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i Odes and Ends. < Education is unquestionably one of I the great factors in our civilization. I It makes men and women more indus- . trious, more reliable, more honest, | more thrifty, and in every respect bet- i ^ ter citizens.?Alexander Mclver. Educational progress means religious , good; it inculcates a love 01 truth that ; is not to be limited. The hope of the | state is not in the cities or the big I towns. The hope of the greatest future j is dawning in ;he rural districts?J. B. j Carlyle. I J Anglo-Saxcn Ornaments. ' Some interesting Anelo-Saxon ornament found on the skeleton of a vtoman dug up in a garden have just been presented to the Saffron WaUIen Museum, says the London Express. " They include richly ornamented anklets and wristlets and a necklet. The latter is composed of one pair of spherical rock crystal beads?considered in the early Saxon times by the wearer as great charms?a pair of glasa beads, a pair of elongated beads in red carmelion stone, a pair of chased ancient silver beads, a pair of bronze pendants ornamented with Saxon chasing and fllgree work, and a plain Bronze pennant w?u mm upcuings. as though it had contained choice stones. A David Harum Trade. There is a citizen in New York who decided to treat himself to a horse and runabout. In every case he insisted upon knowing the attitude of ! the prospective purchase in relation 1 to automobiles. "I don't want my neck broken daily," be would say. I There was a horse that suited him. ; "I can warrant him on the automobile 1 question," said the Jersey farmer who owned him. "I will guarantee that , he will pass a dozen an hour all day long and never look at one of them." ! "Will you give me a w-ritten state ment to that e?Tcct?" "I will." "The sale was made. For once a Jersey man had ioid the truth in a j horse trade. The horse was blind. Ought to Take Warning. Fond mother?Now, look here, George! I want you to break of? with ! that girl. She is very pretty and all that, but I krow her tco well to want you to risk your life and happiness by marrying her. Why, she knows no more about housekeeping than I do ! about Greek?not a bit." George?Perhaps not, but she can : learn. Mother?After marriage Is rather late for that, George. George?But you Eaid vourself that you did not know a thii ? ?bout housekeeping until after you were married. Mother?Very true, George?and your poor father died of dyspepsia j twenty years ago.?Stray Stories. Origin of Ham and Eggs. When Noah had all the birds cor* ! railed in the ark, Shem, Ham and j Japhet, his three sons, made some famous collections of birds' eggs till K ah found out what they were doing by catching Ham robbing the great i auk's nest. It was shortly after this i that Vn?h made his famous bon mot about Ham and Eggs, the exact wording of which escapes us, but which was often recounted at the old settlers' dinners in the vicinity of Mount Ararat.?Minneapolis Journal. * We may boa3t of our history, we , may refer with pleasure to the blue blood that courses through our veins, ! but we will soon lose our standing .'n the sisterhood of states if we do not a better and more adequate pro- I vision for the education of our offspring. It is rumored that the Paulding County Cotton Manufacturing Co., of Dallas, Ga., will build an additional mill. It now has a plant of 3100 spin- j dies, using steampower and manufac- j turing yarns. Capitalization is $100,- I 000. 1 I rw. I! ^"Mywifehad a deep-seated cough | for three years. 1 purchased two | bottles of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, 0 large size, and it cured her completely." J. H. Burge, Macon, Col. | Probably you knew of cough medicines that relieve little coughs, all 1 coughs, except deep ones I The medicine that has been curing the worst of I . deep cc'jghs for sixty 1 years is Ayer's Cherry 1 Pectoral. Tim s!:m: 25c.. 5Cc., SI. AlldraRtsts. 5 ^onlult yoi - ?ioc!or TfToTryTTak^!T ra thea do a* h> sayi. It be tollr you not U I | to take It. th<n don't take it. Ho kuows. H , y Ciave It with him. We are willing. M J.C. AYES CO., Lowell. Mass. 9 I Imp?11 111 - Hi I mil I i'- j Cendoe stam??'l C C C. Never sold ic buk. Beware of il e derler who tries to sell j 'scaietfciag just as good." "WaIWEITI a SO TT<. - zyzs "2/E^.n At once to qua1. .. < ?! lone wh?0? a* will guarau>* ?ii ? .ln? . nlor a $5,GOO , deposit to promptly taoou. .fcom. The Ga.'Aia. Bus. College, : MAC.'ON, GEOHOIA. A SERMON FOR SUNDAY AN ELOQUENT DISCOURSE ENTITLED "A THREE-FOLD CORD." The TJev. 7>r.-7. Wilbur Clnnmnn Point* Out Why Kvets Seemingly Unfortunate Mortals Have Uettor Keaaons For TliunL.f-lvIr" Tlmn For FauItfiu<?i"ST. New York City.?The Rev. Dr. J. Wilbur Cliapir.au lias furnished 10 the press a most striking and popular sermon which is intended tor all those who would rise to better things. It is entitled "A Three-Fold Cord." and was preached from the text, "A three-fold cord is not quickly broken." Ecclesiastes 4: 12. Did you ever stop to think how many things you have in your ine for which vou ought to be grateful to God? Doubtless some of my readers may pause and say "I have vcrv littie for which I need to be thankful.'' and then, as a matter of fact, > we have had more of joy than of sorrow, 1 more days of sunshine than of storm, and if we were hoaest we should be obliged to say that there is more reason for taanksgi ing than faultfinding. n old friend of mine, blind from his bir. l. told nie that he had never seen the sun rise and had never looked upon his son's face, and then he said to me. "Have ' you ever thanked God for your eye sight," and I never had up to that time. Jn thg city of Hartford, going through an insane hospital with the attending physician, 1 stopped with him at the door of a room where a youpg girl frantically said. "Doc tor, I must have a Dream or iresn air, ior I am being consumed with an inward fire." The doctor gently closed the door and said. "This has been her mania for a year." and then we entered a room where in close confinement was kept a man who was reckoned one of the most brilliant journalists in the city, who said, "These wal's are coming rtearer together, and the | floor and ceiling are every dav approaching ( each other, and mv enemies have kept me here until my life :: :a I: crushed out." I uoubt ret but thai he suffered as much as if it we.e an honest fact. I turned auav from the hospital with a heavy heart, but I condemned, too. because up to that time I I bml never thanked God for my reason. There are so many things for which we ought to be grateful, but most of all to my mind there is cause for gratitude in the way (Jod has sought for the lost world ever < since men have begun to wander from Him. A-'am no sooner sins than God sreks ; him In the garden and cries out. "Where art thou?" God will not unlock the foun- i <airs o" the d-en and bring the flood until : lie senri" Noah fi*. ICO years as the preach- ] er of righteousness to warn the people, nor will He let Sodom be destroved until the angel visitors take hold of Lot and drag him forth from the ciiv, and also strive in every way to bring t;,e inhabitants forth to a place o? safety. Every representative of a father in the Old Testament is a picture of Go k .Tt"cab's concern for his children: ]). ' !(). who sto*).s and eric-n "Oh. Abs.Wn." ,-\re hut hints as to God's concern for His own lo.-t clrldren. and H<> is i in every way seeking thnn and calling upon them to return. In the Old Testament He gives the law that they may be- ! hold His oreccpts written upon tab'e? of stone, and when men will not heed His written word He opens the windows of heaven and with an angel choir sends H:s only Son and locates the place of His birth by the star of Bethlehem, and leads the | shepherds to edo-e Him with sounds of angels' music, and this Son of God. Jesus of Nazareth, went up and down the land teaching and preaching, but most of all living in order that men might one day through Him come back to the Father. When the world became so skilled in wickedness that they would not have Him live in their presence because their lives were a condemnation in themselves He made His way to Lai vary and died upon the cross, the just for the unjust, that He might bring us to God, and when He had been crucified, placed in the tomb and had risen He dwelt with them at Jerusalem until they should bo endowed with power from on high. They kept His commands, and when the fulness of time had come with a rushing sound as of a mighty wind the Holy Ghost came upon them. They were immediately chanced men; they began to speak with other tongues as the Spirit gave them utterance. From that day to this the Holy Ghost has Veen in the world, and so that half the trinity of God has been all but repelled in the interests of sinful man. The God of law. the God of grace, the God of power. This three-fold vision we have had of the Divine One and in every disposition He is seeking. This is a most solemn subject, because we are living in the dispensation of the Holy Ghost, the last cord as it were of the trinity. When the Oetire went down on the English coast, one boy, Stewart Holland, by name, became a hero because while the passengers were frantic and the other seamen and officers were otherwise engaged he broke into the powder magazine and a:&in and again tired off the ship's cannon that he might arouse the life savers and let them know of the perilous condition of the ship and her crew. It would seem to me that this is the time when those who preach the gospel ought simply to stand and cry aloud, "Flee from the wrath to come, flee from the wrath to come," because we are in the dispensation of the Holy Ghost. I. This is a solemn subject because of the peculiar kind of sin which may drive away God's spirit. In the Old Testament the sin of the people was largely idolatry. They would not have God rule over them, and so they bowed down to gods of wood and stone. That is not our particular trouble to-day. In the New Testament envy and jealousy hounded Christ to the cross; men feared Him and because thc.v were jealous of Him they hated Him, but that is not our special sin to-day. The sin of this present day seems to be indifference, and it is a dangerous sin because it will drive from our presence the Holy One of God who pleads and waits for us to turn. Every time one says no td Christ he is in danger of saying it for the last time, and every time he says no he but hardens his heart the more, until at last the very pleadings of God Himself become of no effect. In the days when the plague swept over London and funeral processions by the scare wended their wav to the grave, and there was scarcely a home that was not touched with death, ministers, indeed, preached as dying men to dying men, they cried aloud and spared not. Old time seemed to say to them. "Strike now," and the angel death seemed to say "if you do not strike I will." These demands to-uay are almost as serious. Men's hearts are beeomirg hardened, their wills more and more stubborn. It is the time to cry aloud with no uncertain tone. II. A three-fold cord is not quickly broken, but there is one way to break it easily; untwist the cord and break the strands senarate?y. and if you are bound as a prisoner you can easily no free. The representative of the Godhead in the wor'd to-day is t'ne Hoiv Ghost. We may sin against God, the Father, and there is forjrivcrv'.s.?. A father in the South sent his son \orlh to college, and when ho graduated lie came ba?k not only with his diploma, but with the habit of intemperance so fastened uoon him that he disgraced his father's name and broke his mother's heart, and still his father loved him. Mattors went from bad to worse until one day thov met 011 the street, and when the son made a request of the father which was not granted he struck him in the face. The o'd frtber staggered, then stmned into Ms cmvan-' drove homo. He made his j v.-pv out to the family burying ground and foil down upon his krees and shrieked . ;a;n and again, and when the son came back ho said to him. You have disgraced wc aui broken my heart and I have loved I tou; new yon n-.u~t ~o awav. and he j turned and walked from his father's house j an outcast. A Iranian father can do this; j God has not yet done it. We may fin J against Him, but Hp will forgive V.?, and j we may sin against tlie So.i of Man and ] lie has ].ro:ni-rd forglvenc*:*. llna1 men fan do it :< something i cannot understand. J One of the members of my dr.:roll told i me that lie had constructed r.ianv of the j large manufacturing buildings in Ireland, j but one day tie saw that one building was out of line and stepping back lie called to the workmen who were working on a scaffolding to step aside that he might see where the difficulty was. One man lost his balance and started to fall, and said my friend, a man standing by my side, a workman, ran with outstretched arms and caught him. He broke his fall so that he was scarcely injured at all. but his own arms were driven into their sockets a"d his back was t.wisted out of shape. He never recovered, and was ever after that an obiect of pity as he made Irs way along the streets. The man who had been saved gave half of all he had to the man who had saved him. His wages were always divided with the one who suffered for him. and we understand this as being right and true, but when Christ suffers for rs we do naurht but reject Him. yet in the face of all this rejection God says, "I will forgive you," but if we sin aTainst the Hole Ghost there is no hone. V,"e may snap the two cords in the trinity, but when we snap the third by indifference and sin it is a dangerous thing. In the days of the flood on the O.Vo River at that point in the river where three bridges one after another spaa the river, when frequently men and women are seen drifting upon rafts and striving frantically to be saved, ropes are let down from these bridges in order that they m :y attempt to catch them. <IL they miss the two bridges men ettfficVupon the s?CO"d bridge and shout after them as they go. There is but ore more bridre, and as a | ru:e it is xneir lasr cnance. rn u * >vi"i us. except that the statement of God's word is that, if weisirt" agains* the Holy Ghost there is no forgiveness. Our refusal may cue day be accepted. III. We are not so familiar with the Holy Ghost as with the Son of God and with lied Himself. We have learned concerning His personality, we have had visions of His power, we read stories of His work, but it ought to be remembered that every impression we have toward good in these days comes from Him. for He talks of the tilings of Christ and shows them unto us. Sometimes His seeking* have been in trouble, always in a revival. He calls sometimes by the ministry. There is a special call given to us frequently in Cod's providences; generally through our friends who arc Christians He speaks to us the things of Cod. One of my friends took a *cat in a railway train next to a man, and in his conversation learned that he had just become a Christian. He said that it was through a letter written him bv his mother. Mv friend asked to see the letter which would mean the conversion of a man. and he answered, it is not so much iu what she says, but it is the way she ' signs her name; you can see that her hand I has trembled. and when I read it I said, { if she die* no one else will ever ask me to | bo a Christian again. This is time of the Holy Ghost, ff we sin against Him thenis no hope for us. A three-fold cord is not quickly broken. 4>ut we have, as it were, sna-tped two of the strands and the third is day by day swinging just to our hands. To say no once again may be to reject liim forever. ' Self-Surrender. There will come to every manly man times in his life when he will see that there i3 something; which is legitimately his. something which he has a right to, something which nobody can blame him if he takes and enjoys to the fullest, and yet something by whose voluntary and uncotnpclled surrender he can help his fellow man and aid the work of Christ and make the world better. Then will come that man's trial. If he fails and cannot make the sacrifice, nobody will blame him; he will simply sink into the great multitude of honorable, respectable, selfindulgent people who take the comfortable things which even-body says they are entitled to, and live their easy life without a auestion. But if he is of better stuff, ana makes the renunciation of comfort for a higher work, then he goes up and stands humbly, but really, with Jesus Christ. He j enters into the other range, that other sort I - * - v ir 1 tj? I oi lite wnero .icsus i^nrist uvru. .m.- ib i perfectly satisfied with that higher life, j He does not envy, he does not grudge, the [ self-indulgent lives which he has left be- j hind. He does not count un what he has : lost; he docs not asl: whether he is hap Eier or less hmpy than he would ha\e ; een if he had kept what everybody said ; he had a right to keep. It is not a ques- ! tion of hanpinesj with him at all, but prat!- j ually, without his seeking it. ho finds that | the soul of the happiness which lie has ' left behind him is in him - till. Take foun- j tains of sweet water in the sea it rises un I and keeps him a living soul. He Ins left j the world's pleasures and its privileges j only to d'-'aW nearer to its necessities, j which arc its real life. So what he gave i he keeps a thousand fold in this present , time, and eternity is still before him. in j the end everlasting life.?Phillips Brooks, j Sermons the Preacher's Deepest Thoughts "Almost no preacher to-day dwells ex- j elusively upon sin, salvr ion and the re- j lation of Christ to the sinner," says the I Congregationalist, of Boston and Chicago, j "Important a*; these themes are, other as- j pects of the mission of Christ in the world and of the purpose of Christianity arc i being brought to the front. We regard 1 this as extremely desirable. Preaching is i something more than the reiteration of j traditional truths in conventional eccle.v- . astieal language. A sermon is the embodi- ' ment of a man's deepest and most real thought, phrased in words which every- j body can understand and addressed to tiie j real needs of real people. Jesus Christ was j a popular preacher. He employed parables i and talked aliout the lilies and the clouds, j the barrel of meal and the play of little < children, and weighed carefully all His i words with a view to making the truth j which filled and flooded His own soul I plain, winsome and powerful in the eyes cf 1 others." God's Merer. The more we fear crosses the more reason we have to think that we need then. Let us not be discouraged when the hand of God laveth heavy v.oes upon us. We x. i..j? _r .1:. output u> juu?i* ui uitr \ luxciia* ui u?u umease by the violence of the remedies which our spiritual physician prescribes for us. It is a great argument for our own wretchedness and of God's mercy that, notwithstanding the difficulty of our recovery He vouchsafes to undertake our cure. Let us. then, draw from our afflictions a source of love, of comfort and trust in God. saying with His apostle: "Our light affliction, which is but for a moment, worketh for us ? far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory." "Blessed are thev that mourn, and sow in tears, because they shall reap with joy the harvest of eternal glory."? Fenelon. I Mother. God {jive us but one mother. Remember. ?-he ha3 borne for you that which no other human being has or can. Remember that in the natural course of events the grave will in a few years, at most, close over her. leaving you behind. K cm ember that, when she is gone, you will think of her faults and her failings with pitiful tenderness, and want to cover them from all hu- ; man eyes. And remember, also, that the ' locpest sting which sorrow has for us is hidden in those sou1 harrowing words, "if 1' only had!" or "had not!" It would be : blessed to live, no matter what the provo- J cation, so that, standing beside j>tT open grave those words could have^BTsting for ' us.?Mrs. G. R. Alden ^ \ \ , i. \ Importance of Education. There arc some subjects about which one can never write o. talk too much. Their importance and value to the public are so gnat that it becomes the duty of the press to keep eternally publishing something about them until their real importance and value are fully realized. No subject is of greater importance to the people than that of education. We may have splendid railroad facilities but while every man appreciates conveniences cf this kind and fully recognizes the worth of a good railroad system no one will deny that a good public school system is far more important and of a greater value to any community. Intelligence is the life of any neighborhood. Fill up your section of the state with a lot of ignoramuses and you couldn't be hired to stay there, for you would he dissatisfied and unhappy. Let a stite neglect the education of her young people and she discounts her standing in the civilized world. The days of "blissful ignorance" are fast passing away. Today, America is of such great importance to the civilized world that it Is absolutely necessary for her people to be endowed with 'knowledge. A nervous, irritable mother, unfit to care for children; it rui upon herself. The trouble bet too often is due to the fact tl weakness, and she is entirely unfit that governing a child involves; it calmly. She cannot help it, as he shattered nerves caused by some with backache, headache, and all \ of nervous prostration. When a mother finds that she children, she may l>e sure that her c not do better than to take Lydia E. This medicine will build up her enable her to calmly handle a disol children will soon realize the diffei will themselves become quiet. Mrs. May Brown, ( you honor. Gratefully yours,? Mks. J How Mrs. Pinkham 14 Df.ar Mrp. Pinkham : ? I feel it goo<* you and your Vegetable Cornpoui iny tirst baby was born, and at the bi myself thought I should never live thn came regular, and when it came I su ovarian trouble. A friend of my hi Pinkham's Vegetable Compoun but now nothing eould induce me to 1> regular, and 1 feel like a new woman, ing wonun. I hope this letter will le; Vegetable Compound. Yours tn bt., ban Francisco, Cal." (March 10, 3 FREE MEDICAL A If there is anything in your special advice, write freely to 3 Mass. Her advice is free, and h ftP rtftfl FORFEIT if weoannot forthv oouuu above testimonials, which will prr fclwiP\l H' B B K ?8J^fe FOB if FACTORY LOADED || "New Rival" "L< m STP1^ ^cu are !oo*iin8 $8 P N munition, the kin || lyJ^ point your gun, H Loaded Shotgun Shells: 11 Black powder; "Leader ^ with Smokeless. Insist J}. Factory Loaded Shells ^ ALL DEALER Take Counsel With Yourself. Young men cannot estimate to^ highly the advice of parents ami friends. It affords them the benefit o! experience and is given them from sincere solicitude for their welfare. Ii should be remembered and weighed, and acted upon. But. after all. every n;an has his own individual existence: he has his own life to live, for which he alone is accountable. He should si! down and meditate by himself and make up his mind as to the course which ho wishes to pursue in this world. Having done this, he should enter upon the execution of his plans with a determination to accomplish what he undertakes, without reference to the opinions of ethers. No man is of any real account in the world un less he is something in and of himself ?Street and Smith's New York Weekly. We boast of our pu'olic institutions and we have a perfect right to feel At KII * n'n nrjfrl/io* I 1JIUUU UL uinu, UUl n C ouui.f uubJv.v^ ! our public schools. What we need is a J well organized public school syhtcm, 2 ; system so v.ell organized and managed i that the boys and girls who attend our public schools may. when they have completed the prescribed course of study, be able to at once enter a college or university.?Frederichsburg. Va. .Free Lance. Ws^Tired WMrraffiT jSlUKuiisBr often on the verge of hysterics, is ns a child's disposition and reacts ween children and their mothers lat the mother has some female , to bear the strain npon her nerves is impossible for her to do anything r condition is due to suffering ana derangement of the uterine system :inds of pain, and she is on the verge i cannot be calm and quiet with her ondition needs attention, and she canPinklmm's Vegetable Compound. system, strengthen her nerves, and iv?dient child without a scene. The encc, and seeing their mother quiet, )f Chicago, 111., says: :ah Mas. Tixrham : ? 'Honor to whom due,' and 3011 deserve both the thanks >r of the mothers of America whom 3-011 blerscd.lv helped and benefited. I have din E. Pinkham\s Vegetable C0111when I would feel run-down, nervous table, or have any of the aches and pains at few women escape, and 1 have found relieved me at once and gave me new . Several ladies, members of our Litlion, speak in the highest praise of 3-our 1c Compound, as the3' have been cured u serious female troubles. One lady, > thought she must submit to an opcrai, was cured without using anything in vorld but Lydia E.Pinkham's Vegele Compound and Sanative Wash, i have host9 of friends in Chicago, and o visit our city we would delight to do >Iat IJp.ow.v, 57 Grant Place, Chicago, I1L Helped Mrs. McKinny. ; my duty to write and let you know the id are doing. I had been sick ever since rth of my second, my doctor, as well as migh it. After that menstruation never ilfered terribly. I also had womb and isband's advised him to get Lydia E. il for me. At first I had no faith in it, j without it. Menstruation has become Your medicine is a God-send to suffered others to try Lydia E. Pinkhtn's ily, Mrs. Mildrkd McKinny. -'s Pearl 901). DVICE TO WO>IE>\ case about which you would like Irs. Piukhani. Address is Lynn, er advice is always helpful. rith produce the original letters and signatures oI ?ve tnelr absolute genuineness ia E. l'inkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mai*. gagssEggp d fare. graduates In tmslnei*. Write for Special l.\ Ket? COLLEGE*. KlobmouJ, Vi..Birmingham, aiu. SHOTGUN SHELLS *1$ sader" "Repeater" g? for reliable shotgun am- |? id that shoots where you g& buy Winchester Factory *| "New^Rival," loaded with n " and "Repeater," loaded H upon having ^Winchester 0 , and accept no others. K S KB& $HEM M m if i m?E } - -> y1 ? Our money winning books, H $ written by men who know, tell H ? Potash I They are needed by every man H # ptt wlio owns a field and a plow, ami Km 1 who desires tc get the most out H V They are /ret. Send postal card. jffl |j r.rny vv cat.i work* ^ Af $3&$&S9 SHOES S? W. L. Douglas shoes an the standard of the unrld. W. L. Doadaa road# and ?oM acre mm'a O'ocdI year Welt (Hand Kew.H Prorert) akoes In tie drat i atx months or IBO-J Mian anr other naonfartarer. Cm nnn KEWlBlJ will >rpoM to *?* who ^ I UiUUU ran rfUproTe lllla it?'?aia?t. W. L. DOUGLAS $4 SHOES CANNOT BK EXCELLED. I?t < !?. H 100 CQ1 (4 till AAA la t atilbi, l,lvO,>_J MOaMtli, ?<( ?"?"? Best l/roofed ani American tect^ers. Hegi't ! Patent Calf. Enimet, B-<x Calf, Calf. VklK'4, Coronet i Colt, Mat. Kangaroo. Fast Color Eyelet* a add. fnntinn 1 The genuine hare W. L. IXXMLAf1 camion I nam^BB(J j^co .mmpod on batten. Hhoei try mail, 2.1c. extra. It hi*. Catalog pot. W. L. DOUOLAS. BBOCKTON. MASS. R-HH'NSi For twenty years 1 hudbeen a sufferer from bronchia] troubles accompanied with a hacking cough. 1 at times suffered from extreme nervous prostration. About four years ago 1 began taking Rlpans Tubules, and since then 1 have used tliem pretty constantly. 1 rarely vnrifo nf nltflif tl'ithnlll tslrlnc m. ; 'i'abule. aud I find tliey keep my digestive orgalis (which uatnrally are ' weak) in good order, and they also allay any tendency to nervousness ; and make ine sleep. At druggists, i'he Five-Cent packet is enough for an ordinary occasion. The family bottle. 60 cents, contains a supplr for a year. Capsicum Vaseline ! Put up in Collapsible Tubes. < A Substitute for and Superior to Jlretard or anv cither plaster, and will not Winter the moat delicate skin. The pain allaying and curative' qualities of tills article a-e wonderful. It will : stop the t-; .t'ta-'ie a: once and relieve header k'e ar.d sclaiba. We recommend it a- the best and safest external counter-irritant known, also as an external remedy for pcuns in the chest and stomach andall rheumatie.nei.rnljrieandgoutyeoir.| plaints. Atrial will prove what we clafut for-K, ! and it will be found to be invaluable in the j household. Many people say "It is the best of . all your preparations.' Price 15 cents, at all druggists, or other dcali ors. or by sending this amount to us in oostago stamps we will send you a tnbe by mail. | No article should be accepted by the puMia i unle?s the same carries our label, as otherwise ; it is not genuine. CHESESROUfiU IBANUFACTl'RINS CO, 17 State Street, New York City. DROPSY 1C C/.lS* loEAHKU F2EE. Earo mrlo Dropsy and its cosh iicctiou* a r pacialty for twenty i&rswiik tlio most wonderful :ccer,z. Jlz7iCz:id.zz&zjtzzzMid cases. C2.2.!LC3XZSrS3Q?, Bit 11 Atlanta, Go. FOR MALARIA, CHILLS AND FEVER TAKE LIXIR BABES, ^AKuown all ever A merle* as the tot. ^VO est core for all malaria]dm? and as a preventive against lyphoM. Prepared br Kf.ftCZKVVSKIcfc C O. Uaichlnataa, U. C. DT Writ'- for teit'.Txniala. SCREE CATALOGUE ^ I T andinw vnrlutloa i hAmn?hhy*H foptn. raised poultry and egg*. white guinea*, pe* fowls, tur.eyr, gees". (lucks, wild and domestic Shropshire sheop, pigs, cahes. Maltese and angora cat* celglan h ire*, canary birds; best bre- d> of dogs; shepherd, rat, wall fc, p Inters, ret era. bounds, blood, coon, wolf and ia*t fox; red fox enbs H. G. 11A*0.\, V. H. Notional Stock Aseocltulun Members Aaertsau Shropshire Ass'n, Klrksrl le.Mo. mamm Holder. ( a:al<>KUf Frr??. 4.0>ffciTtJ(.f& !\0%ELTV ( OMTAW. lll.MlXGTUiV INDIA* A Wear Red Seal Shoes Catalog for Postal So. 48. &9 Best Cough byrup.^Taates Good!' CmH Lj In time. Sold by druggists. p*l