Pike County Democrat, Volume 18, Number 20, Petersburg, Pike County, 6 October 1887 — Page 4
Rer. T. DeWitt Talmage took tor the fljX3 subject at a recent discourse at the Brooklyn Tabernacle ‘The Nobility of True Abnegation,” his text being: # Yejtnow the grace of oar Lord Jesus Christ, that, though he was rich, yet for your sakes he became poor.—U Corinth ana. vllL, t Br. Talmage said: That all the worlds which on a cold winter's night make the heavens one great glitter are Inhabitantless Is an absurdity. Philosophers toil us — that many of these worlds are too hot or too cold, or too rarifled of atmosphere for residence. But if not Ht for human abode, they may be lit for beings different from ‘ and superior to ourselves. We are told that the world of Jupiter is changing until it' is almost fit for creatures like the hnman rare, and that Mars would do for the human family, with a little change in the structure of the respiratory organs. But that there is a vast world swung somewhere, vast beyond imagination, and that It is the head<|Uarters of the * universe, and the metropolis of immen- . sity, and has a population in numbers vast beyond all statistics, and appointments of splendw beyond the capacity at canvas, or poem, or angel todescribe, is as certain as the Bible is authentic. Perhaps some of the astronomers with their big telescopes have already caught n glimpse at it. not kaowiug what it is. We spell It with six letters, and prouonace it
wim That is where Prince Jnu lived nineteenjrentnries ago. He was the King’s sou. It vis the old homestead of eternity, and all its castles were as old as God. Not a frost had ever chilled the air. Xot a tear had ever rolled down the cheek of one of Its inhabitants. There had never l>een in It a headache, or a sideache, or a heartache. There had never been a funeral in the memory of the oldest inhabitant. There had never in all the land !>een woven a black flail, for there had never tie anything to mourn over. The passage of millions of years had not wrinkled or crippled or bedimmed any of it! citizens. All the people there were in a state of eternal adolescence. What floral and pomotir richness! Gardens of perpetual bloom and orchards in unending fruitage. Had some spirit from another world entered and asked: “What is US? what is bereavement? what is sorrow? what is death’’’ the brightest of the intelligences would have failed to give definition, though to study the i|uestion there were silence in Heaven for half an hour. The Prince of whom I s|ioke bad bonucs, emoluments, acclamations, such as no other prince, celestial or terrestrial, aver enjoyed. As H« passed the street, the inhabitants took off from their brows garlands of white lilies and threw them in the way. He neTer entered any of the temples without all the worshipers rising up and bowing in obedience. In all the processions of the high days He was the One who evoked the loudest welcome, ttometimes on foot, walking in loving talk with the humblest«if th4 land, hut at other times He took a chariot, and among the S0,WO that, l>aviil spoke of His was the aseiftest ami most flaming; or, as when John described Him, be took white palfrey. with what prance of foot, and arch of neck, aad roll of mane, and gleam of eye, is only dimly suggested in the Apocalypse. He was not like other princes, waiting for the Father to die and then take the throne. When, a few years ago, an artist la Germany made a picture for the Kovat OallerVTfepreseuting Entperor William on the throne and the Crown Prince as having one tod on the step of the throne. Kmpercr William ordered the picture changed and said; ’’Let the Prince keep his foot oil the throne till 1 leave it.” Already enthroned was the Heavenly Prince side by side with the Father. Wbat a circle of dominion! What myrmidons of admirers! What unending round of glories! All the towers chimed '• . the Prince’s praises. Of all the inhabitant*. from the center of the city on over the hills nn-i clear down to the beach against the ocean of immensity rolls its billow*, the Prince was the acknowledged favorite. So wonder my „ last says that
He ou rua tW all the diamonds of the earth in one sceptre, l>wld all the palac-« of tha earth la oaa alhambra. gather alt the pearls of the sea in one diadem, put all the values of the earth in one coin, the aggregate would not express his affluence. Tea, I'aul was right. Solomon had in gold £*M),000,000 and ia silver £l."*>,HOifo. But, a greater than K. demon is here. Not the millionaire, hut the quadrillionaire of Heaven. To describe His celestial surroundings the Wble uses all colors, gathering them in rainbow ovef the throne and setting them as agate in the temple window, and hoisting twelve of them Into a wall from striped jasper at tha bass to transparent amethyst ia the capstone, whgtle between are green of emerald, had snow of peart, and blue of sapphire, aasd yellow of topes, and gray ofcchrysonrssus. and flame of jacinth. All the lovelioees of landscape in foliage, and river, and ^jll, and all eachautment aquamarine, the sea of glass mingled with Are as the sun sinks in the Mediterranean. AH the thrill of music, instrumental and vocal, harps, trumpet, doxologies. There stood the Prince, surrounded by those who had under their wings the velocity of millions of miles in n second, rich In love, rich in adoration, rich in power, rich Ia worship, rich ia holiness, rich as Uod. Bat one day there was n big disaster la a department of (lodt universe. A race fallen! A world in mine! Our planet th« scene of catastrophe! A globe swinging oat into darkness, with mountains, anti seas, and islands, aa awful centrifugal of
the css earthly ko( to kMmlr «ccla.tr* i two. aad a cattle-pea to a king’* palace. frigid aone of Mrtk to atmosphere of; celestial radiance. I tan Botimt to low, for hark » to the groan that grow* mightier while I wait Farewell ’ FareTtkM*UW|tM«( oar LonlJ«MuCtrai, that, thonich ho was rckjrl tor roar sate* He hwan poor. Wat there ecsr a contrast so orerpowertmfr at that WIwimi the noonday of Christ** celestial departure and the mid Bight of his earthly arriral? Sore snoagh, the angel* were oat that Bight in the sky. and especial motors acted as oocort hot all Mat was (torn other worlds of welcome. If one of of this world steps oat at ns so and, aad the baadi
and middle-aged Balthasar and old Matebion: To know how poor ha was, pi amine all B>e record i of real estate in all Aat Oriental country and sea what vineyard, or what houaa, or what Bald ha owned. Hot one. Of what mortgage was ha the mortgagee? Of what tenement eras ha the landlord? Of what lease was ha the lessee? Who ever paid him rent? Mot owning the boat on which he sailed, or the beast on which he rode, or the pillow on which he slept. He had so little estate that in order to pay his tax ha had to perform amiracle, putting the amount of the assessment in a fish’s mouth and haring it hauled ashore. And after his death the world rushed in to take an inventory of his goods, and the entire aggregate was the garments he had worn, sleeping in them by night and traveling in them by day, bearing on them the dust of the highway and the saturation of the sea. Pan! in my text did not go far from hitting the mark, did he. when he said of the missionary Prince: For your makes he became poor? The world could have treated him better if it had chosen. It had all the means for making his earthly condition comfortable. Only n few years before, when Pompey, the General, arrived at Brindisi, he was greeted with arches and a costly column which celebrated th» 13,000,000 people whom he had killed or cono.uered, and he was allowed to near his triumphal robe in the Senate. The world had applause for imperial butchers but buffeting for tbe Prince of Peace; plenty of golden chalices for the favored to drink out of, but our Prince must put hit lips to the bucket of tbe well by the roadside after he had begged for a drink. Poor? Born in another man’s barn and eating at another man’s table, and cruising the lake in another man’s Ashing-smack, and buried in another man’s mausoleum. Four inspired authors wrote of his biography, and innumerable lives of Gfcriel have been published, bat he composed bis autobiography in most compressed way. He said:
I harm trodden th« winepress alone. Boor in th<> estimation of nearly alt the prosperous classes. They called him Sab-bath-breaker, wine-bibber. traitor, blasphemer, and raueacked the dictionary of opprobrium from lid to lid to express their detestation. I can think now of only two well-to-do men who espoused his cause, Xicodeujus and Joseph, of Arimathea. His friends for the most part were people who, in that climate where ophthalmv or inflammation of the eye-ball sweeps ever and anou as^ scourge, had become blind, sick people who were anxious to get well, and troubled people in w hose family there was some one dead or dying. If he had a purse at all it was empty, or we would hare heard what was done with the contents at the post-mor-tem. Fwr! The pigeon in the dore-cote, the rabbit in it's burrow, the silk-worm in its cocoon, the le« in its hire is better provided for. better off, better sheltered. Ave, the brute creation has a home on earth, which Christ bad not. If on windy days the roves tlamtol like a dancing skiff. "• Not the le«» he lores hts hsree On the bo-om of the cliff. It almost with eagle pinion O'er the Alps the chamois roam. Ye,t he has some small dominion Which, no doubt, he rails his home. Rnt the Crown Prince of all heavenly dominion bad less than the raven, less tbau the chamois, for he was homeless. Aye, in the history of the universe there is no otiieffftnstance of such coming down. Who ran Count the miles from the top of the throne to the bott om of the cross? Cleopatra, givla; a banquet to Anthony, took a |«earl worth $101,000 and dissolved in vinegar ami swallowed it. But when our Prince, according to the evangelist, In his last honrs took the vinegar, in It bad been dissolved all the pearls of His heavenly royalty. Down until there was no other depth for Him to touch, troubled uutd there was no other harassment to suffer, poor until there was no other pauperism to torture. Billions of dollars s|>ent in wars to destroy men. who Will furnish the statistics of the value of that precious blood that was shed to save us? Ye knoar the grace of our lord Jesus • Christ, that, though he was rich, yet tor your sskes he
Became poor Italy who study thin (ril in two place* can fatly reach it* power, the Holy Land of Asia Minor and the Holy I .and of Heaven. How I should like tome day to take a drintAuit of Jacoh’t well, and take a tail on tlalilee* and read the Sermon on the Mount while standing on Olivet, and seethe wilderness where Christ was tempted. and be some afternoon on Calvary at about three o’clock, the hour at which closed the crucifixion, and sit under the sycamores and by the side of brook*, and think and dream and pray about the poverty of Him who came our souls to save. Hut you and 1 will probably be denied that* and so here, in another continent, aud in another hemisphere, and in scenes as different ns possible, we recount, ns well we may, how poor our Heavenly Prince became. And in the other Holy Land above we may all study the riches' that he left behind when He started for earthly expedition. Come, let ns bargain to meet each other at the door 1 of the Father’s mansion, or on the bunk of the river just where it roll* front under the throne, or at the outside gate. Jesus got the contrast by exchanging that world for this: we will get it by exchanging this world for that. Thera and then yon will understand more of the wonder* of the grace of our Ixjcd Jesus Christ, who. Though he wss rich, yet tor your takes became poo.Yes, grace, free grace, sovereign grace, omnipotent grace. Among the thousand* of words in the language there is no mure queenly word. It mean* free a»d unmerited kindness. My text has no monopoly of the word. One hundred end twenty-nine times doas the tt»b»e ealogtae grace. It is > .*oor swnng wide open to let into the pardon of God all the millions who choose to enter HL John Newton sang of it when he wrote: Amazing grace, how sweet the sound. That saved a wretch like me: Phillip Doddridge put it into nil hymn* ology when he wrote: (trace. Us a charming sound. Harmonious to the ear: Heaven wtth the echo shall monad. And alt the world shall hear.
One of John Banyan's groat books is entitW “Abounding (trace.’’ “It ia all of pat* that 1 am saved** has been on the lips of hundred* of dying Christians. The boy Sammy was right when, being examined for admission into church membership, he was asked: “Whose work was yoor salvation?” and he answered: “Part mine and part Hod's." Then the examiner asked: “What part did you, do, Sammy?” and the answer was: “I opposed Ood all I' could, and he did the rest." O. the height of it, the depth of it. the length of it, the breadth of it,the Grace of Ood! Mr. Fletcher baring written a pamphlet that pleased the King, the King offered to compensate him, and Fletcher answered : “There is only one thing I want, and that is more grace." Yes, Mood-bought hearers, grace to Ure by ami-grace to die by. Grace that eared the publican, that saved Lydia, that saved the dy.ng thief, that sared the jailer, that saved am. But the riches of that grace will not be fully understood until heaven breaks ia upon the soul. An aid Scotchman, who had been a soldier in one of the Kuropeaa wars, wa< sick and driag in one of oar American hospitals. His one desire was to see Scotland and his old home, and once a rain walk the heather of the highlands and to hear the bagpipes of the Scotch regiments. The night that the old what reckless but kind-hearted, got a company of musicians to cote and piny under :he eid soldier’s wind urn, and among the thlTthT^wkiaus 'began* thJdying*Md nan ia delirium said: “What’s that, what’s that? Why it’s the pa^tam’ttatm. Thank Ood.Ibaveg^t
!—L!! JJ !‘5Sli|BS!Sm J-!—!—-Hmtm, ud iki music that you want to hear now la the song of (roe grace, and the music you waat to hoar when yon die is tree grace, Midi forever before the throne of God you will! sing of the Grace of our Lord Jeans Christ, who, though he was rich, (tor roar ashes became poor: Yea, yes, for our sates! It was not fin pleasure excursion that he came, tor it. was ail pain. Itt was not on astronomical exploration, for he knew this world as well before he flighted as afterward. It was not because, he was eompeled to come, for he volunteered. It was not because it wns easy, for he knew that it would be thorn, and spite, and hunger, and thirst, and vociferation of angry mobs. For your sates! Wipe away your tears. To forgive your wrong-doing, to companionshin your loneliness, to soothe your sorrows, to sill with yon by the newmade grave, to bind np your wounds in the ugly battle with the world nod bring you home at last, kindling up the mists that fall on your dying vision with the sunlight of a glorious morn. For yotir sake! No, I willl change that. Paul will not care, and Christ will not care if I chapge it, for I must get into the blessedness of the text myself, and so Isay: “For our.takes!” For we all have our temptations, acid bereavements, and con
met*. For our takes: He who deserve for our sins to be expatriated into a world as much, poorer than this as this earth was poorer than Heaven. For our sakes! But what a fr uitful coming down to take ns gloriously up. 'When Artaxerxes was hunting, Tire* barns, who was attending him, showed the King a rent in his garment. The King said: “Ho* shall I mend it?” “By giving it to me,” said Tirebaxus. Then the King gave him the robe, but commanded h irn never to wear it, as It would be inappropriate. See the startling and comforting fact! While our Prince throws off the habit, he not only allows ns to wear it, but commands us to wear it. and it will become us well, and for the poverties of onr spiritual state we may put on the splendors of Henveuly regalement. For our sakes! O, the personalty of this religion! Not an abstraction, not an arch under which we walk to behold elaborate masonary, not an ice castle like that which Empress Elisabeth of Russia over a hundred years ago ordered constructed, winter with its trowel of crystal eem >nting the huge blocks that had been quarried from the frozen rivers of the North; but a father’s house, with a wide hearth crackling a hearty welcome. A religion of warmth and inspiration, and light and cheer: something we can take into our hearts, and homes, and business recreations. and joys and sorrows. Not an unmanageable gift, like the galley presented to Ptolemy, which required four thousand men to row, and its draught of water was so great that it could not come near the shore, but som > thing yon can run up any stream of annoyance. however shallow. Enchantment now. enrichment for ever! Right about face! for you are going in the wrong direction. While vou are in a favorable mood for it, enter into life: Here and jnst now decide every thing that makes for peace and Heaven. Agassiz says that he has stood at one place in
in* Alps ne count mrow a ejnp mio the water in «ns d r.»ction and it would roll on into the Herman Ocean, or lie coaid throw a chip into the water in another direction and it would reach the Black sea by the I>anub-«, or he could throw a chip in another direction, and it would enter the Mediterranean by the Rhone. How far apart the Mediterranean, anttyhe Black tea, and the German ocean! Standing to-day on this Alps of Gospel privilege, you can project vonr soul into right currents, ttnd it will roll on into the ocean of life, or project it in the wrong direction, and it will roll into the sea of death. But hour far apart the two distances! May God help us to appreciate more and more the momentous meaning of our text. The seven arise meu of Greece were chiefly known each for one apothegm: Solon for the saying,- “Know thyself;” Perinnder for the saying. “Nothing is impossible to industryt'hiio for the saying, “Consider-the end:?, Thales for the saying, “Suretyship is the precursor of ruin.” And 1’aul, distinguished for a thousand utterances. might well afford to be memorable for the saying: You know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that, though he was rich, yet for your sakes became poor, that ye through his poverty might be rich. . -:—-sea—OUGHT NOT TO MARRY. ttkj Persons ABIrted with Hereditary IMsease Should Kornata Single. A correspondent wants to know if people who are afflicted with hereditary diseases ought not to be punished tor getting married, and entailing their diseases upon innocent children We hardly think that such persons should be punished forgetting married. although, doubtless, there is a latte class of both men and women who are disqualified for matrimony by their condition as to health. Where there is some simple . - ailment, about which no concealment is affected. or whore there is the obvious feebleness of old agei the association will be fair enough, if both, parties are willing. But where there is a deep-seated aad fatal hereditary disease, which does not make an appearance till late in Ufa, and whore the party so affected mantes without a full disclosure of the nature at the cane, the act •soar of adaageroos. reprehensible character. It may hs that the erring party is young. aud‘ignorant of the fall extent of the en! done; but la thin ease the blsme is only transferred to parents or other guardians. Where there is a liability to heriditary disease. H becomes a duty, both to others and to one’s self, to abstain from the marriage tto A person who take# a hereditary disease into the marriage connection, may be said to be laying the foundation of a life of trial and misery, like all other selfish wrong acts, II is severely punished In each a case, children are often sources of anxiety and affliction to their parents, or wring their hearts by w^at reason may afterward acknowledge as a comparative mercy—premat ore death. Imagine the feeling of a parent who sees them endeared object* going on to their almost certain doom, conscious that earthly aid is all in vain to counteract the decrees of nature Or suppose the more agonizing feelings with which the first symptoms of a hereditary hUntnl taint are observed arising' The bean of every one melts with compassion at the mention of such distresses; yet there can not he a doubt that the parties are only leaping the natural harvest of the seeds of bitterness which they have sown.-A’. T. LM-ter WORDS OF CHEER. Whg They Can Be Called Uw Lslrkators eg the n-teUoas at Life. It may seem a, little matter, this of giving voice to ana's feelings in some loving word, test nothing can he more truly expressive, and cmr friends are made thereby more truly oars. The reticent spirit which given tug the depth Oit feeling within may possibly be understood by a very few. bat sons are more apt to be thoroughly uusunder•tood. or stand in greater danger of being wound ed by thorn whom approval is dear to And i* this is quite as largely at education as of natural temperament tbs child should be encouraged to voice its natural instincts of good feeling, and not repress aad restrain them. It in not enoneh for the Httle one lo love ite friend. Itrimnid the^Mue not natural, and taught* them both by precept and manner. It B indeed a t toclid i if they do him. to the words at love go far
— among which are the Shroud, the Tosth, the Casket, the Oraee, and the SUf. The Stif U e humorous publication, devoted inclusively to the retailing at email jokes concerning fatal accidents and mortuary affairs. The others are pretentious, solemnlooking journals, profusely illustrated with the latest patterns in coffins, shrouds and ether pleasantries connected with the grave. A special department entitled "Chit-Chat of the Trade” adorns the editorinl page of the Shroud. It is illustrated with a cot of two gentlemen, who look as though they had just risen from the grave, and who, seated upon a couple of coffins, are smoking cigaretteu end evidently discussing the beneflts of the letest medicine. In the same paper, one portion of a column only is devoted to levity. The department is called “Nut-Crackers”, and embellished with a cut representing a person with a ferocious mustache standing on a coffin, and breaking nuts with a shinbone on the top of a gravestone. Use Serpent for a Bracelet, Mile. Mars always carried about 'with her a tame adder, which she entwined around her arms in imitation of the Roman ladies. The contact of this reptile it said to have imparted great fresh ness to the skin of the great tragedienne.
sty Without Palau “What makes my skin to dark and mu,1.1,' Mr cheeks war* »n« eo smooth and raddy! I aao tha host eoemetKw made ' la what a lovely maiden said.' "That's not the care, my eharralnc Mitt,'* The doctor eald—” remember this: If you yourtkln would keep from taint, lHsoard the powder and the patnu -_ for all tueh Ills' Is this, remarked the man of pills: “ Knrich the blood and make It pure— In this eon'll tod the only cure.*' Dr. Pierce’* Goldeu Medical Discovery mil do this without fail. It has no equal All druggists. ‘TtoTKL Is very heavr this season," said the tired suburban as the fat woman sat down and wedged him into about four inches of the seat Tnr>«* who are trying to break up the baneful habit of intemperance will experieneogreat benefit front the use of Prickly Ash flitters. Liquors derange the system. Prickly Ash Bitters will remedy the evil results and restore the brain, stomach and liver to healthy action, thereby st rengtheaing the will power, thoroughly cleansing and toning up the system and removing every taint of disease. It is pjirely a medicine and while pleasant to the Juste, it can not be used as a beverage by rc&son of its cathartic properties. * Wife—“In the game of lawn tennis, my dear, what is the most difficult thing to acquire?” Husband—“The law u.”—Pads. •Caktersyuxe. G»., Jlov. ft. 156. I Ha vs been handling Smith's Bile Beans for more than a year, and my trade has been pleased with them from the start, or first introduction in this place. Everv onespfaks in highest terms of them. I could get a number of testimonials if necessarv. M. R,Woai>, Druggist. "Mr bark is on the sea," remarked the man who sent his dog on shipboard. —Jlf«rcAaat Zruanfar. How Intelligent Women Deckle. When the question has to be met as to what is t he best course to adopt to secu re a sure, safe and agreeable remedy for those organic diseases and weaknesses which afflict the female sex, there is but ono wise decision, via: a course of self-treatment with Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It is an unfailing specific for periodical pains, laisplaci'naent, internal inflammation, and all functional disorders that render the lives of so many women miserable and joyless. They who try it, praise it. Of druggists. A failure to vaccinate is punished! at Phcenix A. T., by J3U0 fine or six months In jail. Invisible, but l’otent for Evil, Malaria, like some malignant spirit, bo rer* in the air, invisible, but potent forovil,often where its existence is not suspected. This enemy of health sometimes springs into existence where it has never been before:: not only in periodically pest-ridden localities, but in places previously healthy. Its remedy and its preventive is always Hostetlter’s Stomach Bitters; also a curative for dyspepsia, liver complaint and constipation. Cisco, Tex., Nov. 11,156. Smith's Bile Beans have an immense sale here, and in an experience of many years in the drug business, I have never sold any pill with more general satisfaction, than Smith's Bile Beans. lies j*>et fully. Jso-T. Creech, Druggist.
Mental gymnastics—jumping to a cortcluA man with A wheelbarrow on the ititlewalk is not Terr popular. but he generally oarxiee svery thing before him. user No. lit. FREF.!—To Merchants Onlt: A tlireefoot, French glass, oval-front Show Case. Address at once. K. W Tassiu. & Co., S5 State Street, Chicago. A raiciLT pearporcupuie.—JMm —the hedge-hog and tha Monwoctjl Iiju W* have been selling Smith s Bde BenLtor over a rear, ami have found a ready sale for them; and they give good satisfaction to those who use them. Sraioos & Be >... Druggists. Tax real estate agent is not necessarily qualified to act as “property" man for a theatre.—Jftntwi Troaaiar. Bt its mild, soothing and healing properties, Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy cures the worst cases of nasal catarrh, also “cold in the head,” coryxa. and catarrhal headaches. 90 cents, by druggists. CUdit differs from wta* in this respect: It does not tin prove with age. Tn Itching caused by akin diseases is always relieved by Glenn’s Sulphur Bowl Hill’s Hair and Whisker Dye, 90c. The best. erallj be found is tost tn love he can irenby tending a belle after V. Opium in Pise's Cure for ConsumpCures where other remedies toil. Sc. Tn moonshiner's conscience wouMI, of " Toiot-Jfmisal Ir afflicted with Sore Byes ms Dr. ltaac it EyeWater. Druggists sellit.iiae. A tocgb employed In court becomes n la. gal teadar. so to speak. —-V. O. THE MARKETS.
Wilt® of the system. It toms the > t Hie body, <ma» comes that tired feeling. (ins pui y sad ruality co the Mood, and clears and freshe n tbs mind. “ Hood's Sarsaparilla as a bloo uriBer has no equal. It toons tbs syntein. street tl ens and lnrJg? orates. string new Me. 1 hare tal « > It for ktdn»:r complaint, with the best results.” 3 B. ancmtSKS, 81 Pearl Street. Cincinnati. O. “ When I took Hood's Barra parti s that hsasinest In car stomach left: the dullness i my head, and the gloomy, despondent feeling d: si ppeered 1 Isgs o to get stronger, my blood gain » better drcu ntlna. the coldness In my hands and f ct left me. sued my kidneys do not bother me a: I afore.” s. vr. II i:ll, Attorney-st-Lew. Miller? t« n . O. Hood’s Sarsaparilla gold by all druggists. 81: sb forge Prepared only by C. L HOOD 4 COm Apothecaries 1 owell. Mass. 100 Doses One Itollar
EAVE V 3 UR EVES) Dr. E. D Uurt. of Nw* York,** in. s iiKwIHlOel' li*4i* t£* w Ki _ I* * v Uanl *4 J ■ cmcue*. « ■ to «*<* t p UIRM lid* « l ri ,- • in « > than knit I
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ROPSY (3T* TREATED FREE. Have treated Dr*w And t: complications with uu>st wonderful succ<-as;. u»eve*et;jtbte remedies entirely her alese. Kernore all symptoms of I>rop*T n 0 to 0© days. Cum patients pronounce t topeless by the best phystctans. From flr t lose symptoira rapidly disappear.and tr t mdavsat lenst of all symptoms are rem v ed. Born© may cry bumbo* without knowing any tiilrtflt about It. Ute* me mber it costs you nothin* to res li t© the merit of oar treatment for yourself. W•* are<D istantly curia* cases of Ion* stand in*—oases that l are been tapped a o umber ©ftimes and the patient d w I a red unable to Urea week. Give full history of care. name, a**, hex. 4<>s Ion* afflicted. etc. 8end for true pamphlet, coce tain in* testimonial*. Tea days'trw.t uent furnished free he mail. If you order trial, y*u must return this advertisement to ns with » eonta in stamps Co pay postage. Kpilepsv < Fits! pos ti rely cured. N. H. GREEN * SONS* M. Da , Atlanta, Ca.
tflEEFEUB LE i [t)NIO
M/tjj Is prepaf d solc'.r tor the cure ore o t» plaint* whldh (fOtm-: afflict all v> ©mankind. It giTes tone and strength to the Qtcr.ce ornos, and corrects danjrerons displacement < and lrregularltheft. ltisofgrreatvalne tn change >ntfe. Theuseof MEBKELLmPMALETO?t 5C >>«r1n)cpregnancy greatly relieves the pains o f Motherhood ajiJ promotes speedy recovery. It assists nature to safely make the critical change from girlhood to womanhood. It tspleasant to the tiste and may ha taken at all times with perfect sa: e y. Price,f £ - F<V* SAL* BY ALL Dtr6 31fT«. J.B.MERKELL L*RCt»CO..Soicl r »n..ST.LOttt& STRICTLY VEGETABLE. CttreConrttpatkro. Indigestion. >-spepeiaJ,E«i> Ek’k Headache, Liver Complaint s Loss of Appetite, Biliousness. Nervousness. iaundica, etc. Tor Sale by ail Drontista. Price. *» Catewars MMiFUTueiRs ca. r. touts, m. FOB ALL XUSOBDEX ii OF THK Stomach, Liter ftsT and Bnwss
HiHtochs, Catarrh, Croon, Sara FiraM, RHEUM ATS*, Lbm Bach, Stiff Joints. Sjriins, Bt^m* Wounds, Old Sms vdl All Aches and Pains. n* BUT teMioiouial. nnin. 1 y n> mom an <*>*• V w®,.ctalm for thB nmrSy. E It Cures Yea. That’s held*®! .•04 by Drumtata. Meta. 8*>?cti 3 ^oKUDatt^l free Mrau M IZARD (ML COW t BY CHKAOQ
f « cfcrtbins rr* !• _ «8 KBi> 14 it .m can km t%iij» i » you «ut ttim pocket*. V'Wtiurr ffcfc p*ickr «t«,oral 0*1 poctartlaw ar titer , Sou* . wi ll spring ieo^oflB (wMdk. »J
*>ws wajr. bovver, Is to :« »i sgr «J|». is to «• to x Vj
iutiug, transient pninsnere and there, coil feet, drowsiness after meals, wakefulness, at usturbed and unrefreshing sleep, constant, ndescribaW* feeling of dread, or of impend"ffriubave all, or any considerable number dilioue Dyspepsia, or Torpid Liver, associated rith Dyspepek or Indigestion. Tbs mmrii omplioated your disease has become ton pester the number and diversity of syrnpDna No matter what stage it has reached. Or, Pierce’s Golden Medlcallftseovery Vlli subdue it, if taken according to tfirecions for a reasonable length of time. If not :ured, complications multiply and Ooneump. Jon 5 the Lungs. Skin Diseases, Heart Disease, Rheumatism, kidney Disease, or other gravo n&huiies are quite liable to set in and, sooner or later, induce a fatal termination. Dr. Pierce’s Goldeil Medical Die* covery acts powerfully upon the Liver, and through that great blood-purifying organ, cleanses the system of all Wood-taints and Impurities, from whatever cause arising. It ill equally efficacious in acting upon the Kidneys. and other excretory organa, cleansing, strengthening, and healing their diseases. An u> appetising, restorative tonic, it promoted aS ss® this wonderful medk-ine has gained grea t celebrity in curing Fever and Ague. Chilis and Fever, Dumb Ague, attd kindred diseases. YOU 7
CURES ALL HUMORS, from a common Blotch, or Eruption, to th» worst Scrofula. Salt-rheum. “ Fever-sores. ’ Scaly or Rough Skin, in short, all diseases caused by had blood are conquered by this powerful, purifring, and invigorating medicine. Great Eating Ulcers rapidly heal under its benign Influence. Especially has it maniested Its potency in curing Tetter, Ecaema. Bolls, Carbuncles. Sore Eyes. ScrolIrysipehta, 1 ileus Sores and Swellings, Hip-Joint Di J White Swellings." Goitre, or Thick Neck, and Enlarged Glands. Send ten cents iu stamps for a large Treatise, with colored oUtve, oo Skin Diseases, or the same amount for a Treatise on Scrofulous Affections. ‘FOR THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE.'* nse It by using Dr. Pierw’i KoldeShl&rSleS Dtarorery, and good digestion, a fair skin, buoyant spirits, ritatl strength and bodily health will be eetahUshed. CONSUMPTION, which isSarofuIa of the Lunge, I and eunSPby this remedy, if Taken in the Is arrested earlier staged of the disease. From its mapvwlous power orer this terribly fatal disease, when flrst offering this now world-famed remedy to the jSubHuTDr. Pierce thought serioulr of calling it hit “Cossnimos Ctraa, but abandoned that name as too restrictive fee a medicine which, from its wonderful combination of tonic, dr strengthening, alterative, or btooddeanaait, anti-buioua, ^pectoral, and nutritire proparti es, is unequalcd. not only as a remedy for Consumption, but for alii Chronic Diseases of the
Liver, Blood, and Lungs. For Weak Lunas. Spitting of Mood. Short ness of Breath, Chronic Nasal Catarrh. Brest; ehitis. Asthma. Severe Coughs, and kindred affections, it is an efficient re-medy. Sold by Druggists, at $m or Six BottlS for t-VnOi _ _ r#“ Send ten cents in stamps for Dr. Pierced book on Consumption. Address, VsTtfi Qispusvy Medical IssseiatiH, 6«3 Wain St- BUFFALO, N. r.
SEVER SUCH kBARGAIN BEFORE REPEATING RIFLE Ml
IF New from Fftctorr. We stake oaf
^ reputation of 47 years on tmsKin*. aita guarantee It the kitgwt ofcr ever made. Sr ndt«e. In stamp* for Illustrated — IflO^cV Iteacriptiee Uls'OTr. Unas. Kfcs.
FRAZER AXLE GREASE. Bnrtintiw. World M»d* oatr tar «k* FniarL^rle* Ur Co. W Chinch X-Y.a ShUmta. Sold *r»r*«*rr*
THE CINDERELLA
WHITE WIRE BUSTLE TjnTUB n TT1 TiW . and for LmtUm vhodo not w oh to ««r the extreme of fashion. On.)/ ACm *E\T BY MAIL « reeelpt mi PRICE. ZDC.WKTM 4 VEILS «? CL mA£TSL>k* _ for Cfctorth to the to Cee, end < CATARRH £*A< AGENTS Iiu.ES5.oi n* r *»». r »«re time. It is a rare opportunely for i pi ■—wl proltaMc b—toiB or In c Jtukrv ton wuu iaj ocher imetneea remeemim free. Addrem. ALPINE SATE CO. CtartaaatL OMik SHI REPAIRS. ForellSewtaar Hackee. ^TANPAUt GoooeOnlf. TWTr»l» to»eH«t Send (or vivo lead, prua im. biuci «rr«oo_ DETECTIVES PENSIONS kind* of i punu. u.& CoL fnf CRIiPIORJIAY PRESSES! VI»J?sl,i a.« n'tt «55« <•>-. WITCHES FROM SI.25 S^SISSK &1 . if m ■ i ioUwmird. SuunpforV ' lu»«* WauaciSMT. SALESHER ggSmSgS wer^e* tit rb» Vent Permanent pooitfoae: pay- Outfit fKA STABBWP poaittoon; jpxd ' UouLaiana. M-j. AWEWNOVElssgy^ta^tg copy toUPmxomMUSiBEtAPfctiaielphla.
OPIMSSSSSssS, ___ Xt* Tailor System of Deo* Coiling. MOOOT t CR, CtnrtnnoJljX ISiHKBMUBBiSK HabttCurad«u&~,M~tcr fUm5$!gH?£&SE, ,<X EDUCATIONAL
R. BERRIDCE & CO.. (Successors to "Woods So Canatsey.) PROPRIETORS OP Star Livery, Feed and Sale Stables, CORNER FIFTH AND WALNUT STREETS, PETERSBURG ! = ? - ■ £ ■' lS%§|.. ' : ' Urst-Class Bneeies anil Safe Horses forth* public at armonable prices. Horses board•4 bp the day or week. tSIve this arm your p« rooisre, and you-will reoelre fair treatment. The well-known hostler, tu Kjitos. will be fouad always on haul. —: NEW FURNITURE STORE! This Arm has opened a large stock of Sew Furniture, ail the latest styles la tefeftak, larMes, Safes, (Us, Brans, taai Cases. Tables, Safes. Our eootl* are all nee -no old stock to select from. Onr place of business Is at Kin* • rd stand, where ws can be found scilin* as cheap as any house in the country. We al » -si a lull stock of UNDERTAKERS’ SUPPLIES F. M. BANKS, ----- Petersburg, Ind.
DKT GOODS. JOIIlSr HAMMOND. NEW GOODS To which ha directs attention. Ill* DRY GOOD-; are aratclaas, and the stock la largo Hats, Gaps, Boots, Shoes and Notions. Give him a call anti you will be eonsint-ed that he is gtTin* BARGAINS on bis entire stock. SOLID GOODS AT LOW PRICES. EUGENE HACK. ANTON SIMON. HACK db SIJVEOTVT, -Proprietors at— THE EAGLE BREWERY. VINCENNES, INDIANA,* Furnish the Best Article of Beer the Market Affords AND SOICIT ORDERS FROM ALL DEALERS BiDTTLE OR KEG BEER SUPPLIED TO FAMILIES. On Sal© at _A.11 Saloons. ISAAC T. WHITE. FRED'S H. BURTON. MARSHAL G WHITS. _ db WHITE, V/VTiolesale Druggists AND BKALKRS IX Paints, Oils, Dye Stuffs, Window Glass and surgical instruments. No. too Main Street, - - - Evansviille, Ind. U! TM]0 OSBORN BROTHERS . «aim removed to their elegant Sew Bultdi^jon Main street, where they have a lari* an« BOOTS AND SHOES, For Men. Women and Children. W* keep R. I. Stevena* and RmaaaraanIl at me Shoe*. Petersburg. Indiana. C? BURGER & BRO. FASHIONABLE MERCHANT TAILORS, F«l«nkaq[, ludiattn, fire MM » La® M i Lafe Stylo of Pint* M, Consisting «tf *k» v«ry bnst Suitings had Broadcloths. Perfect Fits ant Slyies Gasrseieei Prices as lew »s ■ il-ll ■ PS - <*; - - • ■ ' __
FINE SHIRTS i ■ ;» *a %
