Pike County Democrat, Volume 21, Number 34, Petersburg, Pike County, 14 January 1891 — Page 4
to swing soys Cameron, “ytm^ato mistaken; I hero jttstt counted thejn; there are thirty. » ?i%hy,” says McDonald, “do yon suppose that is all the sheep I hare? I have s|ieep*on the distant hills and in the valleys, ranging and roaming everywhere. Other Sheep have I So Christ comes. Here is a group of Christians, and there is a group of Christians. Here is a Me&odist told; here is a Presbyterian fold, here is a Baptist fold, here is a Lutheran fold, and we make our annual statistics,-and ■^e'totoljwe can tell you just lgiw many ChrisUansthere are in the world; how many thp«_hre in' the church* how many of all these denominations. We iiggregnteVhem, and Yjp think we are giving an mtelligent and aocurate aceonnt; butChrist comes, and He says: -‘Wpe-fea^e not counted them right Tlmre one those whom you have never keen, those of whom, you have never Jifemrd. I have my chfTdfen in all parts itftthe earth, on all the H|ndsof the saar dn »H -the cantffiehte, in all the ^Bp^pflhat .lMte'few sheep you ive counted are all the sheep I have? Sere is a great multitude that no man n ti unber. Olher^heephaveJ which i not of this fold.” * r , ‘ Christ,* in my text,.talks of the coasrskm of the Gentiles as confidently as ough they had already been co:ngtod. He sets forth the idea that His mpte will come from all parts of tire ■rth, from all ages, from all circum-anoes^-froib all conditions. “Other <eep have I which are not of this &V to.; nek the’Hot
hqpherd wilFfctid many of His apiong those -who are at present urchgoers. There are different Sometimes.;:. ^ Hi IfcTfJr-oiuy of ChrisPu which by ehemic■ITthe greenness and the ■ been taken, and they are Hite, and delicate, and beau^BPnished. All that is wanted ■ase put over them. The minBe Sabbath has only to take an Hather and |>rush off the dnst V accumulated in the last six Pousiness, and then they are cold ■autiful and delicate as before, thing is finished: finished serttuisbed music,^finished arehitectFruits to the lord’s trpny. We say tc Fthe applicants: “Come in and get youi equipment. Here is the bath in which you are to T» cleaned, here is the helmet you are to put ou your -head, heri are the samdoUyou are to put-on youi feet, here-is thtr brdfetplite you are tt put over your hearChere is . the sword you are to take in your right hupd anc light HisbatW* with; Qui t yourselves rhajai whc years since ulm , habit alf aboui hy Pk
It* says: “How now mere and we Will steM ytkL steady! ftoW give toe yotirl Thank God he is saved! issiwedl*. 80 there are meU ttbw in me nvwon. They haVe made a shipwreck of life. While we come out to save them some swept oft—swept off before we ean reach them—and there are others still hanging on. Steady there among the ;r places! Steady! heap into this It Now Is yaur ehaiWC _fdT J This hour sotth of yoft aj# , Id fee saved.. iFaf away froin God; jgorng fa) be brought nigh. or I which, are POt^bi thisfold.” Christ hay* that ministers of the Gospel ire to tie fishers for men. Sow, when I go fishing I do not want to fish In any hody else’s pond. I do not want to go along Hohokus creek, whew thertj are ten or fifteen men ftfchliif, Snd drop my Unit Just hboiit Where they are droppiBg tMif lines. I should like to p’w a. Newfoundland fishing smack and posh out to sea fifty miles beyond the breakers. I do not think the Church 'ttfXt&igains a great deal wb*h fob take sheep from one fold and put them in another fold. It in the lost sheep on the mountains yon want to bring back —the lost sheep on the mountains. And they arc coming Id-day , yjjti &fe SOW tide hour in the tide of t&nstiah influences. Yon are going to be swept in; your rOiee is going to fcfe ■heard in prayer; J^m are going to be Wmsecrated to God; yon are going to live a life of usefulness, and your deathurronnded by Chrisand devout men Will VMtff f&& 16 your burial when ’jtjur work is done, and these words Willbe chiseled for your epitaph: “Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of Hte saints.”, And tel that history to going to begin to-day. •'Gther sheep have I Which ac* cot of this fold.” * “ten I remark, the Heavenly Shepis going to find many of His Sheep among those Who are hoW rejecters of Christianity. t do not know how you catte to reject Christianity. I' do not know whether it was through hearing Theodore Parker preach, or whether it was reading “Henan’s Life of Jesus,” or whether it was through some skeptic in the store or factory. Or it may be— probably In the ease—that you were disgusted With religion and disgusted With Christianity because some man Who professed to be a Christian defrauded you, and he'being a member of the Church, and you taking him as a representative of the Christian religion, you said: “Well, if that's religion, I don’t want any of It.” I do not know how yon came torejffit. Christianity, bttf you frankly tell me you do reject it; yftu do not think the Bibleisthe Word of God, although there are many things Unfit yon admire: you do not think that Christ was a Divine being, although yon think He was a very good man. You say: “If the.Bible be true—I nevertheless think the earlier part of the Bible IS an allegory.” And there are fifty things that I believe you do not believe. Nevertheless they tell me in regabito you that you are" ah accommodating, yon are an obliging person. H I should come to you and ask of yon a favor you would grant it if it were possible. It would be a joy for you to grant me a favor. If any of your friends eame to you and wanted an accommodation, and you could accommodate them, how glad
lis juncture what; the Bible, -it does you wouia oe. Now I am going to ask of you a favor. I wantyouto oblige me. The accommodation will cost you nothing, and will give' me great happiness. Of course you will not deny me. 1 Want you as an experiment to try the Christian religion. If it does nqt stand if it does, receive it. If you were been given up of the doctors, and I came to y&u and ! took a bottle of medicine from my pocket and said: “Here is medicine. I am Imre will help you; it has cured fifty people,” you would say: Oh, I .haven’t any confidence in it; they tell me 'all these medicines will, fail me.’" “Weli,’* I say, “will you not, as a mat ter- of accommodation to myself, just try it?” “Well:*’ you Say, “I have no objection to tryingit; if it will be any satisfaction to yon I will wy it.” You take it. Now you are sick in disq uietude, sick in sin. Ypu are hot happy. You- laugh sometimes when you are miserable. There come surges of unhappiness over vour spnl that almost swamp you. You are unhappy, struck through .with nnJfrest. Now yrill you not try this solac£, ;;fhis febrifuge, this anodyne, this Gospel medicine? “Oh,” yon say, “I haven’t any faith in it.” As a matter of accommodation, let me introduce you to the Xadd Jesus Christ, the Great Physician. “Why," you say, “I haven’t- any faith in Him.” Well, now, will' you not just let Him come, and try His power on your soul? Just let me introduce Him to you. I do not ask yeu to take my word for it I do not ask yon to take the advice of clergymen. Perhaps the clergymen may be prejudiced; perhaps we he speaking professionally; pergiVe ypu wrong advice; „ are morbid on that subject; not ask you-1< take the advice irgymen. I ask you to take advice stable layman, such as akespeare, the dramatist; at William WUberforce, the statesman; as Isaac NeMSn,the astronomer; as Robert philosopher; as Locke, the the electrician, never preached—they never to preach—but they come out, ig down, one his telescope, and another the electrician’s wire, a* an dtytr tM> parliamentary scroll—thej pome owb and they Commend Christ as s comfort touH the people, a Christ that the world needs. * * Now Itjp not ask you to take the advice of. clergymen. Take the*advice oi It does not make any differ afidifference at this juncture i may have caricatured religion fbpt men who are prom affairs, as these met atkmed, and others wht : to your mind. Yoi t skepticism. I neve: I had a gooc I have been s I do not know what that I uttered aftei . but I think it must There were time: i existence of God divinity of Christ [ tire immortality of th« ‘ 1 my own existence, I have beer l of doubt r about a great
and Uiefl HS waves jple of God, and He p have 1 which are Mt Of tjus fold.” Again I remark, the Heavenly Shepherd is going to {let many of His sheep amongthcse who have been flung away because of evil habits.
lie giVC tHe prodigal: i hear ._ people talk as thdbgfi they thought the graee df God were a chain Of forty dr fifty links, and When they had ynn but then there WaS nothing to tdu'ch the depth of,-a man’s iniquity. 1 f a man were ont hunting for* deer, and got off the track of the deer, he would hunt amid the bushes and the brakes longer for,, the lost game than he will look for a lost soul. They sajbM a niiafi bis bad tHe fielirlum trentfens twice be cad dot be cured. They say if a woman has fallen from integrity she can not be redeemed. All of which is an infinite slander on the Gospel of the Sod of God. MCfi who say that kpoW fibtbiiig ibont practical religion in their owns heart. How many times will God take a man Who has fallen? Wellj 1 can dbt give yon the exact figures, hdt 1 Can tell yon at what point HS certainly will take him back, Four hundred and nidelgr-nidd tidies. Why do I say four hdtidied ted niriety-nine times? Because the Bible Says seventy times seven. Ndw figure thii out,, yod who do not think a man can fall four times, eight tuBes, ten tidies, twenty times,' one hundred tidies, four hundred times, and yet be saved. Four hundred and ninety-nine times! Why, there is a great multitude .before the throne of God who plunged into all the depths of iniquity. ThCVC Were fib Sins, thdy did not commit, bill they Wefd washed of body, and washed of mind, and washed of sonl, and they are before the throne of God now forever happy. 1 say that to teeodrage any man Who feels there is fib chance lot* Itiifi. Good Templars will not save you, although they are a graHH institution. Sons of Temperance will not save you, although there is no better society on earth. Signingthe temperance pledge will not save yon, although It is a grand thing to db. NO OnC htit God ban Save ydn. tk> fibt phi jrohf confidence in broniide of pbtasidpm, or any thing that the apothecary can mix. Put your trust in God! After the church has cast yon off, and the bank has cast you off, and social circles have cast you <5ff, and mother has cast you off, at your first cry for help God will,bend clean down to that ditch of your iniquity te help yoli out. Oh, what a Gbd Hb iS! Long suffering and gracious! I There ihay bt in this house some whose hand trembles so with dissipation that they <Xmld hardly hold a hymn book. I say to such, if they are here, “Yon-will..preach the Gospel yet; you will yet, some" bf you, carry the Holy Communion through the aisles, and you will be acceptable to every body, because every body will know yott arc saved and purified by the grace of God, and- a consecrated hum, wholly consecrated. Your business has got to come up, your physical health is to be rebuilt, your family is to he restored, the church of God on earth and in Heaven is to rejoice over your coming. “Other sheep have I which are not of this fold.” If this is not the Gospel, I do not know what the Gospel is. It can scale any height, it can fathom any depth, it can compass any infinity. I think one reason why there are not ihore pedple saved is WC do not sWnig the door Wide enough Open. NoW there is only one class of persons in this house about whom I have any despondency, and ’ that is those who have been hearing the Gospel for perhaps twenty, thirty, forty years. Their outward life moral, but they tell you frankly they do not love the Lord JCstts Christ; have not trusted Him; have not been born again by the Spirit of God. They are Gospel-hardened. The Gospel has no more effect upon them than the shining of the moon on the city, pavement. The publicans and the harlots go into the Kingdom of God before they. They went through, some of them, the revival of 1857, when five hundred thousand souls were brought to God. Some of them went through great, revivals in individual churches. Still unpardoned, unblessed, unsaved. They were merely 'spectators. Gospelhardened! After awhile we Will hear that they are sick, and then that they are dead, ted then that they died without any hope. Gospelhardened. But I turn away from all such with a thrill of hope to those who are not Gospel-hardened. Some of yon have not heard, perhaps, five sermons in five years. This whole subject has been a novelty to yon for some time. You are not Gospel-hardened; you
Know you are uut erobpei-uarueueo. The whole subject comes freshly to your mind. I hear some soul saying': “0, my wasted life! 0, the bitter past! 0, the graves I stumbled over! Whither shall 1 fly? .The future is so dark, so dark, so very dark. God help me!" Oh, I-am so glad for that last utterance! That was. a. prayer, and as soon as you begin to pray, that turns all Heaven this way, and God steps in, and He beats back the hounds of temptation to their kennels, and He throws all around the pursued soul the covert of His pardoning mercy. I heard something fall. What was it? It was the bars around the sheepfold. The Heavenly Shepherd let them fall, and the hunted sheep of the mountain cpc bounding in, some with fleece torn of the brambles, and others with feet lame from the dogs, but bounding in. Thank God! "Other sheep have 1 which are not of this fold." God forbid that any of you should have the lamentation of the dying nobleman who had rejected all, and who wrote or dictated these words: "Before you receive this my final state will be determined. 1 am throwing my last stake for eternity and tremble and Bhudder for the important issue. Oh, my friend, with what horror I recall the hours of vanity we have wasted together; .but .][ have a splendid passage to the grave, 1 die in state and languish under a gilded canopy. I am expiring on soft and downy pillows, and am respectfully attended by my servants and physicians. My dependants sigh, my sisters weep, my father bends beneath a load of 1 years and grief; but oh, which of these will answer my summons at the high tribunal? And which of these will bail me from the arrest of death? While some flattering panegyric is pronounced at my interment I may be hearing my just, condemnation at a supreme tribunal. Adieu!” A
INFORMATION ABOUT WESTERN CANADA. I
At the close of i&Jp a handsomely tiostrated And neatly printed set of lamphlets was issued, ^fully describing he country from the Eastern portion of Manitoba to the Pacific .Ocean. These lave been carefully compiled by competent men, from the ndhst reliable ources, and besides containing a vast pffidfifit 6f useful idfarmatidtt put in abet readable shape, they contain A rreat number of letters froth actual resdents in the country, telling plainly rhat has been done. Furnished with illustrated they are y. aS_books 8f referm. .(■ .up. ~jbs... pPBi gripes bf bne, d* all Of them,. -will be hailed free of charge to anjr address, if application is made to L. A. Hamilon, Winnipeg, Manitoba; or to J. PMkee* 833 South dark St., Chicago, 11: to C. 8. Shribhyt ll Fort St. West, letroit; Michigaii; ' PhyslHari and HnnttMfc fir. Mary bean and Miss Young, of Helena, Mont, went hunting recently; ind so successfully that they were able kt the close of the first day to ship three Jeer to the city, one of which was dolated to St. Peter's Hospital. Dr. Dean ias prdhabiy the. largest famfly'praetiee of any physiciafi id Mbntana. 8nt» is a thorough believer in 6ut-of-dooi- eisreise as a cure for most of the iils to which womahldndSahd mankind, tod;) .arb subject,', and, vphat is more, she takes her .'Ijwftyjptfticription. She is abie to ride at isfnF ited a horse as. any man id tM^tete, in'd needs not the aid of a horse-b®8te when she wishes to mount. Dr. DeanK> not open to the objection urged against most women physicians, that they have hot the strefigth td Warrant then! In am turning charge of critical cases, for she ■ has trained her innseles ah well as heir intellect, and the Steady nerve that enables her to bring down a deer With he# rifle stands her well as a surgeon.—Chicago Post A Case of Tree Resurrection. About 1875 a large tree of the elm Species, glowing on the farm of .Mr. Smyth, lector Of Little HbUghtdU, Eflgland, Was blriwn down, Upturning Uii Immense quantity of dirtMl its fall: This huge ball of earth ha^aiiUost entirely washed from the roots on the npper side, when, in 1881, workmen were set to work removing the old forest monster. When they had sawn off several of the large limbs on the undermost side, to their great astonishment, not to say downright terror, the tree rose of its oWw»eEord and went back into the pit excavate ed by the upturning roots, six years before standing up in its original place, straight as an arrow. In 1883 it threw ont a fresh, green head and still stands, even to this day, a curious example of a resurrected tree.—St. Louis Republic Office of Hahn, Hoopes & Co., Muscatike. Iowa, Aug. Stn, 1889. Dr. A: T, ShALLSHBERGEB, Rochester, Pa. Dear Sif.-^Thirty years ago 1 was a great sufferer front Malaria, until! found, yohr Antidote and was immediately cured. 1 went south to live, and recommended the medicine to every sufferer I met, always guaranteeing a cure, and without a failu re. Sometime ago I returned to Muscatine and have been chock full of Malaria ever since. The doctors fed me on quinine until I was nearly deaf and blind. I took one hundred and sixty grai-» without breaking the chills, when, remembering thb Antidote, 1 sent to the drug store and got a bottle. One dost did the business, aha I will never be Without the medicine,— No more quinine for hie. Respectfully yours, j. C. SniPLET.
Morn ino wraps were the invention of the man who wakes up hotel guests for the early train. There is more CrAarrh in this section of the country than a" other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to beinourabla Fora great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cute with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment HSU'S Catarrh Cure, manufactured by JR, J. Cheney & Co.,Toledo, Ohio, is thb oidy Constitutional cure on the market It t* taken internally in doses from 10 drops taiateaspoonfuL It acts directly upon tha ttood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials F. J. Chenet ft Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. The man who lives beyond his means docs not meou well.—Pittsburgh Dispatch h fQjj have ever used Dobbins’’ Kleotrio during the 84 years it has been sold, ybu know that it is the beat and purest family soap made. If you haven’t tried it ask vour grocer tar it now. Don’t take imitation. There are lots of them. Vf nr is a mouse like a load of hay J:anae the cat’ll eat it Be THE MARKETS. NRW YORK, Jan. 12, QATTLE—Native Steers.$ 4 00 a COTTON—Middling. Wheat FLOUR—Winter Wheat.. a 40 a WHKAT-So. 2 Bed. 1 0448a CORN-No, 2.: .4. 60 a OATS—Western Mixed. 49 a PORK—New Mess.1180 a ST. LOUIS. COTTON—Middling... a BEEVES—Choice Steers.• 5 00 a Shipping .... 4 60 a BOGS—Common to Select-.. 3 20 a SHEEP—Fair to Choice.. 3 75 a FLOUR-Patents.. 4 65 a XXX to Choice. 2 90 a WHEAT-No. 2 Bed Winter.. M48® CORN-Ho. 2 Mixed. 4844a OATS-fb. 2. 44 « RYE-No. 2. 65 a TOBACCO—Lugs (Missouri).. 2 00 a . leaf Burley. 8 13 a HAY—Clear Timothy. 10 00 " 1891. 5 10 948 5 50 1 0648 6148 62 12 00 948 5 15 4 90 3 65 6 1248 480 3 65 8548 49 4448 is a 1948a . a 648a BUTTER—Choice Dairy. EGGS—Fie8h.... PORK—Standard Mess. BACON—Clear Bib .. LARD—Prime Steam.... WOOL—Choice Tub........... a CHICAGO. CATTLE-Shlpplng. 8 35 a HOGS—Good to Cbotee.. 3 40 a SHEEP—Good to Choice. 8 50 a FLOUR-Wlnter Patents. * 70 a Spring Patents_... 4 60 a WHEAT-No. 2 Spring. a CORN—No.2. a OATS-No. 2 White... . 4348a PORK^-Standard Mess 10 6248a KAKSA8 CITY. CATTLE—Shipping Steers... 3 50 a HOGS—AH Grades. 8 00 a WHEAT-No. 2 Red. 80 a OAXS-No.2........... 444»a COHN—No. 2. 4718® NEW ORLEANS. FLOUR-High Grade.4 40 a coRN-whita ..It. ... a OATS—Choice Western. 5348a HAY-Choice.. 16 06 a PORK—Old M 9 00 9 00 13 50 22 20 10 75 548 526 » 70 5 25 6 00 6 00 9048 4348 10 75 5 00 8 73 90 45 4844 BACON—Clear Rib. • COTTON—Middling. • 64 16 50 900 6 948 LOUISVILLE. WHEAT—No. 2 Red... CORN—Ho. 2 Mixed. OATS-No. 3 Mixed. FORK-Mess... 14 00 BACON—Clear Bib. COTTON—Middling....*..,,,, ,i„ 94 56 . 45 uoo 6 !•
Tie prayer of the Christian pleads for ntardlsosnip against sudden death, and yet ilas, how many leave the world for better >r for worse without "a single moment's ranting He died of heart failure. The ired ana weary heart failed while engaged n Its momentous task of pumpingtheolood >-g and little vein that the wasting tissues >f the flesh might he replenished. How im>ortant then that the great stream Of life be rept puli and its cofpu*?k» ted and active, esi the fldid grows dogged and sluggish, uni ( he heart itt an extraordinary effort map! without a signal the thread of Its nus, u ;ai; strength. ItJSyour dutySS CBS _lo ires the life that Hod has given him* io assist nature in maintaining free action tfthe circulatory system by keeping the Mood id a state of purity andhealth. Nature kas supplied healing and strengthening lerbs for this purpose. Science has discovered what they are and the eminent Dr,. John Bull, of Louisville, Ky., has blended? them in his superior preparation known as Dr. Bull's Sarsaparilla. Demand it of your Irnggisl Take no other. No woman ever made a hit pf striking her husband for money before breakfast— Atchison Globe. A Silent Appeal for Help. When your kidneys and bladder are inactive, they are making a sileut appeal for ho!tv Tlnit!f fliarpcmrd it hut. with Hfistfithelp. Don’t disregard it. but with Hosfa ter’s Stomach Bitters safely impel them Hostet_r___,_I __m to activity. They areltt imminent danger, and It is foolhardiness to Shut One’S eyes to the fact. Be wise in time, too, if yon experience manifestations of dyspepsia, malaria, rheumatism, constipation or nerve trouble. The Bitters before a meal adds zest to it “All persons leaving hofses in my charge will be well cared for,” advertises U livery stableman. . ' ^ Those of you who are weary and heavy idened with sickness and care, weighed lows With the infirmities that beset the iu£hah system, can find the one thing necessary td restore you to bright buoyant lealth, in Sherman’s Prickly Ash Bitters^, ■J. ofeannthana fho ndhlll. ^invigorates and strengthens the debiltated organs, aids digestion, and * ■__ C__ — /ItnAnOAil 11, jneu or^uuss, itius uigtmuuu, uuJ dispels tile ;lpuds arising from a diseased litfcfc * Tocrb is no rose without a thorn, but bore are many thorns without roses;— Indianapolis Journal An Extraordinary hppdrttmitfi Send your address on a postal card find receive, free of charge, sample copies of the New York Merccrt, in its fifty-third year, together with an unprecedented premium list, comprising a thousand articles which, are given to new subscribers. Address, New York Mercury, 6 Park low, New York city. WhEX a matt finds a button in his salad ae will' hardly take the excuse that It is tart of the dressing. 1 had a slight stroke of paralysis which frightened me very much. My health was poor and the doctors gave me medicine for heart disease, but I grew weaker. My cousin recOfhineiidod _ l)r. Ball's Sarsaparilla, which certainly has benefited me greatly, for I feel in splendid health.— Samuel T. Phelan, Dayton, O. A farmer can often give his wife points •n patchwork.—Boston Courier. t THE bitijr true and safe intestinal worm killer is Dr. -Boll's Vegetable Woral Destroyers. It has brightened tab lives 01 jimmy children and gladdened manyaparat's heart. When the balloon collapses in mid air the jest of friends may fall,out together. > kot suffer from sick headache a moment ger, it is not necessary. Carter’s uttte er PUls will cure yott. Dose, Otte .little . Small price. Small dose. Small pill. A pillow thief held on to the piUow. -hough he gavfe the' police the slip. People Aro Killed by Coughs thatjifite s Honey of Horehound and Tar woulffteure. Pike’s toothache Drops Cure in one minute. Wno bath redness of ii’s? The book ,-oeper who writes with red ink, j
In reading ovef the literary items of the week, I found not much to interest me, until my eye caught sight of an-' article headed “Jenks' Dream.7’ Imagine my surprise to find it ended up with a recommendation to use Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. Nevertheless, being a great sufferer from sick headache, I determined to try them, and, to my gfcnt joy, I found prompt relief, and by their protracted use, a complete immunity from such attacks. Pierce’s Pellets often cure sick headache in an hour. They are gently laxative or actively cathartic, according to size of dose. As a pleasant laxative, take one each night on retiring. For c.dnlts, four act as an active, yet painless, cathartic. Cause no gjiping or sickness. Best Liver Pill ever made. Smallest, Cheapest, Busiest to take. For Constipation, Indigestion and BiliotiS Attacks, they have no equal. Manufactured at the Chemical Laboratory of the WoklD’s DiSpensart Hbdjca& Association, No. 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. T. Ms Pills CUBE CONSTIPATION. physical, resulting from . HABITUAL CONSTIPATION •re many and serious. For the core «r this common trouble. Tuff* Elver P ills have sruineri a popularity UII •lieled. Elegantly sugar coated. SOLD EVERY WHERK r.Bun’*Couflh8ympSSIU"*S?»2 Publloations, Kith .describing Minnesota, jtata, Mont ana,Idaho, n and^Ore^dn, HFKtEuOV EBN *umS PACIFIC Best Agriculi-- - —, , inf anil Timber Lands now open to settlers. Mailed FREE. Address , B. LA1IBOK5, Laid Com. H. P. B. 8*. Paal, Mian. ■rVAMB THIS rAMkiwy tb»»f RUM ELY 1 TRACTION AND PORTABLE p* m - Bi— Thrashers and Horse Powers. ■■write tor Illustrated Catalog, mailed Free. M. RUM ELY CO., LA PORTE, ING NGINES. If you wish to start in business and are exi—* — WANTED CLOTHING ,__ SALESMEN. I Pants to Order, $3 and uirrada. Suits to Order, SIS. Write tor samples and blank* tor selfarsani ibis #amb m n—reemue. EMORY °-^gjfao^r
Torn Coughs ast> 'fvs/ilf _ Beo»rs's Baoxcaiu, TBcrats.Bold only in boxes. Gross injustice-counting MO lor iw*J7e dosea.-fttuburgli Chronicle._ Ark as small as homcapaido yetif&. vni O. ORSY to take 08 sugar. EveryWy 'kkea them. Carter’s Little Uver Pills. Try them. A max tuny look as cheerful as a summer sky and yet feel quite as blue. tto Opium to Pise’s Curefor CoisstssnjrSfto. Cure# where other remedies fail. SSo. Tna aicputator frequently hssa peculiar off-ban<1 way about him. Flower” The Hon. J. W. Feiifltetsre U the Sheriff of Kent Ca., Dem and Hires at Dover, the County Seat and Capital of the State. The sheriff is a gentleman fifty-nine years of age, and this is what he says;■ “1 have “ used your August Flows* for sey- “ eral years in my family and for my V own use, and found it does me ‘ * mote good than any other remedy. “ 1 have been troubled with what I “ call Sick Headache. A pain comes “ in the back part of head first, “ and then soon a general headache “until I become sick and vomit. “ At times, too, I have a fullness “ after eating, a pressure after eating “at the pit of the stomach, and * * sourness, when food seemed to rise ‘•‘tip in mjr throat and mouth. When ‘ ‘ I feel this coming on if I take a "little August Flower it relieves “ me,- and is the best remedy I have “ ever taken for it. For this reason “I take it and recommend it to “ others as a great remedy for Bys“pepsia, &c.” ® G. G. GREEK, Sole Manalactnrer, Woodbury, New Jersey. U. S. A.
and all ACHES Promptly 1,000.090 Prosperous * Couiiilron* Northwest. rjis'tiwkm., cfcfetg***. miMT, n r<rt »«..»■. ^ahi msiAroniMf t*m i*1*1"_ . noumuU at »« «*• «M U»tf 0«““* lhtirh«ppliw» v> dillT diet l» !«!>» m4 Cbll<lh»<>4 tanat>n rwwJs^.r^wS.?SSgH aa, WOTTWiT iV jWc*. M—• TREATED FREE. - FUltimf Ct tUH» trttfc T^ettH. «««• £«Sfwt?S®gS% len darn treatment furnirited fWM »■«. UJim order trial, send lO cent* in PK. 11. *1. ©KEEN Jk 8©K8. AT*«p*TA, ©A. ~£sSVI0UII^ Violim Cases, Cellos and Bases,! ecks, Tope, Backs, tinge. Music Books for all instrument? _Violin and all fit* Best assort* ___._z_&£ _ ?nt, lowest prices in America. Send for catalogue. RUA8 HOWL M Oaart Street, Beaton, Maaa* MS'S AM1 tan PAPER K«7 aRm^ __ I AND WHISKEY HABITS Ici'BSH AT HOME WITH ■AT,”-ir«*r x«“lENSION^S^rM Successful(» PROSECUTES CLAIMS. Late Principal Kusincr U. S. Pension Ml I 5 yi s in last war, 25 adjudicating claims, atty «ruat£*THia ?tm*»«Tth*jDia©
mm effectual MT WORTH A GUINEA A BOX'** For BILIOUS & iERVOUS DISORDERS *2SH giok Headache, Weak Stomach, Impaired Digestion, Constipation, Disordered liver, etc., iCNMfi UltniAdSSaa the vital organs, strengthening the muscular system, and arousing with the rosebud of health The Whole Physical EwSJtjr of the Human Frame Beecham’s PM*, taken 89 directed, mil quickly RESTORE FEMALES to complete health. \ SOLD SY ALL DRUCCIST3. Pries, 25 cents per Box. , ‘ Prepared only fej THC& S0ECHAH, St Helene, Lancashire, England. _ _ .rfji,. Helm for Fnilt* Slnlen. SOS A 307 Canal WuJTeir &!■ A';',?/, &*££&*£* Lt keep then) uill moil Bnth™’, MU oh J»wfc _jTBntftow toUpop? ) „
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5 PER DAY gg»XAM£ t«ia FAFBlteiwry dMinite core and preventive of Rheumatiam, Gout and Neuralgi if 7_l._r.tl GlR.il k^MU Cl. I.MR <1 « _iAnnMHi»e»wi«'*«i iM.'rfimaKtSmZ Gout and Neuralgia. Cures where others faU. Small bottle, $1: large. $1.50. ill druggists, or Jwo. W. Carroix i Son, St. Louis, Mo. ‘ Bent to any Write Artificial ETESfer-5,^^3 J to DM. CAM££BH>, £ YE and EAR SPECIALIST. H» 8r““- - «raa>»9Sis ram #•«»«■» Icago* ISTHMA * Catanh.BroachWt^I i^SSFs M'S HwbSmoke. luhaia-ASTIIRIIA-fyiffictra^ r«ML tirr mm! F RE I «rsaiea «*» papbr «**rr onus. rows wad situations. Aseot’a B. unite J.ix •ml Railroad ire,»ntlsecur» [.Sedalia. Mo. i.n.i Tnmom Cnnd.no knife, book *. s. osi. iir Ffi I roe. bmORATIUlil A lii X# Ml If W 1b IS IBS Eim Street, Clneifm.ti, <>bi®. OT-SAOJ trail FAMk.inr senate. . „NKW SSookK.iiBi.kB. Ai.BOOB ; National Pub. Co., Si. Louis, Ha. A N. K., B. »HKH WMTOIS « _ ttet. Oat *•» «» kite ps*e
