Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 7 July 1892 — Page 3
IN ENGLAND.
Dr Talmage 011 the Famous Q,uestion of Pilate.
Sstewhat Shall I Do With Jesus?—It Is Xot pa,:..., Enough to Sympathise with His 5," Sufferings.
& Dr. Talmage continues to receive from ail classes of the English people the warmest of welcomes and the /heartiest greetings. The work of arranging his tour has been exceedingly difficult. So numerous were the invitations awaiting him that to accept some and decline others seemed inridious. Wherever he has gone the largest churches in the cities have been crowded to excess and could have been filled many times over.
Among the sermons he has preached the one selected for publication this week is from the text, Matthew xxvii, £2: "What shall I do with Jesus?"
Pilate was an unprincipled politician. He had sympathies convictions of right and desires to be honest but all these were submerged by wish to be popular and to please the people. Two distinguished prisoners were in the grasp of government, and the proposition was made to free one of them. There stands Barabbas, the murderer and there stands Christ, the Saviour of the world. At the demand of the people the renegade was set free, but Jesus is held. As the hard-visaged and cruel-eyed Barabbas goes among his sympathizers, receiving their coarse congratulations, Pilate turns to his other distinguished prisoner—mild, inoffensive, meek, loving, self-sacri-ficing—and he is confounded as to tfhat course he had better take, so he impanels the mob as a jury to decide, saying to them: "What shall I io, then, with Jesus?"
Oh, it is no dried or withered question, but one that throbs with warm ind quick pulse in the heart of every Bian and woman here. We must do lomething with Jesus. He is here. 5Tou and I are not so certainly here as he is, for he fills all this place— the loving, living, dying Christ—and each one of us will have to ask and answer for himself the question. "What shall I do, then, with Jesus?" Well, my friends, there are three or lour things you can do with him.
You can, in the first place, let him itand without a word of recognition: out I do not think your sense of common courtesy will allow that. He eomes walking on such a long jouraey, you will certainly give him a shair on which he may sit. He is so tveary, you would not let him stand without some recognition. If a begfar comes to your door, you recognize him and say, "What do you want If you meet a stranger faint in the street, you say, "What Is the matter with
A^OU
and your
common humanity and your common lympathy, and your common sense &f propriety will not allow you to let him stand without recognition—the -wxyinded one of the hills. You will isk, What makes him weep? where was he hurt who wounded him whence came he? whither goes he? know there have been men who have with outrageous indifference hated Christ, but I know very well that that is not what you will do with Jesus.
Another thing you can do with him—you can, thrust him back from your heart and tell him to stand aside. If an inoffensive person comes and persists in standing close up to you, and you have in various ways given him to understand that you do aot want his presence or his society, then you ask the reason of his impertinence and bid him away. Well, that is what we can do with Jesus.
He has stood close by us a great while—ten, twenty, thirty, fort\r rears. He has stood close by you hree times a day, breaking bread for your household, all night watching by your pillow. He has been in the nursery among your children he has been in the store among your goods he has been in the factory amid the flying wheels, and now if you do not like his society you can bid him away aye, if he will not go you can take him by the throat and tell him you do not want his interference that you do not want his breath on your cheek that you do not want his eye on your behavior. You can bid him away, or if he will not go in that way. then you can stamp your foot, as you would at a dog, and cry, "Begone
Yet I know you will not treat Jesus that way. When Pilate could not do that, you could not. Desperadoes and outlaws might do so, but I know that that is not the way you will treat him, that that is not what you will do with Jesus. There is another thing you can do with him —you can look on him merely as an optician to cure blind eyes, or an aurist to tune deaf ears, a friend, a good friend, a helpful companion, a cheerful passenger on shipboard but that will amount to nothing. You can look upon him as a God and be abashed while he rouses the storm, or blasts a fig tree, or heaves a rock down the mountain side. That will not do you any good no more save
Jave
oifr soul than the admiration you for John Milton or William Shakespeare.
I can think of only one more thing you can do with Jesus, and that is to take him into your hearts. That is the best thing you can do with him that is the only safe thing you can do with him, and may the Lord omnipotent by his spirit help me to persuade you to do that. A minister of Christ wa9 speaking to some children and said,"! will point you to Christ." A little child rose in the audience and came up and put her hand in the hand of the past6r and said: ''Please, •ir, take me to Jesus now. I want to go now." Oh, that it might be
now with such simplicity of expertence that you and I* join hands and seek after Christ and get an expression of his benefaction and his merc3r!
You may take Christ into your icHmfidence." If you can not trust him whom can you trust? I do not offer you a dry, theological technicality. I simply ask you to come and put both feet on the "Rock of Ages." Take hold of Christ's hands and draw him to your soul with perfect abandonment and hurl yourself into the deep sea of his mercy. He comes and says, "I will save you." If you do not think he is a hypocrite and a liar when he says that, believe him and I say: "Lord Jesus, I believe here is mjr heart. Wash it. Save it. Doit I now. Aye. it is done for I obey thy promise and come. I can do no more.
Why, my friends, you put more trust in everybody than jrou do in Christ, and in every thing more trust in the bridge crossing the stream, in the ladder up to the loft more trust in the stove that confines the fire more trust in the cook who prepares your food more trust in the clerk who writes your books, in the druggist who makes your medicine, in the bargain maker with whom you trade more trust in all these things than in Christ, although he stands this moment offering without limit, and without exception, universal pardon to all who want it. Now, is not that cheap enough —all things for nothing?
This io the whole of the Gospel as I understand it—that if you believe that Christ died to save you you are saved. When? Now. No more doubt about it than that you have a right hand. No more doubt about it than that there is a God. If you had committed fiye hundred thousand trans-1 gressions Christ would forgive you just as freely as if you had never committed but one though you had gone through the whole catalogue of crimes—arson and blasphemy and murder—Christ would pardon you just as freely, you coming to him, as though you had committed only the slightest sin of the tongue. Why, when Christ comes to pardon a soul he stops for nothing. Height is nothing. Depth is nothing. Enormity is nothing. Protractedness is nothing.
Again, I advise you, as one of the best things you can do with Christ, to take him into your love. Now there are two things which make us love any one—inherent attractiveness and then what he does in the way of kindness toward us. Now Christ is in both these positions. Inherent attractiveness—fairer than the children of men, the luster of the morning in his eye, the glow of the setting sun in his cheek, myrrh and frankincense in the breath of his lip. In a heaven of holy beings, the best. In a heaven of mighty ones the strongest. In a heaven of great hearts, the tenderest and the most sympathetic. Why, sculptor has never yet been able to chisel his form, nor painting to present the flush of his cheek, nor music to strike his charms and the greatest surprise of eternity will be the first moment when we rush into his presence and with uplifted hands and streaming eyes and heart bounding with rap ture, we cry out, "This is Jesus!"
Ought it not to set the very best emotions of our heart iuto the warmest—aye, a red hot glow? The story is so old that people almost get asleep while they are hearing it. And yet there he hangs—Jesus the man, Jesus the God. Was there anything before or since, anything to be compared to this spectacle of generosity and woe? Did heartstrings ever snap with a worse torture? Were tears ever charged with a heavier grief Did blood ever gush, in each globule the price of a soul? The wave of earthly malice dashed its bloody foam against one foot, the wave of infernal malice dashed against his other foot, while the storm of God's wrath against sin beat on his thorn pierced brow, and all the hosts of darkness with gleaming lances rampaged through his holy soul.
Oh, see the dethronement of heaven's king! the conqueror fallen from the white horse! the massacre of a God! Weep, ye who have tears,over the loneliness of his exile and the horrors of his darkness. Christ sacrificed on the funeral Dyreof a world's transgression the good for the bad, the great fcr the mean the infinite for the finite, the God for the man. Oh, if there be in all this audience one person untouched by this story of the Savior's love, show me where he is, that I may mark the monster of ingratitude and of crime. If you could see Christ as he is you would rise from your seat and fling yourselves down at his feet, crying, "My Lord, my light, mv love, my joy, my peace, my strength,' my expectation, my heaven, my all! Jesus Jesus!"
Oh, what will you do with such a Christ as that? You have got to do something with him this morning. What will yon do with Jesus? Will you slay him again by your sin? Will you spit upon him again? Will you crucify him again? What will you do with him who has loved you with more than a brother's loVe, more than a father's love, yea, more than a mother's love, through all these years? Oh, is it not enough to make the hard heart of the rock break? Jesus! Jesus! What shall we do with thee?
I have to say that the question will after awhile change, and it will not be, what shall we do with Christy but what will Christ do with us? Why, Christ will say: "There is that man whom I called. There is that woman whose soul I importuned. But they would not any of my ways. I gave them innumerable opportunities of salvation. They rejected them all. Depart. I never knew
you." BlessedI be God that day hai]^
not come. Halt, ye destinies of eter ianotiLer j0b
nity, and give us one more chance jfou
One more chance, and this is it. Bxcfcang*.
THE MOVEMENT FAILED.
An Attempt to Bepress Extravagance in Dress Among Hired Girls.
There is a young matron living one of the small cities in the interior of New York State who doubtless, in her moments of honest self-communion, wishes she had let well enough, or HI enough alone. She undertook recently, single-handed, a crusade from which many an older and bolder woman might have and has shrunk. Her sense of propriety and the eternal fitness of things was wounded by the attire of her own and her friends1 women servants. Gay colors, silk and satin fabrics, flowers, feathers, ribbons—all the fripperies which the soul of Bridget delights in—she felt were neither suitable nor becoming, and she determined to bring about a change.
To this end she drew up and circulated for signatures among her frienda a petition or resolution which should bind every signer not to employ or retain in her service any maid who would not consent to restrict her attire to certain prescribed limits, which were, practically, plainly made dark gowns with cap and apron when on duty, and nothing better than a woolen gown of simple design for Sunday and day off use.
But, alas, for the loyalty of friends! Although many, indeed most of the recipients of the pledge had joined with its author in complaints of the evil it strove to mitigate, when it came to taking a bold stand in the matter their courage was lacking. The paper made its round and returned signerless. But it was not without result. One of those whom it was designed to educate got a knowledge of its existence and mission. The story spread from kitchen to kitchen, gaining force and length as it flew. The maids attempted a coalition and succeeded better than the mistresses. A boycott was declared against the young matron who foolishly thought to make headway against the independence of American help, and her corps of servants is now secured from outside places.
A complement and moral to this story, says a writer in the Sun, is the recent experience of a Brooklyn lady. Christmas brought her a coveted sealskin sacque, of which her colored nurse was, as events proved, a most sincere admirer. The maid was about to purchase a winter cloak, and the horror of the mistress may be fancied when she appeared in it. Although of coarse brown plush, in color, style and general effect it was the fac-simile of of her own costly fur garment. The leugths of the two cloaks did not vary half an inch they were both of sacque shape, and so identical in appearance that at a glance they appeared to be twin garments.
To increase the wretchedness of the situation, the mistress was in mourning, and the maid had a black cloih dress for usual wear. It was the lady's habit on every pleasant day to take her nurse and baby over to spend an hour with her invalid mother, and to do so she must traverse a couple of blocks of a fashionable thoroughfare. One ordeal was enough. She tried to induce the nurse to exchange her garment for one of another style, offering to
pay any
loss she might
snsiaiD,
but
Topsy was indignant, and clung to he* elegance. Then, as the sealskin could not go, the maid had to. The nurse lost a good place and the mistress a faithful servant through incompatibility—not of temper, but of clothes—all of which the young matron may read with complaccacy.
Obeys the taw.
In view of the contradictory rumors circulated regarding the intentions of the Louisana State Lottery Company and in order to accurately answer numerous inquiries, a representative of the Times-Democrat yesterday interviewed Mr. Paul Conrad, the president of the company, with the result expressed below.
Reporter—Mr. Conrad, it was asserted some weeks ago in the Northern newspapers, and the statement has since been revived recently, that the company is about to remove to Nicaragua, and there, under a government franchise, open up the business on a grander scale than ever.
President Conrad—I have heard something of this, but there is ao foundation for it. The company has officially stated that it bows to the decision of the Supreme Court and will respeet the laws.
Reporter—Then you have no plans of future action? President Conrad—I cannot state the case more strongly than was done at the time the company decided not to attempt to obtain a renewal of its charter. I can only repeat that the company will continue in business until the expiration of its present charter and then cease to exist. I cannot understand, after all that has been said, why there should be any confusion in the public mind about the matter.
Reporter—Have you any objection to my stating this as a finalty for the satisfaction of the public?
President Conrad—None whatever. Reporter—Some of the Jjastefn papers, Mr. Conrad, persistently assert that the lottery company conpan continues to use the United States mails in the prosecution of its business you will kindly tell mo if that is true?
President Conrad—It is utterly untrue. We are obeying the law in its letter and spirit, and our agents every where are instructed to obey it. We are using the express companies only in our business, and in all our circulars are printed instruction^ to all persons dealing with us ttf avoid the mail.—Times-Democrat, New Orleans^La.), June 1.
Woes of a Conntrj Editor.
Some two years ago we did a job of printing for a man just over the county line. Last week, thinking he had forgotten the transaction, we sent him a W1L He answers as follows: "Don't
in 8uch a durned hurry. ril haTa
next
spring-
for'
an| w«n
pay
both together.Kaatuotar
An Important OlfltoWM.
To make it apparent to thousands who think themselves ill, that they are not affected with any disease, Jtut that the system simply needs cleansing, is to bring comfort home to tlieir hearts, as a costive condition is easily cured by using Syrup of Figs. Manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co.
Fussy—"I can't see why you wo men wear such long, trailing skirts.' Mrs. Fussy—"To have something to occupy our hands with, of course. Why do you carry a walking stick when you re not lame ?"—Judge.
To Subsorlbrs of this Papr. Alter 96 years constant use of various Pile Remedies 1 never found anything to do me any good until I tried Dr. Kilmer's & O Anointment. I UBed it in connection with the STrampRoot, and I tell you it made anew man out of me.
J. P. Brown. Osgood, Ind.
Duck Is to be a favorite wear this season, both for ladies and for gentlemen who are in the swim.
Combining pleasure sugar coating a pill.
Ton
The Only One E«r Printed—Can 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 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 BOOK, BEAUTIFUL LITHOGRAPHS or SAMPLES free.
with business—
That Tired Feeling.
You cannot always tell what may be its cause. Probably it may be due to change of season, climate, or life: possibly to overwork or overstudy, te mental suffering, nervousness, or various bodily ailments. But there is no mistaking its effects. You know you feei "almost tired to death," without strength to do anything ambition seems to be all gone, and in its place indifference to how the world wags —an indescribable languor and weakness. You have no appetite, do not care about food, and only eat because it is the hour for eating, or from force of habit.
This mast be stopped. Your condition must be changed at once, or like a ship drifting with the inward tide, you will soon be dashed upon the rocks of incurable disease and death. Rouse the torpid kidneys and liver, tone the digestive organs, create a new appetite, purify and vitalize the impure and sluggish blood, cure the headache and overcome all the prostrating effects of That Tired Feeling, by taking Hood's Sarsuparilla. It is just what you need, and to delay taking it is unwise.
Hood's Sarsaparrllla is sold by druggists. $1 six for 15. Prepared by C. I. Hood
Lowell, Mass.
&Co.,
Stealing away from bad company is justifiable larceny.
i"j
How's This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for any case of catarrh that cannot be cured by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props, Toledo,
O.
We the undersigned, have known F. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm.
West & Truax, Wholesale druggists,Toldo, O., Walding, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale druggists. Toledo, O.
Hail's Catarrh Cure is taken internally,acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of he systom. Testimonials sent free. Price 5c. per bottle. Sold by all druggists.
The man who wants to live in clover need only buy a lawn mower. Webster's Dictionaries.
G. & C. Merriam Co,, having won their suit against the Texas Siftings Co., of Naw Y,ork, for offering a 40 year old reprint
6t
the edition of Webster's Una
bridged as premium for subscribers for their paper, are devoting their attention to several other suits of a like nature now in the courts—The Topeka Capital Co.. of Topeka, Kansas, being one of the latest. They claim they are couipellod to do this in justice alike to the public and to themselves and have therefore given directions to their attorney to prosecute in every case where a publisher makes use of misleading announcements.
The Trip of a Life-Time.
If you want to take the trip of a live-time write the General Passenger Agent, Northern Pacific Railroad at St. Paul, Minn., for rates. Tourist books and the best maps published of Yellowstone Park, Puget Sound and Alaska.
TO THE SANATARIUMS.
Special Train Service via Pennsylvania Lines .Between Inianapolls, Martinsville and Spcncer.
Until further notice persons desiring to visit tlie Martinsville and Spencer Sanatariums will be given special transportation facilities, the Pennsylvania Lines haying decided to run special trains as follows: Leave Indianapolis, Saturdays only, 6:30 p. m., Martinsville 7:43 p. m., arrive at Spencer 8:35 p. m. Leave Indianapolis, Sundays only, 4:00 p. m., Martinsville 5:10 p.m. Arrive Spencer 6:00 p. m. Leave Spcncer, Sundays enly, 7:45 a. m., Martinsville 8:34 a. m., arrive at Indianapolis 9:45 a. m. Leave Spencer Mondays only, 6:05 a. m«. Martinsville 6 50 a. m., arrive at Indianapolis :£5a.m.
To Niagara Falls.
On Thursday July 88. 1893, the Lake Erie & Western R. R., will run their pooular annual excursion to Cleveland, Chautauqua Lake, Buffalo and Niagara. Following very low rates: Peoria, $7.50 Bloomington, 17 Lafayette, 86 Michigan City, $6 Indianapolis^ 85: ette, xviiuuigaii w. Tipton, $5 Ft. Wayne, to Muncie, 15 Connersville, $6 Rushville, $5 New Castle, 15 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. K. R. This will be the largest and grandest excursion of the season.
Joseph Ruby. meaced to heal up the scales came off and all over his body new and healthy flesh and skin formed. When he had taken two bottles of HOOD'S SAP SAPAR-
IIXA,
he was free frem sores."
RTTBY, BOX
HARRY K.
356, Columbia, Penn.
L9
Hooo's RIL
area mild, gentle, painless^
safe and efficient cathartic. Always reliable. 25.
I YON A HEALY,
63 Monroe Su Chleape.
mil Kill Frm thoir newly C«u!ofu» if (UuU Instruments, Uniform* and Equipments, 4M i'int Illustrations, (lMcribiug every srticl* required hj Uamta or Drum Cor|'«, (\M tfns Instructions for Aniat'iir UMitli.
Cxercises kail I'm HI Hajur's luetic*. Hjr Ubn uj WMU4 list of t»ud SI usie.
Price, 91 at druggists or by mall, bam pled free. Address
"ANASTKSIS,"
Dion ire*. .KKSIS,-'
Box 241ft.
NEW YOBK
Crr*
P.JSO'S C.URfc- r*o.H-
Consumptives and people who have weak lungs or Asthma, should use Peso's Cure for Consumption. It has aufed thousands, it has not injur* ed one. It Is net bad to take. It is the best oough syrup.
Sold everywhere. Mo.
O N I O N
Let There BePeaes
In the gastric region. If troubled with nausea from sea sickness, billiousness or other cause, Hostetter's Stomache Bitters will immediately put a stop ta the stomachic disturbance. A prominent and most unpleasant feature of Uver complaint is nausea in the morning. The symptoms disappear and the cause is removed by the Bitters. Many persons have very delicate ntomaches which triffling indiscretions in eating or drinking, or even some sight that is repulsive, disorders. Such persons cannot act more wisely than to Invigorate their digestive region with the Bitters, a tonle especially adapted to reinforce it. For malaria, rheumatism, kidney troubles and nervousness the Biters will be found marvelously beneficial,and when sleep is untranqull and appetite variable it soon improves both. It Is in fact a most comprehensive and delightful remedy.
The man with DO mu&Ic in his soul should hire a hand organ.
A
dose in time saves nine of
or HORBHOVND AND TAB. PIKE'S TOOTHACHI
HAM'S HONBY
Daors cars In ona minute.
If you want to treat you friend like a dog make him drunk. Nervous, billious, disorders, sick headache, indigestion,
IOBS
of appetite and constipation
removed by Beecham's Pills,
The Vassar girl fears above all things to reason back from effect to cause. When her guitar string snaps, she exclaims: "Plague on the cat!"
FITS—All Fits stopped free by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. No Fits after first days use. Marvellous cures. Treatise aud $2.00 trial bottle free to Fit cases. Send to Sr. Kline, 931 Arch St.. Philadelphia, Pa.
Had the Desired Effects XI CAWtoiiLToN, Green County, 111.,
NOT.
IBS.
highly recommend Pastor Koenlg's Nerve Tonio to anybody that has suffered from head, ache as my son did for five years, because two bottlos of the medicine cured him.
M. McTIGUB.
AVI&IIA,
Ind., July 16,1890.
About four years ago I was taken with a con* geative chill that left me so nervous that I was not able to do a day's work. I took Pastor Koenlg's Norve Tonic, and I at once began to get better and am now doing my work again. Many thanks for the good it has done me.
MBS. LIZZIE LEY.
CIIBVELAKD, O., 113 Laurel St., June 11, 1890. The use of Pastor Koenig's Nerve Tonic has enabled me to resume work, and I am recommending same to all I see in need of It, and I find mauy, hoping in pare to show m^vatltude by recommending the T0.1I0, [Nfl.
—A Valuable Boot on Soraau Diseases sent free to any address, and poor paUeats can also obtain this medicUt free of charso.
FREE
Beveroni am
KOENIQ MEDo CO., Chicago, III.
SoM by Druggists
cA
81 P®r Bottle. GferS5
Tjacge Size, I1.7S. O Bottlas for 88
Reasonable Hints.
Tho present) weather has gl?en rto to a l*r*o number of eases of paen.tsonta, pieurlvy, and rheumatism. All oL theso diseased fecgle with & e«M. Thia fastens upon ths kidnejs «nd manifests itself in one of tlie maladies nanied above. If the sufferer
tiiko REID'B
2CKI CURE
SYLVAN EKMEDY CO., Peoria, 111.
I EWIS' 98 El' LYE
I Powderedand Perfn med
(PATENTED)
The strongest and purest Lye made. Unlike other Lye, it being a flue powder and packed in a can with movable lid, the contents nr« always ready for use. Will make the best perfumed Hard Soap in 20 minutes vithout boiling. It is tho best for cleaning waste pipes, disinfecting sinks, closets, washing bottles, paints,
trpENSA,SALT
Gen. Agts., Phila., Pa.
PATENTS! PENSIONS
Send for Inventor's Guide or How to Obtain a Patent. Send for Digest of Penslon and Bounty Laws. PATRICK O'FARBELL, Wash-
incton, I). C.
As Large
As a dollar were the scrofula sores on my poor little boy, sickening and disgusting. They were especially severe on his legs, back of his ears and on his head. I gave him Hood's Sarsaparilla. In two weeks the sores com-
Are meeting with Great Favor Everywhere.
Cents Straight. 5 Cents Straight. C. M. CROSS & CO.. Sole Agents, Indianapolis. Ind
THE C08T IS THE SAME.
"German Syrup
99
RegisXeblaac is a Frencl
Regis Xeblanc is a French Cans* dian store keeper at Notre Dame de Stanbridge, Quebec, Can., who was cured of a severe attack of Congestion of the Lungs by Boschee's German Syrup. He has sold many a bottle of German Syrup on his personal recommendation. If you drop him a line he'll give you the full facts of the case direct, as he did us, and that Boschee's German Syrup brought him through nicely. It always will. It is a good medicine and thorough in its work.
LITTLE
LIVER PSLLS
DO NOT GBIPB NOR SICSEff. Sure cure for SICK HEAD" ACHE, impaired digestion, coast!pttiou, torpid glands. Theyaronw
Tital org&Hi, resnoTa nauiea, di»zincso. Mtfrfcsl effect on Kidneys and bladder. Conquer bilions nervous disorders. Eitabliih Mtural
DAILY ACTION.
Beautify complexion by purifying^ blood.
PCASI-T VEGETABLE.
The doao is picely odjtiited to uit cue, on* pill eattv/ never betoo much. Each vial contain! 42, carried is ratpockot. llk« lead pencil. Business man's grat.: convenience. Taken eaiier tkan sugar. 8oll whera. All genuine goods bear "Creieent."
Send 2-cent (tamp. Yon get 32 pagt book with wmjlfc OB. HARTER MEDICINE CO.. St. Louis, lift
S40,000,000
Earned by the Bell Telephone Patent in 18B1. Your invention may be 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.522F St. N.W., Washington,IXC. Mention this paper.
KILL HER!
In the nick of time come* DUTCIIEK'S VltH KIL.L1CK. Certain death to Flies. No mora buzline iirouud your eara. or diving nt your nose, ot freely. Fr
KEDT
colliding with your eyes. Use freely production and gecure ponce.
MR DfTOG CO., St. Albans, Vt.
KI»-will
GERMAN COUGH AND
he will be speedily relievod,
for this great remedy contains no poison. It excites the kidneys to action. stimulates the circulation, relieres the lungs of their burden, and iriil thus cure the worst case of pneumonia or pleurisy, and will relieve an attack of rheumatism quicker than anything else. It is the only remedy on the market that will relieve the consequences of cold, or from any malady that arises from a cold. Ask your druggist for it, and if he does not have it write to us and we will send it to you by mail or express. Small bottles are 25 cents, large ones 50 cents.
'roveat r»-
'KDUTCH-~
IDS uiovu. are touo ouu tuwbuu 9 best medicine known for biliousconstipation, dyspopila, foul# he*dach«,menlal deprduion,*
th* stomach, liver or bowels
bo
par-*
a form their proper funcMent. Persons given to over-5 eating are benefited by taking one after each meel.z
EPILEPSY CAN BE CURED.
a|M Al)r. O. Phelps Brown—the noted
ri I
I" I I
Epilepsy Specialist and Herbalist
J\—discovered that Epilepsy is caused III Wbya peculiar derangement of tho stomach and prepared his celebrated HERBAL REMEDIES for Epileptics, which have Cured Thousands of cases. Send for particulars,testimonials, and his "Treatise on the Cause and Cure of Epilepsy." J. Gibson Brown, 47 Grand Street, Jersey City, N. J.
BORE
WELLS
with
th ocr famomW ell
fSiSffififim
VIVFIS. R.mo.
THE HARTMAN STEEL PICKET FENCE
QB. TAIiBOTT CO., Nos. 1 and 2 Wiggins Block, CINCINNATI, OHIO General Apeuts for taouthorn Indiana and Southern Ohio.
IOVKMl
Ror Lgdl
In PnoutaaftioCusnHbn Oitmond Frame, Slut
Strictly SIQB Seafltj
JOHN P. LOVtfLL ARMS CO..Mfr
THI OHIO* WELL DRILL!
tetaloguo: FREE*
FOR SUMMER COMPLAINTS PERRY DAVIS' PAIN-KILLER BEST MEDICINE IN THE WORLD.
ofbnd eatlng cnrM Sick Headache reat oresCom pi ex ion 5 uresConM pat toi*» fi«Bd [K ft» Samplo 218 Wilt luth 8lr«l. NtwY.rk CUjr.
FAT FOLKS MEDBCEfr
Mrs. Alice Maplfl, Oregon, I I "My wtlitht WMF820 pounds, efJJflfcu." jTot circular* »ddi •Oft i. Ml
DENSION
M'F'G CO.
BuccoMfulIy Proi
Mo., wi4te»|
1 Kit JTI ncipil. n. W". HOW it TjM eradncttnn of JJp lb»." For circular* •ddrtns, witi Dr.O.W.l?.SNTJ5KR. &UVicker'i i.hieaao
JOHN \V. MOaBlSS Washington, D. C. Prosecutes Claims. Lite
jr Examiner U.S.PensionBureau,® 3y rs in last war, 15 adjudicating claims attyalio
I Principal E xamin
HEMORDIA
the OSIiT SUStE CUBE. Price $1.09 by nail. HEHOKDIA CO., HO Fulton St., New York.
T*rea.
WrtM.
BMftirigii
including Pediis. Suspension Siddt*.
Tubing, AdiustsMe'Ball
nrilflg parts.
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