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V AIESSON FOB SUNDAY V. . <& . ' j? ? i v ? AN ELOQUENT DISCOURSE ENTITLED -^COMMERCIALISM." I A Pertinent Talk on a Present-Day Problem, by the Rev. Dr. Reese P. Alsop? Jeans Christ Is the Measure of the n Stature of the Perfect Man. Brooklyn, N. Y.?Dr. Reese F. Alsop, Jfector of St. Ann's Church on the Heights, preached Sunday morning on 'Commercialism." He took his text from St. Luke ; v< xii:15: '"Man's life consisteth not in the abandonee of the things which he possesses." Dr. Alsop said: I heard lately from a brilliant speaker v an address on "Commercial ism." ^ To the surprise of all, it was a panegyric rather than a diatribe. His argument was that commercial, that is, business activity, the industrial epoch in which we live and, whose push we feel, engenders, certain use ful and even moral qualities, such as thrift, ww^or'vlmr c\f Mniffll * truth telling, which is essential to successful trading; trust, without which the vast credit system of the day could not exist; J the sense of responsibility shown in the i honesty of the great army of clerks and place ho.ciers, among whom breaches of trust, defaults and the like are compara tively rare, the percentage of the honest being surprisingly high. At the same time cur Civil War and the Boer War have shown that the commercial spirit did not extinguish heroism and liberalitj*. Witness the gifts of rich men to education and charities. * Now that is all true, and j*et there is a bad flavor about the word commercialism. It baa another cannotation. Is it not a matter of emphasis? Jesus says, "Seek ye fast the kingdom of God." He says, again, "What will a man give in exchange for his fife?" What are men exchanging their life, * .with all its possibilities of symmetrical development, for? What are they seeking first: Is it not too largely material success? St. Paul says: "Having food and raimfeit we have enough." The feeling of tOrday scorns such moderation. A modest competence is nowadays nothing accounted of. To make a living is not enough; to achieve comfort for self and family is a small thing; men aim and toil arid struggle j for more dazzling prizes?a success that makes a noise and is talked of; that glitters and dazzles the e^fe. r ' This is commercialism as I understand it; the measuring of success by the standard of the market place, the sinking o? 1 other aims in the eager rush after gain. There are high things possible for man. Culture of body, mind, growth in moral and apiritual attainments, expansion in faculty and usefulness. There are magnificent careers open to him in science, in art, in literature, in philanthropic service. Over against all these stands the spirit of the age and cries follow me. The ideal is a man who turns everything to gold that he tonches; a man who gets ana holds and then goes on to get more and hold more. Two conversations lately overheard illustrate the point. Dr. Rainsford, of St. George's Church, walking down a New ? 'York avenue, overheard tne talk of three or four university men before him. Looking upon the gleaming equipages and splendid dresses flitting by, one said to another: *T tell you, boys, it is money that goes in this town, is it not?" The belief that it is money that goes?the feeling that it is money that ought to go?are evidences of an almost universal sentiment. "Who is building that magnificent bouse?" said one to another. "Oh. that is to be the residence of so and so. He used to be a poor Baptist preacher, but Rockefeller found out that he had business aoility, and I tell you he did not leave him long a Baptist preacher. He took him into the Standard Oil Company, and now see what a success he has achieved." There speaks commercialism. There, is the voice < of the ideal which has almost hypnotized our generation. ' Agassiz's splendid reply to the lecture bureau, "I have no-time to make money," sounds like a piece, of insanity. Gordon's refusal to accept reward from the Chinese Emperor for his help in the Tai Ping rebellion sounds like a piece of Quixotism. The "simple life," as lived by Tnoreau in the woods, as pictured by Wagner, sums only an idyllic dream. The pursuit of learning for learning's sake, the service of t man with no itch lor reward, the quiet'. ' - dr ?l' i unostentatious sacnnce ui jjer&uuai micicsi. * for the good of others, these are repudiated as folly. The maddening crowd's -'ignoble strife is what makes itself heard. It draws like the song of the siren. Like the suction of a vast maelstrom, it seizes \ men and draws them in. By and by, dizzied bv the tierce whirl, they forget the high tnings and are content to be simply money-makers. That is what I understand by commercialism; the thrusting into the front place of merely material success. It is a corruption of the spdrit in which life is livid. It is a low, wrong motive. It brings .in and holds before the soul a false standard of value. It misconceives what is the real success of life. It subordinates the man to his possessions. It is a radical corruption of the ideal?an absolute reversal of what our text says. Commercialism declares and persuades that man's life does consist in the abundance of the things whicn he possesses. Therefore, it urge? ] k - let him love supremely those things; let liim aim at them, follow after them, sink his very life in them. Let him for them forego, if needs be. mental culture, artistic development, moral elevation, spiritual activity and all that goes to make a full developed manhood. Quench, if necessary, ? all lofty aspirations. Get things, gather them about you. enthrone yourself on and among them. Let atrophy seize every other faculty so your faculty for getting and getting on grows stronger. Let me give an illustration or two. There is a story of a maD who was so eager v to keep safe a very precious thing that he took it with him into a closet, set his candle on the floor and then diligently nailed fast the door, only to find, as his candie flickered out, that he had shut himself in with his treasure. Nailed and encofnned in his own strong box. Here is another: I read some time ago of a young man, who, . upon graduation from college, found himself the possessor of $50.000'a year. He had health, strength, education, position. Choices lay opei> before bim. He migbt go in for pplkiral' life, for philanthropic Service, or college settlement; work. He might ? ^ become a student and a patron of art, of literature. He might throw himself into i the civic life of his dayT In any of a doze? ways he might find his life by losing it in v the service of man and of God. But aiasl he was dazzled by the ideal of the age. Ambitious to turn his one million into k many, to win the power or notoriety vast wealth can bring, ne flung himself into a tanking house. All the beautiful opportu?*. : J W:_ .Imnlu U1QC8 jUlBli linHCU uuu lie ivitnctiii and onV "that he might increase his pile?a Sile which was already sufficiently large. Irant him all the success he coveted, what would be the end? A dwarfed man, with an immense pile heaped up around him. A life practically sunk and lost in the abundance of the things which he possessed. As I said, then, a moment ago, commercialism is found in a wrong emphasis. Wealth is good fairly won aud nobly used. It is not money, but the love of money, that is the root of all evil. Business is good, commerce is good and necessary, industrialism is good and brings forth a goodly progeny of virtues; zeal, activity, perserevance, cleverness in affairs, are all praiseworthy. Material success is desirable. "The blessing of the Lord it maketh , rich." Yes, but to put these things tirst. to rush after them so eagerly as to forget other and higher things, in a word, to sink in them one's life with its possibilities of growth and beauty and usefulness, that is to have caught the spirit of the commercialism of the day and the age. |pr Who can look abroad without seeing y how this spirit tends to invade and even - -J. . ' ,v .. . ,-j~' ; ^ ' \v v.-^v.V -- v - ' -v; ^ A;. ' / 'J. T" " ' * : ~i to dominate every sphere of human activity. We read of commercialism in politics, in art, in literature, in education, in the social world, even in religion, and though we may not have a distinct definition ready we have a fairly clear idea of what is meant. The place holder in nation or city or State whose main thought is what he can make and not what he can do; the artist who listens not to the voice of his ideals but to the bids of the market, and paints or carves simply for the money to be got: the author who writes simply what will I sell and forgets the truth for which he J ought to stand and the service in the way oi instruction, or eomrorr, or amusement which he might minister to his fellows, is each one tainted with commercialism. It has crept even into cur universities, tempting boards of trustees and faculties to bow too subserviently to those who can furnish endowments, tempting the young man to turn from^eonrscs that cultivate the mind to those which prepare for business. Our tneatres have felt the influence, and think more of pieces which will draw than of those which will elevate as well as amuse and recreate those who see and hear. Yea. it is conceivable that even the church mav not escape. The ministry that sets gain above usefulness has caught the contagion. "Put me into the priesthood that I mav eat a piece or bread!" So cried one of old. The very thought was a desecration. The ministry that is sought for the sake of "'the pieces of bread" for a livelihood, whether it be large or small, is a ministry not to God, not to those among whom it is exercised, but to the man that holds it. The clergy who are in orders chiefly for what they can win in the way of comfort, or respectability or income are unfit for their place. They serve not God i r- their fellows, but themselves. And so the church whose chief aim is a large pew rental and a fashionable congregation?forgetting the while that the Master's boast was that to the poor the gospel was preached, is tarred with the same stick. Yes, commercialism is in the air. It is the spirit that now works?that stealthily penetrates every d 'uartment of modern activity, always seeking to make gain the dominant motive. There is no line of work, no business, no profession safe against its insidious influence. It invades law and medicine, even divinity, as we have seen. It is felt in halls of legislation and seats of government. Yea, it pervades evan society, making the fine raiment and the gold ring and the large bank account more potent to open doors than gentle birth and r? 1 nno nreeaing. How are we to resist this influence?es- | cape this spirit? Just as we resist the con- j tagion of an epidemic, the depression of a malaria, by fortifving the powers of life. A man in whom the tide of life i6 full and strong will walk unscathed through the plague laden air. The health that is in him resists the disease that rushes upon him. The bacteria that floats into throat or luncr, or stomach finds no nidus and dies. It must be thus, .then, that we -escape the spiritual danger. Fortify the life within. Remember that life is more than meat; that the kingdom of God and His righteousness are infinitely worthy of our seeking. Do not forget the possibilities of your life, what you can make of it in the way of growth, what you can make of it in the way of usefulness. Keep your eye on the Master. In Him see what you may be ?in Him see what you may do. Yea, not only keep your eye on Him, but keep in living touch with Him, that the tides of His life may flow into your soul, and carry you on and up to the measure of the stature of the perfect man in Christ Jesus. Finally, my brethren, "whatsoever things are honest ? whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report, think on these things." Turn your thought and your eyes away from the dazzling bait of the age. Escape its snare. \ Seek first the kingdom of God. Determine j : to be a man, mentally, morally, spiritually; determine to be a brother to your fellow man, and do for him a brother's part; de? ? * _ - APJ _ C it _ i cerrnine to De a cnua ot tae neaveiny Father and obey His will, so far as you know it: resolve that in you the splendid Dossibilities hidden in the eift of life shall be realized, and you shall have learned bow to use this world without abusing it. Then commerce, business, success shall minister to you but not enslave you; shall embellish your life but not absorb it; shall bring you, perchance, an abundance of things to possess, but leave the while strong and pure within you the life of God. Then shall you in very deed possess the abundance of the things which are yours. Let them, once get the better of you, climb into the throne of your heart and life, and then they possess you and you are their slave and their victim; nailed and incoffined in your own strong box j I which has, a^s, with your treasure, shut j | in your soul also. Living in Hope. ! The habit of living in the future should j make us glad and confident. We should not keep the contemplation of another | state of existence to make us sorrowful, i nor allow the transiency of this present j to shade our joys. Our hope should make i:s buoyant, and keep us firm. It is an anchor of the soul. All men live by hope, even when it is fixed upon the changing and uncertain things of this world. But the hopes of men who have not their hearts fixed upon God try to grapple themselves cn the cloud wrack that rolis along the flanks cf the mountains: while ! our hones pierce within that veil, and lay 1 old of the Rock of Ages that towers above the flying vapors. Let us then be strong, for our future is not a dim peradventure, nor a vague dream, nor a fancy of our own, nor a wish turning irseif into a vision, but it is made and certified bv Him who is the God of all the past and of all the present. It is built unon His word, and the brightest hope of all its brightness is the enjoyment of more of His presence, and the possession of more of His likeness. That hope is certain. Therefore, let us live in it.?The Jte\\ Alexander MacLaren. The Poor Man's Day. In *11 our towns, and throughout too large a portion of our country districts, ihe Sabbath rest is violated and the worship which was the consequence and condition of this rest is abandoned. At the same time the sou! is deprived of its nourishment and the body of its repose. The poor man abd the workinginan are deliv- j ered up, unprotected, to the every day increasing influence of error and evil. Thus ! the profanation of the day has become the ruin of the moral and physical health of the people, at the same time that it is the ruin of the family and of religious liberty. The Sabbath is emphatically the poor man's and the working man's day. And there is no surer way to break down the health, as well as .ne morals and religion of the people, than to break down the Sabbath. To say nothing of the Divine law, on mere worldly grounds it is plain that nothing is more conducive to the health, intelligence, comfort and independence of the working classes and to our prosperity as a people than our Christian American Sabbath.?Count Montalembert. Fast and Future. The past is dead and has no resurrection, but the future is endowed with such a life' that it lives to us even in anticipation. The past is, in many things, the foe of mankind; the future is, in all things, our friend. For the past there is no hope; for the future there is both hope and fruition. The past is the text book of tyrants; thef'.tture is the Bible of the free. Those who sve solely governed by the past stand like [ Lot's wife, crystallized in tne act of looking backward, and forever incapable of j looking forward.?H. Kirk White. The Tear. Eeautiful is the year in its coming and | j in its going?most beautiful and blessed ! I because it is always "the year of our j J Lord."?Lucy Larcom. j pmM -> . -' TAFT TAKES THE"OATjT Installed Secretary cf War as Success or to Elihu Root?Ceremony Was Imposing. At Washington, Monday, Governor William H. Taft took the oath of office oc CQ^ritorv nf war and at onrp en tered on his new duties. These ceremonies took place in the large reception room attached to the secretary's apartments in the war department and the transfer of the portfolio from Mr. Elihu Root to ex-Governor Taft, while simple, was more impressive than any similar event in many years. Before noon, the appointed hour, Governor Taft came over to the depai tment from his hotel with a little party of personal friends and some of his immediate family. They were ushered into Secretary Root's office, where the retiring secretary, in a few well chosen words and with a good deal of feeling, surrendered his portfolio to Governor Taft. The party then proceeded to the reception 'room when General Chaffee, chief of staff, in uniform, took charge of the ceremonies. The room was cleared of all except the participants in the induction and the party of friends and members of the general staff. Governor Taft and Secretary Root took their places at the long table where stood John Randolph, a notary public, who administered the oath to the in WVUilUg OV/Vyl VVU? J . 9 Then there were congratulations for Secretary Taft and good-byes for Secretary Root. Every army officer on duty in Washington was aligned at the door and the brilliantly uniformed column passing before the retiring and incoming secretaries formed a splendid spectacle. HOW BAXTER WAS SWAMPED. System Under Which Cotton Future? are Bought and Sold. The general system under which speculation in cotton futures is conducted is familiar to those who study the market situation. To the layman, who never "indulges," the following explanation will be interesting: The buying and selling of cotton a id produce futures is done on a basis oi "margins," the customary margin or a cotton transaction being $1 per bale or one-fifth of a cent a pound, the standard bale being, fixed always at 500 pounds. The customer makes his contract through tno dealer, who may act as a broker, or who may himself become the party of the second part to the contract. In the latter case the dealer operates what is known as a "bucket shop." The usual cotton trade is one hundred bales, though a smaller amount may be bought on margins in almost any of the bucket shops. The customer places say $100 with the broker or bucket shop proprietor, to margin one hundred bales. This is a margin of twenty "points," the point be-ing one-one hundredth of a cent. The purchase is made at the market price at the time, and ff the market advances the purchaser wins. An^ advance of 20 points, or one-fifth of a cent per pound, means a gain to the customer of $100. An advance of 1 cent a pound means a gain of $500. and so on. Vice versa a decline of 20 points or one-fifth of a cent a pound, means & loss of $100, and the customer's margins are thus wiped out He is then called upon to put up more margins to protect his purchase, and in the even of failure to do this, he loses the original margins placed on the contract. The selling of cotton futures is practically the reverse process. The customer desiring to sell, puts up similar """ wini! TirMoVi Vl a. IrvOOQ in thp PVPnt uiai 5'UO) n^ftvu AM ?A?w w . of cotton rising a sufficient number of points to wipe them out. But if cotton should decline in price he wins $100 for every 20 points it goes down. INAUGURATION AT MANILA. Governor Wright and Vice Governor Ide Assume Office in Philippines. A special from Manila says;. Governor Luke E. Wright and Vjce Governor Henry C. Ide were inaugurated Monday. There was an imposing demonstration, including a brilliant military pageant, about 3,000 troops being in line. ) After<ti&ing the oath of office Gov erndr Wright delirer'ed his inaugural address>.It was ta straightforward speech, - dealing wkh- the - most- important subjects. Governor Wright invited attention to the improvements that had been accomplished in the Philippines under American rule and declared his intention of adhering to the principles of the Taft administration. He urged Americans to establish cordial persona! and business relations with the Filipinos, who must constitute their chief customers. In conclusion Governor Wright asked for the sympathetic co-operation of all classes to whom, he said, were assured equal opportunities for advancement. GRAFT SEEMINGLY EPIDEMIC. Representative from Oklahoma is * Charged With Violation of Law. Charges have been filed at the interior department against Bird S. Mc Gu're. the delegate in the house from Oklahoma, charging that in violation of the law he has been prosecuting claims in behalf of Indians and accepting fees therefor while serving as senate delegate in congress. > ' - ' * v: %i *. wome: Colds Invariably I PE-RTT-NA Both Pi - f \Srs9Ko5E I fiQBKRriJN Miss Rose Gordon. 2102 Oakland av., Oakland Heights, Madison, Wis., writes: "A few year8'ago I caught a severe cold, which resulted in chronic bronchitis and catarrh. Our family physician prescribed medicines which gave temporary relief only. I began taking Peruna and improvecCat once. Two bottles cured me. I recommend Peruna to all sufferers, and am most grateful to you for your valuable]medicine. "?Miss Rose Gordon. Washington,D.C.,609H street,N. W. Dear Dr. Hartmam: "Iused to think that the doctor's knew all about our aches and pains and were"Jthe proper ones to consult when sick, but since I have been sick myself I certainly had good reason to change my mind. During the winter I caught a heavy cold, which developed into catarrh of the bronchial tubes and an in flamed condition of the respiratory organs. The doctors were afraid that pneumonia would set in and prescribed i niUs. vowders a nd tracks until I sick ened of the xchole thing, as J did not ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR A The oniy birds that sing as they fly are the skylark iand woodlark. Men who know when they get enough may Le too foil for utterance after getting it. . Rheumatism's Killing Pain. Left in quick order after taking 10 doses of Dr. Skirvin's Rheumatic Cure, in tablet form. 25 doses for 25c., postpaid. Dr. Skirvin Co., La Crosse, Wis. [A.C.L.] All women were born to love and be loved, and they fight it out on that line. Knowledge From Experience. Li what we understand when Dr. i Spalding, an eminent Baptist divine, of j Galveston, Texas, writes "'send me two | bottlen of Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of ; Sweet Gum and Mullein.. It_ is for a friend suffering from consumption. It is a prejwration I know from experience to j be .good." . At druggists, 25c., 50c. and $1.00 a bottle.! Lots of people would rather not own the , i things they can borrow. frfsT STUART'S I HbkGIHanntSUCHU To all who suffer, or to the friend9 of those j who S' ffer with Kidney. Liver, Heart, Bladder or Blo >d Disease, a sample bottle of Stuart'> , : Gin and Buchu, the :?rect southern Kidney and Liver Medicine, will lx> sent absolutely free ol j cost. Mention this paper. Address STUART DRUG M'FG CO . 3* Mr... AManro. Ga. 1 iiEiiiimiimi iniAAaifllAllABll 1 EVERY SHOOTER = I WHO SHOOTS i ^ flSHoimoi |' gg has a feeling of confidence in g i mt cartridges. x ucy uuu t ? * misfire and always shoot where * 8 you aim. ' Ej Tell your dealer U. M. C. Swhen he asks " What kind ? " ? Scad lor catalog. I Tbs Union Meta llic Cartridge Co. * ! ' ! MHHIlgHliliS T" A nti-Baccoline I /% TT> 1 ^T^Weriar*nle??CTir? i BAU /VI I i V th? tobacco habit In i B W l)r\vvV ?y f?>nn. Treatment ! I EASir, SATS. SVBI ly? AND A6KEEABLI. ! M \4 Y?u take no rhtnoa Tim ; ? 1 m fS Cure Wo Pay. Ail coerce- : K 1 J K p<>ndcnce Ktrictly ronfiden- i VII II 1 .? tinl.Addrwo The Dr.J.S. j a V a a * Will Antl Boccoilae i 3 * Co., lireenTille lli..B?x3J7. | Saw mills! The Ds .etoh Patent Variable Friction Feed | Sew Mill with 4 h p. cruts 2,000 feet rer day. All sires and prices to suit. DeLoach Shingle "Mills, 1 Edeers, Trimmers, Planers; Corn and Buhr Mills, Water Wheels, Luth Mills, Wood Saws, j Our handsome new (dialog will interest you. ; DalLoach MUI Mfe <Jo... Box 834. AtlanU, Ga. j '. . ^ \ |WT ARE ESPECIALLY IN LIABLE TO lesult in Catarrh, Which & Distressing Diseases. otects and Cures a 72 rv?S improve. Chte of the'ladiet^in the HomeViad a\bottle of Peruna and she advised me to try that. Shortly after I began using it I felt that Ihadfound the right medicine. I used$tico bottles and they restored 2 me easily and pleasantly to perfect health. While my stomach teas very delicate, Peruna did not nauseate me in the least, but gave me a good appetite, and I wish to express my gratitude toyou for restored health.''?Miss Rosalie Von 1 Struenning. * CATCHING COLD I % J? the Beginning of Moit Winter Ailments? Pe-rn-na Protects Against and Cares Colds. I There is no tact ot mecucai science better ! established than that a teaspoon ful of Peruna before each meal during the winter season will absolutely jrotect a person from catching cold. Now, $ this is true (and there is no doubt of it), thousands of lives would be saved, and tens of thousands of , cases of chronic catarrh prevented, by this simple precaution within reach of every one. After a cold haa been contracted a teaFREE PE-RU-NA ALMANAC. E ( Corn ) must have a sufficient supply of | Potash I in order to develop into a crop. No amount of Phosphoric I Acid or Nitrogen can compen| sate for a lack of potash in j fertilizers [for I We shall be glad I WtcTiitirV 10 sea<^ *ree to any 9 I Ay farmer ourlittle booty I fnOEtfo u'lilrh cnnlaiM valu- B able information I GERflAN KALI WORKS, I Xew York?93 Xanana Street, or & Atlanta. Ca.?gg}j So. Brood St. M ~ Tr""1 I | cotton Orin | Machinery PRATT. MUNGER. WINSHIP. EAGLE. SIMTH. We matte the moat complete lute ot any I .oncers in the world. We also make PNCINPS And BOILERS. L1NTERS lor OIL MILLS. ! | *? e ten eeerytiuag seeded aboui & Cotloo Gis. I Write for Uliutmted CetoJogue. Continental Gin Co., Birmingham, Ala. S Discriminating spoi tic over the many nove AOE22CAT.TRER REP 8 less, shoots the short, I< I ridges all in the same i I alone has placed it in a I SAT AGE COLDS ets Up a Host of SjS spoonful of Peruna every hour will shortly cure it,, leaving no trace of it behind. After chronic catarrh has become established, Of iJ&gi the first stages of chronic bronchitis or consumption have been reached, it will take \JH: much longer to effect a cure. vj|| It seems strange that as well known and ^ well established as these facts are any one '^Bl^ should neglect to profit by them, and yet ? no doubt there are many who pay little or ' ~ ;J|S no attention to them and go on catching cold, acquiring chronic catarrh, bronchitie and consumption. Catarrh May Permeate,the Whole System. i Mrs. Mary E. Sampson, West Derry, i^Sj Rockingham County, N. H., writes: "I had terrible headaches, both ears ran *5^5 ^ and I was nervous all the time, also had trouble each month; was deaf in one ear for thirty years. I took six bottles of Pe- *} runa and one of Manalin, and am happy to say that it is the best medicine that T ever j 98 used. I am not so nervous, my appetite ia <T|gi '$8 good, everything I eat agrees with me, and j I am feeling better in every way. I think I<aBH Peruna is a godsend to women and a blast- {?' 'SlSH? ing to suffering humanity." ? Mary E. 4 Sampson. J | If you do not derive prompt and satisfae- iyBgl tory results from the use of Peruna write j -v.53 at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full state- /J ment of your case, and he vail be pleased ;\3?'.fB to give you his valuable advice gratis. ( Address Dr. Hartman, President of The D '^IjH Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. VERY DRUGGIST HAS THEM 8 M Avery & Company 1 SUCCESSORS TO avery & McMillan, | -jm 41-63 South Forsyth St*, Atlanta, <jta X v. :*|jj . -ALL KINDS OF- | ^ MACHINERY |.? Reliable Frick Engines. Boilers, all ? ? Sizes. Wheat Seoaratora. ^ Large Engines and Boilers supplied . promptly. Shingle Mills, Corn Mills, '-'t%m Circular Saws,Saw Teeth,Patent Dogs, -;y^| ^ Steam Governors, ?ull line Engines 4 J Mill Supplies. Send for free Catalogue PsAWMULSpSSl I 8 with Hepe's UniveisfiV7.o? Reams, Re'ctlHn-B ^ ear. Simultaneous Set Works and the Hear ^ Bcock-Kln^ Variah'.c I'eed Works are nner-B \ celled for accuracy, simplicity. ncrabirrh - ^ itt and kasb of operation. 'Write for fullB ;.:':raS& descriptive circulars. Manufactured bj the! I^HRO^ (? ;tKS W:n to^3:' 1 em N CM ?Dropsy if II f Removes all swelling in 8 tea* < ^ / days; effects a permanent core - '; A. in 30 to 60 days. Trial treatment 3 given free. Not./iingcan be fairer I I rflSTwin Write Dr. H. H. Green's Sons, ??5z!iHE!_ Specialists^ Box B Atlsnts, fit. MS j(| |Wm mS BfwSm ' rtsmen are enthusias-| I features of the SAV- I EATER. It is hammer- I ang and long rifle cart- I arm, and its accuracy I AltflSCO., Ctica, S. P. 8. A.