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•R EV. AG E
The Eminent Divine’s Sunday
Discourse.
Subject: The Glory of the Xnvv—XavtU
Heroes Deserve Full Measure of
Praise—Useful Lessons Drawn From
Their Bravery and Devotion.
[Copyright, Louis Klopsch, 1899.1
Washington, D. C.-At a time when the
whole nation is stirred with patriotic emo
tion at the return of Admiral George
Dewey and his gallant men on the cruiser
Olympia and the magnificent reception ac
corded to them, the Rev. Dr. T. De Witt
Talmage, in Ills sermon, preaehing to a
vast audience, appropriately recalls for
devout and patriotic purposes some of the
great naval deeds of olden and more recent
times. Test, James iii., 4, “Behold also
the ships.”
If this exclamation was appropriate about
1572 years ago, when it whs written con
cerning the crude fishing smacks that sailed
Take Galilee, how much more appropriate
in an age which has launched from the dry
docks for purposes of peace the Oceanic of
the While Star iiue, the Lucania of the
Cunard lino, the St. Louis of tho American
line, the Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse of the
North German Lloyd line, the Augusta Vic
toria of tho Hamburg-Ainerican line, and
in an ago which for purposes of war has
launched the screw sloops like the Idaho
the Shenandoah, the Ossipee, and our iron
clads like the Kalamazoo, the Roanoke and
the Dunderberg, and those which have al
ready been burled in the deep, like the
Monitor, tho Housntonic and the Wue
hawken, the tempests ever siucb sounding
a volley over their watery sepulchers, and
the Oregon, and the Brooklyn, and the
Texas, and the Olympin, the lowa, the Mas
sachusetts, the lndiuna, the New York, the
Marietta of the last war, and the scarred
veterans of war shipping, like the Consti
tution or the AlliMjee or the Constellation
that have swungMto the naval yards to
spend their last their decks now all
silent ol' the feet trod them, their rig
ging all silent hands that clung to
them, their porMles silent of the brazen
throats that omJwthunderod out of them.
Full justice lias been done to tho m'-n
who at different times fought on the land,
but not enough lias been said of those who
on ship’s dock dared and suffered all t hings.
Lord God of the rivers and the sea, help
me in this sermon! So, ye admirals, com
manders, captains, pilots, gunners, boat
swains, sailmakers, surgeons, stokers.mess
mates and seamen of ail names, to use your
we might as well get uader
way Mud standout to sea. Let all land
lubbers go asn—i-e. Full speed now! Four
bells!
It looks pi®resq®|ind beautiful to see
a war vessel ifoing through the Nar
rows, sailors in new rig singing,
A life on the ocean wave,
A home on tho rolling deep,
the colors gracefully dipping to passing
ships, the decks immaculately clean and
the guns at quarantine firing a parting
salute. But the poetry is all gone out of
that ship as it comes out of that engage
ment, its docks red with human blood,
wheelhousc gone, the cabins a pile of shat
tered mirrors and destroyed furniture,
steering wheel broken, smokestack crushed’
a hundred pound hav
ing left its mark from pdfT to starboard,
the shrouds rent away, ladders splintered
and decks plowed up and smoke blackened
and scalded corpses lying among those who
are gasping their last gasp far away from
home and kindred, whom they love as
much as we love wife and parents and chil
dren.
Oh, men of tho American navv returned
from Manila ami Santiago and Havana, ns
well as those who are survivors of the
naval conflicts of 1803 and 1801, men of the
westej-n gulf squadron, of the eastern gulf
squadron, of the south Atlantic squadron,
of the north Atlantia squadron, of the
Mississippi squadron, of the Pacific squad
ron, of the West India squadron, and of
the Potomac flotilla, hear our thanks!
Take the benediction of the churches. Ac
cept the hospitalities of the nation. If we
had our way, we would get you not oniv a
pension, but a home and a princely ward
robo and an equipage and a banquet while
you live, and after your departure a
catafalque and a mausoleum of scupltured
marble, with a model of the ship in which
you won the day. It is considered a gal
lant thing when in a naval fight the flag
ship with its blue ensign goes ahead up a
river or into a bay, its admiral
standing in the shrouds watching and giv
ing orders. Cut I have to tell you, O vet
erans of the American navy, if you are as
loyal to Christ as you were to the govern
ment, there is a flagship sailing ahead of
you of which Christ is the admiral, and He
watches from the shrouds, and the heavens
are the blue ensign, and He leads you to
ward the harbor, and all the broadsides of
earth and hell cannot damage you, and ye
' whose garments were once red with your
own blood shall have a robe washed and
made white in the blood of the Lamb.
Then strike eight bells! High noon in
heaven!
Willie we are heartily greeting and ban
queting thq sailor patriots just now re
turned we must not forget the veterans
of the navy now in marine hospitals or
spending their old days in their own or
their children’s homesteads. Oh, ye vet
erans, I charge you bear up under the
aches and weaknesses that you still carry
from the wartimes. You arenot as stalwart
as you would have been but lor that nerv
ous strain and lor that terrilic exposure.
Let every ache and pain, instead of depress
ing, remind you of yofc fidelity. The sinking
of the Weehawkea olf Morris Island, De
cember G, 18G3, wns it mystery. She was
not under fire. Tno sea was rough;
Cut Admiral Dahlgren fron the deck
of the flag steamer Philadelphia
saw .her gradually sinking and
finally she struck the ground, but the
flag still floated above the wave in the
sight of the shipping. It was afteward
found that he sank from weakness
through injuries in previous service. Her
plates had been knocked loose in previous
times. So you have in nerve and muscle
and bone and dimmed eyesight and diffi
cult hearing and shortness of breath many
Intimations that you are gradually going
down. It is the service of many years ago
that is telling on you. Ce of good cheer.
Wo owe you just as much as though your
lifeblood had gurgled through the scup
pers of the ship in the Ked river expedition
or as though you had gone down with the
. Melville off Hatteras. Ouly keep your flag
flying, as did the illustrious Weehawken.
Good cheer, my boys!
Sometimes off the coast of England the
royal family have inspected the British
navy, manoeuvered before them for that
purpose. In the Baltic sea the czar and
czarina have reviewed.the Russian navy.
To bring before the American people the
debt they owe to the navy I go out with
you on the Atlantic ocean, where there is
plenty of room, and in imagination re
view the war shipping of our four greut
conflicts—l77o, 1812, 1803 and 1898. Swing
into line all ye frigates, ironclads, fire
rafts, gunboats and men-of-war! There
they come, all sail set and all furnaces
in full blast, sheaves of crystal tossing
from their cutting prows. That is the
Delaware, an old Revolutionary craft,
commanded by Commodore Decatur.
Yonder goes the Constitution, Com
modore Hull commanding. There is the
Chesapeake, commanded by Captain
Lawrence, whose dying words were,
“Don’t give up the ship,” and the Niaga
ra of 1812, commanded by Commodore
Perry, who wrote on the back of an old
letter, resting on his navy cap, “We have
met-Ihe enemy, r-nd they are ours.” Yon
der is the flagship Wabasu. Admiral Du
pont commanding; flagship
Minnesota, Admiral
r.
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-on c •i.Co.MpOT&Zhe
<'ai " ‘
AH tl.osi of YOU
service during the w:nHH|
the afternoon or evCflHjmfl
some of you ir is 2
o’clock, fi o'clock, and it wSi
down. If you were of ng9
broke out. you ate now at !■
o. you have j.i.sseti into
AYhi i.• in our Oman war tlu^HHI
Christian comtnamSvrs on
than in any previous conflict,
vive in your minds tho fact that at*
two great admirals of the civil war 1
Christians, Foote and Farragut. -■
the Christian religion been a eoww
thing they would have had nothing t|
witn it. In its faith they lived and |
In Brooklyn navy yard Admiral H
held prayer meetings and con.luetadJ
vival tile receiving .-hip \oriii c jHSH
and on Sabbaths, far out at sea, folwweW
the chaplain with religious exhortation!
In early life, aboard the sloop-of-wart
Natchez, Impressed by the words of a Chris
tian sailor, lie gave his spare time for tw’o
weeks to the Bible, and at the end of that
declared openly, ‘'Henceforth, under all
circumstances, I will act for God.” His
last words while dying at the Astor House,
New York, were: “I thank God for all His,
goodness to me. He has been very good
tome.” When he entered heaven, he did
not have to run a blockade, for it was
amid the cheers of a great welcome. The
other Christian admiral will be honored
on earth until the days when the lires from
above shall lick up the waters from be
neath and there shall be no more sea.
Ob, while old ocean’s breast
Bears a white sail
And Gcd’s soft stars to rest
Guide through the gale,
Men will him ne’er forget,
Old heart of oak—
Farragut, Farragut—
Thunderbolt stroke!
According to his own statement, Far
ragut was very loose in his morals in early
manhood and practiced all kinds of sin.
One day he was called into the cabin of his
father, who was a shipmaster. His father
said, “David, what are you going tp be
anyhow?” He answered, “I am going to
follow the sea." “Follow the sea.“ said
the father, “and bo kicked about the
world aad die in a foreign hospital?'’
“No,” said David; “I am going to tom
maud like you.” “No,” said the father;
“a boy of your habits will never comiannd
anything.” And his father burst into tears
and left the cabin. From that day David
Farragut started on anew life.
Captain Penningtou, an honored elder
of my Brooklyn church, was with him in
most of his battles and had his intimato
friendship, and he confirmed, what I had
heard elsewhere, that Farragut was good
and Christian. In every great crisis of
life he asked and obtained the Divine di
rection. When in Mobile bay the monitor
Tecumseh snuk from a torpedo and the
great warship Brooklyn, that was to lead
the squadron, turned back, he said he
was at a loss to know whether to ad
vance or retreat, and he says: “I prayed.
‘O God, who created man and gave him
reason, direct me what to do. Shall Igo
on?’ And a voice commanded me, ‘Go
on,’ and I went on.” Was there ever a
more touching Christian letter than that
which he wrote to his wife from his flagship
Hartford? “My dearest wile, I write and
leave this letter for you. lam going into
Mobile bay in the morning if God is my
loader, and I hope He is, and in Him I
place my trust. If He thinks it is the proper
place for me to die, I am ready to submit
co His will in that as all other things. God
bless and preserve you, my darling, and
my dear boy, it anything should happen to
me. May His blessings rest upon you and
your dear mother.”
Cheerful to the end, he said on board the
Tallapoosa in the last voyage he ever took,
“It would he well if I died now in harness.”
The sublime Episcopal service for the dead
was never more appropriately rendered
than over his casket, and well did all the
torts of Now York harbor thunder as his
body was brought to the wharf, and well
did the minute guns sound and the bells
toll as in a procession having ij its ranks
the President of tho United Ltates and his
cabinet and the mighty men of land andsea
tho old admiral wus carried, amid hun
dreds of thousands of uncovered beads on
Broadway, and laid on his pillow cf dust in
beautiful Woodlawn, September BP, amid
the pomp of our autumnal forests.
We hail with thanks the new generation
of naval heroes, those of the year 181)8. We
are too near their marvelous deeds to i ally
appreciate them. A century from now
poetry and sculpture and painting and bis
tory wilkjio them better justice than we
can donfemnow. A defeat at Manila would
have been an infinite disaster. Foreign
nations not over-fond of our American in
stitutions would have joined the otlwside,
and the war so many months past would
have been raging still, and perhaps a hun
dred thousand graves would have opened
to take down ojar slain soldiers end sailors.
It took this country throe years to get
over the disaster at Cull Run at the open
ing of tite civil war. How many years it
would have required to recover from a
defeat at Manila in the opening of the
Spanish war I cannot say. %od averted
the ftilamity by giving triumph to our
navy under Admiral Dewey, whose coming
up through the Narrows of New York har
bor day before yesterday was greeted by
the nation whose welcoming cheers wifi
not cease to resound until to-morrow, and
Dext day in the capital of the nation the
jeweled sword voted by Congress shall be
presented amid booming cannonade and
embunnered hosts, and our autumnal
nights shall become a conflagration of
splendor, but tiie tramp of these proces
sions ana the flash of that sword and the
huzza of that gieeting and the roar of
those guns and the illumination of those
nights will be seen and heard as long as a
pi ge of American history remains inviolate.
Especially let the country boys of
America join in these greetiugs to the
returned heroes of Manila. It is their
work. The chief character in all the
scene is the once country lad, George
Dewey. Let the Vermonters come down
and And him older, but the same modest,
unassuming, almost bashful person that
they went to school with aud with whom
they sported on the playground. The Hon
ors of all the world cannot spoil him. A
few weeks ago at a banquet in England
some of the titled nobiemen were af
fronted because our American minister
plenipotentiary associated the name of
Dewey with that of Lord Neison. As well
might we bo affronted because the name
of Nelson is associated with that of our
most renowned admiral. The one man in
all the eomiDg ages will stand as high as
the other. So this day sympathizing with
all the festivities aud celebrations of the
past week and with all the festivities and
celebrations to come this week, Jet us
anew thank God and those heroes of the
American navy who have done such great
things for our beloved land. Come aboard
the old ship Zion, ye sailors and soldiers,
whether still in the active service or hon
orably discharged and at home having re
sumed citizenship. And ye men of the
past, your last battle on the seas fought,
take from me, in God’s name, salutation
and good cheer. For the few remaining
fights with sin and deaths and hell make
ready. Strip your vessel for the fray. Hang
the sheet chaiDS over the side. Send down
the topgallant masts. Barricade the wheel.
Rig in the flying jib boom. Steer straight
for the shining shore, and bear the sb“*
of the great Comm—
heaven as He cries ...ua, "To
him that overcoma ... * give
the tree of life which is in the midst of '*-*
ftf jfeaiy .Ylj
Lpjpax
I m Ift
Acts gently on the
Kidneys, Liver
and Bowels
Cleanses thb^vstem
■ t u. -6. PERMANENTLY
,Tsß, <u^ crc
Buy THE genuine - M ANT'D By
(AiiRKNIA pG %'RVP<®.
,qO'S V ''L(.a. YO/&.
vP n't. " CAU. ~C Q JN.Ya
fOS SALE BY All CKUCifciSTii PhICL SOt PER NTTIL
Xothlng New Under flic Tent.
I wandered to the circus; I sat be
neath the tent and saw the man from
Berneo, likewise the tattooed gent. I
heard the toothless lions howl, while
men in spangled clothes stepped fear
lessly into their dens and whacked
them on the nose. I saw the sacred
elephant spout water through his
trunk, the salamander eating lead and
other melted Junk; I heard the merry
clown get off the jokes we used to
know when we were boys together,
John, some twenty years ago. The
same old horses waddled ’round the
same old kind of ring; the same old
comic vocalists proved that they
couldn’t sing; the same old hippopota
mus was grunting with disgust; the
same old Persian ox was kicking up
the dust; the same old rheumatic acro
bats crawled pa inf ally around, and the
ossified contortionist was crawling on
the ground, and ladies rode barebacked
steeds to music sad and slow—the
same old girls we used to see some
twenty years ago.—Minneapolis lies
senger.
Only Sow Her Own Joke.
Aunt Hannah—Of course, you ought
not to go if your husband does not
want you to go. You know you prom
ised to obey him.
Mrs. Darling—When I promised to
obey him, of course, I looked upon it
as a joke. You could not think seri
ously of obeying a man who had been
telling you for nearly a. year that ho
desired only to be your devoted slave.
—Boston Transcript.
jmFkAV FPfl HR. MOFFETT’S ft P. Curd, A M.,
wPfcibrs' r 11 rrTli *l3 it
4.C- .£;• !> H r* B 3 B E ft! /■ lj att *dbuto the recovery and
H LL I Eg llf UL continued good health of our
q ortf a Ei ®““ ““ £ kS little boy to TEE'i’IIINA. Upon
-JL (Teething Powders.) JH Beems to ,at -
StfCyf costs only 25 Cents, if not found at your Druggist’s, mail 25 cents to
C. J. MOFFE FT, M, D,, St, Louis, Mo,
When She Shops.
Crawford—Why don’t yon advise
your wife to save her money for a
rainy day?
Crabshaw— She doesn’t need it then.
She never goes shopping when it’s
wet. —Town Topics.
Thousand* of Itchy People
Have been cured quickly by Tetterin.©. It cures
any form of sklndisaaso. Mrs. M. E. I.ntlmer,
It 1 taxi, Mis-*., bad an Itchy break in g out ou her
skin. She sends *1 for two boxes postpaid to the
manufacturer, J. T. Shuptrlne, Savannah, Ga.,
and writes, ‘-Tetterlne Is the only thins t'.at
gives me relief.” Send fifty cents In stamps
lor a box if your druggist doesn’t keep it.
Constancy is the complement of all other
human virtues.
Are 'You Using Alien’s Foot Kase?
It is the only cure for Swollen, Smarting,
Tired, Aching, Burning, Sweating Feet,
Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen’s Foot-
Ease, a powder to be shaken into the shoes.
Sold by all Druggists, Grocers and Shoe
Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Address
Allen S. Olmsted, Leßoy, N. Y.
Cares are often more difficult to throw off
than sorrow’s.
To Cure Constipation Forever.
Take Caeca rets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c.
Jl c. C. C. fall to cure, druggist©refund money.
A man of integrity wili neverlisten toany
reason against conscience.
Police Court Trial arid Judgment.
Judge Andy E. Calhoun, of the police courtof
Atlanta, Ga., recently passed a sentence of
rnuof importance lo dyspeptics. Here it Is:
“I am a great eufferer from nervous sick
headache and have found no remedy ho effec
tive as Tyner's Dyspepsia Remedy. If taken
when the headache first begins it Invariably
cures. A. E. Calhoun.”
Price 50 cents per bottle. At nil druggists,
or sent for price, express paid, by Tyner Dys
pepsia Remedy Cos., 45 Mitchell St.. Atlanta. Ga.
Send Five Cents in stamps for Sample , FREE.
Nothing costs less nor is cheaper than the
compliments of civility.
No-To-Bac for Fifty Cent*.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak
men strong, bleed pure. £oc, fi. All druggists.
A man’s vanity te Is him what is honor, a
man’s conscience what is justice.
PlsnTplion Chill Curs Cuprpntßßd
r Nntional Tt esc mi Ir*.
One of the obstacles in the way of
State ownership of the arid lands, and
their Irrigation, should not be over
looked by those who favor that policy.
This is that waters which originate in
one State frequently flow through sev
eral other States and Territories, and
for one of these States to Impound
such waters would lead to endless com
plications.
For instance, In Wyoming the head
waters of streams exist which flow
into or through seventeen States and
Territories. The water supplies of Ne
braska caaniot be preserved except by
reservoirs in Wyoming, Nebraska can
not build them in Wyoming, and Wyo
ming will not. Nevada must be largely
irrigated from watersheds lying in
California, from the eastern slopes of
the Sierras. One of the largest arid
regions in the United States is the
Colorado Desert, in Southern Cali
fornia. This great expanse of fertile
soil, which only needs irrigation to
make it productive, could only be irri
gated by water from tlie Colorado Riv
er, every drop of which Hows in other
States than California.
Nor would the question end here.
Even Mexico would have to be consult
ed in considering plans for an extensive
system of irrigation. The only way
out of the difficulty is for the Federal
Government to store the water and to
distribute it, under proper restrictions,
upon the lands which the Government
now owns—Los Angeles Times.
The Snvr.gre Bachelor.
The Sweet Young Thing—Did you
know there is a man in tho moon no
longer Some one has discovered a
woman in the moon.
Savage Bachelor—No wonder the
man left.—lndianapolis Journal.
Ccn’t Tcbacco Spit ?nri Smoke Your Lite Away.
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag
netic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To-
Bac. the wonder-worker, that makes weak men
strong. All druggists, 50c or sl. Cure guaran
teed. Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Cos., Chicago or Now York.
If we do not fasten our attention on what
we lack. very little wealth is sufllch-iit.
/'BeluH’sS
Cures all Throat and Lung AfTcctious.
CdOiS'l SYRUP
tox Get the genuine. Refuse substitutes.
XIS SURE /
Dr. Du IPs Pills cure Dyspepsia. Trials 20 for sc.
i Thompson’s Ey® Water
t6 E?ot!r. my wlffb ausd myself Mave Been
BKIHg CASCARLTS and they are tho best
medicine we Lave ever had in the house. Last
week my wife was frantic with headache for
two days, she tried some of your CASCARKTS,
and they relieved the pain in her heart almost
immediately. We both recommend Cascareta.’’
Cijab. Stedeford,
Pittsburg Safe & Deposit Cos., Pittsburg, Pa.
CATHARTIC
Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do
Good, Never Steiteu. VVcake::, or Gripe. 10c, 25c. 50c.
... CURE COWSTtPATIOM. ...
fllerlloy Krai.dv Co!>ar.j. Oiltago, KoDlrral, Sett York. 117
M-Tfi.Sj&fi “old and guaranteed by all Irng
e U'Bflb trist* to WISH Tobacco Habit.
The London fire brigade is called out
more frequently on Saturday than on
any other day of the week.
I understand that he’s
very well connected.
Flasherly. You bet! He’s tied to :
his wife’s apron strings.
To cure, or money refunded by your merchant, bo why not try it? i’riee oOc.
YOU KNOW WM&RYOU’RE TAKING I®S
Wksn You Take A
GROVE’S V v
TASTELESS WEsm
CHILL TONIC lISSB
m . MU m[h nMiif*.#3
Because the formats is plainly printed on each bottle, 1 3 r“**}f 1 N i
stsowing what it contains* Ihe reason the imitators do not co n 7ansn°'a
advertise their formula is because they know the people would not buy |1 1 1 '* I ' r |
their medicine if they knew its ingredients. hi?l' ■; 'rvi'h :'■ '•
Every druggist in the United States is authorized to sell GROVE’S M liM
TASTELESS CHILL TONIC on a positive guarantee of NO CURE tl V : -f
NO PAY. Price, 50c. M *|U|
Your druggist has sold GROVE’S for years. Just ask HIM about it. || {lj>| \
GROVE’S is a description that does care
MALARIA, CHILLS AMD FEVER.
EVERY woman suffering- from any female trouble can bo
helped by Mrs. Pinkham. This statement is based oa
sound reasoning and an unrivalled record. Multitudes
of America's women to-day bless Mrs. Pinkham for competent
and common-sense advice. Write to her if you are ill. Her
—— address is Lynn, Mass. Absolutely no
43 SS’FZ’ charge is made for advice. “I suffered
seven years and would surely have died
but * or Y ot,T help.” writes Mr6. Geo.
cU* Bainbridge, Morea. Pa., to Mrs. Pinkham.
$4? “It is with pleasure I now write to inform
ir vUr 'S tt you that lam now a healthy woman, thanks
HC 3AM *° Y our l c i n< l advice and wonderful medi
ww cine. I can never praise it enough. Iwas
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leucorrhoea, had a continual pain in abdomen. Sometimes I
could not walk across the floor for three or four weeks at a
time. Since using your medicine, I now have no more tear
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Mrs. Susie J. Weaver, feXr \|\ '
1821 Callowhill St., Phila
••Dear Mrs. Pinkham—l
bad inflammation of the ''
taken four bottles and used
Mrs. M. Baumann, 771 W. 21st St..
Chicago, 111., writes: "After two <*daasH
months' trial of Lydia E. Pinkhum's Vegetable Compound I can
not say enough in praise for it. I was a very sick woman
with womb trouble when I began its use, but now I am well"
ASK EVERYBODY
TO SAVE THEIR TIN TAGS FOR YOU.
The Tin Tags taken from
and R. J. R. Tobaccos will pay for any one or
all of this list of desirable and useful things, and you
have your good chewing tobacco besides.
Every man, woman and child can find PomethiiiK on this list that
they would like to have and can havn—FREE.
Write your ntitno and address plainly and send tho to us, men
tioning the number of the present you want. Any assortment of the
different kinds of tu;j mentioned above will be accepted.
TAGS.
1 Mutch Box, quaint drslgn, import
ed from Jupan 40
2 Knife, <-ne bjado, good wteol 4u
a Suitors, Ah inch, good steel l>6
4 Child’* Het, Knife, Fork ami Spoon 85
6 hah and Pepper, ono each, quad
ruple plate on white metal 70
6 K;i/<*r, hollow ground, fino English
8 oel ’— 76
7 Butter Knife, triple plate, boat
qualify 100
8 Sugar Shell, triple plate, bust quid..no
9 S’nrnp Box, sterling silver 100
10 Knife, two blades mu
11 Butcher Knife, 8-inoii blade l<;0
12 s*hears, B-incli nfc.bol lou
18 Nut Set, Ciacker, tf Picas, Hilver bo
14 Six Rogers Tab Jo Spoons 450
16 St\ each Rogers K iv< and Forks .Hot;
16 llevolver, 82 or 88 calibre 1000
17 Base Hall, "AHHcoiation,” 100
18 \\ntch, stein wind and sof, guaran
teed good time keeper £6O
19 Ahum Clock, oh k* I, warranted 111
lU Carvers, buokiu.m handle, good
sted 25u
This offor expires Kcvember 30th, 1900.
Address all your Tags and the correspondence about them to
R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., WINSTON, N. C.
_________ Tnltlon low. All Boole* Fit Eft.
65S!fc‘&*£S£a<SITUfl I IONS QIJIiR/tHTEED
Over SO Ilernln/ton und Smith Premier typ<*-
wrltert. &4 tturtenf* !at voar from 7 Staten.
Bth year. Kend for catalogue. Addrc**, Dep'tZJ.
STRAYER’S BUSINESS COL GE, Baltimore,Md.
TAOR.
21 She Rogorfi' Teaspoons, best qual. 2Du
2J Knives and For. a, six each, buck
born bundles 260
23 Clock, U-diiy, Calendar, Thermom
eter, Barometer 600
24 Itemlngton ilttie No. 4, 22 or 32 < ul .1000
2u Tool but. net playthings, but real
tools 7DO
20 Toilet Set, decorated porcelain,
very handnomo 800
27 Watch, solid raiver^full joweJeil...lt)oo
28 Sewing MacJiino, ftret class, wlih
uU attachments 20CO
29 Wl chester Jtepeating Fhot Gun,
12 guago BSCb
BO Mile, Winchester, 16-fbot, 23-ca1...2000
31 Suot Gun, dotible-barrel, hamuior
lesn 8000
82 Guitar rosewood, lulaal with moth
er-of-pearl 2000
83 Bicycle, standard make, ladles or
gents 8000
84 After Dinner Coffee Bpoon, solid
silver, gold bowl ICO
i 86 Briar Wood Pipe 40
jnjOfiPQY NKW DISCOVERY; *ivoi
LJf S BT C 9 I quick relief and cores worst
,:ite * Boitti o) tert imnnitld nnd lOtlnyH’ treatment
Dr H. H OREEN’S SOWS. Box U. Atlanta 3.
DEmff |pt FrrZaEßAltD > OA.,flTn
S M S * wp.y presents 1 to 20 dollars,
t B'iii \M Send postal tor portlculnra.
MENTION THIS PAPERS" n A K!?i