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DR. TALMAGE’S SERMON
WON-CHURCH GOERS.
fPreeched at the Hamptons I-ong Uiand !
Text- VotfL”_inhn “Cither sheeo I ha s, ’ whi ** h are not "
•ef this “ ’ vi
there is bo monopoly in religim. ,. . Inc
^ klu* ?ou r sclt-is 1 ' Tt
* through not s iVMt *h Tvshn-^hat » I.,ok
hfffom a baiT-d ^e^thi cat-wav we
mi and deer aud the Statu
VY thlro and il I 'L‘! hi ' rh h fime- \ an 1 Cm fruks in
ers orehard'andave,^ v m , \U-it is thaKa
-reare . ai r
i& 'very , 5 ± 5 SS?Sr?«SRSSS
by a lame man, who, email-decavimr although there
wera P , m u inthanle scores^ n nan
by scores and of bushels ir’uit never
would allow any of us to touch the Oue
day. in the sinfulness of a nature inherited
from our first parents, who were ruined by
the same temptation,some of us invaded that
orchard, but soon retreated,for the man came
after us at a speed reckless of making his
lameno-s worse and cried out: ‘ Boys, drop
those apples, or IU set the dog ou you',”
Well, my friends, there are Otir.stian men
•who have the church under severe guard.
There is fruit in this orchard for the whole
world, but they have a rough and unsympa
thetic way of a-costing outsiders, as though
they hal no business here, though the Lord
wauts them all to come and take the largest
and the ripest fi nit on the premises. Have
you an idea that because you were baptized
at thirteen months of age, and because you
have all your life been under hallowed inilu
ences, that therefore, you have a right to one
whole side of the Lord’s table, spreading
yourself I tell you out no. and You taking will up have the to entire haul in room? your
elbows, for I shall to-day place on either side
of you those whom you neveroxpected would
#it there; for, as Christ said to the Jaws long
*go, so he says to you and me: “Other sheep
I nave, which are not of this fold.”
five MacDonald, the Scotchman, has four or
dozen head of sheep. Some of them are
lying browsing on the heather, some of them are
down under the trees, some of them
are in his yard; they are scattered around
to in eight neighbor, or ten different places. Catneron,
comes over, and says: “I see
you have thirty sheep; 1 have just counted
them." -‘No,” says MacDonald, "I have a
great here, many and more sheep elsewhere. than that. Soma
are some are They are
•cattered all around about. I have 4,000 or
*,000 in my flocks. Other sheep I have,which
■re not in tins told
bo Christ says to us: Here is a knot of
Ou-istians and there is a knot of Christians,
git Here they is the make Episcopal up a small fold, part tha of Methodist the flock.
fold, fold, the Lutheran fold, the Congregational
the Presbyterian fold, the Baptist and
tow^n°t&tt Dfttwoen these last f °two two 1 tw being 1 V the ‘noTo? mode of
#heep-washing; and so they are scattered all
sheep; but Christ responds: ‘No, no; you
have not seen more than one out of a thous
«d of my flock They are scattered all over
the earth, and ‘other sheep I have, which
#re not of this fold.’”
Christ in my text was prophesying the
inversion of the Gentiles with as much con
fldence as though they were already con
verted, and be is to-day, in the words of my
text, prophesying the coming of a great mul
would saying ?
come in, to you and saying to
{to fold” her Sh60P 1 haVS ’ WMch ar ° BOt ° f
1. In the first place, I remark that the
•beep Heavenly amnl Shepherd the non-churchgoers. will find many There of his
are
and congregations where be they are all Christians,
they they seem to of completely finished, and
remind one the skeleton leaves which,
by chemical preparation, have had all the
greenness and verdure taken off of them,
S^th^&a^t^^^ nothing wanting bat aglasa^aTtoput^
week, and with ostrich feather dust off tha
the othor kind of a church is an armorv with
perpetual sound of drum and fife, gathering
recruits lor the Lord of Hosts. We say to
•very applicant: “I>o you want to be on
“. d
Here is bath in which y cleanse
a to get J. Here
fa a helmet for your brow. Here is a breast
plate for your breast. Here w a sword for
-SSSl!T*V{SK ssjseasslssr”^"* -- *
:
know all your case; I know it very well,
You have not Teen accustomed to come into
a religious assembly, make But 1 have a surprising
annoum ement to to you. You are
WiJsr-a know how far I from tsuasu'S® anything of that
am
kind.” 1 know all about it I have wan
derail up and down the world and I under
•tand your < ase. I have a still more start
ftSISSBtsWiSKi.’ra lord's sheep, but will become
you one to
day. You will go from this service to talk
with some one about your souL People of
God, pray which for that man. “Other sheep I
are not of this fold.”
When the Atlantic went to pieces on Mars
Bock and the people clambered upon the
bea h, why did not that heroic minister of
the gospel, of whom we have all read, sit
down and take care of those men on the
beach, wraiiping them in flannes, kindling
fires for them, seeing that they got plenty of
food? Ah! he knew that there were others
who wonlH vomJn rln thnt' tr£°Zg r,. qovs- ik “Viin Inrarfl
men that wreck. and Boys, launch the the boat!” rigging And of
ging a woman is frozen and dead. She
“TLTns “Hold e a d m hve 0 anS,°savt” minutes n longer ind SMl and I will
on
p Cd. 4 “toe lifeboat
ar^those^here to-day wduT^re safe oa“fhe
shore of Go bs mercy, but I soe there are
some who are freezing in the rigging of sin
mo e retot^av°ed “befus nush ouTto^that
one. “Clutch the rope O dying man' Clut h
ifi^rv o P d aces gI 'Stoa-fv’ ^herer’
Saved:” J U st as I thought. For Ghmt has
breakers ^ 1 ‘-Dthe?
.h^eolL'-ewh^arenot who shad me ashore of^; fold.” |
«^^*nH ^aZnToth ? ?nf^fisb“n^ ■?^torctes ra butTnto d^waSfc ?he '
to wtright^TtefoK^ns
S aI1
are sitGng of
with hook and line, but, like the fishermen
awav°mK?te’’ ?hore Y^ Vhereare toHv’ o? church-irs fittv^SSIrom f
r£^£€i^%^ non \t here
thHmome^beiugfweV h 7 v^
nations. Their voices will into be Chelan heard in ai^ pub
be
earr el out by devout -en to be b ried, and
» their gravel be chiseled the words:
£«’S!^iSS^ sSwIVS^ta already r!5 the
Christian parmts who have won
C^-b^^r which boJ of this fold.”
are
2. I remark again. Tue heavenly shepherd
b going to find a great many of his she-p
among those who are positive reie-tors of
Christianity. I do not know how ro-i oame
to reject Cbristiamtv. rt "“y ha e been
ShESSSS 1 " or
through the infidel talk of some young man
in yonr store It may have been through
the trickery of some profess’d Christian man
j who disguested you with religion. I do not
j ask you how yon became so; but you frankly
! t-’ll me that. you do reieot it being,although You do not
believe that Christ is adivine do
you admit that he was a good man. You
not believe that the Bible was inspired by
God, although you think that there are that some the
very fine things in it You believe
scriptural description of Eden was only an
allegory. There ore fifty things that I believe
that you do not believe.
And yet vou are an accommodating man
Everybody that knows you says that of you
If 1 should ask vou to do a kindness for me
or if any one else should ask of vou a kind
ness, vou would do it. Now, T have a kind
sxs^jsrjssjsrgsa
come to you and vou were verv sick, and do’
tors had given you un and ssi 1 there wa'- no
chance for yon. and I should take out a little
bottle and say: “Here is a medicine that will
cure you; it has cure l fifty people and it wUl
cure yon. you would say: “I have no conn
denee in it. I w mid say: Won tyou take
rf to oblige me: \\ ell. you would say, ‘ if
ft’s anv accommodation to you I'll take it.”
Mv friend,will religion? vou be just as accommodating
in matters of
There are some of yon who have foun 1
out that this world cannot satisfy voiir sou!.
You are like the man who told me after the
servi-e was over: “I have tried this world
an 1 found it an insufficient portion. Tell
me of som-thing better.” You have come
to that. You are sick for tha need of divine
medicament. Now, I come and tell you of
cured a physician hundreds who and will hundreds cure you, who has
who were sick
as you are. “Oh,” you say, “I have no con
fidence in himBut will you try him! Ac
commodate me in this matter; oblige me in
this matter; just try him. I ara very cer
tain ho will cure you. Youreply: “1 have
no special confidence in him; but if you ask
me as a matter of accommodation, introduce
him.” So I introduce him—Christ, the
physician who has cured more blind eyas,
and healed more ghastly wounds, aud bound
up more broken hearts, than all the doctors
since the time of Aesculapius.
The Divine Physician is here. Are you
not ready to try him? Will you not, as a
pure matter of experiment, state your case
before him now? Holding nothing back
from Him. If you cannot pray, if you do
not know how to pray any other way. say
“Oh, Lord Jhsns Christ, this Is a strange
thing for me to do 1 I know nothing about
the formula of religion. These Christian
thou people have been talking I so ready long about what- what
canst do for me, ara to do
j ever to take Thou whatever commandest Thou me commandest to do. I am ready to
me
take. If there be any power in religion, as
these people say, let me have the advantage
of it.”
Will you try that experiment? I do not at
this point of my discourse say that there is
1 si “ ,ply T y V
—tiy it. Do not take my counsel, or the
i counsel of any clergyman, if you despise
in the matter; perhaps we may be hypocritical
in our utterance; Then perhaps our advice is not
worth taking. take the counsel of soma
the very respectable William layman—as John Milton,
poet; Isaac as Newton, Wilberforce, the states
man: as the astronomer; us
Robert Boyle, the philosopher; as Locke, the
metaphysician. They never preached or
pretended his telescope, to preach; and and another yet putting his parlia- down,
one
wiVe^they * all d^Tare ^h^adapGvene^ of
‘if'yo^will not toketoe
recommendation ot ministers of the
gospel, then take the recommendation of
highly caf and respectable through laymen. with Oh, men, skepti- would
struck unrest,
i you not like to have some of the peace which
broods over our souls to-day) I know all
about your doubts. I have been all through the
tliein all I have gone through cur
S^ether'CtortteHoiL'rtovedoub^a SSffilaSW^Sat
! my own existence. I have doubted every
gunshiny land of gospel hope, and peace, and
comfort: so I have confidence in preaching to
you, and asking you to come in. However
often aSS»3»»»i!aKd you may have spoken against the Bible.
tumultuous sea. If you go away adhering to
your infidelities^.you will not sleep one wink
to-msbt. You do not want your children to
smt^lsa&tjssrsi
they do. Oh! you must come in. You will
come in. The great heart of Christ aches to
have you come in, and Jesus this very mo
ment—whether you sit or stand—looks into
3. Again, I remark, that the Heavenly
Shepherd thosl is going to find a great many sheep
among who have been flung of evil
habit. Itmakes me feel mad to see Christian
of God were a chain of forty or fifty .
links, and alter thy had run out there
was nothing to touch a very bad case. If
they were hunting and got off the tra k of
the deer, they would look longer among the
ban! s and the bushes for the lost game than
they have been looking for that lost soul.
People tell us that if a man has delirium tre
mens twice that he cannot be reclaimed; that
after a woman has fallen from her integrity
she cannot be restored. The Bible has di»
intimated ttlatthe Lord Almighty is
ready to par^n^JOtmies. that is seventy
times seven. There are men before thethron©
of of God sin; but, who »ved have bv wallowed tt® *** m ® ° f e^ry:kmd
th# lifted im and
toilly^by th« Gra^of if sinned (^.tte^tend^ ^wantto
^ to tWhfe“ totakehoW of bad tell you
that dub^m -od love, ^you o^ and’wh.n aver r ca^
society
casts £?‘ ^en you Vow ■ Q “ ‘ ^
mother casts you off. and
iSottSSt-hoff your suffering and shame.
The Good Teinplarscannot save you, although
TemjXfe^it^avfyom M altoolghThey
are.nUity for grU mingthetengierance Jt^alGod
^ ?«othmg but thS of the
^ ^e you and that wdllifyouwiUihruw Fhi-.e
£°d help, me’l eanuot U delivered.
YJ ™'-’ a ^ ” d J 1 P-y P 1 £ thatGod “ erv^m-m^iven^to wfll mke me
^ ong drink there , are senes of tV- set
«nd no o.ie but the e ery where present God
du t uf a g,. eati mu t.tude lie-but I tell you
^Tatoom,"’ a^Tew'^rlea"'^^ :om“,
ite . am and Btola
jta ( . ataeo Ijhs> and every town and
^sa^ns^tstuvnss d J T
SU.‘™a°uj; ,jo lt* o" Mp°™i TtSl
„ neeti of going into the art
sons w and around with srpents. There
^ famdis represented in thisau lienee that
are wiappcd n the martyrdom of fang and
, »i e aud veno u-a iivmg laocoon of ghast
Uuca, and horror. What are you to do)
Do not put your trust in bromide of potas
,iUIU - ° ria JauuUc “ 0r aDrthai8 •**
;hat apothecaries can mix. Put your trC»S
miy j u the eternal trod, aud he "ill see you
through. Some of you do not have tempta
tion every day. It is a periodic temptation
that comer every six weeks, or every three
mouths, when it seems as if the powers of
darkness kindle around aoout your tongue
the tires of the pit It is well enough at such
a time, as some o: you do. to seek medical
counsel; but your first and most importunate
ery must be to God. If the heads will
dra; you to the slaughter, make them
do it ou your knees. 0> God! now
tout the paroxysm of thirst is coming
again upon that man, help him. I lmg back
into the pit ot hell the head that assaults Ins
soul this moment. Oh! my heart aches to
see men go on in this fearful struggle with¬
ou; Christ There are here those whose hands
ciated bread, acceptable to everybody, be
cause of their holy life and their consecrated
behavior. The Lord is going to save you.
Your home has got to be rebuilt. Your phys
lead health has got to be restored. Y our
worldly business has got to be reconstructed,
The church of God is going to rejoice over
your discipleship. this fold.” “Other sheep 1 have which
are not of
i> hile I have hope for all prodigals, there
are ful. some I people tor whom have I am not so hope
mean those who been church
goers all their lives, who havo maintained out
ward morality, but who, notwithstanding Christian
twenty, thirty, forty years of ad
vantages, have nevei yielded their hearts to
Christ. They are gospel hardened. Aser
mon has no more effect upon them than the
shining of the moon ou the city pavement,
As Const says: “The publicans and harlot#
will go iuto the kiugdom of God before
them. nities of divine They have resisted all the iinportu
mercy, and have gone, dur
ing these thirty years, through mo.t power
ful earthquakes of religious feeling, and
they are After farther while away from God than
ever. sick, and a they will will told lie
down some day it be
they are dead. No hope: But 1 turn to out
siders and with a hope that thrills through which my
body this soul. fold.” Other You sheep 1 have, hard- are
not of are not gospel
ened. Vou have not heard many sermons
during the last few 3 -tar s. As you came
into a religious meeting to-day everything
was novel, and all the services are suggestive
ot your early days. How sweet the opening
hymn sounded in your ears, and how blessed
it is in this place! Everything but suggestive shower
of Heaven. You do not weep, the
Is not far off. You sigh, and you have no
ticed that there is always a sigh in those the wind
before the rain falls. There are here
w j, u would give anything if they could find
re ii e f in tears. They say: "Oh, my wasted
j;f eI (j|, the bitter past! Oh, the graves
over w hich 1 have stumbled! Whither shall
y fly> Alas for the future! Everything is
dark-sodark pft so dark! God help me! God
y n ie 1” Thank the Lord for that last ut
begtoto“°m You have begun thaJUall to pray, and when
* h.aveu
flvinir liis wav and (rod steps in and beats
back the hounds of temptation into the ken
jV ar L? j i )ear h something fall. What was
^pfold f k A qr q n f the fence around Sown® the
The shq.herd 1 leta ttiem
and the , hunted . . sheep . of ,.. the mountain . . bound , .
in; some of them, their fleece torn with .he
the dogs; but bounding m. 1 hank God 1
10 th 0r sheep 1 h * v * whioh 0X9 not U
* old . B
-
Why Victoria Dislikes Gladstone.
The queen’s dislike of the G. O. M.
dates from 1808, and thereby the hangs discs- a
very pretty tale. The bill for
f„hli«hmcnt of the Irish church havina
passed , through , . parliament ,- , only „.i„ required
the sovereign s mandate to become law.
It chanced that Mr. Gladstone repaired
to Windsor on the day that the bill was
forwarded for signature and was admit
^Ukno^her principle Sfcs^w^ersfto of the bill and
^ *«•'*««# essential
strenuously opposed •» to the destruction ^°™, oi
the Irish church. She expressed this
much to Mr. Gladstone, and, as the
U. thought showed ereat reluc
to «« wa
In his eagerness Mr. Gladstone blurted
out ’ “But, madam, you must sign.” The
que £is»«ion, CD flushed, and rejoined di,ou with marked
-Sir. w.„,i
needless to say tnat tnc queen sui
marily brought the audience to a close,
and j n a few curt words dismissed hei
m -jme minister and bade him learn better
made and pretense si r i "? of concealing t- her r™ pci- ,!
gonal antipathy to the G. O. M.— St.
8tephm?t y Gazette.
Absence uf Hind
| 1 ‘ I
|n ffslP yXj *f
J” 'L.
1 ■■ ~ ' “
iufivBl /*y' WiiKMEfiWta
t
1 .
topJvV/ 1 !.
WffifM Imwk m* ’■
V&fy'/jM&f/inm
•y hm/mM IWMmlM
_
-
- MW~WL WUL
- ---/fefji / if/
The man who thinks he has left hi#
watch at home, and takes it out of his
pocket to see if he has time to go back
and get it.
--------
A Happy Ending.
Bobby came into the house sobWng and
told his mother that Tommy White had
kl %^ ommy white mother, is giving a very him bad
boy,” said Bobby’s “You didn t kick a
large piece of cake.
him back, did you?”
^ ^
______
The largest library is the BibUotheque
National, in Pans, founded by Lorn#
XIV. It contains 1,400,000 volumes,
sa^ra’asrsrSCs & Ini SeUs. coltaclloo.'.nd
Tte
engraving# exceed 1,300,000, contained
^ volumes.
It isn . ,, t , because good „„^i advice !> is want. want
ing that many people “go wrong, but
because it is easier to “let ’er Blide” than
to uke the medicine.
CHILDREN’S COLUMN.
*I<y»her>« Face.
*T IWES E. REXFORD,
Three little boys- talked together
One sunny summer day,
And I leaned out of Mle window
To tsar what they had to say.
“The prettiest thing I ever saw,”
One of the little boys said,
“Was a bird in grandpa's garden.
All black said white and red.”
“The prettiest thing I ever saw,”
Said the second little lad,
“Was a pony at tho circus—
I wanted him: awful bad ."
“I think,” said the third little fellow,
With a grave and gentle grace,
“That'the prettiest thing in all the world
Is just my mother’s face.”
:
T»ie I#ittle Foxes Which Spoil the Vine*.
One little fox . “By , By. „ -tm II I
IS ana
you track him you come to his homo
Never.
Another little fox is “I Can’t.” You j
SX . J . ,. . -rSi-\r^ y .
little tning. I L/tin t by name. A n
does wonders.
A third little fox is “No Use in m Try«
mg.” . „ TT He has t. spoiled -1 J more vines • ana, ,
hindered the growth of more fruit than
worse-looking . ,
a enemy.
Al^grth little fox is “I Forgot.” He |
is very provoking; he is a great cheat; he
slips through your fingers like time; he
is seldom caught up with.
A fifth little fox is “Don’t Care.” Oh,
the mischief ho has done.
A Little Heroine.
Fairfax Payne is the pretty name of a
little heroine who lives at Monroe, N. C.
Some persons were exerting themselves
to establish an Episcopal church in that
town, and, while others were giving of
their means, little Fairfax had no money
to give, and all her little schemes for
raising money came to naught. She had
one possession, however—that was the
pride of her mother’s heart and the envy
of other , mother the town, and .
every m
! this tUc child determined to sacrifice in
. _
the good cause. It was her mass of gold
«“• which she *“ had “™“-“5 been led to believe would
u ^ worth n a goodly __»» sum -at the North,
The hair was cut oil and consigned to
lady . the North; AT ,, , but , unfortunate , , .
a in
i ly, ^ the “» silken tresses, ’ though b wondcr
full y beautiful, . had very little commercial ___
,
[ value, owing to the fact that not one
head in a thousand lias hair of exactly
that shade, aud $3 was the highest oiler
made by New York hair dealers for Fair
fax Payne’s sacrifice. The kind lady to
whom , the hair , . had , . , been consigned . , , had .
1 1 disappoint ‘ the child
such and it occurred -
with . a poor return,
to her to mako an appeal to other chil
* dre t th.tough Harper's Young People. A
| lished touching m that letter paper, from and the in iady a short was pub- time
gums by the young readers, ihis fund
was txpcnclca in : n fhc uie purchase puruiaso of oi a a com- com
tnumon setvice to De offered in Her own
—. un*. >«'«
golden hair, now transmuted into vessels
j 1 of ' anot her precious metal, ’ to the service
„
little pet of mine: and he is so curious a
thing to , nave « r [ t , .u . if j. wnro
not for his name, I don’t believe you
««•»*«>—*-»*i*.
One day in the early part of Novem
ber 88 t 1 Sat > J *i,„ 1 ,„; window, n f?,.w 1 T noticed noticed
>
lying on the piazza, a beautiful butterfly,
with l,i. Borgeou. -.Ing. ontep.cd. He
waa apparently stunned by the cold, as
he did not attempt tolly away when t 1
-went to nick 1 him up. I brought him
into the warm room, „ „„ when no j,. . on _ h D . •
came vetvlively.
HlS __ t body . , dark , , brown, covered j with
is
f. ne hairs which look like feathers when
put under a magnifying ... glass. n,.„ The
wings b show all the colors of the rainbow,
arranged , the . most , artistic .. .. manner.
ra
The wings themsulves are transparent,
to them by flue scales, which come
off The antenme which
grow from each side of
the head are black and white.
Although you all have seen probably
many butterflies as beautiful as my pet,
I don’t believe you ever watched one eat,
Dusty Wings alights on my finger and
clings to it as if he really loved me. I
then put a drop 0 f sugar in front of him.
Immediately a long trunk (it is hollow,
like an elephant’s) unwinds and feels
about until it finds the liquid, which
gradually disappears; and then Mr.
Dugty Wings 6 i 0 wly coils hia trunk
around and stows it away in a vc.tical
opening m the center of his hca“. The
trunk is co delicate that when it is coiled
^nctbadcmmgh, up it looks like a fine watch-spring. If
he lets me know
fey waving hi# trunk in the air The first
time I fed him, ne seemed shy and only
at e very little; now be is not at all
a{raid
r made him * house with nlentv of air
time o» > »ra> comet ol the mantle. I
do not to let him out veiy often to
fly about, as I am afraid he might be
8 p upon. 1 If I wear a flower he will
‘
crawl uo my dress . until »-i he comes to it it,
d thr ., , he wiu gtav showing that ho
has forgotten bis oil ,, ... life. St.
not
JKehctn.
% mm 3
. v Mm
W
r
- i
i ,
m W
IS ?*' 1
AURANTII
Moat of the which afflict mankind are origin
ally caused bf » disordered condition of (lit* LIVER.*
For nil complaints of this kind, such as Torpidity of’
tho Liver, lJiliowsimiH. Nf.Tvoiw» Dyapepaia, IndiKoi;-
tion Irroxulanty of the Bo.’rdH, Constipation, Flatu
HiS£
Bloody Flux, Chitto and Fever, Breskbono Fevat,
Exhaustion bofmv or aftei' Forms. Chronic I>iar
r h<va. Loh.< i>f Appotltr, H^dncbo, Foul Breath.
Imigularities incidental t o Foma las, Benrinc-down
sxumxfl^Aiuajui) for niidisws**
i a invaluable- it isnotai)«i»-v , « ^ .
but all cUsoaoc'sot'the LIVER,
W ill S?OMAPWa-ndEOWELS.
It changes tho oomplovimi- fw.u* a waxy, yellow
tinKt). to a ruddy, healthy color; Gn «tw?in>)y lemoves
llUVt s i 00 , uy spirits, l is«uiv,.f s*-fcEST al
tsratives and pu^d-i vTiirs
BLOOD, and is A VALUAlSILSi TONIC,
STADICER’Q AutKAKTi J
v \ir sale by »u DmgRisti i’t .w ax.oo p»r iKittio.
C. F. STAD1CE??, Proprietor,
'40 SO. FRONT ST.. PltJadnJ.pbia, Pa.
D. M. TARRY, Pm!. T. n. TARRY. Secy.
’? P <
TWO PERFECT MACHINES IN ONE. X* Sows any de¬
The Only Successful and Perfect Planter, y sired quantity
made to Plant both Cot¬ from 1 quart
ton and Corn. Si. to 3 bushels to
NO SPRINGS. tile aero.
i. They Cheap
NOT COMPLICATED. ©■ aro com¬
.Dc*i pared with other Plan¬
Any body anil can manage ters.
run it.
Plants Cotton Seed as S! aCSaV'r- DON’T buy until you
* \ this Machine.
Comes h orn the Gin. ssoe
Address— C SPRING CART CO •v
ItUSUVlLLE, IND.
MltS. N. DRUM CLARK,
No. 819 Broad St. AUG8TA, GA.
"lie
Wc are prepared to show a line of SPUING and SUMMER MLLLIMERY in great
variety and at lower prices than ever before.
HATS, BONNETS, FEATHERS, FLOWERS, LACES,
Antf all ^
J™tTMKNT rompt dtlivuy. is in active and successfuloperation. Ivtspictfully, ^ MliS. N. ilBUM CLAIiK.
m ttlHH! oBjJjajJ_ o">15u IBB mm m CD A. GOROUS HEA S3
Thouwmd T»*iui A kAwUiti» *SrS2?3®SaSS imposition ot preiontjou «mdmn
1
montnmiwGr»r«Btorod“,oh«i\iih PASTILLES.\ by unoof 1 lopHEp thouatuid*, do« not Utorfcw
AKS7oaTc"ofor"I™asH"w"rOwS'oN HARRIS* SEMINAL
Bsp^aa»fe£»sstf!t __.....SSSfSSSS aaaaaaagagjaaiMg
SSS&feSSSs- Jour with statement of trouble, nna nAKKio Kc-nfitLi ■ ou., mF u UHtMisrs,
name yoar Hooore N. Tenth Street, 8T.
ill 1 A f L^: A(: ii A —! 11 h 11 -"' .'i 1 ‘!l , " r .! | tl h* 1 ’- 30Oq’ iLOTJIB, MO.
.. . l
"W_ Gr. IBIR-A-IDLIEC acT,
HL'Csri-a.on., Conn.,
BORIS MANUFACTURER,
J, g, 3gSCO'S,,Sjlii WltlStlklwi:illItitdllWl«S, Ml »i Mil Xliti
jW
.u3HHk\ ✓ . .. -Bt <s.,-».i*iS5ak.
A x —.
/. /A A J® wwtYffi///±
l/_ \' /'j
-
*
x
Ridiupf qualitiestinstirpfUised. No jar to tho f'-ot, Durable and wtylinh. I rice# r«asow
Hhipmenta singly or by carload to all part# of tho United States.
KcHpoiinibio ARent wanted in ovory town. Send for Prico List aud dcscrqitivo Catalogue.
C'orreHpond^nco oarnoatly solicited. liavo his with odvortiae*
N. Ji Kvory person acting an Agent for 'our onn, will name
incut of WaR HiH advertised in tho leading paper of tho county or town where Agent roBhtoHi
gratiw for nix months.
(jioowin’s Cocoa-Nut Oil Cream.
THE MOST PERFECT IIAHi-DUESSLNG IN USE.
It keeps your hair from lulling out. It promotes the hair growth, and
prevents flan ruff, keeps the rcalp clean, makes and the will
whiskers glossy, restores hair to its natural color, grow
hair on bald beads.
Samtle Bottle 25 Cents. It eqci.au Size 50 Cents.
J. II. GOODWIN, Proprietor,
o Weslern Laboratory, Cincinnati,Ohio.
__
“
I 1 I A 9 ffV ■ 1 ^ CJ R ■■■■■■if ■ lift Hfc R HB ABB H ■
■■ 111II I I |l HI ||f \ % E |J I III |l 5 M ft NEIII li || V I ML 1 ^
U | 11 ■ V V 11 ■■ O W OT I 81 !■ L
^ ^ p ■ IhIHhB A ■ fl ■ B Ok ffll I «. *V
# VI ^ 1 | I M !■ I I 111 Ilf i ^IH W M I I N
j LH U ■ H ■ B ■ B B22 HI H V r ^
a 6o,. ^
Kk PAR^IINV"" A 1% A & S ^ I MAKE P 3 11 I fl I K
|H II U ** c * I.L L
V I# U SfJOJ; V
gj- . r™ wwotthteqtime. iim^miVvS hlet or of
«ton.
potraer 5Sr. <, SdhWy~a n iiT5«?otl5yB P H 9 H If t Hi B I M B AM—m mike heml
Mntr itM. i?n.o« n e|||l |||| ■ L U Ba HlAT B|l % B fll W SuSSSUSofSme. - » *
•trictly Si*othSr any «ri«iyam o a mediciri* f d.cin-u>|H| iti.|f | |*| M |^ | |1 Bib L IW I ■ IJ Bflfl hi I | fl
SS$J52™E. be tiven with food f r e, or *r,t by m»u ror it waura»u»;^ ai-eu^jur-usM bo.l a joiumOa tm i<Jo,. by
~
^THE LlfiHT RUHNIMS^
& *J|x
At %
tiM JMsL
I -j
%
SEWING-MACHINE
HAS NO EQUAL
PERFECT SATISFACTION
fts Home Sewinc late Co.
—ORAMQE, MASS.—
30 Union Square, N, V, Chicago, III St. Louis, So.
i Atlanta, Ga. Dallas; Tex. San Francltco, Cal.
FO W SALE B V
O ORE>,
m
Str/D FOR CATALOGOCS