The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, April 14, 1892, Image 7

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    NEY. DR. TALMAGE.
day Sermon.
Subject: “The Three Tabernacles, a Story
of Trials and Trinmphs."”
Text: “Let ws make three tabernacles.”
wLuke 1x., 33,
fatigue, as, in December, 1882, we rode near
the foot of Mount Hermon in the Holy
Land, the mountain called bv one “a
mountain of ice,” by another
breastplate of ice,” by another ‘the Mont
Blanc of Palestine,” ‘Its top has an almost
unearthly brilliance. But what must it
have been in the time to which my text re.
fers? Peter and vames and John were on
that mountain top with Jesus when, sud-
denly, Christ’s face took on the glow of the
noonday sun, and Moses and Elijah, who
had been dead for centuries, came out from
the heavenly world and talked with our
Saviour. What an overwhelming thres—
senting the prophets, and Christ, represeut-
ing all worlds,
Impetuous Peter was so wrought upon by
the presence of this wondrous thres, thar,
without waiting for time to consider how
preposterous was the proposition, he cried
out, "Let us make three tabernacles—one
for Thee, one for Moses and one tor Etijab.”
Where would they get the material for |
building one tabernacle, much less material
enough to build two tabernacies, and still
less, how would they get the material for
building three? Where would they get the |
hammers’ Where the gold? Where tue
silver? Where the curtains? Where the
costly adornments? Hermon is a barren
peak, and to build one tabernacle in such a
place would bave been an undertaking be-
yond human achievement, and Peter was
propounding the impossible woen he cried
out in enthusiasm, *‘Let us build threes taber-
nacles
And yet that is what this congregation
has been called todo and has done. The
first Brooklyn Tabernacle was dedicated in
1870, and destroyed by fire in I8T2 Tae
second Brookiyn Tabernacie was aeaicated
in 1874, and destroved by fire in 1580, :
third brookivn Tabernacie was dedicated in
April, 1801, und in that we are worshiping
tc-day. \hatsounded absurd for Peer to
propose, when he said on Mount Hermon, in
the words of my text, “Let us build three
tabernac es,” we have not only done, but in
the mysterious province of God were come
pelied todo,
1 announce to you this day that we are at
last, asa cburch, in smooth waters. Ar-
rangements have been made by whica our
financial difficulties are now fuily and satis
factorily aajusted. Cur income will exceed
our outgo, and Brooklyn Tabernacle will be
yours and belong to you and your children
after you, and anything vou ses contrary to
this you jaay put down to the confirmad
babit which some people have got o
representing this church, and they
stop. When I came to brooklyn i ¢ on
small church and a big We
have now this, the largest Protestant church
in America, and financiaily as a coongrega-
tion we are worth, over and beyond all in
debtedness, consiaerably mor $150,000
I have preached here twer three years,
and 1 expect, if my life and
he
Hii
CRUNOL
indeotedness,
: than
Deaith are COL
tinued, to preach here twen
longer, aithough we will ail «
member that our breath
and any hour we may be cal
account of our steward
the future is that ¥
uting all you can to the support of our inst
tutions. Our best days are yet to come;
greatest revivals of religion, and our might
lest outpourings thé Holy We
have got through the Red sen and stand to-
day on the other bank capping the cymbals
of victory.
Yes, twenty-three years have passed since
I came to live in Brookiyn, and they have
been to me eventiul years. It was a pros-
trated church to which [ came, a church so
flat down 1t could drop no farther. Through
controversies which it would be useiess to
rehearse it was well niga extinct, ana for a
long while it bad been without a pastor.
But nineteen members could be mustered to
sign a call tor my coming.
As a committee was putting that call be-
fore me in an upper rooin in my bouse in
Philadephia, there were two othsr commit.
tees on similiar errands trom otaer churches
in other rooms, whont ny wife was enter-
taining and Keening apart from unhappy
collision. The auditorium of the Brook.va
church to which I came defied all the laws
of acoustics: the church had a sieepia toat
was the derwion of the town, snd a
box pulpit wiich shut in the preacoer as
though he were dangerous to be let loose,
or it acted asa barricade that was uanscss
sary to keep back the people, for they were
so few that a minister of ordinary muscle
could have kept back all who were there
My first Sabbath in Brookiyn was a sad
day, for I aid not realize how tar the church
was down until theo, and on the evening of
that day my own brother, througa whose
pocket 1 entered the ministry, died, ani the
tidings of his decease reached meat 6 o'clock
in the evening, and [ was to preach at half
past seven. But from that day the bisssing
of God was on us, and in thres months we
began the enlargement of the building. Be
fore the close of that year we resolved to
construct the first Tabernacle, It was to be
8 temporary struciure, and therefore we
called it a Tabernscie instead of a Temnle
What should be the style of architectures |
was the iinmediate question. I bad always
thought that the amipitheatrical shape would
be appropriate for a chareh.
Two distinguished architects were em-
ployed, and after much hovering over de-
signs they announced to us that such a |
building was impossible for religious pure
poses, as it would not be churchly, and
would subject themselves and us to ruinous
Qriticiam; in other words, they wers not
ready for a revolution in church archi-
tecture, Utterly disheartened as to my
favorite style of architectare, I said to the
trustees, “"Jduild anything you please, ani |
must be satisfled.” But one morning a
Fouug architect appeared at my house and
asked if we bad yet selected a pian for our
church, Isaid, “No, and what we want we
cannot get,” “VV hat kind of building do yon
want” he asked. And taking out a lead |
neil and a letter envelope from my pociet,
in less than a minute by a few curved lines
1 indicated in the rough what wo wanted, |
“But,” 1 mid, ‘old architects tell us it can't |
be dore, and there is no use in you trying.” |
He said, “I can do it. How long ean I have
to make out the plans? 1 said, **This even-
ing at 8 o'clock everything is to be decided,”
At B oclock of that evening the architect
presented his plans, ani the bids of builder |
and mason were presented, and in five min.
utes after the plans were presented they
were unanimously adopted. So that |
would pot be in the way of the trustees dur.
ing the work 1 went to Europe, and when I |
ot back the church was well nigh dove,
Bat there came in a staggering hindrance,
We expected to pay for the new church by
the sale of the old building, The old one
had been sold, but just at the tims we must
have the money the purchasers backed out
and we had two churches and no money,
By the help of God and the indomitable
and unparalielel energy of our trustees
there and there one of them t to-day,
but the most in a better ), wa got
build ready for consecra sud on
Sagem 25, 1870, morning and evening
tory services were beld, and in ths
afternoon the children, with sweet and multi.
tudinous vo ces, consecrated the place to
God, Twenty thousand dollars were raised
that day ory a floating debt. In the
morning old Dr, Stephen H. Tyng, the
glory of the | Church and tho
Chrysostom of the American pup preached
a sermon which lingered in ite gracious
effects os long as the building stood, He
read enough out of the E prayer
book to ke from being repri-
maunded by h for preaching atanon-
Episcopal belong -
is MOSES,
give an
asx fol
our
of Ghost.
nigh
i
ing ts another denomination, responded with
heartiness, as though we were used to the
liturgy, “Good Lord, deliver us?
During the short time we ocounied that
building we had a constant downpour of
religious ewakening.
of
dim my memory the glorious
had in the first Tabernseis,
| of its invasion of the usual style of church
| architecture, was called by soma “Talmage's
| Hiopodro ne, bv others ‘Church of
| Holy Cirens,” and by other mirtiiful nomen
| elature,
| acoustics, and stoo i long enough to have its
imitation in all the large eities of Ameriea
| tecture, People saw taat it was th com
mon sens¢ wavof seating an audience
Instead of putting them in an razular
church, where ssch one chiefly saw the back
| part of somebody else's head, the audience
| were arranged in semicircle, so tuat they
couid see one another's faces, and thr audi-
torium was a great family of seated
+]
rie
{ was an iron structure, and we supposed tire
| prooi, but the insurance companies looked
at it, and after we had gona too far to stop
in its construction taey declinad to insure it
except for a mere nothing, declaring that,
being of fron, if the inflammable material
between the shieats of iron took tire no eagine
hose could play upon it. And they were
right. During those davs we educated and
sent out from a lay coliege under our charge
twelve huodred young men
women, many of them becoming evangelists
avd many of them becoming regularly
dained preachers, and I meet tiem in all
parts of the land toiling mightily for God,
One Sunday morning in December, 1872,
There was an excite.
and much smoke in the
Fire engines dashed past, But my
the sermon I was about to
ment in the street
air,
min! was on
kind of a chariot that Elijah took from the
banks of the Jordan, That Sunday morn
ing tragedy, with its wringin: of hands and
frozen tears on the cheskx of many thou
sands standing in the street, anil the crash
that shook the earlo, is as vivid as though
it were yesterday. But it was not a perfect
i loss
All are anxious
on such occasions sensible people are apt to
do unusuzl things one the member: at
the ris« ol his life, rushed in among the
fallen wails, mounts the pulpit and took a
glass of water from the table and brought it
in safety to the street. Ho you see it was
a total Within an hour from
many churches came Kind mvitatioos to oc
cupy their buildings, and hanging against a
lamppost near the destroyed building, be-
fore 12 o'clock that raorning, was a board
with the inscription, “The congregation of
T ‘le will worship to-night
¥
OL
not loss
Brooklyn Taberns
in Plymouth Cnurch
Mr. Beecher roade the opening prayer,
which was fall of commu iseration for me ani
my homeless flock, and [ preached that night
the sermon that | intended to preach that
morning ia my own church, the te
cerning the prec: fia waster box
at the feel of Christ, and sore
had one very precious broken that da
were, a8 a church, obliterat«d. ut arise
and build” said maav + Another
architect took the amphitreatrieal pian of a
church, which in the first lustauc: was nec
essary somewhat rue nd it
into an elaborate plan that was immediately
adopiad E :
Bat
SX pens
ex oensi ve
adorn
#
Con.
HIS broken
HOD,
develop sid
raise the money for suc
lertaki 15 was he
of any 8
exw nave Rien
w building needed
it was at tha?
tire couniry was
from a financie! panic, but
iong-continued financial depression
remember, as
cloud hung heavy year after vear and com
mercial establishments without num bor went
down. Through wi struggles we
the eternal Go! and some brave souls 1
remembe Manv a time would I have glad.
ac wl calls to some other Held,
but I could not leave the flock in the wilder
ness,
At last, after, in the interragnum. having
orshiped in our beavtiful Academy of
Muasie, on the morning of February 22, 1874,
the anniversary of the Washington who con
querad impossibilities and on the Rabbah
that always celebs 2 the resurrection, Dre
Byron Sunderiand, Chanlain of the Unite |
States Senate, thrilled us through and
with dadicatory sermon from
Hazgai ii, 9. “The glory of this hous
shall be oreater than that of the for mer,
saith the Lord of Hosts The corner stone
of that building had been laid by the (line
trions and pow enthr Dr. Irenmas
Prime. On the platform on dedication day
sat, among others, Dr. Dowling, of the Ban.
tise Chure De. Cre of the Methodist
Church, Mr, Bescher, of the Congregational
irch, and Dr. French, of the Presbyterian
Church, Homannah! Another £35 000 was
raised on that day
The following Sunday 328 souls wero
ceived ur communion, mostly on-
confession of faith At two other ecommu-
nions over 500 souls joined at each one, At
another ingathering 638 souls enterad this
communion. and so manv of those gatherad
throogs have already enterel heaven that
wa axpect to feel at home when we got there,
Mvimv! Won't we be giad to see them
the men and women who stood by us in dave
that ware darz and days that were jubilant!
Hosannsh! The work dons in that ehnren
on Schermerhorn streef oan never be
a an
fuss +]
en aT
$
i bu
t b
Oo
our « ;
time when for years our ¢
suilering,
from that
which ali
not
business the
en
et ]
yay
iy rey
through a
ye |
Dy
re
343%
What self seorifices on the part of many,
wno gave almost till the blood came’ What
hallsinjihs! What victories! What wed.
ding marches played with full organ! What
baotisms! What sacraments! What olbse.
quis! Uneof them on a snowy Sahoath
afternoon, when all Brooklyn sssmel t
sympathize, ant my eldest son, bearing my
own name, lay beneath the pulpit in the last
score of ministers on and around thes plat.
form tried to interpret how it was best that
one who hal § comes to manhoo! and
just
with brightest worldly prospects, should be
osse to sche until
never fall.
That second Tabsrnarie! What a stuven -
dous reminiscence! Bat, if the Peter of my
text had known what an undertaking it is to
build two tabernacies he would not have
proposed two, to say nothing of three. As
an anniversary sermon mast needs be some.
what autobiographical, iet me say [ hava
not been idle. During the standing of those
two Tabernacles fifty-two booke, under as
many titles, made un trom my writings,
were publissed. During that tims also | was
permitted to discuss all the great questions of
the day in all the great cities of this conti
nent, and in many of them many times, be-
ninety-six
we moot where tears
times in England, Scotland and
ninety-four days.
During all that time, as well as sinos, I
was engaged in editing a religions news
paper, believing that such a periodical was
capable of great usefulness, and I have been
a constant contributor to newspapers and
periodicals, Meanwhile all things had be-
come easy in the Brookivn Tabernacle. On
a Sabbath in October, 1899, I announced to
my congregation that I would in a few
cers of the church had conssuted to my go-
jug, 2nd tae wish of a life to me was about
to be fulfilled. The next Sabbath morning,
about 2 o'clock, or alter mid
member of my house
saying that there was a strange
sky. A thunderstorm had left
of electricity, and from horizon to horizon
everything seemed to blaze, But that did
not disturb me, until an observation taken
from the « pola of my house declared that
the secon { Tabernacle was putting on red
wings,
1 scouted the idea and turned over on the
uother sleep, but a number of
to the roof, and I
in the night
second Taber.
service; aud we, although
| “I think that ends my work in Brooklva.
| Surely the Lord will not call a minister to i
i build three churches in one city, The build. |
| Ing of one church generally ends the useful. !
| ness of a pastor. How can any one wresida
at the building of three churches But |
before twenty-four hours ‘had passed we
wers compelled to ery out, with Peter of
my tex’, “Letus build three tabernacles.” |
| We must have a home somewhere, The old
site had ceased th be the center of our con
gregation, and the center of the congrega
| tion, as pear as we could find it, is whers we
now stand,
Having selected the spot, should we build
| on it a barn or a tabernacle, beautiful and
commaodions? Our common senses, as well as
our religion, commanded the latter. But |
{ what puso, what in lustry, what skill, what
| sacrifice, what faith in tiod were necessary!
| Impadiments and hindrances without num
ber ware thrown in the way, and had it not
| bean for the perseverance of our church off
ciale, and the practical help of many pe Ww
and the prayers of millions of good souls in
all parts of the earth, and the blessing of
| Almighty God, the work would not have
| been At. jut it is done, and all good
people who behold the structure fees! in ther
hearts, if they do not utter it with their lips,
“How amiable are Thy tabernacles, O Lord
of Hosts!” On tke third Babbath of last
April this church was dedicated, Dr. Hamlin,
| of Washington, preaching au insoiring ser.
mon, Dr. Wendell Prime, of New York,
offering the dedicatory praver, and some
fifteen clergymen during the day taking
part in the services, Hosannah!
How suzgestive to many of us are the
| words spelled out in flowers above the pul.
| pit—""1800" and “1802” —for those dates
{ nel what rapturex, what griefs, what
i struggles, what triuciphs. 1 mention itasa
| matter of gratitude to God that in these
| twenty-three years | bave missed but one
| Babbath through physicai indisposition, and
{ but three in the thirty «ix years of mv min-
! istry., Aud now, having reached this
| twenty-third milestone, I start answ, |
| have in my memorandum hooks nnalyses
{of more sermons than [ have ever vet
| preached, and 1 have preached, as near as |
can tell, about 33%
During thess past years | have learned two
or taree things. Among others [ have
learned that “‘all things work together for
good.” My positive mode of preaching has
sometimes seemed to stir the hostilities of all
| earth and hell. Feeling called upon fifteen
| years azo to explore underground New York
city life, that I migat report the evils to ba
| combated, 1 took with me two sliders of my
| ehuren and a New York polices commissioner
and a podesman, and 1 explored and re
ported the horrors that needed removal and
the ailurcments that endangered our young
men. Thers canis upon me an outburst of
assumed indig m that frightened almost
i but yaelf. That exo n
nurch thirty or forty news
respondents from north, so
and west, which opened lor me
avenues in which to preach the Gosoel
otherwise would never have teen opened.
Years passed on and 1 preached a series
of sermons on Amusements, and a false re.
port of woat | did say-—an1 one of ¢ ser.
mons said to have bsen preacaed UY me was
not mine in a single word —rogsed a violege
that threatensd me with poison and dirk
and pistol aud other forms of extinguish
ment, until the chisel of Brookiyn police,
without any suggestion fro: «
sexdion of the church wits 213 ar
to ses tual Do barn
ened many doors, 3
ie,
| BVervon
put ints
paper oO
wast
9
RN i»
PO
That
len
licemen done,
excitement
tered for §
Alte
1 wa i
» (rOepel
lewinstioal trial,
aoe wo did
a
& All a
Was Rrraie ¥
the way I¢
youd ’
not
was aogu
sho
Ri
x oe Ame
made me more
ever haovened and
than ist
Leno On the of ea~h oh
ta better and a larger church, ang
saster, not a carmcature, not a pore
tou, an assault, during all theses twenty.
thres years, bu ned for our advan
tage, and ought 1 not believe that “all
things work together { Hosannan!
Anot i during these
twenty-three vears is that it is not nex a
to preacs pick Saws in the old
Bible in order an aadlience: the old
Jook without any fixing up = good enouzh
for me, and the higher criticism, as it is
called, means lower religion Hizlier
criticism is apother form of infddeiity, and
its disciples will believe jess and less, until
many of them will land in Nowhere and
become the worshipers of an eternal "What
is it." The most of theses higher critics ssem
to be sealing notoriety by pitching ints the
Bible, It is such a brava thing to strike
your grandmother The old Gospel put in
molern phrass, and without any the
conventionalities, and sdapted to all the
wants and woes of hunanity, [ have found
the mightiest magnet, aud we have never
lacked an an limes
Next to the biessing of my own famiivr I
account the biessing that [ have aiways had
a great muaititade of people to proson ie.
hat oid Gospel 1 have preached you
these twenty-three years of my Beookiyn
pastorate, and that old Gospel | will yr moh
till I die, and cusrze my S30, Wao 1« on the
way to the ministry, to preach 1t after me,
for I remember Paul's tua lerbolt, “if any
man preach any other Goepel, let him be
accursed.” And now, as [ stand hereonmy
twenty-third apoivermry, 1 see two andi-
ences, The one is made up of all those who
| have worshiped with us iu the past, but have
been transiated to higher realms.
What grou of children--too fair and too
sweet and too lovely for earth, and the Lord
took them, bul they seem present to-uay,
The croup has gone out of tae swollen throat
ire
gave me (
more
au »
we 2
a Q
not
Sy
out
to
or goa
wer lesson 1 have learn
®
>
.
arrove or
rat
y got
of
to
on them the health and radianc: of heaven,
Hail, groups of glorified children! How giad
1am to have you come back to us today!
And bere sit those aged ones, who departed
this lie weaving an awful vacancy in home
{ and church. Where are your staffs and where
ars your gray looks, and woers you stooping
shoulders, ye blessed old folks? “Ou” thoy
say, “we are all young again, and
the bath in the river from under the throne
bas made us agile and bounding. In the
place trom which we come they use no staffs,
but scepiers!” Hail, fatoers and mothers in
Israel; how glad we are to have you come
back to greet us, But the other audience |
see in imagination is made up of all taose to
whom we have had opportunity as a ctaurch,
{ duectly or indirectly, of presenting the
| Gospel. Yea, ali my parishes seem to come
back to-day. The people of my first charge
in Beileville, New Jersey. The people of my
| second charge in Syracuse, New York, The
people of my third charge in Philadelphia.
And the people of ail thesa three Brookiyn
Tabernacles. Look at tham, and all those
whom, through tae printing press, we have
| invited to God and heaven, now sesming to
sit in galleries above galleries fifty gallleries,
a bundred galleries, a thousand galleries
higu.
I greet them all in your name and in
Christ's name, all whom I have confronted
charge, whore my lips trembled and my
kueos knocked together from affright, .
ing from the text, Jeremiah i., 6, “Ah, Lord
God, behold I cannot speak, for I am a
to-day from
Luke ix. 83, “Let us make three taber-
nacler,” those of the past and the t, all
gather in imagination, if not in reality, all
of ua gtatetul Jo tied for meteies " a
us or misimprov opportus
Sopeead for eteranl res, and a, ai
yisibte and She invisible oiing of the
presenta past commingle, ve out
10 be sung by those who are hare to-day, and
to be sung by those who shall read of this
scene of reminiscence and congratulation,
that hymn which has been rolling on since
fsanc Watts started it one hundred and fifty
Yours ngos
Unr God, our help in 5
Wight aid | a me
And var siernal hous, wing
seni nn. one.
A cask has recently been built in To.
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nit
cory Hr
All alone, |
both in the way it acts, and in the |
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ite Pre seription for women,
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If you're weak or “run-down,” it |
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mg sleep, and flesh and
strength, For all functional weak
|
i
i
relieves
the
restore =
tive remedy, Hence,
It's in this way:
It's guaranteed to give satisfac
11
BO
paid for it is refunded. 4
They're 1
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But all that wonld be nothing,
if they weren't also the Jest to
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Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets pre-
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"
yoy ny
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the liberty | take,
he escaped
F.xense
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HAMS Pras
MAE Dwell Used ID Earope
nd eXoelient
Hrs ars not
‘ealed
Birds Cathered His Almond Crop.
id grower of
0 Thi
*£ fu,
Cate
turn
it
is
crop had
yeliowham-
roken-hearted at
ion practiced upon
#
‘niere Gir
PAR 37d bE
Enterpri
Oregon as a Fruit State,
Fruit-growers in the West
¥
the i
are on
thusiastic oy wssibilities of
and
cul Ine
Italian prunes
nette Valley are
to grown italy
The climate, he says, is like the great
region of Asia Minor. One
has planted abo fifteen
ousand prune trees on 150 geres
i Williamette, and it
prunes and other fruits
pianted in thousands of other farms,
That part of the State promises 1
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future.
ing region,
ture
perior 8
a
wer i
are
ONE ENJOYS
Both the method and results whes
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its action and truly beneRcial ha
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n
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the most popular remedy known.
8 is for sale in 500
and 81 all loading drug.
gists. Any who
may not have it on hand will pro
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept
substitute,
FORNIA FIG SYRUP CQ
0
Catarrh Can't be Cured
With loc! applications as they cannot resch
the sedt of the disease, Catarrl is a blood or ours
stitutiopal disvase, and 19 order to cure it you
have 10 take nierasl remedies, Hall's Catarrt
taken internally std acts directly ont
ad mt sirfuces, Hail's
4 Ho Quack It was presord
in ‘his country
reguingr g nm
hie
blood COU
toediciie
Lysicians
ae ot
composed uf the |
fi in
directly
CO bie
Pe
Mucous
nation of the
etch wonderfu
ssilmonia
ITO iA
vlodo, O
0., Props, }
GrugEs rice le.
Bold by
The dexterons wrestler gets
ness when he drops on his friends,
ADIES «hilldren who
iiding ur B
§1 is tiles , €13
indigestion,
panilils, Makes th
nee .Iny , Ox
rown's rot
res Malaria,
OH TiAENE i Liver
¢ Blood rich and pure.
Col
The leap-year girl might try him delicately
Pol ~COrNu.,
FITS stopped fres by Dr. KLINE'S GREAT
NERVE REsTORER, first day's
nse, Marvelous cures.
Lottie iree
Na fits afte:
Treatise and 3!
irr. Kline 931 Arch %t., Pail
tris
5, Pa
A man may be considered lackirg in hos
pitality when be will nol even
iden,
Broxcuiag
known ax an adm
Bronehitis, Hoar eness, Congl
Hi
"BrOws's
widely
rable remedy for
is und
troubles sold only in res,
i y
“There poes a man to be trusted "said
| son, ax Dudeson entered the tailor shop.
broken down from ¢
Brown's Iro:
ae aide digestion, se.
of bi cures malaria. A
for women and ehiidren.
MANY persons are
work or houseaold cares
fers rebui ds
HOVE» eX00nn
spendid toni
ii "4
ir
It often ires crooked work to get out of
| Sir
reagan
Hened circurnsstances,
There are
the Herlie
WiLLiam Bruxcen.
APROMINENT G A I. MAN,
Ever since J eame out of the Army in
‘65 1 had been in peor and had
taken more or less medicine all the time,
I suffered principally from kidney and
liver complaint, pain in back, poor ap-
petite and constitution run down gen.
erally. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Root did
me more good than all the other medi-
cine | had ever taken. At present am
feeling better than for years, It is the
Lest medicine on earth. Wm. Spencer,
Co. ¥, 0th Indispa Infantry, Elkhart,
Ind,
It is just such cases and
cures 43 these that have made Swamp
{oot famous and given ita world-wide
Everybody has a
it. Have you tried
¥
by Druggi
health
wonderful
reputation, good
word to say for
Recommended
81 Ou, _ :
Ely's Cream Balm
QUICKLY CLRE~
COLD ix HEAD
Price 530 Cents. i
ptril
»
t
1%:
iy Balm 10 each Dor
ROK, 6 Warren Bt, X.%
BIN BICOING
4 dieabie fee fn
perience, Wr
Bue all SOLDIERS
tr fuCreass 4 YOArs ex
AW McUonsicK
& (imcimmari, Os
le for Laws
Bowe, Wasnixevox, I. C.
rESSEYES
Faiz
seben
TERY
; 22k
eT
gs
assabas
BACKACHE,
SCIATICA,
SPRAINS,
BRUISES,
i BURNS,
{| WOUNDS,
SWELLINGS,
TERSeT ve
Sais
iid:
NEURALGIA.
it ah ih che ih th ches 5 dt ers
$obipibis
i reds 3
bt Earp Rn :
Kennedy's
MedicalDiscovery
i Takes hold in this order:
Bowels,
Liver,
Kidneys,
®
9
isd FREE
BB Be Peed, BD
—
A bright, energetic man or
woman wanted 10 take the
sole agency for an article
that is needed In every
ome and indisprasas
e in every ce.
Inside Skin,
a » 1 -
Outside Skin,
Driving everything before it that onght to be out.
You know whether
you need it or not.
Bold by every drugrist, and manufactured by
DONALD KENNEDY,
ROXBURY, MAss,
Tuli's Tiny Pills
stimulate the LINY FHS
the digestive organs, regulate the
bowels, and are apeqgualed as an anti.
bilious medicine. Dose small. Price, oD
25¢. Office. 39 & 41 Park Place, N.Y ®
lliustrated Publications, with
{ MAPS, iescribing Minnesota,
} orth Dakote, Montane. dade,
: Washington and Oregon, the
i FREEGOYERN MEN
: AND CREAP
NORTHERN
PACIFIC R. R,
Pest Agricoitaral Gras
ing and Timber Lands
now open to seftiers. Ma
| Mas. Be LARRORR, Lewd Com. BK. 7
$50.00
: *
SELLS AT slg in
A town of Ta] 8700 in
9 days and a steady income
i afterward, A “Bonsnsa’
for the right person. Good
WE E K jobs ure scarce and
“oon in . vile of Oner
I. W. JONES, Manager, Springfield, Oho,
Here It Is!
Want to learn al! about a
Horse! Howto Mok Outta
Good One! Know imperte:
Hoar and so Guard against
Frand! Detect Disease and
Effect» Cure when same is
possible! Tell the age by
be Teeth! What to call the Different Parts of the
Anlmal’ How to Shoo a Horse Properly © AN th
and other Va'uabie Information can be obtained bi
reading our JOOPAGE JTLLUSTRATEG
HORSE BOOK, which we will forward, os
Pid, on receipt of only 35 cents in stamps.
134 Leonard St., New York City.
ath J)
nl
Vi ~
WWAYATAY TAYE 4 FN fa
err hen ee
3 EF CEs LE
B
yrereeey
er.
shasabbashb
OIL
ERBAEE Fares
=
#45118
pe
sid
1b
hyity
TEE
WOLD MEDAL, PARIS, 1878
W. BAKER & COS
Brees Coc
No
sed in
PEREEER LN PAVE ERR NREL RRL Raabe sorb Rbicn ini nana
£3
and
it is solulde.
Clhiem icals
ie pr. pa ii
1,
rE the
with
Sold by Grooers everywhere,
Ww. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass.
VE
RD and Paleo w
Mire the ron, and born
sve Rt £ Sum Boove Polish is Brilliant, Ofer.
{ Ysa, Durable, and the consumer 5107 Bo Lin
or Lats packace with every bry a
BX U 15
ANE Tap assasan,
RIPANS TABU’ » 8 regulste
¢ © stomach. Hver ¥ 0d bowels,
purity the biood, are safe and ef
ectual. The best general family
Medicine Enowyg E- B
‘ondtipation, Dyspepsia, Fouly
Breath, Readncie, Hoarthars Foul
of Appetite, Mental Deg 4
oo :
ing, and
every symptom or 4 resulting from Tape!
blood, or a Tafture hy the stomach. liver or
5 perform thelr proper fonctions Rr w
ah eaaing are hewstited hi taking TARILE herd
i £1 1 hottie hn
£0.30 Sprvoe BL.
;
b
Agents Wanted;
Consumptives and poopie
who have wonk lnmgs or Asth
ma, should use o Cure for
pa.
ire.
+
EY
AVAVAVAY, §1 Wa \WWAVAVAYL
1 | . a
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