Newspaper Page Text
REV. DR. T A IMAGE.
THE BROOKLYN DIVINE’S SUN¬
DAY SERMON.
Snbj^t: j “The Pulpit anti I'rcss Made
Allies.”
Text: “ The children of this world are
in their generation wiser than the children
of light. — Luke xvi., 8.
Sacred stupidity and solemn incompetoncy rebuked by
and sanctified laziness are here awake
('lirist. He says worldings are wider
for opportunities than are Christiana Men
of the world grab occasions while Christian
people let tho most valuable occasions drift
By unimproved. That is the meaning of our
Lord when he says: “The children of this
world are in their generation wiser than the
children of light.” illustration of tho truth of that
A marked of tho Christian
maxim is in the slowness print¬ re-
ligion to take possession of the secular
ing press. The opportunity is open, ami has
for some time been open, tut the ecclesiasti¬
cal courts and tho churches and the ministers
of religion are for the most part allowing the
golden opportunity to pass I unimproved. declare from
That tho opportunity is open
the fact that ttie secular newspapers are glad
of any religious facts or statistics that you
present them. Any animated anil stirring
article relating to religious themes they
would gladly print. They thank-you for any
Information in regard to churches. If a
wrong hag been done to any Christian
church or Christian institution you
could go into any newspaper ol the land
and have the real truth stated. Dedica¬
tion servh-es, ministerial ordinations and
pastorpl installations, corner stone laying of
a church, anniversary of a charitable society
will have reasonable spice in any secular
journal, if it have previous notic j given. It
1 had some great in justice done me there is
not an editorial or a reportorial room in and jthe
United States into which 1 could not go
get myself set right, and that is true of any
well known Christian. Already the daily
secular pr -a daring the course of each week
publishes as much religious information and
high moral sentiment os do :s the weekly re¬
ligious Christianity press. Why embrace then does these not magnificent our glori¬
ous before subject of
opportunities! I ha ve me a
first and last importance. How shall we se¬
cure the secular press as a mightier re-en¬
forcement to religion toward and this the result pulpit is
The first thing hostility against cessa¬
tion of indiscriminate well denounce news- the
paperdom. You might as of the shysters,
legal profession because or
the medical profession because swindling of the quacks,
or nw-ehan dise because of tho I ar-
ga’.n makers, as to slambang ne wspapers be
cause there are recreant editors ana unfair
reporters and unclean columns. Guttenberg,
the inventor of the art of printing, was about
to destroy his typos suggested and extinguish him that the print¬ art
because it was to
ing might be suborned into tho service of the
devil, but afterward ha bethought himself
that the right use of the art might more th in
overcomo tho evil use of it, and si lie
spared the tyne and the intelligence of all fol¬
lowing ages. But there are many to day in the
depressed mood of Guttenberg with uplifted the
hammer, wanting to pound to better pieces mood
type, who have not reached his
ni IV hich he saw tiie art of printing to be the
rising sun of the world's illumination. If in¬
stead of fighting newspapsis we spend the
same length of time and the same vehemence
In marshaling their hpip in religious tho direc¬
tions, we would be as much wiser as man
who gets consent of the railroad superin¬ rail
tendent to fasten a car to tiie end of a
train, shows better sense than he who runs
liis wheelbarrow np tho track to meet an l
drive back the Chicago limited express. The
silliest thing that a man ever does is to fight
a newspaper, for you m ay havetti ■ floor lor
titterancejierhaps one day in the weak, while
the newspajier has the flooreverv day of the
week. Napoleon, though a mighty man, had
J*:sv weaknesses, and one of the weakest
th.ngM, , ever did was to threaten that if the
English criticism »«-. snapei-s did not stop their ad¬
verse ,f himself he would with four
hundred thousand i~vonets cross the chaunel
for their chastisement.
Don't fight newspapers, attack provokes
attack. Better wait till the excitement blows
over and then go in and get justice, to- ge t
it you will if you have disposition. patience und It common
sense and equipoise of ought
to be a mighty sedative that there is ail
enormous amount of common s nso in the
world, and you will eventually be taken for
what you are really worth, and you cannot
be puffed up end you cannot be written
down, and if you are the enemy of good so¬
ciety that fact will come out, and if you are
the friend of good society that fact will be
established. I know what I am talking
about, for I can draw on my own experience.
All the responsible newspapers as far as I
know are mv friends now. But many of
you remember the time when I was
the most continuously and meanly at¬
tacked man in this country. God gave
me grace not to answer back, and I kept
silence for ten years, and much grace is
r-muir. •(!. What I said was perverted and
twiSWs„ to just the opposite qf what I did
«B$qcgBsgss* say. my ,->rsou was maligned, and I w-as
There were millions of Ppq^ins pulpit, al-
..hat there was a large” ’ t [,ing but a chair,
though we never ing t h nB*JLL by the congresa- on that
• and that dur e down ing
,y
Morn than eight hundred thousand people in
Brooklyn,and less than ssventv-flva thousand
in churoho*, no th it our cities are not so
inuidt preached to !>y ministers of religion as
by reporters. Put nil journalists into our
prayers and sermons. Of nil the hundred
thousand s rmons preached to day, there will
not be throe preached to journalists, and
probably not one. Of all the prayers offered
for classes of nmn innumerable the will prayers lie
offered forties most potential class so
few and rare that they will be thought will a
preacher's idiosyncrasy. This world
never lie brought to God until some revival
of religion sweeps over the land and takes
into the kingdom of God editors and re¬
porters, compositors, pressmen and news
boys. And it you have not faith
enough to pray for that and toil for th it,
you ' had bettor get out of our ranks
and join the other side, for you are the un¬
believer; who make the wbeelR of the Lord's
chariot drag heavily. The great final battle
between truth and error, the Armageddon, I
think will not he fought with swords and
shells and guns, but with pins, quill and, pens, be¬
steel pens, gold pens, fountain pons,
fore that, the pens must be converted. The
most divinely honored weapon of the past
has lie n the pen. and the most divinely hon¬
ored weapon of tl\3 future will lie ttie pen;
prophet's pen and evangelist’s pen and apos¬
tle’s pen followed by o liters pen and re¬
porter’s pen and author's pen. God save the
pen! The wing of the Apocalyptic angel will will
be the printed page. The printing press
roll alien 1 of Christ’s chariot to clear the way.
‘■But.” some one might ask, ‘‘would you
make the Sunday newspapers also a re-en¬
forcement;” Yes, f would. I have learned
to take things as they nro. 1 would like to
see the much scofTel at old Puritan Habbaths
come back again. I do not think the modern
Sunday will turn out any bettor men and
women than were your old-fashioned grandfathers Sun¬ and
grandmothers under the
day. To say nothing of other results, Sun¬
day newspapers are killing editors, Every reporter*,
compositors and pressmen. man,
woman and child is entitled to twenty four
hours of nothing to do. If the newspapers
put on another sat of hands that don not
relieve the editorial and reporter al room of
its car s and responsibilities. Our literary
men die fast enough without killing them
with Sunday work. But the Sunday news-
I>aper has come to stay. It will stay a
good deal longer than any of us stay. What,
then, shall we do! Implore aH those who
have with anything moral to religious do with issuing information; it to fill live it
or
sermons divorce and facts elevating. be Urge them
that all cases dropped, and in¬
stead thereof have good advice as to how
husbands an 1 wives ought to live lovingly
together. Put in small type the behavior of
the swindling church memlier, and in large
type the contribution of some Christi in man
toward an ns.ylum for feeble minded children
or a seaside sanitarium. Urge all managing
editors to put ra.‘anness and impurity in type
pe irlor agate, and charity ami fidelity and
Christian consistency in brevier or bour¬
geois. If wc- cannot drive out the Sunday
lie wspaper lot, us have tiio Sunday newspaper
converted. The fact is that the modern Sun¬
day newspaper is a great improvement What on
tile old Sunday newspaper. a lieastly
thing was the Sunday newspaper thirty man’s years
agol It was enough to destroy a re¬
spectability to leavo the tip end of it stick¬
ing out of Ids coat pocket. What editorials!
What advertisements! What pictures! The
modern Sunday newspaper ol 1 time is Sunday as much an
improvement hundred on the is than twenty- news¬
paper as one more
five; in other words, about 75 per cent, im¬
provement. Who knows that by prayer and
kindly consultation lifted with our literary friends
we may have it into Saturday a positively and re¬
ligious distributed, sheet, printed on night M-sse
only Missionary like the Journal, Americ in the Sun¬ ti¬
ger, or the or
day School Advocate, on Sabbath mornings!
All things are possible with (rod,
and my faith is up until nothing
in the way of religious victory would sur¬
prise me. of the Ail the newspaper printing be
presses earth are going to the
Lord’s, and telegraph and telephone and
typo will yet announce nations bom in a day.
The first book ever printed was the Bible by
Faust and his son-in-law, Schoeffer, in 1 Ilk),
and that consecration of type to the Holy
Scriptures was a prophoey of the great mis¬
sion of printing for the evangelization of all
the nations. The father of the American
printing press was a clergyman, Rev. Jesse
(Hover, and that was a prophecy of the re¬
ligious use that the Gospel ministry in this
country were to make of the types.
Again, we shall secure the secular press as
a mightier re enforcement of religion and the
pulpit by making our religious and utterances then the
more will interesting reproduce and them. spirited, On the
1“ -‘is way to
church some fifteen years ago, a journalist
said a thing that has kept me ever sinca
thinking. “Are you going to give us any
points to-day!” oWhat do you mean!” I
asked. He said:‘‘I mean by that anything
that will be striking enough to be remem¬
bered.” Then I said to myself: What right
have wp in our pulpits and Sunday schools to
take the time of people if we liavo nothing to
say that is memorable? David did not
have any “ difficulty Thou in remembering Nathan's
thrust: art the man;” nor Felix
in remembering righteousness, Paul’s point blank utter¬
ance on temperance and
judgment to como: nor the Engli-h King
any difficulty in remembering what the
court againstsin preacher said, when during the ser-
mon the preacher threw his hand¬
kerchief into the king’s pew to indicate whom
he meant. The tendency pf„flrWf utoecuus q
catnre tho whole scone. When the music began
he began,and with his pencil he derided that,
and then derided the prayer, and then derided
the reading of the Ncriiitures.and Mien began
to deride the sermon. But. he says, for Rome
reason his hand began ;to trembl ■, and ho,
rallying himself, sharpened his pencil and
started again, hut broke down again, and
then put pencil and paper in his pocket
and his head down on the front of the pew
and began to pray. At the c’osa of the
service ho came up and asked for tho
prayers of others and gave his heart
to God; although still engaged in news¬
paper work, ho is an evangelist, and hires a
nail at li s own expense and Christ every Sabbath the
afternoon preaches Jesus to peo¬
ple. And the men of that throughout profession the aro go¬
ing to come in a body them, and coun¬
try. I know hundreds of a more
genial or highly educated class of men it
would bo hard to find, and, though toward the
tendency of their profession may bo
skepticism, an organized, would fetch common them to sense the
Gospel invitation Hen of the
front of all Christian endeavor.
pencil and pen, in all departments, you need
th'help of the Christian religion. In the
day when people want to get their news-
papers at three cents, and are hoping for of
the time when they can get any
them at one cent, anil, as a conse¬
quence, the attaches of the printing the cylinders, press are
by the thousand ground under
you want God to take care of you anil your
families. Borne of your best w ork is ns much
unappreciated as was Mi ton’s ‘‘Paradise
Lost, ’ for which the author received $35, and
the immortal poem, ‘-Hohenlinden,” offered of
Thomas Campbell when he first it
for puhlication, and tn the column called
‘‘Notices to correspondent's” T. C.—The lines appeared commencing the
words: “To
‘Oil Linden when tho sun was low’ are not up
to our standard. Poetry is not T. C. ’s forte."
Omen of the pencil and pen, amid your
unappreciated work you need encouragement
and you can have it. Printers of all Chris¬
tendom, editors, reportors.compo-dtors,press¬ readers of that which is
men, printed, publishers resolve and that will not write, set
read anything you tliat debases
up, edit, issue or In the of God, by
body, mind or soul. name
the laying on of the hands of faith and
prayer, eousness ordain tho printing press for right¬
anil liberty and salvation. All
of us with some influence that will hands help
in the right direction, let us put our to
the work imploring God to hasten the consum¬
mation. A ship with hundreds of passengers
approaching the South American coast, the
man on the lookout neglected his work have
and in a few minutes the ship would
been dashed to ruin on the rocks. But a
cricket on hoard the vessel, that hail made no
sound all tho voyage, set up a shrill call at
the smell of land, and the Captain, knowing
that habit of the insect, the vessel was
stopped in time to avoid an awful wreck.
And so, insignificant moans now may do
wonders and the scratch of a pen may save
the shipwreck all of ready a soul. for the signing of the
Are you
contract, the league, the solemn treaty pro¬
posed between journalism and evangelism!
Aye, let it be a Christian marriage of tho
pulpit ami the printing press. The ordina¬
tion of the former on my head, the pen of
the latter in my hand, it is appropriate that
I publish tiie banns of such a marriage. Let
them from this day be one in the magnificent
work of the world’s redemption.
Let thrones and powers and kingdoms ho
Obedient, mighty God, to Thee:
And over isna ana stream and main*
Now wave the scepter o Thy reign.
O, let that glorions anihem swell, tell, If¬
Let host to host the tr mnph
Till not one rebel heart remaius.
But over al! the Stv or reigns.
Fourth of July Fun.
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swallei-ing up my firecrackers a3 fast as
throw them down.
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HEAD-GEAR.
A DESCRIPTION OK TTIB TVAY
MEN’S HATS AllK MADE.
The Method or Making the Felt
from Fur—Shaping tho “Hotly”—
Various Other Processes-
Making Silk. Hats.
Muh a view to learn how mens hats
sro made,a New York Telegram reporter
visited a number of list manufactories
and gives bolow the .-csult of hi* inquirb which *. is
Commencing with the derby, which is
the hat of the multitude ; nd
made tjf fine felt, otherwise known as
fur, tkequestion not unnaturally and arises- what
Wlmt is felt? How is it made
is it made from?
Felt then is a fabric without warp oi
woof, made by hair interlocking together
and forming a solid sheet, more imporv-
ious to air and water than any woven
fabric. How is this done? By simply
thaking the hairs together. It looks easy
when written about, but machinery. the shaking re-
quires skill and special
Any person who takes the trouble to
ptdl a hair out of his head will find, if
lie has a delicate sense of touch, bypass-
ing it through his lingers first one way
anil then the other, that when pulling resist- it
in one direction there is a slight direc-
ance, while if pulled in the other
tion it glides smoothly. This is because
in nearly all hairs, particularly short,
line, soft, hairs, there ure minute barbs,
A hair sometimes gets into the fabric of
a garment and travels all round it occa-
sionally. This ia because it can only go
one way. By brushing the or putting pushed along on or
off the garment hair is
and works its way, always in one direc-
tion, because the barbs prevent it get-
ting back. This is the reason why mat-
ted hair is so difficult interlocked. to straighten out.
The barbs betomo
Felting hair or fur is producing interlock a
fabric by causing the hairs to
closely. Derby bats of the best kind,
called fur hats, are made of the fur of
certain animals, notably the Russian
hare, the nutria, which "is found in tho
Andes ia South America, the beaver and
the cony. The fur of these animals is
particularly well adapted for “felting.” of
There arc three colors and qualities
fur on each of these animals. When a
manufacturer is going to make fur hats,
either high or derby, he makes a mixture
composed of fixed proportions of six or
seven different kinds of fur. The first
operation is to put the mixture through
a blowing machine in order to clear it
from long hairs which do not felt rcadi-
lv. Some manufacturers buy the skins
and cut off the fur themselves, but a
great many have the hairs supplied
j) u , m the
After the fur has passed through ready he
blowing machine and is to
fused the quantity for each hat to be
manufactured is weighed out. To make
the hat, whether high or a derby, the
fur first passes through the “forming”
machine, in which is a revolving table.
The fur is fed to this table, which passes
into the blower, where it is blown upon
a revolving cone, forming whutistech-
nically known as a “body.” lifted oil and
The body or cone is
dipped into a caldron of boiling vitriol
and water. This “cone,” which i.;to be
the hat when completed, is about four
times the size of a finished hat nud oi
the flimsiest texture, something like
gray wadding torn apart, The bath of
vitriol and water gives it its first sizing.
It then goes to a very skilful workman,
called the hardener, who first carefullj
fill} every hole by throwing in spare fui
and then puts it through a machine
which causes the fur to shrink clo-cly to¬
gether. Then it gees to the sizing ma¬
chine, in which are a number of rollers,
which partially clear it of loose down
and where it is reduced in size by com¬
pression From the sizing it to the
room goes through
stiffening room, where it passes
a bath, in which shellac is the principal
ingredient. The specific ingredients of
which the bath is composed and the pro¬
portion of each are various, nearly every
workman having a formula of his own.
Ir emerges from the bath a dirty gray
color and is sent to the colorer, who puts
it, with other hats, into a large vat con¬
taining the dye, where it remains two
days. colorer sends it the blocking
The to
room, where it assumes the first approxi¬
mation to the shape of a hat. It is then
in shape like one of the beaver hats worn
^^ondon during the reign of George
docking machine it goes to
■Aim, where it is softened
: U■■blocked again into !he
to *I'jn-ar
■k.
totoVto;.toUto ; Sb
WOULD NOT LIVE I'KISONEHS.
A Had Story of Hie Captivity of a
Colony of I’rnirlo Dogs.
“When I was a little boy my father
moved from Hoosierdom over upon a
broatl and blooming prairie in Illinois,"
said a man to n reporter of a Chicago pa¬
per. "That prairie, stretching us far us
the eye could reach to tho north nml
west, was one vast garden of flowers and
plants from April to November. There
must have beou a hundred varieties of
w ji,i blooming plants, ranging from the
( with its white blossom,
lowly strawberry, flamboyant wild marigold,
to the gaudy, splendors vivid color
whose oriental gave prairie,
to miles and miles of undulating started in to
“But this by the way. 1
speak or the prairie dogs. The flowers
were scarcely more numerous than they,
You might ride for miles along villages, a path
flanked on either side by their
which were seldom more than a few rods
apart. These villages,always on some lit-
tic knoll or hill, were populous. Tho
horseman who approaened one of them
would see a sentinel gravely motionless
at tho door of every burrow. One could
scarcely toll these sentries from hits of
wood, so still and straight were they,so land-
much apart of tho great, silent
scape. if there of ‘now
“But ever was a case little
( you see it and now you don’t,’those traveler
sentinel prairie dogs offer the a
striking example. He sees them there,
as silent and impressive as tho sentries
of Pompeii, and wonders what they will
do when he gets closer. Ho keeps his
eye fixed on two or three of them, and
unconeiously checks his horse, so that
the clatter of lioofs may not startle
them. He is within fifty, thirty, twenty
paces, when lo! the sentries are gone,
He has not seen them go. The earth
has swallowed them. He rubs his eyes
and he rrdes on, wondering if it were
all an illusion. He looks buck to assure
himself, when lo! the sentries are there
as still and statuesque ns before,
“One time my father trapped four or
five of them. I don’t know how he man-
aged it; I’ve forgotten that. I think
they must have been young and foolish,
like baby rats, which venture where
their pa and ma would never go. Mv
father brought them home, and we cliil-
dren hugged ourselves in delight as wo
fancied them as pretty pets like sqmr-
or white rabbits. A cage was qmek-
ly fitted up; the captives were tho placed dainties in
it ««td surrounded by all
which we fancied could tompt them to
forget their captivity. Our parents kept
11 s away from the cage, ns the little
strangers regarded us with a terror
which they did not attempt to conceal,
®ut we went to place more food before
them the next morning. I ho food pre-
provided had not been touched.
The little prisoners sat wearily on their
haunches in the dark extremity of their
“U- Childish curiosity was repressed
till the second morning, when the cage
was again visited. The captives sat in
the e,vme position, and no morsel of the
vaned bill of fare with which we had
to tempt them had boon touch-
® ,L Tll f Wi \ ter w as undinumshed in the
bowI , -. Another day , passed, tie third
morning came and we ran out to see our
pets. The sight that met our eyes I
shall never forget. In their hunger and
despair the poor captives had eaten their
own feet. The bloody stumps wore a
sad and sickening reproof to oar cruelty
in depriving the children of the prairie
of their wild, sweet liberty. We felt it,
children as we were, and silently, almost
in tears, we opened the prison door and
slipped away to give the captives oppor¬
tunity to escape. But it was too late.
With their little feet gnawed off np al¬
most to their little bodies, they could
into scarcely the more than drag they themselves out
grass, where soon after
died."
A Skeleton Subject.
Father—“1 don’t see what makes that
boy of mine so tliin. He day. seems to get
worse and worse turned every him Doctor, I
wonder if I over to you, you
could do anything with him?’’
Doctor—“Certainly; I could dissect
him.— Life.
A Twenty Years' Experience.
770 ! road wav, New York, March 17,1888.
I have been using Allcock’s Pokol-s Poss-
Tf ns for SO years, and found them < no of thi
best of family medicines. Britfl. summi gup
my expience, I say that when placed on the
emillof lhe back Allcock’s Plasters fill the
body wi h nervous energy, and thus cure
fatigue, brain exhaustion, dobi ity and kidney
difficult es. F. r women an l chillren I have
found them inva uab e. They rever irrit te
the skin or cause the slightest pain, but cur,
sore throat, cr iu >y coughs, colds, pains in
side, back or chest, indigestion and bowel
complaints. C D. FrtEumuiKS.
New being York has Chinese a pictorial characters. paper, the letter
press in
“As glares the 1 iger on his foes,
Hemmed in by hunters, spears and bows,
And, i re he V) unds upon lhe ring,
t elec s the objectof his spring."
fiodiseaso. in myriad forms,fastens its fangs
upon the human race. Ladies who suffer from
distressing ailments P.erce’s peculiar Favorite to Prescription, their sex,
should use Dr.
lit is a positive cur -for the most complicated
fend obstinate oasrt of leucorrhra, excessive
■flowing, painful menstruation, falling unnatural sup¬
pressions prolapsus, or of the worn!),
wo k back, “female weakness,” air eversion,
retroversion, jangostion, bearing-down sensations,chronic
inflammation and ulcerati ui of
■e womb, inflammation, pain an I tenderness
■ovaries, accompanied with ‘‘internal heat.”
I^B-cventh sold to tiie of Ceylon’s natives. revenue comes from
The Nervous
The Debilitated
The Aged.
icientific skill has at last solved the
.long needed medicine for the nsr.
|L and the ag-ed, ly combining tfie
^fe'eli ^R‘h. acting ry and gently Coca, with hut other clltneiitly effec.
■ •'t and lH'Ucls, niiiuvi dlwasn,
renew uiaiity. 'Husiutduuiej*
«
Such V\n avs Oum.
Tho nso of chewing gum has come to
be unite tho fashion in » quiet way, mid
is almost as difficult to break away from
as the tobacco habit. A pretty sauntered young in
lady artist at New York
upon her intimate friends with her
month working over her favorite gum,
and explained how she formed tho
habit: I invited to swell
‘‘You see was a
lunch given by some friends of mine,
and everything wns novel, artistio and
delicious.* After everything else had
been served, there were brought in somo
lovely-looking confections. Each guest
received but one, on a dainty little bon¬
bon dish. It was the creamiest, most and
delicious confection l ever tasted,
ns it slowly molted there was a spicy, did
ai-om atic flavor, and a substance that
not dissolve. It still retains a peculiar, it
flavor, and I wouldn’t give up
for the world. I livo in constant terror
for fear I shall lose it and not bo able to
got any more. Sorry I can’t offer you
somo. It was made by the young la¬
dies themselves, who had the recipe
from an old Indian servant when they
lived in Calcutta. Their father was a
British officer, you know. They won’t
toll how it’s made. They say its tho
only novelty they can be Rure of, and
they would like it to last them two sea¬
sons."
Tiie man who sits down and waits to
be appreciated will find himself among
uncalled-for baggage after tho limited
xpress train has gone by.
A Horae Who (Ian Talk!
Everybody has heard of a "horse laugh,” but
who ha-ever seen an equine gifted with the
power of speech? Such an animal would be
pronounced a miracle; but so would the tele¬
graph anil the telephone have be n a hundre 1
jeers consumption ago. Why, ould even have very been recently looked a upon cure
for w people beginning
as miraculous, but now are incurable.
to realize that the clis ase is not
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovory will
euro it, if taken in time. This world-renowned
remedy will not make new lungs, bit it wi.l
res'- re diseased ones to failed. a healthy Thousands state when
all-d her moms have can
gratefully testify to this. All druggisls.
Rev Dr- Pol ter, the Episcopal Risliop of
New York, receives $10,000 u year salary.
Don’t disgust eve- ybody by hawking, blow¬
ing and spitting, but use Dr. Sage’s Catarrh
Remedy and be cured.
Durham, N. C., is to have September. a tobacco exposi¬
tion and railroad jubilee in
lf afflicted with r ore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬ bottle.
son’s Eye'water. Druggists sell at25c.per
Long’s Pearl Tooth Soap prevents decay.
Try it. 25c. a box.
_
Blood Poison
“I was poisoned by poison Ivy, and let it go till the
poison got into my blood when I was obliged to
give up work and was eonfttied to my house for two
months. I hart sires and scales on me from h art to
feet, my Anger nails came off and my ha r aurl whis¬
kers came out. I had two physic’aiu, i ut did i oi
seem to get much b Ho id’s Sar. a;>ari la helped
mesomutb that I coatln ed taking it till I had
used three bottles, when I was cur; d. I can re om-
mend Hood’s Sarsaparilla fo a’l as the best b!oo1
purifier I know or/’—GEORia W. Vcnk, 70 Park
Avenue, Brockport, N. Y.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Soldby all drug,-tots. $1; six for *5. Prepared on !j
by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, .Hass.
IOO Doses One Dollar
$85 SOUQ GOLD WATCH FREE!
'flu* ffptendid* solid gold, huntinp-cas.; tralch, Is now sob j for
$&>; nt that price it is the host ImrtrainIn America ; until lately
/ could not be purchased for lc«a than $100. We have both la¬
dies’and penis' sizes with works and cases of equal va’.tto.
OXK I* SI K.?*0 in each locality cun secure One of theso
elcjrant watches absolutely PIS EE. These watches may ho
depended on, not on ly as solid gold, but as niumiing; among tho
most perfect, correc wonderful t and reliable possible? timekeepers Wc in the world. want Yon
ask how is this offer answer—wt*
one person in each locality to keep in their homes, nud show to
those who call, a complete line of our valuable, and very useful
liOt’SEUOl.D Samuj.es; thcac samples, after at well as the watch, iu
we send arsolutelt KKKE,and you have kept 1 hem
your home for 2 months, and jd»own them to those who may
have called, they become entirely your own property; it ts pos-
sihls to make this great offer, valuable sending the Gohi for tho
Watch end hirpo lino of sample* Fit EE,
reason bits that the showing of tho samples in any locality, been always
res in a largo trade for us; after our samples have in a
locality for a month or two, wo usually get from $1,<J00 to
$A,(JUU in trade from the surrounding country. Those who writs
to us at ones v. ilt receive a great benefit for scarcely any work
and trouble. This, the most remarkable and liberal offer ever
known, is made in order that our valuable Household Samples
may be placed at oneo where they can be seen, all over Ameri¬
ca ; render, it will he hardly any trouble for you to show them to
those who may call at your home, and your reword will be most
satisfactory. A postal "card, on which to write us, costs but 1
cent, and if, after you know all, you do not care to go further,
why no harm is done, llut if you dn send your address at
once, you can secure, FREE, AN IlLEGANT SOI.idGoi.P,
Hunttno-Casx Watch and our large, complete line of volu¬
ble HotrseHor.D Samples. We pnr all express freight,etc*
Address, STINSON & CO., lsox 467 I’ortland.Maiuo.
WEBER
PIANO-FORTES.
ENDORSED BY TIIE LEADING ARTISTS, SEMI¬
NARIANS, AND THE PRESS, AS THE
BEST PIANOS MADE,
Pri#e« as reisonabls and terms os easy as consistent
with thorough workmanship.
CATALOGUES MAILED FREE.
Correspondence Solicited.
WAREROOMS,
Fifth Avenue, cor. 16 th St, N. Y.
Do you want "fu.u'ir.n ,ri« lc Inspirator?
j ' ft S?
SVALS hvMi V- . J •?
. A j . m m 5:a?s ia
io acuta
tnrm
jewans WAiilfi .► O 5 a ~ H.
IIEGH’S Improved Circular SAW MILLS
equal Pinners
AND 3
TO ANY. Skteo- HI ateliers.
EXCELLED MjB 3
BY
NONE.
Manufactured
8A liE.U IRON WO RK 8, HAL 131 , N. C.
- Plantation Self-Contained Engines
With
RETURN FLUE BOILERS,
FOR DRIVING
COTTON GINS and MILLS.
JHustrated Pamphlet Free, Addresa
■7MES LEFFEL & CO.
^PltlNUFIEUI, ^■kl Iberty tot., X* OHIO, lorb.
w
Ivors,
kifh.ts,
SUnc $0 .00;
I "if
p t
has been before the ]>ubli 0
now about ten years, and i a
that time has proved
to toe all that it has been
represented.
It ia purely vegetable,
CS3 contains and nothing harmful
l.JES purify the
blood and 11 R I; ( ii*.
c as e as it puts the K idneyg
tiie only blood purifying
organs, in complete health.
CO It Cure* Permanently.
We have tens of thousands of
testimonials to this effect
from peoplo who were cured
years ago and who are
well to-day.
It ia a Scientific «p e .
cillc, was not put upon
tlio market until thoroughly
tested, and has the endorse¬
ment of Prof. 8. A. Lattimore, u
M. A., Ph., LL. D., Official
Analyst of foods and medi¬
cines, N. Y. 8tata Board of
Health, and scores of Om¬
nent chemists, physicians
and professional experts.
H. H. Warner everything! tfc Co., doi
not cure hav-l
from specific one bottle, they
ing a for each impor¬ ofj
tant disease. Fight shy
infallibility. any preparation which claims
The testimonials printed hr ,
H. II. Warner & Co. are, so
far as they know, For the positively! P
genuine. past live frfc
years offer they have had a stand- II
ing the of $5,000 If for proof ”
to contrary. you are
sick and want to get w ell,
use
WARNER’S SAFE CUBE,
Lecture on
MJ£a “ROUGH ON RATS."
v Sf* -Z— j
C ® £ R fig «
w, ttetlitugs.^x q Pull
To clear out .»
with grease and smear about their haunto and
put a 1 5c. b o x of it in a pint kJ douche of bento mixture usi
JSJ&JCjJLj? .O IjJ m3 : n applied. cracks end
crevices where grease cannot be For
Water Bugs, Beetles, Roaches,
&c. For two or three nig!.to ' js.
powder, sprinkle in, Rough about on and Rats down dry tiic^z .v
smk drainpipe. thing inDRt DECTS I Lfcw/W/wwjR £0 /e rt>
First tnja8s&i\
the morning wash it all away
down the drain pipe, when all
tho insects from garret to cellar
will disappear. The secret ia in
WATER BOSS (he fact that whmrer
insects are ia the
house they must drink during the uislit. table- For
Potato Bugs, Insects on well Vines, Off etc., flJifO a
spoonful or aket»of the powder, water,and llUSvsiCO i
shaken in syrlhge,
applied whisk broom. with sprinkling Keep it w pot, ell spray stirred up. 15c., or
25c. and 81 Boxes.—Ayr. size. See full direc¬
tions with boxes. CROUWD SQUIRRELS, Chipmunks,
cleared RABBITS, by Sparrows, Rough Gophers, Rate. See directions.
out on
ROUSH OH MALARIA higher than
Fever and Ague, Chills, prepaid Ex. for , JUS. U
no at Druggists, sUwells, or City, by N. J-
to. Jersey
CONFIDENTIAL)!
The Confessions of an
Escaped Nun.
Book is not on our list. EDITION
LIMITED. Send at once.
Price Kedueetl lo So Cents. I
Address A. CHASE, V
Detlhsm, Mase.B
MARVELOUS
m
DISCOVERY.
Wholly unlike artificial systems
Ci« re* ol iiiiiiil wtmuermir.
Any book Irnviiecl in o:ie ItMf*
CtnsRos ot 1087 et IhlPm -re, " ” '
1500 Boston at Philadelphia, large classes of 1.1 < «•*, elumliu 1,1 J , to : » 3 lint-, Jl, e b r
at Wellesley. Oberlm, Umyersitj of T
Yale. University, Clinutanqua, *e.,.«e. u-A»WJ
igan Proctor, the Beirut 1 st. ‘ ™ . ,,, •„ ,«,»
RICHABD
Tamth. gfSRh Awyt
The BUYERS’GJH> b
o issued each olopedia maiion necessities chase and year. the March for furmsa of luxur It ail ol u airi fhot® 1“ ? e>' ® or • Sef” «• itj)
can olotho you nnd ,nn f
all the necessary walk, dam sleep ,
appliances to ride,
eat, fish, hunt, work,. al sizes,
or stay at home, and in ( - lzur i cut
:£xaai*5,'s iiaKBrs?
JONES
9 Saif*
% “mKiLl
ssas*at«ss«^^ I
it’s Pil.s. .ill rouu* 0
afi&T' trortn .0