- ';'v .'.'.-;.' a ; : ,:'-' ... : ::.-v.. - ': -- : - - .-v . "Z' T'i'.'.'v - ' --; '.-' .-.' -'A -' a. ; , - " , -" i " r'- .'. '- -.(.-- . . '- - -: ;.i :-
. r..(uir Warrant.
-Vnt was issued in the Police
rant ;it TOPev fsr John
Cincm" -o treat.
Kfo-recoj
SrSSJ'. brain iS
wuw, ...p, medicine
i cjje says xio iv""
K "ilrd he believes he can
bd, , ,1lT,OOB The warrant
orderly conduct. Townes
i1 oc' ed up, but wilj be forced
, city hospital, and if he still
! TTiPrHcine he "will be
edto do so in the strong ward.
RHEUMATISM AND CATARRH.
Vnrei Deep-Seated Cases Especially
, j'vove Xt xi i oeni r ree.
diseases, with aches and pains in
. L-rkA liiolr mmnirinor nains in
joinis - o
blades, lianas, ungers, arms auu
oled by rheumatism, lumbago, sci-
!r neuralgia; hawking, spitting, nose
ringing in the ears, sick stomach,
s. nois-s in the head, bad teethj thin
oi all run down feeling of catarrh
e sijns of an awful poisoned condi
the blood. Take Botanic Blood
B.B.B.) !Soon all acnes and pains
he poison is destroyed and a real
lent cure is made of the worst rheu-
or foulest catarrh, lhousands of
ured by taking B.B.B. It strength
en; kidneys and improves diges-
. . a 1 it
pruggista, ?i per large douic. oam
L by .writing Blood Balm Co., IS
le medical advice sent in sealed letter.
A SERMON FOR SUNDAY
iVht-fittinar British uniform is al-
b he the cause of much heart disease
soldiers.
krt.Qiow's SoothinffSvruo for ohtldrai
tg.softeathe gums, reduces inflamma
ittys paiu.cures wind colic. '25a. abottld
ttle lie generally travels faster than
truth. .
-am Fadeless Dyes produce the
est and fastest colors.
unexpected . seldom happens to the
who are always looking for it.
jCure is the best medicine we ever usod
affcadons of throat and loners. M.
fcsLKT, Yanburen,. Ind., Feb. 10, 1900.
Is a pleasure to note the success ot
obbitt unemicai vxmpany, oi oam
Md.,, manufacturers of heumacida
ia R.iiH tn he a verv suoerior remedv
leumatism and other blood diseases.
Company has grown from a small be-
Ig until it is now one ot tne most ex
re advertisers in the United States,
mewsDaoer and other methods, also.
lnp I)Hlr For Allen -Koot-
tn filmlrn intn vourshoes: rests the
Cures Corns, Bunions, Swoollen. Sore,
Jallous. Actiing, sweating reec ana in
ktrNaiLs. Allea's Foot-Ease makes new
ht shoe? easy. It au druggists ana
tores. 25 cents. ; ssampie mnei bee.
bs Allen S. Olmsted. LeRoy, N. Y.
be sealed for time and eternity
sealing ceremony in accordance
the law of the Mormon Church ia
in Hilton vs Roylance (Utah) oS
A., 723, to be a good common-
carriage. !
ermanently cured.No fits or nervoos-
ier first day's use of Xr. Kline's Greai
lestorer. $2 trial bottleand treatise f rea
. Kline. Ltd.. 931 Arch St.. 1'hlla.. Ta.
man has no master sreater than
V service must always be
Ung.
I Ti
oor,
ly'i
?
For two years I suffered ter-
blv from dvspepsia, with great
pression, and was always feeling
orly. I then trier Avers Sarsa-
rilla, and in one week I was a
man." John McDonald,
liladelphia, Pa.
Don't foreet that it's
Ayer's" Sarsaparilla
hat will make you strong
d hopeful. Don f waste
our time and money by
rving some other kind.
Use the old, tested, tried,
md true Avers barsapa-
tl AO a hnttta Jill dmrristl.
prsapari'Ja. Ho knows all about thia grand
Id fa.mil v mprllf Inn Vnllav ills advlCO And
c will be satisfied.
J. C. ateii CO., Lowen, masi.
V.
P uk. nek h
L,. V.atefFwf 0W
u,.L- romi (asutt km or
- - l - V
So. 17.
Health at Home
throutrVi
delightful preparation of
roots, herbs, barks and
oemes. Nature's own pre
option. Benefits: every
Hires
S?? th btood- Ownohw tb th lr.t
Wkei'r;;' ..pa
or h i I" ou,u TerywBer
r . . -
neii.HIriCo.,BlTeni,Pa.
u.5Thoinp8cn!s Eyo Water
AN ELOQUENT DISCOURSE ENTITLED
"INCREASE OF FAITH."
The Rev. Qnincy, EwIbr Shows notrThls
llecomes . th " Prayer . of Our Foala
Wheu the World Perplexities Bear
Down Upon Us.
New York City. The Rev. Quincy
Ewing, of St. James' Episcopal Church,
Greenville. Miss., who was at one time un
der consideration for one of the important
pulpits of Brooklyn, recently preached a
thoughtful sermon on "Increase of Faith."
Mr. Ewing took his text from Luke xvii:
5: "Lord, increase our faith." In the
course of the sermon ho said: '
Y We do not know why precisely the disci
ples should have made this request at this
particular time. Jesus had just said to
them: "If thy brother trespass against thee
rebuke him, and if he repent, forgive him.
and if he trespass against thee seven times
in a day, and seven times in a dav turn to
thee, saying, M repent thou shalt forgive
him." Then 1 very abruptly comes from
them the request, "Increase our faith."
Possibly there was some tone of impatience
in their voices as they spoke. They may
have recalled that in the old book of Le
viticus was to-be found practically the
same commandment that He was giving
them; that in the book of Leviticus they
were taught not to hate their brethren,
nor to bear grudge against the children of
their people, but to love their neighbor as
themselves; and they may have felt that
there was no need for them to bear this
old teaching over again from the lips of
the Master: that He was but wasting
time in telling them what they already
knew so well.
So their request. Increase our faith may
have meant, "Tell us something that we do
not already know something hid from the
prophets and wise men of old times; tell
us something, show us something, do some
thing which will make us surer that you
are indeed the Messiah we and our fathers
have looked for; that our hope in You is
not roisnlaced; that You are truly the
promised Deliverer. Make us more certain
that we were justified in breaking away
from the authority of the Scribes and
Pharisees, in forsaking all to follow You.
Do not be simply repeating to us what we
mav rparl nurseiven in an ancient book:
say something, do something, reveal some
thing which will certify our faith in You
as the Messiah."
Or the request may have had a profound
er import and been uttered in a tone of
self-distrnst, of unfeigned humility and
supplication.. Suddenly while Jesus was
speaking there may have awakened in the
souls of His hearers the accusing conscious
ness that, though they had known for so
long the divine law of duty toward their
neighbors, yet never had they ' or their
fathers been able to live ud to it, to real
ize in their human life the divine ideal, and
accompanying the consciousness of past
failure may have been the reflection that
never -should they be able to realize that
divine ideal, to expel from their human
hearts all hatreds, all resentments, all con
temnts. all 'nnforeivineness and'look upon
their - fellow-men with the steady Christ-
vision of reaemptive chanty.
And so tbeir reouest may have meant.
"Open wider our spiritual eyes, that we
may see with You; lead us, draw us up to
Your spiritual heieht: let us share with
You Your vision of God and man: let us
drink from the visible fountain of Your
vast strength and goodness; let us know
the secret of Your Christliness, that we
may rise to full sympathy with Your di
vine purpose and build with You the king
dom of God among men as xou would
have it builded." But whatever may have
been the character of the disciples re
quest, whether of impatient criticism or
humble speculation in the words that came
from, their lips. Increase our faith, we
may all .utter the deepest and devoutest
prayer of the most needful moments of
out human life, "Increase our faith." How
inevitably that becomes the prayer of our
souls at times when the infinite problems
and perplexities of thi problematical, per
plexing world bear down upon us and
threaten to weigh us. down; when we are
forced to give ourselves to reflection upon
the lone and cruel and. apparently, unend
ing suffering of good and evil; the suffering
of unnumbered millions; the vast failures
of justice and triumphs of injustice: the
tragic defeat of right and victories of
wrong; the bitter battles of uplifting truth
for recognition by the mind and heart of
humanity; the painful, questionable pr"-
crress of indubitable good everywhere upon
earth: and. so reflectine. are tempted to
. cry out in loud despair, or in danger of
being mastered by that deep hopelessness
which utters no sound and shows itself in
no outward sign; hopelessness, that a
deathless heart of good docs, indeed, throb
on to victory in thines evil: hopelessness,
that the to-morrows of humanity will be
-orladder and nobler than its yesterdays:
hopelessness, that the wrongs we know will
be done awav. and the eood we dream em
body itseu in fact; hopelessness,, that our
individual efforts, all that we can say, all
that we can do, are not mere vain, tran
sient strivmss a eamst eternal fate, power
less, as the wines of insects fluttering in
the storm, to effect any betterment of
things that are! How much that prayer
of the apostles, Increase our faith, may
mean, then to our individual souls: A si
lent, unsvllabled crv for rescue to the In
visible' Power that made us and the world:
pleading with that Power Invisible,
whose name we cannot then utter, Whose
attributes we hesitate then to declare, that
aeain we mav be nrivileeed to pray, "Our
Father:" that aeain we may feel ourselves
His children; that real enough may be
come His presence in our lives, to banish
from ns nil doubt that the world mtelligi
m 61 'lnSflT JO 3JJBP '3Tai2iTT3iutun .to 3ia
TTis kpeninc: all suspicion, that any coot
dies, that anv right fails, that any throned
pnd crowned power of iniouity ran swing
this earth outside the circle of' His Fath
er s purpose and His Father s love. .
But it is, not only in times of sorrow, sad
ness, perplexity that' the request of the
apostles snould he our prayer, for that re
quest, pf theirs "points to an eternal and
universal need of the human soul, the need
to-day, to-morrow -and forever of a farmer
grasp ot uoa, a clearer vision oi ms pur
noses, a deeper readiniz. of His- will. -in. or
der that we may live and save ourselves in
the wav divine. Perhaps from the stand
point of the need of some of us jt is more
necessary for us to pray fervently that
nraver. "Increase our faith." in the sea
sons of our greatest joy than in the days of
our deepest anguisn; more necessary ai
times when the world shines brieht about
us and we are conscious 'of the burden of
no perplexity and no misgiving, and dis
posed to be tnorougniy sacisnea wicn pur
selves, our performances and with things
as they are; tor then, it may oe, we are in
greatest danger of forgetting God, of grow
ing unmindful of., our personal dependence
upon Him, of crowding Him out of our life,
of skimming gayly the gay surface of things
with eves and ears blind and deaf to their
eternal aspect, their profound and supreme
appeal. Perplexed, bewildered, crushed,
under the stress of deep personal anguish,
we may think. God far from ns, all put of
touch with our, lives-and their needs. - But
to think God at all, however far we put
Him from us, however grimly we deny our
selves all consoling faith in His wisdom
and goodness to think God at all is. infi
nitely better than to forget, to ignore Him
utterly, as if our goodness and our happi
ness did not need -Him; as if the world
about us were fair enough and, bright
enough, and altogether satisfactory enough
with or without His presence!
Do you ask what sort of faith this is we
need to pray for to have increased? Is it
faith in some particular dogma clearer
mental comprehension of some series of
metaphysical propositions faith in the in
fallibieness of some verbal formula? Nay;
the faith of our deeper need is that faith
which means steanVinc vWon'Ar ttiM;.
vine unseen and the divine eternal; pro
found consciousness from moment to mo
ment of-what the poet- has called "the dep
below the deen nnd.fho hoiolit ntrnnrl
, height;" nobler conviction, within us, I be
coming ever more ineradicable and uncon
querable, that the real value of things is a
spiritual value, their real meaning a spirit
ual meaning, their real end a spiritual end.
This is the faith upon which depends uUi
mately our strengthening and saving; jt he
faith which our Bible3. our churches,! jour
creeds, our dogmas, our devotion? were
meant to inspire, and which, if thpy dojnoh"
inspiie. they are hut as sounding brass and
a tinkling cymbal. This i the faith we
need to pray for, kneeling in our pews on
Sundays, or bupy at our work oh week
days, increase of vision, of facullv, toisee
aau ici pe;ow tne earthly deeps and be-
yona tne eartniy heights, and when j we
Prav God to increase for a fMa fund.-
mental faith, ba tempted to dictate! to
God how He shall ansr. er us or when. .We
may want one- answer; He may know that
J 1 a 4 '
we neea anotner. we may choose to have
our flnRWPr in full nil o. nnro' TTo Tnnir
choose to give us but the first svllab'.e 61 : it
A T la t 'Mb.
to-aay. ana to prolong the giving of it
thrnilffh the vpnra rtf n. Hfofimo nui-Vi na
fchrmnrVi thp nenna nf pfemSK- Wn nar
undertake in our wisdom to impose condi
tion unon uod that we imagine He must'
fulfill if He would answer our prayerJfor
getting the one fundamental condition,
that we must impose -upon ourselves hon
est eagerness to hear the higher voices (hat
may can to us irom day to aay, anq to
obev them when thev do: honest strutgle
to beat bade the unholy temptations that
beset us. darkening the way to our f let:
honest purpose to do the duties ihat
throng us hourly, momently, and in their
doing ultimately illumine any darknessUhc
1 , 1
so can enter: (
hardly as they expected certainly it ml?ht
ue. out answered nevertheless and to a de-
ree ot richness that they were not able
all ai once to fathom: answered for them.
it has been through the a?es fori al!
their successors by right of spiritual inher
itance: for them as for him. great and good
apostle unto u of our modprn time, who
waucea tnmugn the hres of sacrifice ;and
came in and 0'it here among us for a son
of years, fighting his ond fiht. his fight
of gnod. his fiVht for God and man. wjiosf
words are vital yet within these walls.iand
hevond th em where men speak the Jlnz-
jisn rongue: answered, i say, that nraycr
for them of tb earlier time, for hirti of
this !cter. not by any flashing miracle of
word or 'deed; rot by any startling revela
tion of a new havens and i new earth;
not by: nny suddenness of divine destruc
tion and reconstruction; nav, but by) and
throujrh a gradual growing svmpftthv
with the purposes of fhe "Redeeming Mas
ter; by and through the deenenint, widen
ing, atonement of thSr.Roulg nnd-feisLrW
and t.hroi"h tTip?r tWnr-. f liV i;f
that worsKrpedVHis, ' and sufTerip' andrrru-i
ciTixions. 7T. meant: to trpm to be a do
what "hould bear true witness to a Christ.
And thus nlv ia 4k fhf Hrtfl fill fill
- "J " v-. 1 1 A.. 1.4 1.1 1 A
fo any of ns the nrarer, Increase onr
iaith. J he eternal Father nf o'ir spirits
"an meet their deener yeamin" for 'Hrger
faith. fo clearer, vision", only through! ad
possible for us frm d?v to dav. the life of
rnort, ot stmgr'e. ot nerOim. Hej has
to do his will reveals it: the seeVing to re
alize His pumoses interprets themfnnd
closer, ever closer, becomes the meet'g
noint of our actual earth and our possible
naven, ai re re.oive that our earthiest
efforts shall lie nobTe enough to hespeak a
heavenly meninar. and our eaHhliest hopes
heroic ' enough to prophesy a heavenly con-
Growlne Faith.
Growtn is charictritic of life, -jrt is
an "evidence of health and inereafinrr
strength. Every sou' is born as a jhild
into God's kinrdom. It must herin. and al?
bPTinnines are small. In our judemnfs nf
others we oneht to remembpr thi fpt.
One ha no ris-ht to expect frorn a hild
that which ' belongs to manhood. When
ADranam wrs hrst called into God service
he came js has everv one since. Hi faith
wa untried ad his growth just begun.
God promised him crent. thinrr which he
hesitated to believe. When told that his
descendants were to be as numerous as thp
stars hp staggered at the thonorht.l All
passed like a dream before him. Th na-
tnarcn was sRenncai. "jiord, how shall J
Know that J hall mhnt it?" God s word
was not sufficient. He wished' some's evi
dence that wuid aoppal to his positive
knoivJpdee. He wished to know. Years
after tint man staggered not at thejicom
nand of God when told to slav bin own
The difference was rot in the cruaHtiy of
of his faith, it was tne same man father
on. God's laws apply in principle alikVto
all. Abraham s experience becomes In
measure a n.irt of our own. A livine fn'th
solves all things. Abraham's vision of the
smoking lam and parted sacrifice wsis but
temporary. It served him for the rqTnpnt
and then became a recollection. But his
faith became a permanent on. It wa a
lamp that grew the brighter. Here lie the
pt.roue'x't. evidence of our acceptance With
God. The vine hres because of its attach
Trnt to the tree. It drnws its life from
nthr veins. Is vour horizon wider. :ronr
f?th stronorer. your sacrifice more wilKnt?
These are vour assurancs of creater things
V .1 T 1 i. X
ucjruuu. j. resuyicnan oournai.
Doin? What We Can.
Doinrr what wo have the power fo o is
our highest privilege and duty. We often
feel that, if we had more money, or "iiore
influence, or more power, we could do
something worth doinsr. but. as iVisj our
possibilities are sadly limited, and we? can
have no hope f grcat'v honoring God", or
helping our fellows."; Yet the one woman
in the world whose name stands highest
above her fellows for what (&e did inj her"
day and ceneration was not a woman of
great wealth or of special power. Of her it
is said simply, "She hath done whatl sho
could." ,Fhe mav have thought , that j her.
sphere rnd abilities were limited, but God
blessed hpr simple doing with His b'esjsing
and with ber ever-growing fame. AH jthat
God would have us do is to do whas we
can..That much we ought, to be ready to
do gladly. Sunday-School Times.
is
"Sun of my soul. Thou Saviour dear!
a line that ought to be said every hour of
a - Christian's life. Some good people! are
tne prey1 or natural despondent tempera
ments. Such need a double supply of grace
and must pray for it. The worries of busi
ness or household care, the loss of sleep
or the derangement of the bodily machin
ery put such Christian folk under a cloud
very often. To-day they sing like larks.
To-morrow the barometer goes down jand
they are in the dumps again. Such people
should Jook after their bodily health as a
spiritual duty. . Moreover they should keep
their Christian faith where it will not be
exposed to every east wind or drenched to
death by every shower that falls.
Some Thoughts.
ITiffh thinking chisels the - features mtt
the beauty of a pure and refined expression.
The tone of the mind assuredly reveal it
self nn the face ' Tf our thoncKfa im '
geueiuus auu luigiviiig, our xaees will
consciously reveal the ; sweetness of t
virtues. into a lrinr? hparf. CinA nAnn
light, which radiates on the face and makes
Christian Joy.
Christian joy - is an experience of treat
depth and solemnity. It never overlooks
that sadness and sternness of life; it is
never shallow or unreflecting; it is re
strained, tender, sympathetic, confident.
We know it when we see it in the face of
any whom wa love; it helps 1 us. Ri J.
(jampoeu..
l y X ' j
' 4
A prominent; club woman, Mrs.;Dan-
forth, of St. Joseph, Mich., tells hew ( she
was cured of falling of the womb and
its accompanying pains and misery j by
Lydia E Pinkham Vegetable Compound
'! uDeab Mrs. Pinkiiam: life looks dark indeed when a woman
feels that her strength is; fading away and she has -no hopes "of ever
being restored. Such was my feeling a few months ago when I was,
advised that my poor health was caused by prolapsus or falling of the
iwonib. The words sounded like a knell to me, I felt that my sun had
set but" Ijydla E. Pinkliara's Vegetable Compound came to me as
ran elixir' of life V it .restored the lost forces and - built me up until my
: good health-.returned to me -For four months Ir took the medicine
daily and each 4ose added health and strength. I am so thankful for
the help I obtained through its use." Mrs. Florence DantorthI
iuvi jiiiiBs-Ave., ot. josepn, Mien. - ;
A medicine that lias restored so many women to, health and
can produce proof of the fact must be regarded with respect. This
is the record of Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, which
cannot be equalled by any other medicine the world has ever pro
duced. Here is another case : j
I ''-Dear Mrs. Pinkham : For years I was
troubled wih falling of the womb, irregular
and painful menstruation, leucorrhoea, bearing
down pains, backache, headache, dizzy and
fainting spells, and stomach trouble. ;
I "I doctored for about five years but did
hot seem, to imnrove. I bejran the use of vour
medicine, and nave taken seven bottles of
Xiydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound,
three of Blood Purifier, and also used the
Sanativo Wash and Liver Pills, and am now
m Ji- enjoying good health, and have gained in flesh.
UJ 'fZL I thank you very much for what you
have done for me, ana Heartily recom
mend your medicine to all suffering
women." jmss lmma ontder, 210 Jiasc
Center St., Marion, Ohio.
"FREE METICATj ADVICE TO TYOMEX."
Women would save time and much sickness if they -would
write to Sirs. Pinkham for advice as soon as any distressing symp
toms appear, j It is free, and has put thousands of women on the
r Tight road to recovery. ; . .
f Mrs. Pinkham never violates the confidence thus entrusted to
licr, and Although she publishes thousands ' of testimonials from
women .who hare been benefited by her advice and medicine,
never in all her experience has she published such a letter without
the full consent, and often by special request of the writer.
I vy "i nsv 1
1 - y
f 7 ' X&T-
7
1
Grandma is
Generally Right
Take advantage, of
?hS$ her vast experience
and ask her what is
"X - best for your Liver,
think she will recommend
DH. THACHER'S LIVER AHD
BLOOD SYRUP
because she has tried it and knows it
cures. Been on market SO years and is
reliable. You try it. "
60c and $1 00 et pood dtugrgists. Dr.
Tbather's Liver Medicine (dry), 25 cents.
Yes, your druggist, sells it. Be sure
it's Dr. Thscher's. thou jrh.
Write otjr Consultation Department,
explaining pyniptonis. and receive free
confidential advice. ,
THACHEK-MEDICINE COMPANY,
. Chattanooga. Tenn.
To Cotton Ginners,
Wa Manufacture the Most Complete Una
of Cctton Gin Wachinerj of Anj Ucrapar.j
In the World, namelj, the
PRATT
WINSHIP,
MUNGER,
SMITH.
V also make
Llnters for Oil Mills,
Engines and Boilers.
We also sell sTerjih'ng necossarj to complete) a
Modern Ginning Outfit and furnish ow ow
tomers with full dehlled plans and c-
terial bills fer construction of necessarf
houses for our plants wlthsut extra charge.
The Continental Bin Company
Birmingham, Ala. '
Vain FOB OXJB XJITKBT CAIALOOtT.
ret ONE OOllAt WITH OSCER WE SHIP tlCTClES TO
AMI ADDKtSJ SUlJtCT TO AfPKBTAL.
. f fm Buys Our Hmw ImprwvM Hih
Alfl.Mn CcnU Nwtn BtertC.
wi LOW PRICKS. rrlkeetwodMrfMHr
CTbt mi, UMt prtoM kaowa ad TOSM Tm.lAS.tJnf
Write for Free Bleyele Catlora. Addnwa,
SEARS. ROEBUCK & CO UUDk
S5000
FORFEIT if we cannot forthwith produce the original letters and' signatures !
above testimonials, wLich will prove their absolute genuineness.
i JLydia . Plukliana Medicine Co., Lynn, Macfe -
f
mm
s
2iO Kinds for 16&
It is a fact thatSalzer's seetls arfb and to
more gardens and on moifarmthan r
any otner in America. Tnere is r
reason for tb is. We own, and opV
erate over 5000 acres for the product- S
tlon of oar choice seeds. In order to
, indnceyoutotry themtremnto
the following anprecedented offenf
For IG Cents Postpaid
St sort wemlerf al aloaa, . .
St Mrti elt wbbas. V
liMii. MacaiOeeatcarrota.
. ti pearlcta MUn T&ri.Uas,
S& rare laaclca radl
SO apleadtd bt aorta. I
. & irluriauMlr haaclual lam X:
In all 210 kinds positively fnrnishinf?
bushel of cluiriuinir tloweraAiid lota
and lots of choice vectixaiim, togeth
er wun our preat catalogue feiung ail
about Macaroni Wlieat. ItllliaM Dol
lar (InuiL TeosLnte. liromna. SneltzJ
etc., all for only lGe. In stamps-aoil. f'
. thla ntitlat. -
Vxloa aeed mt bat COe. paaatC .
JOHN A. SALZER SEED Ca,
' La Crosse, Wis.
ii. mi
viz? z'
iHaVMLjEZ
SSa,SQ. waJBaiaii n'W'''' , .
All
DrarrbU
Genuine stamped CCC Never sold in hulk.
1 Beware of the dealer who tries to sell
'something just as good'
fAPUDINE Cour
V CURES Otomach
AND
... Indigestion
io, 25 and 50c. at Drugstores.
An iceboat is now propelled by; a a elec
tric motor driven fan.
Stati or Ohio, Citt orT oledo, .
Fbank J. Cheney, make oatlithat ho the
senior partner of the firm of .T. Chexey &
Co., doing business in tho City of Toledo,
Countv and State aforesaid, and that said
firm Vill pay the sum of oxe husdrko dol
LA.B8 for each and every casaotcATABBH that
cannot he cured by tho use of Hall's
Catabbh Cube. Fbaxk J. Cheney;
Sworn to before me and subscribed in my
presence, this 6th day of December,
A. D.: 1846. A. W. Gleasok.
Notary Public.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken iaternally, and
acts directly on tho plood and mucous sur
faces of the system. ! Send for testimonials,
iree. P. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists,75c. ' i
B all's Family Pills are the best.!
fflkO-
Promptly
cures all
He si ca a c ih. es
22
nn
YPEWR ITERS
CHEAP!
Tig Lot Second-hand --Machine cf
all makes takn as part pay for the
Oliver. Ba'icains for quick buyer.
J. IS. CBA YTO, Chrlotte, N. C,
CURED
Gives
Quick
Relief.
Removes all swelling; in 8 to 20
days ; effects a permanent cure
in 30 to ooaays. iriai treatment
given free. Nothingcan be fairer
Write Or. H. H. Green's Sons,
Soecialists. Box It. Atlanta. Ga.
So. 17. .: , .
i Which?"!
IroDsv
a
, The Great Spring Remedy. -
, After the rigors of winter are felt you are liable to feel the need "of a tonic, laxative and T?
BLOM RURrFIER.
YOU WANT THE BEST, OF COURSE; THAT IS i Y
RHEUM ACIDE. i I
This medicine is scientifically compounded from the extracts of roots, herbs and barks, com
bined with certain other purifying and alterative products. A sure cure for Rheumatism, Indigestion, ' A
Constipation, Boils, Kidney Troubles', and all diseases arisihe; from impurities in the blood. - Vj.
A Aslc your druggists for RHEUM ACIDE and insist on arettlngr It. I
Y " Beware of subatltutea of doubtful value. - y,
. . All Druggisu, io, or express prepaid on receipt 6T price. ! J
Q Bobbltt Chemical Co., - , - Baltimore, Md.. U. S. A. Q
A lean and potash-hungry soil,
; KT&Sted serf?. trn:tp1 lnlvr nriA
gins A MORTGAGE. Or, plenty of -
. v j : ., -
Pot ash
In the fertilizer, many bales and a
busy ginA BANK ACCOUNT.
Write as for
our books.
Th ey 'are
money win
ners. We send
them frtt to
farmers.
GERMAN
KALI , "'.
WOEK9
98 Xaaaaa St.
New York .
S25 Every Dai
Can be eaailv mad wiUi omr
Well Angers & Drills
One man and ont horae renvtrerl. Wav '
mm u vua aaa4 a vi IUT AlIIiEl wVCaaeaSaaW
Borrag and Bock-trini uaj U aettiaav
1 " - rin.I
Btar of our etwtomera maice rrom aao uaAa.
Sook and Cireulars PRES. Address.
LOOMIS HACK1KE CO., TIFF13, d
I -1 Best Cough brrnp. Mtes Good, b,
Lf I tn wma eoia trr drmnrtsta.
HZrJ