Newspapers / Orange County Observer (Hillsborough, … / May 5, 1898, edition 1 / Page 4
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)0X C nui.1 of di DTE 11 Youi ampi ABOUT DRUMTOCHTY. } av ood i rets d kl .’ uni . I! tote >mp' en c teec The Famous Annahar Glen Is About Two Miles Long. ; The famous glen of Drumtochty which Ian Maclaren introduced to the world is called Annahar .and is a very lovely spot. Drumtochty is a maze of golden bloom in the summer and au- Itumn and the brilliant blossoms make u gorgeous carpet. From the hills (PREPARED ESPECIALLY YOUNG AND OLD. Martyrdom For an € Deavert OU, of SUFWeri the ’theme Able Sermon — Glimpses of Through the Eyes ot the feFeat Preacher — The Eternal Sleep. in uin iiti co.’ Ae tnd 1 vi at: or 1 pie Jag y IE . th Text: opened, ‘Behold etc.—Acts vii., 56-60. see the heavens he about Drumtochty a rivulet flows through Annahar glen and there on the northern slope stands Drumtochty castle, which is very old. The glen is about two miies long, is well wooded and contains a few cottages for the servants on the castle estate, but in his Action Ian Maclaren has added build ings with a poet’s license. Prose vs. Poetry. Romantic maid—And would you be willing to die for me? Practical man—No; but I will gladly try to make a living for you. Educate Your Bowels With Unseat^, •nn C! ^ ly Cathartic, cure constipation forever, ■five, 25c. If C. C. C, fail, druggists refund monsy. Mr. Reubens’ short experiences of fame made him appreciate obscurity. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous- mess after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free Dr. R. H. Kline, Ltd.. 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. Most of the Congressional explosions, it is believed, come from the inside, Chew Star Tobacco—The Best. Smoke Sledge Cigarettes. The work of making plowshares of gun metal has been temporarily suspended. To Cure Constipation Forever. Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c cr 25o. a C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. The ropes on a first-class man-of-war cost about $15,000, nuv 11 * TRY to keep house without Blue Ribbon Baking Powder. At all Grocer: R. B. P. Company, Richmond, Virginia. B. -■UB. It cost 110,000,000 pounds every week run tire world’s railways. to No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 59c, $1. All druggists. In proportion to its size a fly walks thir teen times as fast as a man can run. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is a liquid and is taken internally, and acts directly upon the blood and mucous sur, aces or the system. >end for testimonials free, sold by Druggists, 75c. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. April showers bring May flowers and mud. Southern Baptist Convention. The Southern Baptist Convention, the American Baptist Educational Society and the Woman’s Baptist Missionary Union meet iin Norfolk, May 6tb-12th, and the Seaboard Air Line will sell tickets to Norfolk on ac count of these meetings at a rate of one fare for the round trip. Their ordinary train ser vice which is u agnificent. has been augment ed by running, on May 5th. of the “Baptist Special.” This train will leave Atlanta at 12:00 noon, having attached our Chapel Car. in which services will be held during the trip. The song service will be conducted by Mr. Wolfsohn, who is associated with Dr. Broughton, of Atlanta. For handsome thirty-page, illustrated hand book and guide to the convention call on or write to any representative of the Sea board Air Line, or to T. J. Anderson, General Passenger Agent, Portsmouth, Va. Uncle Sam Says: This is America’s Greatest Spring Medicine. Take it Now to Sharpen Your Appetite, Vitalize Your Blood, To Overcome ThatTired Feeling. Go to your druggist and get a bottle of Hood's Sarsaparilla and be gin to take it today, and realize at once the great good it is sure to do you. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is America’s Greatest Spring Medicine. S. N. U.—No. 17. —’98. Stephen had been preaching a rousing sermon, and the people could not stand it. They resolved to do ns miiri Bomethfies would like to do in this day., if they dared! with some plain preacher of righteousness —kill him. The only way to silence this mail war to knock the bireath out of him. So they Wished Stephen out Of the gates of the city-, and with curse and Whodp and bellow they brought Miff td the cliff, as was the c^sto^ when they wanted to takeaway life by 'stoning. Having .brought him to the edge of the cliff, they pushed him off. Alter he had fallen they came and looked down, and seeing that he was not yet dead they began to drop stones upon him, stone after stone. Amid this horrible rain of missiles Stephen clambers up'on his knees and folds his hands, while the blood drips from bis temples to his cheeks, from his cheeks to his garments, from his garments to the ground, and th6u } looking tip. he makes two prayets-ohO for himself and one tor his murderers; “Lord Jesus- re- ^^iny spirit;” that was for himself; Lord, lay not this sin to their charge;” that was for his assailants. Then front pJirt and loss of blood he swooned dway dhd fell asleep. ^ ^ Ru ^ td Sho^ yoti to-day five pictures— Stephen gazing into heaven, Stephen look ing at Christ, Stephen stoned, Stephen in Uis dying prayer and Stephen asleep. First look at Stephen gazing into heaven. Before you take a leap you want to know where you are going to land. Before you climb a ladder you want to know to what point the ladder reaches; And it was right that Stephen, within a few moments Of heav en should be gazingjintoit; We would all do Well to be foundin thesameposture; There is enough in heaven to keep us gazing; A man of large wealth may have Statuary in the hall and pointings in the sitting room and works of art id all parts of the house, he has the chief pictures in the art gal lery, and there hour after hour you walk with catalogue and glass and ever increas ing admiration. Well heaven is the gallery where God has gathered the chief treas ures of his realm, The whole universe is his palace. In this lower room Where we stop there are many adornments, tessella ted floor of amethyst, and on the winding Cloud stairs are stretched out canvases on ^nich commingle azure and purple and saffron and gold. But heaven is the gallery in which the chief glories are gathered; There are the brightest robes. There are the richest crowns. There are the highest exhilarations. John says of it, “Thekings of the earth shall bring their honor and glory into it. ’ And I see the procession forming, and in the line come all empires, and the stars spring up into an arch for the hosts to march under. The hosts keep step to the sound of earthquake and the pitch of avalanche from the mountains, and the flag they bear is the flame of a con suming world, and all heaven turns out with harps and trumpets and myriad voiced acclamation of angelic dominion to wel come them in, and so the kings of the earth bring their honor and glory into it. Do you wonder that good people often stand, like Stephen, looking into heaven? We have many friends there; thd stones hurt his head hor what woul^ become of hisbddy. His first thought was about his spirit; “Lord Jesus, receive my spirit.” The murderer standing on the trap door; the black cap being drawn over his head before the execution, may grimacd abdutrhe fdtiire, but you dud I have nd shame in confessing some anxiety about where we are going to come out. You are not all body. There is within you a soul.. I see it gleam from your eyes, and I see it irradiating your countenance. Sometimes" I am abashed before an audience, not be cause I come under their physical eyesight,’ but because I realize the truth that I stand, before so many immortal spirits. The, probability is that your body will at last, find a sepulcher in some of the cemeteries' that .Slitround yoUr town or city. There is nd doubt that your Obsequies will be decent and respectful; and you will be able td pillow yoiir head tinder the maple or thd Norway Spruce or the cypress or the bloom ing fir. But this spirit about which Stephen prayed—what direction will that take? What guide will escort it? What gate will open to receive it? What cloud will be cleft for its pathway? After it has got beyond the light of our sun will there be torches lighted for it the rest of the way? Will the soul have to travel through long deserts before it reaches the good land? If we should lose our pathway, will there be a castle at whose gate we may. ask. the way to the city? Oh, this myste rious spirit within us! It has two wings, but it is in a cage now. Itislocked fast to keep it. but let the door of this cage open the least and that soul is off. Eagle’s wing could not catch it; The lightnings are net swift enough to take Up with it. When the Soul leaves the body, it takes fifty worlds fit fibdund; Aud have I no anxiety about it? Have you no anxiety about it? I do not care what you do with my body when my soul is gone, or whether you believe in cremation or inhumation. I shall sleep just as well in a wrapping of sackcloth as in satin lined with eagle’s down. But my soul—before this day passes I will find out where it will land. Thank God for the intimation of my text, that when we die Jesus takes us. That answers all questions for me. What though there were massive bars between here and the city of light, Jesus could remove them. What though there Were great Saharas of darkness, Jesus could illume them, What though I get weary on the way, Christ could lift me on His omnipotent shoulder. What though there were chasms to cross. His hand could transport me. Then let Stephen’s prayer be my dying litany, “Lord Jesus, receive my spirit.” We may be too feeble to employ either of these familiar forms, but this prayer of Stephen is so short, is so concise, is so earn est, issd comprehensive, we surely will be able to say that —“Lord Jesus, receive my spirit.” Oh, if that prayer is answered, howsweet it will be to die! This world is clever enough' to us. Perhaps it has treated us a great deal better than we de serve to be treated, but if onthe flying pil low there should break the light of that better world we shall have no more regret about leaving a small, dark, damp house for one large, beautiful and capacious. That dying minister in Philadelphia, some years ago, beautifully depicted it when in the last moment he threw up his hands and cried out, “I move into the light.” Pass on now, and I will show you one more picture, and that is Stephen asleep. With a pathos and simplicity peculiar to the Scriptures the text says of Stephen, “He fell asleep.” “Oh,” you say, “what a place that was to sleep! A hard rock under him, stones falling down upon him, the blood streaming, the mob howling. What PETS OF ONE HOUSEHOLD. There is not a mail in this house to day so isolated in life but there is some one in heaven with whom he once shook hands. As a man gets older the number of his celestial acquaintances very rapidly mul tiplies. We have not had one glimpse of them since the night we kissed them good- by, and they went away, but still we stand gazing at heaven. And when some of our friends go across the sea, we stand on the dock or on the steam tug and watch them, and after awhile the hulk of the vessel disappears, and then there is only a patch Of sail on the sky, and soon that is gone, and they are all out of sight, and yet we stand looking in the same direction, so when our friends go way from us into the future world we keep looking down through the narrows, and gazing and gaz ing, as though we expected that they would come out and stand on some cloud,, and give us one glimpse of their blissful and transfigured faces. Pass on now and see Stephen looking upon Christ. My text says he saw the Son of Man at theright handof God. Just how Christ looked in this world, just how He looks in heaven, we cannot say. A writer in the time of Christ says, describing the Saviour’s .personal appearance, that He had blue eyes and light complexion, and a very graceful structure, but I suppose it was all guesswork. The painters of the different ages have tried to imagine the features of Christ and put them upon can vas, but we will have to wait until ;with our own eyes we see Him and with our own ears we can hear Him. And yet there is a Way of seeing and hearing Him now. I have to tell you that unless you see and hear Christ on earth you will never see and hear Him in heaven. Look! There He is! Behold the Lamb of God! Can you not see Him? Then pray to God to takethe scales off your eyes. Look that way—try to look that way. His voice comes down to you this day—comes down to the blindest, to the deafest soul, saying, “Look unto Me, all yeends of the earth, and be ye saved, for I am God, and there is none else.” Proclamation of universal emancipation for all slaves! Proclamation of universal amnesty for all rebels! Belshazzar gath ered the Babylonish nobles to his table; George T. entertained the lords of England at a banquet; Napoleon III. welcomed the Czar of Russia and the Sultan of Turkey to bis feast; the Emperor : of Germany was glad to have our minister, George" Ban croft, sit down with him at his table, but tell me, ye who know most of the world's history, what other king ever asked the abandoned and the forlorn and the wretch ed and outcast to come and sit beside him? Oh, wonderful invitation! You can take it to-day and stand at the head of the darkest alley in any city and say: “Come! Clothes for your rags, salve for your sores, a throne for your eternal reigning.” A Christ that talks like that and acts like that and pardons like that—do you wonder that Stephen stood looking at Him? I hope to spfend eternity doing the same thing. I must see Him. I pass on now and look at Stephen stoned. The world has always wanted to get ridof good men. Their very life is Un assault upon wickedness. Out with Stephen through the gates of the city. Down with him over the precipices. Let every man come up and drop a stone upon his head. But these men did not so much kill Stephen as they killed themselves. Every stone rebounded upon them. While these murderers were transfixed by the scorn of all good men, Stephen lives in the admiration of all Christendom. Stephen stoned, but Stephen alive. So all good men must be pelted. All who will live godly in Jesus Christ must suffer persecu tion. It is no eulogy of a man to say that everybody likes him. Show me anyone who is doing all his duty to state or church, and I will show you men who utterly abhor him. If all men speak well of you, it is because you are either a laggard or a dolt. If a steamer makes rapid progress through the a place it was to sleep!” And yet my text takes that symbol of slumber to describe his departure, so sweet was it, so con tented was it, so peaceful was it. Stephen had lived a very laborious life. His chief work had been to care for the poor. How many loaves of bread he distributed, how many tare feet he had sandaled, how many cots c£ sickness and distress he blessed with ministries of kindness and love, I do not know, but from the way he lived, and the way he preached, and the way he died I know he was a laborious Christian. But that is all over now. He has pressed the cup to the last fainting lip. He has taken the last insult from his enemies. The last stone to whose crushing weight he is susceptible has been hurled. Stephen is dead. Thedisciples come. They take him up. They wash away the blood from the wounds. They straighten out the bruised limbs. They brush back the tangled hair from the brow, and then they pass around to look upon the calm countenance of him who had lived for the poor and died for the truth. Stephen asleep! I saw such a one. He fought all his days against poverty and against abuse. They traduced his name. They, rattled at the doorknob while he was dying with duns for debts he could not pay, yet the peace of God brooded over his pil low, and while the world faded heaven dawned, and the deepening twilight of earth’s night was only theopening twilight of heaven’s morn. Not a sigh, not a tear; not a struggle. Hush! Stephen asleep! I have not the faculty to tell the weather. I can never tell by the setting sun whether there will be a drought or not. I cannot tell by the blowing of the wind whether it will be fair weather or foul on the mor row. But I can prophesy, and I will prophesy, what weather it will be when you, the Christian, come to die. You may have it very rough now. It may be this week one annoyance, the next another annoyance. It may be this year one bereavement, the next another bereavement. Before this year has passed you may have to beg for bread or ask for a scuttle of coal ora pair of shoes, but at the last Christ will come in and darkness will go out, and though there may be no hand to close your eyes, and no breast on which to rest your dying head, and no candle to lift the night, the odors of God’s hanging garden will regale your soul, and at your bedside will halt the chariots of the King. No more rents to pay, no more agony because flour has gone up, no ffiore struggle with, “the world, the flesh and the devil,” but peace —long, deep, everlasting peace. Stephen asleep! You have seen enough for one morning. No one can successfully examine more than five pictures in a day. Therefore we stop, having seen this cluster of divine Raphaels—Stephen gazing into heaven, Stephen looking at Christ, Stephen stoned, Stephen in his dying prayer, Stephen asleep! , Aiiorig Them Is a Shetland Pony That Has the Run of the House: Billie Johnson is the only pony in tie world who is a household pet. Bil lie is an imported Shetland pony which Henry D. Johnson of Sou.a Bend, Ind., bought fifteen years ago for his son Harry, when tne latter was a baby. Billie now boasts of seventeen years, but he is as frolicsome as a colt. He has all the privileges usually enjoyed by a favorite hound, except that he has never warmed himself by the fireside or slept on the spare bed. But Billie coines into the house, prancing gayly up seven stairs, the click of his small hoofs being like hail on a garret roof. Naturally he is the banner member of the circus troupe which holds high carnival in the children’s bedroom, it is their chief recreation in stormy weather, and the pony, dogs, cats, pig eons and babies furnish a fascinating program. As Billie is only forty-eight inches high, he easily stands or sits on an or dinary chair, with his front feet dang ling against his breast like the hands of a lackadaisical lady, kisses his mas ter, and plays the corpse to perfection. When the babies are in the basket sad dle he steps softly, evidently appreci ating the helplessness of his precious load. But when the older boys get up on his back he jumps, kicks and frolics like a stiff-legged broncho, enjoying the fun as keenly as his riders. He readily becomes- the foundation of an animal pyramid, lying flat on the ground, while Sir Eldrid, a splendid St. Bernard, lies atop of him. The cap stones are Penny and Dot, two tiny blooded black and tans, weighing twenty-five ounces each. Billie and Sir Eldrid sleep in the same stall, and when turned out in the same pasture the two frolic together like playful puppies., Mr. Johnson has a passion for pets, and raised the famous St. Bernard Major McKinley, me largest dog ever known, which was owned by Gen. Jo seph Torrence of Chicago. He keeps a large flock of homing pigeons, some of which have flown 500 miles. Durirg Mr. Johnson’s recent illness in a Chicago hospital two of the pig eons were kept busy bringing messages from the invalid. They made the night of eighty-six miles in an hour and fif teen minutes. When he first took the pair to Chicago, the male bird was five hours and a half returning home and his mate only a little over an hour, which was considered strange, as he was the faster bird. Mr. Johnson watched him the next time, he was set free, and saw him circle for about ten minutes and then come back to a neighboring chimney and run his head up and down as birds do when looking for something. Mr. Johnson then knew that he was waiting for his com panion. Mr. Johnson’s sons are away at school and have a cage of pigeons with them. It is a very sweet and sen timental fashion of sending letters, and although Mr. Johnson’s private S^®^ ON® ®WO^^ Both, the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50 cent bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIS SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. LOUISVILLE, ICY. NEW YORK, N. Y. TAPE WORMS “A tape worm eighteen feet long at least came on the scene after my taking two CASCARETS. This I am sure has caused my bad health for the past three years. lam still taking Cascarets, the only cathartic worthy of notice by sensible people.” Geo. W. Bowles, Baird, Mass. CANDY CATHARTIC I RACE MARK REGISTERED Pleasant, Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe, 10c, 25c, 50c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago, Montreal, New York. 313 UO-TO-BAG X STvSS» Tobacco waves, the water will boil and foam all messengers distance Uncle Sam in speed they do not pose as competitors in the United States mail service.—In dianapolis Journal If it Only Helped a Little it would be worth 50 cent-. Ono hour’s free dom from the terrible irritating itch of tetter is worth more than a whole box of Tetterine costs. It will cure—sure, and it’s the only thing that will cure. 50 cents at: drug stores, or by mail from J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga. will cure well, have a bright, rich color and flavor, with good burning properties, if liberally supplied with a fertilizer con taining at least 10% actual Potash. "GREAT COAL PRODUCTION. All Records Were Broken, But the Price Per Ton Decreased. The total output of coal in the United States in 1897 amounted approximately to 198,250,000 short tons, with an aggregate value of $198,100,000, a fraction less than $1 per ton. Compared with 1896, this shows an in crease in tonnage of 6,270,000 tons, or about 3.3 per cent. The increase in the value of the product was only $1,700,000, little less than nine-tenths of one per cent. The amount of coal produced in 1897 was the largest on record. The average value per ton was the lowest ever known, con tinuing the declining tendency which has been shown without any reaction for the last six years. NOVEL ARMOR FOR THE NEWARK. Inner Coating' of Cement to Be Used With Cellulose Packing. The big protected United States crusier Newark, which has been at the Norfolk (Va.) Navy Yard for some months under- around it. Bravo scldiers of Jesus Christ ' going extensive repairs, has been selected will hear t he carbines click. When I see a : as the subject for a naval experiment. The man with voice and money and influence j efficacy of cellulose on warships it is be- all on the right side, and some caricature j lieved can be increased by the use of a him, and somesneer at him,and some de- heavy coatingof cement all the wayaround nounce him, and men who pretend to be actuated' by right motives conspire to crip ple him, to cast him out, to destroy him, I say, “Stephen stoned.” Pass on now and see Stephen in his dying prayer. His first thought was not how , armor. the hull of the vessel. This will really form an additional belt of protection, which it is believed will nrove effective against rapid-fire guns. The I Newark is now being prepared for her novel Truth is mighty—that is, it’s mighty scarce. B. B. B. Cures Rheumatism, Scrofula and Catarrh. One bottle will convince the most skeptical of its merits. $1.00 per large bottle, 3 for >2.50, at druggists, or sent on receipt of price, express paid, by Blood Balm Co., At lanta, Ga. i^^Books of wonderful cures free. Woman is nearest perfect when most wo manly. Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the body. Begin to-day to P 11 - 1 ^ ^ lls ' bl °tches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. It is a wise man that doesn’t speak his own wisdom. ST. A ITUS’ DANCE, sPASMS and all ner- vousdiseases permanently cured by rhe use of frf™ 6 ™ ^at Nerve Restorer. Send for Sl-W trial bottle and treatise to Dr. R. Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch Street, Phila., Pa. Only about one-third of what a man posi tively knows is true. To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c. The son of his father is oftena poker chin off the old block. Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Array. 1'0 quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bae, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or 51. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York Many a would-be poker player makes a mistake in his calling. Lyon A Go’s “Pick Leaf” Smoking Tobacco stands at the top for its delicious aroma. Good as can be made. Try it. The less honor a man has the more sensi tive he is on the subject. We think Piso’s Cure for Consumption is the only medicine for Coughs. Jennie Pinck ard, Springfield. Ills,, Ort. 1, 1894. Lord Salisbury has become tired, and wants to be retired. x OSBORNE'S ' Md/d^dd & [SGS FOR HATCHING! SSS Miss S. M. BITER, Ellisville, Louisa, Co., Va. 1 ^-4^1. P^oipal crops of corn, | bodices. .1 JL’Ertt rt. dittoes and tobacco amount I But in the form of sulphate. The quality of tobacco is im proved by that form of Potash. Our books will tell you just what to use. They are free. Send for them. GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau St., New York « We delight to do an early friend a^s^S A good turn. The working parts of ANY AERMOTOR^ S^® EXCHANGED FOR A ROLLER BEARING, zephyr-run. ning, ever-going, everlasting, power- doubling, UP-TO-DATE ’98 MOTOR, 8 FT. FOR $6; 12-ft. for$12;lG-ft. for $30. They run like a bicycle, and are rnadelikea watch, every movable parton rollers. Doubles geared mill power. The Aermotor ran when al) other mills 1 stood still, and made the steel windmill business, i THE NEW BEATS THE OLD AS THE | OLD BEAT THE WOO DE Li WHEEL.' On receipt of amount, revised motor (but not wheel j or vane) will be sent to replace old one then to be: i returned. Offer subject to cancellation at any time. 1 1 If your old wheel is not an Aermotor, write for L terms of swap—new for old—to go on old tower. gsg^You can put it on. Aermotor Co., Chicagm^^g C ONTRACTORS’ ^ ^BUiLDERS’^ a^ JILL SUPPLIES. Castings, Steel Beams, Columns and Chan. B? 1 Ro ds, Weights, Tanks. Towers, Ac. Steel Wire and Manila Rope, Hoisting Engines and I limps, Jacks, Derricks, Crabs, Chain and Rope Hoists. Every Day. Make Quick Delivery. LOMBARD IRON W0RK85 SUPPLY CO. AUGUSTA, GA. tred. $9.75 to $17.00. rued wheels,late models, all makes, $3 to $12. M> ship on approval with- 57000 WOLES carried over from 1S97 musi .... ^ani list ana art cata logue lot swell n>8 Maedels. BICYCLIC FREE for season to advertise t hem. Send for one. Rider agents wanted. Learn how to Earn a Bicycle andmake money. K. F. MEAD CYCLE COMPANY, Chicago. THF .’CD YOU KNOW mt -WHAT IT DOES’ 1/^ C I fW ® It relieves a person of 1 1 r 1 « a11 desiro fo * s ' r ° ns HS^JsSl.1. ® drink or drugs, restores K® bis nervous system ti ® its normal condition, ® and reinstates a man to • his home and business. B»™™w««=a» • ],’ or part’eulars address • ® o®®^®® o o $ « either of the following: The KEELEY LYSTITCTE.Greens!^ 9 5 E St., N.W.,WaBhi»gt‘». D. G 1118 Madison Avenue, Baltimore, JOHN B. WRIGHT, Greensboro, N. 0- sells Pianos and Organs of the best makes at the: lowest prices to dL the people alike, it Wils pay to write him before buying elsewhere. CHICKENS— SONET IF YOU GIVE THEM HELF. You cannot do this unless you understi'^ th®”* and know ’now to cater to their requiremeL^; ana you cannot spend years and dollars learning . v ex perience, so you must buy the knowledge acqu aeu by others. Ve offer this to you for only 25 cents. • YOU WANT THEM TO PAY THEIR OWN WAY. even if you merely keep them as a diversion. Tn or der to handle Fowls judiciously, you must know- something about them. To meet this want we are selling a book giving the experience / DnSo ^Kp of a practical poultry raiser for \wtiay twenty-five years. It was written by amau who put all his mind, and time, aud money to making a suc cess of Chicken raising—not as a pastime, but as a business—and it you will proSt by his twenty-live years’ work, you can save many Chicks annually, and make your Fowls earn dollars for you. The point is, that you must be able to detect trouble in the Poultry Yard as soon as it appears, and knew how to remedy it. This book will teach you. It tells how to detect and cure disease; to feed for eggs aud also for fattening; which fowls to save for breeding purposes; and everything, indeed, you »hould know on this subject to make it profitable. Sent postpaid for twenty-five cents in stamps.- Book Publishing House Alabama Marries Mississippi Oxford, Ala., writes: Have used. Dr. M. A. Simmons | Liver Medicine 25 years. I I know it cures Dizziness of Head, Sour Stomachs ■ Sick Headache, and H manyother diseases. I tried! I “Thedford’s Black 1 Draught,” but did not find ■ it to be half as good as the , ■ M.A.SimmonsMedicine. Ba Leucorrhcea—“Whites.” r This is a disorder from which few woni6ffi escape at some period of their lives. It is in the nature of nasal catarrh. In a healthy condition the lining membrane of the genital organs secretes sufficient mucus to moisten them, but if the mucus membrane is con gested or inflamed, the secretion becomes profuse, irritating and offensive. The best results will followthe use of our Mexican Female Remedy as an injection, and a dose twice a day for some time of that great uterine tonic, Dr. Simmons Squaw Vine Wise, will cure the complaint. V Energy, Miss., writes; HL. A. Simmons Liver THedi- W cine has been used 20 years I . - ^ in m y Esther’s family for h^ i’^S^' Wx Nervousness,Sick Head- ache. Dyspepsia, Eil- Y 1 iousness. My Sister was confined to bed formontha from Enlargement of Liver. Our Doctor gave A^^giiKr JW her up to die. She began taking M. A. 9. L. M. and wV^Ei^i^ SOOE entirely well. 3 There is no just comparison between M. A. S. L. M. and Zeilin’s Liver Regulator. The latter by careful test hav ing been found not so reliable has been dis carded. Menstrual Irregularities. Puberty is the period when menstruation) is established. It is the time when the girt becomes a woman, and also the time from which many female diseases date. The menstrual flow usually continues from three to six days and comes on about every twenty-eight days. The quantity exuded varies from two to eight ounces, but the amount consistent with the health of one person may be excessive and weakening in another.- The function is regarded as being regular when its effect upon the system is favorable. The departures from healthy menstruation are numerous and should be corrected by using Dr. Simmons Squaw Vine Wine. PIANOS EASY PAYMENTS. It is easy to obtain a piano our way. Where no dealer sells them, we will send a piano for a small cash payment, balance in like-to explain monthly pay ments. Three years’ time to complete pur chase if desir ed. We would our method. Will send piano guaranteeing satisfaction, or piano may be returned to us at our expense! for railway freights both ways. Our CATALOGUE, FREE for the ask- ing, tells all about them. Special prices 1 and full information, if you write. Ivers & Pond Piano Co., 114 Boylston St., Boston. HE Fil THE FREIGHT. BEST SCALES, LEAST MONEY. J ONES OF BINGHAM TON, N.Y n MORPHINE HABITS treated on a guarantee. N« pay till cured. Address B.H. , Llthla Spring Opium Cur# x 3, Austell, Ga. C HARLOTTE COMMERCIAL OLLEGE, CHARLOTTE, N. G. No Vacations—Positions Guaranteed—Catalogue FrM 8_ N. U. No. 17. 98. i j and DiquoicHabitcuredin ^^“ I Thompson’s Eye Water I iflOIBS: iSS^: Mrs. W inslow’sSoothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reducing inflama- tion,allays pain,cures wind colic, 25c. a bottle. We ought to have plenty of music when Uncle Sam takes the Canaries. Augusta. Ga. Actual business. No text ^ book,. Short time. Cheap board. Send for catalogue. WEHAVENO AGENTS but have sold direct to the con sumer for 25 years at whole sale prices, saving him the dealer's profits. Shipany- where for examination. Everything warranted. 118 styles of Vehicles, 55 styles of Harness. Top Buggies, §36 to §70. Surreys, §50 to §125. Carria ges, Phaetons, Traps, Wagon ettes, Spring-Road and Milk No. 77. Surrey Harness. Price, §16.00. Wagons. Send for large, free As good as sells for $25. Catalogue of all our styles. No. COG Surrey. Price, with curtains, lamps, sun» shade, apron and fenders, 860. As good as sells for $90. ELKHART ®Asaues abb sasnbss are. co. w. b. pratt, 6c«*y, blkbabt, Div. 'r im dust, and in every | Pekin to' Canton, 1500 milesn-, T flfPU V A SIA WHV
Orange County Observer (Hillsborough, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 5, 1898, edition 1
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