University of South Carolina Libraries
pgpg . : -pr-i'- \ ; U? ' * 1 . , A SEBMON FOR~SUNDAY A BEAUTIFUL DISCOURSE BY THE REV DR. HOWARD DUFFIELD. / ______ ^ Subject: Heart's Ease?The I ton Has Sever Entered the Soul of Thoso Who Expect Happiness to Be a Matter of Personal Choice. New York City.?"Heart's Ease" was the subject of the sermon Sunday morning 4 in the Old First Presbyterian Church, Fifth avenue and Twelfth street, by the Rev. Dr. Howard Duffield, pastor. The text was from John, xiv: 1 (Revised Version): "Let not your heart be troubled. Ye believe in God, believe also, in Me." V lir. Duffield said: Let not their hearts be troubled? How Could they help it? They were not men who knew the world well and they were going out to face the world alone. They were not men versed in the wisdom 1 r vi me stuuyis, aiiu iusj ri-n. w ?teachers of novel, profound and revolutionary truths. They were impulsive, undis, ciplined and without social influence. Hitherto in every hour of difficulty a divine friend had stood at their side to blunt upon the shield of His love every dart which was launched at them. Now they must address themselves unfriended to a mission such as men never attempted, and they must enter upon their adventure broken with bereavement and crushed with a consciousness of helplessness. How could, they be otherwise than "troubled?" It is simple mockery to say to the heart which is harried with the mystery of pain and haunted with the bitterness or loneliness and stung with the keen sense of its inability to cone with the responsibilities of . existence, "Don't be troubled." The oppressed soul is ready to reply, "Pour acid upon alkali and say 'do not ferment/ But when wishes are thwarted and hopes are withered, and endeavor has its upshot in disappointment, and the light of life has gone into eclipse, do not say to me, 'Let not your heart be troubled/ Either you have not measured my grief or the iron has never entered your soul." * But he who spoke ihis sentence had taken the exact measure of the woe of those to whom He spoke, and He knew the wormwood tang of sorrows blackest draught. His acquaintance w'th grief was life-long. He knew grief not as a casual passerby upon the streets. He knew grief not as we know some neighbor by occasional sight. He was the intimate and inseparable associate of that E'm companion. It was just because He ew the secret sorrow, ijts strange ministry and its woudrous outcome, that when He saw His friends standing at the threshold of the very life which He Himself had X lived, a life wrought out in loneliness and suffering and defeat and scorn, a life of utter_ sacrifice_ to t*-J uplifting of oth e^-j, a life rejected dy tde woria ior wnose enrichment they were to give up everything that made their years sweet to them. He said. "Let not your hearts be troubled." In thought He was looking far forward from that unknown house in Jerusalem beneath whose roof they then were seated, to another mansion, not made with hands, eternal and glorious in the city of God. Present to His gaze was not so much the plow and the narrow and the cold, dark furrows of the srcdtime, as the gladsome company of the reapers, laden with golden sheaves and shouting the song of the harvest. He was looking across the storm-sweet sea of the safe and sheltered harbor where the troubled waves were sleeping. He was thinking not only of the wrench of parting, but of the clasp of greeting. Present to His mind was not only the death which was to separate, but the death which was to unite. So He said: "Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid. During the strange, sad i hours and the hard and wearv days that are coming, believe in God; believe also in Me: and by and by the uoors of your Father's house shall open wide for your ? entrance upon a larger, holier, purer min' * istry for which the disciplines of time shall have evoked the capacity, if it were not bo. I would have told you." "Believe" is Christ's talisman for charming away the specter of trouble from the haunted heart. Believe in the Father's plan for His child. Believe in the Father's care of His child. There is no speculative process by which " the mind .mav unravel - a the sore tangles at mortal experience, a condemned heart cannot find belief in a logic book, ^he cold bloodless hand of reason never wiped awa? a tear. The intellect has never discovered any balm for heartache. When one is dying of hunger it is no time to discuss the process by which flour is prepared. When one is ^ pinched with poverty, it is not the hour *> broach the tenets of political economy. ^ * The famine-stricken soul cries for bread, the bankrupt debtor demands coin. The ?, troubled heart yearns for God Himself, and not for any theoretical discussion of the nature of deity. When the problem of the cross becomes too sore and the weight of the burden becomes too heavy, d.- not struggle to express your experience in a theological formula; do not strive to endure the strain in your unaided strength. Lean on God. "Cuddle down" in His arms. Be not afraid. Believe. That is the way Christ would take the sting from mortal sorrow. To attempt to analyze such an act of belief as the Master here prescribes would be 'like endeavoring to learn to sing by study^ ing a picture of the larynx. One may master the anatomy of the throat and never utter a note of song. Think yourself back into the situation. Jesus* was not a theological professor sitting at His desk and lecturing to a class with reference to a neatly articulated system oi dogmas. The shadow of life's* mystery was chilling to the hearts of those He loved, and He was striving to kindle in their breasts a vivid, luminous, unquenchable consciousness of the divine sympathy His word to them is "Realize God instead of theorizing about God." As thougl He said: "Peter, James, John and al the rest, you have lisped sentences con cernmtf God since you were little children David's holy hymns were your cradle songs sacred roles of the synagogue have spoken to you their Sabbath day messages from the Infinite One. Your hearts were imrned are you participated in the sol enmities of Passover and Pentecost, whicl celebrated the august sovereignties witl which God had shaped your nation's life With an irrepressible wistfulness vou hav( pondered the grandeur of Jehovah as yoi felt Him present in the grandeurs o nature, while the quiet watches of th< night stole over you as you lay in vou; fishing boats beneath the unsleeping'stars ' That God is your God. He thinks, Hi plans, He works for you. He marks you K steps. He. treasures your tears. Hi weighs in His heart every cross befor He la^s it upon your shoulder. Th< march of the tribes through the desert, th progress of humanity through the cen tnries, the swing of the stars through th skv is no more to Him than the nassin oi the days of your life. There is notfc in? better known to God than the thing which befall you. There is no one nenre \ to the heart of God than you are. Believ in Him. The reason trouble is so troublesome i that we seldom put God in the presen tense. We transpose Him into the dii past and dwell upon the wonders H ?rought in the days of the fathers. W transpose Him into the remote futui and dream of the glories which shall t ours when all the veils which now hid Him shall be lifted. Christ's cure for tro? ble is to live with God beside us in oi every day experiences; to take God 1 the office, a partner in our business; 1 take God to the parlor, a sharer in oi pleasures; to be in the companionship < God when throngs surround us or whe we tread a wav where no one else bt i He can walk or enter the shades of loneliness whereby all but He are forgo r v a ten. Eternity can bring ns no nearer to God than we are now. The great secret of peace and of nower is mastered by him who comes to know that the comrade- j ship with God, which shall become visible ; hereafter, is actual now. The pain, the strife, the wrong that burn this truth into the tablets of one's consciousness are disguised angels. "Believe also in Me.' The realization of God that brings help to human hearts can never be grasped as a practical truth in any other way'. A personal acquaintance with Christ carries with it a knowledge of the personality of God. All formulas are sorry makeshifts. Whoever is argued into faith may be arg-'ed out of it. If the foundation of your belief is a form of words, it will be overturned whenever a neater and more masterly phrase than ycurs is framed. "No man cometh to the Father but by Me." By the way ot pnuosopnicai uuv muj ^ some concept of God as "a power not ourselves that makes for righteousness." Through the labyrinth of speculative thought one may reach the conclusion that God is the unknown auantitv in the equation of the universe. Along the path of a logical syllogism one may deduce the idea of God as "an absentee God sitting by and watching the universe go." But through Christ alone can one learn to define God in terms of fatherhood. In Christ alone can one learn that the earth life is a disciplinary process?a curriculum of narental love?its defects, its catastrophes, its pains, its mystery, its perpetual sacrifice. all energies under the control of infinite beneficences and compelled to achieve its purposes, for He, the best beloved of the Father, had a path of tears which ended at the cross, but from the cross He shed a light upon a oath by which men find their way to the heart of God. From Him we learn that God holds this poor stricken world in the embrace of an inexhaustible sympathy and that He purposes to crown the frcmentary life of men with a divine completeness and symmetry. Christ is daily translated into the terms of our moral life and expressed in the forms of our human experience. There nn enminarv nf theolovv like that on Calvary. "Let not your heart be troubled." Your mind may be, but your mind will never bring you into touch with God. If we feel after God we will find Him. If we think f after God we will lose Him. The relat tionship between God and ourselves is a j tie of love, and true love i6 not the offspring of logic. The link between God and ourselves is that between father and child, and the mystery of parentship and sonship evades speech and is measured on'v bv-experience. "Let not your heart be troubled." It be ofttimes saddened. It may be spent with strain, wearied with toil, broken with grief?but let it not be palsied with melancholy. Let your life be as the stormvexed ocean, whose surface the tempest lashes into fury, while calm eternal and unruffled abides in the unfathomable depths. "Let not your heart be troubled." Others may be the heirs of unrest, who with their back to the source of light look out only upon the ever lengthening track of their own shadow. They travel the way of life unattended. Thev carry the burden of life unhelned. They toil at the work of life unaided. They stand on the brink unfriended. A brood of troubles nests within such hearts. But for vou, believing in God as your ! ?j _ r>i ;_i. c ; ' ratner, auu m o? vuui ontiuut, im is as a journey home. A few more days of ; mingled cloud and sunshine; a few more ! wondrous passings of winter into spring: a few more hard endeavors in the seed | plot of mortal soil; a few more hot strokes uoon the field of earthly battle?then the flight of all shadows, and the blessed vision of. the face of God. v Religion at Home. The religion of Christ is intensely practical. It is intended to be manifested in our home life, just as faithfully as at crnirch. This is why we can generally obtain a true conception of the soundness of a man's faith by spending a few d*ys in his own home. Manv a man has a reputation for piety, when his home life will not bear close inspection. It is in u_e hum-drum duties of home that we are tried. The way we meet the everyday worries is a better test of our religion than the way we behave in church. It is comparatively easy to be sweet-tempered when we have nothing to vex us, but to keep our , faces bright and our hearts light amid the uninspiring labors of weekday life we need to have the spirit of God dwelling in our hearts. Such living i6 possible. Not only is it possible, but it is necessary for us if we would live up to our responsibilities. Our Lord expects us to be true to Him in our homes, as well as in church, and we are not fulfilling His commands when we fail to live every hour of every day in accordance with the high standard He has set before us. It is an inspiring thought that we can take Him with us into the humblest daily duties. The busy housewife, as she goes about her task, making a home bright for those dear to her. is serving the Master just as truly and just as faithfully as the preacher in the pulpit. Let us encourage our hearts with the thought that He graciously accepts every offering of faithful service of home as well as at church.?George D. Gelv.icks. Duty Above Life. Life is a matter of very small account to anyone in comparison with dnty doing, whether a man realizes this truth or not. i Whatever is worth living for is worth dying for, if "dying be an incident to its 1 pursuing. When the Koman General, 1 Pomnev, was warned against the danger ; of his returning from iwpt to Italy, to c meet a new trouble in his own land, his herioc answer was: "It is a small matter that I should move forward and die. It is ' too great a matter that I should take one ' sten backward nnd lire/' Life ig never r well used when it is held dearer than ' dutv. He who would tell a lie in order | to live is willing to pav a great deal ' larger price for his life then that life is ' worth to himself?or to others.?H. C. Trumbull. ? Transfigured Beauty. ? Let our temper be under the rule of ; the love of Jesus. He cannot alone curb " it?He can make us gentle and patient. 1 Let the vow, that not an unkind word to 1 others shall ever be heard from our lips, be laid trustingly at His feet.. Let the gen-> ; t!en?Ss that refuses to take offense, that J is always ready to excuse, to think and hope the best, mark our intercourse with s all. Let our life be one of self-sacrifice, r always studying the welfare of others, finding our highest joy in blessing others. ? By His grace the most commonplace life r can be transfigured with the brightness of S ? k/i,vnnlo liMiitv no the infinite love of Ct UV-aT Wiuj vj I ?*w e a divine nature shines out through our ? frail humanity. ' A Core For Trouble. 0 g There is no better wav of forgetting one's troubles than by attempting to reB lieve some one else who is in trouble r The more one thinks of his own troubles. e the more poweT over him those troubles gain. When he is turned- away for a time l8 from himself in the effort*to help another. personal trouble may perish from lack of n attention and sustenance. However hard e our own case may be, there is some one e near us whose case is harder. In minis e tering to him, or in trying to give him comie fort, we are likely to lighten his burden le and our own.?Sunday-School Times. 'r How to Gain Strength. as Power is gained rather by the effori :o to give to others than tiy the effort tc ir get from others. Of the supremest beinf >f who was ever on earth it was said thai id He came not to be ministered unto, bul it' to minister; not to be served, but t( a serve. Wnoever has the SDint of Christ t- gains strength in giving strength to others JUDGE LEWIS DEAD. Ex-Justice of Georgia Supreme Court and Man Who First Nominated Bryan for the Presidency. Judge Hal T. Lewis died at his home In Greensboro, Ga., Thursday .morning after a long illness. For several months past he has been confined to his room on account of ill health. Judge Lewis was the son of Col and Mrs. Mills W. Lewis, of Siloam, Green county, Georgia. He was educated in the common schools of the county, and was later sent to Emory College, where he graduated in 1870 with honors. Shortly after leaving college he studied law, was admitted to the bar and removed to Atlanta, where he opened a law office. Later he formed a partnership with Edgar H. Orr, who is now justice of the peace there. He was also assistant state school commissioner under Commissioner Orr. Before practicing law, however, he taught school at Clinton, in Jones county, for two years. . \ After remaining in Atlanta for several years he moved back to Greensboro, where he practiced law until he was appointed associate justice of the supreme court. In 1896 he was elected as a delegate to the national democratic convention from the state at large. He sprang into national fame at 'the Chicago convention by nominating William J. Bryan for the presidency of the United States. His speech caused a great scene in the auditorium, and there was a stampede for Bryan. In 1897, when Judge Spencer R. Atkinson retired from the supreme court, Governor W: Y. Atkinson appointed Judee Lewis to succeed him. He was later elected for the regular term of six years without opposition. In 18S0 Judge Lewis married Miss Hallie Poulain, of Green county. Three children survive Judge Lewis, two sons and one daughter. Judge Lewis resigned from the supreme court last October a year ago on account of failing health. "LILY WHITES" SCORED. | Sub-Committee of National Afro. American Council Takes Action. I The sub-committee of the National Afro-American Council, at a meeting in Washington Thursday, decided to hold the next meeting of the council at St Louis, September 4, 1904, and appointed a committee of five to appear before the platform committee of the next national republican convention to urge that it take vigorous action in reference to the practical denial in a number of states of suffrage to the negro. The following resolutions were adopted: "We are opposed to the unrepublican principle of drawing the color line in the republican party, which has been inaugurated in certain states to the detriment of the party and the in jury or some or tne most uncumprjmislng supporters of its policy in the past, and we believe that the proposed reduction of representation in the na- { tional republican convention would be an injustice which the party should not perpetrate. "We take this opportunity to express our gratitude to the president for daring at all times to stand up for impartial justice and the manhood rights guaranteed by the constitution and the laws based thereon. We have never asked special consideration in r^y matter affecting the common rights of citizens, and sincerely believe that he has not sought to give us such. He has treated us just like other citizens; we have never asked for more and will not be satisfied with less." A resolution was adopted requesting the senate to confirm the nomination of Dr. Crum as collector of the port of j Charleston^ S. C. | SAFE-CRACKERS ARE IDENTIFIED. Two Muchly-Wanted Men are in Clutohes of Law at Mobile. ' " a t>_j it .11.. rt...... Ai uwri JLfi iouuu, iumo jjuulclu, ouu J. R Russell, alias Clark, were identified at Mfbile, Ala., Thursday morning by Captain Taylor, of the Montgomery police force, as the men who blew the safes of the opera house and E. E. Forbes' music store in that city. Telegrams from all over the country are pouring into the office of the chief of police asking for descriptions of the men and the goods that were found on them. CIVIL SERVICE CONVENTION. Daniel C. Gilman is Reflected as President of Association. The twenty-third annual meeting of the National Civil Service Reform Association in session at Baltimore, Friday, re-elected Daniel C. Gilman president The following vice presidents were j elected: Charles Francis Adams, Am bassador Joseph H. Choatt, ex-President Grover Cleveland, Charles W. Eliot, Harry A. Garfield, Arthur T. Hadley, Henry Charles Lea, Seth Low, Franklin MacVeach, George A. Pope, Bishop Henry C. Potter and Archbishop P. J. Ryan. BLIZZARD HELD FULL SWAY. 1 Middle West Experiences Heavy Snow fall and Great Drop in Temperature. ' A blizzard following the line of the ! MisflissiDoi riven, extending as far j west as Nebraska and creeping over ; [ the lake region, held full sway Satur>; day night. From all over the middle ; I west reports tell of heavy snowfall, >' delayed trains and abnormal drops m 1 temperature. .. "* ' *' ; ' - w ADMIRAL 1 E Pe-ru-na Drug Co., Gentlemen: "I has taken Pe-ru-m W. S. SCHLEY.--? Admiral schley, one most notable heroes of tl Century. A name that starts ten of every Spaniard. Amanofstea head, undaunted courage and pr< ? ? ? r ' J Approached by a inena reuc ion was asked as to the efficac the national catarrh remedy, slightest hesitation he gave th endorsement. It appeared or sation that Peruna has been u< ily, where it is a favorite remei Such endorsements serve t< wonderful hold that Peruna j minds of the American people the question that so great and as Admiral Schley could have son for giving his endorsemei than his positive conviction tl is all that he says it is. The fact is that Peruna has cr Ask Your Druggis Money Invested In Printing. The average capital of those engaged in the printing business is $12,574; the average value of their products is $14,569. These figures compared with j those of a previous decade show that j in a period of ten years an increased ! capital is required to produce the same or even a smaller value of products; this is largely caused by an increase in wages and a decrease in working hours. In 1850 a compositor j in New York received $9 per week; i ordinary job compositors now receive ; $19.50 per week, and operators on j machines from $24 to $27, depending on the time of day or night they take their shift. In the opinion of many large operators, the number of wage earners has actually increased, rather than diminished. The introduction of machine composition has?been of decided benefit to the employe, offering a new field for endeavor. There are few unemployed men in the printing trade, as is shown by the fact that when in 1900 the Typographical Union was called upon to supply 150 men for a special job of city printing, only 100 | could be obtained, and these with difficulty.?JFYom Scientific American's Special Number on "Modern- Aids to Printing." , , WHY.8 "Lillian is no$ sure that she loves Walter. Sometimes Bhe thinks she does, and at other times she's convinced she doesn't" ' And yet she is going to marry him?" . "Oh, yes?-that's all settled." "But if she is not sure she loves him why doesn't she break the engagement?" j "Because she is twenty-seven."? Long Hair\, " About a year ago my hair was 8 coming out very fait, so I bought a bottle of Aver's Hair Vigor. It stopped the falling and made mv hair grow veiy 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 hairneeds food, needs nair vigor?Ayers. This is why we say that Ayer's H^ir Vigor always restores color, and makes the hair grow long and heavy. n.?s?Mtk. Aiidnaw*. !If your druggist cannot supply yon, tend us one dollar and we will express I yon a bottle. Be snre and rive the name E of your nearest express office. Address, I J. C. AYER CO., Lowell, Mass. | The flavor of TOBACCoiin"?e of stable and rank < J U1 CVI UJ ?MW ?. ? ^ - ? organic manures. Potash in the form of sulphate produces an 1 | improved flavor and a good yield. Tobacco must have Potash. Our little book. ''Tobacco Culture," eon- i tains much valuable information, and every i tobacco grower can obtain a copy free of : charce by writing for it. GERMAN KALI WORKS i New York?98 Mtmn Street, or 1 , Atlanta, Go.-22tf So. Brood St. SCHLEY INDORSES. , Columbus, Ohio: can cheerfully saj a, and I believe tr Washington, D. C. : of the fore- position and ha le Nineteenth the people. T or in the heart many people h; idy nerve,clear ments to any r -? *- J ?- ? ? a n /Inn ompi UCU1MUI1. IUUC ?anu a uv-ji ntly, his opin- thousands of pe :y of Peruna, for Peruna wh Without the consented to si is remedy his .Never befor* i later conver- it happened thz 5ed in his fam- and internation dy. ing to give un o indicate the ments to a pro has upon the of advertising < .. It is out of a result. Peru famous a man Peruna cures c any other rea- location in the nt to Peruna receives so mai lat the remedy ments. .Address The mrcome all op- lumbus, Ohio, t for free Pe-ru-na ? A KITTLE NIGH. "Is he parsimonious?" "Well," wa3 the guarded reply, "you miglit say tnai ne carries ...? money in a purse that shuts a good deal easier than it opens."?Chicago Post rnrr stuarts rllCUCINand BUCHU 4 To all who suffer, or to the friends of those who suffer with Kidney, Liver, Heart, Bladder or Blood Disease, a sample bottle of Stuart's Gin and Buchu, the great southern Kidney and Liver Medicine, will be sent absolutely free of cost. Mention this paper. . Address STUART DRUG M'FG CO., 28.Wall 8t., Atlanta. Ga. CAPUD1NE | | n 0" R removes the cauee, 0 ZII If 0" soothes the nerves and V W\mm w relieves the aches and colds and orippe ?~t]i headaches and Neuralgia also. No bad effects, loc, 20c and ooc bottles. (Liquid.) RlpansTaboles are the best dyspepsia medidne ever made. hundred millions of them have been ; sold in the United i States In a single year. Every Illness i arising from a disordered stomach Is | relieved or cured by their use. So | common Is It that diseases originate from the stomach it may be safely as; serted there Is no condition of ill j health that will not be benefited or , cured by the occasional use of Rlpana I Tabules. Physicians know them and | speak highly of them. All druggists sell them. The five-cent package is enough for an ordinary occasion, and j the Family Bottle, sixty cents, contains j a household supply for a year. One f generally gives relief within twenty I minutes. This is What Yon Want! Have Too Any Malarial Troubles ? Do yon want to get veU sod get veil Quid ? If so, send ? PostoQce order for fifty cents to the REGAL MEDICINE 00.,of Stanford, Cow., for medicine and directions. A quick and certain core guaranteed in all cases of malaria, chills and fever,dumb ague ana miennmeus ioci. S) BEST FOI GUARANTEED CURB for all bowel troal blood, wind on the stomach, bloated boweli palna after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin regularly you are sick. Constipation kills n starts chronic ailments and long rears of sui C A8CARETS today, for you will never get right Take our advice, start with Cascar money refunded. The genuine tablet stair booklet free. Address Sterling Remedy Cor UArdlUUIR VAdCLIIVk (put up ix collapsible tubes) a substitute forand superior to mustard or any other plaster, and will not blister the most delicate skin. The pain-allaying and curat! vequalitiesof thisartlcleare wonderful. It will stop the toothache at once, and relieve headache and sciatica. We recommend it as the best and safest external connter-irritantknowc,al80 asanexternal remedy for pains in the chest and stomach andallrheumatic.neuralgricandgontycomplaints. a trial will prove.wbat we claim forit, and it will be found to be invaluable in the household.Manypeoplesay"itistbe best of all of your preparations. Price 15 ets.. at all druggists or other dealers, or by sendiiigthisamounttouslnpostaee stamps wewilfsendyouatubebyniaiL No article should be accepted by the public unless the pamecarriesourlabel.asotherwiseitisnot genuine. chesebrouoh jhpg. co., 17 State Street. New Vor* Citt., - .in 1 i?r Give the name of this paper when writing to advertisers?(At51-'03.) B in time Sold by druggists. ( qjp-i-ifi-riffrtiMwqi PE=RU=NA. | r that Mrs. Schley -|jj rith good effect." | s won its way to the hearts of he natural timidity which so ive felt about giving endorseemedy is giving way. Gratire to help others has inspired :ople to give public testimonials || - L .../miI/4 nftf Koirfk LO ncrciuiuic vvuuiu uut uutv jch publicity. i in the annals of medicine has it so many men of national M ial reputation have been will- Jin qualified and public endorseprietary remedy. No amount :ould have accomplished such tna has won on its own merits. atarrh of whatever phase or .*||| human body. That is why it ay notable and unique endorse- | ; Peruna Drug M'i'g Co., Cofor free literature on catarrh. M Almanac for 1904. |j mmmm A Boston physician's 1 ; ^ covery which cleanses and heals all inflammation of the mucous membrane wherever located. In local treatment of female ills Paxtine is invaluable. Used as a douche It : M is a revelation in cleansing and healing power; it kills all disease germs which vcause inflammation and discharges. Thousands of letters from women - J {irove that it is the greatest core for r-aaB eucorrhoea ever discovered. Paxtine never fails to cure pelvic catarrh, nasal catarrh, sore throat, sore \|| mouth and sore eyes, because these diseases are all caused by inflammation * /Jj| of the mucous membrane. For cleansing, whitening and preserving the teeth we challenge the ? f||fl world to produce its equal. 3aH Physicians and specialists everywhere prescribe and endorse Paxtine, and tfcocsandsoftestimoniallettersproveits value. a ? nr cent rmstnaid eo CtS. rtk UlUggtoio, v. 1 x J- ? 7 A large trial package and book of I instructions absolutely free. Write I The R. Phxton Co., Dept. 26 Boston, Mwj |gj gpropsyi Jjqfcfc). y Removes all swelling ia 8 tote ^ / days; effects a permanent cone A , in jo to 6o days. Trial treatment ->^1 /M^ wiwn free. Ndthintrcan befhfrer ?? Write Or. H. H. Green's Sons. ^ '^*r Specialists, Box B A!ia*ta.?fc J U/F nFFFDFre,k PackedOraits II LUf iLllt'-TS PER 80Xt0.b. v,a| at Kisslmmee from now until December 90th. Cash with order. ' v-'Wl WANTED?30,000 pounds Dressed Cat-fish . . gl dally. Correspondence solicited. figa We pay the Highest Cash Price for Otter Furs, Raccoon Skins and Alligator Hides. --VtI Ship us your furs. W. B. flAKINSON CO., USS JMM2, FUL | 4,000.000 PEACH TREES |i TENNESSEE WHOLESALE NURSERIES. .,:||| J one Hud* a Specialty. >5? J*o areata trmreled but sell direct to planters, as V .ill dlaeaeee and true to auw. Write for camlegue. 53 and prleea before pladn* your order* eledwhere. :r^2 We gnaraatee oar Stoek to pe true to nemo. Largest peeoh nnreery in the world. Addreea, . *e U.C.HALE. WINCHESTER. TENN. [THE BOWELS ^ | VcATHARTM :||| jles, appendicitis. bilioosnees, ted breath, bad 4 i, foal month, hekdache, indigestion, pimples, and dlxxinee*. When year bowcU don't mora lore people than all other dJseaeee together. It ffering. No matter what ails you, atart taking well and atav well until you get your bowel* eta today under ateolute guarantee to core or iped C C C. Nerer sold in bulk. Sample and Malsby & Co. jg 41 South Forsjth St, Atlanta, Gf. Portable and Stationary Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills AND ALL KINDS OF MACHINERY Complete line carried in stock for IMMEDIA TE shipment. Best Machinery, Lowest Prices and Best Terms Write us for catalogue, prices, etc., before buying. ' 'ji ^?^Thompwo't Eyi Wafer |