREE. /)) Havomadoßroppy and its corn* y plicaUon3 a, specialty for twantT T yoavavath tho moat \/ond3rm| A success. Uavo cured many thoua* and cases. ca. H. n. OSBSW'S sous, ’’i* Box ii Atlanta, Qcu 1 suffered from i: tion and thought I wuv’d rather die than live. 1 was not able to work for four teen months. A friend rec ommended Ripans fabules to me and I got a box. 1 j immediately began to im I prove. 1 enjoy three good I meals a day now and never 1 i felt better in my life. At druggists. ' '.Xgf&iijjlH Hie Five Cent packet is enough for an I ordinary occasion, the family bottle, 1 60 cents, contain- a .-ur.hlv for a "it 1 writing Cdiene. Loul-jYliie. Ky., year Students eau outer any time. Newest Shoe Styles M Send for Catalog tesgjMljj : r*Givo •he luimo <• er* wrnin:: to advertisers- (At. sf,*o2)||| Di^P^MPPHH———P——HßPft CURE F v>. tea L_l le3£ (.oush SiTup. Tastes Gooo. Cse io tura. Pow hy.draggian, CMm •§: t < . i