Newspaper Page Text
]{i:V. Dll. TALMAGE.
THE BROOKLYN DIVINE’S SUN¬
DAY SERMON
Subject: “Superfluities n Hinder-
Mice.”
TrxTi “.4 man of great stature, whose
fingers and toes were four an l (went;/, six
vn -ach hand, and six on each foot; uu l he
a'so tins the son of the giant. tile Hut when litr
defiled Israel; Jonathan, son o f Shinn a,
David's bro ker, slew him.]' —1. Chronicles
xx.. 5, 0 and 7,
Malformation Did photographed, this and for what
reason mistake f into tho not Sacred passage S ipttiros slip in, by a
i as some¬
times editor a gets paragraph into bis new.-paper utterly obnoxious during his to ab¬ the
sence! Is not this Scriptural errata? No,
no. there is nothing haphazard about tho
Bible. This passage of Scripture was as cer¬
tainly, intended to lie put in the Bible as the
passage; “In the leginning God created the
heav, ns and the eartn,”or, "God so loved the
world that He gave his only begotten son.
And 1 select wjtb-practical it for mV text to-day be< -ause it
is charged nnd tremendous
meaning. people , of God the rhilistinps bad been
By the exception of
conquefed’.wiWi The ot giants the is inastly extinct, u few lain giants. glad
race
to say. There is no use for giants now ox
cept to enlarge the income of museums. But
there were many of them in olden times.
Goliath was, according to the Bible, eleven
feet, four and a half inches high. Or, if
you ou do t not believe the Bible, the famous
Pliny, i....................... a secular writer, declares that —- at
broken' Crete by au earthquake dis-overing’ a monument the remains was
open, forty-six cubits long,
• of a. giqut or
sixty-iiine' ' fekt high. So, whether
you prefer sacred or profane history, you
inust’eorae to’tbo conclusion that there were
iu those olden times ia>es of human altitude
smashed monstrous the skull and of .appalling. of Utys David giants, had but
one -
there wehe other giants that the Davidtan
wars had not yet subdued, He and one pf them
stands in my text. was not only of
Alpine stature, but had a surplus of digits.
To the ord.nary? fingers was annexed an
additional’finger addendum. and thh’foot He h id also a
superiluous • hhd twenty-
four terminations to hands and feet
where others have twenty, It was
not the only instance of * the kind.
Tavernier, the learned writer, says that the
the Emperor of Java bad a son endowed with
same number of extremities-. Volcatius,
the poet, had six fingers on each-hand. 5lau-
petius in his celebrated letters speaks of two
fami.ies near Btrlm, similarly equipped of
hand and foot. All of which I can believe
for I have seen two cases of the same physi¬
cal superabundance. But this giant of the
text is in battle, and _ David, dwarf
as one' the
warrior, had dispatched giant, the
brother of David slays this monster of
my text, -and' there he lies after the
battle in Gath, a dead giant. His stature
did not save him. and hie superfluous appen¬
dices of hand and. foot did not save him.
Tne probability was that m the battle his
sixth the finger on his hand made him clumsy in
use of his weapon,- and his sixth toe
crippled his gait. Behold the prostrate and
maliormated-giant of of fingers the text; "A man
great stature, whose and toes were
four and twenty, six on each hand, and six
on each foot; and he also was the son of the
giant. But when he defied Israel, Jonathan,
the son of Sbimea, David’s brother, slew
him."
Gath that day there was not a man w.th
OTdinarystaturetlnS^was'not^i^ter^ff phvSSi Siu than a”
,- of « te t
physical sue is apt to run in families the
probability is that this brother of David
who did the work was of an abbreviated
stature. A dwarf on the right side is
stronger all the body, than a giant on the wt bog side, and
and mind, and estate, and oppor-
tunity be.terment that you the cannot use for God and the
of world is a sixth finger
and a sixth toe, and a. terrific hinderance.
Tbe most Of tue good done m the world, and
the most 'of those who xvia the battles for the
right, are ordinary ipeople. Count tho fingers
of their right hand and they hav'-o fust five-
no more and’ no less. Otie Doctor Duff
among missionaries,' f nt three thousand mis
sionaries t;iat would tell youThey have only
common endowment. Oms Florence Night-
ingale but to nurse the sick in conspicuous places,
ton thousand women who arc just as
good nurses though never heard of. The
the-war "Swamp, Angel" wasa hig gun that during
made a big noise, but muskets of or-
dinary heft Cal b're'-'-qlld execution! sheita of ord nary
did cabinet the' President Tyler
and day his. Jo-down with tips tb > Peacemaker, Pbtomac one
to experiment a
great iron gun that was-to affright with its
thunder foreign navies. The gunner touches
it off and iLexplodesaudJeavt« cabinet min
"istfs-s dead ocfhq deck, Wifi s at that time all
up and down our coasts were cannon of or,ii-
nary bore able to lie the defens s of the n ation,
nnd The ready at the firsUou.h to waken to duty.
curse of the world is b g gun3. At ter
tho politicians *hty hive.maue' nil the noise
go borne hoarse fro'mhngry diV uss o.i-o i the
evening thenext of the first Monday in November.;
wiil day the pdoplo with the silent ballots
settle everything, and settle it right a
million of the white slips ofvpaper they drop
making about blossom.' as much noise 1 ft, the fa 1 of
an Clear apple ‘
_ , back in th.? rou-try to-day th »re gre
- ■ mothers in p ain apron, and shoes fashioned
oii a, rough-last by th ’shoemaker at the end
of the lane, rocking, bibi -s that are to be the
Martin.-Lnthers, Edisons, and and the-Faradays, and the
the Bismarck*, and tho Glad-
st 9 oes, an i the Washingtons, and the George
•• Whitefields of, the year lhdd, and wlio will
make tho 'Jutli century so bright th it this
hfiich lauded niifeteenth in comparison will
’ seem I like : the" dark -ages.- The longer
tolki live the more 1 like common
■ ing the They, WoiTmV do the world's work, bear-
1 WOTld’s sympathies; burdens, weeping the
lawyers Carrying the world’s con-
Ruius Choate, W'ifi'iam’Wirt, \ye see rise up a
uel Southand, or a or a Sam-
but society would go t > pieces
to-morrow if "there were nbt thousands of
common their lawyers to see that men and women
get Wiliard Parker rights., A ValentfifS Mott or a
Hses up eminent in the medi-
cal profession, but what an unlimited
sweep would pneumonia, and diphtheria,
and scarlet fever, have in the world
. if it were not for ten thousand
common doctors. The old physician in his
gig rolling up the lane of the farmhouse, or
saddle-bags, riding on horseback, his medicines in the
fever, and coming arriving on tire ninth day of the
in to' take hold of the
• pulse of the patient, while the family pale
with anxiety, are looking on and waiting for
his decision in regard to the patient and
hearing'him say: "Thank God, L have
mastere kthe case, lie is getting -well.” excites
in me an admiration .quite‘.equal to the men-
tion of the names of the great metropolitan
doctors, Hutchinson, Pancoast or Gross, or Joseph G.
. of the past, or the illustrious
living men of the present.
■ Yet what do “we Sea in all departments?
People not satisfied with ordinary spheres of
work and ordinary duties. Instead of try-
ing to see fingers what they can do with a hand
of five they'want six. Instead of
usual endowment of twenty manual and
pedal addenda they want twenty-four. A
certain amount of money for livelihoo 1 and
for the supply of those whom we leave be-
hind us after Wo. have departed this life is
important, for saying; for we have the best authority
“He that provideth not for his
own, and especially those of his own
household is worse than an infidel,”
but the large and fabulous sums for which
derance many struggle, if obtained would be a hin-
rather than an advantage. -Tho
anxieties and annoyances that those have
•whoso estates have become plethoric can only
be told by those who posses- them. It will
be a good thing when through vour industry
and public prosperities you can own the
house in which ytiu live. But suppose you
own fifty houses and you have all those rents
to collect and all those’ tenants to please.
Suppose in you have branched out
. business successes until in almost
every direet'in yoi! have investments,
The fire ball rings at night; vou rush up-
stairs to look out of the window to see if it is
in any of y- ur mills. Epidemic of crime
comes and there are embezzlements and ab-
whether scondings in all directions, and you wonder
any of your bookkeepers will prove
recreant. *• A” panic strikes the
world, and you are dike-a hen un ler a sky
full of hawks and trying withanxious cluck'
t°.K e .t yqur'6vergro*h After certain < tJi^> .stage safely of., und S r
' a sue-
has ,
-. .**. been imtiflfclaiit, , Mrjied . you.'have to trust
KO v. roanjt things to others
.
tnat you, are.apt to Iwximtctha' prbv of
. othess,-and,you and the are swindled'Hnd defrauded, ,
anxiety you had on your brow when
Wu InL'f** were ec,u ^^^ eafnirigyoufnrstthftnsand to tbe dollars
anx i e Dv °n your brow now
«n,n^°'ri llave won J 0 ' ir three hundred thou-
xa u. fti e trouble with such a one 1* he is
uproart out like the unfortunate one m mv
text You'have more Wnjrers an 1 toes t'mn you
know wl\nt to Jo with. Twenty were useful,
twenty four i« n hinilw'tiT euoerflnlty. Ds-
rneli sayi that a Kind of Poland abdicated his
.throlean I J olno1 ttie people And and became a
porter to carry burdens. some replied: one
an' <\ 1 him wltv he >li'l so and ho
“Upon mv honor, gentlemen, the load which
I quit ii by far heavier than the one you see
me earry. The weightiest is hut a straw
when rompirod to that world under which I
labored. I have slept more in tour nights
than 1 Imvedur n ' n’t mr reign. I begin to
l e a King mvae’f. Ele-’t whom you choose,
for'me who am so well it would be madness
to return to court" ,, “such overloaded , . ,
“Well," save somebody,
persons ought to he pitied, insomnia for their and worri- their
mouts are rosl and th'ir
nervous prostration aro genuine.” I reply
that they could tret rid of the bothersome
stirp'us bv giving it away, If a man has
more houses t urn he can carry without
vexation, let him drop a few of thorn. If his
estate is so great lie cannot manage it with¬
out getting'nervous dvsnepsia from having
too much, let him divide tip with those
who have nervous dvs-iopsia because thev
cannot get ennurh. No! they guard their sixth
finger with more care than they did the
original live. They go limp-'ne with what
they call gout, and know not that, like the
(riant of my text, they aro lamed by a super¬
fluous toe. A few of them financial by large obesitv chari¬
ties bleed themselves of this
mid monetary plethora, but many of them
hang on to the hindering superfluity compelled till
death, and then ns they are to
give the money tin anyhow, in their last will
and testament tlmv“generously give doubt some
of it to the Lord, expecting: no
that Ho will feel much obliged to
them, Thank God that once in a while we
have a I’eter Cooper,who. owning an interest
in the iron works at Trenton, s-id to Mr
Lester: “I do not fe d quite easv about th •
amount wo are making Worki ng under on-
of our patents, we have a monopoly Everybody which
sterns to me something wrong.
has to come to us for it and we
are making money too fast.” Ho thev
reduced tho price, and this while our philan
thropist mothers was hundred building Cooper of Institute, kindness which
a institutes and
mercy all over the land. But the w orld had
to wait live thousand eight hundred years for
Peter Cooper. I am glad for the benevolen'
institut ons that got a legacy from men who
dim ng their life were ns stingy as death, hut
who in their last tv.II and testament bestowed
money for on such hospitals and I missionary societies
but testators have no respset.
They would have taken every cent of it with
them if thev could, and bought up half of
heaven and let it out at ruinous rent, o»-
loaned the money to ee’estial citizens at two
per cent, a month and got a corner on htrn-
and trumpets. They lived in this worl
fifty or sixty years in the presence of appall
ing suffering and want, anl male no effort
for their relief. The charities of such people
are for the most part in "paulo post future”
tense and they are goin: to do them. The
probability will by donation is that if such a one in his last
a to benevolent societies
tries to atone for his life-time close fisted
ness, the heirs at law will try to break the
will by proving that the old man was senile
or crazy, and the expense of the litigation
will about leave in the lawyers’ bands w-hat
was meant for the American Bible Society
0 ye overweighted successful business men
whether this sermon reach your ear or yout
eye, let me say that if you are prostrated
with axeties about keeping or investing
these tremendous fortunes, I can tell you
how you can do more to get your health
back and yonr spirits raised than by
drinking gallons of bad-tasting water a
Saratoga, Horn burg or Carlsbad —give
ncht vT^hatlTave^T bromid^of
hours ’ sl ep without tlie help of
potassium, and from no appeti e you will
*J ft ,le l ° wait your regular meals,
and V.our wan cheek will fill up and when
you dw ‘j 1 ® blessln K’ °, f those who but for
you wou d have psnstied will bloom all over
yout' grave with violets tf it be spring, or
g a liolus, if it be autumn.
. Perhaps the some of you will take this .... advice,
but most of you will not. And vou will
try to cure your swollen hand by getting on
it more lingers, and your rheumatic toot by
getting on it more toes, and there will be a
slgh of r T ef when y° u are R°» e out of the
world; , , when , over your remains the min
ister recites the words: "Blessed are the dead
wh0 nttle Lord,” persons who have keen
sP ’reeiation ot the ludicrous will hardly be
n1 ! 10 *° k <*P their lace straight. But
wnether . that direction words do
m my goo :
or not, 1 am anxious that all who have only
ordinary equipment be thankful for what
they have anl rightly employ it. I think
vou ail have, figuratively as well as literally,
Angers enough. • Do not long for hindering
superfluities. *r tal giant Standing in the presence of
is on ot my text and in
ths post-mortem examination of him.
ltft us learn how much better off wo
"i" with Just the usual hand, the
usual foot. \ou have thanked God for a
thousiml things, but-I warrant you never
thanked Him for tlioie two implements of
work and locomotion, that no one but the
Innhitt'nfld Omnipotent God could have
over Only planned that or male, the hand and the foot,
soldier or that mechanic who in a
battle or-through machinery has lost them
knows anything about their value, and only
the Christian scientist can have anyappre-
ciaHonof what divine masterpieces they
Charles Bell, tho English
™rgeon, on the battlefield of Water-
!°°, while engaged in amputations
of wondrous the wounded construction was so of impressed'with the
the human hatid-
tbat w ken the Earl of Br dgewater gave
forty thousand dollars for essays on the wis-
domain! goodness of God. and eight books
were written, Sir Charles Bell wrote his en-
tire “°°k ° n the wisdom and goodness of
God , as displayed in the human hand. The
twenty-seven bones in hand and wrist, with
-’artilagcs fingers, and ligaments and ph ilan.e-*3 knit, of
the all made just ready to to
,tnv > ,0 build up, to pull down, to weave,
to write, to friendly plow, to pound, to wheel, to bat¬
tie, the to fingers give salutation. telegraph The offices tips by of
are so many
nasou of their sensitiveness of tou li. The
Amiges, the tunnel-, the cities of the whole
earth are the victories of the hand. Tha
bands are not dumb, but often speak as dis¬
tinctly as the lips. With our bands
we invite, we repal, we invoke, we
entreat, tbem we wring them in grief or
c!as P * n joy, or spread them abroad
“l benediction. The malformation of ttie
giant’* hand hand fashioned in the text glorifies the usual
’ >l ‘ 8| than of God human more equisitely mechanism and
won r ou y any
that «as ever contrived, I charge you use it
for God ana the lifting of the world out ( of
lts mo ™ predicament. Employ it in the
sublime,work , , of gospel handshaking. \ ou
can see the hand is just made for that. Four
fin ? e rs -1 ust set right i o touch your neighbor's
, hand . on one side and thumb set so as to
lellc h don the your By all bones.and
? other side. its
joints,and the muscles, and cartilages, and liga-
“ents, voice of nature joins with tho
voie ? of i’ od commanding yon to shaice
band?. The custom is as old as the
Bible, phipe anyhow.’ Jehu said to Jehonadeb:
“Is heart right as my heart is with
tbinehearti If it he, give me thine hand.”
Wberi bands join in Christian salutation a
heart gospel electricity heart, thrills across the palm from
to and from the shoulder of ono
the shoulder of the other. Shake hands
ad ■’•round. With the timid and for
'meourag -ment, shake hands. AV ith
tb ® troubled and iu warm hearted sympathy,
*hake hands. With the young man just en-
tering business, and discouraged at the
? na " sales and the large expenses, shake
b, ani ' s and - With started the child unending who is new from
wa ’, 'ch - he needs ou journey for
9 ,length, anl to gather great supply of
who can hardly reach up to
-’. 8h ou akehands. , n ' nv because you are so much taller,
and Across cradles and dying beds
£ raves . shake hands. With your
f nerales > who have done all to de-
fame an J hurt you, but whom you
S an a 10 forgive, shake hands. At the
door of , clm , rches where people in. and
tbe door come
at °f churches where people go
oat s,l ake hands Let pulpit shake hands
witb P®*- w>d Sabbath day shake hands with
I**® 11 and earth shake hands with
aven - Oh the strange, the mighty, the tin-
defined, , the mysterious, tho eternal power of
?" hone8t handshaking. The difference be-
j, w ®®" laes ® tira es and the millennial times is
that now some shake hands, but then all will
* naa e hands, throne and foot stool, a t oss
s ? as !' atl ” n wit h nation, God an l man,
.
CDart b nt, htauc . and church triumphant,
tbs malformation of this fallen
foot glorifies the ord nat y foot, for
which 1 fear you have never once thanked
Hod. The twenty-six bones of tbe foot are
the admiration of the anatomist. The arch
of.tbe that foot irajan’s fashioned with a grace and a
poise arch at Beneventum, or
Constantine’s arfch at Rom - , or arch of
Triumph 'i at the• ertd of Champs Elysccs
cou not equal. Those arche3 stand
where they were planted, but this
arch of the foot is an adjustable arch, a yield-
mg arch, a flying arch, nnd ready for move-
ments fashioned innumerable. The human foot so
as to enable man to stand upright
as no other creature, and leavo the hand that
would otherwise have to help in balancing
th* body fret for anything It cbooMa,
foot of tbo camel fashioned for the
sand, tha foot of the bird fashioned for
thi‘ tree branch, the foot of the hind fashioned
for the slippery rock. the foot of the lion
fashioned to reud Its prey, the foot of tbo
horse fashioned for the solid earth, hut tha
foot of man made to c-n.ss the desert, or
climb the tree, or scale the cliff, or wa’k tho
earth, or go where he needs to go With that
divine triumph of anatomy in your possession
rifcu.neTor Whore wh“ t pathVsm ha'vreyou
sot it down? lmve vou left the mark
of your footsteps' Amid tho petrifactions in
the rocks have boon found the mark of the
feet of h r Is and I ■easts of thousands
of yours ago. Am ( od can trace
hfetime and thJ?° yo? made hay
years ih ago nra as plain all as those made
the last soft w utber, of them petrifled
for the Judgment Day. Oh, the foot! How
divinely honor ■(! not only in its construction
the dust of His feet;” "Darkness was under
His feet;" “Tho earth is Mv footstool.” And
representing r]winds cyclones an.l euroclydons and
wh and hurrioanei as winged
creatures, He describes Himself as putting
H's foot on these monsters of the air ami
walking from pinion to pinion, saying: "He
walketh upon the wings of the wind.” 1 ’Thou
hast put all things unu*>r His feet,” cries the
psalm st. Oh, tho foot! Givo me the auto¬
biography of your foot from the time you
stepped out of the crad lie until today and
1 wi l tell your exact character now and
what are your pi-ospe -ts for the world to
come. That there might lie no doubt about
the fact that both t iese pieces of divins
mechanism hand and foot, belong to Christ’s
service, both hands of Christ and both
feet of Christ were spiked on tho
cross. His Right feet through tho arch of
both to the liollow of
His iustep went ttie iron of torture, and
from the palm of his hand to the back of it,
and there is not a muscle or nerve, or bone
umong tho twenty-seven bones of hand and
wrist, or among the twenty-six bones of the
foot but it belongs to Him now nnd fore-er.
Charles Reads, the great writer, lost the
joint of his forefinger by feeding a
bear. Look out that yonr whole hand gets
not into the maw of the old Cerberus of
perdition. Sir Thomas Trowbridge, at the
battle of Inkermann, lost his foot and when
the soldiers would carry him away, he said:
“No, I do not move until the buttle is won."
So if our foot be lamed or lost let it lie in the
service That of the our God, our home or our country.
is most beautif ul foot that goes
about paths of greatest usef ulness, and that
the most beautiful hand that docs the most
to who help others. I was reading of three women
were in rivalry about the appearance of
the hand. And the one reddened her hand
with berries, and said the beautiful tinge
made hers the most be utiful. And
another put her hand in the mountain brook,
and said as the waters dripped off, that her
hand was the most beautiful. And another
plucked contended flowers off the bank, and under tbe
bloom that her han I was tho most
attractive. Then a poor old woman ap¬
peared. and looking up in her decrepitude
asked for alms. And a woman who had not
•aken part in the rivalr y g ive her alms. An 1
all the women re-olved to leave to this beg¬
gar the question as to which of all the hands
present was the most attractive, and she
said: “The most beautiful of them all is the
■ me that gave reiics to my necessities,” and
ns she so said her wrinkles and
rags and her decrepitude and her body dis-
Christ ipp-ared, and in place thereof stool the
who long ago said: "Inasmuch as ye
I d it to one of the least of these ye did it to
Me! ’ and who to purchase the service of our
■and and foot here on earth or in resurrec¬
tion state, had His own hand and foot lac¬
erated.
FIHHTHNG PIRATES.
Hoxv the British Ship Pun jaub Cap¬
tured the Crew of a Slaver.
[From Chambers’ Journal.] I
As the vessels closed, broadside after
broadside was exchanged, and Captain
Dallas, seeing that her metal was heavy,
determined on boarding. The Punjaub
steered close alongside the bark, and
having grappled thirds her, the first lieutenant,
with two of the seamen and ma¬
rines, boarded. On reaching her decks
they met with determined opposition
from about as fierce a set of desperadoes
as ever were banded together for pur¬
poses of crime. Kenegade Portuguese,
savago Malays, lithe, cruel-looking
Manila men and Chinese, all alike fought
desperately, halters for they knew that they
fought with r ound their necks.
But they fought in vain. No men ever
yet could stand against British
ut sen. The Lascars tMuuiutou the valor
of their shipmates; and as for the men
of the Bombay Marine battalion, they
were Sepoys—that is as much as to say
they behaved could. as well Steady as their European and
confreres courage
desperation; perfect discipline prevailed spite over wolfish mere
and in of the
ferocity with which pirate they struggled the
motley crew of the cruiser’s began to Their give
way before the people.
captain was cut down by Mr. Brownsou,
the first lieutenant, and his men drop¬
ped fast before the volleys of the ma¬
rines, while the cutlasses and boarding
pikes of the seamen and Lascars did
deadly work. Part of the pirate crew
ran below, where a couple of their own
guns, loaded xvith grape and pointed
down the hatchways, soon compelled
them to surrender. The remainder bar¬
ricaded themselves in the forecastle, but
a few volleys reduced them also to sub¬
mission. Mr. Broxvnson, having over¬
came the resistance of the pirates, xvas
about to haul down tlie black flag, when
a signal from Captain Dallas warned
him not to do so, but to get his prison¬
ers One into by irons without they delay-. brought
one were up,
shackled and made to lie down. The
obvious. reason of the The captain’s dhows, order though was soon dis¬
Arab
abled for sailing, had got out long
sweeps, of nnd were coming to did the assist¬ the
ance the bark. As they so
cruiser was cast loose from her opponent
and yawing, so as to got a chance xvith
her long gun, raked the nearest from
stem to stern with grape. Great xvas
the slaughter, especially nnd greater still the slavers con¬
sternation, when the
saw the black flag fall to the deck of
their ally and the British union jack
hoisted iu its place. They shouted
Amaum! Autautn! and xvaved their
turhaus in token of submission. Tile
steamer allowed cruised alongside each in turn
aud the s.ax ei crews to come on
boarded, having first dropped their
arms. They were then ironed and
placed in rows on the deck under a I
guard of marine*. The bark was search-
ed throughout and ample evidence of
her character found. The fettered
pirates prize were under placed lieutenant, in confinement; a j
Clew, a was put !
on board, with orders for her to be got
under wyto acoompauy tlie Punjaub; 1
tho dead of both vessels were committed
to the deep and the wounded to the caro
of the surgeon and his assistants. Then
came the work of liberating the slaves
bark—a and transferring tedious them disgusting to the hold business of the
and
aud dangerous withal, as many of tbe
poor creatures were frantic from con¬
finement and xvant of xvater, in a horri¬
ble state of filth, and so infuriated by
their sufferings that they knew not
friend from foe.
A . r,.t * lists a i„ oi .. ,1 (.tintter. _
"Is it true, mamma,” inquired a little
girl, % 5, ‘that \ a in c" t ever take * his h ' 8 “ hat a j
j ‘ i. * true, my dear, answe ed
’ho . , mother,
-onu ‘ it is a mark of respect
which lie thiuks he should pay to no
man. ” "But then tell trie ”
6Wered the ‘liver ^ hild 1 mnmmn "hn 0 - do,« an- a a »
> / manage 17 , he to have
w , on goe u>
. . hair cut?’
nis
k ILLTik UUilbLAU’S BOLD 1 KICK.
In the GufM of a Pinkerton Detect-
ire lie Kidnaps a Bank Cashier
__
Iowa r „ Crrv, _ U-—Ono ra of . ,, tho most . dar ,
ing . exploits of of burglars which
a gang
narrowly to light oscapuil For success has just oome
lipro. a fow days previous
^ the bold attempt to rob the Dunk of
suspicious Wellman, a tuwn near this city, four
persons were seen about the
streota, but it was not dreamed that they
had their eyes on the bank, which has
but recently been started. The cashier
“ “youngniantwenty-tl.reey .^an of age
Wdo carries the keys to the hunk, and
with tho President of tho institution is
tho only person who knows the corabina-
tion of the valuta. A fow nights ago
**0. «, »«-. .1,0 O».hior, v...
iv« spending bride, the carriage evening drove with hie the prospect- liouso
and a knocked up door. He
a stranger at the
demanded with an air of authority to see
young Moore, and taking him to tho
grasped him by tho shoulder and
said: “You aro my prisoner.”
The cashier was ranch astonished, but
he was informed that ho was a forger
and that the stranger was a Pinkerton
detective, ami tho best thiug that could
he done was for the cashier to go along
with him. Haiti the alleged detective :
“If you want to go to tho bank to get
any money or papers that you need I
will go with you, but I am in a great
hurry.” the Moore said he would not go that to
bank, but that he had a friend
he would like to s o to borrow sotno
money from if he had to be taken away.
A this point a country doctor enme up,
and, being a fricud of -Moore, asked to
see the papers on which the latter had
been arrested. Tha bogus detective
said ; “I am a Pinkerton man and I
don’t have to show my papers.”
Then Moore was taken to the friend
he wauted to see, who proved to he the
President of the bank, Mr. Nicholas,
who wauted to know why Moore was ar¬
rested. and who finally said that it
would be best for Moore to go with the
officer. The pretend<>d detective started
out The to take his prisoner to Iowa City.
arrest aroused some half dozen peo¬
ple in the small town, and the detective
seemed in a hurry to get off. Finally he
started and when a little way from the
village he gavo Moore something to
drink from a bottle. In a few minutes
he was taken violently ill. He is still
sick from the influence of the drug that
When was undoubtedly administered to him.
Iowa City was reached the man
told Moore he was sorry, but he made a
mistake. He had found a telegram at
the livery barn imforming him that a
mistake had been made, and that he was
tho wrong Moore. The men then
separated, Moore going home and the
pretended detective taking a train
North.
From investigations made with¬
in the last few days it is pretty certain
that Moore was in the custo !y of a burg¬
lar. It is believed that had the bogus
detective succeeded in ge ting his man
off without arousing the President of the
bank uud so many other citizens he
would have taken him to the bank and
forced him to tell the rest of the gang
the combinations of the vaults which
then held over 8’15,0'X).
Biting the Finger Nails.
Br. Jerome Tuthiil, of Chicago, Ill., in
the Medical Record, says: A novel acci¬
dent, resulting from a habit of very
common ple, brought prevalance among nervous peo¬
xvas to my notice recently.
A young lady presented herself at my
office complaining of a constant irrita-
tion in her throat. Two weeks pre-
viously she had been taken xvith a severe
“sore throat,” which was treated by a
she neighboritig tlie physician. Under his care,
says, inflammation quickly sub-
sided, but there still remained a sensa-
tion of irritation. Examination revealed
^ a small n n fleshy- s i ooking * . object i • ■ about i a. t, the
wheat, .
size of a kernal of adherent to
the tissues posterior to the left tonsil, by
one end. The other parts °f tho throat
were normal, lhe litt.e mass could no.
be detached by a cotton-oovered probe,
but by' the use of forceps it was easily
removed, and on examination proved to
be a piece of finger nail, which had be¬
come covered by a cheesy deposit. A
broken piece of the nail was also ro-
removec l from under the mucous mem-
brane at tbe same spot by a sharp-point-
ed probe, lhe patient tnen confessed
to the habit of biting her tinger nails,
and, ’ moreover, could remember that a
day . two . to ... the onset i.i of iter
throat or previous
trouble a piece of nail which she
hail natl Litton linen off on nan had lipcnmo Become lost lost in m her ner
mouth, but tutor it had caused ft nt of
coughing, sho had forgotten p about it un-
till , reminded ,, by discovery.
my _
They Look Alike.
The members of the Chinese legation
at Washington try very hard to make
themselves popular in society. They of¬
ten make handsome presents, rare jewel¬
ry, quaintances. pethips, or They cosily silk—to casual assiduous ac¬
are very
to paying from calls, bouse The y start house, out together
their an a go and photographs. to leaving
cards They seem
to think that th' ir names will not be
recognized, so they leave their pictures
to establish their respective individuali¬
ties. But to most Washingtonians the
photographs all look alike.
Presbyterianism is making advances
in South Alrica. Already it has there
2 28 congregations, and controls five col¬
leges. Also in Hungary its influen"c is
extending, there being in that country,
France it is said, more Switzerland, Presbyterians with five than in
and col¬
leges, which contain 2,‘J20 students.
vritaw I fiLLU iv rrvFf? J-XiVixiv.
Preventlon Cure.
Th0 followj statement speaks for itself;
“This Tin* certifies certifies that that 1 I was was, with ■wttn my mv family lamtiy,
president of New Orleans during the terrlbl*
Yellow Fever epidemic winch visited that
«tyinl878. We were strangers there, and
unacclimated, but having previously used
Ayer’s A*ue Cure for malarial disorders, I
fully believed it would prove a preventive of
the scourge. I took the Ague Cure myself,
and had my little girls take it daily,
but I could not persuade my husband to use
jt. He fell a ck of tha fever and died, but
my children and I were not attacked. Our
exemption from sickness at this time was
considered miraculous, but I believe it was
Ayer’s Ague Cure, and feel sure that we owe
to this me Heine ths fact that wa survived
the epidemic.’’—Mrs. L. E. Osborn, Prescott,
Ark.
There areon exhibition in the rooms
of the State mini tiff bureau at San Fran¬
cisco, four "desiccated human bodies”
ibat were found by Signor S. Margbieri
iu a sealed cavern at an elevation of 4,-
00 ) f c t on the eastern side of the Sierra
Madre Mountain* iu Vtexico.
laphei* Thej artfteroes. .i indeed, . , , thtse ,i tele?- . .
at Jacksonville. FI a., who. night
and day, in the midst of the pestilence,
tell the story of sickness and death,—
Charleston , 8, C,, News,
Dog Farming in China.
Tbe rearmpf , of . dogs , for their skins is ,
pursued {„ j Australia. in China There just as sheep thousands farming of
u are
BTn all Jo llU(1 goat furruH scattered over
t! .. ‘ e uoithem districts of Manchuria and
Mongolia. Nature lias provided u mag-
niilcont protection to withstand the cold
of those northern lstitudes, where the
thermometer (Fahrenheit) goes down to
”5 degrees below zero-tlmt is ST^offrost,
and it is doubtful if the dogskius m
any other part of the world aro to be
compared with those from Manchuria,
either in size, length of hair, or quality,
The fur is at its best killed during tho the winter,
ft „d the dog is before thaw
gets m, which is affected not by tha knife
which might injure the fur. but by
strangulation. skins fell off Last owing year the tbe stocks value oi oi
the to
provion, year, lioing nmloliveroj. It i,
difficult to understand how the farmers
can rear the animals for the price they
obtain for the hides. To provide eight a xvell-
made dogskin rug, at least ani¬
mals must bo slaughtered, inches by which, at 3
taels per rug of HI) 68 inches
would allow not quite 55 cents per dog,
including tho sewing, choosing, &c., for
tha skins must fairly mutch in color.
The flesh, however, is no doubt used for
human food, and the market value there¬
of enters largely into tho farm’s profit
and loss account. When a girl is mar¬
ried she receives perhaps six dogs as her
dowry .—Pall Mall Gazette.
Artesian Wells In Sonoma.
A few weeks ago, according of excellent to the
Weekly Bulletin, “a fine flow
water was struck at a depth of ninety
feet, on a lot a little to the east of the
town of Sonoma, belonging to Mr. Gil¬
bert. The next attempt was made at
Mr. Wiukle’s vineyard, when at a depth
of eighty-two feet a flow of 90,000 gal¬
lons per day was obtained. The tools
were then moved about 150 feet south to
the lauds of J. Gundlacb, where still
greater success was met with. At a
depth of ono hundred and ten feet a flow
of 100,000 gallou* per day was reached.
Both these wells are located in the oot
hills, considerably above the level of the
valley and supposedly such result. in a very The unlikely tods
place to find a
penetrated and successive layers being of found sand,
ro<-k, latter. clay, the The water
below the water comes out
with considerable force, and will oxer-
flow a pipe twenty feet above the sur¬
face. The fortunate owners of these
wells consider them worth not less than
$10,000 apiece. The tomperature of the
water is constantly 72 deg. F.; and what
is remarkable is that it is exactly the
same as that of several springs on the
other side of the valley, four or five
miles away. Many of the farmers and
fruit growers of the valley are arrang¬
ing to put down wells.”
Excellent Bracers.
The increase, says a New York paper,
in the consumption of milk by business
and professional men of late years, has
been marked. Where once the potent
cocktail was considered essential as a
concomitant of a day’s work, in many
casts a gla-s of milk is now preferred.
To men of sedentary habits, whose
braii s are at fever heat a good part of
tbe time, niiik is one of the best “bra¬
cers” in the world. It is easily digested
nnd is a great w»ste-repairer. It- grow¬
ing popularity in that city is a promising
sign.
Their Onlr Medicine Chest.
Deeklodoe, Montana, Dec. 16,1885.
1 have been using Bhandreth’s Pills for
the last thirteen years, and though I have had
nine children , 1 liave never bad a doc tor in the
hou8e ’ elcept thre ® tim ® 9 - when we hadanepi-
demic °. f Bcarlet ^ver,which we soon banished
a V1 ‘ J °™ U9 U9e of Kuanorkth s Pills.
have used 1 them for myself.two or three a night
for a “°t ‘ C °“ plamt ’ dy8pepfiia ,’
and . constipation. H t In m diarrhoea, cramps, wind
coli(Ji indlge8tioni one or tw0 brandreth’s
PlM flled the children at once. A box of
pills , 8 all the medicine chest xve require in the
house. We use them for rheumatism, colds,
catarrh, biliousness, and impure blood. They
never have failed to cure all the above com-
plaints in a very few days,
William W. B. Miller.
The Prince of Wales is said to be a first-class
banjo player.
A General Tie.up
all the means of public conveyance in a
0 of [ trade tne employes, and industry means for a the general paralyzing being, and
time
j a attended with an enormous aggregate loss to
the community. How much more serious to
the individual is the general tie-up of his sys-
tom. known as constipation, and due to the
strike of the most important organs for more
prudent neglected, treatment torpid and sluggish better care. liver If will too long
a or pro-
duce serious malarial forms trouble of and kidney chronic and dyspepsia, liver dis-
eases,
Dr . Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative Pellets are a
preventive and cure of these disorders. They
are prompt, sure and effective, pleasant to
take, and positively harmless.
The labor press continues to agitate for the
eight-hour rule.
Warner's Log Cabin Remedies—old fash¬
ioned, simple compounds, used in the days of
our hardy rellable.”Theycomprlsea’’Sar forefathers are “old timers’ but
“old apari la,”
“Hops and Buchu Remedy,” “Couch and Con¬
sum ation Remedy,” “Hair Tonic,” “Ex’ract,”
for Ex ernal and Internal Use, “Plasters,”
Rose Cream,” for Catarrh, and “Liver PilK”
They are put un by H. H. Warner & Co., pro¬
prietors or Warner's Safe Remedies, a d prom¬
preparations. ise to equal the All standard value of those great
druggists keep them.
AU dramatic artists’, when off the stage in
Russia, must wear a uniform.
Children Starving to Death
On account of their inability to digest food,
lvill find a most marvellous food and remedy
in Scott's Emulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oil
with Hypophosphites. digested. Dr. W. Very palatable and
easily S. Cohen, of Waco,
Texas, says: “I hax’e used your Emulsion in
Infantile wasting with good results. It not
and only restores wasted tissues,but gives strength
increases the appetite. Iam glad to use
such a reliable a i tide.”
President. Diaz, of Mexico, recommends a
new extradition treaty with the United States.
WomaaTwork.
There is no end to the tasks which dailv con-
front the good housewife. To be a successful
housekeeper, the first requisite is good health.
i:low can- woman the trial,
and weaknesses ™dtatteg peculiar
to her sex? Dr.
druggists, under ^. e aposittve ThTonly 0, reme a dv?“ofd C f bJ
^erymSe^’or^money^refunded^See^^ted guarantee from the
guarantee on bottle wrapper. ' Prmtea
Life is too short to be spent in nursing ani¬
mosity or registering wrong.
Hradfle'd’s Female Regulator will cure all
irregularities or derangements peculiar to
xvomun. 1 hose suffering should use it.
If afflicted with ore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
son'sEyeavater. Druggists sell at 25c. per bottle.
Bronchitis is cured by frequent small doses
of Piso’s Cure for t’onsump ion.
Wabnkr’s Loo Cabin
Hemedies. — “Sarsapa¬
rilla, ’’—“Cough andt on-
gumption 1 emedy,” —
“Hops and Buchu,”
“Extra c t,”—“H a i r
_ Tonic,”—“Liver I ills,”—
“Plasters,” (Porous-Eiectrical “Hose
(Team, ’ for Catarrh. Tlrey are, like
Warner’* “Tippecanoe,” the simple, ef
fective remed es of the old Los cabin
days. “
. [ —:--
PISO’S CUBE FORCONSU M PJI 0 N
Log Cabin Success.
What alls the young meat
Robert Garrett» father left him a fortune
of twenty millions. He was from childhood
education reared in with luxury; especial ho received training a eplendid into
an a
thorough kuowledgoof railroad management
and railroad was expected king. to succeed his father as a
Within three years after the responsibili-
ties which his father's death threw upon him
were assumed, he is reported health a broken down
min, with mind ana permanently
!> battered,
George law is another young man left
with millions of money, who is reported
among the ‘‘wrecks.” His father, bred a
stone mason, was of gigantic size and strength,
with commensurate brain power, so he be¬
came a great contractor, then a railroad
king and left half a dozen millions for hi»
son to dissipate. The young man is a suc¬
cess Tho as a dissipator. both of these great estates
founders of
were born in the most humble walks of life,
grew strong, mentally and physically, and developed by
simple living and honest labor
into financial giants. Their sons were reared
in tha lap ot luxury and developed into in¬
tellectual pigmies.
The great men of our country have not, as
a rule, come from the elegant mansions of
the cities, but from the Log Cabins of tho
rural districts. Simple ways of living, free¬
dom from dissipation and enervating pleas¬
ures, simple remedies for disease, effective
and which leave no po son in the system, de-
velo p brawny, brainy men, who compel the
world to recognize their strength and power.
The wholesome, old-fashioned Log Ustbin
remedies Our are grandmothers the safest and knew surest how for to family
use. pre¬
pare the teas and syrups of roots, herbs and
balsams which drive disease out of the sys¬
tem by natural methods and leave no after
ill-effect*. The most potent of these old-
time remedies were, after long H. and Warner, searching
investigation, secured by H. of
safe cure fame, and are now put out for the
“healing of the nations" in the Warner’s Log
Cabin remedies.
Regulate the regulator with Warner’s Log
Cabi sarsaparilla, and with pure blood
giving health, strength, mental and bodily
vigor, you may hope to cope problems successfully of
with the most gigantic financial
tlie age, without wrecking health and man¬
hood.
___
Miss MacTavIsh, of Va., will marry the
of Norfolk, the premier duke of England.
Tlie Coining Comet.
It Is fancied by a grateful patron that the
next comet will "Golden appear In the form of a huge
bottle, scribed having bold Medical characters. Discox’ery" Whether in-
upon it in
this conceit and high compliment will be veri¬
fied, remains to be seen, out Dr. Pierce will
continue to send forth that wonderful vege-
table compound, and potent eradicator of dis-
ease. It has no equal tn i edlcinal and health-
giving properties, kidneys,In for imparting vigor the and tone
to the liver and purifying blood,
xvholo and through it cleansing scrofulous and renewing humors, the
system. For and
consumption, or lung scrofula, in its early
stages, it is a positive specific. Druggists.
Indicat ons from many parts of the South,
point to an early frost.
A Pleasing Laxntlve.
Whoex-er lias taken Hamburg Figs will never
take anv other kind of laxative medicine. They
are pleasant to the taste, and are sure in their
action, a few doses curing the most obstinate
case of constipation or torpidity of the liver. 25
cents. Dose one Fig. Mack Drug Co., N. Y.
If You Are Sick
With Headache, Neuralgia, Rh umatism Dyspep¬
sia, Biliousness, Blood Humors, Kidney Disease,
Constipation, Female Troubles, Fever nnd Ague,
Sleeplessness, Partial Paralysis, or Nerx ous Pros¬
tration, use Paine’s Celery Compound and be
cured. In each of these the cause is mental or
physical overwork, anxiety, exposure or malaria,
the effect of which is to xveaken the nervous sys-
tern, resulting in one of these diseases. Remove
the cause xvith that great Nerve Tonic, and tho
besult will disappear.
Paine’s Celery Compound
Jas. L. Bowen, Springfield, Mass., writes
"Paine’s Celery Compound cannot be excelled as
a Nerve Tonic. In my case a single bottle
wrought a great change My nervousness entirely
disappeared, of the and heart with and it the resulting the affection
tone of stomach, tho liver, and whole
I tell friends, system if sick was wondertmly 1 have invigorated. Paine's
Celery my Compound as been,
Will Cure You!
Sold by druggists. SI ; six for S5. Prepared only
by Wells, Richardson & Co., Burlington, Vt.
For the Aged, Nervous, Debilitated.
f§m ii
Warranted to color more goods than any other
dyes durable ever made, and to give more brilliant and
colors. Ask for the Diamond, and take
no other.
A Dress Dyed FOR
A Coat Colored >
Garments Renewed j cents
A Child can use them!
Unequalled for alt Fancy and Art Work.
At druggists and Merchants. Dye Book free.
WELLS, RICHARDSON &C0„ Props,, r Burlington, ' Vt
_
~ v ilrTiii ST
\
a %
Grasses-South.
—SEND TO THE—
ATLANTA SEED CO.,
83 Pencil free At., • ATLANTA, GA,
Etc., For price and list Grasses, ‘ Clovers, For Georgia South. Rye. Barley,
Mention our circular, this ‘Grasses the ”
paper.
Fly’s (ream Balm,
Price 50 Cents,
WFMRfflg kj WILL CURE
,C ATARR H
^ AJELY Apply Balm into each nostril.
BROS.. 66 Warren St.. N.T.
PINE-NEEDLE OIL.
Extracted from tbe needles of the Pine Tree, cures
Lung Tronb e. Coughs and l)i|>htli erm, also
ll-tscular itlienitiaii-in. Swellings, Ulcers
nnd W. M. Putrid WHITE, So -s Sample boltso25 cts. Address
A CO., Box418, Atlanta, Ga.
D1 FISTULA
=*i£is and trea caustic. A
ur radical c»rr
guaranteed in every esse
treated. Reference given.
Whitehall St., Aliautin G*f
COWBOY.lfflS.fkiS (0 yearssct^s
-
_
GOLD I nt Live anything: at home else and in make lhe more world TBL'X money Either working flex Costly for u* outfit than
rxxx. Term* fkjcje. Address, h Co., Augusta, .Maine.
Qttl.tb' A^IMor taoiBUlliplivi-A atuI Asthmat-
1 i.e lu.iii who lias invusteti lroui thre* We offer the nmn who wants service
to five doliar* m a Rubber Coat, and (not style) a garment-that will
W CL I
at feei being lf he so does badly taken in, but also ■ |sb| ■ OBB BB ■ the only i»^‘ perfeet Wind and Waterproof
g not look exactly like Coat Tower’# Fish' Brand Slicker^
doe* not have " Fk the 1 8 1! BKAND ” Sucker ■ fl Bbb I W and take no other. If your storekeeper
fish brand, wend for detoriptlve catalogu*. A. J. Tower, ‘20 Simmons St., Boston, M**{*
- DR. SCHENCK’S i
Pulmonic S yr up
Ii the oldest and best established -medicin#
for direct treatment of Consumption
and all affections of lungs
1 /It ripeni and loosens the tubercles,
j \ Cleans Ridi the and Lungs heals of the purulent matter,
sore spots,
< {Makes new blood and helps circulation^
O I Prevents other deposits of tubercles,
“* m [ vCures Helps where the return other of remedies flesh and spirit, /
fail.
Do not fail to send for Dr Schenck's new
and admirable treatise on the Lungs, the
Liver, and the Stomach, with their disease*
and cure. I t abounds in excellent informa¬
tion, and will give you ideas about these
vital organs and the laws of health you
never had before. Sent free.
DR. SCHENCK'S MEDICINESi
1 PURELY VEUETABLE.
PULMONIC SYRUP,
SEAWEED TONIC AND "
MANDRAKE PiLL3
»re for sale by all Druggists. Full printed
directions with each package. Address all
communications to Dr. J. H. Schenck & Son.
Philadelphia, Pa. ”
$15 omrp fo r $io.
I f
ili F
ji£& •J/' i i
/>y
A P A ST PW A T? T £r
“• vWi }
OU Whitehall Street,
ATLANTA, - GEORGIA.
■ I P SO’S CURE FOR
on
I b~ I CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS.
u Beit Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use
] iT> I iu time. Sold by druggists.
P® rj natlTBl airtif
^
I believe Piso’* Cure
for Consumption H. saved
mv life.—A. Dot.'ei.l,
Editor Enquirer, Eden-
ton, N. C., April 23,1887,
PISO
The best Cough Medi¬
cine is Piso’s Cuke job
Consumption. Children
take it without objection.
By all druggists. 2oc.
H to PISO’S CURE FOR Bfef
j y. CURES WHERE ALL ELSE good, I AILS. Use
Best ; Cough Syrup. Tastes
: in in time. Sold b y druggists.
-f 1 i CONSUMP SS
MARVELOUS
piSOftVERY,
Any book learned in one reading:.
HpeiLHiisg Mind wandering without cured,
notes
Wholly unlike artificial system*.
Great Piracy inducements condemned corregBondviice by Supreme C’ourf. classes.
to
mond, Prospectus, tho .NX^rltb-f with opinions ed Spacijplst of m\ tin.Mind Win. A dieedses, Ham¬
am Psych''P
I Mantel Greeiileaf'Thomi son, tho great
j ogist, Han Advocate, J. M. Buckley, R char I). Pr H.,Edit 9 r'Hf the the(7iHs' Scientist,
i ctor
I and others, L-LOIH gent poet /reo br Yiftil New York.
IHIOF. KTTK, 2J7 Ave.,
WEBSTER
f OHABR/OCeffi library
’pieTlONAftlff m M
ITSELF
3000 more Words nnd nearly 2000 more Illus¬
trations than any other .American Dictionary.
An Invaluable Companion
in every School and at every Fireside.
Sold by all-Booksellers. Illustrated Pamphlet
sent free.
G. A C. MERRIAM A CO. Pub’rs.Springfield, Mas,.
_ ,
FAIIMbKS LMit.XKS, lV,K>d PUi)»rt.
? , M SAW MILL
Sitt L°k u oSh£S ,l,l j
B«»n? Recti-
tet WorkSsil
and Dotrt. 1 , Kc-
rentric Friction
Feed. Manufac- a
SALEM turedby the IRON WORKS. _ SALMI, , . . „ >- « e kt
% JONES
^WlPAYStheFREICHT W 5 Ton Wagon *cale«,
„ Iren Levers, Steel .Leering*, brut
Tare Newa and Beam Bfll ft
Iverj JKE tier addre,, r r i .-■* 11*
■ entlpfl thl, paper end
JUNES OF BINGHAMTON, N. V-
m vri ii * NITON.
flffilor In.tit ha* ‘fins Mss Poll. yr
100-r.p. (,isl«F op pf Gun*. Hi#e«, l>voU-er, <■
mils p. i.Ain.i, i turn'll.. Micul'r,, nnw, n**-
WK SKLL ALL AMERICAN
BICYCLES.
JJ «iu. }■; ” “ . “ sooo! “ “ “ " $S
Ord ing: er Nfok«lln#. quick. Also 250 Bicycles second-hand Guns Wheels. taken in ReP*J* traas
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