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DR. TALMAGE’S SERMON.
_ ;
, GOOD „„„„ AND EVIL
COME BACK”
(Preached at The Ilsmptons, Long Island.)
T i.Tr i-He ”_£aiahxL^:teth that sitteth noon upon the tne circle circle
of the earth
Whfie y anithmsands et people thought that the world
was fat of years before they
found out that it was round, Isaiah, in mv
text, intimated the shape of it. God sitting
upon t£ the circle of the earth. The most beau
u l figure iuall geometry is the circle. God
made th * universe on the plan of a circle
i'here are in the natural world straight lines,
angles, paiallelogrames, diagonals, quad- God's
rangles; but those evidently’ are not
.favorite-. Almost everywhere where you
find bim geometrizing, you find the circle
dominant, and if not the circle, then the
curve, which is a circle that died young. If
it had lived long enough it would have been
a full orb, a periphery. An ellipse is a circle
pres ed only a little too hard at the sides,
Giant's Causeway in Ireland shows what God
■thinks of mathematics. There are over lio.OOt
columns of rocks—octagonal, hexagonal, been
pentagonal. These rocks seem to have
made uy rule and by compass. Every artist make
has his molding room where he may
fifty shapes, but he chooses one shape as that pre
ferable to all the others. I will not say
the Giant’s Causeway was the world’s mold
ing room, but I do say, out of a meat many
figures Gol se ms to m e 1
SooM^rththe
moon in a circle, the sun iu a circle, the uni
verse iu a circle and the throne of God the
centre of that circle.
IVben men build churches, they Architect ought and to
imitate the idea of the great
put the audience in a circle, knowing that the
tides of emotion roll more easily that way
than in straight lines. Six thousand years
ago God fluug this world out of his right
hand: hedid notthrow it out in a straight
line, hut curvilinear, with a leash of love
holding it so as to bring it back again. The
world started from his hand pure and edenic.
It has teen rolling on through regions it will of
moral ice only and knows; distemper. but How will long in due time
roll God it
make complete circuit, aud come back to the
place where it started—the hand of God—
pure and edenic.
Why The is history it that of the the shipping*} world j^>es iu day a circle, is im
a our
proving so rapidly? it is because men are
imitating the old model of Noah s Ark. A
ship carpenter gives that as his opinion. that Al
though so mu?h derided by small wits,
ship of Noah's time beat the Etruria aud the
Germanic, of which we boast so much,
Where is the ship on the sea to-day that!
could outride a deluge in which the heavens !
and the earth were wrecked, landing all tho
paesengers in safety, two of each kind of:
living creatures, thousands of species. To-:
mology will go on with its achievements
until after many centuries the world I
will have plums aud pears gardening equal to
the paradisai al. The art of will
grow for centuries, aud, after have the Downings their
and Mitchells of the world done
best, in the far future the art of gardening
will come up to the arborescence of the year
one. If the makers of colored glass go ou im
proving, they may in some centuries bo ablo
to make something equal to the east window
of York Minster, which was built iu LKH).
shall make the complete circuit and come up
to the skill of those very men. If the world
continues to improve m masonry we shall
have afterawhile, perhaps after the advance
of centuries, mortar equal to that which I
saw in the wall of an exhumed Romaus, Euglish
city, built in the time of the 1,(100
years ago-that mortar to-day is as
good as the day in which it was made,having I
outlastod the brick aud the stone. say,
after hundreds of years masonry may al
vance to that point. If the world stands long
enough, we may have a city as large as they
had in old times, Babylon, five times the size
of London. You go into the potteries of , !
England, aud you find style them *’ making cups 4
-»“<* vasesneftaa-the. ft of ------ —
> -a*-*-exhumed from . ’ihe *
not going back. Oh, no! but it is swinging
in a circle, and will come back to the styles
of pottery kna'vn so long ago as the days of
ing Pompeii. until it The makes world must complete keep circuit. on progress- The
the
curve is in the right direction. The curve
will keep on until it be comes a circle.
Well, now, my friends, what is true in the
material universe is true in God s moral gov
eminent aud spiritual arrangement. That is
the meaning of Ezekiel’s wheel. All com
mentations a gree in saying that the wheel
means God’s Providence. But a wheel is of
no use utilesi it turns, and if it turns it turns
around, and if it turns around it moves in a
circle. What then? Are we parts of a great
iron machine whirled around whether we
will or not, the victims of inexorable fate!
No! So far from that, I shall show you that
we ourselves start the circle of good or bad
actions, and that it will surely come around
again to us unless, by divine bad interven- good
tion, it be hindered. Those or
actions may make the circuit of many
years; but come back to us they
will, as the certainly earth. as that God sits on the cir
cle of Jezebel, the worst woman
of the Bible, slew While Naboth because she wanted
his vineyard. the dogs were eating
the body of Naboth, Elisha, the prophet, put
down his compass, and marked a circle from
those dogs clear around to the dogs that
should eat the body of Jezebel, the murderess,
“Impossible happen.” !” the people said, “that will
never Who is that flung out of
the palace window 1 Jezebel. A few hours
after they come around, hoping to bury her.
They the find 0 "ly the palms of her hands and
skull. The dogs that devoured Jezebel
Mid the dogs that devoured Naboth ! Oh,
what a swift, what an awful circuit 1
But it is sometimes the case that this circle
sweeps through a century, or through many the
centuries. The world started with a
ocracy for government; that is, God was the
President and Emperor of the world. People
got tired of a theo racy. They said: “We
don’t want God directly interfering with tiie
affairs of the world; give us a monarchy.”
The world had a monarchy. From a inon
archy it is going to have a limited mon
archy. After a while the limited monarchy
will be given up, and the Republican form
of government will Vte everywhere dominant
and re o. m ed. Then the world will get
and tired of the republican form which of government, is
it will have an anarchy, no gov
era cent at all And then, all nations, find
mg out that man is not capable of ngh eouslv
governing man, will cry out again for the
ocracy, aud sav: "Let God come back and
condu t tho affairs of the world.” Every
licanism, step—-monarchy, limited monarchy. Repub- be
tween he anarchy, only different the steps last the
I lirst theocracy the and ciieleof the
ocra y, or segments of great
earth on wh.ch God sits.
But d* not become impatient because you
cannot see the curve of events, and there lore I
oon lude that God’s Government is going to
breai down, H story tells us that in the
ma .ing o the pyramids it took 2,000 men
two years to drag one great stone from the
quarry aud put it into the pyramids. Well,
now, if men, short lived, can afford to work
so slow v as t hat, annot God,in the building
of the eternities,a .ordto wait: What though
Godshoud take Iff, 00<J years to draw a cir
de! Shall we akc our little watch, whi h
down we ha e to win hold : up it eve beside y night the lest clock it run of
and up
eternal ages! If, according to the Bible, a
th us ind years are in God's sight as one day,
then, a< cor I ng t; that calculation, thefi,0U0
years of th world's e listen -e has been only
to Gol as fro n Monday cai to Saturday. 1
But it s ouen the that the rebound is
quicker-aid t ie circle is soon r co npleted.
You resdve tha* you will do what goo 1 you
can. in one weoc you put a word of counsel
in the heart of a 8 ibbath-sehool child. During
that sa i.e wees you give a letter of intro u -
ti <n to a voung man struggling in business.
During the same week yoi make an ex horta- !
tion in a prayer m eting. It is all gone; you I
will never h-ar of it, perhaps, you thrnk. A
few years after a roan emit- un to yon and
says: “You don’t know me, do you:” You
say: “No. I don’t re nember ever t> have
Sabbath-school seen vou. ’ “Why,” class he says. which “ was yon in were the ‘
over
the teacher. One .Sunday you invited me to
Christ. I accepted the offer. You see “Yes.” that
church with the two towers yonder?’’ I
y -u sav. He ray 3 : ’‘That is where
preach.” ertior'g house? Or: "Do is" you see I live.” that Gov
That where One
day a mau comes to you aud says: “Good
morning.” You look at him and say: “Why,
you have the advantage of me;* I cannot
pla.-eyou.” Hesays: “Don’t you remember, introduc
thirty ^ years youn^g ago, giving a letter of of
tion man-a letter introduction
to a prominent merchant!” “Yes, yes, I do.”
He says: “1 am the mau. That was my first
step toward a fortune; but I havo retired
from business now, and am giving my time
to philanthropies and public interests. Come Or j
ur> to my country place and see me.” to in¬ a
mau comes to you and says: “I want
troduce myself to you. I went into a prayer j
meeting some years ago. I sat back by the |
door. "You arose to make an exhortation.
That talk changed the course of my life, an 1. 1
if I ever get to heaven, under God. 1 will
owe my “salvation to you.” Tu only ten.
twenty or thirty years, the circle swept out
and swept back again to your own grateful I
heart. But sometimes it is a wider circle
and does not return for a great while. I saw
a hill of expenses for burning Latimer and
Ridiev. The bill of expenses says.
One load of fir fagots........... . 3s. Id. i
Cartage Item, of four leads of wood... . 2s. 0d. i
a post.................... . ls, ‘fd.
Item, two chains.............. staples....!.........’ . 3s. -id.
Item, two . Os. I'd.
Item, four laborers. ... . 2s. Sd. i
That was oheap five, considering all the
c i rcumsta ncex: but it ] ; j n d!ed a fight which
shone all around the world; aud around the
martyr spirit; aud out from that burning of
Latimer and Ridley rolled the circle, wider
and wider, starting other circles, convolut
ing, overrunning, heaven—a circle, circumscribing, overarch
iDg all good
But what is true of the is just as true
of the bad. You utter a slander against your
neighbor. It has gone forth from your teeth,
It will never come back, you think. You
have done the mau all the mischief you can.
You rejoice to see him wince. Y oil say:
“Didn’t I give it to him?” That word has
gone out, that slanderous word,on its poison
ous and blasted way. You think it vvill
never do you any harm; but I am watching
that word, and I see it and beginning it is aiming to curve,
and it curves around, at
your heart- You had better dodge it! bosom, You
cannot dodge it. It rolls into your
and after it rolls in a word of an old book,
which says: “With what measure yo mete,
it small be measured to you again.”
You maltreat an aged parent. You br
grudge him the room in your house. You
are impatient of his whimsicalities and gar
rulity. It makes you mad to hear him tell
the same storv twice. You give food lie
cannot masticate. You wish he were away.
You wonder if he is going to live forever.
He will be gone very soon. His steps are
shorter and shorter. He is going to stop.
But God has an account to settle with you
on that subject. After a while your eye will
be dim and your gait will halt, and the sound
of the grinding will be low, and you will tell
the same story twice, and your children will
wonder if you are going to live forever, and
wonder if you will never be taken away.
They called you "Father” ouce; now they
call you "the old man." If you live a few
years longer they will call you “the old
chap.” What are those rough words with
which your children are accosting you! They
al0 tho echo of tho very words you use 1
j n the ear of your old father forty years
jaws ache as you surrender tho attempt!
perhaps it may" be the his gristle breakfast which forty you gave
to your father for years
ago. £w A gentleman passing along the street
s a son dragging his father iuto the street
by the hair of his head. The gentleman,out- about to
raged at this brutal conduct, was
punish the offender, when the old man arose
and said: “Don't hurt him; it’s all right;
forty veal's ago this morning I dragge 1 out
my father by the hair of the head.” It is a
circle. My lather lived into the eighties,and he said
he had a very wide experience, and
that maltreatment of parents sfrw was always
punished iu this world. Other may lie
a <i iourned to the next v.o ~‘ J v ut maltreat
,.»«*• n* .- - '-fox--' ’ ,.. P -ia
OR'what ijuo „,»cJe stupendous «u.-8 quic. thought that th.;
a
good and the evil we start come back to u->.
Do you know that the judgment day will
be only the points at which the circles join,
the good and the bad we have done coming
back to us, unless divine intervention hinder
—coming back to us welcome of delight or
curse of condemnation?
Oh! I would like to see Paul, the invalid
missionary, at the moment when his influence
comes to full orb—his influence rolling out
; through Antioch, through Gyp through rus > through Athens,
Ly.stru, through Corinth, through
through Asia, through Europe, through
America, through the first century,
five centuries, through twenty centuries,
through all the succeeding centuries, through
earth, through heaven, and, at last, the wave
Q f influence having made full circuit strikes
his great soul! Uh, then I would like to see
him! No one can toll tho wide sweep of the
circle of his influence, isave tho One who is
seated on tho circle of the earth. I should
not want to seethe countenance of Voltaire
w fi e n his influence comes t > lull orb. When
the fatal hemorrhage seized him at eighty
three years of ago his influence did not cease,
The mod brilliant man of his century, he had
use ,l all his faculties for assaulting Chris
tianity: his bal influence widening through
France, widening out through Germany, widening
widening through all Europe, 101
through America, widening through died, the widen
years that have gone by since he
j n g through earth, widening through hall,
nn ti! at last the accumulated influence of his
bad life in fierv surge of omnipotent wrath
will beat against his destroyed spirit, aud the at
that moment it will be enough to make white
black hair of eternal darkness turn
with the horror. No one can tell how that
bad man’s influence girdled the earth, save
the One who is seat'd on tho circle of tho
earth—the Lord Almighty, in this audience,
“Well, now,’ say peoplo glad theory,
“this, in some respects, is a very
and in others a verv sad one; we would like
to have all the goed we have done all the come sins back j
to us, but the thought that back we
have ever committed will come to us i
fills us with affright.” My brother, i have to
tell you God can break that circle, and will
do so at your call, lean bring twenty God, pas- for
sages of scripture to prove that when
ChEst’s sake, forgives a rnan, the sins of his
past life never come back. The wheel may
roll on aud roll on, hut you can take your
position behind the cross ant the wheel
strikes the cross and it is shattered for
aver. The sins fly off from the circle into the
oerpendicular, falling at right angles Forgiven) into
Complete oblivion. Forgiven!
xhe meanest thing a man can do is-, alter
some difficulty has been settled, to bring it
up again, and God will not b-so m-au as that.
God s memory is mighty enough to hold all
the events of the ages, but there is one thing be
that is sure to slip Ins memory, one thing
is sure to forget, and that is pardoned trans
gression. How do I know it! 1 will prove
- Their sms and their ini juities will I re
member no more.” Conic into that stale this
m rning, my dear brother my dear sister.
“[Jessed is the one whose traugressions are
forgiven.” the mistake of thinking
But do not make
that this doctrine of the circle stops with this
h e: it rolls on through hean-n. You might
2bout quote in opposition to me what St. John says
the city of heaven. He sa s it “Jfath
four s uare.’’ That does seem to militate
again t this idea: b it you know there i3
many a square house that has a family circle
facing .ach other, and in a circle moving,
a id 1 can prove that this is "I so heard in regard voice to
heaven. St John says: a
of many angels round about the throne,
and the beasts an i the elders.” And,
a ain he savs: “There was a rainbow round
about the throne.” The two forcer instat es
a cir -le; ih; last ei her a circle or a semi
cir le. The seats fa ing each other, the
angels facing each other, the men facing
ea h other. Heaven an am pi theatre of glory. and
Cir u.uferenceof yatrianh, and prophet,
a .ostie. Circumference of Scotch co-enant
ert and Theban legion, and Alhigenses. C r
cumferen e of the goo<l of all ages. Per.ph
ery of splendor, unimagined and indesCTiba
ble. A circle! A circle!
But every circumference must have a cen
tre, circumference! aud what is the centre all of the this glory. heavenly His
Christ His
all the praise His all the crowns. All
heaven wreathe 1 into a garland round about
Him. Tak • oft the imperial sandal from
His foot, and behold the scar of the spike, brow,
Lift the coronet of dominion from His
aud see whore was the laceration of the
briars. Como closer, all heaven. Narrow
the circle around His great heart. O Christ,
the Saviour! O Christ, the man! O Christ seated
the God! Keep of thy throne forever
on the circle the earth, seated on the circle
01 Heaven I
“On Christ, the solid rock, I stand;
All other ground is shifting sand.”
A Dudish Huntsman of the Alps.
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—Fliegende E'aetter.
. V-r " eel lent \ nnef * ite
have i our appetite is good enough. ion
no reason to complain in the matter
0 j fi ea ] t fi Vnii Evereat
,. N are correct’’rnnlied “ V Ever,
cat. , <, T i , have a recipe, . he added; IS ., a Sura
thing every Recipe? time.” it?”
“lley? What is
“H—’m ' Micrht tell you Had to
P a y doctor . . tor it mV myself. self PonflH ( onlldontial, ontinl
mind. and Evcreat leaned over and
whisper impressively in his friend’s ear:
“Two thin< with m. Make it a rule never to
eat ... them with dinner a inner, Conseouence consequence, al- ai
ways sure ot a good appetite. his
Evcreat hesitated, tilted back in
chair,and cautiously scanned his friend's
f(r “whether o Prm imrlv debatino- with him
self o/not to divulge his rec
tpe. “Well—what—what is it don't
vou eat
w ith your dinner?” inquired that gentle
somewhat somewhat nonplussed. normlussed
Evcreat leaned forward and .
again
whispered slowly and impressively in his
friend’s ear: “Breakfast and supper,
1 you b creenhorn V’—Lvn,i Union..
- — -----
The Little Brother.
’
^ -
\
Tty, V * . V
‘O-n 2
When your sweetheart’s little lirotlier
Too much freedom is allowed,
And proves that two is company
And three an awful crowd;
You had better turn attention
To the candy you have bought,
Or he’ll very likely mention
More conjectures than ho ought.
For he’ll blab upon his sister,
As experience will show;
And betray the times you kissed her
When you thought he didn’t know.
So the bribing sweets mast tickle
This ubiquitous young lad,
Or he ll put you iu a pickle
With your Ann Eliza’s dad.
—Texas Siftings.
Unappreciated.
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Whiskisoke— J>y J . ove ,, that . trapeze ,
-
»
act was wonderful! It fairly > took my
breath awav to think of it.”
( j oe , not anrircciate the
! f , , };I Say, old , , man
pm ” * «
just think of it to oblige me; will you?"
— Ilambler.
--------—--------
So _ III ft Resemblance.
Dnmly— , liW vmij | are the Vu. women’s women s hat* fiat
this - ason like chui h steeples?
Smartui: sarca.sticallyj—“I really
don tknow .“
n . L.f.d , invfnllvv_“Rw-mao tbev ^ ara
'
r’-gb. bee. (feebly)— ‘Oh. —Fret Pre&t*
Smartua
--*
M MOST n «r unvnnt anyone ran can make make hhindera Dtunaers, L-il D
few people try to make the best of then
after they have.
I 1b the Santh.
A little gray «wallow,
I fled to the vales
Of the nightingales,
And th* woods of Apollo.
Behind me lie the sheer white cliffs, the hoi
, low
GUreen waves that break at home, the
northern gales,
Tbe misty skies,the homesteads in thedale—
For all my home is far and cannot follow.
I O nightingale voices,
O lemons in flower,
O branches of laurel!
are all here; but, ah, not here my
choice is!
Fain would I pluck one pink-veined bloom of
eorrel,
°1 hear tha wrens build —Magazine in a hazel bower. of Art.
HUMOROUS.
The test butter is the goat.
A rou h drawing—A sluggor pulling a
cart.
grinders • j » motto aa l m lurn aDOUu l ^.. 4 - IS
play
A man may have no car for music, yet ;
havo a mind to play, 1 !
1
T An unavoidable breach of the piece;
* ■
The stock of a gun.
_„|Jupenor O. . Court—Going „ . _ . it .. sweet . on ono
of the dear creatures worth $100,000.
You can never depend upon proverbs.
One says, “Sileuco is golden”; another,
“Money talks.”
“Mamma,” cried a five-year old girl,
“I started to make my doll a bonnet, and
it’s come out a pair of pants.”
“Look here, Judge,” said the burglar,
“I ain’t so bad as you think I am. Only
give me time and I’ll reform.” And the
Judge gave him iifteon years.
A mathematical calculation lias shown
that if the muscles of a man were rel- j
atively as strong as those of a flea ho
could throw a book agent two miles.
“Mercy I" exclaimed Mrs. Homespun,
when she read in tho paper that Jay
Gould made ten cents every time the
clock ticked; “I should think lin’d bo
worried to death for fear the clock would
run down.”
Simmer’s Sharper 8 Outwitted UulWIUOU.
There is a sharper’s game which has
„|„ Pa (1 ,i u,,,,,!-,,.! J —
‘ ' t
and as the turning point is avarice the
game works forty-nine times where it
fails once. Two sharpers set out a few
w a „„„ =° 10 P 1Il 7 u lc „„ on a „ \\r >vayne a „ nn county
farmer. One of them came along * one
day , and wanted . , to . , buy the ... farm. As tho ..
farmer wanted to sell it was quite easy to
strike a bargain. Ike price was to be
f lOOu in cash, and the man handed over
to . . , bargain. Within two
on
.-s a see. "er came along and
war.sU it . baa
uo
.A... ... He foimd
u cam o np
are* he .ain, give $8,000 for the
pla. s/ __
*• xe idea was, of course, that the
fair < terviAukibe awful sick of his first
sale ::m ieek to buy the man oft. It
would release f/iy him to oiler tho man $1,600
to him.
Th ! second stranger was only out of
J t when tho first ono turned up again.
His mouth watered over the prospect,
but n it for long. Tho farmer explained
th , .0 hud been ofiered $2,800 more,
and added:
“But I don’t care for money. The
$4,000 is enough for me, and its all the
old farm is worth. When you arc ready
to pay the balance we ’ll make out the
papers.”
Tho purchaser offered to release him
for $1000—$700-$500—$300, but the
farmer didn’t want to be released. He
hung to tho bargain-money, and bo’s got
it yet, while the pair of sharpers rave
and gnash their teeth every time they
think of tho thickness ol his skull.—
Detroit Free Prett.
Indian Fishing Spears.
The fishing spears used by the Piute
Indians are of peculiar construction.
Into the end of a pole or shaft from
twelve to fifteen feet in length is insert
ed a piece of iron or steel wire about as
thick as an ordinary lead pencil and
about ten inches long; the end of this
■wire is made quito sharp. Another piece
of wire about two inches long forms the
barb. One end of this short
piece Of Wire is made , very
sharp. 1 It is then laid upon the point of
tn6 long wire . and tightly , lashed , , with a
wlece piece of ot witched pitched twine twine, In in the tuti centre centre of d
the piece of short wire is fastened a
string over a foot in length, h 7. which is
made fast to tho .. shaft . .. of , the spear,
When a fish Ls struck the 1 point of the :
entirely .. . through . its , body, _
spear passes
In withdrawing a it the short wire or barb
pulls of, and, turning . the fish
crosswise,
is securely fastened and hangs dangling b °
to the , handle . , of the spear.
-
- -
n * __ iitnrti All Things * *
Clara.—Do J you remember , Jane Crud- _ .
He, Who went to school . , with wnm ug? usf
Dora.—Tho girl with the cat-eyes and
J"*** 08 , 1
'
“Yes."
“Rirr Big mnnthf" mouthr
“Yes.”
,, No v Chin p; no iorencao, r( rca ,d hair nair and anu
Complexion ! bke half-baked brick?
a
; utk. same " ”
4 ‘I should think I did. What a gawk
v. was * Heard “ of her latelv?” '
she’s the . American
«.y es; reigning
rie.iuty in i p.rls this week - - ”_ Chicago y i
Mtut,
% m s>
Si
■W \ 3.
I Iffl Im
AURANIII
Most of thodisoases which afflict mankind arc origin¬
ally caused by a disordered condit ion of 1 hi* LIVER.
For all complaints of this kind, such as Torpidity of
the Liver, Biliousness, Nervous Dyspepsia, Indiges¬
tion, Irregularity of the B incIh, Const ipntion. Flatu¬
lency, Eructations and Burning of the Stomach
(sometimes called Heartburn), Miasma, Malaria,
Bloody Flux, Chills ami Fever. Breakbono Fever,
Exhaustion before or after Fevers, Chronic Diar
rheoa. Loss of Appetite, Headache, Foul Breath,
Irregularities incidental to Females. Be.uinR-dnwn
STftOIG ER’S AURA WTil
“ ' nva,uabte - «“>'oxa P ^ov f nv„ii ( h W ^,
u t (f'lSOBC? mi dlsoaseo«f Wv* LIVER,
i v 111 STOMACH ami POW ELS.
---------
It, changes , the emnplexion , . , fr in a iv.-ixr.
tin*.,t»amaay. hc.Uh>-.-■• i.t ” :l ”“*■ ‘
low, gloomy spmtft. It m mu; "l Ill’- otic l A,.
tcratives arm purifserk of thc
BLOOD, ana A VALUABLE TONIC.
STADSCER’S AUtf?AP!,TlS
v or pale by all Druggists. Price. *51 .OC per bottlu.
C. F.STADSGER, Propneior,
140 SO. FRONT ST.,. Phll^dnlphln, Pa.
I). M. PARKY, Prrst. T. n. PARIiY, .S'ccy.
PARRY'S PATENT COTTON k CORN PLANTER.
TWO PERFECT MACHINES IN ONE. ® OW!i any ‘h 1 -
Tho Only Successful and Perfect Planter, '' ' sired quantity
made to Plant both Cot¬ from I quart
ton and Corn. to 3 busliels to
SPRINGS. the acre.
NO They are Cheap com¬
NOT COMPLICATED. meis pared with other Plan¬
Any body can manage Hi ters.
and run it. lx'
Hants Cotton Seed as it . \ DON’T buy until you
s-- yA—see tliis Machine.
Comes from the Gin,
Address— C SPRING CART CO
RUSIIVILLE, IND.
MRS. N. DRUM CLARK,
No. 810 Broad St., AUGSTA, GA.
i. i Li liMIs XASiWi t It %
We are prepared to show a line of SPRING and SUMMER MILLIMKRT in great
variety and at lower prices than ever before.
HATS, BONNETS, FEATHERS, FLOWERS, LACES,
A nd ali tin Novelt ies of the scarson. A large stock In now. Cali early and get a
choice. Wt- ine filling orders from our new stock daily, Our DRESS MAKING
DEPARTMENT is in active and successful operation. Put In vour orders early for
hiSmpt delivery.* ' Respectfully, MRS-N. BRUM CLARR.
PWwi?, MEN ON s k Avoid GOROUS tho bnpuHltlon ot HEA pruUuitiouii rtando
JL HinBl^t P^iilcfl ‘,Um«?°T»ko for these troubles, and aM^Qiia«k«.
toboalih 5 ^CSKSSRS by of 5 J ICUHRIl thousands, » STOE does Rimw/T not UliUllA. intarfbr*
mentnnd wer*reHtored pastilles.n use with attention to bunincM, or cauM pain
F ’ seminal W or Inconvenience in nay way. Fotindud
harri A Radical 8 Cure for Norvoan Debility. Organic ’ ppron scientlflc medical prlnel|>les. Hy dimat
WookneHsandPhysloal Decay in Young or Mid L. OllC- ’ajpplicutionto nfiucncnis fult the without sent ofdisease doluy. The Its natural «|>eallt
dlo A god Mon. To ate <1 for Eight Years in mn ..ilons of tho human organism restored. The
fchoi sssssr ting elements of life are given back, the natlewl
rful aud rapid)y gai un both straugth and hearth
|M Tmhc?M d f 1 Hulf"r from t'!m nmnV oiSrod 1 TREATMENT.—Ono Month, 13. Two Moi. $5. Throo, t7
w ho m»m»
brought sssss:ssssss about by Indisoretion ( Exposure, Ovor-Broln ------
"w-Maisaisac
"W". Gr. BB-A.DLE x 3
ihvCericLen., Conan..,
BOLE MANUFACTURER,
H. H, RICE £ CO'S., Colid Comfort Euckboard: and Spindle Wagons, single and double seated
TA V ^
Vn
Iff'lin* qualities unsurpassed. No Jir to the fnot, I)ur»hle and stylish. Price* reaaow
aY>l<% BhipmoufcH Kingly or by carlo*! to all partw of th« United States.
ItcRponHiblo Af(ent wantod in every town. Send for Price J^int and descriptive Catalogue.
CorreBiiondence oarneafcly Holicited. u
N. J{ Kvery person acting a h Agent for our Wagons, will have hid name with advertm*.
incut of Wagons advertised iu tho leading paper of the county or town whero Agent reaulaa,
gratia for hix mon the.
Ooowin’s Cocoa-Nut Oil Cream.
\?s PERFECT IIAIU-DKESSING IN USE.
TllK MOST
It keeps your hair from fulling out. It promotes the growth, and
prevents dan ruff, keeps the scalp clean, makes the hair
whiskers glossv, restores hair to its natural color, ami will grow
hair on bald heads.
Sample Bottle 25 Onts. Rkoui-ak Size 50 Cents.
B J. II. GOODWIN, Proprietor,
y Wesfcrn Laboratory. Cincinnati,Ohio.
;
9
LINIMENT
PARSONS’.,, NEW. MAKE BICH
ailBBIM* cent pure ie wo rated. ana It cures ena. aod
v^THE LlfiHT RUNNIBO^
* >
& o
0
4> B
V'
-M
<(V * W
HAS NO EQUAL.
PERFEC T SA T/SFACT/ON
Net Hcriie SowiBi lacMns Co.
—CRANQE, MASS.—
30 Vjr.lou Square, !i Y. Chicago, 111, St. Louis, Mo.
Atlanta. Ga. Dallas, Tex, San Francisco, Cal.
I 7'~o3i SAtfc B Y
1