Columbus enquirer-sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1886-1893, November 28, 1886, Image 2

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DAILY ENQUIRED • STN : nUUMRUS. GForgIV SUNDAY MORNING NOVEMBER 28, 1*86. GOD IN NATURE. principle is observed. Beginning the animalcule, and scrutinizing tn Cod Made the Wor'd Therein. Third of a Series of Harmon* liainr Dallrarail !,) Rararra'1 R. II. Ilurrl*. Ps.toroftlie iir*t !>.,,,- flat Chirr!}, folsmhu*. lia. Kit or that everything is produced from an egg. and ail Thinrs Of the viviparous, as well as of oviparous animals, the observation is true. 1 shall not discus;, this proposition here. Study the teachings of physiology—ask your trusted, physician,ami you will liml that 1 have not misstated the fact. ' The original creation is, of course, inde pendent of all this arrangement; hut once created, Uod furnishes each creature with means by which it may observe His command: '‘lie fruitful and multiply.'’ This means is the atomic, germinal princi ple—the seed, so often mentioned in the Rev. R. H. Harris, pastor of the First Baptist Church, of this city, is pre rehing a scries of sermons on “God in Nature.” He delivered the third of the scries last Sun day night, and it was as follows: TEXT. “Thr eartt brought forth vegetation alter II* kind.*'—Genesis, 1:12. “Uod crested urate ret 1:21. ‘•God created every wince! fowl after iis kind."—Genesis; 1:21. “0 >d made everything upon the cartii after its kind."--Genesis. 1:25. "God created man in llis own image.”—Gene sis. 1:27. "God made the world and ah thing* therein, w** and hath ina le of one blood all millions of men.”—Acta, 17:2126. NVe have studied Genesis and investi gated life; the first phases of UJlure that present themselves to our observation. Development is the next phase which with | were commanded to produce the other whole creature-; but, with His >wn hand, direct ly ripphed. "G >d created man.” He said of.ill His other cre.sti m .'hr mgh objective means accomplished, “it is good;” but, when .all had been finished, in the produc tion of the lordly ma i, Uod applauded His work and said, “it is v ry good.” And the angels, doubtless, marveled and the more adored the Almighty Creator of such a being. Kaeb object of creation, say the rocks and the Bible, was finished and complete, in its own sphere and “after its kind.’’ Toe oyster did not develop into a crab; nor the crab into a fish: uor the flail into a tor- tois. The reoiile was not evolved into Bargains! Bargains! Drives in Table Linen, f Drives in Hosiery, i Drives in Handkerchiefs, Drives in Kid Gloves. Drives in Linen Towels, Drives in Dress Goods. Bible, in relation to animals, as well as bird and, thence, into a quadruped, nor plants; and heroin we cannot fail to ner- thence, through the ape, into man. ceive the uniformity of the method by Science and the Bible both show how which inception is secured and develop- has beer woven the marvelous web of ment attained, of each creature, In its own organiz' d existence. The same silfceu sphere. warp of life extends from one end to the t u af * - r. We have now reached the asserted fact othe'r. Upon that warp have been woven broach! forth, aftcr lU kind/'-ri^neaK of unity in the plan of development. Let different fillings a- different points each us inquire whether or not such is a fact. , finished and comp.ete “after its kind. Unity, in the present sense of the term, First, f he coarse woof of fibrous roots; implies consistency. In a written produc- then, the bark, followed by the jute, the tion or an oral discourse, unity is cbarac- hemp, the wool, the cotton and the flax; terizedbya proper correspondence of all ending, at last, in glossy weft of finest text- the parts. The transitions must be natural urc—warp and filling, silken, both, and easy, the tenor must not be broken, The physical life principle is in all the tone of the whole must accord with creatures that live the same. From the the key-note, the leading thought must coarsest woof upon this warp, the lowest be kept in view. Otherwise, the perforin- form oflife, complete; every stage of pro- ance must be a rhetorical failure. gression may be seen, each complete; until Unity, in a landscape painting, requires at last is reached the fabric, man—all silk that the prominent color, which appears and full width. ^e.e.oou, cu . ,„ upon one portion of the canvas, shall be At this point we are confronted by the , . 1 .. i .i * mi. reproduced, m bits and tints and great ethnological question us to the origin claims consideration, and thut will he our grades, upon every other portion, of the races. But that question I shall not theme to-night. ; The roseate hubs of the sunset clouds must discuss here. All connected with it is mere In the study of this feature of nature we tint the mountains in the back ground, speculation. No one knows anything about cannot fail in observe four thincv Pro- tinge the waters of sea and lake, edge the it; for no definite information is given upon cannot fail to observe four tump, l ro- ri » leon the river ‘ s tidei light up the it either in the Bible or in the book of na- gression, from the simplest to the more foliage ofthe nearer tree,glow softly in the ture. With that and similar questions we complex; uniformity of method; unity of foreground, on rock and bank, and tip the | are not practically concerned. It was, plan, and distinctiveness of kind. grass-blades, at your feet. 1 doubtless, as easy for God to make Eve of The evidences of progression are uni- ; In every single web, the warp must be , Adam’s ri as it was to make Adam of the versal. The first patent step is from the the same, whatever the woof may be, or dust; but it is useless to ask for the partie- chaotic mass of unstratilU d, igneous rock of unity there can be none; and, ' in the ; ulars. And equally fruitless are the ques- to the stratified, aqueous formations based web oflife, as we presently shall see, per- tions as to where Cain fouud his wilt, or upon it. Then, in the examination ofthe feet unity is found. ! whence the Indian and the African have strata, w rich, at certain points, have been As heretofore explained, the plan of sprung. rent from the bottom by internal forces, circulation is everywhere the same in the “God hath made of one blood all nation* and have had their edges upturned to view probable earth currents,—but I must not : of men, who inhabit all parts of the earth.” at the earth's surfaced lie stages of advance- speculate, for I should say the globe itself : This we know from tne Bible; and science ment, from one condition to another, are may be a gTeat battery—in the waters and shows that human blood is in its character clearly and unmistakably defined. The the atmosphere; in plants and animated different from that of all other animals, Laurcntian rocks, of ezoic time, arc mani- beings, from the lowest to the highest ' while in all tribes of men it is the same festly different from the Devonean and , forms. And, in further illustration of the j All men are “God's offspring,” says the other strata of paleozoic time; the latter wonderful unity, which appears in this 1 great apostle, and as such they stand at the are unlike the cretaceous and other forma- ! connection, I may mention the significant ; head of creation's roll. The physical plan tions of mesozoie time; and the last one effect of the electro magnetic currents | has reached its perfect development, is easily distinguished from the tertiary and upon every phase of life. The physician complete iii the body of man. The resist- post-tertiary deposits of cenozoic time. ; will tell you that the galvanic battery pro- less evidences of design, apparent every- And, by the fossils which they respective- duces a remarkable and salutary effect ; where, prove the intelligent author con- ly contain, each included stratum proves ' upon the human system, especially in cer- ! sistent and supreme. The genius of crea- an advance in life conditions from the one j tain characters of disease. Other animals j tion and developed life cannot be chance, upon which it is sujierimposed. From are likewise affected and scientists have Canada, where the first upheaval doubtless [ tested the potent influence, upon vegeta- occurred, to all other parts of the world, ! tile life, of galvanic currents, along wires where the successive elevations have ap- strung low, above the plants. Most singu- penred, the clefts and the gorges plainly lar phenomena, of the latter character, are illustrate progresion in development of reported to have occurred, upon desert forms and conditions of tife—always from ' plains, in the distant west, where forrner- the lower to the higher. 1 Iy naught but the artemisia or sage brush The same fact is illustrated in the plants grew. Since the construction of railroads of the different periods. From the sea- ; and telegraph lines, across those regions, weeds and grasses, of the earliest periods, it is said that grass and herbage have I pass over the mosses and the ferns, to sprung up along the routes, the clouds the catamites and sigillaria of the carbon- | have gathered there and poured out their iferous age, to show that the simplest was , Bhowers, and for miles, on either side, the primary form of vegetable life. It was , prosperous farmers and ranchers have oc- tbe endogenous class—i. e., “growiug cupied the lands. Verily, there is much in within;” the first of the two great general j the phenomenon of circulation that has, divisions of plants. ■ not been told—besides its evident illustra-I A cornstalk is an example from the tion of unity, in design, grasses of that class, and the palm an ex- As, also, heretofore observed, the mode ' pie from the trees. In plants belonging I of respiration is practically the same, in all The teachings of the Bible and of nature cry: “It is God.” Mvehsnlesl ProbilOlilin*. Some claim that the pulley is the oldest mechanical invention, but probably the crowbar has a pryer claim.—Texas Sift ings. BABY'S SCALP, Milk Crust, Dandruff, Eczema, and all Scalp Humors Cured by Cuticura. io that division, growth takes place from creatures that breathe, of both the l AST November my little boy, ageiltlirec years, rings to be per-| vegetable and the animal kingdoms; and | Ts’rAd^amfrightafti’r'th^ h™bmk! within, and there are no „ . ___ , eelved in a horizontal section of the ' here, again, we find an illustration of unity [ out all over hie head’ face and 'ie'ft 'ear. 'l had“a trunk. The other class consists of exo- j genus plants, i. e., “growing without,’ in plan. And, now. there are some other most in- _ _ » 1 “b 2XBU, HU W | kucic Ult' DUIUC UUKT III Uni 111" and is composed of both evergreen and teresting illustrations ofthe proposition deciduous trees and shrubs, which grow, j under consideration, to which I invite by adding a new layer of wood upon the ; your attention. The facts to be cited have outside or the old, year by year. A hori* misled many. Let them not mislead us. good doctor. Dr. , to attend him, but he sot worse, and the doctor could not cure him. His whole head, face and left ear were in a fearful state, and he suffered terribly. I caught the dis ease from him, and it spread all over my face and neck, and even got into my eyes. Nobody thought we would ever get better. I felt sure w e were dis figured for life. I heard of the Cuticura Reme- plant. clusively endogenous period of plant life, | zontal section of an exogenous stem pre- They are the hints, or indications, in one j dies, and procured a bottle oYCuticura'Resofvenl scuts to tne eye a number ut concentric stugu of organic life, of what were to a box of Cuticura, and a cake of Cuticura Soap! rings, each indicating lue growth of one appear in the next, and even in others, far i and used them constantly day and night. After year: and, by means of the microscope, the removed, in time and degree. ! cure and four'eakn?*^? Snan aSiUSP/rSnv rings may be counted even to the pith, The conifers, of the carboniferous age, j curedwithouf asear My boyVskin is now like thus definitely determining the age of the which terminated the, otherwise, ex- j satin. LILLIE EPTING, ’ ’ ■ — 1 371 Grand street, Jersey city, N. J. ore me this 27th day of March, 1885 GILBERT P. ROBINSON, J. P. T1IE WORST SOUK IIHAD. Have been in the drurr and medicine business twenty-five years. Have been selling your cuti cura Remedies since they came west They lead all ethers m their line. We could not write nor could you print all we have heard said in favor of the cuticura Remedies. One y?;ar ago the cuti cura and fcoap cured a little «rirl in our house of the worst sore head we ever .saw, and the Resol vent and cuticura arc now curing a young Gentle man of a sore leer, while the physicians are trying to have it amputated. It will s:.\v his lea. and if a. m— —jeh cannot be said in EVERYTHING GREATLY REDUCED! 1 can show the nobbiest line of Handkerchiefs in Colum bus. beautiful things for the holidays. Four or five shades Evening Surahs marked down very low. A magnificent line of Corsets. Splendid stock of Un derwear. Four or five grades imported Black Silks cheaper than ever. 1 invite your special attention to my stock of Kid Gloves. They are best makes, and I am anxious to sell them. My stock of Collars and Cuffs* will interest you. Re member I am closing up the business of the old firm of Hill iV Law and will offer everything at reduced prices to expedite me in so doing. JOS. IB. HILL. COLUMBUS Iron Works G O IMI IP -A. 1ST TT, Columbus, Georgia. FOUNDERS AND MACHINISTS, DEALERS IN— Lime. Shingles, Dressed and Matched Ceiling and Flooring and other Lumber. Specialty made of Dress ing Lumber for other parties. AGENTS FOR Royal Pumps, Judson Governors, Eberman Feeders, Standard Injectors, Hancock Inspirators and BROWN COTTON GINS MANUFACTURERS OF Stratton’s Improved Absorption Ice Machines. Saw Mills. Pumps, Hollow Ware, Syrup Kettles, " D OT i RAILROAD 1st Mortgage Extension |? Pi Ct Bonds, due 1906 Total Issue Only £5,000 Per s Mile. 1 at crest Payable in JANUARY AND JULY IN THE CITY OF NEW YORK, Or at the Company’s Office, Americus, Ga. Having been appointed finantial agent for the sale of the above bonds, I am now offering a limited amount of them at par and accrued in- j terest, and commend them to any one desiring a , safe and profitable investment, i Full information will be furnished on applica- i tion. Stock and Bond Broker, Co lumbus, Crffi. se wed fri tf FOR SALE ! A substantial Six-Room Residence, centrally located; quarter-acie lot; convenient to business, ! churches, schools and street* railroad. Owner j removing from* the city, and will sell cheap for j cash, or on time. Temperance Hall. The Wilkerson Residence. The Harrison place, Beallwood. Store No. 143 Broad Street. Quarter-Acre Lot north Second Avenue. FOR BENT. Rooms over Singer Machine Office. Six-Room Dwelling, Rose Hill. Col. Holt’s Store and Dwelling, near Swift's Mill. L. H. CHAPPELL, Broker* Real Estate and Insurance Agent. dtf preserved, incontestibly proves progression to become common, in “the following' in the develpmont of plants from the sim- epochs. The acephalous niollusk was pleat pulpy seaweed up to the stately oak. ! followed, after the teutaeled polyp, by the trilobite, with head, thorax and abdomen, But the same fact is illustrated in the ani mal life ol the past and the present. The simplest form of animal existence is pre sented to our view in tho animalcule which floats like a film inthe water, without head or limbs, and subsists by wrapping itself around some nutritious atom with which it conies into contact, extracting its juice: giving promise of creatures, with three anatunmieal divisions. The jointed crusta cean was the precursor of the articulated insect, with its six limbs and numerous eyes; while the eignt-armed graptolite gave a hint ofthe spider, with Us eight extremities und the same number of visual STEAM ENGINES, CASE ILLS, POWER GOLDEU OOTTOIsT. PRESSES AND The Imped Calender Rollers FOR SALE! \TY place on Talbotton road, about two miles 1V1 from city,on line ofGeorgia Midland. Has a new live room House, all necessary out-house*, in excellent repair; splendid spring. The place contains 10214 acres, about 25 acres of which are heavily wooded. TERMS EASY. Foi particulars'apply to me on the place, or to T. M. Foley, opera house. oci-2 ft G. P. SPRTNGFF and then, by unfolding, expels the atom j organs. The branchise, in some aquatic after the nourishment has been exhausted; I animals, foretold the gills; in other: tPacha: were suggestive of lung.; to repeating this feeding prices; on every side. The next is the acephalous mollusk, the fird specimen of which, preserved in the rocks, is the shell-housed hizapod, and ■example ! of which we find in the oysters and the conch, a creature which usually selects and Receives its food from the wa ters around, by means of a fringed appen dage, more or less complete, according to Us seal : of being. From the moilusk, the geologic record carries us onward and up ward to the radiate; thence, to the crus tacean; thence to the fish, and thence through the reptiles, the birds and mammals, up to man. Here, as in the for mer eases, there can be no mistake as to the progression of development in the forms of life. The rock formations, besides i idleating progression in themselves, furnish an ac curate index to the great book of nature, aipread open for our perusal. And this book corresponds, in all substantial par ticulars, with that other Book of God, from which my text is quoted. For there in is described the same progression from chaos to the appearance of the “formed land,” above the waters; from the “grass es” representing endogenous plants, to “the trees,” of the exogenous class; and from the first production of animals in the waters, throng' every intermediate grade to man. Uniformity of method in development is not less clearly to be perceived than pro gression. Upon examination we discover that all terrestrial inorganic matter, in cluded in the geologic, term “the rooks,” is composed of molecules orgrains. Thu earth itself consists of grains of sand, so to speak; the waters, the atmosphere, and all gases are composed of atoms, combined in ag gregated molecules. Both philosophy and chemistry furnish abundant evidence of these facts. Now, geology gives demonstration that the upheaved lands have grown, by mole cular accretions. Each successive age of rock formation has added to the area of its predecessor by extensive deposits built of graius. It is as clearly proved that alterations of condition in the waters and the gases have resulted from atomic changes in their component elements. The atom is the germinal form, as it were, of all inorganic matter that hits been analyzed. The same principle is to be observed in plants. There is, in some form, a seed for every one. I was surprised at a statement which I recently read in a religious pa per, that flowerless plants never produce seeds. The science of botany teaches oth erwise. Cryptogamous, or "flowerless" plants, really bloom, in their way, and some of you have seen the spores of the ferns and the seeds of the fungus. Some phaenogamous or flowering plants often Tail to bear, but both classes of vegetation, in proper conditions of place and circum stances, spring from and produce seeds or germs of some kind. The vital principle of every seed is the germ, and, practically, the germ is the seed. “Let the earth bring forth grass, the herb yielding seed and the fruit tree yield ing fruit after its kind, who3c seed is in it self.” According to the Bible, no vegeta tion was created, except such as contained its Peed, or germing principle, in itself. In the study «f animal life the same Covinffton, Ky. S. 13. SMITH & 13110. Potter Drux ami Chemical Cu . Ilostn Semi for "IIimi lorurcSkin IHoeases." s, 1,’ I Vi Blemishes, Pimples, Blackheads, and ‘ ’ AV l x* Baby Humors, use Outiocha Soap. ACHt! ACHE! ACHE! % Sharp Aches and Pains relieved one minute by the Cuticuka Anti Pa Plaster. A perfect antidote to p. and inflammation. At dnuntiats, cents; five for $1 00. Potter Drug und Chemical Co., Boston. CLIftSCffiAN’S TOBACCO REMEDIES simple nerve-clot was the begiumng, the complete nervous system was the end; the , .. . til! vniH an imh x nf rhe fo,it nnri t,-- id . 1 uticuta Remedies are a positive cure for every . i - ii- r , ° , ‘“Ot and Wins, a ia form oi'Skin ami Blood Diseases,from Pimple-to wcbbedlorefoot and wing pointed to paw Scrofula. Sold everywhere. Price: Cuticuru, .50 and hand. Examine the wing of a bird—a" etsn Soap, 25 cts.; Resolvent, fi. Prepared by the domestic fowl—-and you will find, at its ex- : tremity, a hand, with four lingers in a fleshy mitten, and a thumb. The first j vertebrates predicted their .successors. The shell of the turtle prophesied the widened j back-hone of the bird. Tho ribs are seen, in each, but inseparably united into one osseous whole. The quadrupeds, in con formation, spoke of the quadrnmanal Simla* and the ape, of the latter order, I grotesquely caricatured both quadruped j and man. These facts and others, similar, that [ might be named, are of import, grand. In j eonnecti >11 with the re->t, which nave been presented, they prove the wondrous unity j of the plan before us. That is all; but Unit is enough. Let it be noted and remember- ! ed,that the development is of the plan—the ! great plan of organized life—not of one j animal, into another. The demonstrations given prove that there is a plan within a plan. A unity'of plan, in the development of tho stupendous plan of physical life. But here, upoil this rock of accumulated facts, the evolutionist has struck and lost his reckoning and his course. He has con founded the evolution of the plan with' assumed evolution of the things—the media—by which the plan is unfolded, to its consummation. Here, Tyndall and Huxley and Spencer have lost their way. Their argument defeats itself. Admitting Darwin’s theory to he true, that only the strongest survived, all the weaker necessarily becoming extinct, and that, by “natural selection,” one genus was developed into another—and classes and orders, likewise—there could be no inferior thing in existence to-night, and man would stand alone. And that doctrine, carried out to its legitimate result, will not per mit us to pause, at the protoplasm, but it must carry us, downward, to the initial vegetable pulp. Man, then, has not been evolved from an oyster, as a beginning; he origimited, in a jelly lichen, on a rock. Th ,-u, if tne strongest, only has survived, the last product, alone, can be living now. That product is man, and all other forms of life, animals and plants, are but the creatures of his imagination—the phan tasms of his “developed” vegetable hr In! This logical disaster cannot be averted, by assuming that evolution is forever beginning anew. Were this true, tne transmutations would be occurring now, before our eyes. The argument proves too much. But nature furnishes no evidence of such transitions. There is uo ligament of nature to bind one Mind to another. Each kind, testify the rocks, was com pleted in itself; and examples, of all kinds, survive, to perforin their parts in the mundane economy, as well us to illustrate the Creator’s great plan of development in organic life. And, now, the Bible speaks to confirm nature’s teachings, upon dis tinctiveness of kind: The grass, the herb and the tree, each, “after its kind.” The Inhabitants of the waters, the birds and the beasts, including everything below the man, each, “after its kind.” And, then, “God created man, in HU own image.” The earth and the waters THE CLIUGMAN TOBACCO OINTMENT tfi'liinu . ... relief. Will euro Awl ULon*. Al* 1 ibt'ila. Tetter, Salt Rheum B; rl rr’t* Iteli. Ring, wi.nna, Pimples. Sores mid Boils. Trier 7M) ecu. THE CLSNGMAN TGBACC0 CAKE XVTI'HK’S OWN KK.II1I1Y, «'ure» „ll No*. Sor? ns. Ervsijielas Boils, • tons. Vl er*. SorevStm Eyes ..uo.* U au.u„*CoriiH NVi nilirij, Rnwimr*’ —’ Or. hiti :<’TlVK tk i:t \ H.\- Tiles. A SLIM: C l It K r lniU'il. t«> (rivo Wounds. Carbuncles. B u Throat B: B> ot \n ll.tl : In 1 whato all.1, Bite all local Irrita Trier unity reconiim ndstl foi “ .1st. and tor ti.it da nnfculies Aches ni f the syetei t he stronger a optical k THE CLiNGMAN TOBACCO PLASTER Tu puled m-eot iliim to tlir must seientilie i»rineipies* ofthe Sl-JIMTiVi: I N(*UI.DIK>Tn c mprundod with the purest Tobacco Flour, and ib s,*eciill J - " ' - t’ro 1]. Weed or <Jake of the Brea Tains where, from tch> delicate t ho p. t tent is mi ilde to bear t b of me Tobacco Cake. For Headache c. aim Pams, it is invaluable. Price 1 j els. Ask your druggist for these remedies, or write to the CLINGMAN TOBACCO CURE CO. DURHAM. N. C. >J. S. A. FOR RENT. * 4 TEN-MULE Farm in Oswichee for one or more years. Upon this*place sixteen (16) bales of cotton was made to the mule the past season, with plenty of corn and hay to do the plantation. Labor cheap and abundant. For particulars apply to MESSRS. BLANCHARD, BURRUS & CO., nov21 lw Columbus, Ga. The above cut represents the Improved Calender Rollers, so much admired and extensively used by Cotton Manufac turers of the present day. They consist principally of five Rollers, six Inches in diameter. 40 inches long; two of them hollow, being a receptacle for steam. They are furnished with all necessary pipe and valves, fitted up ready to be at tached. to a Boiler; lias all the latest improvements on same, including the Selvage Rollers ane Cloth Yard Folder a taut and loose. Pulley, 20 inches in diameter, 4 inches face, all ready to he connected to a line of Shafting. II only requires a trial to demonstrate their iudispensibility. . R‘“ r ’ wed.se&wfim RANKIN STABLES, In Rear of Rankih House, on First Avenue. Sale, Feed and Livery Stables,. New Turnouts; Showy, Gentle Horses, Careful Drivers. Horses boarded and carefully attended to. I have ample accommodations for live stock and arrangements to make my stable headquarters for dealers. HORoES AND MULES FOR SALE. WAGON AND CARRIAGE REPAIR SHOP. I am still running my Shop on Wynn’s Hill, and will continue to do all kinds of Carriage and Wagon Work on short notice. WILLIAM M. AMOS. nov22 wed se&w6m Five Gold and Two Silver Medals, awarded in 18s5 at the Expositions ol New Orleans and Louisville, and the In* ventions Exposition of London. The superiority of Coraline over horn or whalebone l,us now been demonstrated by over five years’ experience. It is more durable, more pliable, morq.comfortably and never breaks. Avoid cheap imitations made of variotS Hinds of cord. None are genuine un’ef “De. Waener’s Coraline” is print® on inside of steel cover. 50R SALE BY ALL LEADIN6 MERGHAHTS. WARNER BROTHERS, 353 Bro-dway, New York CiU FOR SALE. CMQ.-W1 0NE STORE HOUSE on Tenth f “ lOrMV. street; six rooms, 34x116 feet. Will pay 17 per cent on investment. One six-robm House on Ninth street. One three-room House and lot 60xU7 feet 10 inches, cheap. Call quick. poa zE^ZEmsrT. One four-room House cn Tenth street, corner Fifth avenue. One small Store House on Rose Hill. JY G. REEDY, Real Estate Agent, No.22 12th St dtf N.W.AYER ft SON ADVERTISING AGENTS stmro PHILADELPHIA Cor. Chestnut and Eighth Sts. Receive Advertisements for this Pftper ESTIMATES 1? Lo'Scuh Vmm FREE i“roV AYER ft SON’S MANUAL