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DI!. TAUIAGF,
THE BROOKLYN DIVINE’S SUN
DAY SERMON.
Habject; “The Assabsinalion.”
Tr.xr: “ Wh r doth e V b, hi
Crr>*i, an l .u c »
Disciple. Luke xi
The cr w -et on which criminn r
were put to deal It nia ®
in th** f»hn|K' of t letter T. in tl ®
.
shnjxj Of of the let r X, som t » in th hap ?
the Jett* . simple upright
t wo cro s pjovs t the p »rp -ndi
bar, so that up-jn tl lower ci i the
criminal partially nt lint hi •r t ?
style ol t '•r< * hs a w jv awgracerui
and always n mv/.inu
When 'll iu > U'luered rabylon he put
800captiv**« Alexamh to ith on th 1 W ne.i
■1 i vro le ] ’ * t !' 00 r a;>
fives tf death ou t ‘ o it w‘i u-t
an all ordinary naxle punishment But in
the forest of crc on tlu hill and in
the valley th® cart It, there is one cro-:
, more attention than .any otli -; 1 .
,’hm ■s not
'^Ti-rc it wo,si th, u thing
|s-< ufifl^mi tho notch at which the tw > jiieccs
are joined, find as to tho h cne, they w itnessed
cruoifh ion» every few weeks; so that 1 s e
a rook 1» man w tit the full and
kicking ing careless] v j do kull, and wondor
who t illam w tliut had so flat an 1
nu-fchnpcn 1 there a h 1 n ! lien s (mother skull,
mi on the hiJside di-r till. In*
d* ed, t fio Bible it was a [> a< of u! Is.
But ah< tho victim on le of tli L* cr
all a.'i's cry in, ** V hois he? was he a
man? was, ho a God! wa , he man an 1 Godf’
'1 hrough the da in h of that )tny day
I come up closr < enough to th-,. < i to
who it is. Iti S J.Kll ll-.w <1 d or no
there? Had ho come up on the the hill
to >k oir upon th i I ermti 1 lands : ;p ■ or
upon a brilliant suns t r \h >. He ca ne : here
ill aiidexi ill -ted People sometimes wonder
wire Chri expir*«l no quickly on the cro
hn m % bee nr seven hours, while other victims
<• on the cross for forty eight hours
bc'aroli: was extinct s II t*dl you the
|e w;ih ej — •aust- when he came
th^re. • had b et! r. ( u ge 1. Wo are hor
riflod at t he cruel lies of tt:o wliijp Hg post,
but those cruelties were mercy compared
with tl a s otirging of Jt‘nus L'hrut
I saw at A nt rp a jiicturc mud • by Rubens
Ruben is picture of tho scourging of Jesus
Christ!, it v\as I it overmastering pict
uro I ookod nt, or ever oxpevt to so *.
A* tli" Ion ■ Crocked o(li< ;al opened the door
fti it, hid the picture, there he was b'hrist
With Ice k bent, an I bared. The ilagcl'ator
stood with the tints r teeth clenched over the
low- blows. r hip, ns though to give violence to tho
I here were tho swollen shoulders of
< hi i t. I’here wero the black and hlueridges,
denied even the relief of bleeding I hero
wire tli flesh adhering to the whips ms they
TV HI lilted. There note tho nnrks where tho
knot- ,ii the whips gouged out t he flesh. There
stood the pei ■liter Mi his foot on the calf
of I lie leg of the Saviour, balancing himself.
(i 1 the furious and hehisli look on those faces,
gr ’l lining vougearn o against the Non of Go l.
If picture Seized I in®, it, overwhelmed mo:
it si erried as if it, won! I kill i no. i do not
think I could have h okul at it, (ivo minutes
mid have lived. *
But that, my friends, was before Christ had
started for ('alvarv. I hat was only the
to w hipping Are you ready for }our journey
the < r<
'I lie • ii penb rs have split tho timber into
two pieeis They me heavy and they are
long pieces, for on«> of l lie.; i must be fastened
deep down in th > earth, lest t he St ruggling of
til" Vn-tiltt llp-ot. the stra: ture. '1*1 ey put
t his 11 ill er ii) -a the shoulder of Christ very
gradually fli -t, tome whetlior ho can stand
it., and niter i lie> find lie can stand it they
put t he w hole w. iglit upon him. Forward
ing now, mo!) tot ‘alvary! The hooting and the yell¬
follow on. Under the weight of the
cro s, Christ bring weary and sick, he stum¬
ble' and la Is, mid thev jerk ut his robe, in
digmuit tied he should have stumbled and
fallen, and they cry; “Cot. up, get up!”
• In ret, pu ting one hand on the ground and
tli" other hand on thoeivss, ris e, looking
into the f.-.re of Mary, his iu it her, for sym¬
pathy; hut they tell her to stand hack, it is
no place for a woman, “Staii'l buck and
stop t los crying.”
< In 1 st moves on with His burden upon His
fthouMers. mid thi-re is a I oy that, puss s
id ng w ith Him, a hoy holding a mail’t and
a lew n uls I wonder wliat they are for.'
t In i'! mo, s on until the burden ri so great
He s*aggers and falls flat into the dust and
faints dea i away, an I a l ulllan puts his foot
on loin and Mink*", him a- ho would a dead
dog, while another ruffian 1 >lcs down at him
Wondering whether ho w hot her he has fainted aw I V, or
is only pretending to faint away,
and with <’ a' an 1 contempt iiVlescribahle,
says: up! get “Fainted, ou!” have you? Fainted! Get
Now I liev have arrived at tho foot of the
hill, (iff with his clothes! Shall that lo$th
M’lno mob look upon the unrolled body of
< T.rist: Yes. The commanding officers say:
' n !; li ' , ,'. n ** 10 K'rfll'N toko off the coat; strip
him! I hi> work is done. But bring back
the Coat, for here are tho gamblers tossing
vi)) coin hi the ground, saying: ‘i have it, i
have it: ii is min!’ He rolls it up and puts
it un .or his arm, or In examines it to see
what fabric it is made of. Then they put
the cro-* upon tho ground aid they stret h
i hrist upon it, and four or five men hold
him dow n while they drive tho spikes home.
At every thump a groin—a gro n. Alas!
nl:is! Ti e hour passes on and the time
comes when they must- crucify him.
Christ has oul v on® garment loft now, a
cap. ayap of thorns. No danger that it will
fall off, lor the sharp edges have puncture l
the temples and it is sure ami fast, t no ruf
fian takes ho d of one end of the short l earn
.
of the rras:, and another ruffian takes hold
of th" other end of the short beam of tho
cross, and another ruffian puts his arms
nround the waist of Christ, and another ruf¬
fian takes hold of the on t of the long beam
of the cross, and altogether they move on
until they come to the ho'e digged m the
earth, an 1 w th awful plunge it jars d nvn
with its l arden of woe. It is not the picture
ff ■ran n sometimes t hrist. it is not in the cathedral; statu■> of Christ, but as is
see a it
■V !y of n bleeding, living, dying Christ.
sometai.es say he had live wounds,
but t v have counted wrong. Two wounds
for the hands, two wounds for the feet, one
wound for the side, they say; five wounds.
No; they have missel the worst and tn’V
have missed the most. D d you ever se - the
bramble out of which that crown of thorns
was made? I saw one on a Brooklyn ferry¬
boat. in the hands of a gentleman who h id
just returned from Palestine; a bramble just
like that out of which the crown of thorns
was made. 0. how cruel and how stubborn
were the thorns! And when that cap of
thorns was put upon Christ, and it was
pressed down upon him, not five wounds, but
ten. There twenty, thirty—I three cannot count them.
were or four absences that
made that scene worse. First, there was tho
abseu.a*of water. The climate was hot; the
fever, the inflammation, the nervous pros
trat on. tho gangrene had seized upon
him, and he terribly wanted water
liis wounds were worse than gunshot
fractures, and yet no water. A Turk in the
Thirteenth century was crucified on the banks
of a river, so that the sight of tho water
might of tantalize him. And O! how
thirst Christ must have tantalized as He
thought of the F.uphrates and the Jordan and
the Amazon and ail the fountains of earth
and heaven poured out of His own hand.
They offered Him an intoxicating draught
made out of wine and mvrrh, but He declined
it. He wanted to die sober. No water.
Then, mv friends, there was the absence of
light. Darkness always exasperates trouble.
1 never shall forget the night m the summer
of 1873, in the steamer Greece, mid Atlantic,
every down. moment All the expecting lights in the steam'r to go
the cabin were
blown out. The Captain came crawling on
h s hands and knees, for he could not stand
and upright, so violently was the vessel pitching,
he cried: “Light up, light up!" The
steward said: “We can’t light up; the can
dire are gone and the holders are gone.” The
Captain said: “I can't help that: light up'”
The storm was awful when the lights were
burning; Then worse when the lights went out.
there was the absence of faithful
nurres. When you are ill, it is Pleasant to
have the head bathed and the hands and feet
rubbed. Look at the hands and feet of
Christ, look atthe face of Christ. There were
women there who had eared for the sick, but
none of them might come up near enough to
help. There was Christ's mother, but
might said: not come up near enough to help,
They place for “Stand you.” back, The stand back; this is
no high priests and the
fcildiers wanted it their own way; they had it
their own way.
The hours pass on and it is 12 o'clock of the
Savior's suffering, and it is 1 o'clock, and it
is 2o'clock, and it is almost 3 o’clock. Take
the last look at the suffering face; wan and
pinched, the purple lips red drawn with back against
the teeth, the eye* weeping and
THE MONROE ADVERTISER: FORSYTII. GA., TUESDAY. JUNE Iff 1S88—EIGHT PAGES.
S’.mken ai though grist had pushed thpm
hafk. blackness under the lower lid, the whole
UHv adroop and shivering with the last ' hill,
the breath growing feebler and feebler and
feebler and feebler until he gives one long.
deep, last sigh. He is dead!
' ray soul, he is deal. Can you tell why?
H as 1 m- a fanatic dying for a principle that
dia not anu mt to anything? Was he a man
infatuated? No: to save your -oul from sin.
and inin», and make eternal life pos<it»le, he
di<-d. There had to be a sulistitute f r six
hoanall it bet “Ivet itbe me,’’said G rist,
lot it b■ me. A ou unfl r-tand the mean
ing of that word substitution. You w, re
drafted for the last war: some one took your
pace, marched your inarch, suffered pur
wounds and died at Gettysburg. Chr -t
conies to us while we are fighting our Little
W.th sin and death and bell, and He is our
- : ^ • be marches our march, fights
ittle. suffers our wonn Is and dies our
dcit 1 ,. Hub-titution! substitution!
Ifow do you feel .» regard to that scene de
s r ‘ ra the text, and m the region around
ahoilt t.*e text. Are your sympathies
arm'd' Or are you so dead in sin, and so
ioned by reason of your transgressions
that you can look upon all that tearless an l
nnmov .No, no; th"ro are thousands of
Hr, ' f” or ni ?l- who can 8 a y,*? fhe
' ?° l ?' , •;**• n0 lf Jes,,s
< n T
< adored • 1 ,L tb it, and all that , forme. I ought to
love him. I niu-t love him, f will love him,
I do loye him. Here, Lord, I give myself to
tlicc: tis all that I can do.
and 1.11 now are you going to test your love,
t"“*t your earn -stiiess? My text gives a
tec. It says that while Christ carried a
e, om for you you must be willing to carry a
‘ >u.d '1 S i un l i stand that. „ Vvr"” There Kay are ’ no ^ crosses never
to be carri'-d in this land; thoso persecutions
one ’ * lobeTrurifi tob> cm iti ,i la n nndvet id jot in in'Jb the the pulpit . re .. fa and n ®
in the prayer me-tings you all keep talking
aboutcirryirig a cross. What do you mean.
* l S\. lIlf ‘ a!l ruatt hu is a cro<s which
1 ca.D you to do, which is unpleasant
sb r . - o 0 J thfa''chri^amT' tins » mist and *if all 1 f n,»! that i t he ar L has n ^ the on
dun-i for me, f am ready to do anything for
h.m, Just L 11 mo what J have to do and Ill
d . it. I am ready to carry any cross,”
cuppo <• / shorn 1 ask you at the close of a
as ssrvico to rise up, announcing your
s df on the Lords u.ie-em,ld you do it? “(,!
n ." you say, I have a shrinking and a sen
si -1 vc nature, , rn<l it would lx> imjiossibl© for
me to rise I, foro a l’^rge assemblage, an
nouncmg mys- t on the TiOrd’s side.” Just
* 1 1 r si earned a mountain, Christ carried a
and Himalaya. Christ carried a world for you,
you cannot lift an ounce for Him.
Ii it hero is a rn in who;® cro s will be to
announce am ng liis business associates to¬
morrow '•"gun morning on exchange that ho lias
anew lifo; that while lie wants to be
fa t.hfiil iu his worldly duties, lie is living for
another world, and lie ought to advise all
those who are his associates, so Car as tie can
in!Iucn ■(, them, b> begin with him the Chris¬
tian life. Could you do that, my brother?
“‘fli, no.” you say, “not just that. 1 th nk
religion is religion, anl I uunass is business,
and if would be impossible forme to recom¬
mend the Christian religion in places of
worldly business.” Just as I fearo i. There
is a so ond cross offered you, and you can¬
not carry it. Christ lifted a mountain for
y<m; you cannot lift an ounce for Him.
There is some on® whoso cross will be to
present dare religion kneel in tho homo circle. Would
you to down and pray, if your
brother and sisb-r were looking ut you?
Could you ask a blessing at the tea table?
Could you take the Bible and gather your
family around you, and read o* Christ and
la a veil an 1 your immortal soul? Could you
then kneel and pray for a blessing on your
household? “Oh!” you say, “not exactly
that; I couldn't quite do that, because I have
a ligion very and quick tried temper, and if I professed re¬
to talk religion in my house¬
hold, and then after that I should Ion my
temper, ‘You they would scoff at me and say:
are a pretty Christian!’ ” So you are
cowed down, and their sarcasm keeps you
out of Heaven and away from Christ, when,
under God, you ought to take your whole
family into tho kingdom. Christ lifted a
mountain, lifted u world,for you; you cannot
lift an ounce for Him. I see how" it is; you
want to bo favorable to religion, you want
to support Christian institutions, you like to
b > associated with those who iovo Jesus
Christ; but as to taking a positive step oil
this subject, you cannot—you cannot; and
my text, like a gate of a hundred bolts, bars
you away from peace on earth and glory in
heaven.
't here are hundreds of men and women here
brave enough in other things in life who sim¬
ply, for tho lack of manliness and womanli¬
ness, stray away from God. They dare not
say; “Forever and forever, Lord Jesus, I
tike Thee. Thou has redeemed me by Thy
b’o >d, here is my immortal spirit. Listen,
all my friends. Listen, all the world.” They
ore lurking around about the kingdom of
God—they crawl are lurking around about it, ex¬
pot ng to in s >nie time whon nobody
is looking, forgetful “ Whosoever of the tremendous doth words
ofmyt'*xt: Me, not bear his
cross, and come after cannot be My dis¬
ciple.” officer of neighboring church
An n told me
that he was in a store in New York—just
hupp nod in—where there were many clerks,
an i a standing gentleman behind came the in and s lid to a young
man counter: “Are you
the young man that arose the other night in
tho Brooklyn Without Tabernacle flush and asked for pray¬
ers'” any of cheek ho replied:
“I am. 1 haven’t always done right, and I
have be-n quite bad; but since i arose for
prayers l th.uk I am better than I was.” It
was only his was of announ ing that he had
started for the higher life. God will not cast
cut a man who Is brave enough to take a
step a'.i ad like that.
1 tell you these things this morning be¬
cause, my dear friends, l want to show you
bow 1 ght the cross i; tl at we have to carry
compared w.th that which Christ carried for
Vou have not bad the liesh torn off for
Christ’s sake in carrying your cross. Ha
tainted dead away under liis cross. You
have not carried the cross until it fetched the
blood. Under his there was a pool of car¬
nage that plashed the horses’ fetlocks. You
have friends to sympathize with you in
carrying the cross: Christ trod the wine¬
press of Go and i’s wrath alone, alone! The cross
tiiat you 1 ought to carry represents
only a few days or a few years of trial. The
cross that Christ carried for us had com
presse 1 into it the agonies of eternity.
There has some one come here to-day whom
you have not observed. He did not come
through down the front door: he did not come
a ny of these aisles; yet 1 know lie is
here, lie is from tho East, the far East. He
comes with bl stered foot, and with broken
heart, and chee ks red not with health but
with blood from the temples. I take hold of
his coat and I say: “It does not seem to tit
thee.” “No.” he siys, “it is not mine: it is
borrowed; it do-s not belong to me now.
For my vesture did they cast lots.” And I
say t o Him: “Thine eyes are red as though
from oss ff sleep.” He says: “Yes, the Son
of m: n had no; where to lay His head.”
And 1 ton h th" logon His back and I say:
“Why earriest Tho 1 this?" “Ah!’’ He says,
“that is a cress I carry for thee an 1 for th®
si ,s of the who!® world. That is a cross.
Fail into line, march on with Me in this pro
t '\-si°n, take your smaller crosses and your
lighter burdens, and yo n me m thismaren to
leaven.” And we join that procession with
our •’ iI «a!!er erodes an i our lighter burdens,
back an 1 lies es some are
baiting been us- thev cannot endure the
ame, or bear the burden, ana w.tn a vote«
which has in it majesity and omnipotence,
He cries until all the earth trembles: “Who
-'Ower doth not bear his cross,and come after
He, cannot bo My disciple. ”
O! my brethren, my sisters—for I do not
speak professionally. I speak as a brother
would speak to a Irotber or sister—mv
brother, can you not bear a cross if at la A
. vou can wear a crown? Come, now, let us
divide off. Who is on the lord’s side? Who
ls ready to turn his back upon the Lamb of
God that taketh away the sin of the world?
A Roman emperor said to a Greek archi
tect: “You build me a cohs.mm, a grand
coliseum, and if it suits me I wdl crown you
in the presence of all the people, and I wiii
' make a great day of festival on your ae
count.” The Greek architect did his work,
did it magnificently, planned The the building,
j i looked was don®. after The its day construction. for opening arrived. building In
i t,l e coliseum were the emperor and the great
, arfihitectJEh^einreror and arose said; amid the plaud
its OI Si v ust «BBUibly "We have
’'gathered here fl^-day to open this coliseum
and to honor -tii^ The Greek architect. It is
a"*wra for the Roman empire.
Let this budding be prosperous, and let
houor be put upon the Greek architect*
Oh. we must have a festival to-dav. Bring
i out those Christians and let us have them
put to death at the mouth of the lions.” The
Christians were put into the center of the
| amphitheatre. their destruction. It was to be a Then great celebra
tion in the lions,
hungry and three-fourths starved, were let
out from their dens in the side of the amphi
theatre, and they came forth with mighty
spring to destroy and read the Christians,
and all the galleries shouted: “Huzza, huzza!
Long live the emperor!” Then the Greek
architect arose in one of er.es, 1
shouted until in the vast alt
heard him: “I, too, am a irht id
they seized him in their fury an I flung 1 m
to the wild leasts, tumbled until his body, bleed.ng again
and dead, was over an l over
in the dust of the amphitheatre.
Cot:l 1 you have done that for Christ !
Could you. in a vast assmr age. all of
whom hated Christ, have sail: "I am a
Christian.’’or ‘ I want to be a Cbrstian:” i
Would vou have had t!.“ ten thoos »ndth
part of the enthusiasm and the i-uri.'... of E
m.e-thmf the Grrek nreirt-*. r ' Nav I ask “ vou an u* r
Wo fid yon in an a . Ch
they are nearly ad Christians— n love an Chri -.-rer T
and*are blage, avn> mubitude of w om rt
willing to live, end f n ei be to tli
for him—would you dare t say: “lam S®
Chr -tian,’ or “I want to bo a Cbrb iun J
.
Won! I v .usiy in the presen e of the friends
3 f fhrbt as much as the Greek arebit c: said
in the presence of the enemies of • ’nrisr; Oh,
are thero not multitudes here this n: ruing
who are ready to say: “Let the word 00 k
on, let all the galleries of earth and heaven
and hell look on. I take Chr;re this dav.
(‘ome app au^e or abuse death' come siekn - s or !
health, come life or Christ no •, Christ
forever : 1 j
Are von for Christ? Are you against Him?
The destinies of etern ty tivmole m the ba,
a n e. It seems as if the last day reckoning. ha i come,
an l w*e were gathered for clouds the and i
“Behold* be comd'n w.th every
! eye shall see him.” What I say to one 1 say |
to all. What are you doing for Christ? !
^Christianman What are vou bearing 'o! for Chrislimi Christ’ i
woman! I
Have vou any scars to show in this conflict? |
Whon a war is over the heroes have scars to i
shows show One gunshot hero fra rolls ture, back his he pulls sleeve down and j
a or
the collar and shows where he was wounded
m the neck. Another man says: “I have never
had the u-eof my limb since I was wounded
a t that great battle.” When the last day
comes, when all our battles are over, will we
}mv • anv wounds for Christ? Home have
wounds for sin. wounds for the devil, wounds 1
gotten in fighting on the wrong side. Have
we wounds that we can show—wounds gotten |
ja the that'resurrection battle for Christ, an 1 for the truth?
On day Christ will have
plenty of s ar.s to show. Christ will stand
there" and show the scars on his brow, the
Ktar s on his bands, the sears on Ins f et, mid
he will put aside th <3 robe of his royalty
and show the scar on his side, anti all heaven
will break down with emotion and gratitude
in one great sob, and then in one great ho
« W1 " J0U *" dl
There will be Ignatius on that day showing
tho mark of the paw and teeth of the lion
that struck him down in the coliseum. There
will be glorious John Huss showing just
where on h s toot the flames began on that
day when his soul too*, wing ot name and
soared up from Constance. There will be
jiugh McKail ready to point to the mark on
his neck where an ax struck him. There
will be McMillan and Campbell and Free
man, the American missionaries, who with
tneir wives and children were put to death m
the awful massacre of Cawnpore, of showing Sepoys
the place where the will daggers be the the Waldenses
struck them. There
showing where their limbs wero broken on
the dav- when the Fiedmoutese soldiery
pitched them over the rocks. \l ill you and
1 have any wounds to show ? Have we fought
any battles for Christ? Oh, that we might
all be enlisted for Christ, that we might might all
be willing to suffer for Christ, that we
all bear a cross for Christ.
When the Scottish chieftain wanted to
raise an army they would make a wooden
cross, and then set it on fire and carry it
with other crosses they had through the
mountains, through the highlands and among
the people, and as they waved the cross the
people w’ould gather to the standard and fight
lor Scotiiind. 1 o-dciy 1 com© It out flaming va ltli tno
eras of the Hon of G»oJ. is a cross
—flaming with suffering, flaming with it tri
umph, flaming with glory. Who I will carry bo out
among all the people. will the standard on the
Lord’s side? Who gather to
of Emmanuel? Across, a cross, a cross!
“Whosoever doth not bear his cross, and
come after Me, cannot be My disciple.”
Tarasitcs on Live Slock.
At the end of the winter colts, calves,
and older stock are very apt to be crowd¬
ed with these objectionable animals, parasites. and
They thrive best upon be bred poor by old,
are supposed miserable to However worn
out and creatures.
this may be, tliero is no doubt that matted they
find a suitable homo in the dirty
hair in the late winter or early spring
months, and ou a sunny day may be
seen literally in millions, every hair
having nits upon it. One reason of so
much rubbisii accompanying them is
that in the course of their development
from the egg to the mature louse the
Bkin is cast several times.
To get rid of them is not always easy,
as the length of coat and accumulation
of dandruff or scurf makes a waterproof
covering that resists many remedies
which in themselves are certain destroy¬
ers if only brought into contact with the
parasites. day should be cliosen, and
A sunny
the early part of it, when a bountiful
washing with soft soap and hot water
should be undertaken, so as to clear the
skin of grease and dirt before applying
the remedy. Stavesacre is an effectual
destroyer of lice if prepared by boiling
* pound with a gallon of water hard and
brushing well into the coat with a
brush.
Tobacco juice is also much in request
for the purpose, and can be procured
from druggists at a very low rate, as it is
imported now free of duty, or only a
nominal duty, and the old expensive
plan of boiling or infusing good shag to¬
bacco is not necessary. By the way,very
few people avail themselves of the gov¬
ernmental privileges this of and growing fumigating suffi¬
cient tobacco for
purposes, though they might easily do
bo.
Paraffin is sometimes used, but is a
very dangerous remedy; occasionally be¬
ing absorbed and causing tho death of
the animal, and not uufrequently caus¬
ing a blister, and much unnecessary
pain, and subsequent blemish.
There is another kind of louse from
which horses suffer, which, if once seen,
can never be forgotten—we refer to
poultry lousiness. It will sometimes
happen that a horse stabled with fowls
will become affected and literally tear
himself to pieces with them unless
promptly treated with one of the fore¬
going remedies, either of which is as ef¬
fectual against these as against the ordi¬
nary louse.
In washing or applying any remedy,
it should always be commenced near the
eyes and worked backward, as if any
other plan is adopted the besieged re
treat into the mane and ears, and many
escape altogether tl«? like breed the after rats tnat the are rat
left t just to keep 1
catelier , , lias
alwavswell gone. repeat the dressing _
It is to
«*• animals moving about till
dry, or they good mny for* them, lick on stand 111010 lotion about
than is or
and get chilled .—Chemist and Druggist.
A Man to he Avoided. ., .
Lambrequin-“There 1 is ~ Brown crossing ’"I
the , st re “ , let u .f tnrn turn ao a * n horp nere flP( ana : et
’ =
out Ot . the
I ldobinson—“What's way. do
the matter, you
owe him anything?” but he has just
Lambrequin—“No, fishing excursion.”— got
back from a week's
Lije.
The prison night school at Trenton, N.
J., which was opened last summer bv
Keeper Patterson, has proved to b mi
I g trrarifvimr Tatu } su.c*-Ss. su"cess The Llic men uu have nave he be
I come greatly interested and the disci
J pline of the prison has greatly improved.
All the 1J4 convicts who have Been un
i der instruction have made irreat Jrvat. nro
! 8”!f» a a ie ^ have developed (lev.dtreed great
patitude for learning, . . iiie scliool will
! be continued.
vr- * V 7 ^
r ^ LtiBSHMAX, of r Lphrata, renn.had
i his , . hand j scratched four weeks by sharp
j ’J” effects ago a
' ° ni TDa of which
.
THE TICKET COUNTED NINE.
It was a Miscount, but a Gleaming
Dagger Made the Correction.
. i
[From the Detroit Free Press.]
As ». +ho th « 6 _ tin tTT1 went down q, 1TrT , and and darkness darkness
. began to the face of the
creep over died
earth the angry artillery less away spite- and
the crackle of mnsketrv the‘lighting was
f u ]. For a while on the
extre . “ e . , , ^ung on, to , .-441 settle „ 41 the ,_
question of who should ‘occupy the okl
earthworks, but at length dead silence
fell upon the whole field. V »
Silence’ No’ It was silence com
P r aretl j to to the the awful awluiro..r roar of 01 the xne long ion_ after- alter
noon, but it was ft silence broken by die
screams and groans and prayers of
wounded men—by the movements of
wagons ;® and aitillerv—bv the subdued
rn voices _ of "n 75 nno 01*0 men as thpv they pimDPfl camped for lor
,
the ‘Without tire, anu anxiously
debated the chances for the morrow.
The sergeant marches off to the left at
the head of half a dozen men. He drops
a man at . “Post 1 ost No. Vo 1 1 , ” and an.i trives gnes him 1 1 m
whispered iustiuetion. until dt the is the last same
at posts 2, 3, 4, etc., man
has been stationed.
There must be vigilant, wakeful men
, between , friends , . , and foes while the l long
night wears away. under beech
‘‘I ost No. (j is a gieat
tree. Shot and shell have scarred and
riven its trunk, and shot and shell have
scattered and riven its thick limbs. A
quarter ni ,„ r f pr n of f n a century centnrv hmes lienee this tins tree tree will will
bear witness to the terrible struggle of
to-day. this tree to the edge of that
“From
thicket, * and the countersign is “Jus
* Ke > „ wli.spered . ft,- the sergeant, and ori ,i as __
>
“G passes on the picket takes up nis
beat. He counts as he passes them by
—one pirrbt’ two, three, four, live, six, seven,
What '- 1 Corpses’ ^ Thev are Iv- L
ou tne grass so near at, pat 1 e
travels that lie can toucii any of tiicni
with liis foot. There are others to the
right and left, farther away. It was
liere that tlie enemy rallied charged a battery—
heie out heroes to preserve it
Grape-sliot and canister, bullet and bay
ouet, found victims thero. Some lay as
if asleep, worn out with the tremendous
conflict—others raved and prayed * and
cursed . r God , &nd , nian __,__. before death j__, 1 , „„ le
leased them from their sufferings,
The picket counts them as he walks,
and a sigh escapes his lips. To-morrow
night ® some sentinel may Ap number liis
mutilated , corpse _____ ^itli others _____ on the 41
same meadow'. To-morrow night tho
autumn winds may vainly seek to rouse
him from liis death sleep,
From tree to thicket and turn. From
thicket ,, . , . to , tree and , turn. ._____ -m- Ho must ^
watch and listen and be on his guard,
but by and by he finds time to count
again. One—two—three—four—five—
six—seven—eight—nine ! What! He
counted only •’ eight dead before! j of Was ho
mistaken, . . , 41 the j 41 t.ie battle- i ui
^ or can _ _
field creep and crawl ? Six—seven—
eight—nine! Yes, there are nine. In
the darkness ho had made a mistake,
Nine ! Well, what matters one more
. field of bat
or otie Aess corpse upon a
tie ?
To the tree and turn. To tho thicket
and turn. As he heads for the tree again
the ninth corpse assumes a sitting posi¬
tion and looks after him. A moment
later it struggles up, and a figure goes
creeping after the picket. The grass on
the meadow is thick and matted. His
footfalls give out no sound. Softly—
softly—silent as the shadow of death—
creeping—creeping, and now he is close
upon the lone picket. There is a gleam
of steel in the darkness—a swift and
powerful blow, and he who was placed
to watch will watch no more.
in Through the gaps tlie spies will pour
and skulk about the camps; a regi¬
ment will be silently advanced" to the
key position; the ghouls will scent plun¬
der and creep up to rob the dead.
The picket had counted, “seven—
eight—nine !”
There is no missing corpse. Tho num¬
ber has been made good !
“Holds Up” a Car,
The Louisville Post tells this story:—
Louis Nevin, recently returned from Hot
Springs, big Ark., brought a tarantula as
as a tea-saucer Mr. Kevin to Dr. Vanderespt as
a present. was at a great
deal of trouble in catching the insect and
in bringing him to Louisville. It was
bagged in the wilds of the hilly country
about had Hot Springs. While Mr. Nevin
it in his possession he was quaran¬
tined from his boarding-house and had
to leave his pet in the woods to eat his
meals. He had a highly exciting time
in getting the bug to Louisville, He
carried it in a glass bottle with a stopper
with air holes in it. While riding on
the narrow gauge road between Hot
Springs and Little Hock the stopper fell
out of the bottle, and following closely
after it cairfte the tarantula. The coach
was full of passengers at the time, with
ia large number of women and children
among them. Before Nevin had an
inkling of the spider's escape he saw it
in the middle of the car aisle. He tried
to recapture it without creating any
furor, but the tarantula was bent on a
little fun, and refused to be captured.
With masculine good taste he made
straight for the petticoats of a pretty
girl. The girl discovered him, jumped
upon the seat and gave the alarm. All
the women went promptly into hysterics
and the men were thrown into a state of
equal excitement. The tarantula had
the car at his mercy for half an hour,
but was finally run into a corner by his
owner and captured.
In 1850 there were 6,787 prisoners in
the jails of this country. In 1880, the
amount was 59,250. In 1850, there was
one prisoner to every 3,442 inhabitants;
in 1880, there was one to every 837 in¬
habitants.
A Prize of sioo.ooo
Fortune’s wh-el. by^uSerted be Turn
of is to congratulated. But
he who escapes from the clutches of that
dreaded moireter. Consumption, and wins back
health an happiness, is far more fortunate. The
chances rf winning $100 000 are small, but
Disco -ery in time. For all scrofulous dis
eases iconmmption remed AU is dr:iggl8ts one of them), it is anun
failing > ’ ’
His sweetheart's skull serves for a paper
weight n a Chicago doctor's office.
If afflicted with -ore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp
son's Eye'water. Druggists sell at 25c. per bottle.
-unmLiLi J“ ■ ....... ............. -■
Biliousness
I* more ger.er 1 at this season than any other.
The bit:er taste, offensive breath, coated tongue,
*Pk headache, drowsiness, dizziness and loss ot ap
petite make the victim miserable and disagreeable
t> others. Hood’s Sarsaparilla combines the b st
and- iiious remedies of the vegetable kingdom, ia
such troportion as to derive their best medicinal
effe ts w.th the lta t disturbance to the whole sys¬
tem. This prepa ation is so well balanced in its
a tions upon the alimentary canal, the liver, the
kidneys, the stomach, the bowels and the eircula
tion of the b ood that it trings about a health
action of the entire human organ -m. restores the
appetite and overcomes that tired fteling.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by a’l druggists. $1; six for $5 Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD 4 CO.. Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
IOO Doses One Dollar__
PISO'S CURE FOR CONSUMPTION
How to Do It.
A . , of .... has
inaugurated new p;an the irrigation just been
’ ou Pawnee river smith
t i.urutu, i , ivaujas. T - A , . wheel .
placed iu the edi large
T e of the water w hich
resembles somewhat a double windmill,
The w heel is so constructed and
?«!F by the current. titert it is kept To the constantly rim of the turning wheel
is attached eioht ltr-m l lr e luu troughs il9 each ta f u
= » = »
. , ,,
wheel liouting eight galloDS of water. As
turns these troughs dip up water,
carry it to the highest point of the wheel
and there empty it into llie irrigation
ditch. Through ditches and laterals it
33 then carried to the adjacent laud. By
this moans the river, by its own force, is
constantly the turning a stream of water on
surrounding country.
She Couldn’t l nderstand It.
“Yi'hat in th - world has happened to you
since th last time 1 saw you?” aske.1 one lady
or .. another , lien they
other day; “I w me on the street the
can’t understand it. Then you
member were pale, hagyard and low-snirited, and I re
you said that you hard v caied
whether you lived or died. To-day you look
ever so mi loh younger, and it is ver.. evident
irom your token beaming flight.” face that vour low sp rits
nave "Yes, indeed." was the
Tepiy; and shall I tell you what drove them
away? It was Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip¬
tion. I was a martyr to functional derange¬
ment until 1 began taking the‘Prescription.’
Now I am as well as 1 ever was in mv life. No
woman who suffers as I did, ought to let an
hemr^pass before procuring this wonderful
The great New York faster. Dr. Tanner, is
the owner of a great ranche in New Mexico.
lUany People Utilise to Take Cod
Liver Oil on account of its unpleasant taste.
This difficulty has been overcome in Scott’s
Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil with Hypophos
phites. It being as palatable as milk, and the
most valuable remedy known for the treat¬
ment of Consumpti n, Scrofula and Bron¬
chitis, liildren. General Debility, Masting Diseases of
( Chronic Coughs and Colds, has
caused physicians Physicians in all parts of tho world to
use it. report our little patients
take it with pleasure. Try Scott's Emulsion
and be convinced,
Try Long’s Pearl Tooth Soap for cleansing
your teeth and perfuming your breath.
NERVES! NERVES!!
What terrible visions this little word bring,
before the eyes of the nervous.
Headache, Neuralgia,
Indigestion, Sleeplessness,
Nervous Prostration,
All stare them in the face. Yet all these nervous
troubles can be cured by using
^(Paine’s \ejgry
(gmbound
For The Nervous
The Debilitated
The Aged.
THIS GREAT NERVE TON 10
Also contains tlie best remedies for diseased con¬
ditions of the Kidneys, Liver, and Blood, which
always accompany Nerve ner.ve troubles.
It is a Tonic, an Alterative, a Laxative,
and a Diuretic. That is why it
CURES WHEN OTHERS FAIL.
$i.oo a Bottle. Send for full particulars.
WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Proprietors,
BURLINGTON, VT.
LYBSIK’S Patent Oombi nation GUH S IGHT.
40 Fer Cent.
KEDUCTIOK
in I*rice.
Address W3II*
forn g:M5»8JB8IMI. , iaiMBiTifF«l8B3aia:£t-A
Oil SlLL, Ladies’book of Fancy work,
Oil I I 3 150 new Napkins, crazy Stitches, (owhite, 1 ored) doz.
5 Curious Fringed Puzzles, with Paper 3 months on
our
trial, for 12 cents. YOUTH , Boston, Mass.
"The Only , /* -:#k
/ , ■A sift
V/ Vt m fi m mV;
'A. xf © Wk, \ i
H ffr-.n--.
STS et's-U'.BSTa.tNy:
[Copyright, 1887.] apw criiaiii m .iurei *
that ., it .T* will 1 ® on!y give medicine satisfaction for woman’s peculiar ailments, sold by druggists, under a positive guarantee, from the manufacturers,
in every case, or money will be refunded, is Du. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. This guarantee has
been printed on the bottle-wrappers, and faithfully carried out for many years.
THIS OUTGROWTH OF A VAST HXPERIENCI!
treatment of many thousands of cases of those chronic weaknesses and distressing ailments peculiar to females, at tho
r Invalids Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y., has afforded vast experience in nicely
remedies for the of woman’s peculiar maladies. a adapting and thoroughly testing
cure
a n ** r * Fierce’s Favor
”... A HORN wgn outgrowth, ite Prescription result, is the of
Tfl or
hOMFM tllis great and valuable
IU IfUtncn. experience. Thousands
of testimonials, received
from patients and from physicians who
have tested it in the more aggravated and
obstinate cases which had baffled their skill,
prove it to be the most wonderful remedy
ever devised for the relief and cure of suf¬
fering women. It is not recommended as
for a “cure-aii,” but as a most perfect Specific
woman's peculiar diseases.
vigorating As a powerful, tonic, in¬
A Powerful it
whole imparts strength to the
Tqhib. system, and to the
uterus, or womb and its
lar. appendages, For in particu¬
“ out,” “ down,” overworked, debilitated
worn - run -
teachers milliners, dressmakers, seam¬
ing stresses, “shop-girls,” housekeepers, nurs¬
Dr. mothers, Pierce’s and feeble women generally.
Favorite Prescription is the
greatest earthly boon, being unequaled as
an It appetizing cordial and restorative tonic.
food, promotes digestion and assimilation of
indigestion, cures nausea, weakness of stomach,
bloating and eructations of gas.
XREiLXUSTGr THE WRONG IDISEiYSE.
ii??.. 0 _., 44 ,^L a “Omiiveror P£ hmes women kidney call disease, on their another family from physicians, Buffering, exhaustion, as they prostration, imagine, one another from with dyspepsia, pain here another there, from and heart in this disease,
oil themselves nervous or or way
ax-?i*° and their easy-going and indifferent, or over-busy doctor, separate and distinct diseases, for which
5? JijYL cri rs?„ JL 18 p v.^ >1 ■ 3 - an . P otl ons, assuming the them to be such, when, in reality, they are all only symptoms caused by some wornb
Ji". ’.™. 4 „ D °n.. i? et y 5 r^ er ciai t ’ffHorant■ ,t probably of worse cause by reason of suffering, of the encourages delay, his treatment practice until and large bills are complications. made. The A suffering
nke Dr. Pierce .’ s Favorite Prescription, directed to the wrong consequent proper
pelling all those distressing symptoms, cause, would have entirely removed the disease, thereby dis¬
and instituting comfort ini stead of prolonged misery.
^ l IlCf ^uteririe^rioutiles!
" FAILED, g ‘ r ,.;ana a f was a comDlpte?v wifh^SlfcultTcro^the^room 6 discnu f m tl ^Rr e
n ; T . b locaf treatm^n^recommlnd^in weak I could Ws^SSon^en^
using the
“leWSfS health restored ™nd offerfn? trouble since. I
had writing be"n the full particulars
to any one T received me for them 1 hMnlf^ etamped-envelope
I forreplu have described have J e fonr ?4 c hundred letters. In reply,
adriWthem^to^do^ mv ciase ,n *h used ? nd hav c ear
aest 1 ’ "
y ma 5 y J have
rece ved secondrittere o^ En^ite nf “r^’c^ton %ThO
menced the e of ’ Advisell’Xd ’ had applied rent the
required for the ‘Medical had the locM
“ a ^ “ aown th " ei "' ‘° d
deai^f Pierce CrA Komm. of Crri Orchard.
great s Favorite Prescription has done me a
for which s^ I tookl sl A? ered from retroversion Prescription,’ of the uterus, and I
am frehng like a different W’
Boctors Failed.—Mrs. F. CoRwrx, of Post Creek, K. Y.,
writes. I doctored with three or four of the best doctors in
tnese parts, and I grew worse until I wrote to you and bepran
using 1 your Favorite Prescription.* I used three bottles of it
and two of the ‘Golden Medical DiscoV€ j r>%* also one and a half
bottles of the ‘Purgative Pellets.* I can do my work and sew and
walk all I care to. and am in better health than I ever expected to
be in this world again. I ome it all to your wonderful medicines.”
Send for
Catalogue of
Sights, Elfles, Ac.
Middleficld, Conn*
How jo Reduce Your Rxi'rrues.
You can do it easilv, and you will not have
to deprive yourself will of a single comfort;on the
contrary, you enjoy life m than ever.
How down can; ou arcompush doctor's HID. this tVi.en r. -ud? Kas’ly;
cut your you lo-e
Your appetite, and b ctime bilious anil constt
off fo^the'fauiiiy‘physician the other hand, wait ’for'a until prescription 1
or, on you are sick
-- just ' go
of Pierce’s e cents vet
a F tllvts supply Take Dr. Pleasant Purgative
’ them as mrected.r.n \ our'word
for .t, your unpleasant symptoms will disap
pear as if by ningic, you wi 1 h^ve no big doc
tor 1 ‘ s ,ti I i° WY' " everybody iapp> interested (ex
' ‘
The woman suffrage law of Washington
Territory is declared unconstitutional.
$TJ&C©SS Oil
TRADE At.
V T
SPRAINS, STRAINS, INJURIES.
1311 Seventh St., Louisville. Ky.
While helping to remove a frame building of th«
City Railway Co., it fell over on me, pressing
v to the ground and spraining mv back I
was car¬
ried home on stretcher, and the doctors attended
me two weeks, when my wife persuaded me to use
St. Jacobs Oil, and the pain was soon gone entirely.
JASPER BROWER.
Sold by Dnioyislf and Dealers Everywhere.
THE CHARLES A. V0GELER CO.. Baltimore. Md.
Do you Yiant a gcuMl, reliable Inspirator?
ami simple
a
a
tcacuta
r;S ■
i
OUR UTILE GEM T 1 RIE-KEEPER.
Just what every-bouy
*3i
5 ■
: • & Y -
w -SI Kd
S“
_
raenia
i ipi
tre will send II subscriptions Milk ami 3Time-keeprTR.Wrile to-c
YOUTH r Uli. CO.. St.. BOSTON, MA
nil ■»» ifa KEi 1 Ba* £*u Afi wiP Centre TEXAS of tho richest bell .
of cheap farming lauds in the wor d. Pnmilati'ui
100.000 5 ,n LVSS. Wl! building. have
In years. 8.")- h .u-i s now
traordinary Largest and most progressive city In Texas Ex¬
Inducements for manufactiucis • co
lightful climate. Make DALLAS, the rent Rail
way Centre, your objective point to visit all por¬
tions of tho State, Address
SEC’Y IMSynORATlOH ASSOGSfiim
Plantation Engines
With Self-Contained
1 1 ^ RETURN FLUE BOILERS,
I FOR DRIVING
; COTTON GINS and MILLS.
jf J Illustrated Pamphlet Free. Address
re ■ AMES LEFFEL & CO.
®*or SPRINGFIELD, OHIO,
110 Liberty St., New Aorlr.
N Dutcher’s-:-Lightning FLY KILLER
i „ Is quick death ; easily ure pa rod anl
F * used; no danger ; flies don’t live long
enough-to get away. Uso it early,
freely; rid the house of them and b ?
at peace. Don’t t ake anything “ju t
Biair’s Pills ■ Great Rheumatic English Remedy. Gout and
Oval Box, 34] round, 14 Bills.
|Qcts gets year address in mir Agent’s Directory and
sent to each one. Address Record Co., Buchanan, iih.
ft P to S3 a <lny. ^Samples worth $1.50, FREB
fal 13 Brewster Safety Rein Holder Co., Holly! Midi.
As a soothing
A Soothing and strengthening
Prescription nervine, ” “Favorite
Nervine. is une¬
qualed allaying and is invaluable
in and subdu
lty, ing nervous exeitabil
hysteria, irritability, exhaustion, and other prostration, distressing,
spasms commonly
nervous functional symptoms and disease attendant
the upon It induces organic refreshing of
womb. sleep
and relieves mental anxiety and de
spondency.
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prestcrip
tion is a legitimate medicine,
and carefully compounded physician, by an experienced
skillful and adapted to
woman’s delicate organization. It is
purely perfectly vegetable in its composition and
harmless in its effects in any
condition of the system.
In pregnancy, “Fa
A Mother’s vorite ’mothers Prescription” is
a relieving cordial,”
CORDliL. nausea, weak
■ nr-ss of stomach and
other distressing syrup
toms common to that
condition. If its use is kept up in the
latter months of gestation, it 60 prepares
pRflM A VOICE I
fiAl UALIFO.iHiA, IPfifiN'A | I r^ceecff ox . vsm8 ' or severe^h^dacbo^but spasms, and periodical since I reeur- have
have had none of thes ?’i 1 also . 1, l ad ^° f ,h complaint so bad that
( 1
^md walk aJl over the city without under inconvenience. the benign influence All my of
troubles seem to be leaving feel me for before. My
your me dieine. and I now smarter than years
4vill physicians told me that I could not be cured, and therefore you
mef please accept my everlasting thanks for what you have done
for and mayGod bless you in your good works.” took ‘Fa
Later, she writes: “It is now four had years since I your
7 0ri T P / f ’Scription,; and I have no return of the female
trouble 1 had then ’
fX*" ofYhe ’ ^FaroritoPrJcri’A'ion’ Too ttje ^^/Trlrdisil
and four bottles of the ‘Pellets.’ and All of Oo the £ ^ f a d 2 y g™3oins'have
disappeared. I do all mv own work; am able to be on my feet ail
day. My friends tell me! never looked so well.
7W- Favorite Prescription is Sold by Druggists the World
Over! Zarge Bottles $1.00, Six for $8.00.
tW- Send ten cents in stamps for Dre Pierre’s large, illustrated
Treatise (160 pages, paper covers) on Diseases of VV omen.
Address, World’s Dispensary Medical Association,
No. 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y,
Keeper. It is NO ltlTMBUO,
or a cliean toy, but n thur
oughly reliable tellerof the
time otday ,m Silver ! V; k;l
Hunting i ttse, i. war.
ramed. time-keepers. Cheap watches The an*
Little poor
Gemcan always be
relied upon, For (cr
25 two-cent stamps), we
will icr.d our Illustrated
paper entitled Youth, for <7
months and give as a pre
mium the absolutely Little Gem FRKKot Time
cost
keeper, in a"* Iland-'orno
Piano polished For 10 wood Case, extra
(see ill send cut). elegant cts. watch
w an
—
For & club of 3 and
#
^
^ **
ge*
^
rj
&
m
13
LOOK
& YOUNG!
Leanrelle Oil
jj PKEWXT3
WBINKLSS,
--OR
mm it] p
Proserves a yout hful, plump, fresh condition
of features. If you desire a transparent clear
fresh Complexion, free from blemish. _or
roughness, use LEAURELLfc Oik, it cmea
and prevents cracking, chapping, roughness
or coarseness of skin. Ket'ps face, neck amt nn
hands soft, plump. Preserves tho tone, lif 1116
and transparent glow of the skin .is in J ot utlu
This is a remarkable article ; though caned «>•
oil is more the nature of an expressed dresstnu juice, fot
and is a superb tonic and elegant which it stimulatea
t e Hair and Winders, the hair
and tones. Without grease, yet keeps and
and whiskers soft, glossy, luxuriant vigor¬
ous. $1.00 at Druggists, or by Express, free ot
Exp. charge. E. SAVelis, Chemist, Jersey City.
CRAY MMR
lf it is desired to gradually darken or restore
gray hair to its original or natural color uso
WELLS’ HAIR BALSAM
Restores Cray Haiu to original color. An
elegant dressing, softens ana beautifies, No
grease nor oil. A tonic restorative. ret Drei VC cuts
the hair coining out; ole cleanses, strengthens tlv
and heals scalp. 50o. and $1.00 at Druggists. $1.
The $1.00 size sent prepaid by Express for
V.. S. V-’: l.i.S, Jersey City . N. J.
««A^V£L©ys
'538
H m
If II gy ..
DISCOVERY.
Wholly unlike artitlclal systems.
J ure ot mind >V;iiidering.
Any book l.-m-ned in one rending.
Classes of 1087 at Baltimore, (O(K) at Dotroiti rt
15<{Oat Philadelphia, 1113 at Washington, l J I
at Boston, larffe cgissok of Columbia Paw students ub
Yale, Wellesley, Oberlin, Chautauqua, Univorsit-y of Putin., Mieh
gan Univevsity, Ac., Hons. Ac. I' dorsrd by
Kh’Haud JitpauP. Proctor, Benjamin, tlie Judge Scientist. Ciuson, Dr. W. W.Astor,
M. Cook, Principal Bhown, K.
N. Y. State Normal College, Arc.
Taught by correspondence. Prospectus Fifth p '»vr FRKic
from PllOP. IiOiSKT I’E, 237 Avo.. N. Y.
. The UUYTHtS’GUIDE is
■Sgv €||leach issued March and Sept.,
year. It is an oncy
GSclopedia of useful inl’or
jSwf mation for all tvho pur
gp’ ^ chase the luxuries or the
necessities of lif®. Wo
can clotho you and furnish you with
all the necessary and unnecessary
appliances to ride, walk, dance, eleop,
oat, fish, hunt, work, go to church,
or stay at homo, and in various sizes,
styles and quantities. Just figure out
what is required to do all tliero things
COMFORTABLY, and value you can tho make BUYERS’ a fair
estimate of tho of
GUIDE, which will bo sent upon
receipt of 10 cents to pay postage.
MONTGOMERY WARD & CO.
111-114 Michigan Avenue, Chicago, 111.
JOKES
xx n-3
PAYS 5 the Wagon FREIGHT Scales,
Ton
T .roo Levers, Steel Hearings, IirMrf
SB Tare Ream &ud Ream Box Tor
tri' Krcrr Hize Scale. For free pno« li«i
t 'fc_ if * mention tills paper and address
* JONES OF BiNCHAMTOK,
1IINGIIAIUTON. N. ¥.
If so, write BRO “VS 6‘: KISS.“
Manufacturers and Dealers in 1
Gouml. \Voolrn :uul (u‘um-l
crai Mill Suppliun.
\Vroughl and lrou l’i 1:00am w Fittings
Brass ‘
M 5.3mm) 512. ATLANTA, GA.}
i i German ASTHMA AslUinu-Curo Qdred .fails togUv® .
never m
m me'iiaOre.’te/in effects the worst casee,iimures comfort¬ fail I
able Bicep; cares where a'l othern A
trial convince, the moil skeptical. Price QOc. and
^yavi kl ye atthorao and make mo f o money workin^forus than
nt, anything else in the world Either sex. Costly outfit
FKKfc . Terms FUELt. Address, TllUE & Co., Augusta, Maine.
m .By return mail. Full Iloscriplion
Moody’s New Tailor System of Dress
Cuttbig. MOODY & CO., Cincinnati, 0.
A. N. U...... .... Twenty-four, ’88.
the system for delivery as to greatly
lessen, with and many the times almost entirely do
away ordeal. sufferings of tfire trying
“ Favorite Pre
__ _
Gores the ecription” is a
positive cure for
Worst Gases. the most complicated
anc i obstinate cases
0 f leucorrhea or
mi .............................— “whites,” excessive
flowing at monthly periods, painful men
struation, unnatural suppression, proiap- back,
bus “female or falling ol' the womb, weak
sion, bearing weakness,” anteversion, retrover- chronic
- down sensations,
congestion, inflammation, and ulceration
of the womb, inflammation, pain and
tenderness in ovaries, accompanied with
“internal heat.”
“Favorite Prescrip
§ ffJR TliP nection tiou,” when with the taken in of eon- Dr,
!, use
* Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis
a I KlfiViCVQ nlUnuIO. covery, doses of and Dr. small Pierce’s laxa%ivo Pur
gative Pellets (Little Liver
Pills), cures Liver, Kidney and Bladder dis
easts. Their combined use also removes
blood taints, and abolishes cancerous and
scrofulous humors from the system.
HEEDS IMPROVED m GIRCULAR SIMM
, SIMPLE, . aWS ICCIIfiATE DURABLE. AND
mm ' u
1 ||g|S
Engines, Wood-Pinners, 4c.
SALEM MtxcrACTitRKD IRON by mu —'AsKa-oTTa
UtA«S.
a
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