Pike County Democrat, Volume 18, Number 17, Petersburg, Pike County, 15 September 1887 — Page 4

subject “Hospitality,” from which ho delivered a brief bat pointed discourse. HI* tarivu: Given to baspitalttT—Bomaas xlL 11 There hi danger the! the maltiplfcetion of lame and oommodioa* hotel* in oar town* and dUe* and Tillage* trill utterly exterminate that grace which Abraham exhibited when he entertained the augel*; and which Lot showed when he watched for guests at the gate of the city; and which Christ recognised as.» ' positive requisite Tor entering Heaven, when he declared: I wee a stranger and ye took me In. I propose to speak this morning otf the triale and rewards of Christian hospitality. The first trial often comes in the whim and eccentricity ct the guest himself. There ore a great many excellent people who bare protuberances of disposition, and sharps edge* of temperament, and unpltatnlity of character, which make them a positive nuisance in nny house ■ .where they stay. On short acquaintance, they will begin to command the househo>d affairs; order the employee to unusual terries; beep unreasonable hours; nse narcotics In places offensive to sensitive n**,tr.ls; put their feet at unusual elevations; drop the ashes of their Havana bn rosily tapestry; open bureaus they ought never to touch; and pry into things they ought never to eee; and become impervious to rousing bells; and have all the peculiarities of the giymandizer or the dyspeptic; and teaks excavations* from poor dentistry with unusual implements; and In a thousand ways afflict the household which proposes to take care of them. Added to all, they stay too long. They Have no Idea when their welcoiqp is worn oat, and they, would be unmoved even by the blessihg which my friend, Gerrit Bmtth, the philanthropist, asked one morning at hi* breakfast table, on the day when he hoped that the long protracted guests would depart, saying: “O Lord, hies* the provision, and our friends who leave us to-day!” Hut, my friends, there are alleviations to he put on their side of the scale. Perhaps they have not had the same refining influences about them in early life that you have had. Perhaps they have inherited, eccentricities that they can not help. Perhaps It is yonr duty, by example, to show them a better way. Perhaps they are sent to be a trial for the development of voUr patience. Perhaps they were to be intended as an illustration of the opposite of what yon are trying to inculcate in the ■uinds of your children. Perhaps it Is to nipke your home the brighter, when they are gone. When our guests are cheery, and fascinating, and elegant. It is very ' eO(y to entertain them; but when we find in our guest* that which is antagonistic to our taste and sentiment, ft is a positive triumph when we can obey the words of my text, and he “given to hospitality.” Another trial in the using of this grace Is in the toil and expense of exercising it. In the well-regulated household things go » ' smoothly; but now you have introduced a foreign element into the machinery, and though you may stoutly declare that they must take things os they find them, the Martha will break in. The ungovernable stove; the ruiued dessert: the delayed marketing; the perplexities of a caterer; the difficulty of doing proper work, and ' yet always bring presentable. Though you may say there shall he no care or anxiety, there will be care, and there will be anxiety. In 1«H the Captain-General provided a 'cry grand entertainment Sami among other thing* he had a fountain in his gar-den--a fountain of strong drink. In it were four hogsheads of brandy, eight hogsheads of water, twenty-five thousand lemons, thirteen hundred pounds of Lisbon sugar, five pounds of grated nutmeg,- three hundred toasted biscuits, and a boat, built on purpose, was placed in the fountain, and a boy rowed around it and filled the cups of the people who came there to be supplied. Well, you say. that was a luxurious entertainment, and of coarse the man had no anxiety; but 1 have to tell you that, though you bad to propose an entertainment like that, you have anxiety. In that very thing coiues the divine reward.

" e w«» t>ocn to serve; and when we •err* other*, we serve (iod. The flush on that " women'* cheek, u she bends orer the hot store, is as tarred in God’s sight as the flush on the cheek of one, who, on a hot „ day, preaches the gospel. We may serve God with plate, and cutlery, and broom, as certainly as we can serve him with psalm-hook and liturgy- Margaret, Queen of Norway and Sweden and Denmark, had a royal cup of ten lips, on which was recorded the names of the guests who bad dmnk from this cup. And overy Christian woman has a royal cup, on which are written all the names of those who have ever been entertained by her in Christian style; names not cut hy human *” Ingenuity, but written hy the band or a divine Jesus. Bat, my friends, you are not to toll unnecessarily. Though the fare be plain, cheerful presidency of the table, and cleanliness of 'appointments, will be good enough for anybody that ever comes to your house. John Howard was invited to the house of a nobleman. He said: ”1 will come on one oonditlon, end that is that you have nothinx but potatoes on the table." The requisition was complied with. Cyrus, King of Persia, under the same circumstance#, prescribed that on the table there must be nothing but brand. Of course these were extremes, but they are illustration of the fact, that more depends upon the banqueters thanupon tho banquet. I want to lift this Idea of Christian entertainment out of a positive bondage, into a glorious inducement. Every effort you put forth, and every dollar you give to the entertainment of friend or foe, yon give directly to Christ. Suppose It were announced that the Lord Jasas Christ would come to this place this week, what woman in this hawse would not be glad to wash for him; or spread for him a bed, or bake bread for kin) There was one of old who washed for him, drawing the water from the well of her own tears. He is coming. He will be here to-morrow. * Inasmuch es ye here done It to one of the least Of these, my brethren, ye have done It to . . >j In picture galleries we hare often seen representations of Walter Scott and his friends, or Washington Irving with his assoc I ales; bat all these engravings will fade out, while through everlasting agea, hanging luminous and conspicuous, wilt he the picture of yon and your Christian guests. Yon see we have passed out from the trials Into the rewards-of Christina hospitality—grand, glorious and eternal. The tout reward of Christian hospitality is the I*ivine benediction. When nay one attends, to this daty God’s blessing comes upon him. upon his companion, upon his chOchiMren, upon his dtniag-hall, upon h<s nursery. The Messing comes In ol the front door, and the back door, and down through the skylight. God draws n hmg mark of credit for services received. Christ sold to his disciples: Its that resolveth yen reoelreih Me; and he th-'t given* a cup of coM water la the aaWPof Odtartple shall in no wtas tern his reward. - As we have hod so many things rocot dod against on in Heaven. It will ha a aotisfact km to have written, on unfailing a; chives, the fact that in the month of May, or Juan, or Itaptember, or December, lAC. we made the blissful mistake of sup- - posing that era were eoOartoiaiag weak, men like oemetvoa, when to! they showed their pinions before they left, and we fo-md ant that they were angels nan warm.

the wall* tor Eli*b«r>nd *11 the agee hava hoard the glorioM consequences. On * cold atomy winter night, sty father ea* tertalned Trueman Osborne. the evangelist, and through all eternity 1 will thank God that Trueman Osborne stopped at oar houss. How many of oar guests have brought to ua condolence and sympathy and help) There is a legend told of 8t Bebald, that in his Christian rounds he used to stop for entertainment at the house of a poor Cartwright. Coming there one day ha found the cartwrlght and his family frees! ng for the lack of any fuel. fit. Bebald ordered the man to go oat and break the Icic'es from the side of the honse and bring them in, 1 and the icicles were brought into the honse and thrown on the hearth, and they began to blase immediately, and Ibe freezing family gathered around andwere warmed by them. That was a legend; bat how often hare nor guests come in to gather np the cold, freezing sorrows of our life, kindling them into illumination and warmth and good cheer. He who opens his honse to Christian hospitality tarns those who are strangers Into friends. Years will go by, and there will be great changes in yon, and there will be great changes in them. Home day you will be sitting in loneliness, watching a bereavement, and you will got a letter In a strange bandwriting, and you will look at the post-office mark, and say: “tVhv, I don’t know anybody living in that city;" and you will break the envelope, and there you will read the story of thanks for your Christian generosity long years before, and how they have heard afar off of yonr trouble. And the letter will be so full of kindly reminiscences and Christian condolence, it will he a plaster large enough to cover np the deep gashes of yonr soul. When we take people Into our houses as Christian guests, we take them intoonr sympathies forever. In Dort, Holland, a soldier with a sword at his side stopped at a house desiring lodging end shelter. The woman of the house at first refused ndmittance, saying that the men of the bouse were not at home; hut when be showed his credentials, that he had been honorably discharged from the armr. he was admitted and tarried during the night. In the night time there was a knocking at the front door, and two ruffians broke in to despoil that household. No sooner bad they come over the door-sill than the armed gnest, who had primed his piece and charged It with sings, met them, and telling the woman to stand back, 1 am happy to aay. dropped the two assaulting desperadoes dead at his feet. Well, now there are no bandits prowling around to destroy onr houses; but how often it is that we find those that have been our guests become our defenders. We gave, them shelter first, and then afterwards, in the great conflict of life, they fought for our reputation; they fought for onr property; they fought for our soul. Another reward that comes from Christian hospitality is in the assurance that we shall have hospitality shown to us and to oars, lathe upturning* of this life, who knows in what city or land we mav be thrown, and how raneh we may need an open doer? There mav come no such crisis to us, bat oar children mav be thrown into some snch strait. He who is in a Christian manner hospitable has a free t>ass through all Christendom. It may be that you will have been dead fifty years before any snch stress shall come npon one of yonr descendants, but do you not suppose that (toil can remember fifty years? and the knnckle of the grandchild will be beard against the door of some stranger, and that door will open, and It will he talked over in heaven, and it will be said: “That man’s grandfather, fifty years ago, gav# shelter to a stranger, and now a stranger’s door is open for a grandson.’’ Among the Greeks, after entertaining and being entertained, they take a piece of lead and cut it in two, and the host takes one-half of the piece of lead and the guest take# the other half as they part. These two pieces of lead are banded down from generation to generation, and from family to family, and after awhile, |>erhaps on* of the families in want or in trouble go out with this one piece of lead and find the other family with the rorree|>onding piece of lead, and no sooner is the tally completed .. than the old hospitality is aroused and eternal friendship pledged. Ho the memory of Christian hospitality will go down from generation to generation, and from family to family, and the tally will never he lost, neither in this world nor the world to come. Mark this: The day will come when w« will all be turned out of doors, without any exception, bare-footed, Iwre-beaded, no water in the canteen, no bread in th* haversack, and will go in that way into the future world. And I wonder it

eternal hospitalities wall open before Da, and if we will l« nvfiTrd info everlasting UbiUtiouF Francis Prescobald was a rich Italian, and -ba was very merciful and Terr hospitable. One day, an Englishman. by the name of Thtmtas Cro.awell. appeared at hU doof asking for shelter and alms, which were cheerfully rendered. Fresco!-aid afterward lost ail bis property, became eery poor, and wandered up into England; and one day he saw a procession passing, and lo! It was the Lewd Chancellor of England; and lot the Thomas H you low each of Take th Ho it i tertain tile lied r.-gal pfl " - >■ 1-ef We V O.hoi4jl - - "►••i «§ p!a> Iwd reading 1 gives oft George N( that banq kids, four rabbits, ttwo hundr ridges, lot quail, oat dredhot | to lire for now," and tmpolalvely shot htmself through the brain. Ho love, after all. to •a strong1 as that which hinds tsealor > happy family, th* bereaved

iA Pi ^ t* ^** —Ob the Cum as elsewhere, waste takes more than storms, frosts and insacta—K !» Farmer. —Sorghum Med is pronounced by those who hare used it a good feed for hop. It will fatten them rapidly, it is claimed. —To Dispone Black Antal A few leaves of Wormwood scattered in the haunts of them insects is said to be effectual in dislodging them. —Animals are subject to sunstroke as well as human beings if compelled to endure excfeaaive heat The pasture should always contain a few shade trees, also running water. —Cedar chests are best to keep flannels, for cloth-moth are never found itl them. Red cedar chips are good to keep in drawers, wardrobes, closets, trunks, etc., to keep out moths.— Mother'* Magazine. —If your child has the ear-ache, turn a drop of hot milk as it can be borne into the ear, and cover it quickly with a bit of cotton batting. This simple remedy has relieved many obstinate cases of ear-ache.—Indianapo-lis Journal. —When drawing hay and grain to the barn from the field, I placed a strong rope across it in such a way that by passing it over a pulley attached to a beam and then under another on the floor, I can with one hqrse tip the whole load o!F the wagon at once. One man can in three to five minutes get rid of a load of hay and not lift the weight of ten pounds. —White Cake: One and one-half •ups of sugar, one-half cup each of butter and corn-starch, one and onebalf cups of flour, one-half cup of sweet milk, the whites of six eggs and two teaspoonfuls of baking powder; j flavor with one teaspoonful of lemon and one-half teaspoonful of vanilla. I : often vary this by using two whole eggs ! and the whites of two, making a very rich color.—Household. Apple Roly-Poly: Peel, quarter and core sour apples: make rich biscuit dough, roll thin and put in the apples, sliced thin, roll up, put in a puddingbag, and then into a kettle of boiling water, with an earthen plate in the bottom; boil one and one-half hours constantly. Before using the puddingl>ag wring it from hot water, and flour the inside Well. Any kind of nice sauce is good with roly-poly.—Our Country Home. NEW PARISIAN STYLES. Wrap* aad White-Wool ToUota for the Warm Day* of Earljr Fall. To judge by the models which modistes are now engaged in preparing for the autumn and winter, wrappings bid fair to be as varied the coming season as they were last year. They will be worn long or short, according to the demands of the occasions;, long for the carriage, and for general wear by ladies no longer young; short for visits, tor walking, and for day wear by I young ladies. Long cloaks are made of woolen* plain, or in very fine stripes, or almost imperceptible checks. The cloth is never heavy; the woolens are supple and comparatively light. A touch of fancy is displayed in long .mantles of tartan plaid in dark subdued soft colors. Their shape is simple, the fronts falling straight, held only at the neck by a clasp of metal or passementerie. the back sometimes plaited at the waist under a belt which stops short under the arms; frequently a cape is added, sometimes a hood; the sleeves, which are roiled under, are rather wide, and gathered at the armhole and wrist. > Short wraps, when intended to be worn in the morning Or destined for young girls, are almost always made of plain cloth, or furred cloth, or coarse woolen, thick aud warm. They are made in any one of the numberless jacket shapes, with or without a cape of the same material, which does not reach farther than the elbow; the cape

may or may not hare a hood; the hood is always pointed. The jacket is invariably adjusted, and is usually somewhat long, or is lengthened by flat basques set under the curved lower edges of the front and back. Sometimes the basque is ornamented with embroidery or passementerie, which does not' reappear in any other part of (he jacket; never is there any trim- ' e lower edge, unless it is edging of braid. jackets assume a military with their decorations of rgs. olives and fourageres or aments. whatever their shape, are il ladies in general with lets, and by young givls at the day. With the short it is different; these arc all by young girls; ladies tar them, in all degrees of r visiting and for afterof these arc so extremely unsuitable for the street. If worn in the carriage. >f Genoese velvet in rich, sometimes embroidered trimmed with passen hich there is gold, almost tuned with lace. Their combination of mantilla and sleeves forming juirt of the ort tab fronts, the tabs eut lilted. ise, never entirely a banrevived under the and is much worn, more young ladies and girls, it generally, it is a dress, it an ordinary dress, worn :*t of the same fabric, on slightly—very slightly— is blouse is worn with a ed at the neck to define a nnd shirred again toward The sleeves are quite full, ami gathered at the armhole. Bulgarian galloon, emcolored silks blended with r, is around the armhole wristband, and similar galfor the belt Such cosmade of barege, veiling, ;«> and crepeline for young toilets. been taken up with so this summer that it will fly abandoned in the are now being wlliich a polonaise or blouse ill, thick but supple, is worn of colored cloth in such near bine, and alThe skirt is braided with hich Is optionally but fregled with tarnished gold; braiding is mi the polonaise. It will be readily understood that such drosses are not intended to be worn on city streets, but in the carriage in Paris, and at; country houses and water-ing-places nl; the end of the season. ~ to make a gradual transi- ' * and avoid a __skirt, the veiled with

Did ever be was rain of his , s yonBsr lady who remarked that he wan not band" aoma Did yon eror know a man who did Mi ay ts his wife that he “liked to see a lady dressed plain and sensi blifc” But when a lady in n plain and sensible dress enters a car where thin same man is seated, aid she may stand anhonr before he offeni her his seat. ever hear a. man talk about and tell his wife that exactly conducive to his safety and peaoe of mind, if «he should trim her front hair, that wouldn’t flirt with any girl with bangs that would notice him. ... Did yon ever see a titan get a little hiit sick that didn't think lie was going to din, and require the entii-e attention of the family, the near relatires and the neighbors? In a few days of ter the wife has a much worse attack, but because uha patiently bears it and tries to keep u|>, don’t he invariably say, “You might com* plain if you should ever get as sick as * last week.” Did yon ever see a man who did not sess a sublime contempt for the “gossip^ of women that didn’t yet all the “newt” at his business place cr club long bafdea his wife hears it through the gossip channels? Did you erer hear a man find fault with himself? Mot much, when there is generally some one convenient to shoulder tlie blame quietly. This might be called their greatest inconsistency, and has been handed down from Ail sun, subject to all modern improvements.’ These evidences of strength in men could be enumerated ndeflnitely. In proportion to the weak* ness of women they are ten to one. Aa Indefatigable Rocker, There is confined in the county jail heie, says the Vicksburg Herald, a. small negro hoy not more than ted years of age, named Dave Lunden, who came from Davis Bend, and has been adjudged insane. Little Davie, while perfectly harmless, sits in a corner of the jail hall all day with his hands locked around lis knees, and rocks himself to and fro from the moment he Is allowed to leave his cell until he is ireplaced there by hit keepers. He never seems to tire, and, ganing straight Wrore him with a wild, idiotic look in bis eye, ha keeps up his singular motions This peculiar freak has bees watched by Jailer Terrell, and never for a moment does he lose his steady stroke. It is accounted for as one of the freaks of crasy people which, in this instance, makee Davie guilty of perpetual motion. Could not some genius make a discovery from this which would tend to solve the perpetual motion probler i How to Rednoo Hour Expenses. Yon can do it eaaily, and you will not have to deprive yourself of a, single comfort: on the contrary, you will enjoy life more than ever. How can you ao rompUsh this result I Easily; out down your doctor's bills. When you lose your appetite, and become billons and constipated, and therefore low-spirited, don’t rush off to the family physician for a proscription, or, on tlie other hand, wait until you are sick abed before dofng anything at ail; but just go to the drugginVs and for t wenty-flge cen -s get a supply of Dr. Fierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets. Take them as directed, and our word for it, y our unpleasant symptoms vrill disappear as if by magic, yon will nave n o big doctor's bill to pav, and everybody interested (except the doctor) will feel happy. MV* for labor!*an-acquired taste. The •▼•rage man was bon laxy.

She Couldn't Understand It. “What in the world ha* happened .to you since the last time I saw you!” asked one lady of another when they met on the street theotherday; “1 cant understand it Then you were pale, haggard and low-spirited, and I remember you said that you hardly cared whether you lived or died. To-day you look ever so much younger, and it is very evident from you;* beaming face that your low spirits have Utken flight.” “Yes, mdaed.” was the reply; “and shall I tell you what drove them away I It was Dr. Rerce’a Favorite Prescription. I was a martyr to functional derangement until I began taking the ‘ Prescription.’ Now 1 am as well as I ever was in my life. Ko woman who suffers as 1 did. ought to let an hour past before procuring this wonderful remedy.’’ Sous Hashes of lightning are believed to ranch a length of taa lilies. Needless Alarm Is experienced by some fidgety people observant of uuusual paleness in their countenances, who experience discomfort in the region of the stomach or liver, or who pass a restless night or two. These are small ailments, capable, mdetd. of aggravation by neglect, but easily removable at the start by the fine assistant of digestion, assimilation and sleep, Hostetler's litomaah Bitters. Use this pure remedy, so admirably adapted to family emergencies. Malaria and kidney complaint* are relieved by it. Turns la sex is fruit; haven't you heard of a mandate?— Ttzai i (r tug*. A Prim of *100,000 la a good- thing to get* and the man who win* it by superior ikill, or by on unexpected turn of Fortune s wheel, is to be cooi tula ted. Hut be wiu> escapes from the Smi utchca of that dread monster. Consumption, and wins back health and happiness, is far moro fortunate, ’."he chances of win00very in time. For nil scrofulous disc Consumption to one cf them), it is an failing remedy. All druggists. I actor who lives inagumt i to rail ut dram-attic art Tbs great substitute for Sulphu r Bulba, Glenn’s Sulphur Soap la inexpensive. Hill’s Hair Dye, Black or Brown, Sic. ■ racing to an eater-prising occapeFkaxcr Axle Quasi to the best to the world—will wear twice as long as any other. THE MARKETS. New You, September 1*. CATT1.K—Native Steen....» t» COTTON—Mkl.l line. FLOCB-Good to Choice. S 50 WHEAT-No. X Bed. » CORN—N \it... *1 OATS-Westera Mixed. St PORK—Mess (»ewi. » » ST. LOWS. COTTON—Middling..... BEEVES-Good to Choke. Pair to Medium . 3 to * 00 S it) 3 73 S *0 r

** How » the furnace fire f a mol iotm*" “Well enough to be ut, 11 four honor!” ^ Bnusr is immediate, anil J Cure pisio’s Remedy for Catarrh. cents. A hotxl horror—flies in tbf aoup.J/.ui

Ills Ionic

On’ itti.

-RAVE TOOCHILLS AND FEVER 1 II ee. get rid of them by « a* KRESS’ FEVER TONIC I'anl> yegetable la eompositloa. Mil » «an aod «t> tali naiedj. We guarantee a cote i» ”*erj eaee whet* gireetione an follow#*, and Ui. drum front whom y » au -rha<# li atithortird u> reload tk- -ooejr la ceae el fat ore. Give It A trial. If It Dots Yn n 6n< It Will Coe t Yoi NotMtC. IT ERADICATES ALL HA ARIA, Aa4 lea Tea tke ejetem strong. Tlgoro -sa4 able to ree M Aiseaee. Aeh gear DruggM Mr i •- U he haa aaaaaa hand hare kiae or*» !or joe. PRICE, 81.00 PEE BOTTLE. B:KKSS* FETKR TOKIC CO. A. Lome, Wi*. MEYER BROS, ft CO.. 9m 4 4»ti THE FA.HOIS Cl’STC r -MADE PLYMOUTH MCI ¥, \ PUTS. (Full Suits and ^ Overcoat;.)

1. Tblf MnpWl**W ioing tic team* i—|— mad* c hvt ixMT busi the rntt ^ State*. ■■■■ 8. We liar® now upon <Snr books over 110.m cietome re, • iom we have supplied direct, saving THREE FACTS thorn tho mormons nix tt •nd eipon ton rents #,? I ho jobber ai . rotoiler. •.We ever Pkbxt? a ny * he (le iH one to sorry u» unm with is, ?or wo alws y» "i»u ui«r wo m • -Ahave an : always will ire--•^^fundmo ey for any Cau se.

Singers and pm bile speakers will nd Fiso's Cure for C >nsumption the 1 «t medicine for boa soil ess and to stnii; .beia the voice. Thousands safer from a short hac- Qg Cough, who mig) be cured by a few «L< see of Kao’s Core.

maladies are quite liable to set in « covery acta pdwwfully upontoe 1 through that tnmf alood-PWnd* cleanses the srstM of all Mood-tain' purities, from whatever cauae ariai equally efficacious In acting upon “.SASSfL* ££$5 Si&; rested its potency in curing Twtjr, Soeim. ^SSi2gri&2*M stamps for a large Treatise, with colored platesTon 8kin Diseases, or the same amount KlfTteatlae on toofuloua Affections. -FOR TH* BoBOO IS THE LIFE.-' BBaftSHUgUNra CONSUMPTION, which Is Scrotal* or Ike and oared by this remedy. !*_“«“JJe earlier stages or the ffscag. taw*, velous power orer this terribly fatal dtoeao), when first offering this now world-famed renredy to the public. Dr. Pierce thoughteertouel J of calling it hla “Cohscmption CVr*. bit abandoned thM nan»_aa too Mtotcare ftr Liver, Blood, and Lungs. JOr Weak Dungs, Spitting of Wood, Shortpsa of Breath, Cliromo Nasal Catarrh. &o'i litis. Asthma, Severe Coughs, and klndmc lections, it is an efficient remedy. Sold by Druggists, at SUD, or 61* BotUs J^*8end ten cents In stamps for Dr. Pfcret* aok on Consumption. Address, World’s Disptisary Hedies! Association, 063 Main ta MiTTAlO, W. 1'.

Cures Neuralgia, Headache, Catarrh, Crow. Sere Throat RHEUMATISM, Lame Back, SMI Joints, Strains, BratUh Borns, Wounds, Old Sores and All Aches and Pains. The minx teetlraoniale received by m more tbIB prove .11 we etaim for tbla Venable remedy. 1 not. only relieve* tbe meet eevere pains, big It Curas Yon. That’s thi Idsa I . Sold by Drunritta. Oar eta. Soho Book mailed frtfcl kddrm WIZARD OIL COMPANY CHICAG4&

FINT> THB LATEST STYLES L’Art De La Mode. • COLORED PLATES. IU ID UIBT MU* AXB no YOKE MSUOU. PrOrrter it of your N«w»d«a J» >r or Mad M oeali for laleil TCWc. P.UWL*, • Catt IMn,Ae> »•*.

ottt » «. A. R. AT ST. LOUIS. We meld call the particular attention dwMeade id rantr *ko anticipate attending Ike mu fretieitia in St. Imu tket If tkejr an in waat of Clothia*. Shoee, Hale * Farnieliiaite. to eaU on the gmj 70S to 713 dfreaklln An., which 119 l> Ike laqeet eetabtiekment of tie kind in St. laaie. ai d wko Mil cheaper than othere nr refund jonr aoner.

► JONES Irm Ltvm, giffSwfaw. Bn« Twl—m4I—lit is |k,~J *V:k Iw^Sitfak. rwtMfriNlt 3H£5im.

CHEAPEST ROUTE TO ST. LOUIS. iipimi of trip by joor Ml u< Dry Uoodi U rko (THU Brood w«y Kmporuuo '« O. CRAWFORD * CO.. t. X. Cor. Brood wor * Frooklla Ai * 1 o-J“«srg£c«

TO® iAT«r ■PHASTHKA1

NEED 8H REPAIR8. ggHfMaafe r 2£js»3i£MTV£JS£flK: PATENTS OBTAINED Md SUITS CONDUCTED. r. mm ttOUre* LmK Mo. IjUATCRES FROM *1.25 SyMS PENSIONS ES.TSSS at ■ Waafalogtoa, ClarcUad. Detroit and Chiceepi, and Wane «nt C. O. I>- aay • _Jeeaieaad retail prhB. a strew * Co.. Mi Wat^di ar. A DAY. rite EDUCATIOHA.L. n 0*«0»* ATBIC IdSPITll College. OewHurft usB^TOsasasaKsafe A.S.E.B. 115.* SCVKS Wlltnc T» . (DM

(Successors to Woods Sc. PROPRIETORS OP , . ,j Star Livery, feed and Sale Stables, CORNER FIFTH AND WALNUT STREETS, PETERSBURG. ” - Hirst-Class Burgles and Sat® Horses for t'<«,public at uuuonable prices. Horses boarded by the day or week, (tire this Arm yoar oxn-onare. aid yon will receive fair treatment The well-known hostler. At. Karon, will be round always on hand. NIEW FURNITURE STORE! This trm has opened a large stack of New Furniture, all the latest styles In Weals, YarMes, Solas, Chairs, Bum, ini Cases, Tallies, Sales. Our goods are all new—no old stock to select from. Onr plnce of business It at Klntr § mi stand, where wc can be louad selling ns cheap as any house In the country. We ale • -•» u full stock of UNDERTAKERS’ SUPPLIES F. M. BANKS, Petersburg, Ind. DBF GOODS.

JOHlSr HAMMONI). -I EW GOODS To which be direct* attention. His DRY GOODS are fi rst-class, and the stock Is large Hats, Gaps, Boots, Shoes and Notions. Giro him a call and yon will he convinced that he Is giving BARGAINS on his entire stock. SOLID GOODS AT LOW PRICES. 4

EUGENE HACK. ANTON SIMON. -Proprietor* of— THE EAGLE BREWERY, INDIANA, Furnish the Best Article of Beer the Market Affords AND SOICIT ORDERS FROM ALL DEALERS BOTTLE OB KEG BEER SUPPLIED TO FAMILIES. On Sale at All Saloons. ISAAC T. WHITE FRED’K H. BURTON. MARSHAL C. WHITE. SB2LX.EIB. db WHITE!, \ 'Wholesale Druggists AND DZAUCKS IK Paints, Oils, Dye Stuffs, Window Glass \ ' \ V • Tk : AND SURGICAL INSTRUMENTS. No. 105 Main Street, - - • - Iv*n»ville, Ind. Petersburg. Indiana. C. A. BURGER & BRO., FASHIONABLE MERCHANT TAILORS, Petersburg, Indians, 3m Eeceired Tteir Larp SW sf la!r Stfiss ol Pirn Goods, Fits and Styles as Low as Elsewhfira.