Newspaper Page Text
THE MONROE ADVERTISER: FORSYTH, PAGES
: GA., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23 , 1888 .—EIGHT
’
•V. DR. I A LM AG ) v.
Tf tE JiROOKI XX DIVINE’S SUN¬
DAE SERMON.
Subject: “The Throe Greatest
Things To Do,”
Tf’T— *'Thf people tho/ rln Irnow thr.it
fi > / shft’l in Irony, and do exiHoilid'—
L, 32.
Antioehtis linnanes, the okl sinner, cam?
a# tine wit his army to desolate
• Jews, advancing ained on elephants time with a linn
thi¬ way an 1 that, and swinging sixty
I infantry, and six thousand
‘ ; ■y were, driven back,
ond t imo he advanced with sev-
1 men and had been again
I he third t ime he laid success
:> Ut: Rome came in with
,t t! h ng banks of onrs and
t i t the siege be lifted. And
Kpiphnnes said ho wanted time
ismt w nli his friends about it,and Fopi
of the Roman embassadors, took a
d nif'd ' 1 a circle on the ground around
nr? Kpiphanes. and compelled him to
h" ora In; came out of that circle;
ni ho Ji I d the siexo. Home of the
d submitted to the invader, but some
resisted valorotislv, a? did Eleazer,
e had s ' ine’s fle.-h forced into his
f )l pit it out, all hough he knew he must
>r it. and did dl n for ft, and others, as
v i, we>*o enabled to do exploits.
“■ • - - - it I would define to bo a hi-roie
! .a brave feat, a great achievement.
V> ell. vou say, “T admire Rueh things but
t i < no chain-/, for mo: mine is a sort of
um If ! bodjan Antloihus Fpiph
fo fight I also could do exfiloitf*. ” You
* ill ‘n bar as great wars are concerned,
probably ha no< pportunitjr todis-
1 yoursclf in battle. The most
D t tli bn.'udier-generals of this country
won d n< or have been heard of had
Can for the war. General
Gran Id have remained in the
USefll vurk of tanning hides at Galena, ami
ht .-dl Jackson woul I have continued the
fjni.-' college professor in Virginia. And
whatever military talents you have will
wobably lie dormant forever. Neither will
on pro! ably become a great inventor,
wneb' ii hundred and ninety-nine out of
fiverv pat nt, two oil 'thousand at, iishington inventions found in the
/a* never yielded
tln-ir authors enough money to pay for the
<*\ | i a < , of securing tho patent. Ho you will
probably n-ver bo a Morse or un Kdi
s Whitney. n, or a There Humphrey Davy or an Mi
is not nun h probability
♦hat you will lie the one out of the hundred
that aoli eves extraordinary success iucom
nioreial or le-.-ai c>r tueilicnl or literary
sph r. '. Whafcthen! ( un you have no on
poitunity to do exploits? j am going to
show you t-. day that there are three opp r
tun ties open that, are grand, thrilling, lur
re<ehmg, stiipo ulous and overwh dming.
They ar<* before you now. In one. if not all
threo of tli in, vou may do oxplo'ts. Tho
three greatest things on earth to do are to
save a man, or save a woman, or save a
child.
During the course of his life almost every
mini gels into an exigency, isoaught hetvvecn
two lavs, is ground between two midstrgies,
sii on tho edge of so ue precipice, or in some
<>Jh' r way comes near dnmolitioa, ft may lie
n financial, or a moral, or n domestic; or a
ini. or a poll! c d exigency.- You some*
tiiu ; s-‘« it in court roo ns. A young man
has got into bad comp my and lie has offend -d
the law, mid ho is arraign cl. All filush
ing and confused lie is in tho pres¬
ence Re of judge nnd jury an 1 lawyers.
can bo sent right on in the
wrong direction. Ho is feeling di graced,
«”id ho is nlmo-ff, desperate. Let tho District
old Attorney offender; overhaul him .as though ho wore an
let the ablest attorneys.at the
bar reins • to say a word fot him because he
cannot afford a considerable fee; let the
jn.t-e give no oppertn dty for pro outing tho
lir ig-iting circmns'a ,<•>? hurry up tho ease
nnd hustle him up to Auburn or Sing Fing.
If ho live seventy years for so von tv years he
will bo a cr m ual end each decade
of his life will 1 e h’a-'kei* t ai
Its predocesior. Tn tho interreg
nums of prison life he cau get no
work, and hoisglad to break a windo v glass,
or blow nn a R-t'e, or play tin highwayman,
so as to get bn-.-k aga'n within tha walls
whero lie < an gel. someMiing fc.» eat an 1 hido
himself from tho cruel gaze of tli? wqrld.
U iiv ('oti’t his lather coma and help hi n?
His father is do nl. Why don't Ii is mother
come an I l-elp him She is dea I. Where
are all th ante..-orating and salutary in¬
fluences of socety! They do not touch
bini. tVhv did not some one long
ngo in tha case understand that
there was an opportunity for tho exploit
which woul I b - l imous in heaven aqua bull¬
ion of yen? after tho earth has become
scattered ashes in the last whirlwind? Wire
did not t!u> Ifi.-lriet Attornoy take that young
man into his private o lice aid siy: “Air
Sell, 1 Sec* tbat VOU 1110 the Viet 111 of ciroUUt
stain*: This i? your first crime. You aro
sorry. 1 will bring the per. on you
wronged into your presence and you
will apologize and mako nil tlie
reparation you can, and I will give
you iin tlier ehnn e. Or the young man is
preset, led In the court room mil he has no
frien Is present, and the judge sires: “Who is
your counselAnd hesnvs: “1 have none.”
And tin) judge says: “Who will tako Ibis
young man's core.' And there is a dead
bait and un cue o 'ois, ai.d aft v r a while the
judge turn? t > some utto: ney w ho never h id
a poc'l case in all his life an 1 never will, an 1
whoso advocacy would I o c:iou;h
to secure tie condemnation or inno.
ounce its*! f. Aud t e professional
in .'Iiqa-trnt aavl? up U.aletb* p issuer,
be ]’:<*• suo,s t> rc-- uc t.'jair, when tiiere
on-lit t*> he r strusfflo anion- all the he>t
Mi.'ii of il-o pr. >.'••— on as to who should have
the Ivn r of trying to help that unfortunate,
How much woiihl si: h an attornev have re
reived re hi- f, . f„r M ,eh mi 'iidvo.-iu'v!
Nothing in dollars, but iiiu-h overv wav in
a huppv eoii?i- ousiiess that would ^las make hi?
coiwi-ioiisir-ss tint '< he hn 1 saved -V a iiiani
Ho liar, nr.' ommerei ex i gen x.'s. A
'cry late spring / hi ter.it/'s tho demand for
epriiig ov, iv. vi is ami spring hats and aprin r
apparel peo/.l" of a,l-oris 'fit 1 'e un.imls of thousands
of sa V . ns we are going re
have no spring and we s'-a!l go straight out
cf v inter iut-> warm w -ather, nn 1 we ran
!"< t along without tho usual spring attire.”
mg. which is a eompr in oo bctw.eii sum
m. -r and wimor, s nos -requimb It
make? n d uV: once in the safe ^>1 Jw
"lir.ion? an 1 Hi >n? of do larsof goods,
eS.t’wur^'ir. Snt'TmSlabfe
goofisth .t never will be salable again ex
capital i? in a predicant .et'hSvoS^n
old merchants do nstlioj vs
in t’.iis awful crisis? Bub their hand?
aiyl might laugh have and known say: better. “Good for him. He
I van in business as long as we
vail imt lea 1 his she ves in tint way. Ha! •
lla! lie will burst up before long. He had
no l ?i“,esa to open his store so near to ours
anyhow,’’ Sheriff's sale! Red flag in the
w n lo ‘•iiev.* nuieli is bid for these out-
1 fV-Hff overcoats and spring
i . a, ,V- f, .n “V the *' nay otl,,n of c out a bid: of Four U dollars. h:u ilo,l
A: Mird. 1 cannot take that bid of fbnr doF
Jar? \\ hy, these coats when first put upon the
in-irk- r "ere otTer.-d at fift-vn dollars each.
-'ml 1 m °b--re l only four dollars. Is
that v
* nt n\e dollars, ami ne take* im
% ' • ' > y 1 he youn^ merchant home
x inu'ht And says to his wife: ell, Mary,
we will have to move out of this house and
sell our piano, That old merchant that has
had an evil „JVlCtSnr-. ffSS
> »> „,.ht
; :;v0 11 remvenated, and next year put it on
ti;e market as new. while we will do well if we
rear.: ut the jvw house." The vmingmam
(
J t h and home, not only is his store wiped
ut s li s morals, and his prospects
’i- two worlls. this ami the next. An-1
u(M i :s inakd a ban: :uet o£ lire ani fill the:r
' s (<! £;ili ;mi ( }riuk deep to the health of
t o od nier.-l apt who swallowed up the
>ou'!£ >1? merchant who got stuck on spring and
mvl went wn. That is one way
-wofyot ^i have tried it
n. n i h liant r who found re that ?r he had i, , miscal u?
’ :, t' -1 jo lay in too goods of one
ng many
1-ini •»'> h,>a •’>,••>■; of the unusual season
fs i' standing >l behind the counter feeling looking vepy
n a, ! biting his finger nails or
»v,a- ins account b oks. which read darker
nnl worse every t ine lie looks at
them, have an l thinks how his yo(**rg wife
wfil to b- put in a plainer houses
rean she ever! exis ted to live in,
or go te a third-rate boardina-bouse where
cornes mornings in and nat^th^vpn d!' ^ /2 ‘ Ur ®, > , breai merchant , flv ' ?
sayg- “ W r aSr* f .
doMroms, Rood nnfl j fe .™ P}* tn'!ny of m tne
deal of late for in r you a
m business I ’ on ^ ’ a r Parted
same „ * 155t . ' ) the
anything scrape. v ntt Z . *■., there is
1 can ,y n , f “ 3 t 1
svill gladly si/htfortholllJ^^ doit iw»-o • you ou
out of P !t tbo »g™ds
will .!*'•" a ?'* , n xt *«ason
we plan '
help someth;, them. I wi:l
you to som„ , V ° U for
me on commission and I wiif ^ an
of tho whoV-'ilo iV an ' * down to one
know you an''l iT; e I Bnd te!1 thn '" t!iat 1
dorori v-i re&T° U Up> nn ' 1 if
wanta few ars ^ br, % vou
I can let vo„ h' f K ‘ m B I; e 118 n»er economica the present
you con kcon e stiff ^ * i as
0oS that ; you ha’-e ™ tw ?! ®iT 1 u .P r ’<) r ItP, nndrcmomber
? r ,eod ** Golaala..self,
y » ! ’ Th <> od merchant go-,
riosk«»/i t h:;,? im ir n «< s Cindies
and outS his spirits ris" sh f/om^^Mo^rero.to **?. he tonus
after thit (riH!3 - An l about throe vears
merchants yo n ' merchant g.>«s into the old
friend, store * and Rays: “Well my old
I was this morning thiukirm- over
what you dHi for me throe years ago? You
mirt/V? morriai instory, ? Ut ° f ?" r learned awful wisdom <*<’i?is HI and 111 V 00 n
perity has imv
come, and the pa'dor has
fh« die 10 «° rose, nt ?L that niy were wife's there cheeks, when an l I
Collided her in her father!* house have
and and 1 I thought t! 2 mV™ my business is splendid, !w
1 ou girt to let you kn that
the ohi f.t u,a ? : J ‘‘ a hort time after,
.il m. 11 , , Ren good while
r.n’jJ7 J"’ a
U lei to ’ mbS 4,1(1 i,a 1 l> oop spcl’s
i’ fa leave the world, and
morning after ho bad one
third Isam abmt read the twemy
Shepherd, “The Lord is my
he elorei his eyes on this
world, and an angel who had been
tor many year? appointed to watch the old
mans paGHreh’s dwelling Orfes Upward th * news that
Anl a® , the twelve sprit angels i? who a keep .out ascending.
of heav/ui tho twelve
ga.os unite in crying down to this
approaching spirit of the old man: “Como in
at any of the twelve pates you choose'
Gome in and welcome, for it has been told all
over these Ci-l- ntiai neighborhoods that you
laved a man.”
Tiiere sometimes come exigencies in tho
lif . of
; a woman. One morning about two
years ago I saw in the newspaper that there
was a young woman in New York whose
pocketbook containing thirty seven dollars
and thii ty-threo cents had been
stolon and she had been left with
out a farthing at tho beginning of
winter m a strange city, and no work.
And although she was a stranger, I did
not allow the nine o’clock mail to leave the
lampost on. our corner without carrying the
thirty-seven do! ars and thirty-three cents;
and the case was proved genuine. Now I
have read all .Shakespeare’s tragedies, and a 1
Victor Hugo’s tragedies, and all Alex¬
ander Smith’s tragedies, but I never read
a tragedy more thrilling than that case,
and similar cases by the hundreds and
thousands in all our large cities; .young wo¬
men without mnn >y and without home an l
without work in these great maelstroms of
metropolitan life. \Y hen such a case comes
under your observation, how do you treat it?
“Get opt of my way, we have no room in our
establishment for any more hands. I don’t be
Revo m women anyway, they are a lazy, idle,
worthless set. J oh u, please show this person out
of the door.” Or do you compliment her per¬
sonal appearance and say things to her which
if any mnn said to your sister or daughter
you would kill him on the spot? That is one
way, an/1 it is tried every day in these large
cities, and many of those who advertise for
lemale bands in factories and for governesses
in families have proved themselves unfit to
be in any place outside of hell.
But there is another way. and I saw it the
other day in tho Methodist Book Concern in
New York, where a young woman applied
for work, and the gentleman in tone and
manner said in substance: “My daughter.wo
crtlploy women here, hut I do not know of
any You vacant had better place in our department
such place, and inquire 1 hope at such nnd
a you "to will be
successful in getting something do.” The
embarrassed and humiliated woman seemed
io give way to Christian confidence. File
started out with a hopeful look that I think
must have won for her a place in which to
earn her bread. 1 rather think that consul
crate and Christ'an gentlemen saved a
woman. New York and Brooklyn ground
up hst year about thirty* thousand
young women, and would like to grind
up about as many tins year. Out of all
that long procession of women who mar h
on with no hope for this world or the next
haltered, bruised, sco fed at and hav<Tbeen llum<- off
ih pro. ipiee, not one but might
saved for home and Go 1 and heaven. But
good men and good women are not in that
kind of business. A’as for that poor thing!
nothing but the thread of that evening-girl's
needle held her, and the thread Iroke. I have
heard men leb in publi- discourse what a
man i?. but what is a woman! Until some
one shall give a better definition 1 will tell
vou what a woman is. Direct from God, a
sacred and delicate gift w.th affect ions sq
great that no measuring line short of that of
tho infinite God can tell their bound. Fash
or.eil to rt’f.in aud sooth ' and lift and
irradiate home and society 'that and the
w,.r.d. Of s V h value no
. lived ne can long appreciate it. unless his mother
who enough to let him understand it,
or m some great crisis of li> when all
oNo laikd him, had a wife to ivinforce him
with a faith in God that nothing could dis
turb. Speak out, yo cradles, and tell of the
let that roexed you and the anxious faces
that hoyerecl ov.-r you! Spe ik out, yo
nurseries ot all Christendom, and ye homes,
the 'yhether fwr?icf dosoljito wife, or mother still in and full daughter, bloom with and
help me to define what woman is. Hainan
rt,,! ' in R II " l' ls hfe accomplish nothing else
p^cept to wm the love and confidence and
help and companionship of a good woman,
it^ V,',^ ‘‘ farlamhsl o, ^ns•siaTsi v^tor and ought to have
gr.it u ation.
of l\ the ut sea ns geographers correspond with tell as the that heights the depths of the
niountiiiis. l have to Ml you that good
womanhood is not higher "The up than bad woman
hood <ie e P down. grander the palace,
< he more awful the conflagration thatdestroys
i: - l*»o granuer thp steamer Oregon, the
m°ro terrible h?r going down ust olf the
ISS^YUtSfl^’S^lSS >ty when 1 tl^pli there is hardly
sav a person
m this bousa but may have an opportunity
to save a woman. It may, m ycur «as*, bo
• Kami ^he^Zu^om iSlnS, ° You' o]
'
; v °uhl not have to go tar. If,
i ^*n ret«m V from
you 1511(1 her responding to the smile of entire
stranger.? hogs that lifttheir hat. go to her
1 I downward path with that very kmd of be
. *
havior.
j Or if. for instance, you fin 1 a woman in
1 financial distress anl breaking down in
! aiul. ^ tSt Mr iiusbiM B d^i or an ill*
I V doing that very important and honor
able work, but which i> little appreciated,
| keeping a boarding house, where all the
j auests aecor.irre as th>v ray small
j without '
p Li.v oar or propose 1 & ‘all. To dSamp^^ ray
board
| critical b«f you,-selves of everything in trying and to hard get to her please
i y divine more
palroas aud ted her ot s.vmpatuv.
! Yea, if you are a woman favored of fortune
anc j a }| tindiv surroundings- finding: in the
follow flatteries of the world her chief re
gakanent, living for herself and for time as
if ri P"SS. ,^her ZSZAZSSS' gSI'S &
£he day a Habbuth-school teacher who
was the means of the conversion of the
daughter of a man of immense wealth, and
« m going to join the church and I want you
! to “Oh, no,” he said, -‘I never go to
I ^burch.” *
j *• Well/' said the daughter, 'if I were to be
| marr ied, would said: you not “Oh. go yes.” to see me “Wad,” mar
\ a \ he
said sh^ "this is of more importance rnwi
t hat.” Ho he went and ha? gone ever s nee,
and 'oves to go. 1 do not know bat that
faithful Habbathsohool teacher not only
saved a woman but saved a man. Th^-re may
be in this audience gathering from all parts
of the world, the most eosmopo.itan assemb y
in a jj the tartb, there m .y Lie a man whose
behavior toward womanhood *s been
pe ^ rfidioils . Kerent! Stand up, tuou mas
n>jeCt *. . 0 f s i u and death, tuat 1 mav charge
L vo far as po-sible, have make h in reparation
0 not boast that vou r your paw
er aut j that she cannot help herse f. When
tbat fine eojjar aa j cravat and that elegant
wwlfour unwvered
! J 50,51 will be better in judgment off and before God, you
if you save that woman.
fcem to arssa a a
oi amount to fun ta. It is nearly ior a year
l before it can walls at all. the first
year and a half it cannot speak a word. For
the first ten years i* would -tarve if it had to
earn its own f<*xi. For the first fifteen
I years valuetM. its opinion on an v subject is abso
lutel/ And then there are to
many of them. My! what lots of children!
Ami soma people have contempt for chii-
1 drt ‘ a ‘ TilAy nre K°° 1 for nothing but to
wear koe out Ine cai p- ;aand break things and
P *ouawake rngl.t. crying. Well your
^ t; ’ na ’’ w of 0 oh1W * different
from that mother's cstunkte who lo t
her dr 1 this summ -r. They took it to
| 'ha Salt air of the seashore and to
the tonic air ef V a mounta ns, but
no life help can. an i th • brief paragraph of its
is or t hat i fe Could be ro
are 1 rnuch would that
wnav it T ’4 j would take all
the jevr is f r i i or fn,e;s ard neck and
bureau an l them d -s ?. And if told that
that was i • would take her
Hi >u e and = . >1 for it,/uid if
at were a o enouu t utd c all in ail
r investments and j vvm nil h t mort
ca.c and bonds: and t i tc’.d that were not
enough, she would sav: “I have ma le over
and if I can have that child
back J will now pledge tl l will toil with
my own hands and carry with my own shoul¬
ders in any kill of hard work, and live
in a ce lc.r and die in a garret. Only give
me back that lost darling,” 1 am glad that
there are those who kuo v something of the
va ue of a child. Its possibilities are
tremendous. "What will those hands yet do?
Where will those feet yet walk? Toward
what itself- destiny ifikull will that thu-.e never-dying lips be the throne sout be- of
Luxe bearedictiorl?
blasphemy or the and bring Cottle, all ye
surveyors of earth, link and
chain ami moa-urd if you Cin its possible
f o .mj.- siom. Com® all ye asty-,mothers of the
earth, w itb ybur teh s opes, ar.d tell us if you
can see t1i£ rrimre rtf i s et.-ma! flight. Come,
all ye ciironologists, and calculate the de¬
cades on decades, the centuries on centuries,
tlie cycles on cycles, lifetime. the eternities Oh, on eter
nitk-s of its to save a
child! Am i not right in putting that among
the great pioitsf Yes, it beats tlia other
IS « ffhfh'o'fl'«
twenty years of that boy i-r girl all right and
I guess vou have got manhood or womanhood
all right and their entire earthly and eternal
career all right. children But; what are you going off to
do with those who are wore
than if their father cr mother had died the
day they were born! There are tens of
thousands of such. Their parentage was
against them. Their name is against them,
The structure of their skulls against them.
Then- nerves and muscles contaminated by
the inebriety or disso uteness of their parents,
they are practically at their birth laid
out on a plank in t he middle of the Atlantic
Uceanin an equ noctial gale and told to make
for shoio. The Hr.t pro-tiog tliey get from
the question often asked. There is another
question quite they as pertinent, anl that
is, what are gong to do with
frem now Tale as Tam Totes^ac
the same number of well-born children, and
they will hand this lan I over to anarchy and
political Suppose damnation each just as sure of as we neglect boy
them. we one us save a
or a girl. You can do it. Will you! I will
lake a cake of and. perfumed hew Testament soap anl a and fine
toothed comb, a a
little candy and prayer, and a piece of caks
and faith in God and common sense, and be
gin this afternoon.
But liow shall we get ready for one or all
save a man or woman or child. But mj
text suggests where we are to get equipment.
‘: The 1X0p :,° V iat do k , J°a th r <;ort rt 11 bfl
strong, strong, and and do do exploits.” exploits.” . . w Me We must know
Him through Jesus Christ in our own salva¬
tion, and then ve shall have His help in the
OWl salvation > UC(Wll of VC others. VM IO i k>, -tl'iU And while "U1IV you J V'U UMi are
saving strangers You you may save brothers some of yout,
own kin. think your and sis
ters and children and grandchildren ..... ....... all safe,
but but th fb -y y are are not not dead, dead, and and no no one one is ' safe till
he is dead. On the English coast there was»
wild wild storm storm and and a a wreck wreck in in the offing, and the
cry was: “Men the lifeboat.” sauore^rew""^ But Harry,
the me usual usual found?and leader leaner of ot tne tne sailors’ wen“ crew, wag
not to be they wRhout Wm
and brought back all th-shipwrecked people
except the one. By this time Harry, the “Why leader
of crew, appeared and said; did
you leave that one?” The answer was: “Ha
could not him help into himself the at boat.” all and “Man we could the
not lifeboat,shouted get .Harry, “and
wo
will go- for that one.” “No,” said his aged
mother standing by, “you must not go. I
lost your father in a storm like this, and
your brother JV iil went off six years aroand
I have not heard a word from Will since he
le,fc - aml 1 don't know where he is, and
what has happened to him, poor W ill,
and I cannot Jet you also go for I am
old and dependent on you.” His reply was:
“Mother, 1 must go and save that one man,
and if I anujost God will take care of you iu
yonr okl days.” The lifeboat, put out. and
nit<*r an awful struggle with the sea they
picked the poor fellow out of the rigging
just m Time to save It's life, and started
lor the shore. And as they came within
speaking distance, Harry, just before he
fainted from the over-exertion, erie l out:
“We .«aved him, 6h, and tell mother it was
brother Will.” yes, my friends let
us start out to save some one for time
and for eternity, some man, and some
woman, and some child. And who
knows but it may, direct)v-or indirectly, kindred, and be
the salvation of one of our own
that will be an exploit worthy of celebration
when the world itself is shipwrecked and smitten the
sun has gone out like a spark from a
anvil and all the stars are dead!
- -------------------------— —
Protection llOietttOll I ruin Li’diiiiin" Li 9 iuiuii 9 .
In Ins recent lectures ou protection
against lightning, Mr. Oliver Lodge
said: “A wire netting all over the house,
a^^ point s, and 1.«,««««««».0 a plentiful supply a - ot that
barbed wire which serves so abomina
bly well for fences, stuck all over tho
J.V roo f V. and a von ™ a Ji-tve an an admirable aumiraoie svstem sysieui
of d i ^nse. ., Now , let us see how far most
people agree, and whero they begin to
branch out aud differ. The old and
amusing political controversy diW«uW. between
I omts to the points *re recognized has
sky as cor
rect; only I wish to adtocate more of
them, any number of them, rows of
^ 4t e “» aU llke promiaent-along barbed wire-not ridges necessarily and
t . 1 or a point has not a very great
J set m motmu by a moderately
' 1ZtU 'oss or W mis hurst machine;
hence it you want to neutralize a
i, houever, ... for great ”, spikes ‘ and , ugly , tn- ,
d^nts, a° painful to the architect. Let
the lightning come to you, do not go to
Pr ? teC f *}} 1°- U T r ' dgea Rnd
Pthhacles, not only the highest, and you
''■ill be- Jar sc.er than if you built your
self a factory chimney to support your
conductor j;,tP„ iVIFT nnnn At u'nvespnt piesent.the tho lnime imme
’ ‘ “ tc l ^f^orhood 10 ” ot a of ^Leguard, a factory chimney but a
source of mild , danger.
---
A Sand Storm at §68*
The British . steamship Glenshiel, from
S?. g?- repor.s ^ a ”“"«r sand storm * rri ™J. which »*
„ occurred on the evening ol July 10,
while the vessel was making for Suez.
t l -m * n hours lloars > slClv suuuemy Snt swept 11 clown, Tf it
.
was impossible to see anything a ship 8
l^ngta RW’ay, The wind blew a gale,
and it was found to be a dangerous ex
E,' Deriment to sfav y °? nn ” Book-fm- “ff'? nnv an I len Uno-+h * t “
1 me * % -tue sana was not, and when
d came into contact with the body,
would sting like thepomt of a knife.
~—~
Her .. Estimate.
rMm' -M rs TTard “Do have cmm. mn oaure ,„
C uic'
Mis, bweettooth hesitating;.—“Well, \ i ir- ..
ust a little, Mrs. Hard. Only a mouth
ful ” *
^thfe xr rs rr« niata r A _«.it r id<r»t fin C et
^ ' *
toom 8 P late nn a P a gam. —^or.
•THE DISAPPOINTED,
.
There are songs enough fo- the her«j
Who dwells on the height of ft.m#*
I sing Tor the disappointed—*
l or those who missed their aim,
I sing with a tearful cadence
For one who stanls in the dark,
An 1 knows that his last, bast arrowy
Has bounded back from the mark,
I sing for the breathless runner,
The eag r. anxious soul.
Who fall*, witu his strength exhausted,
Almost in sight of the goaL
For the hearts that break in st:e\
tYlih a sorrow all unknowi .
For those who need companio
Yet walk their way* a.oia
There are songs enough? for the lovers
Who share lore’s tender pun;
I sing for the one whose passioa
is given ail in vain.
For those whose spirit comrades
Have missed them o.i th; way*
I sing with a heart o’veifilowing
This minor strain to-day.
And I know the solar system
Must som -where keep in spac>
A prize for that sp >nt runner
Who barely lost the race.
For the plan would be imp^rfe;
Unas? .t held some sphere
Tb it paid for the toil and talent
• And love that Is wasted here.
-Er,a
DESIRE’S MISTAKE.
,. Get n , out, , you o d Scamp!
It was a biiUi&ut uly day, with skies
cf cloudless 1.1 c, the a-r scen ed witu
1 113 ua } under g eeu m.iSse* ot
, and who
peppermint; A.r va.cy. had
wu, e l a long distance and had lust
fallen into a do e, under the lC.reshiu
shadow o a or mrl.-il ?T •mid- l me st.rted ,‘ Utc U
Rat. au.caii v up at ilm ungentle ( ad- ,
dress.
‘‘Ala’am.” said he, “I a^ure vou I am ‘
'
t trespassing l~” *
uo :
But a 1 p 0 i o „ et - c words were !■ cut cm
Sum , t , by the , rattling of sto.ib Stick ,
a a on
the stone W.di cio-e to hm; and in at
other moment pln„gl„“ a belli-i'cmit-lookiim- tE%ugl. tfe red
c „„ came T,Wh Tc
?»•*.<•*«* *ug«. n.veu or
lie started to run, but hi? foot catching
j n the guarled root of an ancient tree, lie
fell h adlong. The cow executed ahurdie
ashed !e a P over clump his prostrate of hazel form and van
re?,olute, in a bright eyed bushes; and a
woma i of some 4 C
years came to the rc cue, with a Hopping
sunbonnet tied over her ears,, and the
f - } * y,,„,
8 caw ^nctu a-ro.3 „.. rnoo nu sliouUtr.
Don t Strike? pleaded Mr. Carey,
“I’m getting olf the premises as fast as
I can. I assure 1 you I didn’t ' know ' I was ><
tresnas in" ”
as she pushed b ick the sunbonnet and
endeavored to ad ust her luxuriant red
brown hair > had broken loose from
its p ns
‘Vli, I’m so sorry!” J said she “It
cow
1)1(1 I lilt you with the stick? But I
dreamed of any one but Bossy
being and there. Oh, do let me run home
get the camphor bottle.”
* lo ’ wl Ml
sitting Y - Carey raised himself to a
and then to a standing po-turc;
slowly he fc.t his knees, elbows and
collarbones.
“I’m • not hurt ’ ,1 ” ,' said ho_“ont- e U0 ‘ to
. f ... . .,
mgrv.y .r. it , It wasn ri l jour stuck, ,
mam.it was the roots of that old tree,
It's enough to startle any man, don’t
you see, to hear himself cal ed___an old
g camn »
‘ '
.
l.ut it wnsn t you I meant,’ breath
lessly cried Dcs'ro; “it was tho old cow.
Won’t you let me run to the house and
get B a capeine liiasC-^ 1 Y Oh ’ ff do ’ i 1 lea?e 1 ”
I e ire was r ia.i „ ,- to t , look rr n. upon, m spite
other torty summers, with bg black
cheeks eyes, a laughing, lust browned cherry-red mouth, and
with the heal'hful
hue of mount-i n brcc c<? Mr rw- mir
, h.msdt : f g.aduady , softening . he looked
as
at ha.
A O, 5 ' said he, “J don’t care for a cap
cine plaster. But I’ve walked Unwl'nf a < r ood
wav and T should like n «<•.>’
” *
“Oh, .5
pray come up to the bons .hen.”
said Desire. “It’s only a step ac oss the
orchard Oh that row th-ir onw ' Wo
mus t certainly - have ' lm- ’ ham eie ere/' ( . »frev aitei
„
“Perhaps,” ho , endeavored sad Mr. Carey, solemn Iv,
as to Strath, tell the
ed^es of his bar ’o’l*,,,/! “vou know i,.‘r * family hv J
the the name name of ot t.edand, whoh.ehro- . v . u
about. Two old mads, who manage a
farm all by themselves. Very peculiar
females, 1 have been told” *
I esue stood still aud be ran to l-.uo-h
cheeks. ^
“Why,” cried she, “it's me and Mai
viua. \Ye are the Welland JV oils ”
It Tt-n-re was J>n. xr.- a,.,', Laiey s turn to Lush * \i auu -
look awkward now.
“Oh!” said he. “Well, it don't mat
ter. 1 have busiue-s at the Wei a id
‘
Farm—that's all”
“Isn’t it strange that ,h,n.s should
happen so.’ cried Leslie, opening the
gate into the dim, shadow v orchard
where scarlet lines grew m the tali g: ass'
an d robbins dartecUn and out of the
drooping bough*. “There’s the house
Y*ou can see it now. Malvina and I have
and an estate o: hi, own, and his wife
don't want any single relations. But
we've done very well, every one says.
*$; 3Iiss Malvina was diijgentlj' hoemg
sweet corn in a man’s h W and boots!
She was a tali, Amazonian sort of female
with hgh cheek-bones, haircut short!
and a nrescu’ine way of leaning on her
R oe . She looked sharply around at the
sound of footstens.
.—U"' “T? it 1C ,l the ' e new’ DeW hired “ irect man n * an ” Said cMA she,
“Then, Desire, you may tell him that we
don’t want help that comes at this time
0 f day. 111 have no eight hour men on
mv place. ’
,v» \ na n cried • the
* \
. despair. ^
younger , sister, m ‘‘Its a
gentleman on business.”
In came brother Philo from the back
T»< 'ih *ftl> ^a:d •» w brother
hard Philo, a wrinkled,
feature i man in bine overalls aud
boots that looked as if they might have
ne«l Itantasew.n m icaine, I s pose,
or a new parent reaper, nor anv o’those
labor-savin’ humbngs B cause—”
about vour (oi^in ,J a^'rt
Mr Carey, 1 *‘iaul Weband’s l.in is son’ son. HA He s
come back i r from Australia. . slereque?ted
me to come over here^as I hapnened to
be pas-ing this way. and see what his re
latious would do about giving ° him “ ,LU a «*■
L. n o
m „
"
At these . words , lhilo
airs. Welland _
emerged from the currant Lushes where
she rcd was fruit picking the sparkling, ruby col
0 to make el v For tor ‘ Mrs U s ' 'V Philo
believed m ind,,- ahvay- r■ p.ckmg her nei_h
bqr s fruit before she began her own.
“A home, indeed!” said Mrs. Philo;
wkat j alwayg told vou PhiI g
'
I, that man'll be sure to come back some
day, poorer than poverty, says I: and
lie'll expect us to takecareof him then.
But we’ve worked a deal too hard for our
money-— raeand Philo—and if he wants
to be supported let him just so to the
poorhouse. Paul Welland always better, was a
toym creatur’, and Rolf ain’t no
‘iff S> TO.1 n-revoa »«. f«e
into an expressto rof the mraos^caiuton.
Y, 1 !* 9 J‘ m re his lawyer, -sir, sa.d lie.
Mr. \r L arcy noddotl
.‘illffa toJl'ffi,,?' sail Philo, «.
.rffhinii h?,TSc« r fj S ml”.
took! "W e’ve always too * care of our
reive?: he can do the samel Como.
lletsev, we'd better be fVsire, goin’.”
•‘ihilo!’cried out “how r n
you be so srilish.' Kolf A eil;uv i 3 our
cousin If he is in want or trou ‘ I'whom
has he to loo it>: ut us: mvina, > ou
won t b? so bard-hearted ? The o d iar -
house is b:«? enough for our cousin o’f
as well as for us. ou never woul 1 turn
a si kly old in u adrift upon the w.» 11"
“No, I wouldn’t!” said Miss Malvina.
thumping here, her hoe upon the ground.
“Look stranger, tell Rolf "Welland
he’s welcome to come to a home with us.
We live plain, but we’re ready to give
him a he v tv wet. ome. Tell him to come
here a. nee. The sourer the better.”
“W- men is fool?,” incidentally re
"i" Wdi.,,1, chewing Ik
uV. o' To'^io£ would Alu^cr X*
. - your,, rai« M,,
-°.! tt^every man t.ue cate of li.m
b .I a V'
nd who i knows? > (lid esire, .
hr gaily, “Perhaps we aa ^et ban the
di-tnet school t >te ,ea. 1 heard quire
Do antes say tiia Uie pew ttacuer was
not going to stay more than a quarter "o
- M y» > -•»» » lot* t , Uko
. , „ - . -., -.i . i. „
\ ff.'ff 4t’t •' ' '
‘.h Q 0 co.ue C() ie m IU ana and get t.,e e cu co.teo r ee ” said saia
.
T De-ire, . • “and a few late strawberries,
Mr. -, r.--”
U( l -. alL l-my - ...” na ne, ~.,-a ?a Cl the fn n sHanger, v i
-
^ , Siooa in:movaule beneath the
10 “
hail . f this conversational episode
«* :
“ 1 hat .8 to say, it is my name n-w. I
chanced to make mvself useful to a ri: li
twi pOn.im.u .. ; ,n ,n i ua , ino v i v , took a „
fancy to me, amt ue ie:t me his pioperty j
to ‘ff,"'-' 1 ' , '{V ""U, <
in auu.t.oa to my ow a. inuu caiey isn t
a 1 nain0 -
* erta.nly not said Hido with . ,
“I only wish we had a
{^? \ a w-iy^lTc’mnw^mv ? S°f IrinlTl! 6 nanmTalTl 1.,!
“-' L- . . a y ; A il- i >« any
. .
accomniodatipn to era. . o you re rich
cli lliS '' liC 5t tllis
gentleman fl would be so kind as to come
and take dinner with usto-dav -”
,, •, -° , & a a 5 tne stiangei, m • u c. , .hi, An tit
-* • -
• . . “Will be kind
cisive voice. you so as
to hear me out? Carev, as 1 have al
y ‘ L ‘ ' 0 ls> -*“0114011 Wtl
ai “ '
’ VVhat r , ‘ roaped { lf ., !°'
Mrs. l hilo scrambled up so . hastily , to
feet that she unset the pail, ha.f full
ol currants. iss . alvina dropp; d her
out a little saucer of late, luscious, red
strawberries, stood amazed at thi? reve¬
lation.
“ ou!” she cried, “our cousin Bolf!
AndM , . , ne uly , lut you.with a stick, chas
-yotr^eTam^’ * V ° U ° Ut 0t
“And taught m?,” said the old bache¬
lor, with a stran gely sweet sm le, “that
there is yet a spice of unselfishness in the
conglomerate called humm uat ire.
Cousin Desire, I thank you ior the lesson,
Belie e me, 1 shall not soon forget it!”
But before the day was over he had
hel; ed 3 i?s Malvina fin sh h - patch of
sweet corn, and mended t defective
fen e-rails wh -re the offend in g cow had
broken through, beside stacking up the
sweet-william? and naming tne Big r ise
tree to the frame fro n whence its weight
, , T -.
T V aeci-.rc,' i f-aul > Miss r - v Malvina, i • lies ,
a real comfort a .out'the p.ace.'’
“And he-has traveled so much!” cried
De , ir «. {l , d he talks so i eauti fuilv! I
*
nniv nrev* l> i| be coutcnlcd b Y • e ”
r,q < fie-e . was no , so, , > o r “.id al>ou. ... tea..
Eolf Wcli.uul t r-rcy wr:' very we 1 con
tentet1 ’ He had always lvmgered and
thirsted “ ’ f? for ‘ the details of a homo life _
; “ e *f it w to peHtetion.
* ir * an( ‘ rs * * hilo avcv not f
well sati-li d 1! their spasmod c t o
toward Tend iness were clu- ,c ! vt
aictie frio-hHiv im
its to*) ua i . said i a -ui\ m-o, ■ ai
mo>t cl T : «g
lie’ll be certain sure to go and ma...*,
f 00 i c f himself bv ma.i’vi.i-• .A Gesire ’ nnd '
„ snau 1 11 nevei ct a a a. ;; it t ot 1 n.s |, . in , mey.
Desite e
ougat t > be a* .ameu to tlunk of
su-h a thing at ner age.
i,^« late io.es as « ^u”-T well a, e. r-y or.c- Atic.-t,
S ’ Mr ’ !Vldfctl0 u ;. ,u ' e
ma r eft Desae, and 1 the 1 lnio n ell.tads
we e disconso.’ate,
“It’s all our bad Luck ” sa’d they.
I or they had forgo tea all about the
P a 9 l S° 111 • the , .line , th , t sjieaks of ‘eu
i
tertaining *»**■■»■ angels unaw ties.”— St. Louis
Is Deafness Hereditary?
The State Convention of de f mutes
assembled ii the City Hull .at ..oahestef,
X. Y. f he President in the cour e of
his address said, concerning the Ion
sixty-seven yeail. The oldest deaf mute
in the State is Miss Mary Tabor, of
«l»fe' Bcipio, Th; ( avugi Satj.tical county, 'inf^r aged if
iiat.on
the association is against the theories of
I)r. Alexander Graham Belt concerning
the hereditary tenden v of deafness. In
all but one of these institutions in the
State there were in twenty yers 2893 ad
mi?sions to the deaf mute school?, and
of these eighteen were children of deaf
mutes almost thw-nunripr. tnree quar ers of nnfi one per
cent. The President said not one of the
schools of the State was supported as it
should be. The state paid a yearly
amount per capita 1 of *250. ’ which was
not sutfieient. -lork a- ^ \r 7 Star c *
_____
JlOUest .. . , ^ Vegetable Giants.
have developed » th. vegetable kingdom teem
to a singular propen-ity
to keep themselves hidden from public
view, until, ia these iater davs, science
ber have been brought to view during
recent vears. One of the most.recent is
a plant of the Cam'anulrtce*. or ordei
nf Rp IflnwpM Tf nrnrlnrpq and" a ctpm
reach reach n» ng live n e feet leet in‘he*^ht in ne.gL., anl the
flowers, arranged along this stem, art
over six inches in diameter These hugt 1=
bels-are of a pale, lavender color,
showy as thev / are monstrous. Hegel, ° ’
the , botanist . of c ^t. fetersburg, D . seems tc
have been the Urst to have taken notice
of it, and that it is wholly new to science
so it has been named bv him for a Rus
s A an P pareon a ? ron0 o* - science' =>v>ence. Mr ur. Ostrows Arrows .y. v
Oitroxtkui , magninm, asat is now to be,
was discovered in Bokhara in 1884:
it has a]readv found its wav into cultiva
, ion i a European gardens. » — '—Independent. — *'■
Taeir Platform.
The convention of wholesale liquor
dealers and distill, rs, wh > met in Chick
erine Hall, New Yoik, was in favor of
the following urine! les, ngardte-s of
politics: “Fewer saloons* higher li
cense; tlosing saloons on Sunday; dis
liff
supply for themselves or o hers*; refusing to
liquor business, money to and disreputable men in the
pros, outing any li
rto may viol.to ita
I**™*™*™ h*dy«en
t.a -id nan sp c .u It o. tire appearance,
o:i the same platform and m the same
cause, ot two Komau Catholic cardinals,
a large number of the bishops and clergy
l aeh: uhali church, and leaning
clergvmeu of the various Non-con form
i>t ;> ues. This practical illustration of
Cnn>, ian unity was c.illod out ov tuede
sire to st r up the public feeling to a
point of active interference with the
si ve trade in Africa.
I.eiiei- From iho Ex-Sheri,TotCliuntanqiin
roim.y, New York,
Mayvili.k. X. Y„ Dec. 2, ISfU.
* am 50 say ’ from a loa tf personal ex
P eri euce with Alia oca's Porous Plasters,
that I am aide to endorse all the good things
tuat nave wm- been sam abotir them, and sup-
2 r“"rti»rr 5
cither cxtvrn.d or iulerna!, equals tliem iaccr
tainty and rapidity.' 1 have used them ntona
time for rheumatism, another for backache,
again for bronchitis, always with tho same re
suit—a speedy cure. L. T. Haujuxoxok.
nntariiy a'Cched 1T SS& . lmVC Vt>1
‘
* »"” lu »' F..r
Tennj-son _ his exquisite
ju of poem, dreams of a
Sve iyl'S p dotS H ,a< lf’?. on JovoU' woinert of ages past.
the wwld a greater
011 iytoid the women of the present how they
could improve their health and enhance their
charms. This he might easily have done by
reconunending Prescription the Health use of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite
is the best friend of
innUT ^? ra ble fils towhieh wo
womankind L Sth^
and the “Favorite Prescription”
walk hand inhand, and are inseparable. It is
the only medicine for women, sold by drug
gu?ts, under a i-osittoe guarantee from the mau
ufacUirers, that it will give satisfaction in
•««»-«'
There .are 40.’1 mountain peaks in (he United
States more than 10,000 feet in height.
lmu« Tr„„b M and Wn.t.n.
Vmo, P 180 ^ 65 shown cau be cure by the d. if following propedy treated in
as statement
from 1). G. F rbemax, Sydney: “Having been
an ^ r ® a ari u 6 ^® e wastfnB“wa^ for n nm nasTtlvo
years, it affords me pleasure to testify that
Scott’s Emulsion of God Liver Oil with Lime
a ud So<lil has given mo great relief, and l
cheerfully similar , recommend it to all suffering in a
way to myself. In addition, I would
say that it is pleasant to take.”
the Charleston, erection S. C., lias appropriated ?5,000 for
of two free bathing houses.
Leave hopebehind,
All yc who enter hero!
So ran the dire warning which Dante read on
the portals of the Inferno. So runs the cruel
verdict of your friends if you ai e overtaken by
the first symptoms of that terrible disease, con
sumption. “Leave hope behind! Your days are
numbered!!” And the suggestion against death
is there given up in despair. But while there is life,
is hope! Dr. Bierce’s Golden Medical Dis¬
covery has cured hundreds of cases worse than
yours; and it will cure you, if taken in time.
JTiit delay is dangerous. No power can restore
a wasted lung; the “Golden Medical Discov¬
ery,” however, can and will arrest the disease.
Laura Scliirmer, a singer in the harem of
the Turkish su.tan, was by poisoned by cream
Offensive breath vanishes with the use of Dr.
Sage’s Catarrh Remedy.
The Ada m3 Express Co., have made arrange
meats to introduce its system info Europe.
Children Cr for It.
If a child will take a medicine with pleasu nl c,
you may know that it is not in anyway oli'e
sive to the taste. Children like Hamburg disgust them Figs,
and it is no longer necessary to
with castor-oil. 25 cents. Dose one Fig. Mack
Drug Co., N. Y.
Much bearing Pnin and Suffering may he avoided by
child woman by the timely use of The
Mother’s Friend.
^ •
If afflicted with c ore eyes use Dr. 25c. Isaac Thomp- bottle.
son’s Eye water. Druggists sell at per
of^isu^Cure^or^onsunvptbnf n .... V .. . 1 ‘ ' , srna ... ^ ost ‘ s
" j&&: ~ ' Loo . ~ Cabins “ were not 1
hot houses and the people
PhI^W? who dwelt in them were
El •# not ThL hot bouse T g o-rnwtba n?.
mr\ They were ahaidy,healthy A L
pih generation e(lies »-sed and the simple
^ OLD 1 tsrere
preparations reproduced in
w,, Miirne:rs rn ,, r ’. T L'0 nr rnf.fr, Cabin r/ Gough ni1 „i: and ,,„,7 Coil- r _„
o
suttiptiOU Kemedy and Earners fjp*
pecanoe,” the great stomach tonic.
""juji FlV in Q f rPfllT! n Rflllll , '
c^cou Uljf 0 vitulll DuiLij
m isthebegtremed f0r0hildran
f™Hp|Jnnrr,i .. Buffering from
I *4/ /Hw m r 1 n DHE ATARRW npin *V etrinaco ,!,0FFl " s
ykj Apply Balm intoeach nostril,
^ K i A . Rf)S 66 Wawenst ny '
|p l MOTHERSiFRlENDfi ^
l 4 Ai(£j LABOKfj?useda/wmcntJi* QJild birEh Easy
before SHO^S con.f-inein.cnt. Vvrifcfjr Jjook
M$s$'
PINE-NEEDLE Oil.
«« Ga. re93 rs
w - M white & CO., Box 4ts, axlasta,
Dl FISTULA
and a 1 Rectal Disease 8
treated by loss a painless pro"
cess, No of time from
business. No knife, ligature
or caustic. A RADICAL CURE
guaranteed treated. Reference in every case
gire«i.
Dr. R* G. JACKSON, 41%
" Whitehall ttt*, Atlantai Ga.
ta ls society, _ whichi»aysits _____ membe 2-0 i«so If you should to are 8t,o«i not, join
now5f vt'^vVvtv 1 ' a e frt ^ «ic MinneapoLB, ilL 7 u Ac mnn. E;
y OME
Bryant’s |9 thoroughly College, taught 457 by Main MAIL. St., Circulars Buffalo. N. free. Y.
npiuvi HJ3IT K , n .“*S.a' n oi 0 to 20
|| J Ho a » m .
Treatment. Trial Free. No Cure. No Pay. The
Humane Itemedy Co., I.a Fayelte* Ind.
PISO’S CURE FOR CONSUMPTION
WANTED ? urt't i V Wnght; X 233 B?oidwayrN. y. ' :
New and Second-Hand Machinery.
otl • ^ \HiVtn' ..... , ..
Mill Outfits, Fortable ( OV 4 Lorn - En9in and \ 8 \ 11 1 V heat f 7 MILL Tr i i§ aW , Millstones. Lotting Llotht,
(otton >eed ltullers and Grinders, lleltirg, >aus, Fiplng, itc.
in addiiiwi to New Machinery, we have a large ztock of ?^rg^iTi5KTl Second-Hand Engines, Boilers, shingle Machines,
SK-Sf 1 ' g ^.a’. hinKv^ tsttSs. 0 ,W, ‘
’ GJL
T-..e ue.ii w.io i.as m v,-»ted from three
to live iio...ir, i i a linbtie-r Coat, and
at lus first ^ha'.f hour a expc-nence m
at being .so badly taken in, but also
iec’.s if he d-?-s not look exactly like
**
o ■>.■> i.'.t hava the fish bkamb, send for descriptive catalogue. A. J. Tomta,» Simmons St., Boston. Mass.
2^
l 1
- --- k W
Possesses inanv Important Advantage* over all
oUn ' r T**W"A
BABIES CRY FOR IT.
INVALIDS RELISH IT. '
sold by Druggists. »3«., soc., «l.oo>.
WELLS, R1CHARDS0K g CO . buruhgton vt
j —
; ElafeV POftr^itSo
a Portfolio of ocantiftal patent' baby portraits, printed
; on fine plare paivr by photo mvoess, sent
j Give'Jiaby's at S
; name mid ago.
WELIS, RICHARDSON &. CO., Props., Burlington, Vt
j ~ It’s Easy to Dye
WITH
i m u
t B JS |,yA.8^***"‘ ^ v W gjgt^tP
j S 3
|j /STS. ' 1 SUperiOST «
| ji “J^U I '» f
aW ±?! ! i I b FfiSineSS, . 4 ren s th *
SVfcii B6QUtV 31
' 'M\ A / - AP , n
SlSTipiiClty. - .
Warranted to color more goods than brilliant any other
dyes “er.^ecilo^; ever made, and to give piore and
Scents
■ ; WELLS. RICHARDSON & CO.. Burlington,-Vt.
IVr Gilding or Bronzing Fancy Articles,- USE
DIAMOND PAINTS.
Q Gold, .. Silver, Bronze, Copper. Only jo Cents.
Hi
I believe Piso’s Cure
for Consumption H. saved
my life.— A. Dowell,
Editor Enquirer, Eden
ton, N. C., April 28, 1887.
i
‘re
Tlio best Cough Medi¬
cine is Piso’s Cure for if
Consumption. Children h
take it without objection.
By all druggists. 25c. i>
H ‘
W
;_ :‘N
nr. Kj
SS J
Sees so me of her without Poultry
die cadi year
J I'll kn< w ing w hat the matter
. ....van or.liow lu allett flei •
S mil,, mm Etf&tessrat
’wMifilF W ffl'i’S-'TSf;" ktiufi.
£ 1 J{ n *^nunfr*?»”t\°nittn during"^ ?S P werH*r^er iI dofliiwand
cents) period of years, I« aches you
howto Delect nu«l Cure IMsinneftt howto
Feed for Muks and also ter I-nllciiiiiKi I
which Fowls to Save tor llieeilina nr«
poses; uad everytliins, indeed, you shoiild
know on thin sin bijou. Bu-eoi, V* City»_
134 Leonard N.
i)<> you wn nt lo
te arn nil nliout ,j;
n Horse (* How
Pick s
on od Ou .
to Know ?v f.
*'«*»»*
l?rAud» ’ lfow”to
Meic«'t Wiseanc, carety’-'
micf ofl'ei-i a
iniaPm® 1
1,1 « Tceih < 0 *
How iainmi > Homo Vropei-iy /f All th\n
to sho^ a < 9
relhe^aafne'SpeoTe IoUpage **oiVrn1'by lld,i:sT«ATE{»
read lag. oor BOOK, wMcli
IluithK »>««‘}*nhb ^5 QtS. wo STAMPS*
|joRSK on w>- IH
I100KC0.« 131 beonard St.r . V#
nCCENn^R liutllU jjL or
V pjp $
H : 0 mi
•— ** ot - :■*
« * ; ‘ s. -
Pocko Revolver. 8«nda=.in.um P g
ffiflei, SUl' wM
^ T * Ll1 AB * 8 ’ C0 ‘> uo»ton, Mae«.
FARMERS MILL.| J, £A(1INES, Vr'ooii I’lauK*.
SAW
Circular liege’« Improved Maw >1 ilia] I j
Wi th UniverBal *“
linear and neons Lop Beam Double Set Simnlta- Recti¬ WorkOjeW. Ec-skS %x~‘ mm 7 1
centric Friction
Feed. Manufac- w '
tnred by the SAIH-U, >. . C.
SALEH IRON WORKS,
JONES
ix JU
PAYS the FREICHT Scale*,
5 Ton aeon Brass
Iron Levers, Steel iiea.’inga,
Ttre Beam and Bfrtrn Box for
Brery ilze ftculc T'or free pr»<« lid
»•„ i mention thl* paner aad addre«
» " BINGUAMTOPJ. RlHtS OF BUiSHAMTBN, Y.
N.
ASTHMA CURED
German Asthma Cure never/flft. toyi vc <i»
mediate able sleep; rtiitf effects in the worst where caK©?,i:isureacomfort¬ 1 other? fail A
cares a
trial convince! the mont tkeptical. Price (50c. and
I for 81.00,of DrogRlstsorbvinail. DtuR. SCHIFFMAN, SampleFKIilii St. tan!. Mam:
stamp.
Oval Box,31t round, 14 1‘ilU.
HOLD Lure at home anvJ make more money working for us Than
I at anything else In the world Either f-x Costly outfit
wy.Lt*. Terms ifttkE. Address, 1KUE Sc Co., Augusta. Maias.
SBIsIH'SSSfSis/S
«\Ol,OiU ->ll lor Couanmptives and Astnmat
iljiics. Send 2c. for it. De, BAUiLETT, Boulder, Col.
A N. U For y-two, ’88.
«ja* ■■ ■■§
H B BR Bbi Sa ■
IU
-T
e
CURES WHERE ALL ELSE f AILS.
Best Cough Syrup. Tartes good. Use
In tim e. Sold by druggi sts.
Mil Mm
E Sir!
CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS.
Beet Cough Syrup. Tustes good. Ueo
in timo. Sold by druggist*.
We ofler the man who wants service
(not ztvle) a garment that will keep
him dyy^n^tlie^harde|t^ »tonm ^ l^t_ta
the only perfect \\ ind and W aterproof
Coat is “Towe r'g Fish brand Slicker."
tak« no other. If storekeeper
—'
2