Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 5 April 1890 — Page 7

lere are iny

white soaps,

ch

rented to be Jot as

g»d

as

tlie 'yory.

Iiey are not,

it like I counterfeits,

ey lack peculiar

remarkable

alities of

E

genuine. for ry Soap

'st upon having it. sold everywhere.

ilLY JOURNAL

ITCRDAV. APRIL 5, 1890.

TALJI AGE'S SERMON.

ING DOG IS BETTER THAN A DEAD LION."

of Snail Gifts Wtio Uses What 11. |i IVorlli Jlore Than He of Great who Allow* Ills Ability to Lie t.

ts, March SO.—There was the usual in getting seats, or even standing the Academy of Music this morning jcrvice commenced, the ordinary congregation being increaaed by 0! permits eager to listen to the elo•other. Tho service opened with the el the I/ng Metre doxology by the imlience. Dr. TWmage's subject

Dead Lion," and his text, Eccles. A living dog is better than a dead olloving is a verbatim report of the

bfc is the strongest, the loveliest, the the weirdest, the best of books, kj Moses the lawyer, Joshua the sol--utl the judge, Ezra the builder, post, David the shepherd, Daniel minister, Amos the herdsman, Matcustom house officer, Luke the doctile scholar, John the exile and flat harmony from the middle verse which is tho eighth verse of the thand seventeenth Psalm, both tie upjier and lower lids, and from passage, which is the thirty-fifth the eleventh chapter of John, to the which is tho ninth verso of the of Esther, and yet not an imin all tho 773,093 words which it is of. It not only reaches over the over the future has in it a ferrysecond Samuel and a telegraph ta Job and a railroad train, as in Bd introduces us to a foundryman of Tubal Cain, and a shipbuilder of Noah, and an architect by the

Akoliab, and tells us how many iaion had to take care of his horses, Bach he paid for those horses. But in this versatile and cotnprebenioterest mo so much as its apo"1 short, terse, sententious, epinrings, of which my text is one— fog is better than a dead lion."

AND LIONS OK THE BIBLE. lion stands for nobility, and the e»s. You must know that the' 1 in the text is not one of our ft European or Scottish dogs that, is a synonym for tho beautiful, S the atfectionato, the sagacious,

Tho St. Bernard dog is a hero, doubt it, ask tho snows of the which ho picked the oxhausted shepherd dog is a-poem, and it, ask the highlands of Scotr Arctic dog is the rescue of exit jou doubt it, ask Dr. Kane's The watch dog is a living proyou doubt it, ask ten thousand over whoso safety he watched put 8olotnon, the author of my

Jerusalem, and the dog he text was a dog in Jerusalem. -"J"

I

passed dayB and nights

*ae'! throw of where Solomon »«, and from what I saw of the Jerusalem by day, and heard of 1 can understand the slight toy text puts upon the dog of

Us lean and snarly and disgustcted with parasites, and takes Ike human race by filling the clamor. All up and down the of which was written in Palescontiguous lands, the dog is ptuous comparison. I ervant a dog that ho should do ta self abnegation the Syro•Joansaid: "Even the dogs eat 7s

whlch

fail from tho master's in Phllipplans: "Beware St John, speaking of heaven, we dogs." W '"^ld

tlle

"on

18

healthy,

loud voiced, and at its roar the

th«

mountains tremble. It

tor strength, and when its hide muscular compactness la aderful, and the knife of "ootids back from the tenr"rlns

0(1 ot th0

fores'.

JL™ H86

of

firearms, of which

larly afraid, they have disPaces where onco thoy ranged.

tn„C?^idiaoldea

times. They

1 *. Xorxes while marching thn! They were so nutuorlions were slain In forty

C^tre of Bom«. The Bari'°n'tho Senegal Uon, the

a

most absorbing and

natural history. As most bitten in regions Uon appears in almost all •Of nDaVid

Und0i'-

is seen Prowling and day Boa, fromto description:

temselv^-^?

8un

ariseth,

ia their If

t($8'h«r.

and lay

«,ulI,dr-

W °°Uched for, he took

ot aS ®kinK"

wratl»

Mya-

lu tUe

miilen-

nium, The lion shall eat straw like an ox." Ezeldel knew them, and says, "The third was as the face of a lion." Paul knew them and says: "I was delivered out of tho mouth ?.!m

Potor know tbem ttnd

says,

The devil as a roaring lion walketh about." St. Johu know them, and says of Christ 'Behold the Lion of tho tribe of Judahl"

THE 11KANI.N0 OF THE TEXT

Now, what docs my text mean when it puts living dog and a dead lion side by side, and »ys the former i» hotter than tho latter? It means that small faculties actively used are of more value than great faculties unemployed. How often you seo ill Some man with limited capacity vastly useful. He takes that which God has given him and says: "My mental endowment is not large and the world would not rate mo high-for my intelligence, and my vpcjibulary is limited, and my education was defective, but hero gbos'what I have for God and salvation, and tho making of the world good and happy." He puts In a yord hero and a word there, eucoUrages a faint hearted man, gives a Scripture passage in consolation to some bereft woman, picks up a child fallen tho street and helps him brush off the dust and puts a flve-cent piece in bis hand, telling him not to cry, so that the boy Is singing before ho gets round the corner* waiting on everybody that has a letter to carry or message to deliver comes into a rail train, or stage coach, or depot, or shop, with a smiling face that sots everybody to thinking, "If that man can, with what appears small equipment in life, be happy, why cannot I, possessing far more than he has, be equally happy I" One day of that kind of doing things nmy.not amount to much, but forty years of that—no one but God himself can Appreciate its immensity.

There are tens of thousands of such people. Their circle of acquaintance is small. The mau is known over at the store. Ho is clerk or weigher or druyintui, and ho is known uiuoug those who sit near him clear back in the church under the galleries, and at the ferry gates whore ho comes in knocking the snow from his siioes, and threshing his arms around his body to rovivo circulation, on some Junuary morning. But if he should die to-morrow there would not be a hundred people who would know about it. He will never have his name in the iiewsfmpers but once, and thnt will be tho announcement of his"death, if some one will pay for tho insertion, so much a lino for tho two lines. But ho will coino up gloriously on the other side, and the God who has watched him all through will give him a higher seat nnd a bettor mansion and a grander eternity than many a man who had on earth, before his name, the word houorable, and after his name LI.. D. and F. R. S. Christ said in Luke, the sixth chapter, that in heaveu some who had it hard here would lough there. And I think a laugh of delight and congratulation will run around tho heavenly circles when this humble one of whom I spoke shall go up and take the precedence gf many Christians who in this world felt themsolves to be of ninety-nine ]er cent, more importance. Tho whisjwr will go round the galleries ot tho upper temple: "Can it be possible that that was tho weigher iu our store?" "Can it lie possible that that was the car driver on our street?" "Can it be possible that was the sexton of our church?" "Call it be ]o that is the mqp that heaved coal into our collar?" "I never could have thought it. What a reversal of things I We were clear ahead of him on earth, but he is olear ahead of us iu heaven. Why, we had ten times more brains than he had, we had a thousand times moro money thau he had, we had social position a mile higher than he had, we had innumerable opportunities more than he had, but it seems now that he accomplished more with bis ono talent than we did with our ten whileSolonion, standing among the thrones, overhears tho whisper, and sees tho wonderment, and will, with benignant and all suggestive smile, say, "Yes, it is as I told tho world many centuriesago—better is small faculty actively used than groat talent unemployed, 'better is a living dog tban a dead lion.'"'

THERE ABE PLENTY Or DEAD LIONS. The simple fact is that the world has been, and the world is now, full of dead lions. They are people of great capacity and large opportunity, doing nothing for the improvement of society, nothing for the overthrow of evil, nothing for the salvation of souls. Some of them ore monetary lions. Thoy have accumulated so many hundreds of thousands of dollars that you can feel thoir tread wher they walk through any street or come into any circle. Thoy can by ono financial move upset the money market. Instead of the ten per cent, of their income which the Bible lays down as the proper pro|ortiou of their contribution to the cause of God, they do not give five per cent., or threo per cent., or two per cent., or ono per cont., or a half per cent., or a quarter per cent. That they are lions, no one doubts. When they roar, Wall street, State street, Lombard street and the Bourse tremble. Iu a few years they will lie down and die. They will have a great funeral, and a long row of fino carriages, and mightiest requiems will roll from tho organ, and polished shaft of Aberdeen. granite will indicate where their dust lies, but for all use to the world that man might as well have never lived. As an experiment as to how much he can carry with him, put a ten cent piece in the palm of his dead hand, and five years after open the tomb and you will find that he has dropped oven the ten cent piece. A lionl Yes, but a dead lion I Ho left all his treasures on earth, and has no treasures in heaven. What shall tho stonecutter put upon the obelisk over bim? I suggest, let it be the man's name, then the date of his birth, then the date of his death, then the appropriate Scripture passage, "Better is a living dog than a dead lion."

But I thank God that we are having just now an outburst of splendid beneficence that is to Increase until the earth is girdled with it. It is spreading with the speod of an epidemic, but with just the opposite effect of an epidemic. Do you not notice how wealthy men are opening free libraries, and building churches in their native village? Have you not seen bow men of large moans, instead of leaving great philanthropies in their wills for disappointed heirs to quarrel about, and the orphan courts to swamp, are becoming their own executors and administrators? After putting aside enough for their families (for "ho that provideth not for bis own, and especially those of his own household, is worse than an infidel"), they are saying: "What can I do, not after 1 am dead, but while living, and in fuU possession of my faculties, to properly direct the building of the churches, or the hospitals, or the colleges, or the libraries that I design for the pubUc welfare, and While yet I have full capacity to ecjoy the satisfaction of seeing the good accomplished! There are bad fashions and good fashions, and, whether good or bad, fashions are mighty. One of the good fashions now starting will •weep the earth—the fashion for wealthy men to distribute, while yet alive, their surplus accumulation. It is being helped by the fact that so many large estates havo, immediately after the testator's death, gone Into litigation. Attorneys with large fees are employed on both sides, and the case goes on month after month, and year after year, and after one court decides, it ascends to another court and is decided in the opposite direction, and then new evidence is found, and the trials are all repeated. The children, who at the fathers funoral seemed to have an uncontrollable erief. after the will is read go into elaborate

proceso (u-uto Uiut uie luiuer was crasy and therefore incompetent to make a will' and there are men on the jury who think that the fact that the testator gave SO much of his money to the Biblo society, and tho missionary society, or the opening of a free library. Is proof positive that he was Insane, and that he knew not what he was signiug when he subscribed to the words: "Iu the name of God, amen. I, being of sound mind, do m.u this my last will and testament."

NOW IS TUE TIME FOB GOOD WORK. The torn wills, the fraudulent wills, the broken wills have recently been made such spectacle to angels and to men that all over the land successful men are calling in architects and saying to them: "How much would it cost for mo to build a picture gallery for our town or, "What plans can you draw me out f»r a concert hall!"or, "I am specially Interested in -the incurables,' and how large a building would accommodate three hundred of such patients?" or, "The Church of God has been a great holp to ma all my life, and I wont you to draw me a plan for a church, commodious, beautiful, well ventilated, ana with plenty of windows to lef In the light I want you to get Hgtt at. work iu maltlrlff out plans of such a building, for, though I am well now, life is uncertain, and before I leave the world I want to see something done that will bean appropriate acknowledgment of the goodness of God to me and mine now when can I hear from you?"

In our own city wo have many exampleso^l this. What a grandeur of beneficence ha« our fellow citizen, Mr. Pratt, demonstrated, building educational institutions which will put their bunds on the nineteenth century, and the twentieth century, aud all the centuries! All honor to such a man I Do nok say so when ho is dead, say it now. It would be a good thing if some of the eulogies we chisel on tombstones were written on paper in time for the philanthropists to rend them while yet they are alive. Less post* praise, mid moro ante-mortem!

A poor Scotch lad came to America at (welvo years of ugo, and went to Pittsburg. He looked around for work, and became an mgiueer in a cellar, then rose to become a '-olograph messenger boy, then rose to a position in a railroad office, then rose to a place lu a telegraph office, then rose to be superintendent of a ruilroad, then rose till he became an Iron and steel manufacturer, then rose until he opened free libraries iu his native land, and lust month a free library in Allegheny City, and now offers two million dollars for a free library iu Pittsburg. Thin oxample will lie catching until tho earth is revolutionized. How luajestic such men in comparison with some I wot of, who amnss wealth and clutch it with both hands until death begins to feel for their heart strings and then they dictate to an attorney a last will and tent&ment, in which they spite some daughter because she married against her father's wish, and fling a few crusts to God and suffering hnmanity, as much as to say: "I have kept this surplus property, through all these severs winters, and through all these long years, from a needy aud suffering world, and would keep it longer if I could, but as I must give It up, take it, and much good mny it do you!" Now we begin to understand the text: "Better a living dog thtm a dead lion."

THE DEAD LIONS.

Who would attempt to write the obituary of the dead lions of commerce, the dead lions of law, the dead lions of medicine, tho dead Hons of social influence! Vast capacity they and mighty range, and other men in their presonco were as powerless as tho antelope or heifer or giraffe when from the jungle a Numidum Hon springs upon its prey. But they get through with life. They lay down In their magnificent lair. Thoy have made their last sharp bargain. They have spoken their last hard word. Thoy have committed their last mean act. When a tawny inhabitant of the desert rolls over helpless, the lioness and whelps fill the air with shrieks and howls and lash themsolves into lamentation, and it is a genuine grief for the poor things. But when this dead lion of monstrous uselossness expires, there is nothing but dramatized woe, for "Better is a lix-ing dog than a dead lion."

My text also means that an opportunity of the living present is better than a great opportunity passed. Wo spend much of our time in saying: "If I only had." We can all look back and see some occasion where wo might have done a great deed, or might have effected an important rescue, or we might have dealt a stroko that would have accoiopltshed a raac result. Through stupidity or lack of appreciation of tho crisis, or through procrastination, we let the chance go by. How mu?h time we havo wasted in thinking of what we might have said or might have donel We spend hours and days nnd years in walking around that dead lion. We cannot resuscitate it. It will never open its eyes again. There will never bo another spring in its paw. Dead as any feline terror of South Africa, through whose heart thirty years f^o Gordon Cumming sent the slug. Don't let us give any more time to the deploring of the dead past. There are other opportunities remaining. Tney may not be as great, but they aro worth our attention. Small opportunities all around, opportunities for the saying of kind words and doing of kind deeds. Helplessness to be hel]ed. Disheartened ones to be encouraged. Lost ones to be found. Though the present may be insignificant as compared with the past, "Better is a living dog than a dead lion."

USELESS KEG BET.

The most useloss and painful feeling is the one of regret- Repent of lost opportunities we must, and get pardon we may, but regrets weaken, dishearten, and cripple for future work. If a sea captain who once had charge of a White Star steamer across the Atlantic ocean one foggy night runs on a rock off Newfoundland, and passengers and ship perish, lhall ho refuse to take command of a small boat up tho North river and say: "I never will go on the water again unless I can run one of the White Star line!" Shall tho engineer of a lightning express, who at a station misread the telegram of a train dispatcher and went into collision, and for that has been put down to the work of engineering a freight train, Bay: "I never will again mount an engine unless I can run a vestibulo express!" Take what you have of opportunity left. Do your best with what remains. Your shortest winter day is worth moro to you than can be tho longest day of a previous summer. Your opportunity now, as compared with previous opportunities, may be small as a rat terrier compared with the lion which at Matabosa, fatally wounded by the gun of David Livingstone, in its death agony leaped upon tho missionary oxplorer, and with its jaws crushed the bone of bis arm to splinters, aud then rollod over and expired, but, "Better is a living dog than a dead lion."

My text also means that the condition of the most wretched man alive ic better than that of the most favored sinners departed. Tho chance of these last Is gono. Where they are they cannot make any earthly assets available. After Charlemagne was dead he was set in an ornamented sepulchre on a golden throne, and a crown was put on his cold brow, and a sceptre in his stiff hand, but that gave him no dominion in the next world. One ot the most intensely interesting things I saw last winter iu Egypt was Pharaoh of olden times, the very Pharaoh who oppressed the Israelites. Theinscription on his sarcophagus, and the writing 00 his mummy bandages, prove lieyond controversy that ho was the

Dt«raoh

of Bible times All tH- ^vDtologlsts

and the explorations agree that it is the old Visible are the very teeth with which he gnashed against the Israelitish brickmakers. There are the sockets of the merciless eyes with which he looked upon the overburdened people of God. There is the hair thnt floated in the breeze off the Red Sea. There aro the very lips with which he commanded theiu to make brieks without straw. Thousands of years afterward, when the wrappings of the mummy were unrolled, old Fharnoh up his arm as if in imploration, but his skinny bones cannot again clutch hia shattered sceptre. He is a dead lion. And Is not any man now living, in the fact that he has opportunity of repentance and salvation, bettor off than nny of those departed ones who, byauthority or possessions or influence, were positively leonine, and yet wicked?

A CIIANCB TO BE SAVED.

What a thing to congratulate you on your lifel !ij*tit is worth more than all the gems of the universe kiudled into one precious stone. 1 am alive! What does that moan? Why. it means thnt I still havo all opportunity of being saved myself and helping other* to be saved. To be alive! Why, it means that I have yet another chance to corroct my past mistakes and make sure work for heaven. Alive, are w«! Come, let us celebrate it by new resolutions, new self examination, new consecration and a new career. The smallest and most insignificant today is worth to us more than flvo hundred yesterdays. Taking advantage of the present, let us get pardon for all the past and security for all the future. Where are our forgiven sins? I don't know. God don't know, either. He says: "Your sins and Iniquities will I remember no more."

What encouragement in the text for all Christian wprkersl Despair of no one's salvation. Wljilo there is life there is hope. When in England a young lady asked for a in a Stjr.day school, the superintendent tald, "Betterl go out on the street and get four own class." She brought in a ragged uid filthy boy. Tho superintendent gave him good apparel. In a few Sundays he absented iimself. Inquiry discovered that in a street 3ght he had his decent apparel torn off. He was brought dn and a second time respectably clad. After a fow Sundays he again disappeared, ami it was found that he was again ragged aud wretched. "Then," said the teacher, "wo can do nothing with him." But the superintendent fitted him up again and started him again. After a while the gospel took hold of him and his heart changed. He started for the ministry and became a foreign missionary and on heathen grounds lived, and translated tho Scriptures, aud preached, until among the most illustrious names of the Church on earth and in heaven is the name of glorious Robert Morrison. Go forth and save the lost, aud remember however depraved, however ragged, aud however filthy and undone a child is, or a man is, or a woman is, they are worth an effort. I would rather have their opportunity than any that will yvor be given to those who lived iu magnificent sin and splendid unrighteousness and then wrapped thoir gorgeous tapestry around them and without a prayer expired. "Better is a living dog than a dead lion."

THE LAST SHALL BE FIRST.

In the great day it will be found that the last shall bo first. There are In the grog shops and in the haunts of iniquity today those who will yet be models of holiness and preach Christ to tho people. In yonder group of young men who came here with no useful purpose, there is one who will yet live for Christ and perha]» die for Him. In a pulpit stood a stranger preaching, and he said: "The last time I was in this church was fifteen years ago, and the circumstances were peculiar. Three young men had come, expecting to disturb tho service, and they had stones in their pookets which they expected to hurl at the preacher. One of tho young men referred to refused to Uke part in tho assault, and the others, in disgust at his cowardice, left the building. Ono of the three was hanged for forgery. Another is in prison, oondemned to death for murder. I was the third, but the grace of God saved me." My hearer, give no one up. The case may seem desperate, but tho grace of God likes to- undertake a dead lift. I proclaim it this day to all the peopleFree Grace: Living and dying, be that my thomo—Free Grace! Sound it across thocontinent, sound it across tho seas—Free Grace I Spoil out those words in flowers, lift them in arches, build them tn thrones, roll them in oratorios—Free Grace! That will yet Edenize the earth and people heaveu with nations redeemed. Free Gracu!

Salvation! Oh, the Joyful sound 1 'Tis pleasure to our ears, A sovereign balm for every wound, 'K

A cordial for our fears.

Buried in sorrow and in sin. At death's dark door wo lay But wo arise by grace divine

To see a heavenly day.

Flavor of llrcad.

There is no baking powder whioh produces such sweet and tasteful food as the Royal Baking Powder. One of the greatest of the claims of the manufacturers of this powder is that it leavenB without permentation or decomposition, and that the exact equivalents of its constituents are used, whereby a perfectly neutral result is obtained, whioh invariably guarantees that particular and pecrnar flavor in bread, so much desired and appreciated by all. Iu faot the oldest patrons of this powder declare that they get not only a superlative lightness of the bread, but that the biscuit, cakes, muffins, etc., never taste quite so sweet or so good as when they are raised by the Royal Baking Powder. This oomes from ite perfectly uniform combination of the best and purest materials, as lias been shown to lie true by the recent examinations made by both the United States and Canadian governments, whioh reveal the fact beyond a question that tho Royal Baking Powder is the most scientifically compouded of any in tho markot. The Royal gives a delioioua flavor to the bread.

When Baby was side, we gave her Costoria. When she was a Child, e(he cried for easterly When she became Miss, she clung to Costoria. When she bad Children, she gave them Caitorlfc

Acute and chronis rheumatism can bo elTcotually aud permanently cured be the use of Hibbard's Rheumatic Syrup and Plasters. For sale and highly reoommended by Moffett, Morgan it Co,

Children Cry for Pitcher's Castorfcu

Why suffer with Dyspepsia, biliousness or any disease of tho liver when you can be curcd by Simmon's Liver Regulator.

Childrtn_ Cry for^Pitcher'tjSastor?^

Sick headache, Dyspepsia, Indigesgestlon, Constipation. 26 cents per box or live boxes for $1. For sale by Lew Fisher.

Swift's Specific

To Cure Heart Disease

Use "Dr. Kilmer's Ocean-Weed Heart Remedy." It regulates, corrects and relieves the most distressing cases. Price 50 cents and $1. Pamphlet free. Blngbampton, N. Y. Sold, recommended and guaranteed by Lew Fisher,

Some Foolish People

allow a cough to run until It gets beyond tho reacii of medicine. Thoy often 'say, Oh it will wear away," but in most oases it wears them away. Could they be induced to try the successful medicine called Kemp's Balsam, whioh is sold on a positive guarantee to cure, they would immediately see the excellent effect after taking tho first dose. Price 50c and $100, Trial size free. At all druggists.

Merit Wins.

We desire to say to our citizens, tlmt for years we have been selling Dr. King's New Discovery for consumption, Dr. King's New Life Pills, Bucklen's Arnica Salve and Electrlo Bitters, and have never handled remedies that sell as well, or that havo givon such universal satisfaction. Wo do no!, hesitate to guarantee them every time, and we stand ready to refund the purchase price, if satisfactory results do not follow thoir us These remedies have won their great popularity purely on their merits Ht Nye fc Co's. drug "store.

I used Simmon's Liver Regulator for indigestion with immediate relief.—O. G. SPAKKS, ex-Mayor, Macon, Ga.

That hacking cougn .can oe so quickly cured by Shlloh's Cure. We guarantee It. For sale by Moftott, Morgan Co.

Dr. Henley's ltemedy For Ladles Dr. Henley's Celery, Beef and Iron, contains greater elements of strength than any known tonic. We believe it has greater merit, and has cured moro nervous troubles and weaknesses in humanity than any known remedy. Price $1.00 Sold bv Dr. E. Dotation.

WHY Wm Yon cough when Shlloh's cure will give you immediate relief l'rice, 10 cents, 50 cents and $1. Moffett Morgan & Oo.

Hibbard's Tlirout and Lung Balsuin. For throat and lung troubles this remedy has no equal. It is guaranteed to cure consumption in Its first stages: nnd even in advanced stages of that disease it relieves coughing and induces sleep. You may have a oough or a cold at any time, therefore no househod, especially with children, should be without it. For all affections of tho throat, lungs and chest, croup, whooping cough, hoarseness, spitting of blood and all pulmonary diseases it has no equal.

Prepared only by Rhoumatlc Syrup Co., Jackson, Eich. Ask your druggist for It. For sale and highly recommendod by Moffat, Morgan & Co.

Drs.T.J.and Martha E.H. Griffith

0fflKe*ldenco

HEALTH AND BEAUTY!

**a8e*2g3

Ah

218 South Green street.

Mrs. Dr. Griffith (jives special attentlonto Chronic and SurgicdL Diseases of Women, Children, and Obstetrics. Dr. Griffith, a general practice.

CONSULTATION FBKE.

B. B. MORGAN, M. D., PRACTICING

Phy

sician and Surge jn,

osldonoe, 113 West College ttroet' Offloo at Smith & Morgan

Drug Storo

NORTH

to 10 a.

HOURS

2 |to 4 p. 7 to 9 p.

'"l

TIME TABLEb.

N A & C,

ANDALIA.

SOUTfT

No 4—Mall 2 03am No 8—Mall 1:35pm Local Freight. 3 01pm sootn No 3—Mall 1:15am No 6—Mail 1:18pm Local Frolsht. ..0:0 Sam

Express 0:45am Mali 5:20pxr Aooorn 12:00N

NORTH

Mall 8:15am Express 0:15pm Aooom 12:00 N

THE BA.YLESS

10-CentHack Line

OaUs answered at any hour, day or night. Office with Snodgrass & Murphy on north Washington street residence ISO west Market street.

0.. I. & W.

W.BT

a great health restorer and

promotes beauty by removing blotches, pimples, ernp

tions, and all such troubles. S. S. S. is not one of the

old potash, mercury and sarsaparilla mixtures flooding

the country. It contains no mineral at all but is made

to build up broken health, instead of tearing it down.

We will send our Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases and book of advic9 free to all who will write for it.

TEE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.,

Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga.

DR. O. E. RANKIN,

[Successor to Montague & Hankin.l Office and residence over Cornor Book Store Special attention given to chronic diseases.

0R.KILMEITS

05lnSEED'

_PTOM» 1* OOKBITIOXI ku Bycdflo I^Btellm ud Cure. heart tbt^^Bofter sudden effort skips beaOTmuttera, If you have ase, faint spells, fits or spasms, Vim as though water was gathering I I Ull around the heart,or have heart drops»

Vmi have Vertigo, dizzy attacks, ringing in I IUU ears, disposed to nervous proetratioih appoplexy. shook or sudden death. II Vmi have Neuralgia, Numbness in arms ot 11 IUU limbs, darting pains like Rheumatism

Ocean-Weed Prepared at Dlip hitrm.

DllMMl AItIM

CARTERS

PIUS.

CURE

Bick HeadAOhoand rollovo all tbotroublM teal* d»nt to a bllioua state of tho system, snoh afl DUdneca, K&usea, Drowsiness, Distress afUr •sting, Pain In the 6ido &o. While their mod pimarkablo success haa been shown In owiag

SICK

Headache, yet Carter** Little liver Pint •qually valuable in Constipation, curing and pr*» Tenting thlsannoylmroomplaln^hUetheTalM correct all disorders orthostomach^tlmnUtethft llrer and regulate the bowels.<p></p>HEAD

Zhron IX they only

rJLcbathervronldbealmoatprloeletttot&oflBwha auuer from this distressing complaint butfortnSiately their goodness does notendhere^nd those who once try them will find theeo little pills Tain* Able In so many ways that they will not be wit* tthem. tUsg to do without But after all sick head

ACHE

tithe base of so many lives that haralswbSM wetnike our gnat boast. Our plllsouraltvMle Others do not.

Carter's Little Idrer Pills are very small and Tery easy to take. One or two pills mako a dose. They are strictly vegotablo ana do not grip* or purge, bat by their gentle action plesseall who cm thtm. In rial* »t 25 cents five for $L. SolA druggists everywhere, or sent by mail, Barter hiedicine co.. New York

SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE ^HUMPHREYS' VETERINARYSPECIFICS

For Horses, Cattle, Sheep, Dogs, Hogs, AND POULTRY. 000 Page Book on Treatment of Animal* nnd Chart Hen Free. cuius FeverN,Conffestloas»Tnflammnt!on A.A.JHpioal i)IenTngltie, 0111k Fever. 11.11.—HtralnNf Laraeueus. ItheumatUnu L'.C.--Distemper* Mattel Illscharges*

Bote or Grubs* Worms*

KAST

Nol—Hall, d...9:26am[No 2—MaU.d..5:16pm No3—MMl(d). 12:38am No 4—Mall(d). ..2:0 0am NoO—Mail l:50pmlNo 6—Mail 1:63pm K7—Bxoreu .0:47p

7 pm No 8—Kx*reM«.8:35am

K.E.—CoiiffbN* IleaTos* Pneumonia. P.P.—Colic or Gripes* Bellyache. G.G.—xtllscnrrlaKe. Hemorrhage*. Il.ll.—Brlnary nud Kidney Dlsenser*. I.I.—Kruptlve Dineases* Mange. J.K.—lineuiiei» of Digestion* ParalynU* 81nglo Bottle (over 60 doftcs), .60 Stable Cane* with Specific*, ManuAL

Veterinary Curu Oil and Medlcator, 87.00 Jar Veterinary Cure Oil* 1.00 $old by Drngclsts or Sent Prepaid anywhere and in any quantity on Receipt of Price* HumghrejsMlJedicjn^Oj^^^iiUen^t^l^

ETJMPEBEYS' HOKEOPATHia Aft SPECIFIC No.filT

^nnSesoyears. The only soneistfal remedy for

Nervous Debility, vital Weakness*

and Prostration, from orer-work or other ostites. •lpervlaLor6 rials aod law vial powder, for 96. Bold btDuugoibts,oreent postpaid oo reoeiptel Iffice.-*a»#fcijri,ft6dkU»C*.|lto riU*a0)»,