Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 23 June 1892 — Page 7

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ON THE OCEAN SAILING. Dr. Talmage Dictates a Sermon Before His Departure.

'^Departure I» His Subject, in "Which He Finds Many Beautiful and Api4 propriate Thoughts.

Rev. Dr. Talmage is now on the Atlantic, having sailed from New York on the 15th inst. for Liverpool, for a preaching tour in England, Ireland, Scotland and Sweden. Before visiting Sweden Dr. Talmage will go to Russia, there to witness the reception and disposition of the cargo of breads tuffs on board the Christian Herald relief steamship Leo. Prej. vious to his departure he dictated to his stenographer the following farewell sermon, to be rend by the vast and widely scattered audiences whom dt is his weekly privilege to address through the medium of the newspaper press. He took his text from II

Timothy, iv, 6: "The time of my departure is at hand." Departure! That is a word used only once in all the Bible. But it is a word often used in the court room, and means the desertion of one course of pleading for another. It is used in navigation to describe the distance between two meridians passing through the extremities of a course. It is a word I have recently heard applied to my departure from America to Europe for a pr*eaching tour to last until September. In a smaller and less significant sense than that implied in the text I can say, "The time of my departure is at hand." Through the printing press I address this sermon to my readers all the world over, and when they read it I will be on the ocean, and unless something new happens in my marine experiences I will be in no condition to preach. But how unimportant the word departure when applied to change of continents as when applied to exchange of worlds as when Paul wrote: i'The time of my departure is at hand."

Now, departure impliea a starting place and a place of destination. When Paul left this world, what was the starting point? It was a scene of gi'eat physical distress. It was the Tullianumf the lower dungeon of the Mamertine prison. Rome, Italy. The top dungeon was bad enough, it having no means of ingress or egress but through an opening in the top. Through that the food was lowered, and through that came all the food and air and light received. It was a terrible place, that upper dungeon but the Tullianum was the lower dungeon, and that was still more wretched, the only light and the only air coming through the x'oof, and that roof the floor of the upper dungeon. That was Paul's last earthly residence. I was in that lower dungeon in November, 1889. It is made of volcanic stone. I measured it, and

^SSSESTrrom wall to wall it was fifteen feet. The highest of the roof was seven feet from the floor, and the lowest of. the roof five feet seven inches. The opening in the roof through which

Paul was let down was three feet wide. The dungeon has a seat of rocks two and a half feet high, and a shelf of rock four feet high. It was there that Paul spent his last days on earth, and it is there that I see him now, in the fearful dungeon, shivering blue with the cold, waiting for that old overcoat which he had sent for up to Troas, and which the}' had not yet sent down, notwithstanding he had written for it.

If some skilled surgeon should go into that dungeon where Paul is incarcerated. we might find out what are the prospects of Paul's living •through the rough imprisonment. In the first place he is an old man only two years short of 70. At that very time when he most needs the warmth $nd the sunshine and the fresh air, he is shutout from the sun. What are those scars on his ankles? Why, those were gotten when he was fast, his feet in the stocks. Every time he turned the flesh on his ankles started. What are those scars on his back? You know he was whipped five times, each time getting thirtynine strokes—one hundred and nine-ty-five bruises on the back (count them) made by the Jews with rods of elm-wood, each one of the 195 strokes bringing the blood. Look at Paul's face and look at his arms. Where did he get those bruises? I think it was when he was struggling ashore amidst the shivering timbers of the shipwreck. I see a gash in Paul's side. Where did he get that? I think he got that in the tussle with highwaymen, for he had been in peril of robbers, and he had money of his own. He was a mechanic as well as an apostle, and I think the tents he made were as good as his sermons.

There is a wanness about Paul's looks. What makes that? I think a part of that came from the fact that he was for twenty-four hours on a plank in the Mediterranean Sea, suffering terribly, before he was rescued for he says positively, "I was a night and a day in the deep." Oh, worn-out, old man! surely you must be melancholy no constitution could endure this and be cheerful. But I press my way through the prison until I come up close to where he is, and by the light that streams through the opening I see on his faceasupernatural joy, and I bow before him, and I say: "Aged man, how can you keep cheerful amidst all this gloom?" His voice startles the darkness of the place as he cries out: "lam now ready to be offered, and the time of my departure is at hand." Hark! what is that shufiling of feet in the upper dungeon? Why, Paul has an invitation to a banquet, and he is going to dine to-day with the King. Those shuffling feet are the feet of the executioners. They come, and ibey cry down through the hole of

the dungeon: "Hurry up, old mam Come, now get yourself ready." He had nothing to pack up. He had no baggage to take. He had been ready a good while.

I

see him rising

up. and straightening out his stiffened limbs, and pushing back his white hair from his creviced forehead, and see him looking up through the hole in the roof of the dungeon into the face of liis executioners, and hear him say: "I am now ready to be offered, and the time of my departure is at hand." Then they lift him out the dungeon,and they start with him to the place of execution. They say: "Hurry along old man, or you will feel the weight of our spear. Hurry along." "How far is it," says Paul, "we have to travel?" "Three miles." Three miles is a good way for an old man to travel after he has been whipped and crippled maltreatment. But they soon get to the place of execution— Acqee Salvia—and he is fastened to the pillar of martyrdom. It does not take any strength to tie him fast. He Jmade no resistance. O Paul! why not now strike for your life? You have a great many friends here. With that withered hand just launch the thunder-bolt of the people upon those infamous soldiers. No! Paul was not going to interfere with his own coronation. He was too glad to go. I see him looking up in the face of his executioner, and, as the grim official draws his sword, Paul calmly say, "lam now ready to be offered, and the time of mv departure is at hand." But I put my hand over my eyes. I want not to see that last struggle. One sharp keen stroke and Paul does go to the banquet, and Paul does dine with the King-

What a transition it was! From the malaria of Rome to the liuest climate in all the universe—the zone of eternal beauty and of Rome, but in one moment the air of heaven bathed from the soul the last ache. From shipwreck, from dungeon, from the biting pain of the elm wood rods, from the sharp sword of the headsman, he goes into the most brilliant assemblage of heaven, a king among kings, multitudes of the sainthood rushing out and stretching forth hands of welcome for I do really think that as on the right hand of God is Christ, so on the right hand of Chsist is Paul, the second great in heaven.

He changed kings likewise. Before the hour of death, and up to the last, moment, he was under Nero, the thick-necked, the cruel-eyed, the lilthy-lipped: the sculptured features of that man bringing down to us to this ver}7 day the horrible possibilities of his nature—seated as he was amidst the pictured marbles of Egypt under a roof adorned with mother-of-pearl, in a dining room which by machinery was kept whirling day and night with most bewitching magnificence his horses standing in stalls of solid gold, and the grounds around his palace lightened at higlit by its victims, who had been bedaubed with tar and pitch and then set on fire to illumine the darkness. That was Paul's King. But the next moment he goes into the realm, of Him whose reign is love, and whose courts are paved with love, and whose throne is set on pillars of love, and whose scepter is adorned with jewels of love, and whose palace is lighted with love, andwhose life-time is an eternity of love. When Paul was leaving so much on this side the pillar of martyrdom, to gain so much, on the other side, do you wonder at the cheerful valedictory of the text: "The time of my departure is at hand?"

But you say, "I can not bear to think of parting from friends here." If you are old you have more friends in heaven than here. Just take the census. Take some large sheet of paper and begin to record the names of those who have emigrated to the other shore: the companions of your school days, your early business associates, the friends of middle life, and those who more recently went away. Can it be they have been gone so long you do not care anything more about them? and you do not want their society? Oh, no. There have been days when you have felt that you could not endure another moment away from their blessed companionship. They have gone. You say you would not like to bring them back to this world of trouble even if you had the power. It would not do to trust you. God would not give you resurrection power. Before to-morrow morning j'ou would be rattling at the gates of the cemetery crying to the departed, "Come back to the cradle where you slept! Come back to the hall where you used to play! Come back to the table where you used to sit!" and there will be a great burglary in heaven. No, no. God will not trust you with resurrection power but He compromises the matter and says, "You can not bring them where you are, but you can go where they are." They are more lovely now than ever. Were they beautiful here, they are more beautiful there.

Besides that, it is more healthy for you than here, aged man better climate there than these hot summers and oold winters and late springs better hearing better eyesight more tonic in the air more perfume in the bloom more sweetness in the song. Do you not feel, aged man, sometimes as though you would like to get your arm and foot free? Do you not feel as though you would like" to throw away spectacles and canes and crutches? Would you not like to feel the spring and elasticity and mirth of an eternal boyhood? When the point at which you start from this world is old age, and the point to which you go is eternal juvenescence, aged man, clap your hands at the anticipation,,and say, in perfect rapture of soul, "The time of my departure ijB at hand,

Why a Subscriber of This Paiper Could Not Pay Her Subscription. WHITE

HAIIII, ILI., «Tay 2,. 1892.

EDITOR AXBON CITY Tiaras, Dear Sir:—I am sorry thnt I havft not been able to keep my subscription pui«l UP on my paper, the

AKRON CIT*TIMES.

more promptly than I have in tbo last jyoar. But. the reason was (bis: My [husband has been sick ju«t ono year, •only being able to work about one-half tho time until last Oot. 15th, he was compellod to quit work entirely, and did not do any work until about three weeks ago. Ho again went to the 6hop and •lias vvrorked every clay since (lie is a potter), and he would not bo able to work yet if it was not for Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, Kidney, Liver and Bladder Curo, which he saw advertised in your valuable paper with Mr. Cradick's of Gosport, Ind., account of bia ailments and liis recovery by the use of the Dr. Kilmer Swamp-Koot. 1 wivto to that gentleman and found hla statement correct, after which my husband fsenfc and got the medicine and lias only t*kcn two bottles and has so much reigainod his health that ho can work •every day, and also cat almost auything on any table, which he could not do Without giving him such ar a'vfui pain in his stomach. He could aot even eat one-half of a ci'acker without au'l'erlng untold agony. His trouble was indigestion, liver and kidney trouble. He thinks there never was so wonderful a remedy as is the Swamp-Root.

There are others here using it, and all are greatly benefited already, after only using it for a few weeks.

Inclosed you will 1L $1 as so much •n my subscription. You may please lot me know how we are standing linanciallj*, and as soon as possible will send you the balance. I mostly take the paper qn account of getting the Mogadore and Springfield news, where I was born, raised and married. My maiden name was Mishler. But I seldom see any Mogadore notes. You o^uld get Miss Aliie Mumaw from Mogadore to act as correspondent. She is well educated, plain writer, good speller, and would give you all the news in due time.

Yours truly, MRS. D. BOONE.

AKT.ON, O., May 1S92.

The above letter was sot up in thla office from the original letter written by Mrs. Boone.

EDITOR AKRON CITY TIMES.

CONDIMENTS.

Handcuffs might appropriately be called sad-irons. If you cannot lick a man be lenient with his faults.—Texas Siftings.

The course of true love may not run smooth, but they make" some good records on it in Chicago.

One-half the world doesn't know how the other half lives but some women are trying their best to remdy that.

A Great Go.—"How does your new errand-boy go. Johnson?" "The long way, apparently, every time. "Does Miss Budd have many men in her train?" "Give it up but she had about a dozen on it last night at the ball."

Salphinx—"I fear Hiroller is contracting bad habits." Sharpe—"On the contrary, he seems constantly to be expanding them."

These are the times when the city directory is tha only place where a public man is sure of seeing his name mentioned with respect.

He—Are you happy, now that you're married She—Com parati veIv. He—Compared with whom? She—Compared with my husband.

Manager (proudly)—This theater has existed 100 years. Baron— Very good, but don't you think tha ballet ought to have been renovated In the interim?

American Style.—Scads—You say he left no money! Baggs—No. You see he lost his health getting wealthy and then lost his wealth trying to get healthy. "Is Bronson as forgetful as ever?" "More so. Why, that fellow has to look himself up in the directory every night before be goes home from business. Forgets his address. —Harper's Bazar.

There is no question of the value of advertising, but still it doesn't justify a young man in carrying a new umbrella in such a way as is most likely to catch the eye" of the public.

Laud and Lawed.—"Brobson used to laud his wife without stint before they were divorced." ''Well, she got even. She lawed him pretty briskly for a spell, I can tell you."

About the Count.—Sister Ethe (who likes him)—Well, anyway, he is a polished gentleman. Brother Jack (who does not)—Polished enough, but the shine is all on his clothes. "Hawkins is very fond of his horse, isn't he?" "Why, no, he hates him. "That's queer. I saw him riding in the park the other day, and he had his arms about the animal's neck." —Harper's Bazar.

Mr. Manhattan—You understand flowers, of course, the language of Miss Winona? Minnesota)—Oh, yes! Four X's is the best quality, made from selected winter wheat.

A BambI* Through Wonderland. Tbo season of 1892 brings from toe Northern Pacific Railroad company a 'book entitled "A Ramble Through Wonderland," with 105 pages and over twenty iive handsome illustrations the printed matter graphically describing the territory between the Great Lakes and the Pacific Ocean, with brief mention of Yellow Stone Park and Alaska.

Other interesting publications from this road are the Yellow Stone Park and Alaska folders (illustrated) containing excellent maps respectively of the resorts mentioned, and telling in an Interesting manner of tho most beautiful and marvellous regions on tho faqe of the carr,li. Tho broad water folder, relating to the famous Hot Springs ana Nat&torium at Il&lena, Mont., and "National gamo reserves of North America," a rock of special Interest to sportsman.

If

TOU

wish to take the trip of a lifetime

send to Chas. S. Lee, Ueneral Passenger aad Ticket Agent, St. Paul, Mian., for 0tAmM thaw bo©l«wul

Excursion tickets will be sold from principal ticket stations via Pennsylvania Lines to Chicago, 111., June 58th to 20th, account Democratic National Convention, at one fare for round trip, good returning until July 8th.

V«ry Important to Lovers of Music, Lyon A Healy, 53 Monroe street, Chicago,' hava just issued the campaign edition of their band catalogue, which contains 400 beautiful illustrations and describei everything needed bjr bands and campaign clubs. Better send in your address for one to-rfgy.

AV^WS®

To Cleans* the System

Effectually but gently, when costive or billious or when the blood. is impure or sluggish, to permanently cure habitual constipation, to awaken the kidneys and liver to a healthy activity, without iritating or weakening them, to dispel headaches, colds or fevers, use Syrup of Figs.

S It Was Not That She Lied. Kate Field's Washingtonian. Younger Brother—Nellie, if you had lived in the days of Ananias and Sapphira you would have been dead long ago.

Nellie (indignant)—I am sure, Bobby, I never told what wasn't true in my life. How can you be so unkind?

Younger Brother—Well, they lived about eighteen hundred years ago. You wouldn't have hung on as long as this, would you?

Depended on Location.

Boston News.

Judge (to young woman charged with shop-lifting)—Where do you live, young woman in the North End or Back Bay?

Defendant—Why do you wish to know? Judge (impatiently)—How am I to tell whether this is plain shoplifting or kleptomania?

Tlie Only One Kver Printed—Can 'ou find the Word? There is a 3-inch display advertisement in this paper this week which has no two words alike except one word. The same is true of each new one appearing each week from tho Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This house places a crescent on everything they mako and publish. Look for it, send them tho name of the word, and they will return you BOOK, BEAUTIFUL LITHOGRAPHS or SAMPLES free.

There are only three grades of people in the world. None of them belong to the first grade.

To Niagara Falls.

On Thursday July 28. 1S93, the Lake Erie & Western R. R., will run their pooular annual excursion to Cleveland, Chautauqua Lake, Buffalo and Niagara. Following very low rates: Peoria, 57.&0 Bloomington, $7 Lafayette, SO Michigan City, J6 Indianapolis. £5: Tipton, $5 Ft. Wayne, $5 Muncie, $T Connersville, $5 Rushville, 55 New Castle, $5 Cambridge City, $5, with corresponding reduction from intermediate points. Make your preparations to go on this grand trip. Secure your tickets early of C. F. Daly, G. P. A., Indianapolis, or any other agent of the L. E. & W. R. R. This will be the largest and grandest excursion of the season. Fourth of July Excursions via Pennsyl vanla Lines.

The rate from any ticket station on the Pennsylvania Lines to swiy other station on those lines within two hundred miles thereof will be one fare for the round trip, July 2d, 3d and 4th. Tickets will be good to return until July 5th, inclusive, No excursion tickets sold to adults for less than twenty-five cents, nor to children for less than fifteen cents. Reduced Ratea to Chicago via Pennsylvania Lines.

Scrofula

Willie Tillbrook. bunch under one ear which the doctor lanced and it discharged for sometime. We then began giving him Hooa's Sarsaparilla and the sore healed up. His cure is due to IIOOD'S SAKSA.I*ARILLA. He has never been very robust, but-now seems healthy and daily getting stronger."

Hood's

Pills

do not weaken, but aid di­

gestion and tone the stomach, Try them. 25c,

lieirt's German Cough and KiJaey Cure. A summer cold is a disagreeable thing. It comes from exposure to tho dews of evening or to the night air, and it is almost always followed by an attaok of malaria or by cholera morbus. When you feel chilly, which Is tho first symptom, take a close of REID'S GERMAN COUGH AND "KIDNEY CURE. This great remedy is the bcst» thing for throat complaints an-1 obstinate maladies that arise from a cold, such as asthma, catarrh, and bronchitis. All of these begin with a cold that is neglected, until ifc develops into a settled disease. RETD'S GERMAN COUGH AND KIDNEY Cuina contains no poison, and it can be taken freely and given to children without danger. It is a never-failing remedy for croup and will relieve the worst case instantly. Ask your druggist for it, and do not let him give you anything else. The small bottles are 25 cents, the large ones 50 cents.

SYLVAN REMEDY Co., Peoria, 111.

A. B. BARKER, M.D.

Eye,Ear,Nose and Throat

SPECIALIST, 4W.Wa«hIngton St., INDIANAPOLIS, IND.

neufpolrpai. Summering, Kual Catarrh, aadaUdiMUMof the Eye, Ear, Noee, Throat and Voice •uMtnhlly trcMed by new end Minima method*. Th.flne.t.nd i«nwt «Bppiyot iBMitel «rtlOell eye* in U. 8. Price# Kea»om»l»Io.

S40,000,000

Earned by the Bell Telephone Patent in 1801. Your Invention may bo valuable. You should protect it by patent. Address for full and intelligent advice, free of charge,

W. W. DUDLEY & CO., Solicitors of Patents,

Pacific Bld'g.528 St. N.W., Washington, D.O. Mention this paper.

HEMORDIA

THE ONLY SURE CUBE. Price §1.90 by mail. lUUKOBDIA CO., UO Fulton St., New York.

IS O S O Cona»ptlves and psople who have weak lungs or Asthma, should use Plso'fe Cure for Consumption. It lias aarad thoBSWMifl. It has not Injured one. It Is not bad to take.

ON O N

IT HAS

Stt*

In the Neck.

The following is from Mrs. J. W. Tillbroolt, wife of the Mayor

tu VIMgunplt

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Azrael, The Angel of Death,

Hovers nearer us.sometimes,than we are aware. It is safer far •when we are unwell to suspect his propinquity than to ignore the the possibility of his nearness. Caution is a trait in which the majority of mankind are constitutionally lacking. The proneness to disregard a'-slight cold" is particularly striking. This minor ailment is, however, a predecessor of la grippe, a malady which when developed of the most fatal character, as mortuary statistics attest. After a ohill, or when tho premonitory symptoms of influenza—such as sneezing and shivering, succeeded by feverishness and dryness of the skin—are preceptible, immediate recourse should be had to Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, a genial accelerator to the blood's circulation, which diffuses an agreeable, healthful warmth through the system inductive of perspiration, by means of which the complaint is expelled the pores of its further tendency counter acted. Wonderfully efficacious to is the Bitters for malaria, constipation, liver complaint, rheumatism and kidney trouble. A wineglassful before retiring induces health yielding sleep.

To make himself solid with the gung the politician must set up the liquids. STATE oir OHIO, CITY OF TOLEDO,

•ss.

LUCAS COUNTY,

FRANK J. CJIENTCY makes oath that he is tho senior partner of the of F. J. CHENEY & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said man will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of CATAIIRH that cannot be cured by the use of HALL'S CATARRH CURE.

FRANK J. CHENEY.

Sworn to before me and subscribed in the presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1839. A. W. GLEASON, 1

SE^L

Notary Public.

Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonirls, free,

F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O.

{3T"Sold by Druggists, 75c.

"Yes, every man has his price," but he can't mako his grocer agree with him.

Actors, Vocalists, Public Speakers recommend HALE'S HONEY OF HOUEHOUND AND TAR.

PIKE'S TOOTHACHB DROPS cure in one misuto. He—And, darling, what does your father think of my suit? She (.sobbing)—He thinks it is a misflt.

If you are troubled with malaria talte Beecham's Pills. A positive specific, nothing like it. 25 cents a bo^

When the woman of the house gives a tramp the cold cut he doesrt't feel put out.

FITS—All Tits 6topped freo by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve .Restorer. No Fits after first days uso. Marvellous cures. Treatise and S2.nl) trial bottle freo to Jb'it casus. Send to JJr. liliuo, 'J31 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa.

allAches

EQUAL-

NO

PATENTS! PENSIONS

Send for Inventor's Guide or How to Obtain a Patent. Send for Digest of Pension and Bounty Laws. PATKICJi O'JTARRELI* Washington, D. C.

to

Mc-

Keesport, Penn. "My little boy Willie, now six years old, two lyears ago had a scrofula

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Wart TFIIH StrMt, Hlv

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I .Isik&i $

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M»ni!

mss

''German

My niece, Emeline Hawley, was, taken with spitting blood, and sho became very much alarmed, fearing that dreaded disease, Consumption. She tried nearly all kinds of medicine but nothing did her any good. Finally she took German Syrup and she told me it did her more good than anything she ever tried. It stopped the blood, gave ?r strength and ease, and a good appetite. I had it from her own lips. Mrs. Mary A. Stacey, Trumbull, Coon. Honor to German Syrup. 9

FDBDUE UB1VERSITT.

The State Institute of Tectooloey!

1. A School of Mechanical Engineering. 2. School of Civil Engineering. 3. School of Electrical Engineering. 4. School of Agriculture. 5. School of Science and

Industrial Art.

6. School of Pharmacy.

Has an equipment worth a million dollars. Send for a catalogue. Address

An 53

Overcomes

ua a mnv a •!»,. roinltt ofbad eating c«rei Sfek Headache r*8tor««Complexion curesConntfpatimi

Citj.

I N 26--Q2 INDPLS

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JAS. H. ART, Prbs't.

IEWIS' 98

FITS!

Monroo St., Chlcspc

Will Ball Kreo their nowly cnlir-, »4 Caulofu* of Hind Instruments, Uniterm* and Equipintpta, 400 Kint IIliutrxtiuna, dricribin* f.mj Mticia rt-iu-reJ Vjr BiuiU or Drum $»(•«,

Contains liutrurtioni for AmiUurlUn

Kiiiciief ftud Major's TacClca, «al tialMU^l I Jit at Basil Xualc

KILL HER!

In the nick of time comes BUTCHER'S JTIiTt KILLER. Certain death to Flies. No mora ku»ziu? around your ears, or dirinsr at your nose, e* colliding with your eyes. U«# frMlj. .Prevent reproduction and secure peace. FRED KDUTCH* EllBBUG CO., St. Albans, Vt.

FAT FOLKS REDUCED

reduction of 1 Dr.O.W.l'.SNV SBR.UoVlcW

The HUSTLER Thresher!

EAGLE STRAW STACKER!

lis

Sav Mills, Skifi-Hoautei ant StalioMiy Engines al Boilers

•V.1

1

'i

LYE

•A

The strongest and purest Ly« made. Uhlike other I^yc, it being a line powder ahd paoked in a cao with movable lid, the contents are always ready for usq. Will make the beat perfumed Hard Soap in 20 roinut without boil* ing. It is tha l«st for cleaning waste pipes, disiafecting sinks, closets, washing bottles, paints, trees, etc.

PKNNA, SALT MTG CO. Gon. Agts., Phila., Pa.

EPILEPSY CAN BE CURED.

/Dr. O. Pholps Brown—the noted .Epilepsy Specialist and HerbaUw discovered that Epilepsy is caused by a peculiar derangement of the

6tocnach and prepared his celebrated HERBAl# REMEDIES for .Epileptics, which have Oured Thousands of cases. SeiWi for parfcioulars,teste imonials. and his "Treatise on the Oause and Cure of Epilepsy." J. Gibson Brown, 47 Grand Street, Jersey City, N. J.

I YON & HEALY,

'4

Pewderedand Perfumed

(PATENTED)

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Sulfira EddrsBt TkMtrt. Chic ads, lit

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Itltfife

f. IBliSI