The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, July 07, 1904, Image 7
.
A
SERMON FOR SUNDAY
AN ELOQUENT DISCCURSE BY THE
REV. W. T. BEST.
"Faded Leave?," the Subject of a Helpful
Talk?The Endless Variety of LeavesAll
Must Stand the Storms of Life
Alike and Come to the Same End.
Chasm; Falls, X. Y?The following
6ermon, entitled "Faded Leaves." was
preached here by the Rev. William T.
Best. He took as his text "We all do fade
as a leaf."?Isa. (54:6.
vV Nature has once more been disrobed
of her green foliage, "and the Stork
?? it . i i IL i?
in me neaven snoweu nci a^Ainncu
time and the Turtle and the Crane
? and the .Swallow" have gone to a
warmer region. While looking from my
study window, I noticed the leaves failing
anqthe children playing among the dead
leaves that by upon the ground. I then
began to think of the past year. 1 remembered
distinctly its birth when we
knelt together in the Watch-meeting and
reconsecrated ourselves to the Master.
The thoughts of its youth revived those
pleasant memories that can be appreciated
only by one living in the Adirondack.?.
But, oh, how changed everything appears
to-day! The same river glides by the
door and the same mountains are on
either side of the house, yet a cloud of
6adness hovers o'er me as I watch the
leaves fall from the trees. "Ah! these
are harbingers of approaching storms; the
indication that another summer's warmth
and beauty is about to be succeeded by
the chill desolation of winter."
It is so difficult for us to understand religious
truths that God was obliged to
draw them out in diagram upon the natural
world. Therefore a minister may go
to almost any branch of nature and find
a sermon. "Go to the Ant," says the
wise mam Solomon. Consider the "Liiiies
of the field." says Christ. Bush and brook,
beast and bird, day and night, the changing
seasons; all abound with spiritual
lessons, and the faded leaves, blown wildly
about by *he wilder winds of autumn,
whirl up in our faces, and before our
doors, seeming to sav. "What about us?"
koc- oAmmiecinno/1 nc fn Mm* 1 riPC- I
WU UUO VVIUIUU^IVUVU wo VV v* IIIVU
sage to man, and mingling with the dirge
, of autumn, comes the sadder dirge of the
| Prophet Isaiah, "We all do fade as a
' leaf."
I. The Lndless Variety of Leaves.
Though there are so many different
4 kinds of leaves in the world it is doubtful
* if there are two leaves of any class ex*
actly alike. Then all species of leaves are
not found on one tree. The king of white
oaks may witness 600 years of Canadian
history; the Californian pine may have
existed centuries before "Leif the Lucky"
discovered Vinland; the Parliament Oak
has seen 1500 years of European progress;
the -cedars of Lebanon date their birth
from the time of the flood and the Boabab
of Senegal claim to be over 5000 years
old; yet the leaves they u.ave scattered
, are but as a drop to the ocean compared
' to the number that have fallen to the
earth.
"God hath made of one blood all na,
tions of men," and though there are so
many different races of mankind it is
doubtful if there could be found two men
of any race exactly alike. They differ as
do the leaves. Especially is this true
from a religious standpoint for all men
n uo not no;a roe same religious oenex.
The main thing, however, is for all to belong
to Christ. Let the fig leaf utter its
voice of warning, the maple suggest its
sweetness and the olive bring its message
of peace; yet there are time: in every life
| when naught can be found but the weep*
ing willow.
Perishing, perishing! Hark, how they call
us;
Bring us your Saviour, oh, tell us c'
Him!
We are so weary, so heavily laden,
And with long weeping our eyes have
grown aim.
"Go ye into all the world. :nd preach the
gospel to every creature."
Il.Some Leaves Are Higher Up in This
World Than Others, But All Must
Stand the Storms of Life Alike and
Come to the Same End.
Some people are determined to go up in
this world, even if they go down in the
next. Men lose their health trying to get
wealth, and then lose their wealth trying
get health. God has a place for every man
in this world, whether it be in the ministry,
at the work bench, or following the
; * plow. Let each man find his right place
and there be at his best for God. It is
useless a leaf at the lower part of the
tree to le trying to get to the top, but
in each leaf in its proper place goes to
make a perfect tree. For as we have
many members in one body, and all members
have not the same office: so we,
being many; are one body in Christ." Let
us learn, therefore, in "whatsoever state
we are therewith to be content." "running
with vatienee the race set before us,"
and we shall as surely hear the "well
done" as the man with the greatest number
of talents.
The millionaire can wear but one ruit
, of clothes, sleep i**. one bed. and eat but
one meal at a time. In many respects
his riches only increase his troubles, and
it is a mistake to suppose that he is not
subject to many of the disappointments
common to men. On the other hand, let
us not try to throw a romance about the
poor man's lot. Poverty is hard, cruel,
unrelenting. But as surely as the different
kinds of weather are a necessity to the
leaves, so surely are the storms of life
necessary to our highest good : for
"If all were easy, if all were bright,
Where would the cross be?
4 Where Avould the night?
But in the_ hardness, God gives to you,
Chances of proving that you are true."
% Death places the leaves all on the yame
level. Said a widowed lady, whose husband
fills a drunkard's grave, as she stood
by the grave of the wealthy saloon keeper
who had taken his monev: "Ah! vou are
on a level "with rev husband now." Yes,
death places us all ou a level. Where are
now* the vast armies of the Assyrians.
Grecians, Persians. Romans? As with the
warrior so with the peaceful, as with the
rich so with the poor. Millions have gone.
* millions more are on their journey.
1 "The boast of heraldry, the pomp of
power,
And all that beauty, all that wealth ere
gave,
Await alike the inevitable hour.
The paths of glory lead but to the grave."
III. The Decay of the Leaf is Sometimes
Hastened by External Circumstances.
It may be affected by insects, excessive
moisture, excessive cold, etc., etc. Then
often the leaf is plucked from the treewhile
in full bloom.
* "The wicked shall not live out half their
days." God gives every man so long to
live, if he takes care of his body (which
is the temple of the Holy Ghost) lie will
Erobably live out his appointed days. Yet
ow often we see people called from time
into eternity just at the moment when
their brightest hopes are about to be
realized. ~ Moses has led Israel through
?" the wilderness. He has borne up under
their murmuring.s and backslidings, and
at times he has had to stand alone when
:t seemed as though his shoulders could
not carry the care and responsibility
placed upon them. Yet he has looked for-'
ward to this glad moment as the time
when his character shall be vindicated
, and he shall lead the people, triumphantly
lead the people into the Promised Land.
But now the command comes from heaven,
* "Moses, ascend Xebo to die!'*' 4.1*!
\
' 4
- . ". \- " ;v' ' ' # * .
0
i* tragedy surpassing anything Shakespearean,
yet it occurs almost every day.
A vessel i. wrecked at sea, a train has
jumped the track, a hotel has taken fire
and men and women just on the eve of
realizing their highest ambitions are
snatched from this into another world.
IV. The Leaves Fade in Concert Though
They Fall One by One.
'"'One cannot count the number of plumes
which those frosts are plucking from the
hills." The aisles of the woods will te
overed with a beautiful carpet of many
colors. The imagination can scarcely comprehend
the number of leaves that are
falling. The grave is the great city. It
has the laregst population, the longest
streets, the greatest number of hands,
billions of eyes, though they see not.
King; and queens are there, orators,
statesmen, yea. men of every rank and condition,
yet it is the great city of silence.
Neither work, nor device, nor knowledge,
nor wisdom are there. The multitude of
the dying and the dead are as the autumnal
leaves drifting under our feet to-day.
"One F- one. one by , we shall soon,
yes soon be there."
V. Let Us Proceed to Inquire, How Do
T V l O
tne J-eaves raue:
1. They fade naturally. It is what constantly
occurs. After the summer is prone
and the fruits are fully ripe, they change
their color, lose their interesting hue and
drop in rapid succession to the ground.
"Man that is born of a woman hath but
a short time to live, and is full of misery,
h cometh up, and is cut down like a.
flower; he fleeth as it were a shadow, and.
never continueth in one stay. In f the
midaj of life we are in death," and science;
teaches that we are more apt to die than
to live, all our tendencies are toward
death, and it is one continual struggle to
keep soul and body together. Where are
now the builders of Babel? Abraham and
his seed? David and Solomon? Daniel, the
prophets, the apostles and the great men
of the past? Only remembered by what
they have done. They being dead are
still speaking. The serpent comes to the
sinner, coils about his body, presses his
heart tightly, and then comes the awful
sting. The same serpent comes to the
Christian. But oh, how changed! The
Christian, as he looks him in the eyes,
can cry out: "Oh. death, where is thy
sting?" "I have been dying for many
years, now I shall begin to live."
2. They Fade Gradually.
The different periods of life are compared
to the revolving seasons of the
year. Childhood and youth when life is
all expectation and hope, are like a beautiful
May morning when the sun shines
brightly, and the dew is upon *he flowers,
and everything is beautiful and lovely.
Nature is bursting her bars and is giving
promise of the unfolded splendors of a
summer's glory yet to come. But oh, how
quickly time passes by! Th: boys and
girls of yesterday are the men and women
of to-day. Then, for none of us is there
such a thing as an ever-enduring manhood.
"We pursue our course, from childhood,
with its vigor and beauty, to age
with its feebleness and decay, with the
unfailing continuance of the rounding seasons.
Our march is an uninterrupted one
from the cradle to the grave." But, oh,
how we shrink at the thought of going
down the western horizon of our pnysicial*
strength! The leaves, which a fewdays
ago felt the first touch of the frost
have day by day been changing in tint.
The work was not completed in a day.
No, it has been going on gradually and
after awhile, leaf after leaf, ohey will fall
to the ground. So with you and me.
From day to day we hardly notice the
change, but the frosts have touched us.
VI. There is a Greater Beauty and Glory
'Attached, to the Leaf in Its Fading
and Dying Condition Than at Any
Time in Its Life.
Along the lake shores and river banks,
and up the slopes of the mountains, "there
id dU uiucj^iiuauic vx gv?vt,
orange, and crimson, and saffron, now sobering
into drab and maroon, now flaming
into solferino and scarlet." In the morning
the forests look as if they were transfigured,
"and in the evening hour . . . .
as ii the sunset had burst and dropped
upon the leaves." Some of the mountains
appear to be all on fire, as if thev were
submerged in the glory of the Lord. Said
Rev. C. C. Townsend, as he stood by the
parsonage gate and looked upon the scene:
"Isn't that beautiful? I must bring my
wife up ?.ere to see that foliage." How
.>ften while driving along the road we notice
a tr'-e where the leaves have fade J.
at the first touch of the frost, all turning
a russet brown. "No one stops ?.o study
them. They are gathered in no vase.
They are hung on no wall." Xo one cares
anything at all about them. Such is the
death of the wicked. They do not live
out half their days, but pass away into
blackness, and darkness, and despair without
a ray of light ? cheer the gloom.
But, thank God. such is not the death of
the Christian, for, "the path of the just
is as the shining light, which shineth more
and more unto the perfect day." What
a beautiful sight it is behold a father and
mother in Israel who have spent their
lives in the service of Christ come down to
cross the river. Oh, what halo of glory
there is about them! What words of peace
and joy and comfort proceed from their
lips, and how strangeiy near tne iioiv
Spirit is as the Angels gently loose tie
silver cord.
"Fade, fade, each earthly joy,
Jesus is Mine."
And the fading body flutters and falls
downward as tne leaf, while "the spirit
returns to God who gave it." Oh, that in
this sense, too, we may all fade with the
beauty and glory of the leaf.
VII. The Leaves Fall Only to Rise Again.
It is one of the laws of nature that
nothing i^really lost. Things change their
condition, but exist in another form. In
the jnice and sap and life of the tree the
leaves will come up again. Next May the
South wind will blow the resurrection
"trumpet and they will rise." So with
our loved ones who sleep in Jesus.
They shall not all sleep, but they shall
be changed. "For if we believe that Jesus
died and rose again, even so them also
which sleep in Jesus will God bring with
Him. For the Lord Himself shhll descend
from heaven with a shout, with the voice
of the archangel, and with the trump of
God; and the dead in Christ shall rise
first. Then we which are alive and remain
i M-ifh f-'ipm in
Utf L'uU^iiu uy ??*vu v..v?. - ?
the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air#
and so shall we ever be with the Lord."
Hallelujah! Hallelujah!
VIII. In the Heavenly Jerusalem the
Leaves Shall Never Fade.
"Soon will the shadows of earth's life be
pas':..
Sorrow and partings be over at last;
Soon shall we meet in the 'Mansions of
Day/
Meet where our loved ones can ne'er fade
away."
When Kzekiel foretold the blessings of
the Messiah's kingdom he spoke of them
under the figure of trees growing on a
bank whose leaves should not wither, but
be lor medicine. When John saw in apocalyptic
vision the heavens opened, and
the new Jerusalem descending down from
God out of heaven. He saw in the midst
of the street and on either side of the
river, the tree of life, and the leaves of
the tree*were for tie healing of the nations.
"There the sun never sets and lha leaves
never fade,
There the righteous forever shall shine
like the star:.
In that leautiful city of gold."
Alcoholism is extremely rare in the Italian
army. In 1901, the" latest for which
figures are available, only twenty-five cases
were admitted to the hospitals.
#
!* '. -
^^=?OPULAR^V^Tif
S' C~' SCIENCE 2
M. Kounlt has found that trees may
I t? transplanted in full foliage in May
or .7mm with little or no injury if the
moving is done at niglit. This has
been demonstrated to the entire satisfaeiion
of prominent; French horticulturists.
The report of the English turbine
oo in mission, to determine the advantages
of iurbiue over reciprocating en
are in taking precautions against in- ]
fection. On tlie other hand, fully j
forty per cent, of doctors die of heart
disease and nervous collapse.
? j
A correspondent to an English
6cienco journal announces that an
archaeological undertaking of ah important
character is about to be set
on foot, namely, the complete excavation
of Herculaneum. It is proposed
that this vast work should be
carried out by the co-operation of
.Italy with all civilized countries, and
that there should be a central managing
committee in Rome, with national
I committees elsewhere.
in 1J.1S ?\ ui tv u? xjjicciui wi iiic Indian
Meterologienl Department. Sir
John Eliot has found that while one
hemisphere of the earth, which includes
Europe. Southern Asia, Africa,
India and Australia, is experiencing
high atmospheric pressure on the average.
the other hemisphere, which includes
North and South America and
Siberia, is experiencing a deficiency of
pressure, and'vice versa. This'seesaw
of pressure has an average period
of about four years or a little less.
This and other facts that must influence
long-period forecasting lead
Sir John to declare that the next development
of weather study will almost
certainly be in the * direction of
international or world * meteorology
and its relation to sun-spots and terrestrial
magnetism.
The Scent* ot Dnkanf.
A novel game has been 'ltroduced
cailed "the scents of dukani." The
scents, thirty in number, are inclosed
each in a little bag and suspended
from a rope. A lady chooses a partner,
and together they go and "nose'' the
bags, one after the other, and write
down what they suppose to be its
scent. The pair who succeed in makI
in<v the most correct list are the win
I *"t" ?
ners. That there is a good variety of
odors is easily seen from tiie list appended:
Cloves, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg.
verbena., eucalyptus, onion, brown
soap, Bombay duck, aloes, eau de cologne,
musk, coffee, tea. lavender, camphor.
creosote, -lemon, peppermint,
whisky, brandy, ammonia, benzine, turpentine,
mustard, licorice, aniseed,
cheese, carrot ai:.d curry powder.?
Washington Star.
What Hij Wanted.
j Barrett Wendell, the well-known
I professor of English at Harvard,
j crossed the campus the other day behind
two sophomores. "What is the i
matter with- you?" he heard the first
sophomore say. "What makes you so
blue?" "Why," replied the other, "I
wrote home last week for money to
get textbooks with, and here this
morning my father sends me, instead
?f the money, the books." ?
' w.
j;inrs for the 70-000-horse-power new
Ounarders. shows that the economy of
turbines on the English Channel is
only two to four per cent., and that
the savins of weight will be only oOO
tons.
The Boston Natural History Society
is preparing complete lists of
the fauna of New England, of which
the first part, containing the reptiles,
has been issued in Occasional Papers.
These lists are to prepare the way for
a complete illustrated monograph of
the fauna which the society proposes
to furnish. ... fc j
m |
For some time astronomers have
tried to adapt the stereoscope to astronomy.
says Cosmos, Paris, and very
satisfactory relief photographs of the
moon have been obtained by taking
views at sufficiently long intervals
and utilizing the slight swinging of
the moon to and fro in space. The
moon appears in exaggerated relief. I
An Austrian statistician finds that !
the average lease of life of a medical j
practitioner is sixty years. Deaths
due to tubercular consumption only
amount among them to seven per
cent., thus Showing how careful they
A committee has been appointed by
.he Council of the Library Association
of Great Britain to consider the question
of the "deterioration of modern
liin/linn' loflthofc" nnrl in sii freest a
remedy*. A circular is being issued to
the chief libraries in the United Kingdom
with the vi >w of ascertaining,
among other matters, wfaat. effective
support is likely to be forthcoming
from librarians in favor of leathers
j of the standard specified by the Society
of Arts* Committee.
One of the curious devices of^Kature
for scattering seeds is seen ia the balloon
plant of California. Tbe ifruit is
yellow, and is a little larger t?an an
egg. It. has the appearance of an empty
bag. tot of a solid, but it contains a
watery substance which evaporates or
j dries* up when the fruit matures, a |
sort of gas taking its place. This gas |
is lighter than air, and the fruit flips
back and forth in the wind until it
finally breaks loose from its ^lender
stem, rises into the air to a hdght of
from seventy-five to a hundred feet,
and sails away to fall in sorae^distant
spot, and thus extend the growth of
;ts kind. ?
r- V!. ?--T. Tn
- "Vi s "' . . ;
A Wife's ANow?rce. f
j Is it desirable tfcat wives cnculd j
j Enjoy a fixed monetary allowance for j
! their own disposal for dress and such j
: personal expenses as are continually j
arising? The e.uestion is put forward j
In the pages cf a leading authority on |
matters of feminine interest, and is j
I answ ered from various points of view. !
j Thus, a business woman urges that a i
! man shoul not give him wife unlimited
credit at shops and then be indignant
if her Expenditure is large. On
the other hand, says this lady, an
allowance spurs on a woman to live
within her means, and teaches her
the value of money. A lawyer lays
down the maxim that a man owes it
to the girl he marries to keep her
free from financial worries. There
are those husbands who admit that
they are only glad to hand over the
larger part, if not the whole, indeed,
of th'jrir Income to careful and managing
wives, leaving them to arrange
the scale of household outlay, and
taking what they regard as necessary
! for their own and the children's
| dress.?London Telegraph.
?
City Residents Near-Sighted.
"The race is growing near-sighted,
owing to city life and the conditions
of our civilization," said Frederick P.
Simmons, examining eye specialist,
while addressing the members of the
' New England Association of Opticians.
"Our visual range is confined to
near objects for the greater part of
the day," said he, "and this keeps the
eyes turned in. An object twenty feet
away will make the eyeballs parallel.
"Anything less wil turn them in,
I and people who spend hours in offices
and crowded flats necessarily have
a short range of vision, which overworks
and weakens the interior muscles
close to the nasal cavity.
"The exterior muscles not being so
! strained, are strong, and hence cause
the eyes to .turn out. Let a person
who is thus affected spent a week or
two in the country and his eyes become
normal again, because he gets
greater range of vision. Savages are
generally far-sighted."?Jewelers' Circular-Weekly.
FITS i>erroanent]ycnred. Kofit^orcv.vousj
ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great
NerveItestorer,f2trial bottle and treatise free
Dr. B.H. Kline, Ltd.. 931 Arch St., Phila.,Pu
The Southern 3tates are producing half
the lumber cut in America.
Aak !Toar Denier foe
A powder. It rests the feet. Cure3 Coras,
Bueuoe-s. Swolle a, Sore, ffol, Oal lous,Achin *
Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Alien's
Foot-Ease makes new or tight shoe^easy. A:
all Drc;ggists and Shoe stores, 25 cents. Acecpt
no substitute. Sample mailed Feee,
Address, Allen S. Olmsted, LeP.oy,N. Y.
Seventeen persons in 100 in the State of
New York live to be over seventy years of
age- ?
H. B. Gkukn's Sons, of Atlanta*-Ga., are
the only successful Dropsy Specials in the
world. See their liberal offer in advertisement
in another column of this paper.
A single log of mahogany often brings as
j? much as $5000 at a sale.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup foirchiidren.
teething, soften the gums, reduces inflammation,
allays pain.cures wind colic, 25c.a bottle
The coldest city in the world is Yakut-rk,
in Eastern Siberia.
I amsurePisosCuro forOon.su raptf on saved
my life three years ago.?Mes. Thomas RobBixs,
Maple St.. Norwich. N.l'.. Feb. 17,120J.
There are moie than 100,000 widWs in
Berlin.
Rev. Sam P. Jones.
The famous Methodist Evangelist says:
"My wife, who was an invalid from nervous
sick headache, has been entirely cured
by six weeks' use of King's Royal Germetuer.
I wish every suffering wife had access
to that medicine." It is truly a great remedy."
For free booklet write Germetuer
Medical Co., Dept. C., Barnesville, Ga.
The sunken Variag was the fastest
cruiser of her class (7,000 tons) in the
world.
Or. Bigger:;' Huckleberry Cordial
The Great {Southern Remedy, cures all
tomach and bowel troubles, children
teething. Made from
The Little Huckleberry
that grows alongside our hills and mountains.
contains an active principle that has
? hannv effect on the stomach and bow
els. It enters largely In Dr. Biggers'
Huckleberry Cordial, the great stomach
and bowel remedy for Dysentery, Diarrhoea
and Bloody Flux.
Sold by all druggists, 25 and 50c bottle.
AN EX-CHIEF JUSTICE'S OPINION.
Judge O. E. Lochrane, of Georgia, In a
letter to Dr. Biggers, states that he
never suffers himself to be without a bottle
of Dr. Biggers' Huckleberry Cordial
during the summer time, for the relief
cf all stomach ?Ad bowel troubles, Dysentery,
Dlar-has^t. Flux, etc.
Sold by all d-o^p?ts, 25 and 5Cc bottles.
HALTIWANGEH-TAYLOR DRUG CO.,
Proprietors, Atlanta, Ga.
Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet
Gum and Mullein will cure Coughs, Croup
and Consumption. Price 25c and $1 a bottle.
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT
TULANE UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA
Its advantages for practical Instruction, both
in ample laboratories and abundant hospital materials
are unequalled. Free access Is given to
the great Charity Hospital with 900 beds and
30,000 patients annually. Special instruction is
given daily at the bedside of the sick. The next
session begins October 20. 1904. For catalogue
and information, address Prof. S. E. CHAILLE,
M.D., Dean. P. O. Drawer 2C1, New Orleans, La.
Ipropsyi
JUaV. f Removes all swelling in 8toj?o
/ days; effects a permanent cure
A in 30 to 6o days. Trial treatment
IBBL/Vj; /jftjK given free. Nothingcan be fairer
write Dr. H. H. Green's Sons.
Specialists, Box B Atlanta, <5a.
leMereBlindHorsesK'Sfn0^:?^
6ore Eyes, harry Co.. Iowa City, la., have a sure cure
B to time. Sold by druggists, o g|
' ^ *
On a tombstone at Hir? head of a
grave in r.y.a cf ll:; dcg comelevies in .
Paris is liiis inscription v> t!;o mem- |
cry of ;t bravo Sr. Keruard: "Ilo saved I
the IIvc-s of for.y persons anil was
killed by 1 lie forty-Iirst." ' ' rn
! f
Cat'trr't ( uiimt Up Curn(l
With i o: '.r. at: r.v.vrroxs, as they c.iront ; "f
r ,:.,*n me sent oi t-k- 0i.? use. arris is a j ?i
blood or eoas'i'irional d'-va-e, and in order tl!
to eur.' it you must ta!ci internal remedies. Pa
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and th
nets directly on the blood and mucous su rface th
Hail's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine, as
ir was oreseriii' d bv one of the best pliysi- ^
eians iu this country for years, and is a regular
prescription. If is* composed of the w
best tonics known, combined with the best ot
blood purifiers, acting directly ou the rcu- ta
cous surfaces. The perfect combination of tb
the two ingredients is what produces such
wonderful results in curing catarrh. Send
for'testimonials, free. ia
F. J. Ckesey & Co.. Props., Toledo, 0. m
Sold by druggists, price. 75c. PI
Take Kail's Family Pilis for constipation
One morning four-year-old Margie
had pancakes and syrup for breakfast, m
After she had eaten the cakes there *{.
was some syrup left on her plate, and
she said: "Matnma, please give me a
spoon; my fork leaks." ^
l """""??????
Odors of Perspiration m
Removed at once from the armpits, feet, m
etc., by Rotal Foot Wash. Stops Chafing,
Cures Sweating, Burning, Swollen, Tired
Feet. 25c at Druggists, or postpaid from ^
Eaton Drug Co., Atlanta, Qa. Money back
if not satisfied. Sample for 2c stamp. J
The salaries of the President of
Mexico and of the Governor General
of the Dominion of Canada are $50,000
a year, the same as that of the President
of the United States.
8 Cures i (f
I 1aLT rheumT'ec//Jy.
^ ZEMA, every form of i
XJ ^ ^ * 1 malignant SKIN
Q I A n n ERUPTION, betides <
D Lv/ V L// being efficacious in p
\ n > I >. / toning up the system <
VHALM/ and restoring the con* (
stitution, when impaired i|
^ from any cause. It is a <
fine Tonic, and its almost supernatural healing <; J
properties justify us in guaranteeing a cure of - J
all blood diseases, if directions are followed. , J
Price, $1 per Bottle, or 6 Bottles for 85. \ ]
FOB SA1.E BY DR-CGQJSTS. \
APUf TDCC BOOK OFtTOSDKBFUL CCRKS, I
OCR I l nkC torether with valuable Information.
8LOOp BALM CO.. ATLANTA, GA.J
nnn bank deposit ?
Vj/\_|eVf vr Vf Railroad Faro Paid. 500
FREE Courses Offered.
HBBHRIi Board at Cost. Write Quick
GE0881A-ALABAMA BUSINESS COLLEGE, Hacon.Ga. w
rncc ln Use Qua
rKEC Ve- AH stomacl
REGULAR m rx
50c. TYNER'S DYS
JS Write us your Ci
cAiiTuroN nPNTA
I Bn W v ? M V - If
you are interested in obtainin
for free catalogue of full lnstruci
ADMCM DR. 8. W. FOSTER, DEAN, 100 NORTi
mwca
RIFLE ?> PIST
| ^ jl " It's the shots that 1
|_1 Rifle and Pistol Cartrii
Mi IflM they shoot accurately ar
re Vj trating blow. This is the
If 3 if you insist on having th
I -I ALL DEALERS SELL WINC
FREE to WOMEN
A Large Trial Box and book of in* m
structions absolutely Free and Post* P
paid, enough to prove the value of *
PaxtineToilet Antiseptic
? Paxtine Is In powder
form to dissolve fat
water ? nor,-poisonous
and for superior to liquid
antiseptics containing
alcohol which Irritates i
inflamed surfaces, and
have no cleansing properties.
The contents f
of every box makes J
more Antiseptic Solu- ?
goes further?has more &
uses in the family and ^
doesmoregoodthanaqy.. .
antiseptic preparation
you can buy., Q
The formula of a noted Boston physician,
and used with great success as a Vaginal | ?
Wash, for Leucorrhcea, Pelvic Catarrh, Nasal i ,
Catarrh, Sore Throat, Sore Eyes, Cuts, j t0
and alt soreness of mucus membrane. | p
In local treatment of female ills Paxtine is
invaluable. Used as a Vaginal*Wash we
challenge the world to produce its equal for
thoroughness. It is a revelation in cleansing *
and healing power; it kills all germs which
Cause inflammation and discharges.
All leading druggists keep Paxtine; price.COc. r
a box; if yours does not, send to us for it. Don't f<
take a substitute ?there is nothing like Faxtine. j \
Write forthe Free Box of Paxtine to-day. j
E. PAXTON CO., 7 Pope Bldjj., Boston, Mass.
/y ^IpPjlL
GUARANTEED CURE for all bowel trouble*,
blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels, fou
pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin and
regularly you are sick. Constipation kills more;
starts chronic ailment* and long years of sufferin
CASCARETS today, for you will never get well
right Take our advice, start with Caacarets t
money refunded. The genuine tablet stamped
booklet free. Address sterling Remedy Compan
DR. WOOLLEY'JS I
IPIiiM AND WHISKY 1
ANTIDOTE |
Tdears gsraaagaaj at yaar owi ftm 1
M 1 M. Krowti. ot* DeQueen. Ark., says:
).->r sctc:i yt'irs aro I was cured of th? '32
jmi:i habit by your m.'-iieine. and have con- "*jjB
nued i;i the very bos: of health since.'-*
Mr. \V. M. Tunstall. of Lovinpston, Va.,
ys: "I am glad to say that I firmly belier? >/jRa a
at I am entirely and permanently cured of a
e Drir.k Habit, as I have never even bo much .vjg ij
wanted a drink ir. any form since I took ' ''r-3aB
>ur eradicator. now 18 months a^o. li wu
e best money I ever invested." . 3
Mrs. Virginia Townsend. of Shreveport, La., .v/'j&M
rites: "No more opium. I have taken n?
her remedv tr.an vours. and I make no mis- " ?aW
ke when I nay that my health is better now
inn it ever wiis in my life, and I owe it to yoa
id your remedy. It ha* been twelve year* '^uUH
nee I was cured by your treatment." ^ -J|fl i?
Dr. Woolley has thousands of such testlmon- |J|
Is. with permission to use them. A.treatent
with so many recommendations from
hvsieians and cured patients must he good.
Dr. Woolley'* Antidote has imitators, (as ' ''SSB
I good artic:es have)?perhaps you have tried' Bs&aM
?me of them, but there is nothing lik<' Wool* v-jaBa
y's. It has stood the test of thirty years. No
an or woman who uses opium or whisky in *3|9H
ly form, or who has friends so afflicted
lould hesitate to write to -sh
">r. b. m. woolley. f?
10(/' orth Pryor Street, Atlanta. Ga.,
r his oook on these diseases, which he will
nd free and confidential. ' yj||
ivery & Company 1
SUCCESSORS TO
avery & McMillan. m
1-53 South Forsyth St., Atlanta, Om
?ALL KINDS OF? ^J|9|
MACHINERY 9
--JH
ljla * ^?631
eliable Frick Engines. Boilers, alt Vjf||||g
Sizes. Wheat Separators.
Nf ^ j(t7
1 fvi # "
EST IMPROVED SAW MILL ON EARIE |
Lr.rge Engines and Boilers supplied , ^ ??
romptfy. Shingle 'Mills, Corn Mills, ^9
ircular Saws,Saw Teeth,Patent Dogs, Jgja
team Governors. Full line Engines 4 - I r^H
I ill Supplies. Send for free Cata'oquay'
Give the name of this paper wheai^Bh^j
riting to advertisers?(At28-04) * Iffi
iranteed to Cure ''M
i and Resulting Disorders. Mm
__ f Acts on Bowels.) "'^S Ifl
pepsia Remedy. J*
Me. Box 138, Dept. C, ATLANTA, GA. .^8
T7^W ^ M?????.'^?9
L COLLEGE,
g a dental education, write ||jl
4 BUTLER STREET, ATLANTA. GEORGIA.^??
OL CARTRIDGES. |S
lit that count" Winchester ;f';1
5ges in all calibers hit, that is, ||
td strike a good, hard, pene- :'M
kind of cartridges you will get, M
e time-tried Winchester make, i
IHESTBR MA KB OP CARTRIDGES.
Cotton Gin M
Machinery ;9
jHHn|nanHA ,v*%j
- >^K?b
-^Jm
KAI I. munwwm,
WINSHIP.
AGLE. 3IMTH. ||JN
He m*Xe the meet complete' bM ?t ui '
ncsrn is the world. WiaImbtake |
;NGINES and BOILERS, :M|
UNTERS tor OIL MILLS.
e icU everything needed aboat a Csttoa Gia, -ifjjp
Write for Illustrated CataJogue. ,
Continental Gin Co., \:m
Birmingham, Ala.
HE BOWELS ^ m
\liWdy
CATHARTIC
appendicitis, biliousness, bad breath, bad |jfi
il rnoutb, headache, indication. pimples, '
dirtiness. When your bowels don't more
people than all other diseases tof ether. It ->?M
H. No matter what ails yon, start taking
and stay well until yon ret your bowels . :'.?jsH
oday under absolute fusrantse to core or Sgjifl
C C C. Never sold in bulk. 8ample sad