The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, March 08, 1889, Image 7

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JH1 * It U aa © Id * 4ftff , "T b * forewarned ( *
wfifc - * ° bo forearmed. " So let it be ia your
ffifif case , who rea this , aad keep on hand Ai >
fklWli i'KN fl Luko BAUAKf which is sold by all
I All Nerves.
IHt " ) " FW * * : r , • rotebgy , cranky , maybe mil ol
jfl $ j. , A. _ _ _ . aches and pains ,
fffif f w\ . t&t lhat ft realIlltl ( :
IK ) _ % ! fJ description of one
] " Wt7v lrko to • ' _ _ nerves ? "
' fljl y r _ # 2n t\ Pln6'fl Celery Com-
jgf \ Vl\M \ pound will soothe the
pjrjf c - J yjs j Irritated , strengthen
w\L. jfe jfe Zpjj the weakened , and
fity YJ v ] ) brace up the shat-
[ fj * tere < * nem8 , Unique
HfI l7 ir * n , ta combination
Exr _ / f of nerra remedies ,
IWl / M unique in its invlgor-
Mi } atlng action upon the whole system , unique
lit. 1 . , ta Its wonderful cures of nerrous diseases.
Mi Fame's
M Celery Compound
Mil can bo Implicitly relied upon to do all that it
tt ] promises.
9 { "I was infferine with nervousness and gen-
tmi , eral brenkdown of my entire system , and found
aV I'alne's Celery Compound to quickly quiet my
HI ! nervousness and restore my whole system to
SBjl vS , ° r * , vd cnerpy atraln. " P. B. Robkktson.
§ j | | . Keed SUtlon , Va. Jl. Six for 5. Druggists ,
| S * Wells. Kiciu.BD80M&CaProp. , Burlington , Vt.
i ( LACTATED F00D & ] gJ3S&
m DIAMOND DYES & &JB
I SICKHEADACHE
mnADTCDO \ < he8e.tttie nil * .
| UM ft IE. They also relievo Dis
f W lia. | 1.1 IV
m } . tress fromDyapepsia.In.
*
§ Mfi > p dlgestionandTooHeartj
§ 3 , "flflTTLIa Eating. A perfect reni
ns P | IllPfl edyrorDIzzlness.Nausea i
g | I | b _ IVEiK Drowsiness , Bad Taste
'
? i H nirai A , n tho Mouth , Coated
a f B flLLo. TonguaPaininth 81de.
\M \ J _ MM TOUPID UVER. They
U5 I _ _ _ _ _ _ _ k9 regulate the Bowels.
[ 3 ' la--Mi Purely Vegetable.
| | . ' = = - . 1 priQe J55 cents ; ,
jil * CAaTES 2DICINE CO. , NEW Y0 * .
ij . s BBiiii i * Smaii fL alir l *
1 CHOICETEKASLANDS
iffli * Rare Chance for Settlers.
j' [ KII Th Railroad System of Texas having developed so
r Mi aato brlDK within eaiy access of cood interior and
- fM\\ \ seaboard markets the lands cranted to the
11' , ' HOUSTON&TEXASG NrLRY.GO.
\ vw | It haa been detaxminod to offer to settlers the
m Eenowned Agricult'l Lands
: yfei Located along the line of the Fort Worth & Denver
) m\\ \ • City K. It. . iMginDinit with Wllbarser
f. • mil County , comprising ;
\m \ 200,000 ACRES
I jSj In farms of 160 aores and upward. These lands were
I 5H located by the Company amongthe earliest , with
r 'ji- esMcial care aa to soil , timber and writer. They are
I JA adapted totbe growth of cotton , corn , outs , wheat ,
"t (41 barley , rye , vpjotables , orchards acd gardens and
S iy\ tbe various domestic grasses.
i JW 8ituat d in tbe elevated and healthy region known
r ; * | as the Southern Panhandle of Texas , tliey possess n
% Sij genial climate , favorable to man and beast , where
' / n\ , outdoor work can be carried on the year round , and
I - * $1 are in marked contrast with regions of early and lata
J 'ilj Xrosu or cf dfKtructive " blizxards. "
I Population is fast pouring in , and local government
-I | SI is already established , with schools , chnrches , &c.
' vi/ Tebjcb or Sale : One-fifth cash , balance in four equal
/
| rl | yearly pavments , with Interest on deferred payments.
I Kor further information as to these and lands in
Slfjf } adjacent counties , apply tc
Jl j J. S. NAPIER , Vernon , Texas ,
j'Rji j. xvho is prepared to show to purchasers ) ; or to
'
' C' . C. GIB3S , Land Ag't , Houston , Tex
i'lLy gg FOR " THE BLOOD
11 I'll bPHsWv Swiit's Spccitlc has cures ine of a mullg-
ri'J ' RaPa nanthrcokliigouton my Ice , whii h caused
T/tl fJCjerlntoIcnihle pain. It wns called Eczema by
iMf * BBfJthe doctors fmirof whom treated mo with
J "J W tt'no relief. I candidly confesj that I owe my
J1 * ' Ilj prrhent Kood health to S. H. S. , which In my
iirJ k. M estimation is invaluable as a blood remedy.
MV HsBM MISSJULIADEWITT.
\lJ\t , s s B 2227 N. 10th St. . St. Louis , Mo.
, 'l. 1JjL-4. W FS Onrbnby when two months old was attack-
if [ St sT * ; Od | th Scrofula , which for u long time < le-
fi j i I mm ittoyed her eveslyht entirely , and cnuvsd us
; [ • % Jto despair of her life. The doctors failed to
I * fMrellcve her , and we gavo Swift's Specific ,
I . BlCwhlch noon cured her entirely , and sha Is
I f B * \now hale and hearty. K. V. Delk ,
) \ WMmT Will's PointTexas.
r 1 sf Jf I ScrofuladeTelopedonmyUauffhter swell-
[ * < t t/fnp and lumps on her nee'e. We gave her
it * E-Swift's Specific , and the result was wondor-
I Hs sK nl and the curs iirompt.
I I I BarWi S. A. DEAUMOND , Cleveland. Tenn.
* - smSBP PnScjid for book giving history of Wood
! I. R > RDUcases and advlre to sufferers , mailed free.
If , IKkw THUSWII-T SPECIFIC CO.
. ff IVEkI Drawer 3 , Atlanta , Ga.
V ITEIi DKIIXS , all Styles for all Pur-
I r Wb.poses. . Send SO cents for
- j J&tPi znalUnsr complete and
, I Jft . h&nd ame Catalogue. For
1 M 5 \ particulars , address ,
\ / I ijnk GOULD , AUSTIN & '
f I 0a CALDWELL CO. ,
i
ON 30 DAYS eubtiVtiuss TRIAL.
KlMfts = SJKr Has a Fad different from all
QHj WEjvaSS'others Is enp shape , wita Self- '
_ . , " e 'fil + > J adjUktincEall In center.adnpts I
III VL M Itself to all po ition orUie body .while ,
it * k J tic ball in thecup presses back ,
• tv sasasess * tke intestine ? Just as a per-
II eon does with the finger , with light lumnra
f ( the Hernia Is heU securely day and night , * nd aradical
i H 1 sure certain. ltlse v rtnrabletndplipap. Sentbymali.
I ' OronJaxs tree. KOCLESTCS TBOSS SirQ. CO. , ChlMI. , in
H j mmWpTvZ Si UV WILL SAVE MONK l
II mMmbmi1 TlmcrIn' Troubl °
II ) RlS and WU CUKE
I \ iK P Ely's CreamBam" S ,
J t t * Cdi ' Apply Balm Into each nostril.
sK
s
M j , mmW 0 * 1 ELY BHOS M Warren St. . S. Y-
l JfJk. Wf 5 Ton AVasoa Saalea ,
] * mmmumJFw * Ltru-t , sui b ui si , btm
I ' * ' * Staa > m i a in e i ut
sa s s s P tV
HII JBK > V 8iwBse3 I I""dieSMl . r rSrtyrinlie *
sB. AbWSETs • * " • tk | " rt * * * * * ar * i
BHt issuick r.v
WM THE MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
HK , OP IV3HJ"W YORK.
| H | The Largest , Cheapest and ilest In the World.
H , CASIE ASSETS S130.O0O.O00.
IV ; 8IU0S QOETZ , tTM. F. ALLEN' .
\v- \ Special Ageat. General Agent.
If . sflHHe k . A I prescribe and folly en.
- ( mm P mW dorse Big G as tba only
v r mmr CtttiV * * m gpecific for the certain cura
I K1TO&DiLTBV of tbla disease. t
t- mSmf ana J iJ . * a.n.i GRAHAirir.D.t
; gq c m g rtgtnr > Amsterdam , N. Y.
'
K' EB wrdealybytba We have sold Big G for
' Blr9ifsclittl0a.many , and it has
* % . many years
H i < kmultw \ \ WKi f1 3t Gl Bntia *
Ha kT0 aj > .S' DTCHE4CO. .
, !
B ; TrsiT BMBs CarilSl.OO. Bold by DrugglstsI
I IJABTH ACtJSEDl
B GenstsiB A ti ncCnre never/acutoglvnfoi-ia
H > di t r It < in tag worst canoe4nsnre eoaafort.M
mBl silo sleep tefTecsscurca where aU other * fail. >
B , . < ( ri Zean tfr ( ta MA Iw7 > < * eaL PnoeoOc-aadB
V S1.00c4Drti5iet orbyBaa. Sample FREJEB
i is EJ iiJi22 S i LiS L222ES
*
B ! v BMHMMsle BB B"l e HHMHHS ! TwW ,
H UflWTCn The address of Soldiers
H WAil 1 CaJ end Sailors who HOME-
' i H0KESTE&0S. W. E. MOSES ,
t V tSTiientjoH hls paper. JJrX\EK - COLO.
L - * APP PS i l Fresh Reliable. Only 3 and 3
sjM v = - tfcll 8u ? ecnu per large psciace. 00,000
* ' J lPF'iiKoveltyprcKentsFree. . Mam-
, % t ? M IBB BSP W moth Seed Farms. One acre
H oi ( iiass. Keantiful Garden Guide FREE.
mMy H.W. B UCKBUK-UocktorU beed Farm. ltorJ iirdTilT
H , / - > a _ _ _ .find Hso's Cnro for
H T"1 c. ! < rfriJCfr "g"'rHnTi the
t _ 3BiJhJ--l ( KyBEST remedy for
WM ( ' 7xn r V3kxwTS7hoarsencf and to
mMt K r • - Oclear the throat.
* _ _ _ - >
W tfteuSatl'8Rg # CAN BECrKCD. Atrialbot-
A V S t gy * ! Stic sent free to any one amieted.
WMt fQ S gSSVBl I > J .IAFrUEOloebcsUrN.Y.
H'1
V'
bhY * j *
B BaV& ' ' BM
S S S H H Hk .w4 *
mm\\m\\mmm \ \ mmmm\ \ mMm aisS
mm S Sm r'f
m mmmmmmmm mmmmmM mmmmmmmS X&
FOIL OF MYSTERY.
i _ _ _ _ _ _ _
The World , Says the Rev. Tal-
mago , Contains Gross Quantities
of It
The Dark Recesses of Anolent
Times Worra Delved Into by
David.
An Unhappy Pealing Existed in Society in
Days of Old as Now.
Biiooklts , Fot > . l. Tho audionco that
crowded tho immense auditorium of tba
Brooklyn Tabornaclo and tho adjoining
lecture room and parlors to-day united in
singing :
Son of my ouL Thou Saviour dear.
It Is not night If Thou be near.
Dr. Talmago preached on the * subject :
"Dark " Text xlix
Sayings on a HarpText
Psalm of Djavid , verso 4 : "I will open my
dark sayings on a harp. "
Tho world is full of tho inoxplicable , the
impassable , tho unfathomable , tho insur
mountable. We cannot go three steps in
any direction without coming up against a
hard wall of mystery , riddles , paradoxes ,
profundities , labyrinths , problems that we
cannot solve , hieroglyphics that wo cannot
decipher , anagrams wo cannot spell out ,
sphinxes that will not speak. For that reas
on , David in my text proposed to tako up
some of those somber and dark things and
try to set them to sweet music : "I will
open my dark sayings on a harp. "
So I look off upon society and iind people
in unhappy conjunction of circumstances
and they do not know what it means and
thoy have a right to ask , why ia this ? and
why is that ? and I think I will bo doing a
good work by trying to explain some of
these strango things and niako you moro
content with your lotand I shall only bo an
swering questions that have often been
asked me , or that we have all asked our
selves , while I try to set theso mysteries to
music and ojwu my own dark sayings on a
harp.
A QUESTION' THAT IS OPTUS' ASKED.
Interrogation the first : "Why does God
tako out of this world those who aro useful
and whom wo cannot spans and leave alive
and in good health many who aro only a
nuisance or a positive injury to the world ?
I thought I would bogin with tho very
toughest of all tho seeming mscrutables.
Many of the most usofulmen and women
die at thirty or forty years of aire , while you
often iind useless people alivo at sixty and
seventy and efahty. John Careless wrote
to Bradford , who was soon to bo put to
death , saying : "Why dolh God suffer mo
and such other caterpillars to live that can
do nothing but consumo tho alms of the
church , and taKo away so many worthy
workmen in the Lord's vineyard ? " Similar
questions aro often asirert. Hero aro two
men. 'The one is a noble character and a
Christian man ; ho chooses for lifetime com
panion one who has been tenderly reared
and she is worthy of him and ho is worthy
of her ; as a merchant , or farmer , or pro
fessional man , or mechanic , or artist , ho
toils to educate aud rear his children ; ho is
succeeding , but ho has not yet established
for his family a full competency ; he seems
absolutely indispensable to that household ,
but ono day before ho has paid off tho mort
gage on his house he is coming home through
a strong northeast wind and a chill strikes
through him and four days of pneumonia
end Ins earthly career and the wife and
children go into a struggle for shelter and
lood. Hia next door neighbor is a man who ,
though strong and wcU , lets hi3 wife sup
port him ; he is round at the grocery store
or some general loafing place in the even
ings whilo his wife sows ; his boys are imi
tating his example and lounge and swagger
and swear ; all tho use that man is in that
house is to rave because the coffee is cold
when he comes to a late breakfast , or to say
cutting things about his wife's looks when
he furnishes nothing for her wardrobe.
Tho best thing that could happen to that
family would be that man's funeral ; but
ho declines to die ; he lives on and on and
on. So we have all noticed that many of
the useful are early cut off while tho para
sites of societjr have great vital tenacity.
I talre up this dark sayiug on my harp and
give three or four thrums on the string in
the way of surmising and hopelul guess.
Perhaps the usoful man was taken out of
the world , because he and his family were
so constructed that they could not have en
dured some great prosperity that might
have gone down in tho vortex of worldli-
ness which every year swallows up ten
thousand households. And so ho went
while ho was humble aud consecrated , and
they were by tho severities of lire kept close
to Christ and , fitted for usefulness here and
higli3eats in heaven ; and when they meet
at last befoi e the Throne , they will acknowl
edge that though the furnace was hot , it
purified them , and prepared them for an
eternal career of glory and reward for
which no other kind of life could have fitted
them. On tho other hand , tho useless man
lived on to fifty , or sixty , or seventy years ,
because all the ease he ever can have he
must have in this world , and you ought not ,
therefore , begrudge him his earthly longev
ity. In all the ages there has not a single
loafer entered heaven. There is no place
for him there to hang around. Not in tho
temples , for they are full of the most vigor
ous , alert and rapturous worship. Not on
tho river bynk , for that is tho place where
the conquerors recline. Not in tho gates ,
because there are multitudes entering , and
we are told that at each of tho twelve
gates thero is an angel , and that celestial
uard would not allow tho place to be
§ locked up with idlers. If tho good and
useful go early , rejoice for them that they
have so soon got through with human life ,
which at best is a struggle. And if the
useless and the bad stay , rejoice that they
may be out in the world's fresh air a good
many years before their final incarcera
tion.
Interrogation the second : Why do so
many good people have so much trouble ;
sickness , bankruptcy , persecution , tho
three black vultures sometimes putting
their fierce beaks into one set of jangled
nerves ? I think now of a good friend I
once had. He was a consecrated Christian
man , an elder in the church and as polished
a Christian gentleman as evor walked ,
Broadway. First his general health gave
out and he hobbled around on a cane , an old •
man at forty. Aftor a while paralysis i
struck him. Having by poor health been
compelled suddenly to quit business , he
lost what property he hadThen his beau
tiful daughter died. Then a son became
hopelessly demented. Another son , splen
did of mind and commanding of presence ,
resolved thai ? he would take care of his fa
ther's household , but under the swoop of
yellow fever at Fernandina , Fla. , he sud
denly expired. So you know good men and
women who have had onough troubles , you
think , to crush fifty people. No worldly
philosophy could take such a trouble and
set it to music , or play it on violin or flute
or dulcimer or sackbut , but I dare to open
that dark saying on a gospel hai-p.
You wonder that very consecrated peo
ple have trouble ? Did you ever know any
very consecrated man or woman who bad
not had great trouble ? Never. It was
through their troubles sanctified that they
were made very good. If you find anyj j
whero in this city a man who has now and t
always has had perfect health , and never
lost a child , and has always been popular , j
and never had business struggle or misforj j
tune , who is dislinguished for goodness , i
pull your wire for a telegraph messenger
boy and sena me word and I will drop
everything and go right away to look at |
him. There never has been a man like that , i
and never will be. H ho aro those arrogant , ,
self conceited creatures who move about
without sympathy for others and who think .
more of a St. Bernard dog , or an Aldernoy
cow , or a Southdown sheep , or a Berkshire
pig than of a man ? They never had any
trouble , or the trouble was never sacrificed.
Who are those men who listen with moist
eye as you tell them of suffering and who
have a pathos in their voice and a kindness
in their manner and an excuse or an allevi
ation for those gone astray ? Thov are the
men who have.graduated at the Royal
Academy of Trouble and they have the di-
Dloma written in wrinkles on their own
countenances. My ! my I What heartaches
they had ! What tears they have wept !
What injustice they have suffered ! The
mightiest influence for purification and sal
vation is trouble. No diamond fit for a
crown until it is cut. No wheat fit
ior bread till it is ground. There
aro only three things that can break off a
chain a hammer , a file or a fire ; and trou
ble is all three of them. The greatest writ- '
ers , orators and reformers get much of their
force from trouble. "What gavo to Wash- '
that . tenderness and
ington Irving cxquis.le j
pathos which will make h'.s Looks favorites
while the English language continues to be
written and spoken ? An early heartbreak j
that he never once mentioned : and when ,
thirty years after the death of Matilda II offj j
man , who was to have been his bride , her {
h i
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ k _ _ _ _ _ _ 4 (
asrims SKBE SS SS
* *
father picked up a piece of wnbroklery aad
said. "That 1- a pieco of poor Matilda's
workmanship , " Washington Irving sank
from hilarity into silence and walked away.
Out of that lifetime grief tho great author
dipped his pen's mightiest re-enforcement.
• 'Calvin's Institutes of Religion , " than
which a moro wonderful book was never .
written by human hand , was begun by tho
author at twenty-five years of ago , bocauso
of thepersecution by FranoiB.kingof Franco.
Faraday tolled for all time on a salary of 80
pounds a year and candles. Aft every brick
of tho wall of Babylon was stamped with
tholbtterN , standing for Nebuchadnezzar ,
so every part of tho templo of Christian
achievement is stamped with tho letter T ,
standing for trouble.
When in olden time a man was to be hon
ored with knighthood , ho was struck with
tho flat of tho sword. But thoso who have
comoto the honor of knighthood in tho king
dom of God were first struck not with tho
flat of tho sword but with tho keen edgo of
tho cimoter. To build his magnificence of
character , Paul could not havo spared ono
lash , ono prison , one stoning , one anathema ,
ono poisonous viper from the hand , ono
shipwreck. What is true of individuals is
true of nations. Tho horrors of the Ameri
can revolution gave this country this sido
of tho Mississippi river to independence ,
and tho conflict between England and
Franco gave tho most of this country west
of tho Mississippi to tho United States.
France owned it , but Napoleon , fearing
that England would tako it , practically
mado a present to the United States for ho
received only $15,000,000 of Louisiana ,
Missouri Arkansas , Kansas , Nebraska ,
Iowa , Minnesota , Colorado , Dakota , Mon
tana , Wyoming and tho Indian Territory.
Out of the lire of tho American revolution
came this country east of the Mississippi ,
out of tho European war came tliat west of '
the Mississippi river. The British empire i
rose to its present overtowering grandeur ,
through gunpowder plot , and Guy Fawke3' j
conspiracy , and Northampton insurrection , j
and Walter Ralicgh's beheading , and Baj j
con's bribery , aud Cromwell's dissolution i
of parliament , and the battles of Edge Hill , j
and Grantham , and Newberry , and Marsj j
ton Moor , and Naseby , aud Dunbar , and j
Sedgemoor , and execution of Charles the
Frst , and London plague , and London fire ,
and London insurrection , and Ryehouso j
plot , and tho vicissitudes of centuries. So ;
tho earth itself , before it could become ap- :
propriate and beautiful residence for tho {
human family had , according to geology , to I
be washed by universal deluge , and scorchj j
ed and made incandescent by universal |
fires , and pounded by sledgehammer
of icebergs , - and wrenched by earth- .
quakes that split continents , and i
shaken by volcanoes that tossed mountains ,
and passed through the catastrophes of '
thousands of years before Paradise became !
possible and the groves could shako out their
green banners and tho first garden pour its j
carnage of color bet ween the Gihon and tho
Hiddekel. Trouble a good thing for the j
rocks , a Rood thing for nations , as well as a j
good thing for individuals. So when you j
push against mo with a sharp interrogation |
point , Why do the good suffer ? I open tho I
dark saying on a harp and , though I can I
neither play an organ , or cornet , or hautboy , j
or bugle , or clarionet , I have taken some les- |
sons on tho gospel harp , and if you would !
like to hear mo I will play you these : "All i
things work together for good to thoso who '
love God. " Now ilo chastening for tho
present seemoth to be joyous , but grievous ;
nevertheless afterward it yieldeth all possi
ble fruits of righteousness unto them which
arc exercised thereby. " "Weeping may en
dure for a night , but joy cometh in the
morning. " Wnat a sweet thing is a harp ,
and I wonder not that in Wales , the country
of my ancestors , the harp has become the
national instrument , and that they have fes
tivals , where great prizes aro offered in the
competition between harp and harp ; or that
weird Sebastian Erard was much of his
time bent over this chorded and vibrating
triangle , and was not satisfied until ho had
' ven It a compass of six octaves from E to
f with all the semi-tones , or that when
King Saul was demented the son of Jesse
came before him and putting his fingers
among the charmed strings of tho harp
played tho devil out of the crazed monarch ,
or that in heaven Ihere shall bo harpers
harping with their harps. So you will not
blame me for opening tho dark saying on
the gospel harp.
Your harps , ye trcmlilinir silnts ,
Down from the willows take :
Loud to the ptal-e of love divine
Bid cverv string aw ke !
Interrogation third : Why did a good God
let sin and trouble come into the world when
He might havo kept tnem out ? My reply is ,
Ho had a good reason. He had reasons that
He has never given us. He had reasons
which He could no more mako us understand
in our finite state than the father starting
out on some great and elaborate enterprise
could make the 2-year-old child in its armed
chair comprehend it One was to demon
strate what grandeur of character may be
achieved on earth by conquering evil. Had
there been no evil to conquer and no trouble
to console , then this universe would nover
havo known tin Abraham or a Moses or a
Joshua or an Ezekiel or a Paul or a Christ
or a Washington or a John Milton or a John
Howard , and a million victories which havo
been gained by the coasecrated spirits ot all
ages would never have been gamed. Had
there been no battle there would have been
no victory. Nine-tenths of tbe anthems of
heaven would never have been sung.
Heaven could never have been a thousandth
part of tho heaven that it is. I will not say
that I am glad that sin and sorrow did enter ,
but I do say that I am glad that after God
has given all his reasons to an assembled
universe He will be more honored than if
sin and sorrow had never entered , and that
the unfallen celestials will bo outdone and
will put down their trumpets to listen and
it will bo in heaven when those who havo
conquered sin and sorrow shall enter , as it
would bo in a small singing school on earth
if Thalberg and Gottschalk and Wagner
and Beethoven and Rheinberger and Schu
mann should all at once enter. The
immortals that have been chanting ten
thousand years before tho throne will say ,
as they close their librettos : "Oh , if wo
could only sing like that ! " But God will
say to those who have never fallen and con
sequently have not been redeemed : "You
must be silent now ; you havo not the quali
fication for this anthem , " so thoy sit with
closed lips and folded hands and sinners
saved by frraco take up the harmony , for the
Bible says "no man could learn that song
but the hundred and forty and four thous
and which were redeemed from tho earth. "
A great prima donna , who can now do any
thing with her voice , told me that when she
first started in music her teacher in Berlin
told her she could be a good singer , but a
certain note she could never reach. "And
then , " she said , "I went to work and studied
and practiced for years untill did reach it. "
But tho song of the sinner redeemed , the
Bible says , the exalted harmonists who
have never sinned could not reach and never
will reach. Would you like to hear me in a
very poor way play a snatch of that tune ?
1 can give you only one bar of the music on '
this gospel harp : "Unto him that hath
loved us and washed us from our sins in his
own blood and hath made us kings and
priests unto God and the Lamb , to him be
glory and' dominion forever and ever ,
Amen. " But before leaving this interroga
tory , Why did God let sin come into the
world ? let me say that great battles seem to
be nothing but suffering and outrage at the 1
time of their occurence , yet after they have j
been a long timo past we can see that it was j
better for them to have been fought , namely , i
Salamis , Inkerman , Toulouse , Arbella , |
Agincourt. Trafalgar , Blenheim , Lexington ,
Sedan. So nowthat the great battles against .
sin and suffering are going on we can seo ,
mostly that which is deplorable. But twenty
thousand years from now , standing in glory
we shall appreciate that heaven is better off
than if the battle of this world's sin and •
Buffering had never been projected.
But now I come nearer home and put a
dark saying on the gospel harp , a style of i
question that is asked a million times every i
year. Intenogation the fourth : Why do I ,
have it so hard while others have it so j
easy ? or , why do I have so much difficulty j
in getting a livelihood while others go
around with a full portemonnaie ? or , why
must I wear those plain clothes while others
have to push hard to get their wardrobes
closed , so crowded are they with brilliant
attire i or , why should I have to work so
hard while others have three hundred and
sixty-five holidays every year ? They are i
all practicallj' one question. I answer them !
by saying , it is because the Lord has his ,
favorites and he puts extra discipline upon •
you , and extra trial , because he has for j'ou
extra glory , extra enthronement and extra
felicities. That is no guess of mine , buta
divine say-so : "Whom the Lord lovethhe
chasteneth. " "Well , " says some one , "I
would rather have a litUe less in heaven
and a little more here. Discount my heav-
only robe 10 per cent , and let me pow put itj
on , a fur lined oveicoat ; put me in a less
gorgeous room of the house of many man
sions and let me have a house here in a bit
ter neighborhood. " Nono : God is not going
to rob heaven , which is o be your resideuco '
for nine hundred quadrjl ion of years , to fix
up your earthly abo te , which you will occu
py at most for less than a century , and
whero you may perhaps slay only ten years
longer , or ono year , or prhap3 a month
moro. Now you had better carefully let ,
I
l )
f
God have hi * way , for , you soo , ho has been
taking care of folks for near seven thousand
years , und knows how to do It , and can boo
what is beat for youbetter than you can
yoursolf. Dou't think you aro too insignifi
cant to bo dlvlnoly cared for. It was said
i that Diana , tho goddess , could not bo pros-
: ont to keep her templo at Ephcsus from
burning "becauso aho was attending upon
tho birth of him who was to bo Aloxander
tho Great But I tell you that your Goa
and my God is eo great iu small things as
woll as largo things that ho could attend
tho cradle of u babe and at tho same timo
tho burning of a world.
And God will make it all rl ti with you ,
and there is ono song that y m will sing
ovory hour your first ten years in heaven ,
and tbe refraiu of that song will bo : "I am
so glad God did not lot mo havo it my own
way. " Your caso will be all fixed up in
heaven and there will be such a reversal of
conditions that wo can hardly find each
other for some time. Some of us who havo
lived in first rate houses hero and m first
rato neighborhoods will bo found , becauso
of our lukewarmness of earthly service ,
living on ono of tho back streets of the
celestial city , and clear down at tho end of
it at No. 80a , or 909 , or 1505 , whilo some who
had unattractive earthly abodes , and a
crumped ono at that , will , in the heavenly
city , be in a house fronting the Royal plaza ,
right by the imperial fountain , or on the
Heights overlooking the River of Life , tho
chariots of salvation halting at your door
whilo thoso visit you who are more than
conquerors , and thoso who aro kings and
queens unto God forever. You , my brother ,
and you , my sister , who havo it so hard
hero will havo it so fine and grand thero
that you will hardly know yourself and
will feel disposed to dispute your own
identity , and the first timo 1 see you thero I
will cry out : "Didn't I tell you so when
you sat down there in the Brooklyn Tabor
naclo and looked incredulous because you
thought it too good to bo true ? " and you will
answer : "You were right , tho half was not
told mo ! " So this morningl open your dark
saying of despondency and complaint on my
gospel harp and give you just one bar of
music , for I do not pretend to be much of a
playor. "Tho Lamb which is in tho midst
of the throne shall lead them to living foun
tains of water and God shall wipe away all
tears from their eyes. " But I must confess
I am a littlo perplexed how some of you good
Christians are going to get through the gate ,
becauso there will be so many there to greet
you aud they will all want to shake hands
at once and will all want the first kiss.
They will have heard that you are coming ,
and thoy will all press around to weleomo
you and will want you to say whether you
know them after being so long parted.
Amid tho tussle and romp of reunion I
tell you whose hand of welcome you had
better first clasp aud whose cheek is entitled
to the first kiss. It is the hand of Him with
out whom you would never have got thero
at all , tho Lord Jesus , the darling of tho
skies , as ho cries out , "I have loved thee
with an everlasting love and the fires could
not burn it and tho floods could not drown
it. " Then you , my dear people , having no
more use for my poor harp on which I
used to open your dark sayings and
whose chords sometimes snapped , despoil
ing the symphony , you will take down
your own barps from tho willows
tbat grow by tho eternal water
courses and play together those celestial airs ,
some of the names of which are entitled ,
"Tho King in His Beauty , " "Tho Land
That Was Far Off , " "Jerusalem , tho Gold
en , " "Home Again , " The Grand March of
God , " "The Life Everlasting. " And as the
last dark curtain of mystery is forever
lifted it will be as though all the oratorios
that were ever heard had been rolled into
ono and "Israel in Egypt" and "Jeptha'a
Daughter" and Beethoven's "Overture in
C" and Rittcr's first sonata in D minor and
the "Creation" and tho "Messiah" had been
blown from the lips of one trumpet or been
invoiced _ by the sweep of ono bow or had
dropped' from the vibrating chords of one
harp.
But hero I must slow up lest in trying to
solve mysteries I add to tho mystery that
we bavo already wondered at ; namely ,
Why the preachers should keep on after all
the hearers aro tired ? So I gather up into
ono great armful all tho whvs , and hows ,
and wherefores of your life and mine ,
which we have not had time or the ability
to answer , and write on them the words
"adjourned to eternity. " I rejoice that wo
do not understand all things now , for if wo
did , what would we learn in heaven ? If v/o
knew it all down here in the freshman and
sophomore class , what would bo the use of
our going up to stand amid the juniors aud
seniors ? It we could put down one leg of
the compass and with the other sweop
a circle clear around all the inscrutables ,
if wo could lift our little steelyards and
weigh the throne of the Omnipotent , if we
could with our seven day clock measure
eternity , what would be left ior heavenly
revelation * Sol move that we cheerfully
adjourn what is now beyond our comprehen
sion , and as according to Rollin , the histor
ian , Alexander the Great , having obtained
the gold casket m which Darius had kept
his rare perfume , used that aromatic casket
hereafter to keep his favorite copy of Homer
in , and called the book , therefore , the "edi
tion of the casket , " and at night he put the
casket and his sword under his pillow ,
so I put this day into the perfumed casket
of your richest affections and hopes this
promise , worth more than anything Homei
ever wrote or sword ever conquered :
" \ \ hat I do thou knowest not now. but
thou shalt know hereafter , " and that I call
the "edition celestial. "
o
Concerning : Donnelly.
Ignatius Donnelly attempted to get
into tho United States senate , but the
Shnkesnerian students arose in a wave
of wrath and defeated him. If Mr.
Donnelly's genius were half so broad
as his industry he might , without impu
dence , claim ascendency over the great
man whose immortality he has attempt
ed to despoil. But , unfortunately for
Mr. Donnelly , he is an iconoclast with
out creative ability a man who can
tear down a palace , but who cannot
build a corn-crib. At one time it was
thought that Donnelly's book would be
a great success. Several Englishmen
who laid claim to distinction declared
the "Cyphergram" to be a work of
great insight , but a careful examination
by less excitable men showed it to bo
not only weak , but nonsensical.
It is unfortunate that some of Shakes
peare's contemporaries did not give
a sketch of his life. That they did not ,
however , is perfectly natural. Shakes
peare , during his life , was not regarded
as a great man. In fact , he w.as not
looked upon as a great poet until Dry-
den proclaimed him a master of verse.
It is easy for the half-educated man to
say that Shakespeare did not write the
plays that aro attributed to him. It
would he equally easy to say th.it
Burns , unacquainted with the college ,
did not write some of the finest verses
that are accredited to him.
The greatest poets , it seems , are doom
ed to be obscure , so far as history of their
lives is concerned. That is easily ac
counted for. Poets , as a rule , are not
great until many years after thoy have
passed away from the scene of their
work. The obscure man of to-day may
be forgotten when a few years have
rolled away.
Ignatius Donnelly has one merit He
has a deeo-seated admiration for the
Shakespearean plays. Tne man who
loves Shakespeare is never a fool. He
may he a rascal , but he knows beatuy ;
he may he a crank , but his mind knows
liberality. Arkansaw Traveler.
m
Advice from a Solid Man.
' " I have of ad
"Young man , one piece
vice to give you , " said a benevolent
and generally comfortable-looking old
gentleman to his seatmate on a train
coming into Boston Thursday. "What
ever you do , mako it a point to have a
little more money the first of next Jan
uary than you had the first of this. "
The satitfied and substantial air of the
maker of tho maxim indicated that he
had made the piece of worldly wisdom
the rule Of his life.
1
It is hard to tell at this time of year
whether a man has care on his mind or a
jiiece of mince pie in his stomach. Mer
chant Traveler.
There can never be any objection to o
cigar manufacturer puffing his own goods.
Detroit Free Press.
s sss Wsi BWHiSiSJSjsss s " * " * 7. . . | i
8hrw _ Astvlee to a Sittttsrcr.
Tom Morritt is on deck again. If tho
gentleman from Marion did not bob up
at snch times tho legislature would lose
ono of ita qnainest chnractera.
Merritt's Btuttcr gives a pecnliar spico
to his stories. Sevornl years ago , desir
ing to nchievo distinction as nn orator ,
ho sought to havo tho impediment
enrod. Ho heard of a man who , it was
said , could euro stuttering , and con
sulted him. Bofng informed that the
impediment could bo removed , ho was
so elated that he made known tho fact
to all his friends , ono of whom was Sam
Buckmn8ter , who used to rnn the old
Alton penitentiary.
"Don't do it , " was Bnckmnater's ad
vice.
"W-wh-why ? " ejaculated Morritt , in
astonishment.
"Becauso your stuttering is all thero
is to 3'ou. Don't do it , " rejoined Buck-
master. Chicago Tribune.
Mr. and Mra aCIeveland will live at the
Victoria hotel % hen they retire to New
York.
Mr. SoivhII niiilce * n TVn-Strll
Chicago (111. ) Arkansas Traveller. Feb. 9.
A Traveller representative , lear.mig
that Mr. George W. Sewall , of Auburn ,
Park , HI. , had held a lucky number in
tho last drawing of the Louisiana State
Lottery , interviewed that gentleman. It
was found that Mr. Sewall had one-tenth
of tickot No. 40,789 , which drew tho sec
ond capital prize of S100,000 in tho com
pany's drawing of January lfilh. Mr.
Sewall said : "I was asked incidentally
by a friend to purchase a ticket in this
drawing. I did so , paying ono dollar
for tho Fame , ami gavo the matter no
further thought until , to my jrreat sur
prise , I was notified that my ticket had
drawn a prize. I received my money
through tho Adams Express company ,
five days after the date of tho drawing.
The § 10,000 was handed me without
question and without the slightest in
convenience or annoyance to me. The
ono dollar which I paid for tho ticket is
the iiifit and only money I have ever in-
vested-in the lottery. "
Mr. Sewall lias already invested the
proceeds of his lucky draw in Cook
county (111. ( ) bonds , nn investment which
is regnrded as perfectly afe , and which
will bring him a comfortable income.
Cranbfrry nance differs irom mercy in
that it should always be strained.
Conversation i-nrirhes the understanding
but Hobtude is the achool of genius.
"If a woman is pretty ,
To me 'tis no matter ,
lie she blonde or brunette ,
So she letn me look at her. "
An unhealthy woman ia rarely , if ever ,
beautif il. The peculiar diseases to which
so many of the ex are subject , are prolific
cntiseH of pale , sallow fares , blotched with
unsightly pimples , dull luatrclcps eyes and
emaciated forms. Women so ufilicted , enn
be permanently cured by uaing Dr. Pierco'a
Favorite Preacription ; and with the restor
ation of health comes that beauty which ,
combined with good qualities of iiead and
heart , makes women angels of loveliness.
"Favorite Prescription" is the only medi
cine for women , sold by druggists , under a
positive guaranteefrotn the manufacturers ,
that it will givt * satisfaction in every case ,
or money will be refunded. This guaran
tee has been piinted onthebottle-wrapper ,
and faithfully carried out for many years.
Dis hard the man who has frozen to
death.
Nothing Iilko It !
Every day swells the volume of proof
that as a specific for all Blood disease ? ,
nothing equals Dr. Pierco'a Golden Medical
Discovery. Remember , this ia an old es
tablished remedj with a record ! It haa
been weighed in the bnlance and found ful
filling every claim ! It haa bean tested
ninny yeara in thousands of cabea with
flattering success ! For throat and Lung
troubles , Catarrh , Kidney disease. Liver
Complaint , Dynpepsia , Sick Headache and
all dibordera resulting from impoverished
blood , there is nothing like Dr. Pierce'a
Golden Medical Disco vf ry woiid-reuo wned
and every growing in favor !
Dr. Gatling'a latest invention is a police
gun or street piece for use in riots.
IIoiv'h Ynnr Liver.
Tho old lady who replied , when aated
how her liver was , "God blesa mc , I never
heard that there wna such a thfnginthe
house , " was noted for her amiability.
Prometheus , when chained to a rock ,
might as well have pretended to be happy ,
aa the man chained to a diseased
1 ver. For poor Prometheua , thsre
was no escape , but by the nse of Dr.
Pierce's Pleaaant Purgative PelletB , the
disagreeable feelings , irritable temper , con- '
atipation , indigdstion , dizziness and sick !
headache , which are caused by a diseased
liver , promptly disappear.
There aro people who feed themselves
with their grief until they get fat on it.
For ISIcketn , iUnravmun , and nil IVaat-
IiiST DI ordera orciilldreu
Scott's Emulsion of Pure Cod Lircr Oil ,
with Hypophoaphitea , ia unequnled. The
rapidity with which children gain flenh and
strength is wonderful. "I have used
Scott'a Emulsion in cases of Rickets and
MarnsmiiH of long standing. In every case
tho improvement was marked. " J. M.
Main , M. D. , New York. Sold by all drug
gists.
It is the fellow with the sand who laya
siege to the girl with the rocka.
Conmimptlou Surely Cured.
To the Editor : Please inform your read
ers that I have a positive remedy for con
sumption. By its timely use thousands of
hopeless case * have been permanently
cured. I shall be glad to send two bottlea
of my remedy fiiee to any of your read-
era who have consumption if they will send
me their express and P. O. address. Re
spectfully , T. A. SbOCUM , M. C , lSlPear !
street , New York.
An electric car line to the top of Mis
sionary Ridge is proposed.
When P.bT was Met. we gave her Cab tori a.
When she woo n Child , she crlwl for Casteria.
When she became Miss , he rlnns to Cnstor : ,
When she had Children , she pave them Castori-v
A Yoanj : Phlo plier.
Mrs. Piice , wife of the ex-governor of
Massachusetts , recently brought home
some of that curious New Bedford wood
that burns with a bright blue flame.
She burned a bit of it to amuse her lit
tle son nnd then hid away the rest.
Next dry she fonnd him playing with
one of the forbidden sticks. "Why ,
where did you get that ? " she asked ;
"how did you know where it was ? "
"Mamma , dear , " replied the 7-year-old
philosopher , "miraculouB intuition is
not the result of forethought" New
York Tribune.
MOWS THIS !
We offer One Hundred Dollars Rewar 1
for nr case of Catarrh that can not be
cured by taking H-ll'a Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHENEY & CO. , Props. , Toledo. O.
We , the undersigned , have known F. J.
Cheney for the Inst 15 years , and believe
him perfectly honorable in all busineaa
transactions , and financially ablo to carry
out any obligations made by their firm.
WeatitTruax , Wholesale Druggists , Tole
do , Ohio.
Waldiug. Kinnin & Marvin , Wholesale
DrtiggistB , Toledo , Ohio.
I E. H. Van Hoesen , Cashier , Toledo Na
tional Bank , Toledo , Ohio.
Hall's Catarrh Cure ia taken internally ,
acting directly upon the blood nnd mucus
surfaces of the aya em , Price , 75 cenU pr
bottle. Sold by all Drug 'sto. '
_ _ _ 2 _ _ _ _ _ _ j J _ _ _ _ jg21lA-s > - ' - - "
Min , .i yr - h--jsp * < y > nl _ > ; W fQfm * *
I suffsred for two weeks with neuralgia
ot tba face , nnd procured iratnodlats relict
by using Salvation Oil
MKS. WM. 0. BALD.
433 N. Carey St. , Balto. . Md.
A Chicago lover bot his girl that hocould
tell what aho was thinking of. Ha thought
• ho was thinking of him , but she wnitn't ; It
was about Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup , which
had juat cured her of a dreadful cough.
When a littlo man la hopelosaly in lovo it
greatly increases . hia siglia.
Tho State of Texan on coming into tho
Union reserved to itaelf its public lands ,
and afterward deroted tho alternating
sections to promote school * and aid rail
roads. Tho Houston and Texas Central
R. R. Co. wan the first to build and select
from the then public domain. For boiiio
years it haa been at the mercy ot Its cred
itors ! , but haa recently been reorganized
and is now ready to part with Ita landed
estate , and make titlo thereto. By an an
nouncement , to bo found elaowhere , it will
be seen that settlers enn have timo in
which to complete purchases.
The man who invests in a worthlcsa
mine is a hole-sold fellow.
Foil TlIHOAT DlSElHES , CoUOHS. COLUS.
etc. , effectual relief ia found in the uho ot
"Brown'a Bronchial Troches. " Prico 25
eta. Sold only In _ ° ojeBj
The busy chimney sweep nppeara in a
fresh Hoot every day.
Jacobs on
S
%
TRADE P l
&EMffl
For Stableman and Stockmen.
CiU. ( veilings. Sralics , Gjnlu. Culls , Btrsiss ,
L a ne\j. BtUTneJi , Crxctci Ue li. Seritcfcti.
CoBtr eUoni , Ileth TTosadt , Klrlaghill. Sort-
Throat , DUlempir. Colic , Whitlow , roll Sri ! ,
71itul , Tmcors , BpllsU , aizgb n a and Spi.rU
la Its rly 3Ur.ti. Elrectlosi with cich BotU * .
At DrtucGLvrs xnd Dealers.
THE CHARLES A. VOGELEH CO. , BslUmors.UiJ.
Diamond Vera-Cura
A POSITIVE COU2 FOi : INOIGEbTIOS' AKD ALL
Etomuc.i ' 1 rouble ? Arliing Therefrom.
Your JrutjgM or General Dealer tctlt get Vera-
Cxira for you If not already in stcck ; or it icill be sent
bV mail on. receipt aj'23 ct * . i5 boxes ft Ou ) in itamps
bainple tent on receipt ofcent stamp.
THE CllAKLES A. YOOK-KltCO. . Baltimore. M.I.
IF U3 D BEFOBB CONFINEMENT.
Book to "MoTHeRS' ' ilAiLxnKmx.
braufield keuulatoic co. , ati.aistajga.
Sold iiy allDscgcists.
FIaImi nn ! nrvnn We manufacture to sell
Baby Carriages ssssssxsss
charge wtthln 7C0 mllos of ChlrawSend for Catalogue.
CUAS. KAJBEII. irr. . 03-C41'ljbcnrn An. , talus-
sal _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ , , , , AolnMA
KIDDER'S PASTILLESs wfr
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Charlw town , Hue
'
W. 1SU. . . Omaha , - 4f ! > 10.
M
6p5p5 I
TRY fesydsV j& TRY. * I
Slrlctrr PURE , It csoUIns NO OPIUM la isj ftniv
Amon thebtstremeiJlejAIIe _ * l.nu Bi U B- m
standi pre-eminent. Tho dntgel i l e * * > * Mm
highest ttrms , bs glrinz sntlre satisfaction wbersts * mm
it U ussJ. 9 \
l rlco5cta.,50cta.andlperBottl - H
The 25CKNTBOTTI.KH aro put up for the acer * B
modatlouof all who ds lra simply a H
COUolIorCltOOfllKMBUr ; . H
TAom oVifrwrr a remedy for VONS 1/MrTIOJf H
or uty LUNQ DISEASE thould ucun H
Vu Large $1 JJottia. M
Mothers. Read ! H
OAKLAND STA. , KYApril SI. MS * . M
eenttemen. Tho dsmanil for Au.KN's Hrxp A f M
8AM Is Increasing constantly. Tho ladies thlnt th r H
Is no medleln * equal to It for frnun nnd Vf booplnr- M
Couch. C.H. MAUTIN.Drauu * . H
BOtP BY ALL HEDICISS VEALHSiL H
AND SEEDS I
Aro acknowledpsd the btst. btlnj ; hardier , I- H
moro productive and ylsla better crops. fa H
FINE IXLUSTKATTJ > CATALOGUE | 1
Gjmulnlajoolj th V lT rlttUfm ll. < Cr a awUjfi Li
ctUca. WWTS FOX IT. 9.
_ _ IWAY a CO. , 1 1
gyFtORISTS AND BttMUlH , 6T. PaUI , MWM tjE H
ill $3 $ a " M0 _ Fail ? Scate I
- j , ' , ' \ * > . . Thlilslr-sUfaatBcee * * H
_ 5i > vJ 2Ct * * ° manufacture by a _ M
t&P&y ffll ! othereonocm. AU * ca ! s P H
TJf/Mv'V' art. finely flnlbd with. , M
" -ff * " _ . VcrmlIlliinailUoJil.St ( C H
_ _ vf-y- i . . .j . _ < rf ftnr1ijnIinu niiuna _ < i f H
VSr ji 1 pKckrnln iici.lrt.iin , at. M
'BR Ii I auaI90Ulb.J' _ tfnrmSeaIa. mM
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ . V-j nroller * for 911. A3 _ * H
> r * . > ry'Ty -U > . itock tra ] S-10. A Mo * ! _
rtiZ3t $ ? \ S1 Watrun Hciie W. a 4 a a- _ H
-Si'&SS Sr * UnJorSM. Boy > • * * * - _
( _ i B P T > * i n < t enrn nwnry. Struct tor- _ H
freelithocrapLixlUrooJ r- 9 9
American Farm Scale Co. , fjiilcaga.
aiSfiJl lAS A K > W WA.NTJBDr M
W-W FrUTf-4 J7 % Jp tY vmcrji.Kn TllKT. H
ffS SH3 " laiinnnster'nSafety Rein mWM
tSf T Sm "oWers G1VEN AWAY to Intro- M
r wztf&winf duco them , Krcry txirs. * owner buys MWM
ffrftffiy&it , from 1 to 6. Lines norer under horse' * mMM
Wtli.S'J . irvt Hand icentn In stumps t pay H
> T.4i * d pomace and pucklng tor Nlckls M
uV-tit/KmA i'inted Snrupte that soils for U H
• $ JSjtV9nii cents. Adores * . M
MaftifflM Erewater Mfg Co. , HollyMicL
IGUBEFITST I
I do not mean merely to stop them lor a time aa ' H
then have them rctnrn. I mean a radical cure. I h xo- > l
nude FITS , EPILEPSY or FALLING SICKHESS- H
lifelongstudy. . I warrant my remedy to euro ttt * B
worst cues. Because othsra hare failed in no re tea B
for not now receiving a cnre. Sendatoncofor trcvtt _ -
and KreoBotUe of my Infallible remedy. Giro Eiprtv _
and P.O. 11. G.KOOT.ai.C.lS3I'carl St N' .S H
Tflfft IJ tatao # a < Imk mor _ B yworfclBffforuMt\Mm HB ]
yylll t TtMns ! i ln Ike worU Ftlh.r ifl Co.tl'outffx J M
rvlt. T ru ram.IJJr.n. . Taua * Co..Au-u.u. aUn. BBV
aH ginl'IHlJ-llvir ' Wmi Do you-want theRIIV ftinRTHPRU CRilttftiJ 4 * _ _ H KB Baft Sh $ _ _
| | stKfSi ? V.lASl _ ffl 8 Sf ti _ _ _ i
E&mKtflft& &s M. 'i'J/iH ' on Early Cabbage , rotato ? * , IVo-i. Etc , and get routing gT ) _ r M V (3 ( fi Tk _ _ _ i
_ _ _ _ _ Wlr ? > y j9ifariu cromt . If so. plant HAL/.Klt'K HIUi > ' . 2C PackQL ' * # * _ dtgi _ _ Sax _ _ JUS w lJP * B kb _
_ SR WS 2SSia2 ! agf3iAllI.IESTV |
B Mr9asWef TiSa Tremendous I I { p C n 11C p I ft C R < ton per a. ) . Vew Oat. TVlieat rotate , tis. mW
PW'jsiZ WK 'JSSSIStwkorpraw LitllllilIIC LW a _ li\Vart.hmiftoaira2acre * . Beutl HciUimutejr _
Ri Wia _ [ vVi&S WHITE WONDER OATrmbu.p ra.amlmyraJnBmplvsandgettineUCaU- _
| g 23BaailiIosi > u6u/uiin l > < urica. JOltN' A. SALZEJf , Beed Grower , Lu CroitcVjw H
ra"r , \ < * Z&7' X Th FISnB2ANDSLlCKZttl Trarrmnttd'w t.rpri > ff a 't wilt k f yoa dry In M
63 A * ( T"ttT _ . n T > in ths hai-f1.it ttaita. Taa opt l'OZIllfX FUfCJCK IJ a p > r ! - .t riJIiic coit , ami. _ _
VI JSm TJlSJVW * * eoTerstk Btlr F ! a > . K < "jra-aortmlUtloas. Konae nilBei ltSio tU.o"l'tai
pi * * _ JljJ D/yir * * Kr oJ' t-aile-n.aik. lUmtrated Catalofu * free. A. J.Towtr , Bastaa , Mass. ]
m i' fa2vS55 | 5z % % : v jsS cvfii / n i * • n * 'i W. _ _ _ _
A DELIGHTED YOUNG WOMAN. I
Loot at my face and my hands-not a pimiiy face was all blotches comple-fon lOcfr
H
pie , tallow ;
Such as you saw there Eomo time No wonder they thought me s.nd called rae
ago. a fright ;
See my fresh checks , and I'm getting a dimNo one need have pimples and skin gray and ,
pie , sallow ,
I don't look at all like 1 used to , I IT Ehe'll take what I toot , ev'ry morn.
know. noon , and night. M\ \
I asked the delighted youngwoman what she referred to. and she answoredr
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It is the best beautilicr in the world , ,
because it purifies and enriches the blood , and pure rich blood gives good health , . j
and good health beauty. j
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery is guaranteed to cure all Blood , •
Skin and Scalp Diseases , as Blotches , Eruptions , Salt-rheum , Tetter. Eczema , ' .
Erysipelas , Scrofulous Sores aud -ellings. . in shortfall diseases caused by bad J j
blood , or money paid for it Avill be promptly refunded. > i
Copyrighted , 133S , by World's Dispensary JIzdicai , Association , Proprietors- .j J
It * 25 T' M l l T x 5" s3ssk : s : _ _ _ & _ _ > , $ 1
-5i ! z _ _ v -j . xiui . , vSr ; _ i5 . \ . , IO n.ettsr how bad or of k how loos standing , I
13 permanently cured by DR. 6AGE'S CATARRH REMEDY. oO cents , by drussists- , 1
fj
\ _ _ _ _ _ _ i