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DR, TALMAGES’ SERMON.
•MONOPOLY AND COMMUNISM
STRUGGLING FOR THE POS
SESSION OF THIS COUNTRY.’’
.v Te . xt: J u T ls e u Lord <kßriteth in thee and
toy land shall be married.”—lsaiah, lxii, 4.
As the greater includes the leas, so do-,
the circle of future joy around <mr etaiS
world include the epicycle of our own repub
he. Bold eihilarant, unique, divineim
rry of the text. So manv are depressed
tne labor agitation and think
in this, country is going to pieces, I preach
thremornm? a sermon of goodche£r and
aut'-c ipate tlie tune when the Prince of Pea-e
and the Heir of Universal Dominion shall
take panasuon of this nation and “thy land
shall tie married.” J
In discussing the final destiny of this na
tion it makes all the difference in the world
whether we are on the way to a funeral or a
■wedding. The Bible leaves no doubt on this
subject In pulpits and on olatforms and in
places of public concourse, I hear so many of
the muffled drums of evil prophesy sounded
as though we were on the way to national
interment, and beside Thebes, and Babylon
and Tyre m the cemetery of dead nations
- our repub. 12 was to be entombed, that I wish
you to understand it is notto be obsequies,but
nuptials; not mausoleum, but carpeted altar
not cypress, but orange blossoms: not
qniem, big wedding march, for “thv land
Mall be married.” I propose to
of the suitors who ore claiming the hand of
this republic. This land is so fair, so beauti
tt\S. a H Uen V hat **?•* ma °y suitors, and
", depeud much upon your advice
whether this or that shall be accepted or re
In the first place I remark: There Is a
81 ‘gasping , mouster who comes in
seeking the hand of this republic,
and that monster is known by the name of
ZetStS&i ? Cept r^ £ made " ut of the iron
of the rail flack and Ore wire of telegraphy.
He does everything for his onai advantage
and for the robbery of the plple. Things
° a J rom ba"! to worse, until in the
three Legislatures of New York,’New Jersey
Pcnnsylvan a, for the most part
7 decides everything. If monopoly
law nis A'J4t^ sses; * “ ocapo,y a
Monopoly stands in the railroad depot put
ting mto his pockets in one year two hundred
millions of dollars in excess of all reasonable
charges for service. Monopoly holds in this
one hund the stem prwer of locomotion, and
in the other the electricity of swift commu
nication Moncp ly decides nominations
a.d election—-city elections, State elections,
national elections. With bribes he secured
' a ote L°. f legislators; giving them free
passes, *m(t appointments to needy rela
“ r ®^ t oJ uc iti v e positions, employing them
asattomqy? if they are lawyers, carrying
their goods fifteen per cent less if they are
merchants, and if he finds a case very stub
born, as well as very important puts
down before him the hard cash of bribery.
But monopoly is not so eßsily caught now
as when,during the term of Mr. Buchanan
toe Legislative Committee in one of our
States explqj-ed and exposed the manner in
Mcha certain railway company procured
of public land. It was found out
from that State
received 1175,000 among them. Sixty mem
bers of the lower house of that State re
ceived $5,000 and SIO,OOO each. The Gov
ernor of the State received $50,000, his clerk
Lieutenaut-Governor re
ceived SIO,OOO, all the clerks of the Legisla
ture J . r ® five d S-%000 each, $50,000
were divided amid the lobby agents.
That thing on a larger or smaller
scale is all the time going on in
some of the States of the Union, but it is not
so blundering as it used to be, and therefore
not so easily exposed or arrested. I tell you
toat the overshadowing curse of the United
States to-day, is Monopoly. He puts his
band upon fivery bushel of wheat, upon
every sack of salt, upon every ton of coal,
?“r<L very man > woman and child in toe Uni
ted States feels the touch of that moneyed
despotism. I rejoice that In twenty-four
States of the Union already anti-monopoly
leagues have been established. God speed
them in the work of liberation. 1 wish that
this question might be the question of our
presidential elections, and that we compel
the political parties to recognise it on their
platforms.
I have nothing to say against capitalists.
A man has a right to all the money be can
make honestly. There is not a laborer in the
land that would not be worth a million dol
lars if he could. I have nothing to say against
corporations ns such; without them, no great
enterprise would be possible. But what Ido
say is that the same principles Mould be ap
plied to capitalists and to corporations that
are applied to the poorest man and the plain
est laborer. What is wrong for me is wrong
for great corporations. If I take from you
your property without any adequate com
pensation I am a thief, and if a railway
damages the property of the people without
making any adequate compensation, that is
a gigantic thief. What js wrong on asmall
scale is wrong on a large scale. Monopoly in
England has ground hundreds of thousands
•of her best people into semi-starvation, and
in Ireland has driven multitudinous tenants
almost to madness.
Five hundred acres in this country make
an immense farm. When you read that in
Dakota Territory Mr. Cass has a farm of
15,000 acres and Mr. Grandon 25,000 acres
and Mr. Darvmple 40,009 acres, your eyes
dilate, even though theso farms are in great
regions thinly inhabited. But what do you
think of this which I take from the Dooms
day Book, showing what monopoly is on the
other side I give it as a warning of
what it would do on this side the soa if in
some lawful way the tendency is not re
sisted. In Scotland J. G. M. Heddle owns
50,400 acres: Earl of Wemyss, 52,000 acres;
/Sir J. Riddell, 54,500 acres: Sir C. W.
A. Ross, 55,000 acres; E. H. Scott,
59,700 acres: Mr. ,T. Baird, 60,000 acres:
Sir J. Ramsden, 00.000 acres; Earl of
Duuraore, OO ltOo acres: Duke of Roxburghe,
60,000 acres; Earl of Moray, 61,700 acres;
Countess of Home. 62.090 acres; Lord Mid
dleton, 63,000 acres: Earl of Aberdeen, SC
-509 acres; Mackenzie of Dundonnell, 63,C00
acres; Mr. J. J. H. Johnston, 68,000 acres;
Earl of Airlie 65.009 acres; Sir J. Colquhoun,
67,000 acres: C. Morrison, 67,000 acres; Duke
of Montrose, 08,000 acres; Mpyrick Bankes,
70,030 acres; Grant of Glenmorriston, 74,000
acres: Marquis of AiNw 76.000 acres; Rar
oness Wnlougby diiresuy, 76.000 acres; Mr.
J. Malcolm, mi.ooo acres; Marquis of Huntly,
80,000 a res: Balfour of Whittinghame. 81,-
000 acres; Sit J. O. Orde, 81,000 acres: Mar
auis of Bute, 93,050 acres; The Chisholm,
4,500 acros: Mr E. Ellice, 99,500
acres; Sir G. M. Grant, 103.000 acres;
Duke of Portland. 106,00) acres;
Cameron of L-cliiel,. 109.509 acres;
Sir C. W. Ross, 110,400 acres; Earl of Fife.
113,000: The Mn-kintosh, 124,000 acres; Lord
Macdonald, 130.000 acres; Earl of Dalhousie,
133,000 acres: Ma"leod, of Macleod, 141.700
acres: Sir K. Mackenzie, of Gairlock, 164,-
680 acres: Duke of Argvle, 175,000 acres:
Duke of Hamilton, 183,030 acres; Duke of
Atbolo, 194,000 acres; Duke of Richmond,
255,000 acres: Earl of Stair, 270,030 acres;
Mr. Evan Eailiie, 30 ,090 acres; Earl of Sea
field. 306,000 acres: Duke of Buccleugh, 432,-
183 acres: Earl of Breadalbane, 437,696acre5;
Mr. A. Matlieson, 2%),433 acres, and Sir J.
Matbeson, 406.070 acres: Duchess of Suther
land. 149,879 acres, and Dnke of Sutherland,
1,T,0,353 acres.
Such mcuopolies imply an infinite acreage
of wret hednojs. There is no poverty in the
United States like that in England, Ireland
and Scotland for the simple reason that ir.
those lands monopoly has had longer and
la' gnr sway. Lost summer in Edinburgh,
Scotland, after preaching in Synod Hall. I
stood on a chair in front of the hall and
preached to an audience of 20,000 people,
standing in one of the most prosperous parts
of the city, and reaching out toward the cas
tle. ns fine an array of strength and health
and beauty ns one ever sees. Three hours
after I preached to the wretched inhabitants
of the Cowgate and Canuongate.the audience
exhibiting the squalbr and siekliness and de
spair that remains in one’s mind like one of
the visions of DRute’s Inferno.
cheat, monopolies in any land implv great
privation. The time will come when our
government will have to limit the amount
of accumulation of property. Unconstitu
tional do you say? Then constitutions will
have to be changed until they allow such
limitation. Otherwise the work of absorption
will go on and the large fishes will eat up the
small fishes, and the shad will swal ow the
minnows and the porpoises swallow the xhaid
and the wholes swallow the porpoises, an a
thousand greedy men will own all the wo 1
end 500 of these will eat up the other 500 and
Olio hundred eat up the other 400, and finally
there will be only 50 left, and then 40 and
then 30 amt tbsn 20 and than 10 and then two
and then one. . ... .
But would a law of limitation of wealth Ist
anriglitei.ua? If I dir so near my neighbor a
fpupdMtiun, is order to build my bouas t that
GEORGIA HOME JOURNAL : GKEENESBORO. FRIDAY. JUNE 25, 1886.—EIGHT PAGES.
a •“*> th >w grabs me. If I have
or . c “*nical factory the malodors
resident, id toe
hood, the law savs: “Stop that.” If I drain
mvm7Twb^ m , itsW a “fi divert “to
jny mil-wheel, leaving the bed of the rivera
l Z r ,ua,aria ' tfie law says*
W outrage”’ And has not a
a n &ht to say that a few
men shall not gorge themselves on the'
Ymm rirht l bea 1 1,hatKi lifeof g derations!
riffite end where mv rights begin.
Monopoly— an 1
to t 96?R M ' al^ d ’ m 9P°P°/ —offers* his hand
JvJfcfc R,pu | ,ll( ‘- Ha strefc ha* it out over
v“l!*?“? v D tbe - Ptnns ylvania and the
Erie and the New Y ork Central Railroads,
and over th telegraph polc-s of the continent
and says; ‘Here is my heart and hand: be
mine forever.” Let the millions of the peo
ple, North, South, East and West forbid
thelSfw nl th y‘ forbid them at
h®!* forbid them on the platform.
fc y great organizations, forbid
oythe sentiment of an
v?n na t*°n. forbid them by the protest
of the church of God. forbid them by prayers
Heroi bhaU no* b' a '-e
this Abigail. It shall not bo to all devouring
monopoly that this land is to be married
<**“”?* the hand °f th >*
Republic is Nihilism. He owns nothinv but
“ knife for universal blood-letting and a
nitro-glvcerin? bomb for universal explo
s on. He believes in no God,no government,
no heaven, and no'hell except what he can
make on earth! He Rlew the Czar of Russia,
keeps Emperor William, of Germanv, prac
tically imprisoned. kil!ei Abraham Lincoln,
would put to death every King and President
on earth, and if he had the power would
climb up until he could drive the God of
heaven from his throne and take
i *"• . the universal butcher,
in R-ance !t is called Communism: in the
Lmted States rt is called Socialism; in
Russia it is called Nihilism, but that last is
the most graphic and descriptive term It
means complete and eternal smash up’. It
would make the holding of property a crime
and it would have a dagger through your'
hesrt and a torch to your dwelling and turn
over this whole land into the possession of
tf)”ft and lust and rapine andvnurder.
. 'there does this monster live? In St. Louis,
in Chicago, in Brooklyn, in New York, and
in all the cities and villages of this land. The
devil of destruction is an old devil, and he is
to be seen at every great fire where there is
anything to steal, and at every shipwreck
wnfere there is anything valuable floating
ashore, and at every railroad accident where
Mere are overcoats and watches to bepur
loineo. On a small scale I saw it in my col
lege days, when, in our literary soci
ety in New York University, we had
exquisite and costly bust of
Shakespeare, and one morning we
found a hole bored into the Hds of the marble
and a cigar inserted. There has not for the •
lart century been a fine picture in your art
gallery or a graceful statue in your parks or
a .t 6 f resco on your wall or a richly bound
album in your library but would have been
despoiled if the hand of ruffian sm could have
got at it without peril of incarceration. Sotue
times the evil spirit shows itself by throwing
vitriol into a beautiful face, sometimes by
wilfully scaring a horse with a velocipede
sometimes by crashing its raid:wheel against
a carriage.
The philosophy of the whole business is
that there is a large number of people who,
either through their laziness or their crime,
own nothing, and are mad at those who
through industry and wit of their own or of
their ancestors are in possessions of large re
sources. The honest laboring classes never
had anything to do with such murderous en
terprises. It is the villainous classes who
would not work if they had plentv of
work offered them at large wages. Many
of these suppose that by the demoli
tion of law and order they would be
advantaged and the parting of the ship of
state would allow them as wreckers to carry
off some of the cargo. It offers its hand to
this fair republic. It proposes to tear to
pieces the ballot box. the Legislative hall,the
Congressional assembly. It would take this
land and divide it up, or rather, divide it
down. It would give as much to the idler as
to tie worker, to the bad as to the good. Ni
hilism—this panther—having prowled across
other lands has set its paws on our soil, and
it is only waiting for the time in which to
spring upon its prey. It was Nihilism that
massacred the heroic policemen of Chicago
and St. Louis a few days ago and that
burned the railroad property at Pittsburg
during the great riots; it was ’Nihilism that
slew black people in our Northern cities dur
ing the war; it was Nihilism that again and
again in San Francisco and New York
mauled to death the Chinese; it is Nihilism
that glares out of the windows of the drunk
eries upon sober people as they go by. Ahl
its power has never yet been used. It would,
if it had the power, have every church,
chape], cathedral, school house, college and
home in ashes.
Let me say it is the worst enemy of the
laboring classes in any country. The honest
cry for reform lifted by oppressed laboring
men is drowned out by the vociferations for
anarchy. The criminals and the vagabonds
who range through our cities talking about
their rights when their first right is the peni
tentiary—if they could be bushed up, and
the downtrodden laboring men of this
sountry could" be heard, there would
be more bread for hungry children.
In this land riot and bloodshed never gained
any wages for the people, or gathered up any
prosperity. In this land the best weapon is
not the club, not the shillelah, not fire arms,
but the ballot. Let not our oppressed labor
ipg men be beguiled into coming under the
bloody banner of Nihilism. It will make
your taxes heavier, your wages smaller,
your table scantier, your children hun
grier,your suffering greater. Yet this Nihil
ism, with feet red with slaughter, comes forth
and offers its hand for this republic. Shall
the banns be proclaimed* If so, where shall
the marriage altar be? And who will be the
officiating priest? And what will be the
music? That altar will hive to be white
with bleached skulls, the music must be the
smothered groans of multitudinous victims,
the garlands must be twisted of nightshade,
the fruits must be apples of Sodom, the wine
must be the blood of St. Bartholomew’s mas
sacre. No! it is not to Nihilism, the san
guinital monster, that this land is to be mar-
ried. '
Another suitor for the hand of this nation
is infidelity. Mart you that all anarchists
are infidels. Not one of them believes in the
Bible,and very rarely any of them believe in
aGo 1. Their most conspicuous leader was
ihe other day pulled by the leg from under
a bed in a bouse of infamy, cursing and blas
pheming. The police of Chicago, exploring
tne dens of the Anarchists, found dynamite
and vitriol and Tom Paine’s Age of Season
ana obs.ene pictures and complimentary
biographies of thugs and assassins, but not
one tjstament, not one of Wesley's hymn
books, not one Homan Catholic breviary.
There are two wings to Infidelity. The one
calls itself liberalism and appears in highly
lit >rnry magazines and is for the educated and
refine 1. The other wing is in the form of
anarchy and is for the vulgar. But both
wings belong to the same old filthy vulture,
lnfiuehty! "Elegant infidelity proposes to
conquer this land to itself by the pen. An
archy proposes to conquer it by bludgeon
and torch. „ ,
tVhen the midnight ruffians despoiled the
grave of A. T. Stewart in St. Mark’s church
yard everybody was shocked But infidelity
proposes something worse than that—the rob
bing of all the graves of Christendom of the
hope of a resurrection. It proposes to chisel
out from the tainb)hes o. your CurisiUr
dead the words “Asleep in Jesus’' and to sub
stitute the words “Obliteration, aunihila
tion.” Infidelity proposes to take the letter
from the world’s Father inviting the nations
to virtue and happiness, and tear it up into
fragments so small that you cannot
read a word of it. It proposes
to take the consolation from the broken
hearted and the soothing pillow from
the dying. Infidelity proposes to s-near
in the President of the United Suits
and the Supreme Court and the Governors of
States and the witnesses in the court room
with their right band on Paine’s “ Ageof Rea
son'’ or Voltaire's “Philosophy of History.”
It proposes to take away from this country
the book that makee the difference between
the United States and the Kingdom of
Dahomey, between American civilization and
Bornesian cannibalism. If Infidelity could
destroy the Scriptures it would in 300 years
turn the civilized nations back Kfsemi-bar
barism and then from semi barbarism into
midnight savagery, until the morals of a
menagerie of tigers, rattlesnake* and chim
panzees would be better than the morals of
the shipwrecked human race.
The only Impulse In the right direction
that this world has ever bad has corns from
the Bible. It was the mother of Roman law
and of healthful jurisprudence. That book
has been the mother nr all reforms and all
ebaritias—mother of English Magna C'harta
and American Declaration of ladandenca.
Beniamin Franklin hold that holy book in
his hand, stood before aa infidel club at Paris
and read to them out of the prophecies of
H&hakknk, and tbs infidels, urn knowing
what book it was, declared it was the l.t
yuf'ry they bad *rr liewj, Ilia! bu'ik
brougat George Washington down, on fcii
knees in the snow at Valley Force, end lei
tee dving Prince of Wales to ask someone
to sing “ Rack of Ages. ”
I tell you that the worst attempted crime
of the fcentnry is the attempt to destroy this
book; yet infidelity, loathesome. stenchful,
leprous, pestiferous, rotten monster.stretohes
oat its hand, icherotis with the second death,
to take the hand of this republic. It
stretches it out through seductive mazarines
and through Iy mam lectures and through
caricatures of religion. It asks for all that
part of the continent already fully ssttdei
and the two-thirds not yet occupied. It
says; “Give me all east of the Mississinni.
with the keys of the church and the Christian
printing presses—then give me Wyoming,
give me Alaska, give me Montana, give me
Colorado, give me all the States and Terri
tories west of the Mississippi, and 1 will take
those places and keep them by right of po*e
sioa long before the Gospel can ,be fully en
trenched.” .
And this suitor premes his case appallingly,
j Sha’l the banns of that marriage be pro
i claimed? “No!” say the home niissionuries
; of the West, a mar tyr band of whom the world
i is not worthy, toiling amid fatigues and
! malaria and starvation, “no! not if we can
I help it. By what wo and our children have
suffered, we forbid the banns of that mar
riagel” “No”’ sav all patriotic voices, “our
‘ institutions were bought at too dear a price
; and were defended at too great a sacrifice to
be so cheaply surrendered.” “No.” says the
God of. Bunker Hill and Independence Hall
and Gettysburg, “I did not start this nation
for such a farce.” “No,” cry ten thousand
voices, “to infidelity this land shall not be
married.”
Bnt there is another suitor that presents his
claim for the hand of this republic. He is
mentioned in the verse following my text,
where it says; “As the bridegroom rejoiceth
over tire bride, so shall thy God rejoice over
thee.”w it is not my figure, it is the figure of
the Bible. Christ is so desirous to have this
world love him that he stops at no humilia
tion of simile. He compiles His grace to
spittle on the eyes of the blind. He com
pares Himself to a bon gathering the chick
ens, and in my text He compare Himself to
a suitor begging a hand in mirriage. Does
this Christ, the King, deseryg thjs land? Be
hold Pilate’s Hull and the insulting expecto
ration on the face of Christ. Behold the Cal
vareanmassa-re and the awful hemorrhage
of five wounds. Jacob served, fourteen
years for Rachel, but Christ, my Lord, the
king, suffered in torture thirtv-three years to
wiq. ths love pt this wprld. Often princesses
at their very birth are pledged in treaty
of marriage to princes or kings of earth, so
this nation at ita biith was pledged to Christ
for divine marriage. Before Columbus and
his 120 men embarked on the Santa Maria,
the Pinta and the Nina, for their wonderful
voyage, what was the last thing they did?
They sat down and took the holy sacrament
of the Lord Jesus Christ. After they
caught the first glimpse of this country
and the gun of one ship had announced
it to the other vessels that land
had been discovered, what was the song
that went up from all the three decks?
“Gloria in exeelsis.” After Columbus and his
120 men had stepped from the ship's <jeck to
* >solid ground, what did they do ? They
all knelt and consecrated the new world to
God. What did the Huguenots do aftsr they
landed in the Carolinas ? What did the
Holland refugees do after they had landed in
New York ? What did th 9 Pilgrim Fathers
do after they landed in New England ? With
bended knee and unlifted face and heaven
besieging prayer they took possession of th's
continent for God. How was the first Amer
ican Congress opened ? By prayer, in the
name of Jesus Christ. From its birth this
nation was pledged lor holy marriage with
Christ.
And then see how good God has been to us!
Just open the map of the continent and see
how it is shaped for immeasurable prosperi
ties; navigable rivers, more in number and
greater than of any other land, rolling on all
sides into the sea, prophesying large manu
fa-tures and easy commerce. Look at the
great ranges of mountains timbered with
wealth cm the top and sides, metalled with
wealth underneath. One hundred and eighty
thousand square miles of coal, 180,000 square
miles of iron. The land so contoured that
extreme weather hardly ever lasts more than
three days—extreme heat or cold. Climate
for the most part bracing and favorable for
brawn and brain. All fruit*, all min
erals, all harvest*. Scenery dis
playing an autunmal pageantry that
no land on earth pretends to
rival. No South American earthquakes. No
Scotch mists. No London fogs. No Egypt
ian plagues. No Germanic divisions. The
people of the United State* are happier than
any people on earth. It is the testimony of
every man that has traveled abroad. For
the poor, more sympathy; for the industrious,
more opportunity. Oh, how good God was to
our father and how good He has been to us
and our onildren. To Him—blessed be His
mighty name!—to Him oAcross and triumph,
to Him who still remembers the prayer of
the Huguenots and Holland refugees and the
Pilgrim Fathers—to Him shall this land be
married. Oh, you Christian patriots, by
your contributions and your prayers hasten
on the fulfilment of the text
We have during the past six or seven
years turned anew leaf in our national his
tory by the sudden addition of foreigners.
At Kansas City I was told by a gentleman
who bad opportunity for large investigation,
that a great multitude had gone through
there, averaging in worldly estate SBOO. 1
was told in the city of Washington
by an officer of the Government
who had opportunity for authentic
investigation that thou ands and thousands
had gone, averaging *I,OOO in possession of
each. I was tola by the Commission of Emi
gration that twenty families that had hrrived
at Castle Garden brought $85,000 with them.
Mark you, families, not tramps. Additions
to tin national wealth, not subtractions
therefrom. I saw some of them reading their
Bibles and their hymn books, thanking
God for bis kindness in helping them
cross the s?a. f-'ome of them bad
Christ in the steerage all across the
waves and they will have Christ in the
rail trains which every afternoon start for
the great We; t. They are being taken by the
Commission of Emigration in New York,
taken from the vessels, protected from the
Shvjocks and the sharpers, and in the n amo
of God and humanity passed on to their des
tination: and there they will turn your Ter
ritories into States and your wilderness into
gardens, if you will build for them churches
and establish for them schools and send to
them Christian mis.ionaries.
Are you afraid this continent is going to
be overcrowded with this population? Oh.
that shows you have not been to California l
that shows y.u ..a.-s i. >. e.i to Oregop,
that shows that you bate n>t i-een to Texas.
A fishing smack to-day, on Lake Ontario
might as yell be afraid o 'being crowded by
other shipping before*night as for any
one of the next ten generations of
Ameri-ani to be afraid of being
overcrowded bv foreign populations
in this country. The one State of Texas is
far larger than all the Austrian emoire, yet
the Austrian empire supnorts 35,090,090 peo
ple. The one State of Texas is larger than
all France, and France supports 30,099,009
people. The one State of Texas far surpasses
in size the Germanic empire, yet the Ger
manic empire supports 41,900,090 people. I
tell you the great wautof the Territories ahd
of the We-tern States is more population.
While some may stand at the gates of the
city, saying: “Stand back!” to foreign pop
alations, I press out as far beyond those
cates as I can pre-s out beyond them and
beckon to foreign nations, saying: “Come,
come!” “But,” say you, Tam so afraid that
they will bring their prejulice; for foreign
fovei nments and plant them here. ” Absurd!
hey are si -k of the governments that have
oDpressed them and they want free America!
Give them the great gosnel of wel-ome.
Tnrow around them all Christian hospitali
ties. They will ad 1 their industry and hard
ea ned wages to ihis country, an l then we
will dedicate all to Chr.sS, “and thy land
shall be married.”
But where shall the marriage altar be?
Let it be the Rocky Mountains, waca, through
artificial and mighty irrigation,all their top
shall be covered, as they will be, with vine
{rards and orchards and grain fields. Then
et the Bostons and the New Yorks and the
Charlestons of the Pacific coast come to the
marriage altar on one side, and then let the
Bostons and the New Yorks and the Charles
tons of the Atlantic coast come
to the marriage altar on the
other side, and there between them let this
bride of nations kneel: and then if the
organ of the loude-t thunders that ever
shook the Sierra Nevadan on the one side or
moved the foundations of the All-glianh-s u
the other side, should open full diapasou of
wedding march, that organ of tliuuders
could not drown the voice of Him who should
take the hand of this bride of na
tions, saying: "Asa bride;room rejoi -eth
O' er bride, so thy God rejoiceth over thee.”
At that marriage banquet shall he the plat
ters of Nevada sllrar sad the vlialiuen of Cali
fornia gold and the fruits of Northern
on bards and spices or Kouthere graves
and the t*|ieetry of American inanafac
ture and the congratulations from all the
free nations of earth and from all the tri
umphant armies of heaven. “And so thy
land shall be married. ”
MAKING CAST I RON LOANS
SOICI CUiuOSITIES OF BOR SOWING
IN NEW YOBK.
Monev iloaned on Almost Everything
of Value —Doans Upon Furniture ,
—Advances Upon Salaries.
“You can borrow money on anything
wh : ch has value, from a railroad bond to
a dog blanket,” remarked a veteran lo in
agent the other day. “There is nothing
which can be sold that doesn’t have rome
value as a collateral, and one would be
surprised to learn the various kinds of
articles upon which money is lent. The
pawn shops are not the only kind of loan
ing agencies that take everything as se
curity. The commonest kind of a loan,
though, is upon furniture in use. In
every daily paper you will see from one
to a dozen advertisements from loan
agents offering to adance monv upon fur
niture which need not l>2 removed from
the house. Those who usually avail
themselves of th’s accommodation are
boarding-house keepers who have run
behindhand in their bil's. It is a east
iron loan, though, and subjects the bor
rower to many unpleasant incident*.
When a hous keeper w;:nts to make a
loan of this description she communi
cates with the agent, who sends an expert
to examine thefurniture. If it is in a de
cent condition—and I never saw any that
was too worthless to borrow some amount
of mon"y upon—he makes a complete in
ventory of every article that he will accept
as security, p'hen he closely estimates
its value, not at what it is worth to the
owner, but at what it would fetch at auc
tion. If you wqnt to know what dis
counts are made upon first eost,l will tell
you that the moment a carpet has been
laid upon the floor, no matter how little
worn it is, it decreases one half in value.
Of course, after it has been used some
time the decrease is very much grater.
By this rule the furniture in a house,
which cost say $5,000, would be valued
by the expert at S3OO. He would ltan
all the way from SBOO to S7OO upon this,
depending largely upon the character of
the owner. A wem in, who has outside
me ins or who shows ability as a manag. r,
or who has good financial hacking, would
secure much larger loans at less interest
than one who does not possess these
qualities in so high a degree. The inter
est varies—ten to thirty-three per cent, a
year—and the chattel mortgage that she
gives is iron-bound and steel-ribbed. It
gives the capitalist the right to turn her
out of house and home should he deter
mine that she intended in anyway to de
fraud him.
“Workman often pledge their tools to
these sharks and give them a lien upon
their first earnings. This, however, is a
hazardous proceeding, as the debtor
sometimes evades the agent and skips
out. This is a difficult task, though, and
rarely attempted. The agent who looks
after these loans has a score of eyes,
more legs than a centipede and can be
everywhere at the same time and several
other places besides. I have heard of
actresses borrowing money on their
wardrobes, which they still retained the
use of. And I once knew a man to bor
row $5 On a double set of false teeth,
which the agent kindly allowed him to
retain after giving him a chattel mort
gyge on them to secure him against loss.
The worst sort of sharks, though, are the
men who advance money upon salaries.
The poor chaps who g> to them never
cease to regret it. They are not only man
eaters but soul-consumers as well, and
woe betide the wretch who enters their
maws. They positively want the whole
earth and all the reat of the planets; they
are never satisfied. It is against their
nature. If they ever were they wouldn’t
be in that business. They demand
about forty per cent, a month,
and they get it, too, unless
the borrower becomes desperate and
kills himself to avoid their extor
tionate demt nds. If he doesn’t respond
promptly they go to his employers, and
of course that means a sure discharge to
the employe, for no business man cares
to have in his employ a man who can't
live on his earnings. He would be too
fond of money to be trusted about the
establishment. There .are men who loan
money upon expectations, such as judg
ments, bequests, patent rights and other
uncertainties, and you can be sure that
they weigh the chances with unscrupu
lous care and see as well as they can that
their interests are protected.”
“There are,” observed the relator,
“other classes of loan agents. I refer to
them as amateurs to distinguish them
from those I have already described. They
are persons in various callings of life
who have a little ready cash on hand and
don’t know exactly how to place it. For
instance, we will take a clerk who has
saved up a few hundred dollars. His
landlady borrows it from him, and pays
it back in board, given him a cheaper
rate than her usual custom in lieu of in
terest. Sometimes she falls before ftie
debt is paid and he loses his money with
out having any recourse. Then board
ing-house keepers who have musical
dfihghters often advertise to give board
in exchange for musical lessons. There
are also fortune-tellers who borrow money
and pay it back by disclosing to the
credulbus capitalist what the future holds
in store for him. It is needless to say
that these loaners never get back the
worth of their money.” —New York
Graphic.
Hints for Conduct
Fifty years ago there was a well known
publication called “The Good Manners
Book.” It contained instructions in re
gard to goinsr to and returning from
church, on table etiquette, etc. On each
page was a picture representing the fault
mentioned in a couplet beneath. The
following are 'a few spec imen couplets
that are appropriate for advice in some
domestic circles to-day:
Writhe not your limbs in every shape
Of awkward gesture like an ape.
Twirl not your toes, nor lolling stand.
Nor in your pockets place your hand.
All whispering, giggling, winking, shun;
Turn not your bade on any one.
When you blow your nose lie brief,
And neatly use a handkerchief.
Do not allow yourselves to look
In letters, paiiers, or a book,
(Till you have leave).
Set not your kuife and fork up straight.
Gaze not upon another’s plate. *
Dip not a dirty knife in salt.
And carefully avoid the fault
Of blowing while at meals your nose,
Unless necessity impose:
When drinking do not stare around.
Nor make a harsh or gurgling sound.
Turn not your rosat nor view it close;
Nor ever hold it to your nose.
Rtuff not your mouth, nor blow your meat
Wait till it’s cool enough to eat.
If in your fowl should chance to be
What cant be eat conveniently.
Remove it from ymr monih with care,
Lean not upon another’s chair:
Use not a toothpick to be seen,
But hold a napkin for a screen.
AN OPIUM EATER'S STORT.
Hot Rare ef Iron In
HU lesrfil Fmxr-A HcUntiflc lnvesli
eatlau and Its HennlU.
Cincinnati Tima Star.
“Opium or death:”
This brief sentence was fairly hissed into
ibe ear of a prominent druggist on Vine sti eet
iy a person who. a few years ago well off, is
o-day a hopeless wreck!
One can scarcely realize the sufferings ot
in opium victim. De Quincy has vividly por
trayed it. Lot who con fitly describe the joy
if the rescued victim?
H. C. Wilson, of Loveland, 0., formerly
with March, Harwood & Cos., manufacturing
ffiemists of St. Louis, and of the well-kuown
inn of H. C. Wilson & Cos., chemists, for
merly of this city, gave our reporter yester
lay a bit of thrilling personal experience in
Jus line.
“I have crawled over red hot bars of iron
uid coals of fire,” he said, “in my agony
luring an opium trsnzy. The very thought of
ny sufferings freo. es my blood and chills my
tones. I was then eating over thirty grains
if opium daily.”
“How did you contract the habit?”
“Excessive business cares broke me down
uid my doctor present ed opium! That is
jbe way nine-tenths of cases commence.
n hen I determined to stop, however, I
found I could not do it.
“You may be surprised to know,” he said,
‘that two-fifths of the slaves of morphine and
opium are phyaicir nt Many of these I met
" e studied our cases carefully. We found
out what the organs were in which the appe
tite was developed and sustained; that no
victim was free from a demoralized condition
of these organs; that the hope of cure de
pended entirety upon the degree of vigor
which could be imparted to them. I have
seen patients, while undergoing treatment,
compelled to resort to opium again to deaden
the horrible pain in those organs. I marvel
how 1 ever escaped."
“Do you mesa to say, Mr. Wilson, that
you have conquered the habit?”
“Indeed I have.”
“Do you object to telling me how?”
“No, sir. Studying the matter with sev
eral opium-eating physicians, we became
latisfied that the appetite for opium was lo
catfd in the kidneys and liver. Our next ob
ject wa6 to find a specific fgp restoring tbps®
organs to health. TES physician.?, much
against their coda, addressed their attention
to a certain re medy and became thoroughly
convinoed o i its scientific merits alone that
jt was the only one that conld be relied upon
in every case of disordered kidneys and liver.
I thereupon began using it and, supplement
ing it with my own special treatment, finally
got fully over the habit. I may say that the
most important part of the treatment is to
get those organs first into good working con
dition, for in them the appetite originates
and is sustained, and in them over ninety
per cent, of all other human ailments
originate.”
“For the last seven years this position has
been taken by the prow iitors of that remedy,
and finally it is becoming an acknowledged
scientific truth among the medical profession;
many of them, however, do not openly
acknowledge it, and yet, knowing they have
no other scientific specific, their code not
allowing them to use it, they buy it upon the
quiet and prescribe it in their own bottles.”
“As I said before, the opium and morphine
habits can never be cured until the appetite
is routed out of the kidneys and liver. I have
tried everything,—experimented with every
thing, and as the result of my studies and
investigation, I can iay I kno>c nothing can
accomplish this result but Warner’s safe
cure.”
“Have others tried your treatment?”
“Yes sir, many; and all who have fol
lowed it fully have recovered. Several of
them wno did not first treat their kidneys
and liver for six or eight weeks, as I advised
them, completely failed. This form of treat
ment is always insisted upon for allDatients,
whether treated by mall or at the Loveland
Opium Institute, and supplemented by our
special private treatment, it always cures."
Mr. Wilson stands very high wherever
known. His experience is only another
proof of the wonderful and conceded power
of Warner’s safe cure over all diseases of
the kidneys, liver and blood, and the dis
eases caused by derangement of those or
gans. We may say that it is very flattering
to the proprietors of Warner’s safe cure
that it has received the highest medical
endorsement and, after persistent study,
it is admitted by scientists that there is
nothing in materia medica for the restora
tion of those great organs that equals it in
power. We take pleasure in publishing the
above statements, coming from so reliable
a source as Mr. Wilson, and confirming by
personal experience what we have time and
again published in on columns. We also ex
tend to the proprietors our hearty congrat
ulations on the results Wrought.
Code in the Lime-Kiln Club.
Professor- Burwell Cavendish, a late
local member made his debut by inquir
ing if the club officially upheld the code.
If he was insulted, and he challenged
the insult er, would the club staud by
him?
“What would you challenge him to
do?" asked the president.
1 ‘To meet me on the field of honah,
6ah.”
“What fur?”
“To fight, sah.”
“Oh, I see. Well, Brudder Cavendish,
my advice to you am to keep off the field
of honah. You’ll git ver feet all wet,
ta’r yer coat-tails on "the bushes, and
probably be run off by the farmer’s
brindled dog. Wl-cn a man gasses me,
and does it to be mean, I’ze gwine to let
drive fur his nose with my bunch of fives.
Dat’s code ’null fur anybody, an’ you kin
hit him on the sidewalk as well as to go
off to some field of honah. Let us now
adjourn fur one week.” —Free Press.
Proof Positive.
“Reform, si:, is the watchword of the
hour, fivery city department needs re
organizing.”
“The police are very efficient, I think/
“Not at all, sir. They neglect thei,
duty shamefully.”
“Mention an instance.”
“Id one single ward down town theii
are eight players on the accordeon.”
Being entirely vegetable, no particular care
is required while using Dr. Pierce’s "Pleasant
Purgative Pellets.” 7 hey operate without dis
turhai ce to the constitution, diet, or occupa
tion. For sick headache, constipation, impure
blood, dizziness, sour eructations from the
stomach, bad taste in the mouth, bilious at
tacks pain in region of kidneys, internal
fever, bloated feeling about stomach, rush of
blood to head, take Dr. Pierce’s "Pellets.” By
druggists.
Time will come and Ijmi- will go, but the
swallow-tail coat has come to stay.
“Big Jloney In It For I’s.”
Among the 150 kinds of Cloth B mnd Dollar
Volumes given away by the U all is tor (N. Y.),
.American Rural Rome for every $1 subscrip
tion to that Great 8 page, 48 cal., 16 year old
weekly, (all 5x7 inches, from 309 to 909 pages
bound in cloth) srs
Law W tbout Lawyers. Danebon’s (Medical
Family Cyclopedia. Cmnseior.
Farm Cyclopedia. Boys’ Useful Pastimes.
Farmers’ and Stock- Five Years Before the
breeders’ Guide. Mam.
Common Sense in Peoples’ History of
Poultry Yard. United States.
World Cyclopedia. Universal History of
Wlist Every One AU "Nat'ius.
Should Know. Popular II storv Civil
War (both sides).
Any one liook an 1 piper one year, pus paid,
sl.lsonly ! Sa isfaction guaranteed. Refer
ence: Hon. C. R. Pabsoxs. Mayor Rochester.
Samples 2c. Bubal Ho.mi Cos., Ltd., Roches
ter, N.‘Y.
It is often hard to tie just, but most any-one
can preach justice with first-class ease.
Soft, pliant and natr results from the
useot flail’s Hair Renewer.
For imparting tone and strength to the
stomach, liver, and bowels, take Ayer's Pills.
. *r-wi. BEST IN IKE
MAHIjIW Magazine
loonrit v c uruiil*it •"* lw y sUoiuklj ***lf rdU ou tlv n.wkel. w
iBAIiLAKD OALLUtY. gWRTtvo AND TAIttT unity. yU.wii. Bni for
■y— ‘ Ctf Ift. _ _ iUABLXN HUE Alt wearbD
LIU RiSri*!^®^
a>|itiut in our lino cheerfully given.
“Good deeds," once oaki the celebrated
flichter, ring clear through Heaven like a
1*11.” One of the beet
banian sufferings. Last fall my daughter
was in decline," says Mrs. Mary of
Monttoee, Kansas, "and everybody thought i
!ie was going into consumption. I got her a 1
bottle of Dr. K. V. Tim e's 'favorite l’rescrip- 1
lion’ and it cured her.” Such facts as the above ’
need no comment.
The inventor of g coat-on stove was a bach- |
rlor. but a r ose observer.
I.fa's Springs, East Tennessee, isa reason
nbleand first-ciasssnmmer resort. See ad’vt.
Earnestness in a gfto-I canae cannot stop
r.liort oT famg. |
Katlsfaciery Evtdenre.
T. W. Graham, Wholesale Druggist, of Aus
tin, Texas, writes: “ I been handling
Dk. Ws. Hall's Balsam roaTHi Lungs for
the past year, and hare found it one of the
most salab e medicines I iiave ever had in ray
house for Coughs, Colds, and even consump
tion. always giving entire satisfaction. Pleaso
send me another gross.”
Ik some of our reslanrsnts the customer in
one who does the most waiting.
For dtspkpsia, inuiobstion, depression <n
spirits, general debility in their various forms,
blsoass preventive against fever and agne and
ether intermittent fevers.th# “Ferro-Phosphor
ated Elixir of Calisaya,” made by Caswell,Haz
ard & Cos., New York.and sold by all Druggists,
is the best tonic: and for patients recovering
from fever or other * ft has no equal
The Brown Cotton Gin Is “A No. 1 .**
“Tt is simnly perfect.” Has a>l the latest
improvements and Is delivered free of all
! charges At any accessible point. Send to Com
pany at New London. Ct.. for catalogue or ask
i your merchant to order one for vou.
If tod feel as though water wis gathering
around the heart (heart-dropsy) or have heart
rheumatism, pa'pitation of the heart with suf
focation, sympathetic heart trouble—Dr. Kil
mer's Ocean-Wxed regulates, corrects and
cures.
Never tell a secret to anybody who is eagerly
inquisitive t" know it.
“As is the hml with an envious worm,”
so is many a yduth cut down by the gnawing
worm congumptioif. > But it can be made to re
lease its hold and stop its gnawing. Dr.
Pierce’s “Golden Medical Discovery” will, it
taken in time, effect permanent curee, not only
in consumption, but in all cases of chronic
throat, bronchial and lung diseases.
Fume, liPe lightning, generally strikes a
man who is not expecting it.
A’o Opium in Piso’s Cure tor Consumption.
Cures where other remedies fail. 25c.
WO Ml EN
N f'2 l w*S .tr.th, r whs suffer fr.m
Infirmities peculiar to their pm, sfcnald try
iWa H
M" * BEST TONIC
This medicine combines Iron with pure vegetable
tomes, and is invaluable for Diseases peculiar to
Womens and all who lead sedentary lives. It En
riches and Purifies the Bloody .stimulates
the Appetite, Strengthens the Muscles and
Nerves—in fact, thoroughly Invigorates.
Clears the complexion, and makes the skin smooth.
It does not blacken the teeth, cause headache, or
produce constipation—all other Iron medicine * do.
Mb. J. W. Carter. Meridianvflle. Ala., says: “My
wife has been an invalid for II months, for the past 8
months has been confined to the bed most of tne
time. Bhe tried various remedies without relief.
Brown’s Iron Bitters has made her feel like anew
being."
Mbs. 8. A. Jacksow, Kno wills. On., says. ** I suf
fered with General Debility and Female Weakness.
I wss despondent and had no appetite. I uaed
Brown's Iron Bitters with great benefit."
Genuine has above Trade Mark and crossed red Baas
on wrapper. Take no other. Made only by
1 BBOWB CHEMICAL CO.. BALTIMORE*MIL
Binraois
originates in the nasal pas
sages sad maintains its
stronghod in the head.
From this point it sends forth
a poisonous virus along the
membranous linings and
through the digestive organa,
corrupt ing the blood and
producing ether t roubleeome
as i dangerous symptoms.
Cream Balm
HAY-FEVER
upon. KM. at druggist*, or by mail.
ELY BROTHERS, Druggiot., Onto. N. Y.
ROANOKE
"Wap COTTON PRESS.
i fcj HI The Beet and Cheapest Press
\ HI / niade. Costs less than shelter
\ / over other presses. Hundreds
\ ' Hm / in octuaLl use at both steam
V iHmTTf HU I! and horse power gins. Bales
-J* BBff H B ’ Jf- faster than any gin can pick.
fCMwfe- .j Address Roanoke Iron and
Wood Workb, Chattanooga,
jgf=f WILSON’S
/iTI CHAMPION SPARK ARRESTER
II h Beat open tfv it right arrester In
\T- / tlie world. No more gin houses
■ / burned from engine Npnrks. Mold
fr-pn on guarantee. write for Olrcu
iJJ* lar. T. T. WIN DSOII dk No,.
a> * 36 W.ynef t., .linirdßevllfr.Gu.
Cy~ReHTiopsihle Agents wanted for sale of Arrester.
Free Farms mIHS
T’he most Wonderful Agricultural Park in America.
Surrounded by prosperous raining and manufactur
ing towns. Farmer's Paradise’ Magnificent crops
raised in IMS. Thousands of Acres of Govern
ment I .and, subject to preemption and homestead.
Lands for tale to actual settler* at SB.OO per Acre.
Long Time. Park irrigated by Immense canals. Cheap
railroad rates. Every attention shown settlers. For
maps, pamphlets, etc., a tdres* COLORADO LAND A
LOAN CO., Opera House Block, Denver, CoL Box 2810.
I dimples. Blotches, Scaly or Oily Skin,
•Iletnishes nnd all Skin Diseases Cured
and Complexion Beautified Jy
Beeson’s Aromatic Alius Soap,,
Sold by Dsuggfofs or sent by mail on receipt of I
23cents by WHT. DREYDOPPEL, Manu-I
I facturer, 20S North Front St., Philadelphia. Pa. I
hflpai wivu smal. capital make $5 to $25 per day
31 #■ H wl *h <ur amateur Photo Outfits. No ex
-881 ftals perWtnce required everything sold ready
for u s It pays big with other bu&lne-s. in stores,
eiuips at hoine.or iron* hou eto hous >; affords steady
work; pa.vs 300 ■ assta percent profit* we
also copy anden- A large all styles and
iia'le-i of Por- H It? 13 traits. Work guaran
teed, no risk, par ticular* free, or 50-paxe
book,’‘Hou? to Make Photographs and Sample*Photo
made by Empire. ArnateurCatnera *ent postpaid, for,
ucta. Write to day. name this AU
paper and address Empire Photo Bi9||||| l ||
Equipment Cos., 881 Can I3L.N.Y. W 1 Wllllwll
Lea’s Springs, Granger Ce., E, Te:\^:
Only 21 miles from Knoxville—by railroad or daily hack,
j Fine mountain and osve scenery; elevoel. foßUkio.
; cool, healthy; superior natural uiioora l watersTWhim
; Sulphur. Black Sulphur. ClvUybaifc\ aftlf Wit’*
stone. Ilot and cold sulphur Vitus; g vVd V
auiusements, new builltpga; et*n wood farMMKHnfi-i:
onablerat**. Address M. J. HUGHES, PiiuPRiXTOB.
for des riptive pamphlets. ■■■ -■
JAMS ’wclf Pi'ki*. 1 , ’
Vinegar. Catsup. Preserve., AgnfkWfiUH
Kraut.nakinx for fr , nr’i'
wth every dime pack of rill Inri o
nv-PAPtIR OF WINTER BEETS THROWN IN.
JAKES HANLEY, Sped Or iy i—A| ■ ! >Lfr
f n DOLLARS earh for
I J lerfeil SEW IMi M A CMM >. 'SOH^M-H
I # \VRrriUPlfvff J-PRM. M
I fa-... *. ?<*•'*“,*. “'ASAv':,
Orr.,.r ...mi’ Hjg :
enlxr wlh I"*' 1 •*t■•. • ' •'■t ’ M
UAO. bA Y N ii. A v O 44 n. X9R^H|pS
cilair'sPiH^sSkSflß
Oval H.-
PensionsfJf^pS
m *ttS
! J^L
wm? Igi^^SSSHH
’Krßfflrvl
‘‘■-ill wdorM*
mßEpfe&s# l
c isrm r. c.^C^.L ,
AXD UTWAXM.
Hi The New
Job Press
* I t ** t,tt **^^S
■ ,bW TOB&lnr ■
ABPi - - ,f. ever eokT. Jk
m /lißaafillifWMl trial guarm
wMßi tees ratisfan
i Won. Four sJsng
- made Senator
- ■ m A. OlmewiaM,
-—■ AiCEHTgiak,
— New York.
ASK FOR THE
W. L. DOUCLAS
Bet materiel, perfect fit, eqnflß on; IS or t< shoe,
•Terr pair warranted. Take none inteu •UmpaS
• W.L Doaglu' sßooShoe. Warranted." Coacrtaa,
Button and Lace. Boya ask
for the W. L, DoukUM* —. Mr
•2.00 Shoe. hme tty Tea .a 5f
the MOO btioe. It you cannot Jhl ,21
ret ihcse ahoes from deal- /Kf Oa
en,end addre*onpotal
card to W. L Douglaa. SMy,/ VC* ft
Brockton, Mui Z-&J -
$3
BOOK AGENTS WANTED*^
PLATFORM ECHOES
.r HVtNQ truths you head and heart.
By John B. Gough, •
HU last and crowning Ilfs work, brim full of thrilling Inter
est. humor and pathos. Bright, pure, aad good, lull of
“laughter and tears." it dU at eight to aIL To it i s added
to SBOO a month made. o ZTsHeUmes no hindrmnee as vf
give Extra Terms and Pap Freight *. Write for circulars to
lA. P. WWKTHI.NUTON jL COm Uortford, Loan.*
7fyper/dtM>
~
& House
XiriTHOTTT TABRRD BDILDINO P A PER nnd*r
Y Y the weather boarding and floors. Warm in win
ter, cool in summer. ABSOLUTE PREVENTIVE
•ralnat vermin of every kind. Coat, (Mark nothings.
only about ninetyrenUi a room. Aek dealer* for it or
Tit. CHARLES H. CONNER. Manufacfur.r, -
LOUIS VILLR.KT,
* TE * I" ADVANCE
OF ALL OTHERS.
APBtTTta INSTRUMENTS.
Sft4.nil LOWER PRICES.
mZLJL ' JfEasitRTENMS
wn.te
Stamp rOR /}j/r- -7.
Full Pawticular*.
SKIN BROS-A
NEWARK, N. J.
uviLfini
Atttne and th.n b.r. Ih.m return a** l ”'.L“L*“ I ,VJtt'n
ta’. cure. I b... nod* tha dl.e.M of FITS. Xl lI.BrXYAJ
“ FALLINttBICKHISfIa llfe-loag atady. Irr.lmy
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