Pike County Democrat, Volume 21, Number 30, Petersburg, Pike County, 17 December 1890 — Page 4

*_ I life has ended for want of ■ precaution in the hour of need . When fever and infiuania are abroad, when _the damp chilly d^jri touch the marrow waves. w* rtsisvss should be fortified hy a use of that sujoerb “So TB* the stoop ter. I)ld broke Times. I von you called to see Ida duugh«k any thingi” “Tee, ha engagement.” - Philadelphia false There are knaves now who represent certain local blitu poisonous stimuli os identical with session properties akin to those of t met with ers aud or possessing properties akin to those of Hostetter’s giomaob Bitters. These scamps only succeed in foisting their trashy compounds upon people unacquainted with the genuine article, which is as much their opposite us day is to nigh t. Ask. and take no substitute for the'grond remedy for malaria, dyspepsia, consti pation, rheumatism and kidney trouble. Or course there are exceptions; to the rulo-“tho good dlo young,” but there aren’t except' ■■■.j,” bat t many of un—Elmira Gazette Jimcs, Noittn Carolina, July 33th. Messrs A. T. Shaixenbekgeb St Qu ' Rochester, Pa. I enclose two dollars for two botilea of your Malaria Antidote. The bottle yqu sent me a year ago 1 gave to a nephew of mine who had chills for more than three months, and taking medicine from the doctor all the time without Improvement. fiefore be had taken half the bottle of the Antidote he was entirely cured. Youi* truly, H. H. Conrad. no sooner iw to talk well 1888. to old enough to know tn he also learns the iue of not talking atoll.—Atchison Globe. The climate here did not agree with me and I was sick with malaria most all the time. The least exposure gave me a severe cold and my health was miserable. I grew weaker until 1 began a use of Dr. Bull's Sarsaparilla, when I gained health and strength. I recommend it as the very best strengthening medicine.—SaraA Wmlt^n, Wabash, Inti. If turkeys knew ns much as the muchdespised geese they would fly very far South in the fall.—Pittsburgh Press. —That sovereign has a little mind' who seeks to go down to posterity by means of great public buildings. It is to confide to masons and bricklayers the task of writhig history.—Talleyrand. —Thor© are many vices which do not deprive us of friends; there are many virtues which prevent our having any. —Talleyrand. f

Jr* 1 Too large —the old-fashioned pill. Too reckless in its way of doing business, too. It cleans you out, but it uses you up, and your outraged system rises up against it. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets have a. better way. They do just what is needed —no more. Nothing can be more thorough—nothing is as mild arid gentle. They re the ^smallest, cheapest, the easiest ► take. One tiny, sugariated granule's a gentle lax--three to four are ca--Sick Headache, jjion, Indigestion, Biliks, and all derange?e Liver, Stomach are promptly reperm anently cured.

JBNJOYS od and results when ■taken; it is pleasant o the taste, and acts fitly on the Kidneys, i the BTS> )OSf Wad 3 habitual i is the ever pro- ) taste ana ac- ?#. r from the niS# substances, fit qualities oomid tun ave made it r,v«rs tmuedy known. Licasafa for sale* in 50o 1 * leading dnigdnigfMwho •ttv tsmittkand wul prot «»y one^ho U it Do not accept m SYRUP COL rfifrOMLi

discourse, ill tiohlinuaon the Holy Land,was delivered by Bev. T. DeWitt Talmage in Brooklyn and New York City from The following d tionofthe series < the text: The cedars ol Lebanon which Be hath planted.—Tsaliu elv., 16. In our journey we change stirrup fof wheel. It Is four o'clock In the Morning, at Damaaotta, iiyria, and we ate a thong the lanterns oi' the hostelry waiting fot the stage to start. A Mohammedan l» high lifeiB putting hia three wives Oil board within an apartment by themselves, and oUi‘ party occupy the main apartment of one of the most uncomfortable vehicles in which mortals were ever jammed and half-strangled. But we must not l«it the disoomforts annul or disparage the opportunities. Wear* rolling on and out and up the mountains of Lebanon, their forehead under a crown of snow,_ which coronet the Angers of the hottest summer can not cast down. We are ascending heights around which is garlanded much of the finest poesy o:E the Scriptures, and are rising toward the mightiest tkfiflinioti that by any ever recognized, feigned over by the most imperial tree that ever swayed a leafy scepteiv-the Lebanon cedar, a tree eulogized in my text as having grown from a nut put into the ground by (>od Himself, and no human hand had any thing to do with its plantThe trees of Lebanon which He hath planted." The average height of this Mountain is seven thousand feet, but in one place it lifts its head to an altitude of ten thousand. No higher than six thousand feet oan vegetation exist, but below that line at the right season, ore vineyards and orchards, and olive groves, and flowers that dash the mountain Side with a very carnage of eolhr, and fill the air with aromatics that Hosea, the prophet, and Solomon, the King, celebrated as “the smell of Lebanon." At a heights of six thousand feet is a grove of cedars, the only descendants of those vast forests from which Solomon cut his timber for the temple at Jerusalem, and where at one time there were ten thousand axemen hewing out the beams from which great cities Were constructed. But this nation of trees has by human loonoclasm been massacred until only a small group is left. This race of giants is nearly extinct, but I have no doubt that seme of these were here when Hiram, King of Tyre, ordered the assassination of those cedars of Lebanon which the Lord planted. From the multitude of Uses to which It may be put and the employment of it In U»e Scriptures, the cedar is the btvtne favorite. When the plains to be seen from the window of this stage in which we ride to-day are parched under Summer heats, and not a

grass blade survives the fervidity, this tree stands in luxuriance, defying the summer sun. And when the storms oi winter terrify the earth and hurl the rocks in avalanche down this mountain side, this tree grapples the hurricane of snow in triumph, and leave the spenl fury at its feet 1'roin sixty to eighty feet high are they, the horizontal branches of great sweep with their burden of leaves needle shaped, the top of the tree pyramidal, a throne of foliage on which might and splendor and glory sit. Hut so continuously has the extermination of trees gone on that, for the most part, the mountains of Lebanon are bare of foliage, while lam sorry to say the earth in all lands Is being likewise denuded. The axe is slaying the Ldests all round the eart h. To stop the slaugh - ter God opened the coal mines of En - gland, and Scotland, and America, and the world, pi-actically saying by that: “Here is fuel; as far as possible let my trees alone.’’ And by opening'for tho human race the great quarries of granise, and showing the human family how to make brick, God is practically saying: “Here is building material; tyt my trees atoms.’’ VVe had better stop the axes among the Adirondacks. VVe had better stop the axes in all our foi> ests, as it would have been better for Syria if the axes had loflg ago been stopped among the mountains of Lebanon. To puniish us for our reckless as - sault on the forests we have the disordered seasons; now the droughts because the uplifted arms of the trees do not pray for rain, their presence, accordingto all scientist, disposing the descent of the showers; and then we have the cyclones and (he hurricanes multiplied in number and velocity because there is nothing to prevent their awful sweep. As we ride over Lebanon to-day there is a howling wind sweeping past and a dash of rain, idl the better enabling us to appreciate that description of a tempest, which was suggeted by what David had seen with his own eyes among the:»e heights, for as a soldier he carried his wars clear up to Damascus, and such a poet as he, I warrant, spent many a day on Lebanon. And perhaps while lie was seated on this very rock against which our carriage jolts he writes that wonderful description of a thunderstorm; “The voice of the Lord is full of majesty. The voice of the Lord breaketh the cedars of Lebanon. Yea, the Lord breaketh the cedars of Lebanon. He maketh them also to skip like a calf, Lebanon and Sirion like a younjj .uni- (,°* u. The voVee flumes of Ire. A*‘he lion is the _ fields, and behemoth the waters, cedar is the m t|ees. And I think one re > lfio glor.flefl an „p and down the of chan . and are enu iT much of the every rul jdhe cedar,' the very fdii I; twist blewounfl; wide-b and tem these cedars a are deep-rooted, chore down into the mountain and. fasten dations of the: earth, and clinch themselves on the ot of the deepest layer of rock reach. And'that is the diffe: tween Christians who stand tians who fall. - U is the diffe tween a superficial charade that has clutched its roots deep down, around and under the Rock ol Ages. One of the Lebanon cedars was o*amined by a scientist, and from its concentric circled it was found to be thlrtyand five hundred ;| lug. and lasting all eternity, tion, shall are those - re old, and -still standsuch a thing as eversndlfach a staunchn ess that all time and' of being its demoliNot such who are have no As (she and of Christian !h> lc

itself at the will depend and an unobt takes ell the to keep toein from Still Kitf t^rv Oh those taUWdett* who toteae With pale faces and stories of distress and subscription papers, The reason that Odd planted these cedars ill thfe Bible was to.suggest tc life that we ought, in our religious d iaracter, to be dciep like the cedar, high tore the cedar, Iwoad-brancheiT as the cedar. A traveler measured the spread of the boughs of one of these trees and found it one hundred and eleven feet from branoh tip to branch tip, and I have seen cedars of Christian character that through their prayers and Charities pill otit One branch to the uttermost parts of America, and anotherbrancii to the uttermost parts hi Asia, ana these Wide-branched Christians will k«>p bn multiplying until all the earth is overshadowed with mercy. But mark you, theSe cedars of Lebanon could not grow if planted in mild climates and in soft air, and in Careful-, ly-watered gardens. They must have the gymnasium of toe midnight hurricane to develop their arms. They must play toe athlete with a thousand winters before their feet arC rightly plant fed and their foreheads rightly lifted and. their arms rightly muscled. And if there be any other way for developing strong Christian character except b$r atoms bf trouble, t heVet heard of it. Call the mil of idartys, call the roll of thfe prophets, call the roll of the ApoSr ties, and see which of them had an easy time of it. Which of these cedars grow in the warm valleys? Not one of them. Honeysuckles thrive best on this south side of the house, hut cedars in a Syrian whirlwind. Men and women who bear thi& or read this, instead bf your grumbling because you have it hard, thank God that you are in just the best school for making heroes and heroines. _, _ It is true both for this world and the next. Such that baby in a Cradle, cushioned and canopied; graduate hint from that into A costly high fehuir And give him a gold spoon; send him to school wrapped in furs enough for an arctic explorer; send him through a college when^ he ufli! not have to study in order to get a diploma, because his father is rich; start him in ft profession where he begins with an office the flooweovered with Axminstef; and ft library of hbbks in ttossian morOCco, and Ah arm chair upholstered like a throne, and an embroidered ottoman upon which to put his twelve-dol-' lar gaiters, and then lay upon his table the best ivory cigar holder you can import from Brussels, and have standing outside his door a prancing span that won the prise at the horse fair, and lea ve him estate enough to make him Independent of all struggle, and What will become of him? if he da not die early of inanition or dissipation, he will live a Useless life, and die an unlamented death and go into A fdol’S eternity.

But what has been the history of most of the great cedars in merchandise, in art, in law, in' Wdicine, in statesmanship, in Christian usefulness? '“John, get up and milk the cows; it's late, it’s 5:30 in the morning, Split an armful of wood on your Waydut, bo that We cah build the flees for breakfast, put your bate feet on the cold oil-cloth, and break the ice in your pitcher before yoti can wash; it has been Showing and drifting again last night, and we will have to break the roads.” The boy's educational advantages, a long oak plank without any back to it, in country schoolhouse, and stove throwing out more smoke than heat. Prefv'e^ on from one hardship to ahoti.. After a while a position on salary or wages small enough to keep life, but keep at its lowest ebb. Starting i-i occupation or business With prosperous tnen trying to fight you bgek at every step. But after a good vjhile fairly on your feet, and your opportunities widening, and then by some sudden turn you are triumphant. - You are master of the situation and defiant of all earth and hell. A Lebanon cedar! John Milton on his way up to the throne of the, world's sacred poesy, must sell his copyright of “Paradise Lost” for seventy-two dollars in three payments. And-William Shakspeare, on his way np to he acknowledged the greatest dramatist of all ages, mast hold horses at the door of the London theater for a sixpence, and IJomer must struggle through total blindness to immortalitv, and John liunyan must cheer himself on the way up by'making a flute out of his prison stool, and Canova, the sculptor, must toil on through orphanage, modeling a lio n in butter before he could cut his statues in marble. And the great Stephenson must watch cows in the field for a few pennies and then become a stoker, and afterward mend clocks before he puts the locomotive on its track and calls forth plaudits from Parliaments and medals from Kings. Abel Stevens is picked up a neglected child of the street, and rises through his consecrated genius to be one of the most illustrious clergymen and historians of the century. And' Bishop Janes, of the same church, inH boyhood worked his passage from Ireland to America, and up to a usefulness, where, in the Bishopric, he was second to no one who ever adorned it.- , V\ hile in banishment Xenophon wrote hits Anabasis and Thucydides his “History of the Peloponnesian War,” Victor Hugo must be exiled for many years to the Island of Guernsey before he can come to that height in the affections of his countrymen, that OTowds Chumps Ely sees, and the adjoining boulevards with one million mourners, as his. hearse rolls down tc the Church njihe ^facteleine. on, it is a tough old world-and it' wDf keep ydtC'baek awJ you under as hstill ‘bplonif Tin, I, solSnm, Thirty years from me® in all occupations will be those who are ffd ^truggle of early life, g dollars to their it takes a utions, sicknesses op stalwart Christian a letter a few days ha^lmriMyneen a well ’-and I count not got ina and, at ‘ snows there deepest s„ would be the mildest winter of ‘Sows on these Lebanon mountains. The cedars catch that skyfull of crystals on their brow and all their long arms. Piled up in great hefts arethose snows, enough to u-iish other trees to the ground, splitting the branches from " leaving themjunt to is is of tempest saa

to send, for that Is the way oar strength and that is the w 3 serve (Sod and teach all ages _to endure and eoUqdCr.” Bb t say: (food Sheer to nil people who aTC sndwed Under. Cttt your faith id tied add yod Will come ottt gloriously. Others may lie stunted growths, or weak jumpers bn the lower levels of spirituality, but yon are gfang to be Lebanon cedars. At last it will be said of such as you: “These are they who came out of great tribulation and had their robes washed and made white in the blood of the Lamb.” ' Bnt while crossing over these mountains of Lebanon I bethink tny^eif of What an exciting sceneit niust bis when bne of the eedafs does fall. It does riot gd down like oiher tr**s with il slight crackle that hardly - makeS the woodsman look up, or a hawk-flutter :£rom a neighboring hough. When a cedar falls it is the great event in the calendar of the mountains. The axeman fly. The wild beasts slink to their dens. The partridges swoop to the valley for escape. The neighboring trees go down Under the »WM Weight iit the descend: ing Monarch. *Fhe hecks tire in cited bht of their places,- and the earth trembles as front miles around all ratines Send back their sympathetic och '*-«. Crash! Crash! Crash! Ho when the great cedars of WoridlV of Christian Influence fall it is something terriflc, Withifl the past few years how many mighty and overtopping men have gone down. There seems now to be ah epidemic of moral disasters. The moral yrorld, the religious world, the political world, the commercial world are quaking with the fall of Lebanon cedars. It is awful. We are competed to cry Out with Zttehariah, the prophet: “Howl, dr trees, for the cedar is fallen!” Soitte of the smaller trees am glad of it. When some grCaf~tlCaler in stocks goes down the small dealers dap their hands and say: “Goad faf him!4' When a great political leader gobs down the small politicians clap their hands find say: “Just as I expfected!” When a great minister of religion falls many little ministers laugh up the% sleeves and think themselves somehoy,- advantaged. Ah, my beloved^ brethren, no one makes any thing quf of moral Shipwreck. Not a WiiloW WlC rivers of Damascus, not a Sycahibre an the plains of Jericho, not an dive tree in aii Palestine is helped by the fail of a Lebanon eedar. Better weep, and pray and tremble, and listen to Paul’s advice to the Galatians when he says: ^Considering thyself lest thou also he (tempted.” No man is safe until he is Bead, unless he be divinely protected, A greater thinker than Lord Francis Bacon the world never was, and he changed the world’s mode of thinking for all time, his “iSfovuto Orgnduni” being a miracle of literature. With eighty-eight thousand dollars salary, and estates worth millions; and frohi tn6 highest judicial bench of the world he goes down-under the power of bribery, and confessed his'crime,and was sentenced to the Tower, and the scorn of centuries. Howl, cedar is fallen! fir tree, for the

PH&t By the Heavenly along the Palace Warren Hastings, nsmg until ne Deeamc Governor-General of India, and the crtVy of the chief public Wen of his day, pliinges into Cruelties against the barbaric people he had bedi sent to rule, until his name is chiefly associated with the criminal trial in Westminster hall where upon him came the anathemas of Sheridan, Fox, Edmund: Burke, the English nation, and all time. Howl fir-tree, for the cedar is fallen! As eminent instances of moral disaster are found in our own land and our own time, instances that t do dot recite lest I wound the feelings of those now alive to mottrn the shipwreck. Let your indignation against the fallen turn to pity, A judge in One of our Americaii Ccnlrts gives this experience, in a respectable but poor family, a daughter was getting a musical education. She needed one more course of lessons to complete that education. The father’s means were exhausted, and so great was his anxiety to help his daughter that he feloniously took some money from his employer, and going home to his daughter said: “There the money to complete your musical education.” The wife and mother suspected something wrong, and obtained from her husband the whole story, and that night went around with her husband to the merchant’s house and surrendered the whole amount of the money and asked giveness was denied, arrested. Tire judge, the circumstances, money had all been icumn, suggested to the merchant he had better let the matter drop for the sake of the wife and the daughter. No! he would not let it drop, and he did all he could to make the case ebnspicuous and blasting. The judge says that afterward that merchant was before him for breaking the law of the land. It is a poor rule that will not work both ways. Let him that standeth take heed lest he fall. Not congratulation, but tears when a cedar is fallen! Yet there is one cedar of Lebanon that always has and always will overtop all other's. It is the Christ whom Ezekiel describes as a goodly cedar and nder it shall come all fowl of wing.” Make your nest in that cedar. Then let the stonps beat earl* rock, and time end,, and et< -nity begin, all shall be well. Tn my journey up and down Palestine ana Syria nothing more impressed me than the trees—the terebinths, the sycainp~s, the tamarisks, the oleanders, the raw oerrya, the olives, the maples, the palms, the cedars—all of them explanatory of sb much of the Scripture*. And the fame is commg when, through an lifip jFved arbcrrtSmWe, the-wunc world Shall be circumferenced, engirdled, embosomed, emparadisdft in shade md fruit trees and’flower trees. in one pi i iucilities Kr ueeatirradtuition; "The glory ato it,” and es of the l of nstead of Heave...-/; _ tine and Syria, is a | i&Hprehard of them, a grove of them, a forest Of-them Sainfe John saw them along the streets ana on both, sides of tie river, and eyery month they yielded a great crop krf fruit. You know what an imposing appearance trees give to a city on earth, ont now if- exalts my idea of ’hen Saint. the lln^L trees!,? r the nough.4 There some thing plete all that pomp behold the upbranch Not like those st St™”sth^!ufh the lorn’ .x.icir dolorous lam-., moan like lost j down the ! *1 b you will es of mu the homes of s Kingimi are they t Mips* nnder trees. “Bh His commandmen tight to the tree Jackson’s dying i fully _ suggestive: life was cro*

m Wide Awake. A hirti order of stories, poems, articles and pictures fill toe Christmas Wide Awake from cover, to cover, while brilliant h#ar type and the discs rdmetit fit columns ve the pages a very fresh and attractive At, and we learn that the mag azine is rtuThontly enlarged to one hundred ges. Leadihg attractions include a new PI>ers serial by Margaret Sidney, the promised railroad serial, “Cab and Caboose,” by Kirk Munroe, “Drawing the Child-Figure,” the first of twelve pictorial drawing-lesson papers (with monthly prizes) by Miss Caroline Rammer, daughter of Dr. Rimmer, the art-anatomist and sculptor, and “Marietta’s Good Times,” an Italian serial by a well known Italian woman in Boston. The short stories, papers and poems (and there Is a full treasury of them, making a Christmas stocking book in fdctf are by Bailie Pratt McLean Greene, Eauua Sherwood Chester. Graham R. Tomsdtli .EtUelWyfi Wetoerald, Charlotte M. Vail, Elizabeth Robins Pennell, RgV, Georgo Whyte, Miss Hawley, John C. Carpenter, Margaret Eytinge, Miss PoulssOtt, Mrs. ClaHin and Prof. Otis T. Mason. A special feature to the fac simile reproduction of Mrs. Hemans's original manuscript of “The Landing of the Pilgrim Fathers,” which was brought to America by James T. Fields. The price of Wide Awake will remain at f3.10 a y ear, only 20 cents a number. DLothrop Company, Publishers, Boston. ‘‘Does alcohol affect the blood!” asked the professor of the medical student. “I should think,” replied the young man, “that it might hare some tendency to get into the jug-mar vein, ’—Washington Post State or Ohio, Cm op Toledo, 1 „ Lucas Countf, { *• Prank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the sedior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business In the. City b t Toledo County and State aforesaid, find that salt firm will pay toe sum of one husiired dollars for each and every case of Catarrh that can not be cured by the use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure, Frank J. Cheney. Sworn to before me andsubscribedin my fsEALl W. Gleason, Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and sets directly upon toe blood and mucous surfaces of the system Send for testimonials, free. F. J. Chenet & Co., Toledo,O. Sold hjp Druggists, Too. “1 would give any thing if I but had a musical car.” “Why don’t you tako quihinol” “Quinine!” “Certainly; that will make your cars sing.”—Indlauapoli3 Jour -*- Wabash Holiday Kates. The WABASH LINE announces tk usual LOW RATES f .r the Holi ln.vs. Particulars given by the nearest Wabas' Ticket Agent. F. CHANDLER. G. P. & T. f>. Java must be a moral place to live in; we Sever see It advertisod except as “pure Sva.”—Puck. Pure soap is white. Brown soaps are adulterated with rosin. Perfume is only put in to hide the presence of putiid f,it. Dobbins’ Electric Soap is ;.urr, white, and unsoented. Has been sold siuco 1S65. Try it —More evil truths are discovered by the corruptions Of the heart than fay ths penetration of the mind.—Talleyrand, mothers’men HUES CHILI Bum iF UBRO BEFORE CONFINEMENT■ Book to “Mothers-’ Mailed free. BBADFIE1.I1 REGULATOR (XL ATLANTA, U. SOLD nr ALL DRUSOUTS.

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FREE BOARD tthroo to one joujig man from Meta taMlta who con for* ■iota tattimoaiaL of good mors) chowder ud staid lotto debit.. APPLY AT OXtf to Alabama mi HtSTSTlLl.Kj The Academy is one of the to the South, with • itam'acad^y, A LAB AH A. »ped military school* of Profee sort. ASTHMA CURED fiermaa A at hat* Cure nc*9Tjbtl9 to giveimmediate relief in the worst treses, ftswree comfortable sleep; effects euree - — TOLEDO WEEKLY (OLIDE. hew Story by Oliver Optic weeks. Very handsome China Teas mms for mbomt aothUe. The best w the world for tl.OAETeiy body in v. specimen copy. At the same time_ fjeatial1 terms to agents and see how to ni day. ho other paper in the world allows missions. INK BLADE, Te mrttAMS THIS FAFtRemy Ouja—“ Alienee in feat id other prem. .Newspaper he -> send for a tr our con A* ,kc WO.OO per iff«sr ■ms used tftcnn^ DKE.V8 CIlIl\>KiiN. Thousands of young n Uuuen in the U. S.fA. c their Urea and their health uf their happiness to Klc thtdr daily diet in 1»„,_ and Childhood hartagft Ridge s Pood. By Dm ■TOOL AnillllAND WHISKEY HABITS f W tBJSS 111 IIS CURED AT HOME m V* as! all OCT PAIN. Book of pnr-1 111 | U III tieuiars SENT FREE. IS '■ ■ ■■■ B. Bfl. WOOLLEY. M. D.. W ATLANTA, 6A. Oftee 1HH WklteksUM. *r*Jtan THIS RAFlkem? time 7M write. P«1P „~T. . to Djt. CAMFIEIiD, EYE and EAR Sir-ta£uTau rL’u1^ State Street, Chicago. ICIUO1 fh |g| AOHNWJIOBR1S, ICilUOI V Ini Washington, 0. C. • SucoeMfullr PROSECUTES CLAIMS. S. a PouloB Bonn. iting claims, atty since. JiHEllHITISi-wreijMAiM"*: cure and preventive of Rheumatism. Gout and Neuralgia. Cares where others fail. Small bottle, $1: large, $1.60. All druggists. or Jxo. W. Carroll A Son. St. Lonis, How 1 If I V CIPIf Sufferers, tend 10c for sample A lVMnLri 91 Vn doses of the acknowledged greatest Liver. Kidney and Bowel-Specific the world ever produced. Riraeir*Herbal Med., 729 Franklin,Av., St. Louis. and Tumors Cured.no knife, book free. Dm GUAT1CIN Y A DIM, 163 Elm Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. Dr-NdJUB THIS PAPER emrr ttasywawtta SANGER Yfililttfi MFI]tearn,TS1^raPhr *nd Bailroad I Uwotu enin Agent’s Business here,nnU secure good situations, write J. D. BROWN, Sed&lia, Mo. •TXAICS THIS PAPER mmj ttawywiwnts. AfiCUTC WAMTCn.^KW books, Bibles, albums. APlEiO .IfAIjICII national Pub. Co., SL Louis, Mo. A N. K-, B. 1322WREN WR1TTNC T» ADVERTISERS I'I.EASI Mat. that ,n MV the AdvcrtlMsawnt la thi.

FOR SALE BY NEWS DEALERS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 13th

The Christmas Number OF THE NEW YORK LEDGER will have a cover beautifully printed in colors containing on its front titlepage the original of the engraving here illustrated. It will also contain 20 pages of illustrations and reading matter contributed by the GREAT WRITERS OF THE DAY, and unexcelled in quality by that of any publication in the United Stales. This number will be one of the three numbers sent in 'lillgf \ Jf * response to W fc ^ \ g . our offer of m 1M W ^^|VS

; £ £ These three numbers will contain a larger number £ of illustrations and 50 per cent:, more reading matter . than tfcat. contained in any of the magazines. Therefore our offer embraces both quantity and quality. The three numbers for jto cents contain: (1) Mrs. Amelia JE. Harr's new serial,, “ The Beads of Tasmer." Mrs. Barr is the author of * that most successful serial, “ Friend Olivia,” just ^ completed in The Century; but hereafter Mrs. ^ Barr will write exclusively for The New York £ Ledger. (2) Mon. George Baneroffi's description of “ The Battle of Lake Eric,” beautifullyillustrated.' £ (3) Margaret Iceland's latest story, “ To What 1 (4) Jwmss Russell Lowell’s poem, “ My Brook,” £ written expressly for The ledger, beautifully illus- £ trated by Wilson de Meza, and issued as a FOUR- £ PAGE SOUVENIR SUPPLEMENT. £ (5) Mrs. Mr. Julia Holmes Smith starts a £ series of articles giving very valuable information £ to young mothers. £ (5) Robert Giant’s brilliant society novel, 1 “ Mrs. Harold Stagg.” £ (7) Harriet Irescott Spofford, Marion £ Harland, Marquise Lanza, Maurice £ Ihampson, and George Frederic Ear- £ sons contribute short stories. £ ■ Barton, M. W. Hazeltine and £ ' ^P^-CuJOuer (author of “Great Senators”) £ End ?”

ran, J hove, SPARKLING EDITORis, Helen Marshall North’s a Variety of delightful reading of ’ pibers of the household. is a sample of the matter which goes *• inMfp/'f HsHftnal Familv Tournal

tiqdia'the American people. [end SO £%pfS.^/er, these three numbers and ■ judge for yoursfelf, or send only $2 for a year’s subscription to THE HEW YORK LEDGER, Hebert Bot ner’s Sons, Publishers, «•» Wiu.lt M STRUT, YORK . Hi&i s