Decatur Democrat, Volume 35, Number 39, Decatur, Adams County, 18 December 1891 — Page 3
A Gr**S MeOleln* Inssimsion. / - It is aft often that The Tidings indulges . in a puff of any business enterprise, but in this instance we are induced to say a few words in reference to the great growth of the Dr. Kilmer Medicine Company at Bing* bampton, N. Y. From a small beginning a dozen years ago the ifr. Kilmer Company, have grown to immense proportions already. Having only just completed a large five-story addition to their factory the rapid growth of their business demands still more room.'until another large addition is now being contemplated to their enormous establishment. In addition to the special practice of Dr. Kilmer himself, extending Into several States, his several proprietary remedies have large sales and enjoy great popularity all over the country. The justly celebrated-kidney remedy, known throughout the land as Swamp-Boot, has already reached the largest sales of any kidney remedy in the world. And what is more this remedy has acquired its popularity and enormous sales, not by great advertising, but mainly through the reputation of the cures which it has wrought. Testimonials as to its merits and the cures it has made have been'received by hundreds from every State in the Union. Where a remedy accomplishes such cures as Swamp-Root has done in cases where they were even regarded as hopeless it is a pleasure to refer to such facts in our columns.—Buffalo Saturday Tidings. Queries. Is lib not a pleasing error of the mind to look complacently on one’s own mistakes and errors? Is there anything like adversity to try the temper of our friends? Os how much avail are science and learning unaccompanied with good sense? How much solid acquirement results from promiscuous reading? Why is the man who does you an unprovoked and uncalled-for injury ever after.your enemy? '■ Why should druggists keep so many medicines when one patent medicine wiM cure everything? How easy to mistake uniformity for unity and neutrality for independence?— Boston Journal. I Discountenancing Celibacy. Georgia is going to tax bachelors. A bill for that purpose has been brought into the Georgia Legislature and the House Committee on hygiene and sanitation has reported it favorably. Under - its terms it will cost a Georgian $25 to begin the bachelor business at 30 years of age, and on a rising scale of $25 for five years a man of 60 and over will be at the expense of S2OO per annum for the privilege of going without a wife. ! One reason why some people are not so wicked as others is because they haven’t had so good a chance. r W lib donmatraaa ’ • • I ■ l' l l l A new man can be made, out of one that’s «used-up,” bilious and dyspeptic. It’s done by Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. It starts the torpid liver into healthful action, purifies and enriches the blood, cleanses, repairs, and strengthens the system, and restores health and vigor. As an appetizing, restorative tonic, it sets at work all the processes of digestion and nutrition, and builds up flesh and strength. It’s the only Blood and h Liver Remedy tbat’s guaranteed, in every case, to benefit or cure. If it doesn’t do all that’s claimed for it, • the money is promptly refunded. But it keeps its promises — that’s the reason it can be sold in this way. “Discovery” strengthens Weak Lungs, and cures Spitting of Blood, Shortness of Breath, Bronchitis, Severe Coughs, and kindred affec- * tions. Don’t be fooled into taking something else, said to be “just as good,” that the dealer may make a larger profit. \There’s hothing at all like the “ Discovery.” DR. KILMER’S ft Kidney, Liver and Bladder Cure. . The Great Specific for “Bright’* I dleea.e,” nrluary troubles, kidney difficulties, ana Impure blood. F IF YOU have sediment In urine like brick dust, frequent calls or retention; YOU have gravel, catarrh of the bladder, excessive desire, dribbling or stoppage of urine. IF YOU have torpid liver, malaria, dropsy, fever and ague, gall stone, or gout; y ‘ IF YOU feel irritable, rheumatic, stitch in the r back, tired or sleepless and all unstrung; lL SWAMP-ROOT builds up quickly a run■k down constitution, and makes the weak strong. Guarantee- Use contents of One Bottle, if you are not benefited. Druggist will refund to you the price paid. ■r At Druggie**, sOc. Size, SI.OO Size. gnTalids’ Guide to Health” sent free-Consultation free Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. Common Soap Rots Clothes and Chaps Hands. IVORY SOAP j- - f DOES NOT. I '
DR. TALMAGE’S SERMON. AN ELOQUENT DISCOURSE* BY THE BROOKLYN DIVINE. AlMagnlfleent Sermon on th* Temptations' to Which Young Men Are Subjected—An Exhortation to Bold Fast to the Bible’s Truths. Talmage to Young Men. Dr. Talmage’s text was Proverbs i, 17, “Surely, In vain the net is spread in the sight of any bird.” Early in the morning I went out with a fowler to catch wildypigeons. We hastened through the mountain gorge and into the forest. We spread out the net, and covered up the edges of it as well as we could. We arranged the call bird, its feet fast and its wings flapping, in invitation to all fowls of Heaven to settle down there. We retired Into a booth of branches and leaves and waited. After awhile, looking out of the door of the booth, we naw a flock of birds in the sky. They came nearer and nearer, and after awhile were about to swoop into the net, when suddenly they darted away. Again we waited. After a while we saw another flock of birds. They came nearer and nearer until lust at the moment when they were about to swoop they darted away. The fowler was very much disappointed as well as myself. We said to each ottier, “What is the matter?” and “Why were .not these birds caught?” We went out and examined the net and by a flutter of a branch of a tree part of the net had been conspicuously exposed, and the birds coming very near had seen their peril and darted away. When I saw that I said to the old fowler, “That reminds me of a passage of Scripture: 'Surely in vain is the net spread in the sight of any bird.’ ” Now the net in my text stands sor e temptation. The call bird of' sin tempts men on from point to point and from branch to branch until they are about to drop into the net. If a man finds out in time that it is the temptation of the devil, or that evil men are tempting to capture his soul for time and for eternity, the man steps back. He says, “I am not to be caught in that way; I see what you ,are about; surely in vain is the net spread in the sight of any bird.” There are two classes of temptations —the superficial and the subterraneous —those above ground, those under ground. If a man could see sin as it is, he would no more embrace it than he would embrace a leper. Sin is a daughter of hell, yet she is garlanded and robed and trinketed. Her voice is a warble. Her cheek is the setting sun. Her forehead i§ an aurora. She says to men: “Come, walk this path with me. It is thymed and prlmrosed, and the air is bewitched with the odors of the hanging gardens of Heaven. The rivers are rivers of wine, and all you have to do is to drink them up in chalices that sparkle with diamond and amethyst and chrysoprasus. See! It is all b,oom and roseate cloud and Heaven.” » Oh. my friends, if for one moment the choiring of all these concerted voices of sin could be hushed, we should see the orchestra of the pit with hot breath blowing through a fiery flute, and the skeleton arms on drums of thunder and darkness beating the chorus, “The end thereof is death.” I want to point out the insidious temp-°> tations that are assailing more especially our young men. The only kind of nature comparatively free from temptation, so far as I can judge, is the cold, hard, stingy, mean temperament. What would Satan do with such a. man if he got him? Satau is not anxious to get a man who after awhile may dispute with him the realm of everlasting meanness. It is the generous young man, the ardent young man, the warm hearted young man, the social young man that is in especial peril. A pirate goes out on the sea, and one bright morning he puts the glass to his eye and looks off, and sees an empty vessel floating from port toport He says, “Never mind; that’s no prize for us.” But the same morning he puts the glass ttf his eye, and he sees a vessel coming from Australia laden with gold, or a vessel from the Indies laden with spices. He says, “That’s our prize: bear down on itl” Across that unfortunate ship the grappling hooks are thrown. The crew are blindfolded and are compelled to walk the plank. It is not the empty vessel, but the laden that is the temptation of the pirate. And a young man’ empty of head, empty of heart, empty of life —you want no Young Men’s Christian Association to keep him safe; he is safe. He will not gamble unless it Is with somebody else’s stakes. He will not break the Sabbath unless somebody else pays the horse hire. He will not drink unless some one else treats him. Ho will hanz around the bar hour after hour waiting for some generous young man to come in. The generous young man comes in and accosts him and says, “Well, will you have a drink with me today?” The man, as though it were a sudden thing for him, says. “Well—well, 11 you insist on it, I will—l will.” Too mean to go to perdition unless somebody else pays his expenses? For such young men we will not fight We would no more contend for them than Tartary and Ethiopia would fight as to who should have the great Sahara desert; but for those young men who are buoyant and enthusiastic, those who are determined to do something for time and eternity—for them we will fight, and we now declare everlasting war against al] the influences that assail them, and we ask all good men and philanthropists to wheel into line, and all the armies of Heaven to bear down upon the foe, and we pray Almighty God that with the thunderbolts of His wrath He will strike . down and consume all these Influences that are attempting to destroy the young men for whom Christ died. The first class of temptations that assaults a young man Is led on by the skeptic. He will not admit that he is an infidel or an atheist. Oh, no! he is a “free thinker; he is one of your “liberal” men; he is free and easy in religion. Oh, how liberal he is; he is so “liberal” that he will give away his Bible; he is so “liberal” that he will give away the throne of eternal justice; he is so “liberal” that he would be willing to give God out of the universe; he is so “liberal” that he would give up his own soul and the souls of all his friends. Now what more could you ask in the way of liberality? The victim of this skeptic has probably just come from the country. Through the intervention of friends he has been placed in a shop.. On Saturday the skeptic says to him, “Well, what are you going to do to-mor-row?” He says, "I am going to church.” “Is it possible?” says the skeptic. “Well, I used to do those things; I was brought up, I suppose, as you were, in a religious family, and I believed all those things, but I got over it; the fact is, since I came to town I have read a great deal, and I have found that there are a great many things in the Bible that are ridiculous. Now, for instance, all that about the serpent being cursed to crawl in the Garden of Eden because it had tempted our first parents; why, you see how absurd it Is; you can tell from the very organization of the serpent that it had to crawl; it crawled before it was cursed just as well as it crawled afterward; you can tell from its organization that.it crawled. Then all that story about the whale swallowing Jonah, or Jonah swai* nwfntf tha whale. which wm It? ft don’t
make any difference, the thing is absurd; it is ridiculous to suppose that a man could have gone down through the jaws of a sea monster and yet kept his life; why, his respiration would have been hindered; he would have been digested; the gastric juice would have dissolved the flbrine and coagulated albumen, and Jonah would have been changed from prophet Into chyle. Then all that story about the miraculous conception—why, It is perfectly disgraceful. Oh, sir! I believe in the light of nature. This is the Nineteenth century. Progress, sir; progress. I don’t blame you, but after you have been in town as long as I have you will think justas I do.” Thousands of young men are going down under that process day by day,and there is only here and there a young man who can endure this artillery of scorn. They are giving up their Bibles. The light of nature! They have the light of nature, in China*; they have It in Hindostan; they have it In Ceylon. Flowers there, stars there, wafers there, winds there, but no civilization, no homes, no happiness. Lancets to cut and juggernauts to fall under and hooks to swing on, but no happiness. Young man, hold on to your Bible. It is the best book you ever owned. It will tell you how to dress, how to bargain, how to walk, how to act, how to live, bow to die. Glorious Bible! Whether on parchment or paper, in octavo or duodecimo, on the center table of the drawing-room or in the counting room of the banker. Glorious Biblel Light to our feet and lamp to our path. Hold on to itl 0 The second class of insidious temptations that comes upon our young men is led on by the dishonest employer. Every commercial establishment is a school. *n nine cases out of ten the principles of the employer become the principles of the employee. I ask the older merchants to bear me out in these statements. If, when you were just starting in life—in commercial life—you were told that honesty was not marketable; that, though you might sell all * the goods In the shop, you must not sell your conscience; that, while you were to exercise all industry and tact, you were not to sell your conscience; If you were taught that gains gotten by sin were combustible, and at the moment of ignition would bp blown on by the breath of God until all the splendid estate would vanish into white ashes scattered In the whirlwind, then that instruction has been to you a precaution and a help ever since. There are hundreds of commercial establishments in our great cities which are educating a class of young men who will be the honor ot the land, and there are other establishments which arb educating young men to be nothing but sharpers. What chance is there for a young man who was taught in an establishment that it is right to lie, if it is smart, and that a French label is all that is necessary to make a thing French, and that you ought always to be honest when it pays, and that It Is wrong to steal unless you do it well? Suppose, now, a young man just starting in life, enters a place of that kind where there are ten young men, all drilled in the infamous practices oi the establishment He is ready to be taught The young man has no theory of commercial ethics. Where is he to get bis theory? He will get the theory from his employers. One day he pushes his wit a little beyond what the establishment demands of him, and he fleeces a customer until the clerk is on the verge of being seized by the law. What is done in the establishment? He is not arraigned. The head of the establishment says to him, “Now, be careful; be careful, young man, vou might be caught; but really that was splendidly done; you will get along in the world, I warrant you.” Then that young man goes up uuj til he becomes head clerk. He has found there is a premium on iniquity. One morning the employer comes to the establishment. He goes into his counting room and throws up his hands and shouts, “Why, the safe has been robbed!” What is the matter? Nothing; only the clerk who has been practicing a good while on customers is practicing a little on the employer. No new principle introduced into that establishment. It is a poor rule that will not work both ways. Yon must never steal unless you can do it well. He did it well. lam not taking an abstraction; I am taking a terrible and a crushing fact. Nowhere is a young man. Look at him to-day. Look at him five years from now, after he has been under trial in such an establishment. Here he stands in the shop to-day, his cheeks ruddy with the breath of the hills. He unrolls the goods on the counter in gentlemanly style. He commends them to the purchaser. He points out all the good points in the fabric. He effects the sale. The goods are wrapped up, and he dismisses the customer with a cheerful “good morning,” and the country merchant departs so impressed with the straightforwardness of the young man that he will come again and again, every spring and every autumn, unless interfered with. The young man has been now In that establishment five years. He unrolls the goods on the counter. He says to the customer, “Now those are the best goods we have In our establishment.” They have better on the next shelf. He says; “We are selling these goods less than cost.” They are making 20 per cent. He says “There is nothing like them In all the city.” There are fifty shops that want to sell the same thing. He says, “Now, that is a durable article; it will wash.” Yes, it will wash out. The sale is made, the goods are wrapped up, the country merchant goes off feeling that he has an equivalent for his money, and the sharp clerk goes into the private room of the counting house, and he says, “Well I got rid of those goods at last 1 really thought we never would sell them. I told him we were selling them less than cost, and he thought he was getting a good bargain. Got rid of them at last” And the head of the firm says, “That’s well done, splendidly done!” Meanwhile God has recorded eight lies—four lie's against the young man* four lies against his •employer, for I undertake" to say that the employer is responsible for all the iniquities of his clerks, and all the iniquities of those who are clerks of these clerks, down to the tenth generation, if those employers inculcated iniquitous and damning principles. I stand before young men this morning who are under this pressure. I say, come out of it. “Ohl” you say, “I can’t: I have my widowed mother to support, and if a man loses a situation now he can’t get another one.” I say, come out of it. Go home to your mother and say to her, “Mother, I can’t stay in that shop and be upright* what shall. I do?” and if she is worthy of you she will say, “Come out of it, my son—we will just throw ourselves on Him who has promised to be the God of the widow and the fatherless; He will take care of us.’’ And I tell you no young man ever permanently suffered by such a course of conduct A man said to hie employer, “I can’t wash the wagon on Sunday morning; I am willing to wash it on Saturday afternoon, but, sir, you will please excuse me, I can’t wash the wagon on Sunday morning.” His employer said, .“You must wash It; my carriage copies In every Saturday night, and you have got to wash it on Sunday morning.” “I can’t do it” the man said. They parted. The Lord looked after him. Be Is worth today a hundred fold more than his employer everwas or ever will be. and he
saved his souL Young men, it is safe to do right There are young mon In this house to-day who, under this storm of temptation, are striking deeper and deeper their roots and spreading out broader their branches. They are Daniels in Babylon, they are Josephs In the Egyptian court, they are Pauls amid the wild beasts of Ephesus. I preach to encourage them. Lay hold of God and be faithful. There is a mistake we make about young men. We put them in two classes; the one class is moral, the other is dissolute. The moral are safe. The dissolute cannot be reclaimed. I deny both propositions. The moral are not safe unless they have laid hold of God, and the dissolute may be reclaimed. I suppose tbere.are self righteous men In this house who feel no need of God, and wHI not seek after Him, and they will go out Id the world, and they will bo tempted, and they will oe flung down by misfortune, and they will go down, down, down, until some night you will see them going home hooting, raving, shouting blasphemy—going home to their mother, going home to their sister, going home to the young companion to whom, only a little while ago, in the presence of a brilliant assemblage; flashing lights and orange blossoms, and censers swinging In the air, they promised fidelity and purity, and kindness perpetual. As that man reaches the door, she will open it, not with an outcry, but she will stagger back from the door as he comes in, and in her look there will be the prophecy of woes that are coming, want that will shiver in need of fire, hunger that will cry in vain for bread, cruelties that will not leave the heart when they have crushed It, but pinch It again and stab it again, until some night she will open the door of the place where her companion was ruined, and she will fling out her arm from under her ragged shawl and say, with almost omnipotent eloquence: “Give me back my husband! Give me back my protector! Give me back my all! Him the kind heart and gentle words and the manly brow—give him back to me!” ' And then the wretches, obese and filthy, will push back their matted locks and they will say: “Put her outl Put her out!” Oh! self righteous man, without God you are in peril. Seek after Him to-day. Amid the ten thousand temptations of life there is no safety for a man without God. Come home, young man, to your father’s God. Come home, young man, to your mother’s God. Oh! I wish that all the batteries of the Gospel could today be unlimbered against all those influences which are taking down so many of our young men. I would like to blow a trumpet of warning, and result until this whole audience would march out on a crusade against the evils of society. But let none of us be disheartened. Oh, Christian workers, my heart is high with hope. The dark horizon is blooming into the morning of which prophets spoke, and of which poets have dreamed, and of which painters have sketched. The world’s bridal hour advances. The mountains will kiss the morning radiant and effulgent, and all the waves of the sea will become the crystal keys of a great organ, on which the fingers of everlasting joy shall play the grand march of a world redeemed. Instead of the thorn there shall come up ; the fir tree, and instead of the briar there shall come up the myrtle tree, and tlw mountains and the hills shall break forth into singing, and all the trees of the wood shall clap their Honors to the Flag In the Navy. I am not so familiar with the customs of the army in regard to the flag; but in the Navy I know they are admirable, and decidedly worthy of emulatfbn in civil life. You may perhaps know that the flag of a ship does not fly during the night. It is taken in at sunset: and I think the simple little ceremony which attends the hauling down of the ensign at sunset is one of the prettiest in existence. The first time 1 ever saw it I was sitting on the quarter-deck of the U. S. S. ‘-Yantic,” conversing with three of her officers. We had been dining together, and were enjoying the cool evening breeze under the awning. I knew that it was nearly time for I “evening colors,” and I was anxlqjis to see whether the ceremony in the [ Navy was different from that aboard a flrst-class yacht. I speedily learned that there was a difference. A few minutes before sundown a bugle-call sounded from the flag-ship, and the call was immediately repeated by the buglers of the other ships of the squadron. “What is that?” I asked. “That’s ‘Stand by the colors,’” said one of the officers. The sailors came aft, cast off the ensign halyards, and stood by with their eyes on the flagship. In a few moments we heard bugles sounding again; for you must know that on board ship many of the commands are conveyed by a few musical notes upon the bugle. Amaiine came aft and, saluting, said: „ “Haul down, sir.” “All right,” said the officer of the deck. “Sound off.” At that order the bugler of the Van tic blew the lovely call, “Evening Colors.” The moment he sounded the first note, .the officers rose from their chairs, faced the colors, took off their caps, and stood silent, in respectful attitudes, while the two seamen slowly hauled down the colors, bringing them in over the rail as the call came to an end. When the colors reached the deck and were gathered in by the seamen, and the last note Os the bugle died away, the officers put on their caps, resumed their seats, and went on with their con versatlon. Removing the cap in honor of the colors is the common form of salute in the Navy. When an officer comes up from below he always lifts his cap in the direction of the quarter-deck; and all boys should remember; when visiting a man-of-war, that the proper thing to do When you go on board is to turn towarc’ the stern of the ship, where the ensign always flies at the taffrail staff, and raise the hat. If the officer of the deck sees you, he will return the salute; but whether any one is on the quarter-deck or not, always raise your hat when you go aboard. The salute is to the flag, not to any person, and surely every American boy ought to be proud to lift his hat to the flag of his country. —St. Nicholas. Maryland Suited Charles. This country came near having Orescentia as the name of one of its States instead of Maryland. It was originally intended to give that name to the province granted as a proprietary government to Lord Baltimore, but when the charter was presented to Charles L for his signature he struck out that name and substituted hlß Q ueen ’ X&ODIaOvucI QX.JfmauCO-
Th* Vole* of th* People Ssacbae us—or should do so-through ttebaL lot-box. This is the medium through which it •ugh tto speak in clarion tones. But there are Other maana by which th* peopl* vole* their sentiment*, irrespective of poUtfca, concerning matter* of vital importune*. Suooesaful or um successful ar* those popular admonition* as they nr* hanrdhiatinctir or faintly. But health, th* grand desideratum, appeal* to ua all. Th* avenu* la only *loared whan th* obstacle* which bar its oomptete recovery ar* sw*pt aside. Hoetetter’s Stomach Bitter* ha* for nearly a third of a century occupied the flrat rank among pro. prietary remedies for debility, dyspepsia, oon■tipation, disorder of the liver and kidney*, and a* aa effectual mean* of conquering and preventing malarial complaint*. Since the advent of *l* grippe’ it has also signalised itself as a cure of the complaint. Why a Blue Roe* I*lmpossible. A florist makes the assertion that a blue rose Is among the impossibilities, but, while an explanation of this curious fact may be equally impossible, he fails to mention a very interesting law which governs the coloring of all flowers. A knowledge of this law would save many flower-growers hours of unavailing and foolish hope. The law Is simply this: The three colors, red, blue, and yellow, never all appear in the same species of flowers; any two may exist, but never the third. Thus we have the red and yellow roses, but no blue; red and blue verbenas, but no yellow; yellow and blue In the various members of the viola family (as pansies for instance,) but no red; red and yellow gladioli, but no blue, and So on.—St. Louis Republic. •100 Reward. •100. Th* reader* of thin paper will be pleased to learn that there 1* at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cur* in all it* stages. and that 1* Catarrh. Ball’* Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to th* medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure!* taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of lp.e system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing it* work. The proprietor* have so much faith in it* ciwative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollar* for any case that it fail* to cur*. Send for list of testimonial*. Address, F. J. CHENEY ft CO., Toledo, Q. gr Bold by Druggist*, 70c. Hom* Trouble*. The many troubles in your household will tend to your edification, if you strive to bear them all in gentleness, patience, and kindness. Keep this ever before you, and remember constantly that God’s loving eyes are upon you amid all the little worries and vexatlbns, watching whether you take them as He would desire. Offer up all such occasions to Him, and if sometimes you are put out, and give way to impatience, do not be discouraged, but make haste to regain your lost composure. Three Bottles of Swamp-Root Produced a Positive Cur*. I had inflammation of the bladder and kidneys, with intense pain in my back and a frequent desire to pass water, which was highly colored and full of sediment. Physicians pronounced my case chronic kidney troubles and stated I was beyond cure. . Jacob Oswalt. KnlghtsviUe. Ind. German Conservatism. Until recently the royal palace at BerI lin has been lighted only by candles. Both the father and the grandfather of the present Kaiser were opposed to gas and would not allow it io be introduced into the palace. Emperor William has had gas put In, aud is now arranging for electric lights. Th* Only On* Ever Printed—Can You find the Word? There la a 3-inoh display advertisement In this paper this week which has no two words alike except one word. The same la true ol each new one appearing each week from The Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This house places a “Crescent" on everything they make and publish. Look for it, send them the name of the word, and they will return you boos, bkautifulduthogbaphs. OB BAMPIBS FBEX. . The Bradley County Fair held at Warren recently offered SIOO for the largest family exhibited. The prize was captured by one' Benjamin Parnell, who with his w(fe showed up ninety-eight descendants, as follows: Twenty-one children, fifty grandchildren, and twentyseven great - grandchildren. — Lonoke (Ark.) Democrat. You Can Break Up a Bad Cold by the timely use of Dr. Jayne's Expectorant, an old and popular medicine for Sore Lungs ' and Throats, and the best of all Cough remedies. Swallowed a Nail. A boy in North Bergen, N. Y., stood watching his father shingle the roof. A nail dropped from above was swallowed by the open-mouthed lad. Dr. Craig, of Churchville, and others cut into the boy’s bronchus in vain. Two years thereafter he coughed up the nail. USE BROWN’S BRONCHIAL TROCHES for Coughs, Colds and all other Throat Troubles.—“Pre-eminently the beat.”—Rev. Henry Ward Beecher. Panes and Putty. The work of replacing a broken pane of glass may be greatly simplified by running a hot iron around the old putty, which loosens it, when it may be easily qcraped off, aud the broken pane removed. Lixk Oil Upon Tboublkd Waters is the influence of Haus's Honey or Homhodnd and Tab ui on * cold. Pikb'sTootsacbb Drops Cur* in*>ne Minute. Off tit* Farm. Do not sell anything off the farm if It can be converted into something better. It is much cheaper to ship butter than to ship bay or clover. Endeavor to feed •11 materials that are bulky. Who summits with his liver, constipation, bilioua ills, poor blood or dissiness—take Beecham’s Pills. Os druggists. SS cents. Or*at Railroad Train. The longest and heaviest train ever carried over any road in this country consisted of 325 loaded four-wheel coal cars on the Lehigh Valley railroad. Two Things In Regard to Catarrh X*h ItU • C*a*MS**H*t*«l Disease; and •<, II JtegMire* a OesMtMattonsd Bewtedy. Those t*o fsets srj now so well known to th* med* i<pl fraternity that local appUcatieaa like anuflk and Inhalants, ar* regarded aa atbeal l kely tosive only temporary relief. To eSeot a permanent cure ot Catarrh require* a oenatitaMcntl Bemedy like Hood's Sarsaparilla, which part tying the blood, repairing the diseased tissues, and imparting healthy ton* to the aflbeted oNaae. does give thorough and laaiins cure. 1 want to aay that Hood's flsreaparilla is a parasanent our* for oatairh. Attar auflbring with eatarrb ter maar years, I was requested to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla „and utter a lag tbrae or four b> Moslem heeled of the most anaoyiag disease the humaa system la hel*to.‘-P.B.flrouT, Sheridan. Xud. nil ro
•rta MngMttc Mfmnl Mud Bnttta, CHvan nt the Indiana Mineral Spring*, Warren County, Indiana, on the Wabash Uno. attract mor* attention to-day than any other health r«aort in this country. Hundred* of people suffering from rheumatism. kidney trouble, and akin diseases, have been cured within the last year by the wonderful magnetic mud and mineral water bath*. If you are suffering with any of these diseases, investigate thia, nature’s own remedy, at once. The sanitarium buildInga, bath-house, water work*, and electric light plant, coating over $150,000. ju*t_Dompleted. open all the year round. Write at once for beautiful illustrated printed matter, containing complete information and reduced railroad rates. Address F. Chandler. General Passenger Agent. St. Louie, Mo., or H. L. Kramer, General Manager of Indiana Mineral Springs. Indiana. Monkey. Monkeys are not the only animals which are capable of showing sorrow and of weeping. Humboldt says the* saimlri of Peru are extremely sensitive, and that at the least cause of chagrin their eyes fill with tears. Beal tears have been observed among dogs, deer and gazelles. Here another supposed characteristic of man disappears. FTTSg-All Fits stopMd tree by Dr.Wtae's Great Tmbbb are more Indians in America now than there were when Columbus discovered them. 0 IhvcTW’C IS Two Bottle* Cwred He*. VI « Carroll, lowa, July, 1889. I was suffering 10 years from shock* in my head, so much so that at time* I didn't expect to recover. I took medicines from many doctors, but didn't get any relief until I took Pastor Koenig’s Nerve Tonic; th* second dos* relieved me and S bottles cured me. 8. W. PECK. Beeosamends It to Many. # Seymoub, Ind., Oct. 1,1890. My daughter became epileptic about five years ago through a fright. All physicians’ treatment availed nothing, until I used Pastor Koenig's Nerve Tonic, which at one* dispelled th* attacks. It is the best remedy I ever used and I have recommended it to many of such aa are suffering from this ZICKLK& iKLL aassssß» w KOENIG MED. CO., Chicago, 111. Sold by Dru«wists at •! per Bottle. CfteM. large Sis*. >1.78. 6BotU**for >B. ENJOYS I Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant ' and refreshing to the taste, and acta gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the system effectually, dispels colds, headaches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Svrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever produced, pleasing to the taste and acceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial m its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities oommend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c and 11 bottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will procure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it Do not accept an/ substitute. CALIFORNIA FIO SYRUP CO. SAN FNANCIBCO. OAt, LOUISVILLE, Ks. NEW YOM. N.V. SHILOH’S CONSUMPTION CURE. The success of this Great Cough Cura ii without a parallel ih the history of medicine. All druggists are authorised to sell it on'a positive guarantee, a test that no other cure can successfully stand. That it may become known, the Proprietors, at an enormous expense, are placing a Sample Bottle Free into every horn* tn the United States and Canada. If yqu have a Cough, Sore Throat, or Bronchitis, use it, for it will cure you. If your child has the Croup, or Whooping Cough, use it promptly, and relief b sure. If yon dread that insidious diseas* Consumption, use it. Ask your Druggist fat SHILOH’S CURE, Price io eta., to eb. and gl.oo. If your Lungs are sore or Back lam*, uae Shiloh’* Porous Plaster, Price *5 eta. - $65 mnwazowa - «u artsusinat • Sons. Wa—inchmmg dTc. ft Cimcimnati. O> hifsgaas OUR AGENTS EAR ■ CtonMURpIITQN mid pGuplG d ■ who have weak lun*s or Aslb- ■ ■ ma, sbouM us* Plso'sOure for K ■ consumption. It ba* qitrw«H ■ imp. ‘ ■ Bow eTerywimk
“August Flower” " I inherit some tendency to Dy* pepsia from my mother. I suffered two years in this way ; consulted a number of doctors. They did me no good. I then used Relieved In your August Flower and it was just two days when I felt great relief. I soon J got so that I could sleep and eat, and -J I felt that I was well. ’ That! was three years ago, and I am still fistclass. I ai# never Two Daye, without a bottle, hud if I feel constipated - the least particle a dose or two of August Flower does the work. The beauty of the medicine is, that can stop the use of it without any bad effects on the system. Constlpatlcm While I was sick I • felt everything it seemed to me a man could feel. I was of all men most miserable. I can say, in conclusion, that I believe August Flower wiU cure anyone of indigestiea, 'if taken Life of M leery with judgment. A. M. Weed, see Bellefontaine St., Indianapolis, Ind.” • B Asthma. A certain cure fcr Consumption in flr-t *i twea. and a -w.relief in adv*ne*aatages. U«e at once. You will see the eacell*.. t effect aft** fir liver pills WkWM DO KOT GRIPE MGR SICKER. Jot SICK HEADACHE, impairtd digertioa,OOMtb . pa t ‘ o S< tor P i ”glanda. Th.yuouM W o>saD*, icmove names, di*, a line*. Nickel effect on fcldj O ney* end bladder. Conanet 3 bilious nervous aissft ft orders. Eetablieb oatS V V ural Daily AcnonBeautify complexion by purifying blocfll. PVBSLY VSaSTASI*. The doee le nicely adjueled to cult eSee, ae onepnieajt, neverbctoomuch. Each vial contain, ft, carried la VMr poeket. like le*d_pencV Business man’s peat convenience. Taken eerier tken eager. Soldevety•bere. AU pnuine goode bear •'Creeoent” Send t-ceutrtimp. You getatres* took wtth mamN SR. HARTIfI MEDICINE CO., St. lauis. M*. iTOiis SOLID VESTIBULE TRAIN . Daily at ».M p. m. from eteaaM KsssaiS - Siß Hsxby Tnonrsos, ths 'v atost noted phyataian of Eng---A bnd> MT* Um* half of aU disease* come from errors in diej- ■* Send Free Sample of Te« to 31» West tttb Street, New York City. BOREI-.B TIFFIN. •«•- FRHB. CEANOTHINB ItUXS. A SURB CURB y EVERYUorNraVIW! DR. It. T. WUeSON, Maandal*, R. 4. n a nr reus nmcto eiociiNsg-gijg W. K SEIMMKR. 3» A waahuaston BL. Beatas. Mam !N 570.00 A WEEK tired. Bestows earn gta, wesklyl gl cnMffttSi B*n* dost** Mrs* M. ff. PCTMN ou oan 1B ? or * **** CalwlW hnwranco, of abetter quality, I
