REY. DR. TALMAGE. day Sermon, ing Camels.” Text: “Ye blind guides, who strain at a gnat, and swallow a camel.” -Matthew xiii., NH. A proverb is compeet wisdom, knowledge in chunks, a library in a sentence, the elec. tricity of many clouds discharged in one bolt, a river put through a millracs., When Christ quotes the proverb of the text He means to set. forth the ludicrous behavior of those who make a great bluster about small sins and have no appreciations of great ones, goat and a camel. You hava in museum or on the desert seen the latter, a great awk ward, sorawling creature, with back two stories high and stomach having a collection of reservoirs for desert travel, an animal forvidden to the Jews us food, and in many literatures entitled *‘the ship of the desert.” The gnat spoken of in the text is in the grub form. Itis born in pool or pond, after a few weeks becomes a chrysalis, and then after a few days becomes the gnat as we recognize it. But the insect spoken of in the inhabits the water—for my text isa misprint and ought to read “strain out a gaat.” My text shows you the princa of inconsis tencies, A man after long observation has formed the suspicion that in a cuo of he is about to drink there is a grub or the grandparent of a gnat., He goes and gets a sieve or a strainer, He takes the water and most than drink this water until this larva be extirpated.” This wate brought un- der inquisition. The experinent is success- ful, leaves against the side of ths sieve the grub or gnat. Then the man carefully removes the insect and drinks the water in p.acidity. But go. ing out one day and hungry, be “ship of the desert,” the came!, which the Jews were forbidden to eat. ‘Tue gastrono- mer has no compunctions of conscience, He suffers from no indigestion. He puts the is upper jaw over the hump of back, and gives one swallow and the drome- dary disappears forever. He strained out a gnat, he swallowed a camel. While Christ's audience were yot smiling at the oppositenessand wit o —for smile they did in churcu, unless were too stupid to understand the hyperbole —Christ practically said to them. ‘That is you.” Punctilious about smail things; reck- less about affairs of great vane, oy No subject over withered under a strgzeon's knite more bitterly than djd the Pharisees under Christ's scalpel of truth, Asap anatomist will take a human body to pieces amd put them under a microscope for examination, so Christ finds His way to | the heart of the dead Pharisee and cuts it out and puts it under tha glass of inspec. tion for all generations to examine, Those Pharisees thought that Christ would flat- ter them and compliment them, and how they must have writhed under the red hot words as He seid, “Ye fools, ye whited sepulchers, ye blind guides which strain out a gnat and swallow a camel.” There are in our day a great many gnats | strained out and a great many camels swallowad, and it is the object of this ser- mon to sketch a few persons who are ex. tensively engaged in that business First, | remark, that sll those ministers of the Gospel are photographed in the text who are very scrupulous about the conven- tionalities of religion, but put no particular upon matters of vast importance. services ought to be grave and solemn. There is no room for frivolity in religious convocation. But there are illus trations, and there are hyperboles like that of Christ in the text that will irradiate with smiles any intelligent auditory. Toers are men like those blind guides of the tex: who advocate only thoss things in reli oer. vice which araw the corners of mouth down, and denounce all thoks things which have a tendency to draw the corners of the mouth up, and these men will go to instalia- tions and to presbytaries and to conferences and to associations, their pockets full of fine sieves to strain out the gnats, while in their own churches at home every Sunday there are fifty people sound asles hey make their churches a great dormitory, and somuiferous sermous are a cradle, and the drawled out hymns a lullaby, while some wakeful soul in a pew with her fan keeps the flies oft UonConNsSCIous persons appr IXimate, Now, ley it is worse to sleep in caurch than to smile in church, for the latier ; uplies at ieast attention, wile the for. ner imnlies the indifference of the hearers and the stupidity of the speaker, : In old age, or from physical infirmity, or from long watches with ths sici, drowsiness will sometimes overpower ons, but when a minister of the Gospel locks off upon an sudience and finds heutay and intelligent people struggling with drowsiness it is time tor bim to give cut the doxology or pro nounce the benediction. The great fault of church services to-day is not 00 much viva. city, but too much somnolence. The one is an irritating gnat that may be easily strained out; the ¢tier is a great, spraw.ing | and sleapy-eyed camel of the dry desert. In all our Sabbath schools, in all our Bible classes, in all our pu!pits we need to brighten up our religious message with suca Christ. like vivacity as we find in the text. I take down from my library the biog- raphies of ministers and writsrs of the past ages, inspired and uninspirel, who have done the most to bring souls to Jesus Carist, and the thay whey Jus tae their Christ, Elijah used it when he advised the Baalites, as they could not make their God respond, telling them to call louder as their god might be sound aslesp or gone a bunt- conceited comforters, “Wisdom will die with you." Christ not oaly used it in the text, but when He ironically complimented the putrefied Pharisees, saying, “The whois need not a physician,’ and when by one word He described toe cunning of Herold, saying, "Go ye, aud tell that fox." Matthew Henry's Commentaries from the first page to the iast coruscated with hamor as summer clouds with beat lightning. John Buunyan's writings are as full of humor as they are of saving (rath, and there is not an aged man here who has ever read “Pilgrim's Progress” who doss not remember that while reading it he smiled as often as he wept. Chrysostom, George Herbert, Robert South, John Wesley, George Whitefleld, Jeremy Taylor, Rowland Hill, Nettleton, George 6, Finney and all the men of the past who greatly advancsd the kingdom ol Gol con. secrated their wit and their humor to tha cause of Christ, 85 it has been in all the ages, and I say to tise young theological students, who clus ter in these services Sabuath by Sabbath, sharpen your wits as keep as scimiters aud and then take them into the holy war, Itis a very short bridge between a smile and a tear, & suspension bridge from eve to lip, and it is soon crossal over, and a smile is sometimes jast as sacred as a tear. There is as much religion, and 1 think a little more, 38 4 spring morning than in a stariess mid. t. i work without any humor or wit init isa banquet with a side of beef, and that raw, and no condiments and no dessert succreding. People will not sit down at such a banquet. By all means remove all frivo.it and ail pathos and all lightness and all vu ity =strain them out h the gleve of y discrimination: but, on other mand, beware of that monster which overshadows the Christian churen to-day, conventionally, going us Sron the reat Sahara Desert of , having ou its back a hump of sanctimonious gloom-—and vehemently re- fuse to swallow that camel, Ob, bow are about the int/initesimals whila they are jt reckless about the magnitudes. What did Christ say? Did He not excorinte the people in His time who were so caratul to wash their hands before a meal, but did not wash their hearts? It is a bad thiag to have unclean hands; it is a worse thiug to have an unclean heart, How many people there are in our tine who are very anxious that after their death they shall bs buried with their feot toward the east, and not at all anxious that during their whola life they should face in the right direction so that they hall come up in the resurrection of the Just whichever wav they are buried, How many there are chiefly anxious that a min- ister of the Gospel shall come in the line of apostolic succession, not caring so much whether he comes from Apostle Paul or Apostle Judas. They haven way of meas uring a goat until it is larzer than a camel Again, my subject photographs all those who are abhorrent of small sing while they i are reckless iu rezard to magnificent thefts, | You will find many a merchant, who while | he 1s so careful that he would not take a yard | of cloth or a spool of cotton from the counter | without paving forit, and who if a bank | cashier should make a mistake and send in a | roll of bills five dollars tos much would dis- patch a messenger in hot haste to return the surplus, yet who will go into astock company | in which after awhile he gets control of the | stock and then waters the stock and makes | 8100,000 appear like $200,000. He stole only | $100,000 by the operation, Many of the men | of fortune made their wealth in that way, | One ol those men engaged in such unright- | sous acts, that evening, the evening of the | very day when he watered the stock, will | find a whar! rat stealing an evening newaspa-~ | per from the basement doorway, and wil zo { out and catch the urchin by the collar and | twist the collar so tightly the poor fellow j cannot say that it was thirst for knowledge | that led him to ths disaounest act, but grip the collar tighter and tighter, saying: *‘I | have been looking for you along while, You stole my paper four or five times, haven't { you! You miserable wretch™ And then { the old stock gambler, with a voice tuey can heur three blocks, will cry out, “Police, po- ues | That same man, the evening of the day on | which he watered tue stodk, will knesl with | bis family in prayer and thank God for the | prosperity of the day, thea kiss his children | good night with an air which seems to say: | oof hope you will all grow up to bs as good as your father Prisons tor sins insectile in size, but palaces for crimes dromedarian, No mercy for sins animaleule in proportion, bat great leniency for mastodon iniquity, tis time thal we learn in America tuat | sin is not excu in proportiou as it de- { clares large dividends and has cutriders in | equipage. Many a man is riding to perdi- tion postilion abead and laciey tehind, To steal a dollar is a guat; to steat {i sands of dollars is & camel, Toers is many a ruit dealer who would not consent to steal a basket of peaches from a neighbors stall, but who would not serupie depress the fruit market: and as long as | can remember we have geard every summer the peaca crop of Maryland is a fa:lure, and by the time the crop comes in the miwrepresentation makes a difference of millions of dollars. A man sq bie to fitty thousand peaca baskets, Any summer go cown into the Mercantile library, in the readiag rooms amd see the newspaper reports of the crops from all pares of toe country, and their phraseclogy is very much the sancie, and the sams men wrote ing out the huge lying about the grain crop from year to year and for a score of years. After a while there isa ‘‘corner” fi wheat market, and men who bad a contempt for a pstty theft will burgiariz» the wheat bin of a pation and commit larceny upoa the American corncrib, And mea will sit in churches and in reformatory institutions try - ing to strain out the small goats of scoundrel. isto, while in their grain elevators and in their storshouses they are fattening huge camels which they expect atter awhile to swallow, Society bas to be entirely recon structed ou this subject. We are to find that a «in is Inexcusab.e ia proportion as it is great, i know in charge reiig: Tooy say, a have in the Ch waen an elder of minister of a Sabbath what display newspaper re ica—"* Another ical Boouadreiien count.” “Shame there ara a church to 2, and never se» ta wR enougn tian Lo get But in all ¢ the tendency is to excu sw as it is mammoth, Eva Joun Milton his “Paradiss Lost, ¢ confemus Satan, gives a grand description of him you have hard w to suppres yvour asdmira- tion. Ob, this straining out small sins like gnats, and this guipin: dowa great in- iquities lige came This subject does not give the picture of | one or two - persons, but is a gallery in which thousands ofl peop may see their likenesses, For instance, all these people wno, while they woud not rob their ueigh- bor of a farthing, appropriate the money and the treasure of the public. A man has a house to sell, and he tells his customer it is worth $20,000, Next day the assessor comes around and the owner savs it is worth #15,- 000. The Goverament of the United States took off the tax from personal income, among other raasons becauss so few people would tell tha trute, and many a man with an income of hundreds of dollars a day made statements which seemed to imply he was about to be handed over to the overmer of the poor, Careful to pay their passage from Liver- pool to New York, yet smuggling in their Saratoza trunk ten silk dresses jrom Pars and a hall dozen watches from Geneva, Switzariand, telling the custom house officer on the whar!, "lhere is nothing in that Y ur time the tendency is to frauds upon gool men what a class of frauls vou God in this day.” and a deacon ora suparinte: out a defaulter 2 in many of the type; line onded.” *“*Cler- at =n Charches, indreis outside one inside of ti 14 hh of & Charen or on irs a t ’ Ty tite (2oape 3 i feds th lent of La tive Dis on amid ws thousanni sco walle the the who misbzbavi ¥ why gg wv OF BK CON is caus wr yao 1 88 #5 grees cyne a Chris. | pany. ous and irrelig.oue, sin in proportion : oH G4 3 Aly ga I's i of of five dollar gold piece in his hand to pusctu- ate the statermsnt, Descrived in the text are all thoss who are particular never to break the law of gram- mar, and who want all their language an elezant spec.men of syntax, straining out ail the inaccuracies of sprech with a flue sieve of literary criticisas, while through their | conversation go slander and ianuendo and | profanity and falschoo | larger than a whole caravan of camels, waen they migat better i fracture every law of the language and shoot their intellectual taste, and better let | vero seek in vain for its nominative, and | every noun for its government, and every | praposition lose its way in tae sentence. and adjectives and participles and pronouns get | into a grand riot worthy of tas Fourth ward | on election day, then to commit a moral in. | aeruracy. Better swallow a thousand goats thai on? caiasl | Buch persons ars also desoribad in the | text who ars very much alarmel about | the small faults oc. otasrs and have no | alarm about their own great transgros. | dons, There are in every community and ! in every caurch watchdozs wao fesl called | upon to keep taeir eyes on others and growl. Trey are full of suspicions. They | wonder if that man is not dishoasst, if that man fs not unciean.if thers is not something wrong about the other man. They ars al ways the first to hear ol anything wrong. Vultures are always the firet to smell care rion. They are ssi appoioted detectives, 1 lay this down as a rule without any excep- tian that those peoples who have the most faults themseives are most merciless in their watching of others. From scalp of head to sole of foot they are full of jealousies and Byprermicists. ‘hey spend their life in bunting for musk. rats and mud turtles instead of hunting for instead grand, their neighbors hmpet toetions and look at their owa a upside thing mean They look at " im hurt them half so much as one fault of some- body elisa. Their neighbor's imperfections are like gnats, and they strain them out: their own imperfections are like camels, and they swallow them. scrutiny of the text, I have to tell you we make the questions of time more prominent | than the questions of eternity. Come now, | let us all go into the confessional. Are not all tempted to make the question, Where shall I live now?! greater than the question, Where shall I live forever? How shall I get more dollars here® greater than the question, How shall [ lav up treasures in heaven? the question, How shall I pay my debts to man? greater than the question, How shall 1 meet my oblige- tions to God? the question, How shall I gai the world? greater than the question, Vhat if I lose my soul? the question, Why did God let sin come into the world? greater than the question, How sball I get it ex- tirpated from my nature’ the question, What shall I do with the twenty or forty or seventy years of my sublunar existence? greater that the question, What saall I do with the millions of cycles of my post terrestinl existence? Time, how small it is! Eternity, how vast it is! The former more insignificant {io comparison with the latter than a goat is inslzuiticant when co, upared with a camel, We dodged the text. We said, “Chat doesn't mean me, and that doesn't mean me,” and with a ruinous be- nevolence we are giving the whole sermon away, But let us all surrender to the charge, What an ado about things here. What poor preparation for a great eternity. Ag though a minnow were larger than a behe- moth, as though a swallow took wider cir- cuit than an a'batross, as though a nettle were taller than a Lebanon cedar, as though a giant were greater than a camel, as though a minute were lounger than a century, as though time were higher, deeper, broader than eternity, So the text which flashed with lightning of wit as { Christ uttered it, is followed LY the crasi- ing thunders of awful catastrophe to those who make the questions of time greater than the questions of the future, the oncoming, | overshading future. © Eternity! Evernity! Eternity! HE —— Defeated Each Other's Intentions. A very curious case, in which a band executed a will which had | prepared for his wile, and the wife exe- | cuted & will which hal been prepared { for her husband, has recently been de- | cided by the general term of the Su- preme Court of this State in the Fourth { Judicial Department (Syracuse). John {and Jane Nelson, being husband and { wife, wanted to make wills each in favor {of the other, aud employed William hus- been at ity { Cowie to prepare the instrument, which the did in due form. The wills were | read and placed unon the table for sig- i nature. Esch then signed of the { wills, made the requisite declaration as | to the character of the instrument, and | asked the subscribing witnesses to sign. | After execution the wills were sealed up | in an envelope, which was not opened i until after the husband's death, when it was discovered for the first time toat each bad by mistake signed the will in- tended for the other. The wife brought a suit in the Supreme Court to correct ber husband's mistake in the wrong will, by relorming the lang of the will which he did actually exe- it thal which he certainly intended to execute. Her complaint was dismissed at the special term, however, and the Appel. one sigain or = # Juage 0 cute so as to make conform | late braoch of the Supreme Court holds that the dismissal was right. Mr. Jas tice Martin, in the opinion of the gen- in suostance that there is the husovand ail, The was his wife's ¢ : because did not make soy will at strument that will, and of no more it had No pre« ely ks i“ ¢ executed wig} god DIADK piece if re. significance of ie been b &i han if t i ported in this State, but milar there are Eo ia decwsions in puiat of wile, == Mer. Care lish and Peansviv 3 position (N. XY.) Argus, — adverse {o th the Albany Overeating vs. Overwork. the QaRive th I 3 ft y of A to An abute that tends brain workers is exo writer in the Medical Mi mind several active brain suddenly broke down, and fancied that it was due to brain {atigue, when, as matter of fact, it was due to overstuffing of their stomachs. The furnace con. nected with meqtal machivery became clogged up with and carbon | ’ inj ir * eating. ’ fOr Tecals wWorsers wao i ¥ ia various shapes aad forms, and as a result disease came, and before the cases were fully appreciated, a demoralized condi. tion of the nervous systems was mani- fested, aad they Iaid the flattering unction to their souls that they hal in. in mental overwork. Hard work, mental or physical, rarely ever kills. If a mild amount of physical ex. ercise be taken, and a judicious amount of food be fursished, the bowels kept open in proper manner, the surface pro- tected with proper clothing, and the in. ' dividual cultivates a philosophical nature { and absolutely resolves to permit nota- ing to annoy or fret him, the chances are that he can do an almost unlimited amount of work for an indefinite length of time, bearing in mind always that when weariness comes he must rest and not take stimulants and work upos | false capital. The tired, worn-out siave should not be scourged to additional labor. Under such stimulus the slave i may do the task, but he soon becomes | crippled and uatit for work. The secret ! of successful work lies in the direction | of selecting good, nutritious, digestible food, taken in proper quantities, the adopting of regular methods of work, the rule of resting when pronounced | fatigue presents itself, determining | absolutely not to permit friction, worry | or fretting to enter into his life, and the | cultivation of the three graces, charity, | patience, and philosophy. —Scieatitic i American. An Armored Train. The Midland reilroad of India has had an armored train built which can be used either as a means of defense or attack, or for the repair of the railroad tracks and the telegraphs. The experiments with the train have yielded results so satis. factory that similar trains may be con structed for the sole purpose of the de. feuse of the country. Evideatly mili. tary armaments will never be finished, new means and weapons of war being wvented continually, Chicago Times. ns INI A The Austrian War Minister is about to establish a school to teach practical bal. looning for army wses in time of war, asnes i A Promising Situation, : (New York Daily Investigator.) Good judges say that one of the next lo- | calities to achieve distinction by lumping from a substantial town to a thriving me tropolis in a few years will be the city of Buperior, Wisconsin, and this, with. | | i too, inferior towns the have same while ef- | Until a year | paseo i result, i think that Buperior as a monopolist of ths | water and rail termionl at one end of the | | Figures are uninteresting | briefly, but comparisons | important, This little Bu- | credited by its lost census with | 22,000 people, handled more . of grain it shipped nineteen million bushels, of flour | end, ire always porior, merchandise | million do lars, business was in magnitude, reason for this | is that the rail | Michi- per ton per mie, while | ne-tenth of one cent per | ton per mile, This position at the ex- | treme western end of Lake Buperior is what gives the city of Buperior its prestige, and is making it grow faster than Chicago ever did, Besides one hundred and | ne sinaller industrial concerns, Sup rior has located twentv-eight large manufacturing enterprises in the past eighteen months, in- duding the American Steel Barge any, the bullders of the famous ‘whaleback™ vessel, which 8 revo lutionizing the lake and ocean freight carrying trade. The twenty-eight institu tions ab ve mentioned inc ude iron and stesl plants, flour mills, stove foundries, wagon | factories, pump makers, ship builders ani saw and shingle mills, The most HET vative business men in the Northwest believe that Baperior will grow faster in the next ten years than any ther city in that prosperous section of the wountry, and many f them claim that Cuoicago, St. Paul, Minosapolis and Mil- waukees have never rapil growth that will come to the head of the great chain of lakes and the city of Sup rior, value of Inke on'y is an condition of the all to Of thirteen cities this to Chicago economical things, It i gan is one cent the water rate | om. of o wisely Lhe we {i rey 3 hie 1 iy § A NE ONES : way {o vet un hen out of the # Lo go slow but shoo'er. garden WTATE OF UNIO, UTTY OF 10LEDO, { 1 Lucas County ; a. i Fraak J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partoer of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Vo, doing business | the City Poedo ¥ and State aforesaid, and that said finn my the sum of $i for enacts and every » of catarrh that cannot be cured if Hall's Ustarrh Cure, Fraxx J. Cnexey Sworn to before me and subscribed my presence, this OLL day of Deceinber, A. 1D. B60, | A.W. GLEARS of ¥ 4 3, ¥ fe i ! { BEAL ¥ ny Nedary Pulite Hail's Catarrh Cure is taken ate directly on the blood aud ms of the syste. Send for testin F.J Unexey & Co., Toledo, QO. =r Sold by Druggists “It’s all up” with the landiobber when ‘sakes his first sen voyage. » § Tix Six Dellars te Chirage. nd Dayton » fare bet Th R { we Cincinnati, H shnounor & reds nnati and Chics ow ' World's Hab with Dining a RB. Weer; i 1238 Tals 14 thie i » tickets i ad vim dt { bie a] | saucers § : ¥ figagement ot Are A new 8d, but engagement jars are old stand. bys, | JacwbsQil AFTER 22 YEARS. Newton, lll., May 23, 188! Fre years—I J § ry * ii Tt 1 1863 to 1388 suffered of the ras cured by the use of St. T. C. DODD “August | Flower” it "5 -- rheumatism 1 . h 'acobs Oil. I am happy to state to you and to suffering humanity, that my wife has used your wonderful remedy, August Flower, for sick headache | and palpitation of the heart, with | satisfactory results. Forseveral years she has been sn great sufferer, has | seep under the treatment of eminent | physicians in this city and Boston, and found little relief. She was in- luced to try August Flower, which gave immedaite relief. We cannot say to much for it.” I. C. Frost, Springlield, Mass, @ 3it gh The casting out of the devil of disease was once a sign of authority. Now we take a little more time about it and cast out devils by thousands—we do it by knowledge. Is not a man who is taken possession of by the garm of consumption possessed of a devil ? A little book on careruUL LIVING and Scott's Emulsion of cod-liver oil will tell you how to exorcise him if it can be done, Free. nh & Dowwsg, Chemists, 139 South gth Avenue, v ork. 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KLix®’s Grey No fits after first day's use, Marvelous cures, Treatise and £2 tris Lottie free. Dr. Kline, 931 Arch St. Puila., Pa A msn may be cons dered lacks g in hos pitaiity when he will vot iden, even entertain an 8CTo The worst cases of { eld Dr. rwan's Jr. swan, Beave emale weakness read Fat maples Dum, Wis io ie free, i cure ‘ ba There goes 5 man to be trusted son, ne Dudeson entered 'snid Jag. the tailor shop. . ———— Brecuas's Kew Pioas biood wot king urder will eu the Onl and The worst mild, soothing bt price 25 conts cases yield to the ! sing and heal- ing properties of Dr, Sage’s Catarrh Remedy, That's why the proprie tors can, and do, promise to pay £500 for a case of Catarrh in the “ i al ar ETAL It often re (juires siraitened cireq crooked work oH, stance LiaMictedwith sore eyestine Drlsiae Th soti's Eye Water. Diroguistuesii nt 75s + The flour mission To make good b Head which they cannot cure. Obstinate Blood Humor. | HAD TERRIBLE ECZEMA Fr Sicurees yearswas hing wd finally LOST ! IGHT After other remedics without relief, 1 tock 3 5.5. AxD IT Ct ooth, and the terrible trouble is aM K.N. Mrreueur, : o™~ I know the above s - iN r was lernibie, treatment by five and RED ME Mj 1 sm oe “one a ic com, La tatement to be true. —8, S. Haruon, Macon, Ga. obstinate RASH OR HUMOR, that spread 1 ) I consulted physicians, and used many remedies without a cere, e suggestion of x friend | used Swift's Speci } Tha compiectely cured me il uble.—~E.H WeLi1s, Chesterfield, Va. 1s iw as I was for some time troubled wit over my fice and | breast $ Iwo vear have had no return of 1} safest and best remedy for all troubles of ood and Skin. ~ the B general health, Cures OY removing - : IFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga, the cause, and at the sae «dF 0 ' Af - “ waails a EVERY FAMILY, Cchool, Library, and Office §-H-0O-U-L-D Have a Dictionary. Care should be taken to . - GET THE BEST. THE INTERNATIONAL, yf ar a wh ££ Aa” i dan Ak RE JRE — x Kur a a Bl Bo oti i BED wn wall wid a Ans Bw ve Ry # EAD Bhd wi wl A pg, RB natband Pu a —y Kan dt Sy wan Hoot whe ps bay Ay - =. fad 0 FY Gan, BY te ARFIELD TEA === comes results of Daw suiting ures Slek Hondar hey restorestomplezioncuresConsti pation. Pe « AREIDGRD.™ ES OF ad Wy # WEBSTER'SY INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY wl IS THE ORE TO BUY. ” % VED aiveds, and Paints and by ish is Brilliant, Over Her pas fof prurcha 00 KOT BE DECE with Pastes. un which slain the fins Hjure the iron rn of hh Biowe § and the cone with every je Son very symptom or diseases ress itis & Taliare by (he stoma? perform thelr yer Funets verenting cach onl drome THE R ® Agents Wanted; Ferma iogy slated; DOR, PETTUS nd Biood Qisenms sent sealed for §OC,; also Arisdagt HA Liz | IIDE BAA, Marks, Indian Tok and Earks, eure ile pee Gf Nowe, 5% Teous Salr, Pimdes 5% John H. Wosdbarr, 3 Dermatolorist, 33 ] “or 42d Mi, New York £5¢ Oonvaitation free ul office ANS TABUL | wt . ty ry tiaennd, or ow re benef tod Ly taki riew By all I grossil PARE CHEMICAL (0 M0Rpruce FIGHT per vent profi POPROOP 1 hetdde 38 Ad 5 N.Y rE and win $18 CAS on } “i $ 2 A ite Brus -e Be, Bri pman, GENTS 2s = THECOST ISTHE SAME. Swipes fl PRITES * go ar The Hartman Steel Picket Fence ordisary clumsy wood plebet affair that obstructs the view and will rot or fall The Hartman Fepoe is artistic in design, protects the grounds without concealing JLLUSTRATLD CATALOGUE WITH PRICES AND TESTE HARTMAN MFG, CO, Beaver Falls, Pa. WHITE & DOUSON, Norfolk, Va Corts ne more than an apart In a short time them and I» practically everlasting. MONIALS MALL DD FREE DUFUR & OO. Baltimore, M4, GLAS $3.2 SHOE Por gentlemen is a fine Cal! Shoe, made seamless, of the best leather produced in this country There are no tacks of wax threads 0 Hal the fool, and I= rade as smooth inside as a hand sowed shoe. It is as stylish, easy fitting and durable as custom-made shoes Oosdng from $4.00 wo $5 00, and acknowledged © be the Best in the World for the price. A 33.00 5en 32.50 bugs $2.00 "tua $1.75 xis 82,25 Nis 2 & 5175 Working man's Shoe, Goodwear $2.00 "i. § ey K> SCHOOL SHOES. TAKE NO SUBSTITUTES. IT IS A DUTY you owe to yourself and your family, duri times, to get the most value for your money. You can eco n your foot. wear if you purchase W. L. Douglas’ Shoes, which, without qui , represent a greater value for the money than any other makes, . ; CAUTIO W.L. DOUGLAS’ name and the price is stamped = on the bottom of each shoe, which protects the consumer inst high prices and inferior shoes. of deniers ing fraud- Beware tho s of W. L. Douglas’ Shoes ng te Substituts ather rakes for om. Such Substitutions are 1d igang gubje Ww. Lb DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass. ng 7 under; Tone RA Be rey For GENTLEMEN. $5 00 Be. $4.00 $3.50 "rae. $2.50 Extra Value these hard oe iree, have ne agent ih