The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, January 27, 1899, Image 7

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BRITAL.MAGE'S SERMON I Eminent Divine's Sunday ' Discourse. H.SnkJrct: "The Value of Good Wives"? J J tMinlllles Winch Crown Noble Woman. 1 luinil?WuiuleNOIirlallautty llnbone . For the Weaker Sex. Tkxt: "Ellslia passed to Xhuuem, where whs u threat woman."?11 Kiti^s iv., 8. Tho hotel of our time had no counterpart in any entertainment of ohlen time. Tho vast majority of travelers must then be euterlnmed at private abode. Here comes Ellsha, u servant of tho Lord, on a divine mission. and he must it ml shelter. A lml. . o?y overlooking the valley of Esdraelon is offered hini in a private house, and it is especially furnished for his occupancy?a 1 chair to sit on, a table from which to eat, a candlestick by which to read and a bed on ' which to slumber, the whole establishment belonging to a great and good woman. Her j husband, it seems, was a godly man, but | lie was entirely overshadowed by his wife's ; excellences; just as now you sometimes | IIml iu .a household tho wife the centre of ; dignity and influence and power, not by j any arrogance or presumption, but by su- i parlor lutellect and force of moral nature, wielding domestic affairs and at the same ! time supervising all financial and business 1 affairs?the wife's hand on the shuttle or J ; the banking house or the worldly business. ; | You ace hundreds of men who are sue- i ] *?7*?>ssnil only because there is a reason at home why they are so successful. If u man ' marry a good, houest soul, he makes his fortune. If he marry u fool, the Lord help : him. The wife may be the silent partner I in the llrm, there may be only masculine . voices down on Exchange, hut there often- | i times comes from tha home circle a poten- j tial and elevating influence. This woman - ; of my text was tho superior of her husband. i He, as far as 1 can undurstuuil, was what ] we often see iu our day, a man of large for- ( tune and only a modicum of bruin, intense- j ly quiet, sitting a long while in tho same , place without moving hand or foot, if you i say "Yes," responding "Yes;" if you "say j i "No," responding "No"?iuauc, eyes half . j shut, mouth wide open, maintaining his < position in society only because he has a i j largo patrimony. But his wife, my text i says, was a great woman. Her name has i not come down to us. She belonged to ] that collection of people who need no name ' i to distinguish them. What would title of I < duchess or princess or queen?what would | | escutcheon or gleaming diadem bo to this I woman of my text, wlio by her Intelligence j i and her behavior challenges the udinira- j tlon of all ages? Long after the brilliant j < women of tbo court of Louis XV have been | i forgotten aud the brilliant women of the ! ] court of Spain havo been forgotten and ; < the brilliaut women who sat on the thrune j | of Itussiu have been forgotten some grand- i father will put on his spectacles, and bold- i ing the book the other side the light read : to bis grandchildren the story ol this grout i woman of Sbuuetn who was so kind and courteous uud Christian to the good ' i prophet Klisha. Yes, she wftS a great j i woman. j In the tlrst place, she was great in hei ! t hospitalities. Uncivilized aud hurharous | 1 nations have this virtue. Jupiter had the J 1 surname of the Hospitable, ami he was ' I said cspeclaliy to avenge tue wrongs of ( 1 strangers. Homer extolled it in his verse. , i The Arabs arc punctilious on tills subject, i and among some of their tribes it is not until t lie niuth day of tarrying that the occupant has a ngnt to ask his guest, "Who I ami wliouce art thou?" If this virtue is so i honored among barbarians, bow ought it i to be honored uuioug those of us who believe in the Iiible, which commands us to use hospitality one toward auotner without grudging! * rrr:;ist/ i do not meuir under this cover to give any Idea that 1 approve of that vagrant class who go arouud from place to place, ranging their wlitie lifetime, perhaps und?r tho auspices of soiuc benevolent or philanthropic society, i|uartcring i themselves on Christian families with a great pileot trunks iu tiio hall ami carpetbag portentous of tarrying. There is many a country parsonage taut look-', out week i by wcwk upon tiio ominous arrival ot w.igon with croaking wheel aad lank lior.-.o iii.it dilapidated iirivor, couie uutier the i auspices of some charitable institution to i spend a few weeks and canvass the neigh- I borliootl. Let no such religious tramps ! take advantage of this buautilul virtue o' i Christian hospitality. Not so much the sumptuousuPss of your diet and the I regality of your abode will impress the i friend or the stranger that steps across < your threshold as the warmth of your J greeting; the informality of your reeep- I * tion, the reiteration by gru.-.p, and by l look, and by a thousand attentions, in- ' significant attentions, of your earnest- ! nej.s of welcome. There will be high i appreciation of your welcome, though you have nothing but the bra/.ctt can- i tlle.-tic!i and the plaia chair to offer | Klishn when lie comes .to Shuiiem. Most beautiful is this grace of hospitality | When sliowu in the house of God. i uui i thankful tliai I have always hceu pastor i of chinches where strangers are wel- ' conic. flat I have entered churches I where there was no hospitality. A ( stranger would stand in the vestibule for a while an l thou make a pilgrimage up < the long isle. No door opened to inrti until, flushed and excited and embarrassed, lie 1 started back again and, coining to some i half filled pew, with apologetic air entered ? it, while the occupant glared on him with a i look which soemod to say, "Well, if I must, 1 must." Away with such accursed indecency from the house of Cod. Let every church thnt would maintain largo Christina j inllueuco In community culture Sabbath by i .Sabbath this beautiful grace of Christian ' hospitality. A good iiiuu travellug iu the far West, in 1 t tlie wilderness, was overiakeu by night | and storm, ami he put iu at a cabin. lie saw firearms along the beams of the cabin, ; ami he felt alarmed. He did not know but thai he had fallen Into u den of Hi I eves. I He sat thorn greatly perturbed. After a i while tlm man of the house canto home - \v?tl> ;i gun on his shoulder niul sot It down iu u corner. The stranger wns still moro 1 alarmed. After nwlille the inau of the house whispered with his wife, nud the stranger thought his destruction wns being plnuued. Then tho man of tho house enino forward and said to tho stranger: "Stranger, wo are a rough and rude j>eoI> 1 o out here, and we work hard for a living. We make our living by ^ fainting, and when wo come to the night fall wo are tired and wo are apt to g.> to bod early and before retiring wo are always iu tho habit of reading a chapter froin tho word of God and innking a prayer. If you don't like suoh things, if you will just step outside the door until wo got through I'll bo greatly obliged to you." Of courso the stranger tarried in the room, andtho old hunter took hold of the horns of the a'tar and brought down the blessing of God upon tils household and upon th stranger within their gates, itude bu glorious Christian hospitality! This woman of tho text was only a typo oi thousands of men and women wiio cotno down from mansion and from cot to do kindness to the Lord's servants. I could tell you ot something that you might t. ink A a romnuce. A young mnn graduated from H New iiruuswlek Theological Seminary was calied to a village church. lie had not the H menus "to furnish tho .parsonage. After A: t Kre.t nr four weeks of nrcneliin<* a cnniin it I tie i?f tlie officers of thochnrch waited 011 K lilrn and told him ho looked tired and ' thought lie had hotter take a vacation of a few day*. The young pastor took it as an Intl..nation that his work was dona or not acceptable. He took the vacation, ? * and at the end Of a few days e-uno haek. when an elder said: "Here Is the key of the pnrsonago. We have lieen cleaning it up. You had better go up and loo!^ nt it." ho the young pastor took the koy, wont up to tho parsonage, opoued the door, and lo, it was carpeted, and there was the hetraok All ready for the canes and the umbrella* and the overcoats, and on the left hand of the hnll was the parlor, eofaod chaired, pictured. Ho passed on to the other side of the hail, and there was the study table in the centre of the floor with stationery upon it, bookshelves built, Iook ranges of new volumes. Tar beyond the reach of the means of the young pastor, many of these vol a mo#. The young pastor went up stairs and found all tho sleeping apartments furnished, oame down stairs and entered the pantry, and there wore tho spines, and the colTees, and tho sugars, and the groceries for six months. lie wont dow* into the cellar, aud there was tho coal for all the coming winter. Ho went into the dining hnll, and tlicro was the tabic already set?the glass and the silverware. Ho wont into the kitchen, nun there were all the culinary implements and a groat stove. Tub young pastor lifted one lid of lite stovo, and ho found t!ie fuel nil ready for Ignition. Puttlug back the cover of the stove, lie saw in another part of it n Inciter match, and all that voting man had to do in starting to keep house was to strike the mutch. Von tell me that is apocryphal. Oh, no, tuat was my own experience. Oh, thi>- Itiadness; oh, the enlurged sympathies sornetimes clustered around "tnoso who enter the gospel ministry! I suppose the man of Shuneru had to pay the bills, but It was the largO'lioarted Christian sympathies of the woman of Shunem that looked aft.r the Lord's messenger. Where are the feet that have not been blistered on the hot sands of this great Sahara? Wheye are the soldiers that have not bent under the burden of grief? Where Is the ship Balling over glassy sea that has not after awhile been caught iu a cyclone? Whero Is the garden of earthly comfort, but trouble hath httdhedvup its flery and panting team and gone through It with burning plowshares of disaster? Under the pelting of ages of suffering the great heart of the world has burst with woe. Navigators tell us about the rivets, and the Amazon, and the Danube, and the Mississippi have heen explored, but who can toll the depth or the length of the great river of sorrow, made up of tears unci blood rolling tbrohgh ?U lands and nil nges. bearing tlio wreck of families, and ot communities, and of empires, foamIng, writhing, boiling with the agonies of SOOO- years. Etna, Cotopaxi aud Vesuvius have been described, but who bus ever sketched the volcano of sulToring retching up from its depths the lava and scoria, and pouring them down tl*e shies to whelm the nations? Oh, if 1 could gather all the lieartstriugs, the broken heartstrings, into a tiarp I would play on it a dirge such as was never sounded. Mythologisls tell us of gorgou aud centaur and Titau, nud geologists tell us of extinct species nf monsters, but greater than gorgou or megatherium, and not belonging to the renlm of fable, and not of an extinct cpecies. a monster with an iron jaw aud a hundred iron hoofs has walked across the nations, and htstorv and poetry and SCUlpfnr.i In It...Ir t It ?/. it .1., ... ...... ......... fv V ....... .. .V ...... ...juorlbe it, hava seemed to sweat great drops of blood. But, thank God, tbore uro those who can conquer as this woman of iho text conquered, a id say: "It is well. Though my property be gone, though my childreu be gone. though my homo be broken up, though my health besaerllleod, it is wail; it Is well!" There is no storm on tho sea but Christ is ready to rise in the himlor part of the ship and hush it. Thero is no darkness P but tho constellation of God's eternal love inn illumine, and, though the w.ator comes out of tho Northern sky, you have sometimes seen that Northern sky ail ablaze ' with auroras which seem to say: "Come up this way. Up this way are thrones of light sud seas of sapphire and the splendor of a a eternal heaven. Come up this way." Again, this woman of my text was groat in her application to domestic duties. Every picture Is a home picture, whether she is entertaining an Elislia or whether she is giving caroful aitenioa to her sick boy or whether she is appealing [or tho restoration of her property. Every picture in her en?e is one of domesticity. Those are n not disciples of tlwsShuuomite woman who, s going out to attend to outside charities, neglect the duty of home?the duty of wife, of mother, of daughter. No faith- 1 fulness in public beuofacliou can ever atone for domestic negligence. There has becu many a mother who by indefatigable toil has reared a large faaiily of children, equipping them for the duties of life with goo.l manners and large Intelligence and Christian .principle, starting them out, woo has done more for the world than many a , woman whose name lias sounded througu all the lands and through tho centur.es. I remember when Kossuth was in this country there were some ladies who got honorable reputations by presenting him very gracefully with bouquets of flowers on public occasions, but what was alt that compared with the plain Hungarian mother who gave to truth and civilization and the cause of universal liberty a Kossuth? Yes, this woman of my text was great in her simplicity. When this prophet wanted to reward her for her hospitality by asking some preferment from the king, what did she jayr nun uecuuea u. nun sum, i uweu *? amonj! my own people," us much as to say, f, "I inn satisfied with ray lot; all 1 want Is my family and my friends around mo; I dwell " union# ray own people." Oh, what a robuke to tho strlfo for precedence in all apes! How many there are who want to get great architecture and , homes furnished with all art, all painting, nil statuary, who have not enough taste to g distinguish between Gothic and Byzantine, p and who could not tell a figure in plaster of pnris from Palmer's "White Captive," and would not know u boy's penciling from P Biorstadt's "Vosomlte." Men who buy p largo libraries by tho square foot, buy- . Ing these libraries when they.liavo scarcely Duough education to pick out the day of V tho month in the almanac! Ob, how many s there are striving to have things as well as their neighbors or bettor than their neighbors, and in the struggle vast fortunes aro h exhausted and business firms thrown Into p bankruptcy nnd men of reputed honesty rush into astounding forgeries! But what I want to impress upon you, ? my lienrers, is that you ought not to in- p vontory the luxuries of life among the In- . disponsablos, nnd you ought not to doproelato this woman of tho text, who, when f offered kingly proferment, rosponded, "I ^ dwell among my own people." Yos, this woman of tho text was great in her piety. Just read the ohnp- v ter after you go home. Faith iu o God, and she was not ashamed to t ik about it before idolaters. Ah. woman will nover nppreeiute what she owes to n <'!iri*linnity until she knows and sees n llie degradation of her sex under pagan- j ism and Mohammedanism! Her very birth considered a misfortune. Sold like ' cattle on tlio shambles. Slave of all v Work, and at last her body fuel for the r funeral pyre of her husband. Above the shriek or the lire worshipers in India, aud n abovothe rumbling c! the Juggernauts I 0 hear the million voiced groan of wronged, p insulted, broken-hearted, downtrodden woman. Her tears have fallen in the Nile and Tigris, the La Plata,and on tlio steppes of Tartary, Hbo has been dishonored in Turkish garden and Persian palace and h Spanish Alhambra. Her little cnos have boon p sacrificed In the Indus and the Ganges. Thero Is not a groan, or a dangoon, or an island, or a mountain, or a river, or o a lake, or a sea but could tell a story of (1 the outrages heaped upon hor. But, r tbunks to God, this glorious Christianity comes forth, and all the claims of this vassalage ure snapped, aud Hbe rises from ignominy to exalted sphere and be comes the affectionate daughter, tho gentle wife, the honored mother,tho useful Christina. Oh, if Christianity has done so muoh for woman, surely woman will become its most ardent advocate and Its subllmest exemplification! It Is reported that the large shoe menu i facturers in New England Intend to form a combination to control the market. fSjersY [Hair $ mis vigor 4 ^j^*^hat^loe^it do? It causes the oil glands in the skin to become more active, making the hair soft and glossy, precisely as nature intended. It cleanses the scalp from dandruff and thus removes one of the great causes of .baldness. It makes a better circulation in the scalp and stops the hair from coming out. Ill Prevents and It cores Baldness A ?ro?*V ^7 Injvi o nan v will surely make hair grow on bald heads, provided only there is any life remaining in the hair bulbs. It restores color to gray or white hair. It does not do this in a moment, as will a hair dye; but in a short time the gray color of age gradually disappears and the darker color of youth takes its place. Would you like a copy of our book on the Hair and Scalp? It is free. It tou do not obtain all t'm bonoflu yon ciiiectfd front tlio u?? of the Vigor write the Doctor about It. Add rest, DR. J. C. ATER. Lowell. Matt. Dcsscrti in Variety. Of postprs. or desserts. there is root variety, the majority of Port tiro's many fruits adapting tin n elves to tlio making of sweetmeat! 'lit* favorite kind is that of the gun: l>a. or guava. This is a round, yrlhr ruit. a little larger than the plum an ed within. It is eaten raw or in pr ewes, and from it is also prepare he famous brown guava paste an lie dark red guava Jelly. Cocoant s prepared in many ways, chief! r 1th eggs, milk or brandy. The swe< nd bitter orange and the paradoxic] weet lemon are often used for pn erves. as are also the red ereza an no yoiiow grosclta, fruits of the fori ml size* of cherries. Canned pent ml peaches are known, and would li iwch more popular were it not fc lie prices which have been kept his y the import duties, lee cream is m ften used, because of the lack of ie< 'amly of native fruit is sold evert fliere, but it Is generally quite orudi 11 the larger towns liner candy is t <o had. imported from France an pain. Here again high import dutic ave boon the cause of a lack of popt irity. The Forto Rleans. as a rub re quite fond of sweets, as is prove y the wholesale consumption of 01 age. cocoanut. and guava candy, an no of the first and last sounds hear y the visitor to Forto Itico Is the or f little hoys who hnve such sweet i?t* sale: "Dulce de coco-o-o! Pulce d uuy-aba-a-n!"?New York Times. French and Fnglish at Sea. A lielief which, if not extraordinary * entirely erroneous, appears to li enerally held that a war with Franc r it wore unfortunately to coim roiild be of short duration. Variou ersons with more or less autliorit nve )>nt the period in which wo ni r> knock out our ancient enemy an k'hllom ally Into a cocked hat at froi even days to seven weeks, n very fc eknowlcdglng that it might run int s many .months. We know of notl tig to justify such optimism, but vcr iiucli to lend us to a directly opposil pinion; and we conceive It perfect! losslblc to be of this opinion and yi o make no question of the ultima I esult of such a lamentable eonfllc Ve feel that to attempt to draw an oology from the results of recent ni al wars would be only to mlslen >urselves. There Is no comparisc it all lietween the relative strengt if France and this country and tin if China and .Trunin, nr Snaln ntwl ?1 *nltoil States. If lho British puhl marines that French navjil ofllcei v111 prove themselves to he ns del lent In strategical and tactical ski s the officers of China and Spa it! hav lemonstrated themselves to lie. it ireparlng Itself for a rude nwakenlnj - British Army and Navy Gazette. A decree has been Issued or will 1 hortly, says Agriculture and Bulh ftlf. hy Chilean Congress offerin State bounty of $125,000 to any fo, lgn company or Arm who will ur or take to establish an iron foundry I Jhlle on a sufficiently large scale. 44 Lft Creol i . GREAT COLD STORAQE PLANTS The Largest ia the World to Bo Ballt la the Argeatiae Rcpjbllc. The great refrigerating and cold storage plants of this country, the largest in the world, promise before long to be eclipsed by those of the Ar genune iiepuuiic. J iio snnsimna plant at lluenos Ayres is only one of several and >4,000,000 lias already been expended upon It. It has a capacity for slaughtering 3,000 sheep dally, with r proportionate number of cattle. One of the cold storage rooms holds 60,000 frozen carcasses of mutton at one time. These are transported to Europe in refrigerator steamers. A1 though there is a voyage of 7,000 miles across the equator, the original cost of each slicep Is so small that the price of the meat In Europe is not greater than of that brought from the United States and Oanndn. In 1897, 2,500,000 frozen sheep were exported from the Argentine. If to these be added those sent from Australia and America it will be seen liow dependent is Europe upon foreign meat products. This business was begun only In 1883. when 11,000 frozen sheep were sent from the Argentine. It Is estimated that that republic now has a total of 105.000.000 sheep, twice the number of the United fTKI? 4 4,^1. 1V ? .... oinccn, nun ^irai iiUL'iv u%v Iiu iiirnuo represents the future capacity of tbe country, for 591,000 square miles, or a territory ten times t'lie size of the Sfiate of Now York, la available for slu'ep pnsturage. As yet It may be said to be deserted, compared with the number of animals that It will support In the future. It will be capnble of supplying the civilized world with all the mutton Its Inhabitants can consume. Before the establishment of refrigerating plants In and the exportation of mutton from the Argentine, sheep that could not be utilized for their wool and tallow were driven oIT tbe rooks into the sea or were used for fuel until laws were passed making It a crime to drive living sheep into the fires of the brick-kilns. White Deer. I have heard of not less than three white deer l>oing killed in Wisconsin alone this fall. One was taken into Ashland by F. C. Klady, H. I'ahuqulst and Krlc Bcheldeen, who shot it Nov~ ember 19. Another was killed by Oie Cattish, a Flambeau Indian, 011 Nova ember 10, on the Bnc du Flambeau r, reservation. It weighed 2."?4 pounds i and had good antlers. It was bought by the Indian agent and sent to Clilcr. ago for mounting. A third albino w door was killed by A. Vine, son of tlie i sc hool simeHntendent. on ttiia snino II *" * Flnmbonu reservation. It weighed ,i pounds: and also had a good sot of antlers. This specimen had a few 1( small dark spots on the legs, but was j otherwise white. In the ease of Ole < Cattish, the Indian, it would appear ^ 1 that he Is forgetting a good mnny of the saerod traditions of his i>cople, ! one of which says that the Indian who ( 1 shoots a white deer is forever accursed '! and followed by ill fortune. Perhaps | Ole Catfish Is willing to take a few 10 chances in that line for the sake of ,r the additional price that a white doer 11 brings in valid coin of the realm. Superstition and commerce sometimes | blond rather strangely.?Forest and 7~ j Stream. 0 ; llennty In Blood l)?fp. d (.'loan blood means a clean skin. No j beauty without it. Cascarets. Candy Cathsr! tie clean your blood and keep it clean, by j stirring tip the laay liver and driving all im* I purities* from the body. Begin to-day to d banish pimple?, boils, blotches. blHckheads, | and tlint sickly bilious complexion by taking . Cnscarets,?beauty for ten cents. All drug(| ; gists, satisfaction guaranteed. 10*;. 25c. 50c. ; Ttio Austrian Government serum factory * i in Vienna for the treatment of dipthcrfa :s disposed of thirty thousand four hundred , 1 and thirty-four bottles of the remedy for 1 I the last twelve months. To Cure a Fold In One-Pay. Tnke l.nxntlve Bromo (jutnlne Tablets. All p, PrupplM* refund money If It falls to cure. 25c. 1 There is a creature known as the liag[?, rlsb. or myxlne, which is In the habit of getting Inside cod and similar ti?h and devouringthe interior until only the skin and the IS skeleton are left. V | H. If. (iRRRN's NONB, of Atlanta, (la., are the (% j only successful Dropsy Specialists In the world. See their liberal offer in advertisement In anil other column of this paper. Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrap for children teething.softens the gum*. reduce* inftamm i0 j tion.allays pain.cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle. 1- I Cyclists in Denmark are not allowed to ride v ( faster than the speed of a cab through towns. 10 To Cure Conslipatloo Forever. V , Take Oasonrets Candy Cathartl- 10c or Tie. ^ 11 C. C. C. fall to cure, druggists rotund mbnay. to Ireland possesses the most eqtinblo climate j . of any Kuropcan country. [V How's This? _ I We offer One Hundred Dollars Heivnrd for any case of Catarrh that cannot he cured by (1 Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHUNKY A CO . Props . Toledo, O. i i We. the undersigned, have known F. .I.Che- j 11 noy for lh<' Inst 15 years, and believe him per. fectly honoralde In nil business transactions | 11 and financially nblo to carry out any ohllgn H> | Hon made by their firm. Wkht A Tkcax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo. 11 j Ohio. s Wai.pino. Rinnan A Mamvin. Wholesale Drug. , gists. Toledo. Ohio. 1 Hall's Catarrh Cure t? taken internally, act11 Ing directly ujion the blood nnd mucous surfaces of the system Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists Testimonials free. js Hall's Family Pills nre the best. i 1 hcllcvc Piso's Cure for Consumption saved ! my hoy's lifeln-tsuir.mor.?Mrs A i.i.ik I)oith! i.ass, Lo Roy. Mich.. Oct. '-'0. 1mh. I(> | Twenty-six thousand men aro employed at 1- I the Krupp gnnworks. K | Kducnte Yoiir Rowel* AVItli Canraretii. r" Candy Cathartic, euro constlnation forovor. ). lOc.lfSc. If C. C. C. fall, druggist* refund inouoy. 11 All the pope's private fortune is invested in British securities. PHHHMHnni e" Hair Restorer is a Perfeci ' i I ^ IVORY SOAP >In fifteen minutes' time, wit Soap and water, you can mak a better cleansing paste than y< Ivory Soap Paste will tak< and will clean carpets, rugs, kid enamel, russet leather and cam painted wood-work and furniti of Ivory Soap in this form aris< can be used with a damp spot many articles that cannot be w, not stand the free application oi DIRECTIONS FOR MAKING.?To on* and one-half ounces of I Tory Soap cut Into i the Soap is thoroughly dissolved. Remove _ venicnt dishes (not tin.) It will keep well OepTTiftt, 189T, by Tt? Frorivr k Ota -T- ?3 ?ne ?* the \ ieI cause $>r thi S I HAVE SUFFERED Ml With painful menses, attended with sour stoi M and occasional whites. I also have severe ner &L. had I cannot rest. 1 have used various female H9 no relief until about two months qko, when I Bf Female Panaoea and ST. JOSEPH'S f.lVKK M more Rood than all others. I shall continue t ?_ Glenmore. Ga. IS If your case is complicated, write t formation regarding the use of this me m gist, ii n? aoes not Keep it flenti us \ X all charges paid. L. QERSTLE 6 " ? i Cattle in a Hath. i ^J| According to a recently adopted rog- |*g ulation cattle entering the abattoirs, j or stock yards, of the Western States from infected regions further South, Er must undergo a disinfecting hath. The st administration of this hath was inaugurated at St. I.ouls with some ceremony. The bath is composed of water con- a tnlning a solution of kerosene and sul- m pliur. Under tlie superintendence of fj the chief Inspector, seventy-two cattle .y were first treated. They objected somewhat strenuously, as was natural in view of the composition of the bath, but quite in vain. They were JS thoroughly soaked, tlie process requlr- Corn ing some thirty-six minutes. They ennie out, shaking their heads and blowing, but without any ill ef- miii feet. The result being satisfactory to ,*|r' the Inspector, a much larger number f'ec of cattle and straightway put into the bath, and none of tliein found themselves any the worse for the sulphur B and the petroleum. B No-To-llac for Fifty Centa. V tinaranteed tobacco habit cure innken wank H men strong, blood pure. All druggists H Rt. Petersburg's bronze statue of Peter the > Orent weighs 1.0OO tone. 1 gg| The Potash |j Question, i j| jA thorough study of the sub- II B ject has proven that crop fail- j [ | ures can be prevented by using ! fertilizers containing a large j ?? percentage of Potash; no j 0 plant can grow without Potash.' We have a little hook on the subject of ID I Potash, written by authorities, that we would like to send to every farmer, free of * cost, if he will only write and ask for it. VV { Co., ] OERriAN KALI WORKS. M Nassau St., New York. Mill fc Dressing and Restorer. Pri< PASTE. f th only a cake of Ivory y t in your own kitchen, V 5u can buy. t spots from clothing; gloves, slippers, patent, vas shoes, leather belts, ire. The special value ss from the fact that it age or cloth to cleanse ashed because they will I water. e pint of boiling water add one shavings, boil five minutes after from the fire, and cool In conin an air-tight glass jar. ibU Oo. CtMteMS. JW. 0* First Symptoms of \ inff Health in a Woman Is I VOIISNESSi ;or think that thero is always a 8 malady? In women Nervous. H srally the forerunner of some tale disease, such :u? Whites, jk fuse or Irregular Mouses, etc., H iich will produce Nervousness istresaing intensity. If you use A s Female Panacea? (O.F.F.)"*"" ry soon bo cured of Nervousother female troubles as well. move the bowels with mild Joseph's Liver Regulator. \ FOR YEARS M naeh, rushing of blood to the head. voua spells and heart i alpitation so M remedies for a long time hut found commenced using your Geratle's KF.OULATOK, and they arc doing me i heir use. _ _ MltS. SAHAH JKNKIN8. is and we will give you fVill in- H| idicine. Get it from your drug?1 and we will send a bottle, ^ : CO.. Chattanooga. Tcnn. J alsby & Company, 3ft S. Itrmul 81., Atlnntn, Ga. igines and Boilers m Water Heater*. Hteniii Pumps anil Ponbertliy Injertor*. Manufacturers and De.ilora In MILLS. i Mills, Feed Mills, Cottnn.GIn Machinery anil drain Separator*. LID and 1NSKIITKD Saws, Saw Teeth and s. Knljcht'i Patent Hoe*. ttlrdaall Saw anil Kngliie llepalra, Go voruors, Grata i and a full lino of Mill Supplies. l'rloe quality of gooda guaranteed. Catalogue by mentioning this paper. A8TGPFE0 FREE 'U Psrmansatly Cnrttf Insanity Prevented by n DR. KLINE'S GREAT t W IERVE restorer Feature cure tW all rem Dittnv*. Fat. Ffilff. Annu and St. I'MCfMH. >i>l III or NirvoutMa after Aral Say ' oaa. Treat i so and $t trial bottls free * VII palladia, they paylDciprru ibtirr.ooty when recti * !. 8?*o<1 to l?r. Klin*. ).tl, 8HU?o* Institute of McJic&iac. 1C1 Atvb ??.. i'fciU4?!ukU. Pa. laaaaaaaaaaaaeeaiaaaaaa , IFOR 14 CENTS'; WewlahtogainthiayearSOfcOfiO J . W new enstoinrre, and h?noe oiler ; ~ 1 Pkr. It Pay ltadiah, 10c 1 | 1 Pkg. harly Ktpa Cabbage, loo I 1 I " Karlleat Ited Beet, lOo I > I " I.ong Llfthtn'ir Cuenmber 10c | | I " Sailor's Beat l.ettuee, loo , . 1 " California Kig Tomato, Sue . 1 " Knrly Dinner Otion, loo 1 " Brilliant Flower Seeds, l?e < Worth 41-00, for 14 emit. fTiw < > Above 10 pkgs. worth $1.00, wo will | 1 mail yon tree, together with our I 1 great I'ia'it and Seed Catalogue I I upon receipt of thia notice ,t llr| i poat vg-. Wo lovite your trsdo and | | know when you onre try e?alsr.er'a , , nooileyoii will never gc? alongwitb- [ . oat t neni. Union Sreil ?IHr. end 1 ' a. up a II). I'otatni inl 81,^1' 1 W?i* a llbl. Catalog alone he. No. Kf (lilt A. HAI./f K Hril? CO.. I.A I knillAl and Whiskey HabiU B ^1 111 cared at home wlth III BBI out rain. Book of par|l IwllB tieularasent I'HKK, ImbMMBH b.m.wooi.lky, m.d. w Atlanta, ba. Office 1(M N. Pryor Bt. oodqv new discovery; kin* l? qnfek relief and ourM worot Book of toot noon i an and fO dure' treatment . Dr. H. OREEN 'B SONS. Ho* D. Atlanta, GO: 1NTRD- Oaae of bad health that RIPA K I trill not benefit. Rend f> cts. to Hii'itu* ('liemleal SewYork, for lo samples and tow loatimuulale. WON THIS PflPERrr-lSJSS se $1.00.