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BRILLIANT SERMON
BY REV. T. IH R ITT TAI.M.tOF., D.
V., OF BROOKLYN, N, Y.
The Moral Infliionrn of Nowspapevs—liilii.
ralioniil Power—Tlie lle.eiiliut Grace
ol Christ—Inauiiiiale Ueliaion.
I'ttXT: '‘An,I the mm of the city said unto
Elisha: this Behold, U I pixty thee, the Lord situation sceth; but of
city pleasmt, as my the ground barren.
the water is naught, and
And hr said; Briny vie a new cruse, and
put salt therein. And they brought it to him.
Aud he trim t forth unlo the spring of the
tenters, and cast the ..alt in theie. and .said:
Thus, said, the Lord, / lull's heated these
waters; there shall not be from thence any
mare death or t (H r n land. Sa the waters
vcrc, healed unto this d try.”—2 Kings ii.,
It is difficult to estimate how much of tha
prosperity and health ot n city arc dependent
upon good water. The tim.- when, through
well-laid pipes and trom safe reservoir, an
abundance of water from Croton, or Kiilgo-
wood, or Schuylkill celebrated is brought with into oration tho city and
is appropriately
pyrotechnic display. Thank do 1 everyday
l’or dear, bright., beautiful, sparkling water in
ua it .irons in tho shower, the or hydrant. tosses up the
fountain, or rushes out at
The City of Jericho, notwithstanding all
its physical and commercial advantages, was
lacking in this important element. There
whs enough water, but it was by diseased, and
Eli.-ha Hie people tire were prophet, crying out to the reason thereof. He
comes rescue.
sat s; "Go; me a new cruse; till it with salt
and bring it tome.” So the cruse of salt was
brought to the the prophet, general and I see him aud lo! walk¬ all
ing out impurities to through reservoir,
tlie depart, a supernatural
and divine inf.u neo. and the waters are
good and fresh and clear, and all the people
tlap their hands and lift up their faces in the
gladn beautiful, -ss. W ater for Jericho—clear, bright,
God given water!
At different t ines 1 have i>ointedouttoyou
the fountains of municipal corruption, and
till- morning I propose to show you what are
the means lor the rectification of those foun¬
tains. There arc four or live lands of salt
that have a cleansing tendency. So far as
God may help me, I shall bring a cruse ol
salt to tlie work, and empty it into the great
reservoir of municipal crime, sin, and shame,
ignorance In tin's work and abomination. of cities, I have
first cleansing is our for
to remark, that there a work tlie
broom aid shovel that nothing else can do.
There always hus been an intimate connection
between iniquity and dirt. The filthy parts
of tiie great cities ore always the most iniqui¬
tous pails. Tho gutters and tlie pavements
of the Fourth W ard, New York, illustrate
and symbolize the character of the people iu
the Fourth A Yard
T he first thing that a bad man does when
lie is converted is thoroughly to w ash him¬
self. There wore, this morning, on the way
to the different churches, thou amis of men ,n
proper appari 1 wh< before their conversion,
were uni it m tiicir ISabbatu fin When on
the Sabuath i see a man V.^ud un leanlv i‘ in his
dres-. my su..pi,-.,,.,s in iiis moral
ell. r: t. are .10 I. and they are alwavs I
laci 1 U! "i.'| l ion ! '?’ a ^
of ( i i u£Yas sul S
men rl.- r-and lak k five
ocean,-, and ail the wo.i J might to l« Wean cities',
Away, th n. with the dirt fro,, our
[bv 'i " p ./' :; :V h ;m t: n,Ta' lsa, i
ah 1 / '1 ?,'?“!}
re i . , , . , ( i„ always'lias
po/tiv. 1 tv. A liitiiy i I’itv y * ,4fc
" - - ■ « li W- a - ked city
Mm on,:, th.- up: -ril.,,; of the earth for
K Smmtabie n rh°e V arAUTaru 1 iirookiym^or y sua| Ul Iut 0t fo^ree la-it
dirt of the sU
no ...n, h i. no t mt^iy
11
n . .. i ..
Anoi'.. -l- '.'oicvi ti ve influenca that we would
bn,I,; to ’ -^Vris ofa great Its cities
inere fty of any r' 1 S ij w aionV of tl,e“ morel"
The ’lews’ < y who runs
w, th 0 : ■'! «n P-! -re u,d r h:s arm is a tre-
meu.>ORs loiv-e that cannot re ,mn«I
nor <:l-’\ati-d" J Th^hmn
citv is or Amcri-au’ d -railed
gry, all 1 -vmriiig miud must
susst
; ‘ lt 1 ‘i * 1 rests the iviifion-ibility of
- .''"rehte h'-uid
you meet 1”,-re'bo iiis
pain-r in l’O ’kef Wh-.t book h it vou
have in your Uun . YY’i-it, 1 . ■ iijvr is it
you ha>e in -o r ’v.-U-t: M.nistei-s may
mav in'- tref*!' ■ 1 "-JtVm’ ‘ P f "ihl 1: '.? 1 » sls
al , j thV . , , w u ,ii I ad
tha now-na cre of th ■ land and ai>
the. boo’ res Of ih- lm: i se. themselves
w^“kh’dT ti'.icVi.H , | .V'V: ! !V i-virei 1 -w t’S ot'.'mt'J'Tr a 1 b 11 .? 1 ! 1 0 ‘m d S 1 *
'
Fvorv uiVii'they , >f n,iv 8 « i
Ashing h. ’iso- ni:ike ihe earth
quake. i’Yoiufh m ;; 3 - mul to: th bless a thought the world, like
an iing,! of light to u t I TK
'.'iS °, 111
remt s* t^mri aii.im^ u
G o' 1 bv ' 1 v, omid noteut 1 dii - iv yttl1 *
veto 1 - ;l
I go 0.1 further an isay that we must de-
pen ! i. 0 i Uie school ior a great deal of cor-
: u-’l^;‘V T 1 "- m n?nft C , S
a; to“l„ive - --V ‘un m iiv'nas. u Urt
it can Hirer 1 hv^a-hmuled -d wimf Ic-
norm- is. he mother of
Th;i 1V one per , cat. of all the criminals of
S th fu W,to -
there" mitt!!-- tU «f‘ , 1 * ?X l .. 8 i . S ~- ^mitlaws^nnwi '/ ? r ' c 1>re ‘
are educated
Who, through thoir sliarpn-s- da of They in-
,™ C tLrflnr“Ti uwSi 1 . n » e “PI"? !' ou ?’ other
peo, 1 s: names, and their science in ingenious
liSrt&^V^ttelr'^d^f'^lriol well-cut 1, and dangling jewelry and
watches of appai’i eighteen karats, kid
and gloves,
They are refined, educated, magnificent vil-
rant as they are wicked! For the pr wf of
what I say, go into the prisons and peniteu-
tiaries, and look upon the men and women in-
carcorated. The dishonesty in the eye, the
low passion in the lij>, are not ©ore conspicu-
Ig’ionmt'ria^^^Tafwlys classes. Demagogues thrm
marshal Thcv
are helmless, and are driven before th© gale.
tterity^^Taftho^UeMv^inT
aj >. ireciate the a-.vf ul st atisti, s that while years
ago in this count ry there was set apari, forty-
eight millionsof acres for s,hool nurro hundred cs
there are now in New England one
an, 1 ninetv-one thousand people w o can
^ Hundred xrsi and £” mxsti&isi thousand
Krits 1 forty-one writ hile ,i" ,,1C wiio United can
tfr nor f’ 7
rta-reeraM 1 confound anvmcfwboC^hto Xo ofthto
Go and IPs countrv. .v vtew
fact, lam in favoY of compulsory educa-
tiq.i. When parents are so bestial iLi^tb^Jtha as to neglect
with a strong* ha! id, ft the
gentle hand,ought to lead these little ones into
tlie light of iuteiligenee and good moraiaft
was n beautiful tableau when in our city a
swarthy policeman, having picked up a lost
child in the street, wa- found app:ashig it*
cries with a stick of candy h© hr.,1 hougiit at
tlie apple-stand. That was wed done, and
litauiifully of little done. But, oh! these thou-
Kinds ones through our streets
wiio are crying for the bread of knowledge
and intelligence. Shall we not give it
tliom;_ down into The the officers cellars of and the law ought the to go
nnd bring these benighted up m garrets
out little ones, nnd
put, them under education d intluences; after
they have passed through the b dh and under
the comb, putt ng before them the spelling
book, and teaching them to read the
Lords Prayer and the Sermon on ths
Mount: “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for
theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” Our citv
ought to be father and mother both to these
outcast little ones. As a recipe for the cure
of much of thy woe, and want, and crime ot
our city, 1 gii e the words which Thorwalfi^n
had chiseled on the open scroll in the hand of
John Gutenberg, the inventor ot the art of
printing: “Let there be light!”
.Still further: Reformatory societies are an
lnqiortaiit element in tl;e rectification of the
AYithout calling any of
tlmJ* a “f.’ 1 _ le!e r 2, !° re ‘“i'ceially to
wire.n reco S a,z ■ ® ffie , Physical as well as
the the moral | woes of the world. There was
wnat*rrS d * S r eat deal of common sense in
when / v ' 3nieu ^ to Dr - Cuthrie
ss «si
poitance, but they cannot sat-
i?. r Ti an ■tbrnaeh ! 7 011 have to go forth
m this work with the bread of eternal life in
v< ur light muni, and the bread of this
hie in your left hand und then you can touch
them, imitating bread the Lord Jesus Christ, who
ilrat broke the and fed the multitude
in the wlldorness, and then began to preach,
recognizing tho 1 net tlmt while people aro
hungry they will not listen, ami they will
not repout. He want more common sense
fn the distribution of our charities; fewer
magnificent Still further: theories, The and remedial more hard influence work.
is the great Take
Gospel of Christ. that down
through down amid the the lanes hovels of of suffering. sin. Tako Take that that
amid the mansions and palaces of city up
That the salt that all the your
is can cure poisoned
in louniniiisof cluster public of iuiquity. cities,New Doyou knowthat
tubs three York,Jersey
City and Brooklyn, there are a great multi-
tudeoi home s children. You see i speak more
in regard to the youth and the children of tin*
country, beoatis - old vi,in ih are si Idom re-
formed, and therefore I talk more about the
little ones. Tin y :-!. e]. under the stoops ,.11 the
burned out s.ifo, in the wagons in ti es reets,
on the barges, wherever they can get a ooard
to cover them And in the summer destitution they sleen
all night long in the parks. Their
ls well set forth by an incident \ city
missionary asked .me of them: “U hero
« vour homer Said ho: "i don’t have „o
and lome, mother;" sir.” "Well, “They where dead, are your sir.” fnth r
me Did
you ever hear of Jesus Christr "No I don't
ihink I ever heard of Him.” “I>id you ever
hear of God ’ “Yes, I've heard of God.
Some of the poor people think it kind of luckv
at night t« say sometimeo.er about that be-
fore they go to sleep. Yes, sir, I've heard of
Him.” Think of a conversation like that in
a Christian city.
How many are waiting for you to come out
t iie spirit of the Lord Jesus Christ and
them from the wretchedness here I Oh,
tho Church of God had arms long
and hearts warm enough to take them
How many of them there are! As I was
hinking of the subject this morning, it
to me ns though there little was a grout with
l.i iiik, und that these ones
and torn feet were coming on
it. Anl here is a group o’
O fathers and mothers, wh.v do
V.m think of these fatherless and motherles-,
oneef No hand at home to tako care of
apparel, no heart to pity iham. Said one
little one, when the mother died: “Who will
k ‘ care of ni y clothes now The little ones
thrown om, in this great cold world They
shivering on the brink like lambs cn the
rge of a precipice. Does not your blood run
cold as they go over iff
Aud here is another group that come on to-
the precipice. They are the children of
tH’sotted parents. They are worse off than
orphans. Look at that pale cheek; woe
bleached it. Look ut that gash across the
forehead; the father struck it Hear that
hcart-pieremg ciy; a drunken mothers
biasphemy compelled it. And we
come out and we say: ”U ye
suffering, peeled and blistered ones,
sands wo com© of to voices. help you.” ‘ The “’ ^th ^0 7x4^°is
steep down, and we can’t stop. Too late!”
And we catch our bmith and we make a ter-
ril1 '' outcry. “Too late!’’ is echoed from the
to celtair, from tto Hw pn-shopand late, fr.an they
1 °° latrf - too am
eo Here’ over f
is another group, an army G
n^Jected children They come on toward
J! 10 brin k ,’ 0,1(1 every time they step ten
wfihThe^ ^ ^ , b k£d^of“'feet Tta^ The ah-4s heaw
rank, are
filled up from all the houses of iniquity and
R, ‘ a:l1 ®; thebimh HU-jl.-tox 1 ^ t - •smir deattknell pushes them hasalreadyr on to-
hovrer hke bfflds over the® P plun”e chTl-
a cataract. White these
^are on ,he brink they halt and throw
w.n' i,!.’ Jo
God, will you help? whue Christ cries from
^^
m the street and just looked at
tho f “ re of one 01 ,h ' s ” little on, ' s ' Have Ad- you
0 .v er jammed tho t^as of ihe neglected
'ss in tl ei^f^es t^-oad^. i?UnS ™of P thJu?H them
«
s Pring gust had unloosened an orchard of
ap P ! «^ los, ? ! "'. 1!l1 } these children of the
’j’ hey Jot skip or run up on the lumber
j Ust - for tho pleasure of leaping down. They
"e ve r bathed in the mo intain stinam. llwrf They
m'v-’r Th■wl'the^butSflv°aJro«aie ''tumr wh^re wS
beTor,’. hat rWit down it
ju-t Childhood has been dasiied out of
tte.’in. Want waved its wizanl wand above the
m:, nger of their birth, and withered leaves
oflaauhf "on,"o in a'whfiooiM onei oMhow^UB-
di-en g«ts out. Here to for instance. At
ten years of age he is sent out by hto parents,
lv h ' !n: ‘‘Here is a basket—liow
°’ - i 0 .i, °
m./into ccnn-'r t i They li/ni kick
a Ti,»r nia-hi it-« his
swollen head into'the straw: but a voice
comes from heaven, saying: “Courage, his head poor
biiy courage!” Covering .,,,, from
the j;,, wasiics’h rarshm-^i’' a»U on'^h^r'^anlMiettor 1
s lace clean at the public running by-
llront - With a few pennies got at Ko
elTa;! ^’ h s t* A better c oat - V :U
T n \ AA, be A mes trom , a ,l« w
to the p are where /ou cameVom.”
Put that night Ihe l.oy says: “God help me,
1 can t go hack;” and quicker than ever
mother fiew at theory of a child’s pain, th©
Eim toy ^Vo-irere’”' 6 awhile'he U^bri -ht L f’iee-'lm
a position. After second
clerk. A vars pass 011 and he is first clerk.
Years pass on. The glory of young manhood
<m°frr ' He fo-n-si:,-,, the firm. H* goes
•-re Lti srat-.-s mi cess to “nothor. He
i tl^*-h'C , ‘-T‘'. 1 m %.? e ' 8 L !,e if wea 2
of ii iv\,re’„ i 1 l' , " , '°V d
instituli.r s '°\/ •. .1 '■'•! onp n t
[A -'‘vu i '’ i ! l “- Do you know who ot
,- .".'Y r V y jlf* 0 " K ' r< ^ n ‘ D’mce,
r‘.\ L ' S, V r btroet ili.c
-
1 '/’."/J!,, i'JA' L ‘/“ ai .e r , to 1,11,1 ale t hey something w,HC *, . ‘f
vnwheij „ ro re t. , . inlhe
had thoir : ..Iks and made widtV
’ ‘ ■ 1 ' aa i°- lo** some one to
f who ^ &ir } J l0r0 *
’ }' * th ? *2 nd ’°^
1 K the-esha come at last with
and re,o.ciiig, it will take* very broad
«'VV'* ,s on r w,!U °v-‘iM, h they t,le ^ 1 i,e victory. of °li th* laxtlo-
'
it fivBdSLra^'^Wlia^in £ k , rrv bo ra d ina
‘W^°Eovwpltol° tr^and ‘W ilito
mother is siek and po I want to go
^ If ^wspnpcr h f-’ “W In,sice W ,, you and back.” I shad -’.fy rc 5 l-rother a home
t } V ° l r ’ lolN ? f C0 ? 7 ;i’ 1 S 7 er ex-
■ - Ivlif h,,n a
you o re ire”° ‘rt^V-'v saVp amfono -7
' lths b’’” Time
ai “TmLre n . 10I ‘. s went lw, day
a • mrf’fl said; yoa
!_ a What u ' e <lo J°«*” s squired • my
“"other. “Don’t you remember that a boy
came in here six months ago and wanted to bore
five dollars tj go into the notvspapor
businessJ” “O, yes, 1 remember; are you the
,ul 1 “Yes,” he repli d, ' i have got along
,,1 ’’ el 5 r . I have got a nice home for iny' mother
< s be is sick yet), und 1 am as well clothed as
y°u are, and there’syottr livo dollars.” O.waa
110 not morth saving! Why that Did is worth
? rt y such elegant boys as circles, I have sometimes put to seen mov-
"’S God ln never any use
mr or man. Vv ortli saving! I go farther
tll ' ln that, and tell you they are not
oul >' worth saving, but they are being saved,
l>ne of these laris pick-d up from our streets,
“‘“Iwnt West by a benevolent society, wrote
Hast,saying: 1 “I am getting jfethoifist along first rate.
am on probation m tlie Church.
f shall be entered as a number the first of !
nex t mouth. I now teach a ’Sunday-school !
( ' ‘ lSS °f eleven hoys. I get along first rate \
lth ife This is asnlendid country to make a
v IVin ” m . If the boys running aroundthej
-
with ° packing box on their!
a shoulder, , «’ma, only ora knew bundle what of high papers ohi times under their boys I
we
have out here, they wouldn’t hesitate about
coming \V‘est, but come tho first chance they I !
get.” So some and by one humane and Chris-
tian ing rescued. visitation, In some reform by another, school are be-
one fchmncrh
which two thousand of the little ones pas-isl,
one thousand nine hundred and ninety-
^‘^rw'Bws.'ssat
through the rich grace of our Lord Jesus
Christ, have already won tin* crown. Alittle
girl was found in the streets of Baltimore and
taken into onu of the reform societies, and
they said to her: “What Is your nainef
Hiiesid: *■ ly name is Mary!” “What
is vour other naioef Hhesaid: “I don’t
know.” Bo they took her into the reform
society, und ns they did not know her last
mini ■ they always called her *‘ Mary Ixwt,”
sinoe sho hid been picked up out of the street,
JSut sl *° K'row on, and after awhile the Holy
Spirit came to her heart, and she became a
Christian child, and she changed her name;
««d when anybody asked her what her name
was, she said: “It used to be Mary Lost; but
now since I have become a Christian, it is
Mary Found.” willing
For this vast multitude, are we to
go forth from this morning's m rvioe and see
wlmt we can do, employing alt the agencies I
have spoken of for the rectification of the poi-
K f» rnt li.isi \\ e live in a beautiful
oity. T lie lines have fallen to us in
!>" <-®nt pin -s, and we have a goodly
heritage; nn 1 any man who does not like*
residence in Ur..oklyn, must bo a most un-
V° ” ,i "‘ l unreasonable man. But, my
fried, t.w nwtorial prosperity of a city house* is
noun chief dory. I acre may bo fine
011(1 beautiful tracti, and that all be tho
garniture of a sepulchre. Homo of tho
pr ( « ijimiw e tim of the world have gone
,1,u ‘ u )’°“ another But
a city may be in ruins long before a tower
* ias or a column has crumbled, or a
tomb has tieen d. ; <• • 1. When in a city the
c.iur mes of God are lull of cold formalities
nu I inanimate re; gion; when the houses of
commerce are t'ie abate of fraud and unholy
tr.‘ lie; wh.m the foots are filled with
cnm ’ uiurrmte l and sin unenlightened
111111 li though lnl smess unpitiel—that church city is Ht.
ruins, every institution were a
Peter’s, and every moneyed were
a British I auk of Museum, Knglaud, and and every library house had wore a
Kheims.and every roof like that
porch like that of a
of Amiens, and a tower like that of Antwerp,
and traceried windows like those beat of rapidly Freiburg. the
Ty brethren, our pulses shall and
time away, and soon we be goue:
wlmt vj 0 1 > do for the city in which w*
live we must do right speedily, or never do it
at a I. In that diy when those who hav*
wrapn d Ur.m Ives in luxuries and everlasting despised
tho p . .shallcome to shame and
coni*I hope it may he said of you
and m , ut wo gave hiv id to the orphan, hungry, and
and wiped away the tear of the
11 .on the w ..id nvr heno of fiction the street of we opened Christian the
hr : AiiGiess and a
home; an I then, through our instrumental-
ity, it shall bs known on earth and in heaven,
that Mary iod became Mary found!
TIfE CHILDREN’S ‘ COLUMN. ’
Carl Duudcr Tells Some Fairy Taloa
for the Little i.u«o„..„ Outs.
-
Yhell, Bhildren, once upon a time, close you
know, dere vlias a man who hfed
P e81 ' te a big woods. He vhas worry
poor. His clothes vhas in rags. Ho
doan’ lmf so mooch money in one year
nsb would pny liim a quart of peanut*.
j it: v has alwnyscomplaining of his liardt
lo - und lm yhas always medt pecause
Bt.mopody else vhas rich. Vhell, one
dav vlicn he vhas cvym’ oudt dot lie vhas
«> lcl j. nnd dot he do,m’ lmf some luck
doteafaypody else vhas all nght
but hini, a leedle oldt man comes oudt
ot <l-’i u . >-. u und says to liun:
Vhas vour’ name Hardt Luck ?’’
>4*, dot vhas my name und I vhas
EO ^ragojl vhas do I like I shoot myself. help If
a fairy you to me
‘‘J!! 1 ?' , • , o,
*
-xri ( r T i , m“ , •
he finds himself Ued oop a
pooty queek, und some more oldt mans
come around mit switches und gif him
sooeh a liekiiur as nefer vims. Den .ler
lirst leedle oldt man unties him und
says: from lazi-
“Your poverty comes your
ness; your liardt lot vhas vour own fault;
week of liardt labor beats fife years of
luck. You must learn der plain lesson
dotvhenamnn doan’help himself nopody
else was responsible for his troubles.”
Und, shildren, dot was shust der vhuy
of it. Ifvousoe some mans who vhas
always kicking und complaining und
telling of his liardt luck, von may pet
vhas nil to plame for it, und der soon-
er somepody boots some ambition into
him der petter ho vhas off.
Veil, onee upon anodor time a man
who life py a fann mit his wife, und liaf
come cows und sheep und pigs, und vhas
all right, vhas going home from his day’s
work vhen he meets an old woman'in a
black cloak. He vhas going past her,
but she shtops him und says:
“Poor mans, I feel sadt for you dot
you lmf to work so awful hardt. On dor
sea shore vhas a big treasure. Vliy doan’
you go und find him and be a rich man.”
wife, und all night ff long home nopody \° ^ shlceps his
a wink. He goes oudt in der eafery morning week
und looks und looks, und
he lo " ks untl ,li SS und vlialks nroundt to
fin ' i (lol t r eiisure. His fields grow oop
imt weeds, lus cows und pigs und sheep
vhas soldt off, nnd vhen he comes home
he quarrels mit his wife pecause ho
doan t find dot money. One day vhen
der sheriff sells him oudt und his wife
runs off. dot oldt womans meets him
««’J .Jj° ^ so awf «l madt dot
he like to kill hei.
“My fcendk,” said der oldt womans,
“it vhas through you dot I like to teach
der worldt a lesson. He who vhas con-
tent r.dt vlmt lie has vitas rich. Ho who
has ph’nty for all Ws wants vhas a fool
to run after dot vhicn is buried oudt ot
Bight. That you got by honest toil
»«$» happmea: vi.at you hoped to
r 1 ! "“"f ? T^ ^ brought you
to poverty and wretchedness,
Und, shildren, dot vhas nil aboudt it.
Joys of Piseipnlttiro.
««.« **« IM ,
county built a dam across a creek flow-
in " throi ‘” ! > bind, and made a lake of
0 pi ce of low ground. One day last fall,
while skirting this lake, he came across
a . inn who was seated on a lo<y, with
three i fish lines out, and he l>.ail< <1 him
with:
' vl, ’ lt are you doing?”
- 1 ’ 1 ijl,l re was the brusque reply.
“W!.: Mo,;”
“For fish ”
t
7
, (V Act . a one.
“D > you know that this lake belongs
to mo? ’
“Acs’’ ,„j
u -\ml ui n l anybody , , tell ,, you that I went
to Detroit and bought twentv-four bill-
heads, aud Unit all but one died on tlie
wav u 1 „ l K . r .
,\ 1, v
‘
' . iu n vou know , that . there is only one
'
.
solitary lt.su i t l Iiis poml ?”
“I do, mister, and f I’m min-r i to have
ll!m I ], efo e ,, ,1 - A ,‘f 1 ,t ! hc t ori< 1 l,oc9nt i„e«W
lre ® z< -evi r ami . cyclones , keep awa y.-~])e
troit Free Press.
----------
100 „ UIi ,, for , Utterance.
*
A clerk in n bmkino- a S house ho»«» /orated nlehraimA
* lne 1 ,,, Uventy-hlth rt.u anniversary . of lus con-
ne f tJ 0 'i with the firm. Schmul, the
P nncl l>ai, kinds’him in the morning a
closed cn .clone, inscribed: “In memory errat/
of this eventful day a 7‘ ” The lae clerK clerk grate-
U ,, . W the envelope , without open-
- l,ut hint
ln A 0,1 “ gnicious from the head
M ‘ k 01 a-
the reply.
lietjehde Blatter.
Educating Brave Boy*.
From Scharf’s Illustrated History of
the Confederate Navy, published On., hy
W. II. Shepard & Co., of Atlanta,
wc find a very interesting history of the
Confederate Naval Academy. The school
started July 23, lt)03, under the super¬
vision of Commander John M. Brooke,
C, 8. N., one of the most accomplished hud able
sailors of his day, aud he :iu
staff.
The staff remained almost intact until
the school perished with the Confederacy.
of 18(14, Lieut. . U. r.
in tho summer
Johnson relieved Lieut. Hall ns cora-
mandant of midshipmen in order that
the latter might devote more attention to
the . . instruction of , ,, the classes, , and , in • v No-
vember, Lieut. B. P. Loyall relieved
Lieut. Johnson. The only other change
() f importance I was that later Com. James
itocnuie was orntrea d ^ to to me ,.. e gchoo sen, i
Henry of midshipmen and
as commnmlnnt exigencies exce¬ of
utive officer. As far as tho
wou ld permit, the organization,
studies and , di.eir.line discipline of 01 the me school stnooiwu were
modeled upon the curriculum of the
\J. 8. Naval Academy. Cadet* were ap-
no : ntP d bv members of Congress from
thur . respective districts districts and a 1 bv | the 1
President from the Confederacy with at large,
and the school began work fllty
acting ' midshipmen. They were required
lo 1 >e n nnrier fourteen norovereiirht- ^
, , ro1 u * "^' re
« f-n y** n 01 *8*' nn ** ,,n
represented many of the most distill-
gujshcd families of the South. After
n passing aH8 iiitr a physical j j examination and an
examination on such ..u, elementary u t,i,li,, u
as reading, writing, spelling and tna lour
principles of arithmetic, they became
u( ,midshipmen and entered upon
their , studies, which co J .
partments and twenty-two branches,
There were four annual courses and the
miilahinmen were arranged into four
classes, , each class pu s g of these
courses. Tho studies of the lourtii class
embraced practical seamanship, naval
gunnery and artillery and infuntrytac-
ties „]„pi, aJ g eDr0 r » to 10 enuations equations of 01 the me first ursi de- ue
, English and desGiip-
gree, grammar of the third
llve geography; those
class, practical seamanship, gunnery tactics,
au j artillery and military
] b geometry, -’> plane r and sj.her- >
. i trigonometry, .’ r physical . geography, ,
lca those
history and the French language; seamanship
those of the second class, artillery,
and steam, gunnery and field
astronomy, navigation, application of ai
gebra and trigonometry to mensuration
of planes and solids, political science and
French; those of the first class, seeman
ship and naval tactics, gunnery, infantry
tactics, navigation, surveying, French
and Spanish. Academic Board held examina-
T he and
tions in each June and December, attended
the December examination was
by a board of visitors, commanders, whe
ascertained aud decided upon the quali-
ft- tttions 0 f the midshipmen for promo-
tion and as rapidly ‘ * as the latter were
1 ficicn tl y were ordered to
8hipS) |) atterieSj or otber duty. The
Pstrick Henry was usually stationed near
fighting, and by the time they were pent
to distant service they were versed in the
Practice as well as the theory of war If
the routine of a day was not broken by a
'“toman the guns on shore, or
?.° «»“ting, or take part in boat expedi- board
^ *, he n8 > morning 11 w « 8 ful1 gun of was ^r^ork hrul on at seven
o clock, and at eight a breakfast of hard
served. Sick call, studies and recitations
occupied the hours until two o clock,
«nd then came a dinner of salt junk,
perhaps a mess of vegetables, aud the
inevitable corn-meal that became climbed a staple
article of diet when wheat flour
toward $1,200 per barrel in Confederate
currency. School exercises and dress
parade took up tho remainder of the day
ended with tattoo at 0:30, and taps at
10 o’clock. Near the close of the war,
when it became necessary to have the
boys on shore pretty much all the time
to ttand to the guns, they occupied huts
in ihe Drewry’s Bluff batteries. Such a
training nourish d and strengthened
their finest qualities, and it is not re-
markable that so many of them have
since risen to positions of great honor
and trust, and exemplified ihe virtue,
and worthy ambitions of civil life,
A Multitude of Ailment*.
The ailments whith afflict ihe kidneys and
b’ad er are so nunieiout, that merely to name
them woj!d fill a space far on,running the
lim ts of this article. Suffice it to say,that they
are both obstinate and dan-’erous. To 11 e r
irevention Hostetter’s stoma’ h Biite sis well
adanted. The st mulus wh:th it lends to the
a. :ion of the kidneys when I hey are legarth c,
sert. to counterr.ct a tende icy in tlie n to
ity.anla lapse, firs’, t into a ds s’a into en pernicions o’positive inic organic tiv-
wwa one
fit e .-e, w .rich soon d s ru> s their del cat s in -
t’-aunients, j ois. n the b nod and cau-cs (IchIIi.
A clouole purpose i > -e ed b, tlTs depure: t.
It promotes act!y the blood of the wli kidneys, 1 and expels
Impurities ur.il from *d of oilllot, eh llioie ave organs! no ua 1 -
c a:i except fe.erand
Constipati d n, hil ou-nose, also a'ue.rhcu-
ma’ism ai dyspi-ps a, are action remedied hy
tins medicine or tnorough and wide
some.
trials” I h • warship end Chicago has N. finished York. her ’’dock
lus gon ■ to w
” Th>‘ ieprousdistilment, whos-i effect
Holds such an enmity with blood of man.
That, swift a- quicksilier, and alleys it cou of res through
The natural gates the body,”
and rau-e. the sk.n to become "barked about,
most lazar-like, wiih vile and loathsome
crust’’ Such are the effects of diseased i.nd
morbid b’ie, the only ilufe antidote for which U
to cleanse and reg the liver un offli e ad¬
mirably performed by Pierce's Golden Medi¬
cal Discovery.”
Th© dumag • by for-st fires in Northern
Michigan in May, amounted to $7,000,000.
Dr. Pierce's “Favorite PreS’-riptlon” per-
fectly and perma-ently cures tliose d sea es
peeu. *r to lenmles. It is ionic and m rvine,
cfTs tmliy allaying that and cur tlie ng those sirksn-
ug semations affect stomach and
heart, through refiex action. Tlie backache
and ‘drarging-down” gthening sensal Ions all disappear
under the s re effects of this great
re-.orative. By druggists.
Ovor $6,000,000 of Southern railway bonds
have been auuscribed for in New York.
AmerlcR' • Pride.
Trne Ainerlcan men ami women, by reason
or their strong constitutions* beautiful forms,
r uh envied complexions by cn 1 churacferistic energy, penerkl
are ail i at (>n-. It iu the
u?e of Dr. Iiait r s Iron Tonic which brings
about these result*.
Advice te >Iotlicra.
Dr.BiKgprs’ Huckleberry Cordial should al
way« boused for children teething. ItBoollio 3
the child, softens the gams, ftuays ad pain,
cures wind co ic, Bud i« the best remedy for
the bowels. Try it.
Tho world’s visible supply of cotton is 1,903,.
970 bales.
Young uervo.wdebfl men or mtddle-ageri ones, suffering*
trom ty and k ndred \v«aknesfs^
Should send 10 cents in slump, for Illustrated
hook eugetsting sure raeins of cure. Address,
Main World’s Street, Dispensary Buffalo Medical Auoclatlen, bd
N. Y.
Many wish us eo d mornimr that were the
cauasQf our h iving * b d night
-JSSPTE*. , “f*« 8toin/lch ^ 8H lm I tr ores warms srid up itrengthef.s snd Invig--
tho di^sstiys ’
organs, opens the pores, pro
motes perspirat on, and equalizes the circula-
«on. As a corrector ot w a disordered system
T here la nothing to squal it.
The New York b t n : s n w bold ip
excess of legal requirements.
If a coush d isturl’s yonr r Jeep, taka PiFo*t
Dure for Consumption and rest well.
Far Rickets, Marasmus, and Wn.ttat Dis¬
order* of Clil Id rent
Scott's Emixsion of Col Llrer Oil with
HypoF>>osphlt">n, In unequal*!. Tb* rapidity
with which children gs!n flesh and strength
upon It U rery wonderful. Read the follow¬
ing *‘I hare ueed Scott’* Emulsion In case* of
Rickets and Marasmus of Ion* s'anding, and
have been more thanpleaned with therennUB,
ae lnevery cane tlia Improvement wa* marked"
—J. M. Maim, M. D-, New York.
Gray hairs aro honorable. They do not stay
on a baid bead.
_
Daughter*, Wive* ami Mother*.
Send for Pamphlet on Female Disease*, free,
securely eealed. Dr. J. B. Murchial, Utioa, N.Y
Salt Rheum
|g th* rao.t common of all akin iiU«iies, and 1 a often
exceedingly disagreeable. The t>kln buconnw dry
and hoi, grower d and rough. and often breaks into
painful crack., while small watery plinplei appear
In groat numbers, discharging a thin, stick* fluid,
caullng Intense itching. Hood’s Sarsaparilla has
wonderful power over thl> iilfiea,e. It purifies the
blood and expels the humor, an* tbs skin krgu
without a soar. It
“1 had sa t rheum over nearly my entire body.
la !napo ■ ble to d> a rlbe my Bufferings. When l be
gau to use Hood’s Sarsaparilla the alsease bega n to
•ubside. iho watery pin pie*, with their agmU cured-’ m.;
itch and pain diaapneare 1. and uow 1 am
Lyman ai-i.eh, No. t h cago, ill.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla Prepared
Bold by all druggists. $1; for $5.
by C. I. HOOD A Co.. Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
IOO Doses One Dollar
I
nplCKLY I. Bitters A5H
^ ITISAPUflELYVEfiETABLEPRtPARAIIOM
MS 5EMNA-MANDRAKE-BUCHU
li AND OtHOI tgUAliy t/riCIEMT REMtDIES
It has stood the Test of Years,
J in Curing all Diseases of the
• .* fe^ELOOD, I KIDNEY8.B0W- LIVES, 6T0K-
» ACH,
ELS, to, It Purifies the
Cj. c u Blood, Cleanses InTigorates the System. and
BITTERS DYSPEPSIA,CONSTI¬
CURES PATION, JAUNDICE,
UL01SEASCS0FTNE SICKHEADACHE, BIL¬
LIVER IOUS COMPLAINTS, Ac
KIDNEYS disappear at once under
its bene ficial in fluence.
STOMACH It its is pure! cathartic y a Msdlcin proper »
AND as
BOWELS. ties forbids its use as a
beyerage. It ii pleaa-
ant to th* taste, and ai
easily taken by child¬
ren as adults.
AllORUGGISIS PRICKIY ASH BITTERS CO
'PRICEl DOLLAR Sole Proprietors,
ST.Louisand Kansas CrTY
JSSrW Pe II 1 beverage. ROOT by BEER mailed
ling, wholesome Sold druggists;
forific. C. £ HIRES, 48 N. D«-«. Ave.. Phil*., Pa.
WEAK MEN, WEAK WOMEN,
Dr. BAIRD’S IllsOOD CRAM hour. Thousand* I KS are
marvelous, the sensation of the
hare used them and not one but is enthtudnstic over
their wonderful properties. 25 cents : 5 bores, $1.
Of Drugsists or by mail, postage of prepaid. All etc., In
vallds should send account « ase, symptoms,
with order and we will DO YOU GOOD. Address
Dr. WM. I>1. BAlUb. Waehlntian, N. J.
S'1 Pk£!L 9 SET fhitvla*. re ? arnm ^ 1 ‘ Beeerlp^tlon
B 2K00DY ft COm Ciaciunati, 0
OATPi^TQ V* ■ liilft MO Obtained. Inventors’ Uuide. Send sta L. amp Bino fo
1 ji. Patent Lawyer. WAxHtntrron. D. C
k & h
m f I
w
il rt/ 'i®, Si> r. ■ 3'. *
This represents a healthy life. Just such a life a** they eniov
Throughout its various scenes. Who use the Smith’s Bile Beans.
aud* KW- punt The anel original size, of this Photograpb, picture
jicyM. r JTl*tf*y c onsist of a vegetable combination that sent on receipt of lOc. in
Iia« no equal in medical science* They cur© Conwtipa- sta mps. Address.
tioni 1flalariiii and Dyspepsia^ and are a safeguard BILE IIKINS,
againat all foriUM of foversi, chills and fever, g:all atones, St. Louis, Mo.
and Jlritilit’s disease. Send 4 cents postage for a saxn- bottle,
ple package and test the TRUTH of what w o say. Price, 25 cents per
fcutilca to any address, postpaid. DOSE ONK BEAN. Sold by druggists.
F. SMITH cfo CO., PROPRIETORS, ST. IiOTJIfi,
BLOOD AND LM DISEASES.
Liver Disease Mrs. Mary A. McClure, Columbus, Kami.,
writes: “ I addressed you in November, afflicted with Iffed,
in regard to my health, being
ano liver disease, heart trouble, and female weak¬
Heart Trouble. ness. I was advised to use I)r. Pierce's
ridden Medical Discovery, Favorite Pre¬
scription and Pellets. X used one bottle
of the ‘Prescription,’ five of the ‘Discov¬
ery,’ and four of the ‘ Pleasant Purgative Pellets.’ My health be¬
gan to improve under the useof your medicine, and my strength
came back. My difficulties have ail disappeared. 1 can work hard
all day, or walk four or five miles a day, and stand it well; and when
I began using tho medicine I could scarcely walk across tho room,
most of the time, ami I did not think I could ever feel well again.
I have a little baby girl eight months old. Although she is alittle
delicate in sizo and appearance, site I is healthy. I give treatment your reme¬ after
dies all the credit for curing me, as took no other
beginning their use. I am very grateful for your kindness, and
thank God and thank you that I am as well as 1 am after years
of suffering.” Mrs. I. V. Webber, of Yorkshire, Cattaraugus Co.,
pr. N. Y„ writes: “ I wish to say a few words in praise
of your ‘Golden Medical Discovery ‘ and ‘Pleasant
Disease. Purgative them Pellets.’ For five years previous I had to
taking pain in I was right a great side sufferer; continually: a
severe my was
unable to do my own work. I am happy to say
I am now well and strong, thanks to your medicines.”
Chronic Diarrhea Cured,—D. Lazarre, Esq., *7i and *77
Decatur Street, New Orleans, Discovery,’ La., writes: has "I used three bottles of
the ‘Golden Medical and it cured me of chronic
diarrhea. My bowels are now regular.”
“THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE”
Thoroughly cleanse tho blood, which is the fountain of health, by using Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, and good
digestion, .. a Medical fair sa u, Discovery buoyant spirits, ail and humors, bodily health the and vigor pimple, will be blotch, established. eruption, to the worst Scrofula, or blood-
Golden cures from common or Scrofulous Sores
poison. Especially has it proven its efficacy In curing Salwheum or Tetter, Fever-sores, Hip-joint Disease,
and and Ulcers.
Indigestion Rev. F. Asbitry Howell, Pastor of the M. K.
Church, of Silverton, N. J., says: “I wa 3 af-
Boils, flirted with catarrh and indigestion. Boils and
blotches began to arise on the surface of the
Blotches. skin, and I experieuced a tired feeling and
dullness. I began the use of Dr. Pierce’s
Golden Medical Discovery as directed by
■ him for such complaints, and in one week's
Upnelbegan . , to feel , like a new man, and am now sound and well.
The PieasantPurgativsPellets’ are the best remedyfor bilious or
sick headache, or tightness about the chest, and bad taste in tho
mouth, that I have ever used. My wife could not walk across the
floor when she began to take your ‘Golden Medical Discovery.’ work/’
Now site can walk quite a little ways, and do some light
Hip-Joint Mrs. InA M. Strong, of Ainsworth, Tnd., writes:
“ My little boy had been troubled with hip-joint
Disease. disease for two years. When lio commenced the
use of vour ‘Golden Medical Discovery’ and
‘ Pellets/ he was confined to his bod, and could
not be moved without suffering great pain. But
now, thanks to your * Discovery,’ lie is able to be up all tho time,
CONSUMPTION, WEAK LUNGS, SPITTING OF BLOOD.
), by its wonderful blood-purifying, invigors-
Breath, Bronchitis, Severe Coughs, Ariiima,
F J cures tho severest Coughs it strengthens the system
and purifies the blood. by
P “ P the ByStera ' and incTWl8e8 th0 fle8h and weight of those reduced below the usual standard of health
Consumption.—Mrs. You will Edward be praised Newton, by of TTarrowsmUh, the
Out., writes: X ever mo for remarka¬
ble cure in my case. was so reduced that my friends had ail
given me up, and I had also been given up by two doctors. I then
went to the best doctor in these parts. He told mo that medicine
was only a punishment treat in He my said case, I and might would not undertake to
liked, me. that, the only thing try Cod that liver oil if I
Given Up as was could possi¬
bly have any curative power over consumption so
f»r advanced. I tried the Cod liver oil as a last
„„ TO U E treatment, but I was so weak I could not keep it
on iny stomach. My husband, not feeling satisfied
everything _.. . , lie t0 advertised mo up for yet, though complaint, ho had bought for me
tity of your Golden sw Medical Discovery.’ my I took procured only four a bottles, quan-
and, to the surprise of everybody, am to-day doing my own work,
and am entirely 1 free from that terrible cough which harrassed me
' ha / e bee n afflicted with rheumatism for a number
of years, and now feel , so much better that I believe, with a con-
Ow'.e’rf'V.IVn 5 ol! 1 ' ( io,d °n Medical Discovery,’ I will be restored
to pci feet health. I would sav to those who are falling a prey to
'h^-'ase consumption, do not do as I did, Dike every¬
thing else first; but take the Golden Medical Discovery’ in the
early stages of tho disease, and thereby save a great deal of suf-
foring and be restored to health at once. Any person who is
e.iil ^ in doubt, need but write me, inclosing a stamped, self.
r a uhsmnti;md r by' r m;'.™ he “ t0n *> iB * Btat “ wW
f ully B
Rockland Onred.-hUAc E. Downs, Esq., of Spring Valley,
Co., N. Y. (P.O.Box 28), writes: ‘‘The‘Golden Medi-
Golden Medical Discorery is Sold by Drngrgists.
WORLD’S DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, Proprietors imp
Mo. 663 Main Street, BUFFALO, J*. Y*
EXHAUSTED VITALITY
A Gnat Mtdloal Work for Young
and Middlo-Agod Mon.
f
KNOW THYSELF.^HBP
P Boston, c cWW^i^Tfe:L WM. II. K I’A . A 4XTSA*K; RKKK, M.I>.,
Mass. More than million cobIm
Con.uliln* Phy»lolan on* Plivalral Debility,
sold. It treat, upon Nervous and Impate»d
Premature Decline, ■•heuitrdYUalltr, b> r^T
n-m. Warranted xjo pt™
•Uhatantlal ernioM d binding, full published Kilt. In the
tbe best finguiig*. popular medical trratlae by mall, postpaid,
Kuril.* Prior only *1 JUustratim
and eaaoealed in tend a plain wrapper. address ae above.
wimple frtt if you now.
Name tMe paper.
MEMORY MARVELOUS
DISCOYRRY.
Wholly unlike artificial lYltfn*. reading.
Any book learned in one
Recommended bj Mark Twain, Richard Proctor
the Scientist. Hon. W. W. Astor, Judah P. Benjamin.
fob SSfJSTTt
£• SEAMDK8S P -
The only »3 world. I
She. in the */$ j , 4
StesJFasESri&r -
W. L. ^oLiSlas L_ j
• 1.60 I
the », a
Used by
Sr ms.
keye ell wesr the W. I.. nm (juT«3 SIIOe!
If your dealer does not kern them, send your mime Mil*. on
postal to W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton,
JONES
an
PAYSthe 6 FREIGHT Mcalce,
Ton Wacan Biv#! BraM
lr*n Lever*, Beariegs,
Tar« Beam and Beam Box for
^ S60.
*v»f r Mae Boale. For froa pri«# It#
asandoa till* paper ilmeHAMroM, attd a^drcaa
v ^ BINGHAMTON. iflNis of
N. T.
One Agent ( Merchant only) wanted in every town for
-
I
<* M
Your “Tannill’a Punch” 5o, orgars are getting lots
of rl on d*. Traveling men &jy to us every d*y Oir ;
Why they ere better t* an most 10c. cigar." commen’e.I
trad# li» %% moff than dou bled u<no wo
to sell hem. P. & a. L. Millard, EllLburgh. N. Y.
Add res* R. w* TANSILL A f’O., Chicago.
LEA S Springs, Granger Co.,E. tonn*
Superior natural Mineral Waters, Mountain and Cave
Scenery. Convenient, healthy location, tselect. Proprietor. Cheap
board. Address .11. J. JHT*tiE8«
m Washing Machines. It you want
w« Operating send your name. 1\0. and exprs^ofn e
* W one us National Ce.*« Si,V.y
at once. T he oy
IfrlUM «Ik'SBIO Mo .rR ,, J na H V ,U Cp r'u
5
■
8 IIAil. Att’r. W^ahinxt- m. p. 0 .
OPIUM Habit Cured. Treatment sent on trlaL
Unwi x?’! Rrmktiy ro.. LaFavette.Ind.
n _Mrs. Parmelia BRtrtfDAOE, of 1S1 Lock Stmt,
hr Hr HAL Luckport, X. Y. writes: “ 1 was troubled with
" ' chilis, nervous and general debility, with frequent
riCDII (TV sore throat, and my mouth was badly cankered.
ULuil.il I. My liver was inactive, and I suffered much from
dyspepsia. I am pleased to say that your ‘Golden
Medical Discovery’ and ‘Pellets' have cured me of all these
ailments and 1 cannot say enough in their praise. I must alio
say a word in reference to your ‘Favorite Prescription,’ as it
has proven itself a most excellent medicine for weak females.
It has been used in my family with excellent results.”
fkyspepsia.—J ames L. Colby, Esq., of Turatan, Houston Co... eat
Minn., writes: “I was troubled with indigestion, and would
heartily and grow poor at the same time. I experienced heartburn,
sour stomach, and many other disagreeable symptoms common
to that disorder. I commenced taking your and
ImiinoDiTro ‘Golden Medical Discovery’ and ‘Pellets,’ and
InflfaufldlcS I am now entirely free from the I have dyspepsia, been for
- am, in fact, healthier than seventy-
7HC SYSTEM flve years- I weigh one hundred and
ink viu.kin. one nn( j one _half pounds, and have done a*
much work tho past summer as I have ever
done in the same length of time in my life. I never took s
medicine that seemed to tone up the muscles and ‘Pellets.’” invigorate
the whole system equal to your ‘Discovery’ and
Dyspep* , n. —Theresa A. Cass, of Sprtrtff./Ifid, Mo., writes:
I was troubled one year with liver complaint, dyspepsia, and
sleeplessness, hut your ‘Golden Medical Discovery’ cured me .’t
Chills and Fever.—Rev. H. E. Mosley , Montnmrenci, S. C-.
writes: "East August I thought J would die with chills and fever.
I took your ‘ Discovery ’ and it stopped them in a very short time.
and can walk with the help of crutches. He does not suffer b«n any
pain, and can eat and sleep as well as any one. It lias only
about three months since ho commenced using your medicine,
l cannot find words with which to express my gratitude for the
benefit he baa received through you.”
“Democrat and „ News, „
Sk I ti Disease.—The "Mrs. Eu®k
A TcDDIDIC of Cambridge, Maryland, says: Poole, of H i*-
* ILnnlDLt Ann Poole, wife of Leonard Mil., has been curoo
AFFLICT Jliamsbuty, ON Dorchester Co., using Dr. Pierce*
of a bad case of Eezerna by «>-
Golden Medical Discovery. The disease knee*.
peared first in her feet, extended to the then
covering the whole of the lower limbs from feet to knees, her.
attacked the elbows and became so severe as to prostrate two she
After being treated by several physicians for abovo. a year or She soon
commenced tho use of the medicine named Pooie think*
began to mend and is now well and hearty. Mrs. days.”
the medicine has saved her life and prolonged her Md.,
Mr. T. A. Ayres, of East New Market, Dorchester County,
vouches for the above facts.
cal Discovery ’ has cured my daughter of a very bad ulcer ws
procin perfectly.” 1 l^lir ^bott/'^Y Downs'continues: a * nK)8 *' cyerythlnp i800very ’ whic wRhout succcw, up
Mr.
Consnmptlon and Heart Disease.—“I also with to
thank you for the remarkable cure you have effected In my cast,
For three years I had suffered from that terri¬
Wasted ble disease, consumption, and heart disease.
to Before skeleton: consulting could not you sleep I had wasted rest, and sway many m
A Skeleton. a nor misery. 4
times wished to die to be out of my naa
then consulted you, and you told me you *
hopes of curing me, but it would take time.
took five months' treatment in all. The first two months I
almost discouraged: could not perceive any favorable strength, symptoms, i
but the third month 1 began to pick up in flesh at’d and realities 0*
cannot now recite how, step by step, the developed signs themselves.
returning health gradually but surely and am won
and To-day strong." I tip the scales at one hundred and sixty,
Our principal reliance in curing Mr. Downs’ terrible disease
was the Golden Medical Discovery.”
Joseph F. McFarland, Esq., Mhens, iAn
Bleeding the writes: lungs “My before wife she had commenced frequent bleeding using from
from Lungs. ‘ Golden Medical Discovery.’ She has not
had any since its use. For soma six she ns*
—........ j she hus been feeling so well that
discontinued it.
Price $1.00 per Bottle, or Six Bottles for $5.00.
UECTCKK Off
Rongb on Rats, ft
Ifl
MIcG
Thin li what killed vour poor father tihuait
f^;;^ eon tainhiK W It older throughout ofiS tom
careers. lUU.I NBHH. e head,
tolteepecial T Ri time
U nflM U1 I fUUL CDHI away In futile and *
* mon. y
efforts with Inee, t powdr, borax ore! or
what nof. used atrmndom all
the houseto*et rid ofpttTI .,X I llg FQ
Roaches.Water-bilge, nlclits [j sprinkle
For two or three
“Borron ON Hjth" dry/Hinder. In,
about and down the sink, ilmln
pipe. wash First all thing down in the he morning sink, drain
it away i pipe wflldl.2 when
nil the insects from garret to cellar it
pear The an,'ret is in the fact that wherever
■acts are in the house, they must hA UAllllES 1 nil Wee
drink during the night. II
Clears out Rats, Mice, is sold lied-bugs, all Flies, B.otbi
"Rouon on Rath ’’ mound th. world
In every the clime, Is the sale rorastexteiisively of advertised Sfa-J
and has largest any article of Its
on the face of the globe.
_____ ca
For Potato Bugs, IOSOCtS
r™r fU f
and
SS : —CLEARS VLSS* OUT- )
Roaches, ants, water-imps, moths, rats, miss, ^
sparrows, jack rabbits, squirrels, Cophers. 15o.
5A
THE ONLY TRUE
4 'IRON
TONIC
OH of YOUTH JVvpo;.sin,WigA g»RtW>n,LHekaf
of Appetite, Irirli K
Strength gotutelf and cured: Tiled/eeliag Bt>ce»,
Sw cles and nerr«»* rtr-eivt
for ■ce. Fnlivf ns V mi *4
n* d supplies from Fra emppljiiate Poi»«g,
■ L A rs S D L '■ S —nT"i'f^— ES tint: oring
TONIC a snfo and speedy cure. Oivcsac’ear, connt’v^latt* knj.
thy complexion. Frequent attemr t" at
ing only add to the popularity o» r the original* He
noteiperiinent—ffwt the Original and Bi st,
/c« B ^rX E A 7 ,w L M Dream L ,?«a )
I n©*dache. Sample Done and Book
lmailed on rece'pt of two cent*in post age.
I THE DR.HARTER MEDICINC COW.PAHY;
; St. Louis* Mo.
i Biair’s Pills. li ed: tntjf'tkh bouTind'
tUieumatio flemedy.
Uvnl Box, J 4 ; rounds i IV'j-*.
^ to ,•soldier*and Heirs, stu jforwre
! P?T ,f r * ee Kwr-vssfol.
■ fc. H* biLLM ,, O-N A- CO .9 Waskingt m, D. 0.
J.P.$T£VE$# ^ Sc Ff-O,
j ■ imbb* Mr fa *, m 5 vesoua ^ sa " a an iy k. ir*W
R » ffl ^ | a V
If HbhWW ■■Lbb H lWi
nlluniU, Ailfintn Pff Oil.
lend for Cetalojgur.
BUSINS SS
Ed duration a specialty .itJaiifn* at .110015 i-^S Kl'SINKSS
I'.'VIVIillHlTV, One of the beib
schools in the Country. Send tor Oir cuiars.
rf). Can get tile most Practical Business Eda-
f //C&llS lur Circulars Jk bpfcimmi «•: Peomanahip.
AIP AA Flat top Wo. lO ook Stove cor # I (MM)
V B S« UU„]ttitiitur.a tnd fur catalogue, A.P,
OlVI USt.. Atlanta. 0*.
Piso’s Romady for Catarrh is the
Best, Easiest to Dse, and Cheapest.
• i.
C ATA m Jl
Sold by drnggi ts or ffeut by mail.
I )c, E. T. Jlazulimo, Warren, Pa.