The Banner-messenger. (Buchanan, Ga.) 1891-1904, October 08, 1891, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE BROOKLYN DIVINE’S SUN¬ DAY SERMON. Subject: “The March of Christ Through the Centuries.” Tkxt: “On His head were many crowns.”— Revelations xix., 12. May your ears be alert and your thoughts concentrated and all the powers of your soul aroused while I speak to you of “the march of Christ through the centuries.” in You say, “(live us, then, a good start rooms of Vermillion and On fldors of mosaic and amid corridors of porphyry and under canopies sun.” dyed in You all the have splendors such of the setting can no start ing place. At the time our Chieftain was oom there were castles on the beach of Galilee and palaces at Jerusalem and imperial Uthrooins at Jericho and obelisks at Cairo and the Pantheon at Rome, with its Corinthian the portico Parthenon and its sixteen Athens, granite with columns, and at Its glistening coronet of temples, and there were mountains of fine architecture in many parts of the world, but none Chieftain of them was to be the starting place of the I cele brate. A cow’s stall, a winter month, an atmos phere in which are the moan of camels, and the baaing of sheep, and the barking Betakes of dogs, and the rough banter of hostelries. His first journey before He could walk. Armed desperadoes, with hands of blooo, were ready to gnatch Him down into butch ary. Rev. William missionary, H. Thompson, whom the I vete ran and beloved saw this last month in Denver, in his eighty. sixth year, has described, in his volumne en titled, “The Land and the Book,” Bethlehem as he saw it. Winter before last I walked up and down thegray hills of Jura limestone on which the village now rests. The fact that King David had been born there, had not during ages elevated the village into any special attention. The other fact that it was the birthplace of our Chieftian did not keep the place in after years from special dis honor, for Hadrian built there the Grove of Adonis, and for one hundred and eighty years the religion observed there was the most abhorrent debauchery the world has ever seen. Our Chieftain was considered dangerous from the start. The world had put suspicions eyes upon Him because at the time of His birth the astrologers had seen stellar commotions—a world out of its place and shooting down toward a caravansary, Star divination was a science. As late a? the Eighteenth century it had its votaries, At the Court of Catherine de Medici it was honored. philosophers that Kepler, one of the wisest the world ever saw, declared it was a true science. As late as the reign of Charles II. Lilly, an astrologer, was called before the House of Commons in England to give bis opinion as to future events. For ages the bright appearance of Mars meant wi'.r, of Kfcr P rd r ; 1*histef e mo^ while circles, I do not know but that after a ride^of 6 th““ia anf the ^n° affects the growth or blasting of crops, other worlds be sides those wfth two worlds may have something na" to do the destiny of individuals and Horn in this world. Ido not wonder that the commotions in the heavens excited the wise men on the night our Chieftain was born. As He came from another world and after thirty-three years was again to exchange worlds, it does not seem strange tome that astronomy should have felt the effect of His coming, And instead of being unbelieving about the one star that stooped I wonder that all the worlds in the heavens did not that Christ mas night make some leave special to demonstra- world tion. Why should they one or meteor the bearing of the news of the humanization of Christ? Where was Mars that night tbat it did not indicate the mighty wars tbat were to come between righteousness, and iniquity? Where was Jupiter that night that it did not celebrate omnipotence incarnated? Where was the Pleiades that night that they did not an nounce the storms of persecution that would assail our Chieftian? In watching this march of Christ through the centuries, we must not walk before Him or beside Him, for that would not be rev erential or worshipful. .So we walk behind Him. We follow Him while not yet in His teens, up a Jerusalem terrace, to a build ing six hundred feet long and six hundred feet wide, and under the hovering splen dor of gateways, chiseled and by a pillar shape of crowned flow with capital into the ers and leaves, and along by walls of beveled masonry and near a mar ble screen, until a group of white-haired philosophers and theologians bewilders gather and around Him, and then overwhelms the boy these scholarly con founds and septuagenarians with questions they can not answer, and under Ijhs qu they ck whys their and whyfors and hows and whens pull and rub white beards with embarrassment their wrinkled foreheads in confusion, and, putting their staffs hard down on the marble floor as they arise to go, they must feel like chiding the boldness that allows twelve years of age to ask seventy-five years of age " such puzzlers of building follow Him into Out this we the Quarantania, the mountain of tempta tion, its side to this day black with robbers’ dens. Look! Up the side of this mountain come all the forces of perdition to effect ou. - Chieftain’s capture. But although weakened by forty days and forty nights of absti lence, He hurls all Pandemonium down the rocks, suggestive of how He can hurl into helplessness all our temptations. And now we climb right after Him up the tough sides of the “Mount of Beatitudes,” and on tbe highest pulpit of rocks, the Valley of Hatin before Him, the Mediterra- Lake of Galilee to the right of Him; the nean sea to the left of Him,and He preaches a sermon that yet will transform the world with Chieftain its applied sentiment. Lake Galilee. Now we We follow our on must keep to the beach, for our feet are not shod with the supernatural, work Peter made and of we it remember what poor when he tried to walk the water. Christ our leader is on the top of the toss ing waves, and it is about half past three in the morning, and it is the darkest time just before daybreak. But by the flashes of lightning we see Him putting His feet on the crest of the wave, stepping from crest to crest, walking the white surf solid as though it were frozen snow. The sailors think a ghost is striding the tempest, but He cheers them into placidity, showing Himself to be a great Christ for sailors. And Ha ■walks the Atlantic and the Pacific and tbs Mediteraneau and Adriatic now, and if ex hausted and a ffirighted voyagers will listen for His voice at half past three o’clock in the morning on any sea, indeed at any hour, and they will hear His voice of compassion encouragement. We follow Chieftain, and continue to our here is a blind man by the wayside. It is not from cataract of the eye or from oph Mialmifl the eye extinguisher of the east, but he was born blind. “Be opened 1” He cries, and flr&t there is a smarting of the eyelids, and then a twilight, and then a mid noon, and then a shout. ‘‘I tee! I seel” Tell It to all the blind, an ! they leant can appreciate it. And here Is the widow’s dead son. and here is the expired damsel, and here is Lazarus. “Live!" our Chieftain cries, and they live. Tell it through all the bereft households, tejl it among the graves, An (there around Him gather the deaf, His and the dumb, and the sick, and at word they turn on their couches and blush from awful pallow of helpless illness to rubicund health, and the swollen foot of the dropsical sufferer becomes fleet as a roe on the mountains. The music of the grove and household wakens the deaf ear, and lunatic and maniac return into bright in telligence, and the leper’s breath becomes as sWeet as the breath of a child, and the flesh as roseate. Tell it to all the sick, through all the homes, through ail the hos pftaig. Tell it at twelye o’clock morning; at tell night; it tell it at two o’clock in the a t half-past three, and in the last watch of the night, that Jesus walks the tempest. still we follow our Chieftain until the government that gave Him no protection in sists that H* pay tar, and, too poor to raiee the requisite two dollars and seventy-five has cents, He ordars Peter to catch a fish that i n it8 mouth a Roman state, which is a bright coin (and you know that fish naturally bite at anything bright), ’ but it was a miracle f Peter v t . sbouid . ,. bare , cau 8 ht .... ]t at ... the flrst „ ... , sells the Si Him to S’, his pursuers £ Tell it to aU fn xh! the bundred d / >> | a f 8 or tSim lar8 ’ aold °ut, do ^ oar mt rest . f wer ® consider for how much ^ cheaper a sum the r°u d of e tf tb apd heaven was su rren dered humiliation r and death. But here, wbue ’{mowing Him on a spring night between : eleven and twelve o clock, we saw the flash [ torcb ® s and la f. t 1 rns ',p/ ld we hear the cry . ^ the , It ,1** w ahwdof tf Jerusalem cks “roughs t°f led n on „ fZ. A, 1 ?!: B ut notes are liable to assail j®T rong man ‘ Ho ^ T>i re ™ T * w lJ1 ftf 8 Jud T and b y .. tbat SI - S? al 7°“ will ’, W JlThcSV?/ ™ tbo kiss which throiu,hcut th« the ^ a V e and g* tlon 6 for Paui a wrltes t0 the Iio:nans . ’ aad - fbe Corinthian^ . and the Thessalonians concerning the the ldss “holy kiss,” and Peter celebrate of charity, and with that conjunction of lips Laban met Jacob, and Joseph met his brethren, and Aaron met Moses, and Samuel met Saul, and Jona than met David, and Orpah parted fi»om Naomi, and Paul and separated from his friends the at Ephesus, the the father prodigal, in parable greeted returning an d when the millennium shall come we are told righteousness and peace will kiss each Christ other, and inspiration all the world is invited “Kiss to mss as cries out, the Bon, lest He be angry and ye perish from the way —that the most sacred demon stration of x-eumon and affection was dese- : crated as the filthy lips of Judas touched j ; ary and debasement and hypocrisy of all . As in December, and 1889, I walked on the Mount way ! from Bethany, at the foot of alem, Olivet, through a half mile the frpm Garden the wall Gethsemaue of Jerus- j inder of and the their eight pomological venerable olive trees now standing, of ancestors j having been witnesses the occurrence. spoken of, the scene of horror and of crime J came back to me, until I shuddered with the historical reminiscence. In further following our great Chieftain’s march through the centuries, Herod’s I find myseli in a crowd in front of palace in Jerusalem, and on a moveable platform placed unon a tasselatad pavement, Pontius Pilatesits. And as once a year a condemned criminal is pardoned, Pilate lets the peo plo choose whether it shall be an as sassin or our Chieftian, and they all cry out for the liberation of the assassin, thus declaring they prefer a murderer tb the salvation of the world, Piiata took a-basiu of water in front of these people and tried to wash off the blood of this murder from his hands, but he could not. They are still lifted, and I see them looming up through all the age 3 , eight fingers and two thumbs standing out red with the carnage. Still following our Chieftain, I asc?nd the hill lish which explorer General arbiter, Gordon, the great clay mode! Eng. and made a of. It is hard climbing for our Chieftain, for He has not only two heavy timbers to carry on His back, the upright and horizon tal pieces of the cross, but He is suffering from exhaustion caused by lack of food, mountain elmwood chills, desert heats,whippings of with rods and years maltreatment. It took our party in 1880 only fifteen minutes to climb to the top of the hill and reach that limestone roek in yonder wall, which I rolled down from the apex of Mount Calvary. But I think our Chieftan must have taken a long time for the ascent, for He had ail earth and all heaven and all hell on His back as He climbed from base to summit and there endured what "William Cowper and John Milton and Charles Wesley and Isaac Watts and James Mont gomery and all the other sacred poets have Raphael attempted to Titian put in and verse, Leonardo and Angelo da Vinci and and and all the great Italian and German and Spanish and French artists have attempted fb paint, and Bossuet and Masillon and George Whitefield and Thomas Chalmers have Something attempted to preach. overwhelming of its awful ness you may estimate from the fact thal the sun which shines in the heavens could not endure it; tho sun which unflinchingly looked world, which upon the without deluge blinking that drowned looked the which swallowed upon the ruins of earthquakes has looked Lisbon a nd Caraccas, and uff blanched on the battlefields of Afibela, all Bleu heim, Megiddo and Esdraslon, and the scenes of carnage that have ever scalded and drenched the earth with human gore— that sun could not look upon the scene. The sun dropped over its face a veil of cloud. It withdrew. It hid itself. It said to the mid* night, “I resign to thee this spectacle upon which I have no strength to gaze; thou art blind, mit 0 thee midnight tragedy!” and for that reason I com to this Then the night hawk and the bat flew by, and the jackal howled in the ravines. Now we follow our Chieftain as they carry His limp and lacerated form amid the flowers and trees the of lilies, a, garden, the the gladioluses the oleanders, geraniums, the mandrakes,down five or six steps to an aisle of granite, where He sleeps. But only a little while He sleeps there, for there is an rocks earthquake this in day all in that their region, aslant leaving and the to rup tured state declarative of the fact thal something extraordinary Chieftain there happened And we see our arouse from His brief sliimber and wrestle down The ruffian Death, who would keep Him ini prisoned in that cavern, and put both heeli on the monster, and coming forth with t cry that will not cease to be eclioed until on the great resurrection day the door of th< lost clanging sepulcher into the shall debris be unhinged of demolished and flung ceme teries. Now we follow our Chieftain to the Ehoulder of Mount disciples Olivet, clutching and without for Hii wings He rise*tbe —* robes too late to reach them, and across the great gulfs of space with one bound He gains that world which for thirty-three years had been denied His companionship, and all heaven lifted a shout of welcome aa He entered, and of coronation as up the mediatorial throne He mounted, It was the greatest day heaven had ever seen. They had Him back again from tears, from wounds, from ills, from a world that never appreciated Him to a world in which He was the chief delight. In all the libretto of celestial music it was hard to find an anthem enough oonjubilant to celebrate tho joy saintly, seraphic, arch-angelic, deiflc. But still we follow our Chieftain in His march through the centuries, for invisibly He still walks the earth, and by the eye of fa £ th sti1 ' Hi ™' ^ ou ca J ten wbe He wa!l£ b the churches and , hos P ,tals f e °nd , reformatory ? - T institutions, and . along the houses of mercy that spring up T™/- I bear His tread m the sick room and m the abodes of bereavement. He marches ° n and th « “‘J 00 ® are gathering around Him. The islands of the sea are beanng His voice, fhe continents are feel ir Vj, * ils P°'y er - tf 1 ' 61 ?, 0 ? Eu T?P e ^'jl be Hu! Asia will he His! Africa will be ^ts, Australia wid be His 1 hew Zealand will be His! All the earth will be His! Do you real. iza that until now it was Not impossible until for the world to be converted? very re cently has the world been found. The Bible telks about “ the ends ot the earth >. and the *. utte rmost parts of the world’- as being saved, but not until now bave tb9 ‘ ,ends of the eai-th” been dis covered, and not until now have the “uttermost parts of the world” been re vealed. The navigator did his work, the explorer did his work, the scientist did bis work, and now for the first time since the world has b»en created has the world been known, measured off and geogra pbized. the las’, hidden anrl unknown tract bas been ^PPed out - bo and begun now with work of evangelic ition will an ^ rnesln ^ and velocity as yet unim- the magined. The steamships are ready; print lightning express ready; trains are the ready; telegraph the and Ing presses are ready, millions of Christians telephone ready and are Christ marching are now see on through the centuries. Marching on! March ia * on! One by one governments will fall into line and constitutions and literatures will adore His "ame. More honored and worshiped is Hein this year of 1891 than at anytime when since the year one,and the day hastens all nations will join one procession “follow j n _ tbe Lamb whither soever He goeth.” Marching on’. Marching on! This dear old world whose back as been scourged whose eves have been blinded, whose heart has been wrung, will yet rival heaven This planet’s torn robe of pain and crime and dementia will come off and the white and spotless and glittering robe of holiness and happiness will come on. The j^t wound will have stung for the last time; the last ?r £ef will have wiped its last tear; the last" criminal will have repented of his last crime and our • world that has j, een a s trailer among worlds, a lost miscreant gtar a wayward planet, a rebellious glob?, a satellite, win bear m? voir.5 rrrar uttered childish jUatat in Beth^m mid a ?°^ z ® d P^^and will return this fromi^wan- voice erbs, “C?me,” our world dermg never agai s y. . 0 • Jnarc.-ing on. mil be great n,,* that ot ber Then w« this ds grid’s besid^ joy heaven nay m so b^tad to f°,- te > es olcs =°Pf’ ; ,/ hacomino- moV - p°weiful, have d ^? ® and volcanoes aad «»*£ a a a “ d d the stvleo’atmosnhere and this wnlgo , ^1 . Kle S eLc’iln^g- should a °_ to , ith ot w olanets And as I b '’ e doubt other worlds are in'iab iteJ for Gol _ would not have built - houses have then su° b magnificent world to stand without tenants or occupants, m tho final joy of earths redenmtion all astronomy I thmk will take part, we signaling otaer worlas and they in turn signaling their s.ei lar neighbors. Oh, what a day m heaven that will be when this march of Chios* is finished. I know that on the cross Christ ®?> d f It is finished, but He meant His sac nficial worn was finished, All earth and all heaven knows tba.t evan gelization is not finished, but tbere will come a day in heaven most rapturous. It may be after our world, which is thought to have about fifteen hundred million people snail have on ks dec.ts twice its present pop ulation, namely three thousand million souls a ? d al * redeemeJ, and it wili^ be after this world shall be so aainageu by conflagration tbat no human foot can tread its surfaca and no human being can breaths its air, but most certainly the day will come when heaven will be finished and the last of the twelve gates of the eter nal city shall have clanged shut, never to open except for the admission of some celestial embassage returning from some other world, and Christ may strike His scarred but healed hand in emphasis and on tae in arm of the amethystine throne say substance, “All Mv ransomed ones are gata ered; the work is done; I have finished My march through the centuries. the battle of Leipsic, _ When in 1813, after fate of the Nineteenth which decided the century, in some respects the most tremend dous battle ever fought, the bridge choked down. the river incarnadined, the street with the wounded,the fields for nnles around strewn with a dead soldiery from whom all traces of humanity had been dashed out there met in the public square of > city of Leipsic the allied that con querors and king3 who had gained the vio¬ of tory—the king of Prussia, the emperor Russia, the crown prince of Sweden—fol lowed by the chiefs of their armies. With drawn swords these monarch saluted each other and cheered for the continental vic tory they had together gained. History has blade the scene memorable. Greater and more thrilling will bo the spectacle when the world is all conquered for the truth, and m front of the palace or heaven the kings and conquerors of all the allied powers of Christian usefulness shall salute each other and recount the struggles by which they gained the triumph, and then hand over their swords to Hun who is the chlrf ' of the conquerors, crying- I June, oh Christ, is the kingdom. lake the crown of victory, the crown of dominion, the G! "0'' v n the of glory. Uu tils . head °*- £ race < crown were many crowns, A WHOLESALE LYNCHING. Fearful Sequel to a Cotton Picker Riot in Arkansas. A Helena, Ark., dispatch tays: It u learned (hat Sheriff Derrick, of Marian¬ na, Ark., left Cat Island Thursday night, having charge of nine of the thirteen colored picker rioters who killed Inspec¬ tor Miller in Arkansas last Friday. The chief was on his way to Marianna, where he was going to put bis prisoners in jail, but the parly was overtaken late at night by an armed posse, who took the hanged prison¬ ers, alter a sharp struggle, and the entire party. Extract From “ PlunkettV’ Letter In Sunday’s Constitution. Me and Brown went up to see the Cyclo- of raroa at Atlanta, last week—the battle Missionary Ridge. and books I uster say that pictures generation could not teach the young wbat war was, but I take it back, every young person should see this picture. You can see ihe gathered drops of sweat upon the suffering wounded’s faie, the blisters upon the barefooted rebel’s feet, and the mud crush up between their toes as they cross the wet plactS. This is to show you how real the picture is, of cour-e you can see biood as it trickles and watch the writh ings of p«iD. since the It has been a long t : mc scene at Missionary Ridg*-, tut when me ai d Brown stepped upon the platform and suddenly seed the picture it took my breath, and Brown yelled; jumped “Lav down, melish!” as he back and fell behind a bench. A gentlemen by the name of Hubner— Mijor Charles W. Huhnei—stepped and up an i look me hv the arm, soothed seated me, and then turned and tried to get Brown from behind the bench. “You ci n’* fool me!” said Brown. “I’ve been utre before! Picture thun¬ der! Lay down, melish!” as he tucked his head aud lay closer lo the flench. By this time the whole crowd had gathered aad were laughing at Brown, but it took some time to convince him. As we stood and let our eyes travel along the river, and up and dowD the valleys, watched old Lookout, and turning followed the ranges of mountains for miles upon milts into other States, Brown took a long breath and said : “This is the place.” As w e became pacified and stood and had our memories refreshed by the Major pointing out first one place and than an¬ other, and dwelling upon events of the battle, it seemed that we were living over again the 23th of November, 1803. It was grand !” We endorse every word “Plunkett” says in regard to this wonderful attrac¬ tion, now on exhibition in Atlanta. It is the grandest attraction ever seen in the South. Gratifying to All. The high position attained and the uni¬ versal acceptance and approval of the pleas¬ ant liquid fruit remedy Syrup of Figs, as the most excellent laxative known, illustrate the value of the qualities on which its success is based and are abundantly gratifying to the California Fig Syrup Company. Write your epitaph on the hearts of your friends by the sweet influence of your daily life. _ S. K. COBURN. Mgr., Oiarie Scott, writes: “I find Hall’s Catarrh f'nre a valuable reme¬ dy.” Druggists sell it, 75c. How’s Your Liver Tf SlllgglBll ailtl and paiDIUl, noinfn! ltlVlg- lo-irio Orate It •. tO . t HealtHy i f L aCtlOll Oy I taking x i* Hood’s Sarsaparilla Hi Syrup The majority of well-read phys¬ icians now believe that Consump¬ tion is a germ disease. In other words, instead of being in the con¬ stitution itself it is caused by innu¬ merable small creatures living in the lungs having no business there and eating them away as caterpillars do the leaves of trees. A Germ The phlegm that is coughed up is those Disease. parts of the lungs which have been gnawed off and destroyed. These little bacilli, as the germs are called, are too small to be seen with the naked eye, but they are very much alive just the same, and enter the body in our food, in the air we breathe, and through the pores oi the skin. Thence they get into the blood and finally arrive at the lungs where they fasten and increase with frightful rapidity. Then German Syrup comes in, loosens them, kills them, expells them, heals the places they leave, and so nourish and soothe that, in a short time consump¬ tives become germ-proof and well, a yy AMTEP, EXPERIENCED SOLICITORS to sell INSTALLMENT BA NK STOCK Payments $2 per share per month for 50 months. Guaranteed t o nay not less than 8 per cent on its paid-up Stock; makes 15 to 20 per c ent. F. W. MILLER* CO., Atlauta, Ga. IP YOIJ HAV& no > appetite, Indigestion, Flatulence, Sick H eodcahc, “ol^jruxi down” or losing flesh, isissls ijyf ‘‘MOTHERS’! >eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee# FRIEND” ••ftMfftttHtWMMHMfttHWWWfMMfHW * To Young ___ Mothers im & in / V 'f ^ I Makes Child Birth Labor, Easy. • Shortens Lessens Pain, • Endorsed by the Leading Physicians. ! Book to “Mother$’ f mailed FREE. BRADFIELD RECULATORCO. • ATLANTA, GA. • SOLD BV ALL DRUGGISTS. I 1 PADGETT “FREIGHT. A Great Offer that may not delay. again lie repeated, so do not “Strike while the Iron is Hot.” Write for Catalogue now, anil say what paper you saw this Advertisement in. Remember that I sell everything that goes to lurnisli a home—manufacturing the PI some things? and buying others in ;ij largest possible lots, which enables me to ® wipe out all competition. Start* H Here are a few of my V ling Bargains: full A No. 7 Flat Top Cooking Stove, size, 15x17 inch oven, fitted with 21 pieces y of ware, delivered at your own depot, for only all II ’t freight charges paid by me, S gfl Twelve Again, I Dollars. will sell you 5-hole . , , ^ Cooking . a «£? RaDge, 13x13 inch oven, 18x2d inch top. Eg fitted with 21 pieces of ware, for Thir- 11 teen Dollars, and pay the freight to B I vour depot, for Do not pay two prices 9 your goods. Parlor Suit, *3 I will send you a nice plush combination walnut frame, either in or banded, the most stylish colors, for » ■ $33.50, toyourrailroadstation, freight 9 all I paid. will also sell nice Bedroom Suit, B Bureau you a with glass, 1 high 9 consisting of Wash-tarid, 1 Centre B head Bedstead, 1 Chairs. 1 Cane Seat and Table, 4 Cane Seat aj m Back Rocker, all for $16.50, and pay »j freight Or will to your send depot. elegant Bedroom B I you an Suit, with large glass, full marble top, 9 for $30, and pay freight, Wi Nice Window large Walnut Shade on 8-day spring Clock..., roller $ 4 .40 00 Bj Elegant 7.00 BS is Walnut Curtains Lounge............................ window.............. 1.00 Eg} Lace per I cannot describe everything in a small Hi advertisement, but have an immense H jgj store with warehouses containing and 22,600 factory ft. of buildings floor room, in jjg B other largest parts business of Augusta, of this making kind under in all one the Wmansg-ment in the Southern States. H These stores and warehouses are crowded with the choicest catalogue productions of the best tf I factories. My goods will be containing mailed illus k trations of if you will kindly sn I Pay v where Freight. yon saw this Address adver vi jtisemenf. PADGETT, Xj, P. Si PROPRIETOR Padgett’s Furniture, Stove AND CARPET STORE. 1110-1112 Broad St., AUGUSTA, GA. THE NEW WEBSTER i o o CD CO Z >, / WEBSTER’S w « l INTERNATIONAL o cx V DICTIONARY J o c o U1 o ■ SUCCESSOR OF THE UNABRIDGED. Re-edited and Reset from Cover to Cover. * 9of.*” D pffl,yei!i!!s NT VV ork of revision occupied over 10 years. More than 100 editorial laborers employed. Critical examination invited. Get the Best. Sold by all Booksellers. Pamphl et free. CAUTION is needed in purchasing a dic¬ tionary, as photographic reprints of an obso leta ana comparatively worthless edition of Webster are being marketed under various names and often by misrepresentation. The International bears the imprint of i G, & C. MERRIAM & CO., Publishers, Springfield, Mass.* U. S» A* L E« Powdered 1 S’ (PATENTED.) 88 and Perfumed. % LYE Strongest and pu rest Lye mada. Makes the best perfumed Hard; Soap in 20 minutes without boilr¬ ing. It is the best for softening; water disinfecting cleansing sinks, waste closets, pipes, wash¬ ing bottles, paints, trees, etc.. PENNA. SALT MFG. C0-, Gen. Agents, Pflila., Pa. Vlil B* £_ ^ °^, without ed w detention j th0 »fc. the from knife, business. ancF H I ““ Guaranteed. I 1 1 k r m re Been All diseasie k “E.T! W teSS"*<2SESSS”rf“ THK m treated. Also ORGANS. EsEss ulw'Ji' (Hiuvard Medical filV & l'r U.dle Ke lOT6.> York 1881.) Allcom- Ll\ n^Tiii I III jK a itiunications will be T I | % B | nil M Rjt promptly answered. B mm hesult oi 20 yra’ experience. For sale fi ( ake P r ««f1stis ami 128 or p book by mail, on Dermatology 60c. Sample Isei to iib amy and ! Blood 8 lus : ) disease i,°° skm and - ScSf*. fchea? jm-atmern, D lf 7 1 Kurt*nient.H sent like sealed UIIlTH for I 0 sutifcH* r. 5 ala© /Starks, ^Moleg, bears, Warts, 1 ittmgs, India Redness Ink and of Powder Nose,. ISSTlT ^giceor b^ettr Tvont tfSSS free, at SMITH’S WORM OIL Is Cnxloubtedly the Best, Quickest, L aud Most Reliable Worm Mexlicinc Sold. V" 1 #* g£»?!mw JS£ is ?»“'ono h f 5S~J» l S» dose to little girl, » 86 my four yours o Id, and she passed worms, from 4 to 15 inches long. W. F. Phillips. s ° ld Everywhero * 2S Cent*. QMiifll