Pike County Democrat, Volume 27, Number 33, Petersburg, Pike County, 25 December 1896 — Page 6
ENGLAND SHAKEN. Wales, the Midlands and the Soutk of England *Vhtl«d by tor«N CarthquUM-Orcr Tws Hand red Towns aud VUUt** Affected— Little Damage Wrought, but Use Woman Die# at Fright London, Dec. 17.—Two strong shock* of earthquake were felt throughout Wales, the Midlands and the sootti ol England. The first shock occurred at la. m., and the second at 5:30, the waves passing from west to east, j Bouse* were violently shaken, beds Moved from their places, doors forced open and furniture overturned. Tele* grams from all quarters concur in the statement that the first shock was of 30 seconds’ duration, aud was followed bj a loud rumbling souud and minor tremblings of the earth. The secoud shock was shorter but more severe. Many people in Windsor, Cheltenham and other places rushed out of their houses, but no one was hurt. The cathedra^ at Hereford was damaged somewhat, but no other serious darn* age is reported. The area of the seismic disturbances was unusually wide, extending hum dreds oi miles from London uorth to J Lincoln, thence west to Lancashire, south through Wales, Taunton, aud southeast to Southampton, over 20C towns and villages being affected. There were, however, no fatalities except* in the case of a woman who died from fright at Hereford. The telegraph lines were not affected. The attaches of the Greenwich observatory say that the galvanometer, which registers the earth currents, showed a very slight disturbance at the time of the shocks. The authorities at the btuuyhurst observatory aay that their galvauotneters showed DO indication whatever of a seismic disturbance. IT DIDN’T WORK. « Th. Attempt lo Farspe 1‘uulihmriit |i Ko(Uud by CeuftMiug to Crime lo America. London, Dee. It. —The man- for whose arrest ou a charge of murder a warrant was issued yesterday at the Bow-street police court, on the application of in- American embassy, is Darned Ldwurd Richard Taylor, lie i is at present iu the Oxford jail, where he is serving a sentence of six months for rubbery. When h-o was arrested be wrote a letter staling that he is wauled fora murder iu Kentucky, lie w ilt bo arrested ou the warrant immediately upon the 'exp.ration of the present Service. 2\o details of the murder which he claims to nave committed can be obtained. . In Oxford police circles littic credence is given to his story, it being held that he probably tuought he anight escape punishment for his crane here by confessing that lie had committed a more serious crime iu America. On the-otaer hand it is not believed that the embassy officials would have applied for a warrant had they uot had reasu to believe that Taylor w*s telling the truth or evidence connecting him with thu murder which he confesses.
BAYARO AT BRISTOL. Ih* Aufricau Awbut4>lur t lit* li<»uor«-tl U«Mt of lb« biM iet; or M«-rct> tttt Veu. tur».«, . ■ BKisrok, Dec. IS. — H ou. Thomas F. Bayard, the American minister, arrived here yesterday in resrpmse to au invitation to distribute the pi.r*- and deliver au address to the students at Che aauual commencement of the technical school of the Society of Me/ehaul Venturers. Mr. Bayard was iuvlted to be present at the commencement for the reason taut but great grandfather on the maternal aide beiouged to a distinguished family of Bristol merchants. This great I .grandfataer was boru tu Bristol iu l?OV, aud subsequently settling iu l'hitadelpula, was mayor of tnat eity, aa his father belqre him had been mayor of Bristol. The Society of Merchant Venturers U one of the surviving medieaval guilds. Mr Bayard i* * lineal descendant of au aucieut mayor of Bristol aud i member of tue merchant venturer*, his presence at yesterday's ceremonies was particularly appropriate. He too* j luucheou with tue counc i at the Bristol chamber of commerce iu the board room of the council. Kspiyiiig to a toast to the health of tiie guest of the occasion, Mr. Bayard said Inal Ahere was much iu the hearts of Americans' to-day to make them look upon Kuglaud as their old home; Toe ties of Blood, he said, were thicker than water. Coutiauing. he expressed hope that •when he returned to America no cloud would obstruct Ups vision of any justminded mau. Mr. Bayard theu proceeded to make liia usual extreme Anglophile speech, concluding by de•daring his belief that the pence existing between the two Eugiish speaking j aa-ious would never be broken. WrUtrt ProblbuvU tram 1‘airolllug ihi • owl. Uaubi ho, Dec. IS.—lu consequence j of the disturbance here the striker* are prohibited by the police from pa- j. troliiug the poru Numbers of struck j •rs are seeking to returu to work, but the employers refuse to receive then until the strike is euded. FRENCH INCONSISTENCY. MUIUmu for 1’otttp, bat Nat U.«» Sou tu Ibf lug. 1‘jLtua, Dec. lit—The credit asked fo» by the government to meet the ex- j V- uses of the visit of the czar and j caariua to Baris was grauted by the j c.lumber of deputies yesterday by a j vote of Act- to* sM. Before adopting the credit the chamber, by a vote ol B6 to lib, rejected a socialist amendlueut to add to the credit i,UdU,U0t francs to be devoted to the aid of thv unemployed, many of whom arc ant Tenug for bare ueccssiartca.
THE ENTIRE VOTE. HIM hr tfc« Coutrj' at Ik* Lata Qm> •ml HmHm la PlMtlmUf Complete r or a*—Thar* Ara a Ik* Miaor Olacrapanclaa, WfcKk, Hawtm, Cat Bat a Trt8l»g Fl(ar« and Bo Not* Affect tk* Basalt. N*w York, Dec. 18.—The canvass of the vote of New Tork state just made practically completes the official vote by states, and makes it possible for the first time to tabulate the popular vote for president. With the exception of Utah and South Dakota, where the courts have ordered the revision of the completed returns, the final vote of all states has been collected by the United Associated Presses. The total vote cast was 13,924,653. This was 1,813,124 more than the total vote of 1892. McKinley received 7,109,480, and Bryan, 6,508,681, a plurality for McKinley of 600,799. The vote for Bryan and bewail and that for Bryau and Watson are combined in the total vote given for Bryau. Only 12 states reported a separate vote for Bryan and Watson. This aggregate vote was 46,879. The sound-money democratic vote for Palmer and Buck* ner was 132.056. The prohibition rote for Levering was 127,174. The national, or free-silver prohibitionists cast 13,320 votes for Bentley. Matchett, the candidate of the socialist-labor party, received 33,942. The following is the tabulated vote: Totals
MeK;nivy * plurality, «W.7W. Thu UOtrlitl Vwl» uf South Dakota. Pierre. S. D.,. Deo. IS.—The official canvass of the vote cast in this state I at the recent election was completed : here yesterday. On the state ticket the populist nominees for governor, attorney-general aud railroad commissioner were elected. The republicans got the rest of the state ticket. The ; Vv>te for congressmen and elector was: Republican, Crawford, 40,M3; Gamble, 40,575; populist, Kelly, 41,1-3; Knowles, 41,-85; prohibition, Alexander, 093; Lewis, 752. Electors—ltryan, 41.223; McKinley, 41.042; Levering, C64. FROM HONOLULU. tls-Quern Lll'a Departure—Thn Annexation Srutiuirlit (itowiuc HoSOLrt.l’, Dec. la—The departure of ci-Queen Liliuokalani for the ; United States was conducted with the greatest secrecy, only haif a dozen intimates knowing of her plans. On ;he way to the steamer she called on 1’resident Ih>le aud informed him of j aer trip. Nothiug is kuown of the j abject of her trip. The annexation club has beeu re- i organized with L. A. Thurstou as president. The anuexatiou sentiment { is again ^ety strong, tlie government and moat of the popnlatiou favor it. The U, >. S. Alert arrived yesterday to relieve the Adams. THE BOSTON ALL RIGHT. The story of Her tiroundtng Uri(ln»Wd In a Pilot's spite. SAX Fraxcisco, Dec. 18.—A dispatch from Victoria printed here says that the United States steamer Boston grounded on Sandspit.uear Chetuiulpo, Corea, December 3, was seriously ^trained aud may be obliged to come home for repairs. The Daily Report received letters by last steamer from ; Yokohama stating there is no truth j whatever in the report of the ground- I mg of the steamer. The Bostou. when ->il Chemiulpo. declined the services of a pilot, who, out of revenge, sent the j ,tory of the grounding to the Nagasaki j shipping list._ SUDDEN DEATH Of Hermann, th* World. Faiuua* t'rnstldlgltntor- Died an a Railway Train. RocuKSTitK. N. Y., Dec. IK—Her- j tuaun, the uiagiciau, who gave a performance here Wednesday uight. at f the Lyceum theater, died at Great Val- I ley, while eu route to Bradford, l*a. S liis body is now at Salamanca, N. Y. j Mr. Hermann was perfectly well j w hen he took the Buffalo, Rochester ; ik Pittsburgh traiu here at 7:30 a. tu. As the tram approached Great Valley, a few miles this side of Salamanca, he suddenly expired. The car containing the body was switched off at Salatnauca. A SHORTAGE REPORTED In tbn Accounts uf I'ustmaster Hatch at Mnwporu Kf. CISCIXXATI. Dec. IK—Post Office In- J spectors Leatherman and Holmes, who have been examining the hooks of Postmaster J. J. Uetch, of Newport, Ky., report a shortage in hia accounts j with the governmentof between *3,000 | snd §6,000. Uetch has disappeared j and his whereabouts is unknown, lie was a leading citixen of Newport, being president of the Newport Printing and Newspaper Co., publishers of the Kentucky State Journal.
TALMAGE’S SERMON. The Need of the Hour ie More Practical Religion. “Fallh Without Works Is Thsro Most B« » Now Oeptrtat* It tho Appllcttion of Ktlitlot to Kvcryday Affair*. Rex. T. DeWitt Talmage talked on “Practical Religion” in a recent sermou before his IVashiugtou congregation. His sermon was based on the text: “Faith without works is dead."—James il.. at The Roman Catholic church has been charged with putting too much stress upon good works and not enough upon faith. 1 charge' Protestantism with puttiug not enough stress upon good works as connected with salvation. | Good works will never save a man, but if a man have not good works he ! has no real faith and no genuine re- j ligion. There are those who depend | upon the fact that they are all right; inside, while their'conduct is wrong outside. Their religion, for the most j part, is made up of talk—vigorous | talk, fluent talk, boastful talk, per-' pelual talk. They will entertain you j by the hour in telling you how good they are. They come up to such a i higher life that they have no patience j with ordinary Christians in the plain discharge of their duty. As uear as 1 cau tell, this ocean craft is mostly sail and very little tonuage. Foretopmast staysail, foretopiuast studding sail, maiutop&ail, mizzentopsail — everything from fly ing jib to uiizxeu spanker, but making no useful voyage. Now, the world has got tired of this aud it wants a religion that will work iuto all the circumstances of life. We do not want a new religion, but the old religion applied in all possible directions. Vender is a river with steep aud rocky banks, and it roars like a young Niagara as it rolls on over its rough bed. It does nothing but, talk about itself all the nay from its souree in the mountain to the place where it empties into the sea. The banks are so steep that the cattle cau not come down to drink. It does not ruu oue fertilizing rill iuto the adjoining field. It has uot one grist mill or factory on eitner side. It sulks in wet weather with.cbHi iiLg-fogs. ‘Noone cures when 1 that river is born among the rocks, ’ and no oue cares when it dies into the j sea. liut yonder is another river, aud ; it on sses its banks with the warm; tides, aud it rocks with floral lulluby j the w ater lillies asleep ou its bosom, j It invites herds of cattle and flocks of sheep and .convoys of birds to come there aud drink. It has three gristmills on one side and six cotton factories ou the other. It is the wealth of ‘duo miles of luxuriant farms. The' birds of heaven chanted wheu it was born in the mountains, and the ocean shipping will press iu from the sea to hail it as it comes down from the Atlantic coast. The one river is a man w ho lives for himself. The other river is a man who lives for others. l)o you know how the site of the ancient City of Jerusalem was chosen? There were two brothers who had adjoining farms. The one brother had a large family, the other had no family. The brother with the large family said: “There is my brother with no family; he must be louelv. aud 1 will try to cheer him up, and 1 will take some of the sheaves from my field in the night time aud sef^them over uu his farm, and say nothing about it." The other brother said: “My brother has a large family, aud it is very difficult for him to support them, and 1 will help him along, aud 1 will ; take some" of the sheaves from my I
farm m me mgm mue, auu set them over on his farm, and say nothiug about it." i>o the work of transference went on night after u;ght. aud night after night; but every morning things seemed to be just as they were, lor. though sheaves had been subtracted from each farm, sheaves had also been added, and the brothers were perplexed and could not understand. Hut oue uight the brothers happened to meet while making this geuerous transference, aud the spot w here they met was so sacred that it was chosen as the site of the city of Jerusalem. If that tradition should prove uufouuded, it will never* theless stand as a beautiful allegory, setting forth the idea that wherever a kiudiy and geuerous and loving act is performed, that is the spot tit for some temple of comment oration. 1 have often spoken to you abont faith, but this morning I speak to you about works, for “faitn without works is dead.” 1 think you will agree with me in the statement that the great w ant of this world is more practical rcligiou. We want practical religion to go into all merchandise. It will supervise the labeling of goods. It will not allow a man to say that( a thiug j was made in oue faelory when it was j maue in another. It will not allow | the merchant to say that watch was «h§uufaclured in lieueTa, i>wit*erlaud, | when it was manufactured in Mas&a- } ehusetts. It will not allow- the merchant to say that wine came from Madeira when it came from California, practical religion will walk along by the store shelves aud tear off all the tags that make misrepresentation, it will not allow the* merchant to sa; that is pore coffee when dandelion root and cbickory and other ingredicuts go into it. it will not allow him to say that is pore sugar, w heu there are in it sand and ground glass. Wheu practical religion gets its full swing in the world it will goduwu the street, and it will come to that shoe store and rip off the fictitious soles of many a fine-looking pair of siioes, and show that it is pasteboard sandwiched between the sound leather. And this practical religion will go right into a goocery store and will pull out the plug of the adulterated sirups, and it will dump into the ash barrel in front of the store the cassia bark that is sold for cinnamon, and the briekdust that is sold for cayeuue pepper; anu 1% will shake out the Prussian blue A
from the tea leaves, and it will sift from the flour plaster of Paris and bonedust and soapstone, and it will, y chemical analysis, separate the one quart of water from the few honest drops of cow’s milk, and it will throw out the lire animalcules from the brown sugar. There has been so much adulteration of articles of food that it is an amazement to me that there is a healthy man or woman in America. Heaven only knows what they put into the spices, and into the sugars, and in the butter, and into the apothecary drug. But chemical analysis and the microscope have made wonderful revelations. The board of health in Massachusetts analyzed a great amount of what was called pure coffee, and found in it not one partieleof coffee. In Euirlaud there is a law that forbids the puttiug of alum in bread. The public authorities examined 51 packages of bread, and found them all guilty. The honest pkysicion. writing a presrciption, does not know but that it may briug death instead of health to his patient, because there may be oue of the drugs weakened by a cheaper article, and another drug may be in < full force, and so the prescription may have just the opposite effect intended. Oil of wormwood warranted pure from Boston was found to have 41 per ceut. of resiu and alcohol and chloro-, form. Scammouy is one of the most | valuable .medical drugs, it is very j rare, very precious. It is the sap or the gum of a tree or a bush in Syria. The root of the tree is exposed, an iu-! eisiou is made iuto the root, and then j shells are placed at this incision to! catch the sap or the gum as it exudes, j It is very precious, this seammony. ! But the peasant mixes it with a : cheaper material; then it is taken to I Aleppo, and the merchant there mixes it with a cheaper material; then it is comes on to the wholesale druggist iu London or New York, and he mixes it with a cheaper material; then it comes to the retail druggist, and he mixes it with a cheaper material, aud by the time the p or sick man gets it into his bottle it .s ashes and chalk and sand, and some of what has beeu called”pure seammony after analysis has beeu found to be no seammony at all. Now, practical religion will vet rectify all this. It will go to those hypocritical professors of .religion who j got a ■‘corner"' iu corn and wheat iu Chicago and New York, pending prices up aud up until they were beyond the reach of the poor, keeping these bread- j stuffs in their own hands, or controlling them until the prices going up | and up and up, they were, after awhile,5 ready to, sell, and they sold out, making themselves millionaires in one or j two years—trviug to tix the matter up with the Lord by building & church I or an university or a hospital—delud-! iug themselves with the idea that j the Lott! would be so pleased with the ’ gift He would forget the swindle, j Now, as such a man may not have j any liturgy in which to. say his prayers, 1 will compose for him one which he Is practically making: “Oh, Lord,
wo, i>y gemug a corner tu ureaastulfs, swindled the people of the j United States out of $10,000,000, ! and made suffering all up and down ! the laud, aud we would like to compromise this matter with Thee. Thou ! knowest it was a scaly job, but then j it was smart. Now, here we compromise it. Take one per cent, of the ‘ profits, and with that one j»er cent, i von' can build au asylum for these1 poor, miserable ragamuffins on the j street, aud 1 will taken yacht and go i to Europe, forever aud ever. Amen!" j Ah, my friends, if a mau hath got- I ten his estate wrongfully aud he build j a line of hospitals and universities | from here to Alaska, he can not atone i for it. After aw hile, this man who has j beeu getting a “corner” iu wheat,! dies, and/then Satan gets a “corner’* i in him. lie gtn-s into a great, loug ! ldack Friday. There is a “break” in j the market. According to W all street j parlance, he wiped others out, and i now he is himself wiped out. No col- j laterals on which to make a spiritual j loan. Eternal defalcation. Hut this practical religion Will not' only rectify all merchandise; it will i also rectify all mechanism and all toil. j A time will come when- a mau will j work as faithfully by the iob as he | does bv the day. You say when a thiug is,slightingly done: “Oh, that I was done by the job.” You can tell by j the swiftuess or slowuess with which ! a hackman drives whether he is hired ! by the hour or by the excursion. If he | is hired by the hour he drives very \ slowly, so as to make as many hours j as possible. If he ts hired bv the ex- ] cursion. he whips up the horses so as to get around and get another eustbtaer. All styles of work have to be inspected. Ships inspected, horses inspected, machinery inspect-: ed. Capitalist comingdowu unexpect- j edly to watch the boss. Conductor of j a city car sounding the punch of a bell j to prove his houesty as *a passenger j bauds him a clipped nickel. Al^things , must be wsteued aud inspected, lm- j perfections in the wood covered with j putty; tlanuents warranted to last t until vou pul them on the third time, j Shoddy in atl kinds of clothing. Chro-1 moa. Pinchbeck. Diauiods for $1.50. Uookbiuding that bolds on until | you read the third chapter. I Spavined horses. by skillfull dose of jockeys, for several days made j to look spry. Wagon.tires poorly put j on. Horses poorly shod. Plastering: that cracks without any provocation and falls off. Plumberiug that needs to be plumbered. Imperfect car wheel that halts the whole train with a hotj box. So little practical religion in the mechanism of the world. 1 tell you. my friends, the law of mau will never rectify these things. It will be the allpervading intlueuee of the practical religion of Jesus Christ that will make j the change for the better. ,. Yes. this practical religion will also j go into agriculture, which is proverbi- j ally honest, but.needs to be rectified, I and it will keep the farmer from send- j ing to the city market veal that is too yonng to kill, and when the farmer farms on share*, it will keep the man who does th* work from making his half three-fourths, and it will keep
| the farmer from building bis post and I :• id rail fence on his neighbor’s premises, and it v-ill make him shelter his cattle in the winter storm, and it will keep the old elder from working on Sunday afternoon in the new ground where nobody sees him. And this i practical religion will hover over the house, and over the barn, and over the ; field, and over the orchard. Yes, this practical religion of which I 1 speak will come into the learned professions. The lawyer will feel his responsibility m defending innocence and arraigning evil, and expounding the law, aud it will keep him from charging for briefs he uever wrote and for pleas he never made, and for percentages he never earned, aud from robbing widow and orphan because they are defenseless. Yes, this practical religion will come into the physician's life, aud he will feel his responsibility as the conservator of the public health, a profession honored by the fact that Christ Himself was a physician. And it will make him honest, and when he does not understand a case he will say so, not trying to cover up lack of'diagnosis with pouderous technicalities, or seud the patient to a reckless drug store because the apothecary happens to pay a percentage on the prescriptions sent. Aud this practical religion will couie to the school-teacher, making her feel her responsibility in preparing our youth for usefulness and for happiness and for honor, and will keep her from giviug a sly box to a dull head, chastising him : for what he can not help, aud seudiug discouragement all through the after years of a lifetime. This practical religion will also come to the newspaper men, and it will help them in the gathering of the news, and it will help them in settiug forth the best iuterests\a$ society, and it will keep them from putting the sins of the world iu larger type thau its virtues, and its mistakes than its achievements, and it will keep them from misrepresenting interviews with public men, aud from starting suspicions that never eau be allayed; and will make them staunch friends of the oppressed instead of the oppressor. Yes, this religion, this practical religion, will come and put its baud on what is called good society, elevated society, successful society, so that people will have their expenditures within their income, and they wil exchange the hypocritical “hot at he me” for the honest explanation “too tired."’ or “too busy to see you,'- aud will keep iuuoceut reception from becoming iutoxicated convivial ity. Yes, this practical religion will have to come in and fix up the’ marriage relation iy America. There are members of churcnes who have too many wives and others who have too many husbands. Society needs to be expurgated, aud washed, and fumigated, and Christianized. We want this practical religion not only to take hold of what are Called the lower classes,but to take hold of what are called the higher classes. The trouble is that people
ligion ou Sunday-with hymn-book and prayer-book aud liturgy, and some of them sit in cuurch rolling up their eyes as though they were ready for translation, when their Sabbath is bounded on all sides by an inconsistent life* aud while you are expecting to come out from under their arms the wings of an angel there come out from their /orehead the horns of a beast. Tt^re has got to be a new departure in religion. I do uot say a new religion. Oh. no; but the old religion to new appliances. In our time we nave had the daguerreotype and the ambrotype and the photograph; but it is the same old suu, and these arts aye only new appliances of the old sunlight. So tnis giorioifs Gospel is just what we waut to photograph the image of God on one soul and daguerreotype it on another soul. Mot a new Gospel, but the old Gospel put to new work. In our time we have had the telegraphic invention aud the telephonic invention and. the electric light invention; hut they are all chtidreu of the old electricity, an element that the philosophers hare a long while known much about, iso this electric Gospel needs to tlash its light on the eyes aud ears and souls of meu, and to become a telephoned medium to dart invitation and warning to aH nations; an electric light to ilium uiuate the eastern aud western hemispheres. Not a new Gospel, but the old Gospel doing a new work. ^ . In the latter part of the last century a girl in England became a kitchen maid in a farm house. She had many styles of work aud much hard Work. Time rolled ou, aud^she married the son of a weaver of Halifax. They were industrious, they saved rnouey enough after awhile to build them a home. On the morning of the day they were to euter that home the young wife arose at four o'clock* entered the front dooryard, kuelt dowu, consecrated the place to God* and there made this suletnu vow; “O Lord, if Thou wilt bless me in this place, the poor shall have a share of it.'* Time rolled ou ajutfa fortune rolled in. Children grew up around them, and they all became affluent; ope, a member of parliament, in a public plat- declared that his success came front that prayer of his mother in the door-yard. All of them were affluent. Four thousand hands in the factories* Tney built dwelling liou-es for laborers at cheap rcuts, and where they were invalids aud conld not pay tfeey bad the houses for nothing. One of these sons came to this conntry* admired our parks* went back, bought land, opened a great public park, and made it a present to the eity of Uaiifax, Euglaud. They endowed an orphanage, they endowed two almshouses All England has heard of the generosity and the good works of the Crossleys. Morals: Consecrate to God your small means and your humble surrounding*, and yon will have larger means and grander su rroundings. “Godliness is profitable unto ell things, having promise of t oe Ufe that now is and qf that which ie to come.” “Have faith in God by ail means, but remember that faith without work* is dead.”
Doses One Dollar is true only ol; Hood's Ssraapsriils. It is economy to fret E tod's when you need a blood puriaer and nemli tonic T Hooi 11 Sarsaparilla Is the best—la fact the One Tens Blood Purifier. Hood’s Pills r Ills; easy to 1.0 operate. 25c. Smart Young M Wonderful things ha old people weye^young—i of old people Is to be ]spened when 1 the memory young friends,” said a Corneille academy ly< “let me urge upon you tl not only reading good owning them, so that recourse to them at au when I was a young tu queutly to work hard al money to buy books, an before daylight to Youth's Coiupabioa. i. trusted. » “My lecturer in the eum course, e necessity of books, but of you may hare time. Why, tu 1 used fr©-‘ night to earn 1 then get up ead them!”— SlOO Krwiint S' The readers of thispapei to leant that there is at lea disease that science has bet all its stages, and that is < Catarrh Cure is the Only known to the medical fra to being a constitutional dist e n tituaotKtl treatmeut. Cure is taken internally, upon the blin d and mucous system.thereby destroying o: the disease, and giv strengt h by building up the assisting nature in doing proprietors have so much ! tive powers that they offei Dollars for any case that bend fcrlist of testimonial Address F. J. Cheney £ri Sold by Druggists, T.V. Hall’s Family Dills are the ‘■Uxct.e Bob. what is . ’Why, he's the fellow who when a bicycle rttus over Record. ‘too will be pleased st one dreaded Li able to cure in atarrh. Hall’s positive cure E-pity. Catarrh ase. requires a Hall’s Catarrh acting directly urfaces of thethe foundation the patient institution add its work. Tho aith iu its curaOue Hundred fails to cure. mg o., Toledo, O. best. pedestrian?’* makes a row him.’’—Chicago Garden Spots of tlije South. The Passenger Department of the Louisville & Nashville K. K. has just issued a hundred pago book with thib above title. It is descriptive©! the resout|es and capabilities of the soil of the con this line in the states'of Ii see. Alabama. Southern Western Florida. It also ijities lying along ■ntueky, TeuuesMississippi and outalus a county niap of the above mentioned states,ana Is well worthy of a perusal 1 ested in the South, any address upcu receipt i vet* or stamps, by C. P. A' Agt., Louisville, Kv. Sou sious South. Write for pa H\kc.«eav*s—“1 met Bt was in Chicago the last tin is about the only bill v< he* ’~Cincinnati Enquirei To Pay a Penalty Is rather hard, isn't it? ’ compelled to uo this after pepsm, that inexorable ceases to torment of-its rarely yields to ordinary tr.iuquil.ity of the storn# thesf who pursue a cou Stomach Ritters. TUi remedies malarial and i rheumatism, constipation aervousuess. >f any oue inter-' A eop]y will be sent to ten cents in silmokb, Gen. Pass, i-monthiy exeurticulars. falo Bill when 1 ed' Ferry—"Ho u ever met, isn't or Gluing et how many arevery meal. Dys* ersecutor, never own volition, and medication. But U is in store for se of Hostetter's e corrective also tin idney comp amis, biliousness and is not what we hack but^hat we do i what we have, that pro Vs our fitness yromotiou. Don't Tobacco Spit and Away If you want to quit to and forever, be made we! full of new life and vigor the wonder-worker that strong. Many gain ten J Over 4O0.0UO cured. Bur vottr own. druggist, wh Sterling Remedy Co., C lx this world it !s not hut what we give up, thiit H W. Beecher. Wnn.jt asdee-*, cured All right, Bt. Jacobs Oil The man who robs at io»e> most by the iransat A practical Business t f si. Mo. “lufe Bcho’s f >r particulars. Addrt! Tub man who always Had a s.cady denvimf fo can do.—Ram's Horn. Tub same—old or new Jacobs Oil will cure. Exckgt and {Mti tilings Benjamin Fum >acco using Easily , stri'Ug. magnetic, take N*>-To-Bae,, makes weak men >unds in ten days. No-To-Bac from will guarantee a mailed free. Ad. cago or New York. what we take up, makes us rich.— !ioreness, stiffness I lid it. uother of bis right lion.—Ram' s H o t a. liege is at Hsnni>hip.” ifU*. AY rite s F. L. Kelly, Pres. Urn's his best will the things that he heuuiatic pains St. tence din. conquer all
Gladness W! itha better unci srstanding of the - transient nature of the many physical ills, which vanish before proper-ef-forts—gentle efforts- -pleasant efforts— rightly directed. There is comfort in the knowl*#?, that so many forms of sickness are not due to any actual- disease, but s&mply to a constipated condition of the system, which the pleasant family laxative. Syrup of Figs, promptly removes. That is w hy it is the only remedywith million sof families, and is ever where esteemed'so highly-bT all whs value good health. Its beneficial effects are due to the fact, that it is the on© remedy which promotes internal cleanliness without debilitating tha organs on which it nets. It is thereto* all important, in order to get its beneficial effect*, to n<i*e when yon purchase, that you hare the genuine article, whieh is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup vo only and sold by all reputable druggists.* If in the enjoyment of good health, and the system is regular, laxatiTes or other remedies are I hen not needed. If afflicted with any actual disease, one may be commended to the most skillful * rSh* if hi of * Should haV* th'ii best, and with the Comes
