The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, May 26, 1904, Image 7

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> k A SERMON FOR SUNDAY k AN INTERESTING DISCCURSE BY THE REV. DONALD SACE MACKAY. Subject: "The Value of a Day'*?TTe Should Xot AVa?te Klforf in Talking I'lnlilml.c 4 hniit. Jill? SllOrlOPRS Of | k Time?Let Us Be Uj? and X>oing. Xew York City.?-A <enaon preached Sunday evening by rue Rev. Dr. Donald Sage Mat-Kay. in Collegiate Church, tilth . avenue and Foriy-eignth street, had for ' i its subject "The Value of a Day.' The test was from John xi:0: "Are there not twelve hours in the day?" Dr. Mat-Kay said: : > My text this evening is Christ's definition of a day: "Are there not twelve hours in the day?'* And what of it? you as!:. This much at least: The day is a great deal longer than some people seem to imagine. It is indeed one or the dreariest, as it is one of the oldest^ of moral reflections. which forever dwells upon the shortness of time and the .swiftness of its flight. More inournfut eloquence and doleful poetry have been- inspired by that one theme than by any other in the catalogue -* of human thought. Of course, time is short, and its flight is swift, bat are there not twelve hours in the day? To each man sufficient time has been giver, to do the task assigned to him. That is the sol% oran practical truth emphasized by our Saviour here, and it is one that perhaps we hardly ever think ox; noc the shortness * of time, but its sufficiency for the tasks of life. Are there not twelve hours in the day? That is our subject, the value of a day, abundance o: tine to do the duties which must be done, to bear the burdens which must be bora?, - to face the trials which God sends. At the outset I want to see how these words of Christ rebuke two very opposite, but very common, tempers which men assume in regard to time and its opportunities. Cn the one hand. Christ rebukes here that morbid spirit which in .hopeless impotence is forever bewailing the short ness oi i;m?. i*.5 loss oi opportunities m ine past and its sina'dues-? cf opportunities in the present, *V. if I had only done so and so twenty yearo ago, how much better oft I > had been to day.'' one man exclaims, and # ho sits down in a sort of sentimental fatalism, bewailing his unhappy lot. making no real effort to better it. To such a man Christ says in effect."Never mind the past; v it is gone: you cannot recall it; but are there nor twelve hours in the clay? Do the * best you can with this day and its precious hours." Vain regrets for the past are the wofst kind of dissipation of the present. Bur, on the other hand, these words not less strongly rebuke that opposice spirit, which, because life seems to stretch through a long vista of seventy or eighty years, is prodigal or its time, thinks that the duties of the present can well enough be marl* j/aged on the opportunities of the future. , "What does it matter, after all, if a young man squanders a tew years in sowing his mi d oats? Nature is generous. You can bank on her resources. A few years of mis-spent time?well, it won't matter twenty years after this." So in effect many men argue. So they stake lire and iminor '* tality on the chances of the future. And to that temper Christ says: "'Are there not twelve hoars in the dayV"' Only twelve! Steal ten of them for sin to-day and you cannot give twenty-two of them for (loci - to-morrow. Only twelve hours! Sufficient to do life's duties in, bat not sufficient to serve God and the devil in. Twelve hours! Abundance of time, but not a moment tec much, not a second too many. "Are there not twelve hours in the day?" It was Jesus Christ who asked that cues* tion. Have you never been struck with what I must call the frugality of Christ, not only in respect of time, but of everything else? Christ was pre-eminently a frugal man, not prodigal with His resources. not spendthrift with His powers. lie had the riches of the universe in liis > grasp. Xo millionaire that ever lived could command such resources; and yet when out of these resources He had fed a multitude of 500b people, what was ii: lie said to His disciples? "Gather up the fragments, that nothing be lost."' He was an::ious for the crumbs. Frugal, not parsimo- ! nious, He realized the value of the little things in life. So, too. in this m tter of time. From everlasting to everlasting He is God. "Before Abraham was, T am," the heir of all the ages. And vet He counts life by its hours, twelve hours in the day, while we, 4 the frail, helpless children of a day, presume to measure life by its years. How c!d are you? And the young man in the exuberance of his vitality counts life by its years, and replies: "Twenty, thirty years old." "How old arfc thou?" said Pharaoh to the aged Jacob. And the patriarch, , though i c was IJ7 years old at the time, counted his life bv its davs. and Jacob said unto Pharaoh: "Few and evil have the i ^ days of the years of my pilgrimage teen." It was by iis days chat the old man reckoned life. So, too. you remember the prayer of Closes: "So teach us to number,'* net our years, but "our days, that we may apply our hearts unto wisdom." Have you ever noticed how much mere keeaiv this san?e of the value of a day is forced home uuon us the rearer *.vc come to eternity? I; is when the soul stand:* upon the shore of a bour.d;c.?.s eternity that it begins to think of how much a day. an hour, a moment mean?. "A million of money for f.n inch of lime," cried the great English queen, after six.*' ior.g years on a throne. A mil-ion of money for an inch of time! The nearer we get to eternity the more precious tr.e moments become. And , Christ, who lived in ihe atmosphere of eternity and v.*ho alone hath immortality, counted life by its hours, twelve hours in the day?enough, but not enough and to , spare. f want, of course, this evening to cm* poasizc espeeV.y the spiritual aspect cf this subject. and yet it cannot be out or place altogether to remember that this power of using the hours of a day and gathering up these precious fragments of time, frequently ceiled "odd moments," U really the secret or some of the most successful hves. One of the striking testimonials c 1 biography, indeed, is this, that a r crest many enduring reputations in the g world have been built out of the "odd ino"* merits" of life. Men otherwise long since forgotten arc remembered to-day for what tbev achieved in edd moments, in the twelve hour? of the day. One of the best v translations of Lucretius, the great Latin writer, was the work of a busy London doctor while going his daily round among ' his patients. A great musician iearned French and Italian while riding from one musical pupil to another, Kirke White learned Greek while walking to and from a 'awyer's ofhcc. so that he was enabled co I raduntc with honors in the university. One. of the ablest legal treatises hi the ' French language was written by a man in the somewhat depressing interval which precedes the serving of the evening me?.!. afier !:e had come home from his ofiie-r. i.ihu Burritt taught himself eighteen ancient languages and iwrnly-two Kemp an languages while waiting for the ho;-? -- * be shod in his blacksmith shop. .Vivo cxa piss teach t;s forcibly enough how abundant are the hours of the day for the noblest tasks c? life, i: we would bur t fracc^to use ti:e:u aright. "Rcdeernir.yrhe j lime." saya the apostle. How many o: us ask Cod's grace each day wo rise, to n?o the twelve hours aright, for His glory mud lor the benefit of our fellow men? f Do we realize this privilege of twice hours a day sufficiently": I cm if we did we should m<t say so of*.ev < r e [ j do that we have no time. We vhouki not L waste so much time in talk?*>sr platitudes * about the shortness of time. We should b<? up and doing, living Hfe in earr.e?t~, and , not in spasms. Yet think how many | squander i iiesc precious twelve horns day l>y day. Think, for example, of the hoars of idle reveries, useless, a unless dreaming, respectable loafing. That many of us give ourselves up to throughout the day. It is not perhaps that our thoughts are vicious or impure, but simply that our minds get ) into a state of suspended animation, during which an uncurbed fancy makes havoc of our will power, paialyr.es our energy, and rob? us of the day's most precious opportunities. Meditation, indeed, is not idleness?quiet, restful thought, in which the soul drc-.tms its visions for service, is net wasted time. But the mistake so many of us make is that our ^moments of meditation are lost in hours of idle dreaming which leads us nowhere save only into the mazes of selfish indulgence and .sentimental fancy. Twelve hours in the day, nr,/l !->mv ninnv lost iii foolish dreaming? Think, too, what waste in gossip. in ! needless, thoughtless talk. It is not that { we are deliberate scandal-mongers, but j simply that to pass the lime we indulge in i a kind of talk about our neighbors and friends, the results of which for evil are greater than we may ever know. Who can i estimate the reputations that have been j wrecked, the Jives of promise that have 1 : been crippled, the usefulness for good in j , the world that has been checked by the j 1 retailing of evil slander throughout the twelve hours of the day? Once more, think of the hours consumed j in the pursuit of merely selfish pleasure, j Indifferent to the bitter cry of outcast hu- j * inanity, callous to tlsc great moral needs of i the hour that come knocking at our door?, i hov.* many of us use up the twelve hours j . in the pursuit o: schemes whose one pur- i ]X>sc is for self and self alone. Busy we may be, but so busy with the affairs of self , that we have no time to spend for the common good, for the needs of man, or the glory of Cod. Twelve hours! and all of < them strangled upon the altar of self?not one given up to Cod. to wing its way up- ; i ward like incense before the eternal throne! j Look back upov the week ?.iat is gone, with its treasury of hours, and what record have they Ieft*upoa the tablets of the soil!? How many hours of last week wi.nessed ! you on your knees before God ? How many j hours did you give to prayer? How many '} hours did you give to studying the Bible? How many to thinking thoughts of love- ! nm? trnnsbitincr them into deeds of kind- j ; ncss? Ho*.v many to crucifying soli and j enthroning Christ? How many? Perhaps | , net even or.e. And yet on these hours we i are building character lor eternity; out of these hours is growing ih.it immortal self with which at last we must stand before j the judgment seat of God. Twelve hours j in the day to work cut your salvation, and j how many men are using these twelve hours in working out their perdition? How. then, are wc going to redeem our ! , days, make the most 01 .hose twelve hours, j ' so that at last no upbraiding memory shall j recall them with sorrow rnd shame? .1 would not be so foolish as to say that this power to use time aright means that, j we are to fill un each separate hour with | some determined, conscious effort. That j f would be impossible, and. even if it were I . possible. }it would turn us into self-con- j scious prigs and moral pedants. You can- i not detach every hour and say. as Franklin ! said in his diary, that this hour will be de- j voted to such an ' such a duty, that he r , to some other duty, and so on. That would destroy a great deal of the inspiration of | iiie and would turn existence into a grind- ! ing machine. Xo. fhe hours rrc to be re- ! deemed, not so much by what we do in i :-:i l.ttnin ! mem as oy irc spun v.<_- i;h.^ , the temper in which v.c use ihcin. Let ; every day be begun with its season of spe- 1 eial prayer. Let it have its moments shut ; off for communion with God. And then ; these moments, however brief, of conse- ! crated prayer, will give a tonic to ttie rest J of the day ? inch will make impossible that flippant dissipation of lime which is so i ruinous io character. There are two tiling? that this spirit of prayer will produce in our use of the j twelve hours in the day. First, prayer ; produces a sense oi' urgency, a spirit ot haste, if you like, but r.ot a spirit of hurry. It intensifies the thought that time is short and yet enough for each one 01 us to co something lor God. It is that feeling of j urgency in regard to each day as it comes j that it should 'rave the record of soiui> I ! thing attempted, something given lor Gcd [ and our follow jrven. that gives richness to i j life, a beauty to character, a sunny r.v : 1 diance to the soul, that makes earth the ! j threshold of heaven. Nothing is more dis- ! j gusring than to meet people who simply i ioai through life, without any t-euso oi' ur* j i j ger.cy. As the saying goes, they do not i | care whether school keeps or not. They ; . I are not worried about the - orld's necesj)i- | j ties. What we want is this sense of ur- * i ' genry. Time is short, and ytv. long enough with prayer to do something ihat will abide when we have passed i.way. That is the first thing that prayer brings to the ( j twelve hours of the day. The second thing is a ?cnse of calmness. | , a spirit of serenity. How often we fret and worry beneath .ho pressure of life! The friction of care reduces the effective- : Hess of our energy. Many men are wearing themselves out before their time, simply because they have ibis hallucination that I there is not time enough. They get into & ; fever or worry became the days are too .short. P.at prayer brings to us the thought that God has given us time enough, and all -- .... , ?** ? i - u.. ?i,_ ! Ho asks from us is to uve ana work o> m?; , day. In His service vvc arc only tlay labor- j rrs. With to-morrow ye have nothing to j do. The command is. "Go. work to-day," j and the promise is. "I will pay you a penny a day."' God's wages are paid, not by_the | month nor the week, but by the day. Ha eh j day brings its duty, but each day brings ; : its erace and strength and blessing as well; ; ' J "Build a little fence ?: trust I , Around to-day. j Fill the :.puee with loving work, ; And therein stay. Look not through the she;'.ering bars ' Upon to-morrow; [. God will help thee bear what ccm.es Of joy or sorrow." With some oi us here this evening the J day of life is young. The morning light , 's.iJl lends freshness to your youthful ar- j ! dor. But with others of i < it is already ! the eleventh, hoe:, the eleventh hour in } life's busy day. Although va know it not, the du>k of time .'s talking f". The:' twi I light of our years s decpenuig and higSi up in the belfry of the soul | "The curfew tolls the knch of passing day." And yet through the siler.ro of tins: e'ev- j cr.iJi hour, throug . the shadowed marketplace of your lire's activities, you may hear to-night the voice of infinite love and tea- . ilvrness calling, and calling yet again: "Why stand ye hero nil \he day idleV" It is the eleventh hour.and C hrist claims ibat eleventh hour. Bedeora the time in His service. Consecrate it to His glory, and yen will in nowise lose your reward. To-. day if ye will hear His voice?and remember, "There are twelve hours in the day." Affliction That I'ajf, A psalmist once said: "It is good for ' me that. 1 have been afliicted: that I | might learn Thv statutes." He might j not have sought me ways or God had ! he not fmir.d Ids own way* hedged about j | him. ilis experience was that of a j great number of men -..ho discovered riches i:t nffiieiiou which were otherwise ! not to he found. The depth human love and sympathy would never be known i v.ore it n t l'or effliciiu:). Through sorI row there liar ci'for. wre.. a wealth of love and affection. marvelous .n its j sweetness and power. It was not until he was afflicted that ;iie psalmist saw the j glory of tl:e inly lav . j. ' in alKitijon : also that l.io ? cry oI human lov: shines > i out. richer by far because it is charged I with the holy love e; God. Yes, 't ;< a. dear price to pav i>uf in the .-.itcr-g'ow we shail be e.ble to say ;ha". if was worth paying.?Baptist k'niou. ' ,.o ?? | | ? JAP ASSAULT"FAILSl I Land Attack on Port Arthur Successfully Resisted. SLAUGHTER FRIGHTFUL According to Russian Report, Fifteen Thousand Japanese Were Killed wmi* -3 rvin n<?ff?nders Went Down to Death. A special from St. Petersburg says: It is reported #iat Foreign Minister Lamsdorff has received a message from the Russian consul at Chefoo saying thai the .Japanese have made a land attack on Port Arthur and in doing so they los\ K,.000 men, killed and wounded. The Russian loss is placed at 3,000 men. The ultiir.::e outcome of the fighting is not stated. The Russian?, are now confident, of holding Port Arthur w in the 30,000 men now stationed there, exclusive of ihe navy and the crowds cf mechanics working 011 the damaged warships, all of which except the Czarevitch and the Retvizan are ready to rejoin the fleet. These will a'sc be ready for sea service by July 1. The entrance to, tire harbor has been cleared and small beats now-pass in and out freely frcm Pert Arthur to Dalny. The guns on the land side of Port Arthur have been complete.! and are now prepared for a severe contest. Of -the few soldiers left at Dalny the majority have gone to Port Arthur and the only defenses left there now are the mines in the harbor. EIGHTY-NINE LOSE LIFE. Steamer Reported Wrecked Off Vancouver kland and All on Board Find Watery Grave. A special from Tacoma, Wash., says: It is reported that wreckage from the steamer Corbin. which sailed from Seattle for Nome with eightynine passengers Tuesday, has been found on the west cf' Vancouver island. She was- scheduled to sail Monday a week ago, but some of the persons booked for passage complained to United Slates inspectors of the way the steamer was overloaded, and the inspectors ordered all freight; stored in the holds. Tacoma shipping men who saw the sceamer before she sailed expressed the fear that she is lost. The Corwin had quite a list and seemed to be heavy and unseaworthy. STOREKEEPER UNDER CHARGES. Young Girl Figures as Prosecutrix in i Sensational Case at Americus. A case of sensational interest was placed formally before the superior court: at Americus Monday afternoon when an indictment charging George T. Sullivan, Dr. W. C. Barrow and a negro nurse. Amanda Wilson, with assault with intent to murder was returned by the grand jury. The evidence upon which the indictment rests war* given by Miss Olivia Me Lane, a young girl, v.'ell connected and highly respected and formerly employed in Sul- i livan's jewelry cuore.whom she charges with responsibility for her troubles, and the indictment is for an alleged abortion recently performed, in which Miss McLine declares the three defendants tool: part. Bond# in the sum of $2,000- were assessed for Sullivan i and Barrcw, and $1,000 for Amanda Wilson, the nurse. The case will be heard at this term of court. CITY TO PURCHASE PARK. Piedmont Exposition Grounds in Atlanta to Change Hands. Piedmont park will be purchase! by fhn. rrmnirdnalitv of Atlanta, for $90. 000. " . I North Atlanta, and all the territory j to the east of that section to"-the tracks of the -Southern Railway, will be incorporated by Atlanta. These things were decided upon during the session of council Monday afternoon. after a rather sharp debate. THROW UP POLITICAL JOB. Bank Directors Resign Candidacy for Electoral College in New York. | James T. Woodward, Harry Payne i Whitney and Isador Strauss, democratic candidates for the electoral eoliege, ! lvave sent their resignations -to the | state chairman. All are national bank directors and Mr. Woodward is president of the | Hanover National of New York. Their j withdrawal from the ticket is the result of a report by a special committee which recommended such a course in view of doubt as to their eligibility under the constitution. DEAD BANKER BURIED. ] Suicide Millionaire Plant's Remains 1 Consigned to the Grave. The remains of R. H. Plant, banker. ' financier and capitalist, were laid to ( rest at Macon, Ga., Monday morning J in the family burying grounds, in Rose 1 Hill cemetery, and it was quite a gathering which looked upon -the lowering j of the bedv into its last resting place t 1 and heard the last words uttered by | j ministers alongside the grave. j ( i % U. S. SENATOR FR Recomme: For Dyspepsia an If you do not derive prompt and sal factory results from the use of Peru: write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving full statement of your case, ana he will pleased to give you his valuable adv gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of 1 Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Q. LIMITED MEANS OR E ALL OUR 6,000 GRADl It. R. FARE PAID, BOARD AT 88.00. f,A ? A I A COO Free Couraea. un' ~2BSS? WE CURE [ /STAnd we do not stoj is st ri| known all over the s {F| IK-il| curing Cancers, Tun m 1st* are equal !y note ? -C/7 Hydrocele, Blood ] V J of both Men and W< and sympton blanks treatments when voi DR. REYNOLDS ! cures' DY.sr epsiaTsk^k^hea TYNER'S DYSPI FREE BOOKLET. Write, Box 13 OTBMMinmimewnanMmi In a church in London, chiefly i tended by seamen, is a pupit In exa imitation of a ship's prow. The < sign follows tbo line of the ships the ancient Vikings. FITSDflrmanently cure I. No fits ornervou cess after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Gre Nerve llestorer. t ri al bott leaud t reatisef i Dr. K. H. Kltnk. Ltd.. 931 Arch St.. Phila.,: When a girl is in love she is aungry o: between meals. Aak Your Dealer For Allen's Fo.it?Ea*j A powder. It rests the feet. Cures Con Bunions. Swollen, Sore, Hot, Cal lous.Achi Trpct- nnd Incrowlncr Nails. A lie: Foot-Ease makes new or tight shoos easy, all Druggists and Shoe stores, '25 cents. J espt no substitute. Sample mailed Fat Address, Allen S. Olmsted" LeRov, N. Y. A girl with a dimple will laugh at a fool thing a man says. Mrs. Winslow'sSoothingSyrup iorchildi 1 eething, soften t L e gums, reduces inflamn iioi5 allays pain.curesuind colic.'25c. abot < Many a man who starts at the toot the ladder is down at the heel at the fini: J do not believe Piso's Cmtc for Codsuji tionhas anequal for coughs and colds.?Jo F.Lotek, Trinity Springs. Ind., Feb. 15,19 A woman cares nothing about a ma: first love if slie is sure of being his last. Overheard on the Pike. Mr. Easy?"Why should people vislti The Exposition at night use more Alle: Foot-Ease than in daytime?"' Miss Foote?"Because under the brillir illumination of the grounds, every loot 1 comes an acre!" Mr. Easy?"Fair. Only fair! Pray, cc duct me to the nearest drug store and promise never to accept a substitute : you or for Allen's Foot-Ease." * " * Foot Aote?The twain will be made o in June. Bather than become a spinster the av age girl will marry the wrong man. TIRED, SUFFERING WOV1EN. Women run down and endure da: tortures through neglecting the ki 1103*5. Kidney backache makes hous work a burden; re iitfnl; appetite giv out and you are tir I~>i 11 c ho' A 11 * Ul^ 1 "u lace, of IS Capitol street, Concord, ! H., says: "I was in tho ear stages of Briglit's Disease, ar were it not for Doan's Kidm Pills I would not he living to-da Pain in the back was so intense that; night I had to get out of bed until tl paroxysm of pain passed away, was languid and tired and hadn't tl strength to lift a kettle of water. :*ould not work, but a few doses < Doan's Kidney Pills relieved me, ai: Lwo boxes absolutely cured me." A FREE TRIAL of this great kit ley medicine which cured Mrs. Wa ace will be mailed to any part of tl United States. Address Foster-Mi mrn Co.. BuiTalo, X. Y. Sold by a lealcrs; price 50 cents per box. . - '-V. f % / % ; , ' - ? v ' _/ . " "... . . - .... ... ... m SOUTH CAROLINA nds Pe-ru-na d Stomach Trouble. -o A \ Catarrh of the Stomach is Generally J Called Dyspepsia?Something J to Produce Artificial Digestion is Generally Taken. J Hence, Pepsin, Pancreatin and a Host J of Other Digestive Remedies J Has Been Invented. f These Remedies Do Not Reach the ' Seat of the Difficulty, Which r is Realty Catarrh. ) ^ T7' X. U. S. Senator M. C. Butler from . 4 ll. South Carolina was Senator from thut j r State for two terras. In a recent letter to | The Peruna Medicine Co., from Washing- j ; ^ j ton. D. C., says: f "1 can recommend. Peruna fordysf j pepsi a and stomach trouble. I have i been using your medicine for a short period and I Jeel very much relieved. 7 It Is indeed a wonderful medicine ^ besides a good tonic. V~M. C. Butler. i The only rational way to cure dyspepsia f is to remove the catarrh. Peruna enres i catarrh. Peruna does not produce artix ficial digestion. It cures catarrh and f leaves the stomach to perforin digestion i in a natural way. This is vastly better f and safer than resorting to artilicial methi ods or narcotics. , \ Peruna has cured more cases of dyspep9 sia than all other remedies combined, A simply because it cures catarrh wherever * located. If catarrh is located in the head, Peruna cures it. If catarrh has fastened it-' :is- self in the throat or bronchial tubes, na, Peruna cures it. When catarrh becomes ; a settled in the stomach, Peruna cures it, be as well in this location as in any other, ice Peruna is not simply a remedy for dyspepsia. Perunia Is a catarrh remedy, 'he Peruna cures dyspepsia because it is generally dependent upon catarrh. * . BY A $5,000 mfomleed BA*Kr>EPOSIT DUCATION NO HINDRANCE. JATES AT WORK. WRITE TODAY TO BUS. COLLEGE, Macon Ga. iANCERS AND CHRONIC ULCERS. > at that. The name and fame of Dr. Reynolds is outhland on account of his wonderful success in lors and Chronic Ulcers, and his associate Speeiald for their skill in curinjr Stricture, Varicocele, Poison, and all Chonic Deap Seated Diseases omen. Write today for our .Medical Work, "FACTS," . Do not experiment with Quacks or Cheap John u r health is at stake. & CO., 513 Austell Building;, Atlanta, Ga. DACHE! BILIOUSNESS, NERVOUSNESS I EPSIA REMEDY Bowels. 8 I 8, Atlanta, Ga. ASK YOUR DRUGGIST J ii i in nun wnn mi i ??w?a?? " FREE to WOMEN ie- A Large Trial Box and book of inof structions absolutely Free and Postpaid, enough to prove the value of PaxtineToilet Antiseptic N* ^ n- 1. I. - 3 jkgg ruunu 1a in puwu^i at form to dissolve In eo water ? non-poisonous Pa >?98B88Kh?V and far superior to liquid fgSMKI? ^IRfc\ antiseptics containing ,"v r?K_-T~^8BA a5coho' which irritates * i inflamed surfaces, and AjK/mr-^ have no cleansing prop: %&k& $>WH| erties. The contents I Wl iWH of every box makes | -s- JflK more Antiseptic Solun<i yrrtt" J1 tion ?lasts longer? l ? ' goes further?has more I a s i >2kv US S 'n aB<f At | ^2jgT" doesmoregoodthanany u- j antiseptic preparation I | The formula of a noted Boston physician, ny | and used with great success as a Vaginal Wash, for Leucorrhcca, Pelvic Catarrh, Nasal .en Catarrh, Sore Throat, Sore Eyes, Cuts, ia- and all soreness of mucus membrane. : 10 In local treatment of femalo ills Paxtine is 0; invaluable. Used as a Vaginal Wash wo 5jj" challenge the world to produce its equal for thoroughness. It is a revelation in cleapsir.g and healing power; it kills all germs which " j cause inflammation and discharges. I A 11 U.-v?r? Pa*tin/?? nriftfc.50f!. 0'^ i a box; if yours does not, send to us for Tt. Don't I . | take a substitute ? there is nothing like Paxtine. I n s j Write for the Free Box of Paxtine to-day. I E. PAXTON CO., 7 Pope Bid;., Boston, Mrisi ;; SHSTEHHiSfi n tire States of I bC" ' No trouble to answer questions. S& miles ! ; shortest route Shreveport to Dallas. Write j for new book on Texas, free. E. P. TURNER, j j General Passenger Aeent. Dailas. Texas. | / | ^ ^ CURED 11 pfc Dropsy Ei ( ^ >/ Removes all swelling in 3 to ?o PS I days; effects a permanent cure 1 /V injotoGo days. Trial treatment given free. Not hingcan be fairer j l't Write Dr. H. H. Green's Sons. J |ie _*!?Speciilists. Box B Atlanta, Qz. 1 11. Give the name of this paper when | ?3' writing to advertisers?(At22-04) | i re J GUARANTEED CURE for all bowel trouble? 1- I blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels,.fo l. jj pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow akin ant B regularly you are sick. Constipation kills more ie I starts chronic ailments and long year^of sufferi , | CASCARETS today, for you will never get we I right Take our advice, start with Cascarets 11 B money refunded. The genuine tablet stamped R booklet free. Address Sterling Remedy Compt < I " ?l?P? . g . Especially Mothers 1 The Sanative, Antiseptic, Ij Cleansing, Purifying, ?1 and Beautifying Properties of | | tSP Assisted by CUTICURA Ointment, the great I Skin Cure, are of I PricelessValue. j For preserving purifying an& tVi* ctrfn. fnf flrAOSfoC W?wiu;u*j w-.-y m the scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping of fa&v jng hair, for softening, whitening, ' "'JS < and soothing red, rough, a?;d sore hands, for baby rashes and cha- '? ^ fings, in the form of baths for an- > noying irritations, ulcerations, and' -B ; inflammations of women, and .\i many sanative, antiseptic purposes which readily suggest themselves, as well as for all purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery, CUTICURA Soap and CUTICURA Ointment are priceless. -'|g|j Sold throughout the world. Cutlcura Soap. 25c- Oiat- ment, 50c., Keeolrent, 50c. (in form of Chocolate Coated Pllli, 25c. per rial of 60). Depotc London, 27 Charter- -J 4mm bouee S<j.; Pari*. 5 Rue de la Petx; Botton, 137 Colombo* Are. Potter Drug tt Chem. Corp., Sole Proprletore. ". oSM or 8?ad for * Low to Pmerve. Purify, and Beaotifp.* _-.M Avery & Company SUCCESSORS TO avery & McMillan, 51-53 South Forsyth St., Atlanta, Cm -ALL KINDS OF MACHINtiKY Reliable Frick Engines. Boilers, all M Sizes. Wheat Separators. BEST IMPROVED SAW MILL ON EARTH. Large Engines and Boilers supplied promptly. Shingle Mills. Corn Mills*. Circular Saws,Saw Teeth,Patent Dogs, Steam Governors. Full line Engines & ? Mill Supplies. Send for free Catalogue. with Here's Universal LopBeams.Rectilin-B ear. Simultaneous Set Works and the Hea-I cock-Kin# Variable Feed Works are unex-l relied for acocracv. sixn.iQiTT, durabic-? eitt and ease op operation. Write for fall! descriptive circulars. Manufactured by the? 1 awiiwrn? ?? iwS i mm iiiwssMir NoMoreBllndHorsesKa^SIf , M Sore Eyes, Carry Co., Iowa City, la., have a sure cur* i CANDV M . CATHAHT10 ul mouth, headache, indigestion, pimples, I dizziness. When your bowels don't move : people than all other diseases together. It1 ing. No matter what ails you, start taking / ":i?g> II and stay well until you get your bowels J/iitoday under absolute guarantee to cure or 1 C C C. Never sold in bulk. Sample and ny. Chicago or New York. go*