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THE LEXINGTON DISPATCH, j / " " AD^ERTISilTG RATES; 1 TERMS 0? SUBSCRIPTION. , \ _. - ~ Obituaries own ten tints che.r^?-o u> ? ^Rj VTSEEE::::::::::^! vol. xxi. Lexington, s. c.. i- dn e-sday, Vpril i, 1891. 19 J Editor and Proprietor I^B " '?^"-1*in!l l""'">11"1 "a>^",^^3B[BL>^ai H ,0DDS ^AND ENDS. [ LOVE ON A D?ATH BOX. | TEMPERANCE DEPARTMENT | Watch this space for annoucement of Bargains in CLOTHING next week at L.EPSTIN; - - .* ? % -v- o r- r -r ! OU MAIN I rtttL I , UKDER COLUMBIA HOTEL. COLUMBIA, SL O Sept. 7-tf k . -LOAN AND EXCHANGEmmmmimmi * STATE, CITY AYD COOTY DEPOSITOR I COLUMBIA, S. C. Paid up Capital $127,00 Surplus and Profits 76,00 Transacts a general banking business Careful attention given to Collections. ^ SAFZXGS DEPARTHEVT. Deposits ot $1 and upwards receivec Interest allowed at the rate ol 4 per cen jper annum, payable quarterly on the fin days of January, April, July and October ^ A C. HASKELL, President. "W. C. FISHEK. Vice President. JULIUS H. WALKEB, Cashier. June 19?lv COMMERCIAL BANK COLUMBIA, S. C. Capital Paid S100.00 Transacts a Banking and Exchange bus saess. Receives Deposits. Interest allow* -on Deposits. Safety Deposit Boxes to rei * ntc onnnrr>_ m "Wj? H. LtLES, James Ibedell, President. Cashier. Xov. 28?ly CAROLINA ^NATIONAL BANI -ATCOLUMBIA," &. C Ik STATE, CITT aa<I COl.YTY DEPOSITORY Paid up Capital $100,0 Surplus Profits 60.0 SiTI.TGS DEPARTHEYT. | Deposits of $5.W and upwards receive Interest allowed at the rate of 4 per cer kper annum. "W. A. (JJLAJtm, rreBiaeni Wilie .Tones, Cashier. December 4-!y. IMPROVED COTTON SEE! I AM NOW OFFERING 100 BUSHEI of a new variety of improved Peterk Seed for sale at $20 per bushel, or $5 p Peok. It is a Limbed Cluster, very prolifi f fruits from the ground to the top, and m tares every boll. Not likely to dry fori on stalk lise other prolific*; not liable fall out like other clusters; makes about t same turn out of lint as the well kno^ 1,11 ? Feserkai^from 33 to 40 per cent). I have three years experience with tl Cotton, and can say that I believe it to the best Cotton now in existence. I have never offered it for sale befoi And have only ICO bushels for sale. Ord . Tight away 11 you whiic mem. I am still offering my well known varie at $1.59 per bushel, price reduced on lar orders. Cash must accompany orders and freig prepaid, as the railroads will not acce Cotton Seed without prepaying the freigl The price on Improved Seed will not be: daced by taking over a peck, but will be ,ibe others if ordered in large lots. A farmer who bays a peck of the I; proved Seed, will consider himself f-.rt sate next fall. I have ne ver seen anytbi to equal it. HS. 4. PETERKIX Fort 3Iotte, S. C. rP2A2T03 A2T3 OBGAffS, For cash or on time. at the lowest po?*it prices. VC4LJEB 0 MOSES A CO., It Main 5?t , Richmond. Va Addresss: J. D. Sinitbdeal, Richmor Va., or call on E B. Roof, Lexington. S. April ICtb, 1890. Iw21 | THE RESURRECTION DAY ' SERMON BY DR. TALMAGE FOR EASTER SUNDAY. "Come, See the Place Where the Xa>rd Lay" the Text of the Discourse?A Wonderfully Graphic Word Painting of the Cast Scene of Earth. New York, March 29.?Dr. Talj flowers. Easter fiVies j A selection of music appropriate to the festival was beautifully rendered at each service. The test of the preacher's discourse was Matthew xrviii. 0, "Come, see the place where the Lord lay." Visiting any great city we are not satisfied until wo. have also looked at its cemetery. We examine all the styles of cenotaph, mausoleum, sarcophagus, crypt and sculpture. Here lies buried a statesman, yonder an orator, hen1 a nru>t nnr there an inventor in some | other place a great philanthropist.. But j with how much greater interest an t I vrith more depth of emotion we look upon our family plot in the cemetery. In the one case it is a matter of public interest, in the other it is a matter of private and heartfelt affection. But _ around the grave at which we halt this * moral'ig there are gathered all kinds <>f stupendous interest. At tills sepulcher, I have to tell you, in this sepulcher there was buried a king, a conqueror, : .in emancipator, a friend, a brother, a Christ. Monarch of the universe, but j bone of our bone, and flesh of our flesh, 1 ? . P anCI sorrow Ol our sorrow, ftU4 uvaii/ i'i our heart. "Come, seo the place where the Lord lay." Ir has for surroundings the manor in the suburbs of Jerusalem, a manor owned by a wealthy gentleman by the name of Joseph. He was one of the court of seventy who had condemned Christ, but I think he had voted in the negative, or, being a timid man. had been absent at the time of the casting of the vote. He had laid out the parterre at great expense. It was a hot climate, and I suppose there were broad branched tree3 and winding paths underneath them, while here the waters Ii rippled over the rock into a fishpool, and yonder the vines and the flowers clambered over the wall, and all around there were the beauties of kiosk arborHfcanlmrp Arter the fatieues-of-ilia. Je enjoys and wears his br&n new Alliance badge when the backward spring weather is playing the very deuce with his planting, I am wont ; to inquire whether it is a fact that: : ''The farmer is a happy man, Hit life is free from care, With rmnght to make his spirit sad t Or Make him want to swear; All d?y among the cockle-burrs f. He gayly grubs and hoes, A 3 f mAnhlfia him aii'l juuucj liuuun..j Ualess 'tis what he owes." q The large body of Laborers work? ing on the South Bound railroad seem tc b9 making rapid progress j from Columbia in the direction of t- Savannah. We will havo a depot somewhere in these ^digginV' and already some over anxious ones spend too many idle hours watching for a train. But that we are ere long to " have a railroad passing through Piatt m Springs and Bull Swamp we are as| sured. | Mr. (i. A. (Jrooctwin nas suppnea 9 j our planters with several tons of i guano at fair prices and planting is | progressing despite the unfavorable I weather. The public school taught by the ? accomplished Miss Carrie East, at i Pine Plains, closed last week. The r | Sprightly Miss Nettie Caughman i i continues her school at Senn's. Mr. \ Fritzgerald has returned and comi menced teaching near Mr. D. E. j Craft's store. Fritz is a good teacher ^ j and we wish him success. O'Brien's UO j school at Oakey Springs Academy i? J increasing in attendance. 3 I With no recent marriages?only lt- j prospects?and no mad dogs to | chronicle I conclude wishing for good | crops, and success to the railroad ^ : and the Dispatch. Festus. April 4, 1891. ,S , in er 1 Public Beads. 10, { a- I ns j to j In our last we tried to emphasize I the fact that this Southern country? vn ] ^ J j and maybe the Western, also, foi |j? j aught we know?is entirely withoui i public highways which are at al; e'T j worthy the name. We now come tc I our second point, which is that w< 'ty g'e : are not fully civilized in the mattei , ; of roads. i ^ | pt Is not an elightened nation sensaat tive to the best accommodations anc :e- [ in j conveniences for its people? Does i1 ! not always try to deport itself thai m- i . :u- j foreigners visiting it may go awaj ! with good impressions concerning it; ! progressiveness? Does it not try U | set a good example for other younge] ? ; and less experienced nations that i may spring up around it? We thinl any one with good common bors< ; sense will acknowledge an affirmative I answer to the abo\e questions. Now c. j if they be hue. where are we? say not mend it. Forever and forever it is a broken tomb. Death that day taking the side of the rniiirarv received a I * horrible cut under the an eel's spear of | flame, and must himself go down at the last?the King of Terrors disappearing i before the King of Grace. ''The Lord Ls risen." Uosaima! Hosanna! Oh. weep no more, yo::r eoniforts slain, Tho Lord is risen, he lives again. "When one of the old Christians was dr-it-iop cnld li?* qiip nil t!lO sskv th-? i ^.'*"<5 ?~ - - j letter "V," and he said. "I cannot uni derstand \vhat that is I seo against th > i sky; it is the letter 'V."' A Christian j standing beside him said, "I know what it means; that letter 'V stands for vie! tory.'" I gather up all these flowers i to-day, and I strew them over the graves of your Christian dead in the : letter "V" for "victory," "R" for j "resurrection." "T" for "triumph," j "H" for "' eaven." "The Lord is risen." ; FJosanna! HONORS AFTER DEATH. vy nue standing arouuu uie piavt; i where the Lord lay I am impressed with the fact that mortuary honors cannor i atone for wrongs to the living. If they ! could have afforded Christ such a cosv; ly sepulcher they could have afforded j him a decent earthly residence. Wili ! they give a piece of marble to the dea l j Christ when they might have given a ! soft pillow to the living Christ. If thev t had put half the expense of that mau! soleum in the making of Christ's life j on earth comfortable the story would j not have been so sad. Ho wanted j bread; they gave him a stone. Christ, uke every other benefactor of the [ world, was better appreciated after lie was dead. Westminster Abbey and menu mental Greenwood are to a certain extent the world's attempts by mortuary honors to atone for neglects : to the living. Poets' Corner in Wesr.j minster Abbey an attempt to pay for j the sufferings of Grub street. I go into j that Poets' Corner of Westminster Abj bey, and there I lind the grave of Hanj del, the musician from whoso music : we bear today as it goes down reverberating through the ages. While I i stand at the costly tomb of Handel I ' cannot forget the fact that his fellow | musicians tried to destroy him with i their discords. | I go a little farther in the Poets' CorI ner of Westminster Abbey and 1 find j the grave of John Dryden, the great j poet. Costly monument, great mortu ary honors; but i cannot forget the ; fact that at seventy years of age lie i wrote about the oppressions of mlsfort! une, and that he made a contract for a j thousand verses at sixpence a line. J j go a little farther on in the Poets' Cor-j kill time; the County Commissioners j may say, "0, its ail right, we'll have ! the roads fixed now", but allow us j to repeat that "warned labor" is i j a A aato /i/1 UUUJUCU, CLCijuaxxj j The roads themselves is prima facie evidence of the inefficiency of | the system under which they are worked. Why even a blind, deaf | and dumb man can tell that the law : is a failure if you just let him pass ! over the roads. Can't any one who is not an idiot see that this way of placing a few hoes and old worn out shovels and an old axe in the hands j of a few lazy, hard headed negroes, ! ard a few white men, who will not work because the overseer can't make ; negroes work. We say can't anvI body see that this is behind the age ' and under this rule the roads steadily j grows worse and worse? It is as j plain as the nose on a man's face and ! if we don't do away with this infer nal, no-account "worn out" system, j and that very soon, our roads will | finally fizzle clear out and we will ; have to stay at home sure enough. In our next we shall endeavor to ! give our ideas as to a change in our ! laws so that we may keep abreast of j the times. "VV. H. H. Caughmans, S. C., March 28,1890. | Queer world! Queer people! Here | are men and women by thousands 1 suffering from all sorts of diseases, I Vioarincr ?.]] manner of uain. snend , ? D , ; ing their all on physicians and "'got | ting no better, but rather worse,' i when right at hand there's a remedj ( ; which says it can help them because i it's helped thousands like them j ''Another patent-medicine advertise j ment," you say. Yes?but not of the j ordinary sorts. The medicine is Dr , Pierce's Golden Medicine Discovery, | and it's different from the ordinary nostrums in this?It does what it rr if. r.r.-ki von nothing! J UA.Cti.UaO WV - ? w j ^ ^ ? i The way is this: You pay you] " ! druggist SI.00 for a bottle. You " j read the directions, and you follow ' j them. You get better, or you don't 'l j If you do, you buy another bottle > J and perhaps another. If you don't get ' i better, ycu get your money back ' i And the queer thing is that no many | people are willing to be sick wher ' j the remedy's so near at hand, i 1 "John, think I'm becoming a bet ' ter housekeeper every day." "1 an ' glad 01 that," said the gratifiec 5 ' youug husband who wasn't tiree > | just yet 01 praising- lu* uine ; I "What is your latest wonderful ac : eomplishment?" "Well I thought i ; ! all out by mvselfshe continued en I v i j thusirtstically. "When I found 3 1 i eould open the fanned tomatoes witl 1 , I the ax I used your razor, and i | worked just beautifully." count that you have no more rcMHtf titan that for their bones? gather together and straighten fence and lift the slab and mound and tear out the plant the shrubs. After a whHp?|||||^ yourself will want to lie down?|v||fe^ last slumber. If you have noBfe^^ f /-at- tlm KAnoa r\f ronr ? nr?ncf iT^^B@6SSflftSS4ct iV/1 UiV WlAVyO V4 ? VU1 ^ ? J " children will have no your bones. Do you say are of no importance? You how much importance they ?t.0C arCndPyel lah(a <5TTt~TT7B^^^|? Turn all your graveyards into gardeiH||| Standing in this place whero the L'jBp|j ! lay I am also impressed with the nity of unpretending obsequies. Jos Klip that day was mourner, sexton, li^*||||| man?had the entire charge of all?^B|| j kjka i uui umv ai j burial of the King of the Universe. I?^K| I this bo consolatory to those v Hp i tlirough small means or lack of acquaintance, have but little |||f stration of grief at the gravex'of 1 dead. It is not neceesary. Lon^d ; of glittering equipages, two rows teU^. vM vor handles, casket of costly w. pallbearers scarlet and gloved are not Bf necessary. Christ looks out from ? heaven ai a burial where there are six I in attendance, and remembers there are I i two more than he had at his obsequies. JB Not recognizing this idea, how m.?* I ! small properties are scattered in v | funeral rites, and widowhood and tv& i phanago go out to the cold charity e. | the world. The departed left enouj . y j property to have kept the family ; gether until they could take care themselves, but it is all absorbed in tlyeS j funeral rites. That went for crap.;e ;J i wliich ought to have gone for bread, . A man of small means can hardly af' I .. "P ford to die in one of our great cities.1 * i Funeral pageantry is not necessarf.^Jj No one was ever more lovingly and * tender'v put into the grave than Christ, but there were only four in the proces- ! ? : sion. j TIIK DEAD SHALL RISE AGAR*. j Again, standing in this place when? t j the Lord lay, I am impressed with the t fact that you cannot keep the dead ! 8 down. The seal of Sanhedrim, a regi- \ k I ment of soldiers from the tower of v Antonio to stand guard, floor of rock, k roof of rock, wall of rock, niche of t } rock, oo.nnot keep Christ in the crypt, y j Come out and come up he must. Came a j out and came up he did Preflgura- t i tion. The first fruits of them that h : sleep. Just as certainly as you and I t The trial of Judge Charles ijf 1 Kincaid who, while a- Washington 1 correspondent, shot and killed ex- 1 Representative Taulbpe, of Kentucky in the Capitol--btiildtng on s February 28, 1890, is going on this f week and is attracting much atten- 3 tion. The defense is self defense. Ex-Representative Grosvenor of Ohio, has taken the place of Senator Vorj hees, who is under treatment at the j Arkansas Hot Springs, as Kincaid's t ? < 1 P - - -L cliigI counsel, a ieaiure 01 me iruu was the cross examination of Sam- ( uel Donaldson of Tennessee, ex- < Doorkeeper of the House of Repre- 1 sentatives, who stated in answer to j questions which the judge directed him to answer, that he was by occupation a lobyists, and that at the time of the shooting he was working in the interest of the Western Union I Telegraph company. This publi^fl admission will not bf pleasant ne^m^ for a number of?Bffire5smen have been in the^^^^|^kun^fl|||||? with "Sam" aroun^^Bcapit^^^^l^ j ridors and restaunj^ Russell Harrison^vho ijflESPPli be mixed up in several involving questions lands, bas succeeded man, ex-Representative Carter of Montana, appointed commissioner of the general land office, to succeed Judge GrofF, who was compelled to resign because be would not change Lis opinion in order to oblige Secretary Noble. There's nothing like , being the son of the appointing power, and nobody knows any better f than Russell. A copy of the letter from Governor j Xieholls replying to 31 r. Dlaine s ex- j > cited telegram sent on the day the j Sicilians were lynched at New Orleans was sent to the Italian minis- ; ter as soon as it was received at the j department cf State. He has not j since been heard from regarding it; - j and he declines to see newspaper ! i men who have called at the legisla- ' i tion. i . i The National Association of Dem- j ocratic Clubs has sent a circular let- ! ter to Democratic clubs all-over the j . country requesting them to appro- j fa ll-ic. nnniT'fji-eovTr r\{ I ' I pjlllllC'i V tilVJ UUiJl IV.ACW.A J Vk I i | tbe birthday of Thomas Jefferson ! i Thursday, April 2d* The letter calls ! attention to tbe contrast between the : simplicity of Jefferson with the pro- I i digalitv, centralization favoritism ? * 1 | and corruption of the last Congress, ' i of which it says: '*They could go no S further for they have exhausted the j surplus in the treasury and in the , tt* ? i MI . J j ; c j .VLciULiiey Dili, raiseu prices una | taxes to the last point of endurance. | [ ; The time is especially appropriate? i i while celebrating (he great apostle of t I liberty"?to rejoice over the popular i i repudiation and the hnai adjourn-? Bumt6r77!T ? Tnion ft'^liamsburg.. i.rork From tnc above ;een that our rrom 995,577 L890, or | th An Uagftllaat Answer. j sa _ ? I ^ Speakeigp&dF, of the Kausae | ^ Bouse ofWpresentauv.s is~rioc??l;f-+-?1 i politicuHpf the new school, hut is .]uite uniBlin his method of speech. ; ve The othe^Ri^'hen he became en- j th tangled^^^fcfh of rules, he cut ! rei bimsel^^^^Bby exclaiming: | "I^SSraj^Hrules, I declare the iwHSw^Hftoliticians had much *? success of Speaker naturally expected ^ei in behalf of woman on*- rep^jwas- i ^ rocking, ladies, ! ^ to sing bass, I I to ^ffS^^Bur claim for suffrage." j ^^^^^^awoman^dled al a j^| Q?MHMr Avenue drug store the fl otr^^^^^gand asked for morphine. ! and ^^Bsrk replied to her request ; wj "Is iSb your husband?" j ?a t? T 1V o ttt,r-\'t* rrsit o-r? t? ! Wli, f CA-Lij . j ''Do ^? ?* suic^e' ' j pr "You must." m "Well, then,^^^kou thick that ^ a woman 40 had her first o?fer^4^H^^|Bs than half : hour something to quiet her a pj The af^l, and she : jlc got her j ^e ! 111' : fo] >e r" | d its v. | al< it , 10' 'e ; it iG ! s. j a ju 11 , a r- j ^ is | te .. l In Chest cil Itl 1 ' " 'S-B^'c.vc n A in w vxui>^ 1 * I kVerv small buokles- aro prefe bows on eveninq slippers. Success is the card that wins the successful fool is applaude Ic philosopher who fails is his gggar)r. Levis, tho latest owner o IBt, Bayard Taylor's old lie and the place is agr id: "I will not drink henceforth is fruit of the vine until that c ien i cirmK it new witn you in : ither's kingdom." The habit of strong drink ry strong; and some, even af ey have reformed, cannot be ach of the fiery liquid without th aole physical nature crying out In "Mabels "Works" an ineid< toid of a man who, after he I formed some time, was present communion service. Struggli: aring and trembling he was ab< touch the cup to his lips, wt abel, seeing him, came and tc e cup at the same time telling I ernlain. lie told how weak .d been and bow she had kept h Dm probably falling back. into t from which he had been some: joined bin mented w the sake iteousness i water i: manifest a then wo LYe needed a new body as well a tw heart, before he could have : oached the wine. Now, Christ >t making wine, but he is in bee/ ihtercede for us. 4ft fhy Should We Include Cic in the Pledge? We should include cider in 1 edge because it may be either holic or not. It takes twenty-f< >urs for it to ferment. Really gins to ferment in a half hour l* it is pressed, and as soon as f entation begins alcohol begins rm and it is no longer a temperi ink. Most of us have scienti formation enough to know tl ; real evil comes from i :'oholic principle formed by f entation, and yet in speaking we do not distinguish the f entecl from tne sweet. A good man may say: "We iu st been making cider, willjouh; drink?" and yet denounce the ci< unkard in the most unspari rms. While a cider maker woi ugh at the idea of its "not be: der until it was fermented," Lough he might ferment it bc-f ltting it iu the market. It died sweet by a great many pec hen it is two or three days old. lis way others have been made :rrcd to j A Chicago Driver Takes His Sweetl Out Hiding on a White Hearse. Kyc:i , Everybody on the "West Side kj rh vchi! > i Barney SuJiivan. Ho drives a h sod. I for a Madison street undertaker. K Cedar- : -ias ied more funeral procossioi |>me, lies Calvary in the past- two yearsthy liin to bo ' lay j nity will hurt businessTexcite^^^^ ny j derision in a sensible man's mind. | To a mother whose son is going to is j ruin by way of the saloon, is simply ter J atrocious." in " ? - v * . "It has been said that alcohol ap^01 I plied to a thrifty farmer's 6tomach CD j will remove tiae boards from his lac* I fencc-s, let the cattle into his crops, of I . ^ ; kill his fruit trees, sow his fields Q?' ! with thistles, mortgage bie farm, j subdue his reason, rouse his passions, \ CiT\ : i -? -l i onng -want, sorrow and disgrace on )&k ! bis family and topple him into a tim j drunkard18 grave. he ! E. S. W. , Superintendant Press Work, tte | Leesville Y. W. C. T. U. rci - ! ??-?-? lin | Dsafass3 Caa't Ids Cured ine i j Bv local applications, as they can! not reach the diseased portion of the n^? ! ea*\ There is only one way to cure his i deafness, and that is by constitution... , U1U i ed remedies. JL>eainess is caused by 3 a | an inflamed condition of the mucous aIJ- j lining of the Eustachian Tube. is ! When this tube gets inflamed you vza ' have a rumbling sound cr imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed. Deafness is the result, and unles the imflammation can be taken j out and this tube resorted tc it3 normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever: nine cases out of the ten are caused by catrrh, which is al- nothing but an Inflamed condition of )ur the mucous surfaces, it We will give One Hundred Dollars ftf- I for any case off Deafness (caused by er- I Catarrh) that we cannot cure by takto j ing Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for ate 1 circular, free. .fic | F. J. CHENEY & CO., mt ; Toledo, 0. j Sold by druggists, 75 cents. 23 er" Fred Brown, a murderer ol 01 | Lexington was to be hanged last er" ! Friday. Gov. Tillman commuted ! the death penalty to a life sentence tT0 1 in the ccnitentiarv. That is better ive j than banging. Neither the hanged ^er i nor the public is benefitted by the in% halter?Carolina Spartan. Id j ing The number of national banks in al- the South is five hundred and ninety, 01 e with an aggregate capital of SO,753' in 705, an increase during last year of pie one hundred and four banks and ?10, In 935.000 in capital. Only two Southto . em banks failed during the year 1890 What We Kay Do Socially. nows earso He MARY C' ABLE' is ki Do voa them. The winds blow and the mu^^KraRKfiMn| splashes, and the happy groom begins to wonder if the sun will ever show his bright face again. The --elouds back some more, and the wind" whistles through his wampus like the old woman kept tavei n. Then a Mascott in the divine Jet m of an angel boy, "looms up on the horizon of this cold, crampy colicky life, but this ripple of laughter an 1 sunshine is overshadowed too o'u.u by reverses and misfortune that bring only misery to thooO loved more thnn our own existence. Disappointment follows quick upon the heels of vA versity, and life, such as it is, bogins to look like a black card. I- > newed energy and hard experience--? - - ^ teacn mm tne narrow way torougn the fields of economy to ' the rich mines of prosperity. The sun is now lowering behind the der.-e clouds?the silver lining dazzles li' o a fairy tale. His reward has come at last?he is about to sit down to banquet in the evening of life and rest his vertebrae. But, before Le can voice the usual blessing, the s ;n has fallen beneath the brow 01 the adjacent hill, and Old Father Time, with his Tasty scythe, come upon the _ scene, and garnets the gray headed m sire to his narrow couch in the dcil. |j > I/*j . . 2 _ x _ e _ _ 7_ 1 ^ *iji ne nas leit an esiare ior nis couarcu ? to quarrel over, and the noble lawyer fl to rescue for himself. Is life worth J the living? Well, we leave that to you. As for ourself we do not clamor for six feet of earth before the day set by God for our terse mole cules B|s mingle with the murky clay of obii- M vion. So long as there is life there |i is hope?of a windfall. I You are in a Ead Fix. I ; j But we will cure you if you will 1 j pay us. Our message is to the weak, " ! nervous and debiltated, who, by early 1 j evil habits, or later indiscretions, have : trilled away their vigor of body, mind [ and manhood, and who suffer all ' ! those effects which lead to premature | decay, consumption or insanity. If I this means you, send for and read j our Book of Liff, written by the greatest Specialist of the day, and i sent (sealed) for G cents in stamps. i [ Address Br. Parker's Medical and I . ! Snrjv?r->! rnsiituie. 151 Xorth StiVUC? A i ? f ? i. <rs | St., Nashville, leezi. jg . I Cough drops, atthe Bazaar. S