an Grand Family WWebstor s International-—A Educator. Noah Webster would not know his old dic- tionary in the perfection it has attained in the hands of modern scholars. The world grows, bowever, and dictionaries with it, so that a wlmanae. essentially new book from cover te cover, and is the product of more than ten years of labor, by University. tion before the first copy a third of a million dolls winted exceeded Thix new Diction- Was AIS, anguage. It unlocks mysteries, resolves doubts and decides disputes, the habit of consulting it will tend knowledge, literary taste and social refinement, mastered the art of reading, the purchase of Webster's International will prove a Jrofitable investment, and the more they advance In knowledge and cultivation the more they will appreciate its aid and worth. G. & OC. Merriam Co., Springfield, Mass, senda free pamphlet, containing specimen pages, upon application, The dexterons wrestler gets down to busi ness when he drops on his friends, How's This ¢ We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for any case of catarrh that cannot be cured by taking Hall's Catarrh Cura, F. J. Cuexey & Co. Props. Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known PJ. Cheney for the last 156 years, and belleve him perfectly honorable in all business transac. tions, and financially able to carry out auy obs {gations made by their firm, th Truax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Warpivo, Kixxay & Manviy, Wholesale Diruggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act. directly upon the blood and mucous sur faces of the system. Testimonials sent free. ice “0c. per bottle. Sold by all druggists. son, as Dudeson entered the tailor shop. LADIES needling a tonle, oy «+hildren who want buliding up, should take Brown's lion Bitters. it is nleasant to take, cures Malaria, Indigestion, Biliosness and Liver Come piaints, makes the Blood rich and pure. saucers fire Engagement cups and a new fad, but engagement jurs are old standbys, Af. wivoerotine fief fur Lead. i. R. Branham, edi lanta, Ga., writes: with unfailing, prompt ache.” All druggists, fifty cent There are 208 students from North Americs at the Berlin (Germany) (iniversity » Hl COPYRIGHT 10D The best 17 ing to P21 re suffering fron you 5 Head 18 this: when Sick or Biliou pation, Indiges or any derang Stomach, or that relieves permanently, tem with the ary pills Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets, They're the smallest, for one thing ( but that’s a great thing ), and the easiest to take, They're the best, for they work in Nature’s own way-— mildly and gently, but thoroughly and effec tively. They're the cheapest, for they're guaranteed to give satisfaction, or your money is returned. You pay only for the good you get. What more can you ask ? But don’t get something that the dealer says is “just as good It may be better for him, but it’s prety certain to be worse for you. we te Fu bbe VE Be rs 2 WAM Be ywels, Om prom PJon't ordin ney " 3 % R Rheumatism, Lam . pain in joints or back, brick dust in urine, frequent calls, irritation, inflammation, gravel, ulceration or estarrh of bladder, Disordered Liver 9 Impaired digestion, gout, billious- headache, “WA PROOF cures kidney difficulties, La Grippe, urinary trouble, bright’s disease, Impure Blood, Kerofula, malaria, gen'l weakness or debility, fGwarantes we rontents of One Pottle, If not bene ted, Druggists will refund to you the price paid, At Druggists, 50e¢, Size, $1.00 Size, “Iovalide’ Guide to Health free Consultation free Te, Krrmre & On, Mrvanauwron, N. Y. Kennedy's MedicalDiscovery Takes hold in this order: eys Inside 8 Outside kin, Driving everything befors it that ought to be seul. You know whether ‘you need it or not. DONALD KENNEDY, ROXBURY, MASS. REV. The Eminent Brooklyn day Sermon. ee DR. TALMAGE. “The Greatest Name of AIL" Text: “The name whieh is above every name,” —Philipplans il., 9, Paul is bere making rapturous and en- thusiastic description of the name ot Christ, There are merely worldly names that some- times thrill you through and through. Buch was the name of Henry Clay to a Kentuck- ian, the name of William Wirt to a Virgin- ian, tne name of Daniel Webster to a New Englander. By common proverb we have come to be- lieve that “‘toere is nothing ina pame;” and #0 parents sometimes at the baptismal altar gives titles to their children reckless of the fact that that title, that name, will bs a life time hindrance or a lifetime help. You have no right to give your child a name lacking either in eupbony or moral mean. ing. fi is a sin to call a child Jehoiakim or Tigiath-pileser—or by anything that 1s disa- greeable, you should inflict it upon your progeny, And yet how often it is that we see a name it. lustitutions and great enterprises some- times without sufficient deliberation take nomenciature, Mighty destinies have been decided by a name. While we may by a long course of Christian bebavior get over the misfortune of having besn baptized with the name of a despot or a cheat, how much better it would have been if we could have started life without any such incum- brance! When Fau', in my text and in other pas rages of Scripture, burst forth in aspirations of admiration for the name of Christ, | want to inquire what are the characteristics of every name.” you in regard to the name of Christ, I want to tell you it 12 ap easy name. You are sometimes introduced to people with long and unproncunceable names, and you have to listen cautiously to get the names, and you have 10 haar them pronounced two or three times before you risk trying to utter them, but within the first two years the lit- tie child folds its bands and looks upward and says “Jesus” Can it be that in all this church this morn- ing there are representatives of any house hold where the children are familiar with the names of the father and mother and brother and sister, know nothing about “that pame which is above every name? Bome- tirnes you forget the name of a quits familiar friend, i: 1 you have to think and think Le- fore you get it, but can you imagine any freak of intellect by which you should for. get the name of Jesus? That word ssems to fit the tungue in every dialect, Down to old age, when the voice is tremulous and uncer tain and indistinct, even then this regal word finds potent utterance, When an aged father was dying one of the children and said, “Father, do you know m and in s delirium of the last be said, “No, | w you Another child “Father, do you know me “I don't know yon.” tor came in and said, you know me He said, “No: [don't think [ever saw you Then said minister, “Do you know Jesus! “Oh, yes said the dying man, *'1 know ‘hiel among ten thousand is He, and the One altogether lovely.” Jew, for ail ages and for all languages, and for all conditions is an easy name Jesu, | Jove Thy charming iin IRUNiC 10 my ear, 8 would | so yet eame th con't SCR Ness nL KDo came and sald ¥ “Xo.” be said, “Dou the Jesus: { Yes name, it 8 load Lat Leaveu and earth mighi beer sovel §% ana 8 « t further in regard to this pame of Christ, that it is a besuti. ul name, Now you have noticed that you cansot dis associate a name from the caaracter of the verson who has it, Theres are some names, instance, that are repulsive to my ear Those names are attractive to your ear What is the difference’ Why, I bappened to know some persons of that name who Were Cross or SONU, OF quest OF GOSYINpa- thetic, and the persons you bave happened to know of that name were kind and genial. Since, then, we cannot disassociate a name from the character of the person who has the name, that consideration makes the name of Jesus unspeakably beautiful, I eanpot pronounce the name in I remark for your Gethsemane and Uolgotha, and you see His Joving face, and you tear His tender voice, and vou feel His gentle touch, As soon a+ 1 proncunce His pame in your presence you hierarchs, yet came dows and breakfasted on the fisa which the rough man haugled out of Genesaret; you think of Him woo, though footsore on the road t> Emnmaus, i cannot speak His name in your hearing the shining one who restored the centurion’s daughter, and who beiped the blind man to useless, and who looked down into the laugh- ing eyes of the babe until it struggled to go to Him: then, flinging His arms around it, and impressing a kiss upon ite beautiful brow, s«id: “Of such is the kingdom of peaven.” Oh, beautiful name, the name of Jesus, that is good ana glorious and tender and sympathetic and kind! It is aromatic with all odors, It isaccordant with all harmonies. Jesus Christ it seems as if the letters were made of tears, and then they seam to be gleaming crowns, Bometimes that name to reign, Jesus and 1 hear in it the sob of Gethsemane snd a ring with hosanna. Glorious name! Take ali the glories of bookbindery ani put them around the page on which that name is printed. Un wreathe it on the wall, Let it drip from liarp's string and let it thunder out in organ’s sound it often, sound it well, ua. and heaven acclaim in full chant, ‘‘Blessed be His glorious name forever.” “The name 5 above every rame.” on ever heard in a Methodist uring a time of revival, a scoreof Have church, ywer of just two lines of glorious esley? Jesus, the name hgh over all, In heaven, or earth, or sky. Te the Ktpenting soul, to the exhaustelin- valid, to the Sunday-school girl, to the snow white octogenarian it is utiful, The aged man comes in from a walk, and he riwens the door of his home, and he hangs his hat on the old nail, and he puts his cane in the usual place, and he lies on his couch’ and he says to his children and his dehildren, “My dears, I am \going away roms you ” And they say, hy, where are you going, grandfather ¥' HOR” ho says, “1 am going to Jesus:” and so the old man faints sway into heaven, oa And the little child comes in from play snd the ings heresk tf in yout An pg “ wo # A per anuma, to bed, and the fever child hear] that her playmate was dyi and she went to the house, and she ha upon the bed 'of her dyinz playmate. { “Where are you going to?” and the dying 1 girl said, “I'm going to Jesus.” Then said the little girl that was well as she bent over to give the parting kiss to her dying play- mate, “Well then, if yon are going to Jesus, give my love to Him." Itis a beautiful vame, whether on the lips of childhood or on the lips of the old mar., When my father was dying the village minister said 10 him, quoting over his pillow this passage, ‘This ix a faithful saying and worthy of all ac- ceptation—that Christ Jesus cam» into the world to save sinners, "and thers he stopped, Then my father finished the quotation by saying, ‘of whom I am chief,” But I remark again, in rezard to this name of Christ, that it is a mighty name, Rothschild is a mercial world, Silliman is a name mighty in the scientific world, Irving is a name mighty in the literary world, Washington is a name mighty in the political world, Wellington is a name mighty in the military world, but where in all the earth is a name so potent to lift and thrill and arouse and rally and bless as the name Jesus? Why, the sound of that one name unhorsed Saul and threw Newton on his faes on ship's deck, and that one name to-day, while 1 speak, holds a hundred mil- i lon souls under omnipotent so2ll. That name in Eogland today means more than Victoria. In Germany that name to-day | means more than Emperor William, Ou, | mighty name! 1 have seen a man bound hand ani foot { of the devil and captive of all evil habits, at the sound of that name dash down his | shackles and march out forever free, | have | seen a man overcoms the sound of that pame the ssa dropped, | and the clouds parted, and the sunburst of eternal gladness poured upon his soul, 1 { the judgment day, reckless of eternity, at | the sound of that name blanch and { and groan and kneel and weep ani repent { and pray aod believe and rejoics and tri umph. Oh, it is a mighty name. Under its power the last temple o! superstition will come down and the last Juggernaut of iniquity i will be shattered to pleces, carnage, spoken of in apocalyptic Vision, ana the black horse of death must come bac their haunches, while the waite horse ViClory goes forth mounted of Him who hath the moon under His feet and the stars of heaven for His tiara. Mighty name! It will make the whole earth tremble, and it will makes all the nations name! Other dominions seem to be giving way France had to give up some of her favorite provioees; Npain has lost a great deal of her OWS: many the thrones world are being lowered: many he sceplers of the world ars bang On of then sing. Migaty of {f the of tat Christian institution establisbet abroad the mighty nams of Carist. already been heard ander the Chiness wa and in the Siberian suow castle, and irazilian grove and in ths eastern pago That name will swallow up all other Abat crown will yet cover crowns, That empire dominations, All erim os shall cease and ancient fraads shall Heturning jastice (ft sof Ber scale Peace o'er ihe world her olive wand extend And white-robed lunocesce from Leaven descend spreads of # th in. EE up all will yet © Ty ai Pass fall But I remars arain, in this subject, an enduring fn [ou iver the of the graveyard and you pull the back from the name that has pearly from the tombstons, and youn wisi Walter Neots we along and rechisel it so tl mi might really find out what the name is, hv. that was the pame of the greatest man in ail the town, in | ail the country, in all the State, now almost { faded from the tombstone, And 30 the greatest names of this world either bave perished or are Gregory VI. Sancho of Spain, Conrad 1. of Germany, Ricoard 1. of Eagiand, Catherine of Russia, Those names were once mi and they made ths earth tremble, cares for them now? XN them reverence, Bat the name of Christ is enduring forever, It will bs preserved in the worid's fine art. There will be other Bellinis to sketch the Madonna, and other Ghirlandas jos to pressat baptism of taking ston { MENG A als pi that the reward name of Christ get « fen weds faded * “¥ Who WHO a the sions all full, Mall. The sun will | set afire with its splendor the domes of the | temple, and burnish the golden streets into | a blaze, and be reflected back from the | solid pearl of the twelve gates, and it will be | noon in heaven. Noon on the river, Noon | on the hills, Noon in the valleys, High | noon. And then you will look up, gradu. | ally uegustoming your vision to the sight, | shading vour eyes at the first lest they be until after awhile you ean look upon the ful irra liation, and you will ery out, “My Lord, my Lord, Thou art the Bun that Never Bets” But at this point I am staggerel with the thought that there may be persons in this house for whom this name i no charm, thouzh it is 80 easy, thouzh it is m0 beauti- during, Ob, come to-day and see whether there is anything in Christ! I challenge you to test with me this morning whether Gol is good, and whether Christ is precious, and whether the Holy Ghost is omuipotent, Come, my brother, 1 challenge you. Come, ani we will kneel at the altar of mercy, Yoi kneelon the one side of the altar and I will koeel on the other side of the altar of mercy, and we will not get up from ow knees until our sins are pardoned and wm are able to ascribe all honor to the name- you pronouncing it and I pronouncing it— ‘the name which 1s above every name” His worth if all the nations kuew, Bure the whos earth would love him too, I pray God that He may move upon this asssnbiage now, that we may see Him walk- ing through all these aisles, that the Holy Spirit may spread His wings over this audi- tory. Now ix your time for heaven. Oh, my friends! meoting once, perhaps never again until the books are opened, what shall we say of this morning’s service? Havel told you the whole truth? Have you listened Now is your time for heaven. Come into the kingdom. If you na ver had an invitation before, 1 give it to 1 do not ask what your sin has been or That is not perti- to the question. The only thing is you want Christ. Come in, the farthest off, Come, the nearest by. “Where sin abounded, grace shall much more Is there in all this august assem. biage n man who feels he is two wicked to come? You are mistaken Coma now, “Now is the acceptel tiie; now is the day of salvation.’ 0 ye who are young, come pow gloomy religion that | preach. It will 1o lustre from your eye. It will take no eolor from your chee, It wiil take n spring from your ste I kaoow what I am talking about, 1 have f the consolation of this grace in my own heart It ®t a theory with me, I know in whom 1 believe, nnd He has been #0 good friend to me, 1 have a right this morning to commend His It i= no take is ne a 1! Do not say wickel forsaee man his # ends of Oh, come Into the Fou are Loo bad, way and azhite 16 onrih ” you into the kKiag RinNgoo v3 wed ed the unrest af + & * “look unto N How is He a0 int He Lin at sil It wil OVE rn in by His Gree ATIVE not 4 » 30 3% wil be because What yo What for? draw. Uh he Kingdom ail ends 1 have heard of that warrior of ancient times who went into nzainst C1 He 1 } 4 went into 3 the battles he bs arrow and iw the the un and t WAS OCZIDRE away, he band to his heart and took a handiul »4 from the wound and held IL up oO 3 Out, } , Jesus! Thou bast nr rit fell, and as be th his face ” 1 up to 30 life blood : Hs 2 sun and mquered . to-day, my t the arrow of Gols gracious igs the truth of what | ba il surren jer yourssl it you, vou would ttle against Christ's hast juersad know not what y will do will tell you one thing before i suse tall it. 1 will tell you one thing here and now, that I take Him to be my ny God, my pardon, my piace, my como my sivation my peaven Blessed be His glorious name {orevear, “be name Cre ¢ ‘ wa wid al ener, f to fs 5 Bere) Gl with ooh visiting the spirits in prison, and other Giottos to appal the vision with the Cruci fixion. It will be preserved in the world's | literature Theres will be other write the “Messiah ” and other tn celebrate His triumph, and other Cow. pers to sing His love It will be preserved in the world's grand and elaborate archi tecture, ani Protestaniam shall yet bave its Bt. Mark's and its Se. Petar's, t shail be preserved in the world's literature, for there i will be other Paleys to write the of Christianity.’ embalmed in the hearts of all the good of enrth and sll the great ones of Shall the enascipated bondsman ever for. get who set him free? Shail the blind man ever forget the Divine Physician who gave | him wignt? | ever forget who brought them home? Why, to make the world forget that name Alexander Pooes to br. Y down all the churches, and then in the spirit {of universal arson go through the gate of | heaven and pat the torch to all the temples | and mansions and palaces until in the awful | conflagration all heaven weat down and the | ruins; but even them they would hear the | name of Christ in the thunder of falling | towers and in the crash of templr walls, and | soe it inter woven into the firing banners of { flame, and the redesmed of heaven would { say, “Lot the temples an | tae palaces burn; | jot them burn: we have Jesus left.” Blessed be His glorious name forever, “The name | which is above every name,” My friends, have you made up your mind by what name you will accost Christ when you soe Him in heaven? Now that is a prac | teal question. For you will ses Him, caild of God, just as certainly as you «it thers and I stand here. By what name have you made | up your mind to call Christ whea you first meet Him in heaven? Wil you cul Him | “Anointed One,” or *'Mesdah?” or will you | take some one of the symbolic terms which i { you read in your Bible on earth-terms by | which Christ was designated? | Bome day perhaps you will be wandering i among the gardens of God on high, the piace | abloom with eternal springtime, infinite lux. { ury of lily ani rose aud amarath, and per | haps you will look up into the face of ( Thrist {and say, “My Lord, Thou art the Rose of Sharon and the Lily of the Valley." Some tithe thers will be a new soul coms into ! heaven to take its place in ths firmament and shine as the stars forever and ever, and the luster of a useful life will shine forth tremulous and beautiful, and you will look up into the face of Christ and say, “My Lord, Thou art a brighter star, the Morning Star, the Star of Jacob, the Star of the Re- deemer.” Howe day you will be walking a 2 the fountains that toss in the runighf, falling in crash of pearl and amethyst'into golden and ery urn, and waddering up the round banked river to the piace whers the water first tinkles in silver on the rock, and from chalices of love you will be drinki to honor and ev z joy. and you will look up into the face of Christ and say, “My Lord, my Lord, Thon art ths Fountain of Living Water.” Some day you will be wandering among the lambs and sheep of heaven feeding by the rock, rejoicing in the care of Him who brought you out of the a im taut. ck ay AY i look up in hy I my § ord, Thou art the Shepherd of tek vitlasting Hills.” cmon fonglellow's First Poem. The following has long been accepted how Loaglellow’s precocious poetic ability was discovered: When the great poet was nine years old, asked him to write a composition. Littie His teacher said: *'You can write words, can you not?” “Yes,” was the reply. “Then you can put words together” “+ Yes, sir.” ““Then,” said the master, *‘you may take your slate and go out of doors, aod” there you can find something to write about, and then you cao tell what it is, what it is for, and what is to be done with it, and that will be a composition.” Henry took his siate and wént out, He went behind Mr. Finney's bara, which chanced to stand near, and secing knew what it was, what it was for, and what would be done with it. A half hour had been allowed Henry for his first undertaking in writing a composition. In a half hour he carried in hus work sll accomplished neatly, and his teacher is said to have been affected almost to tears when he saw what the boy had done in so short a time. Tae composition had been written in a postic form, and was as follows: Mr. Finney had a turnip, And it grew, anl it grew, And it grew behind the barn, And the turnip did no harm, Ant it grow, anl it grew, Til it could grow uo taller: Then Mr, Finney took it up And put it io toe callar, Ther: it lay, thers itlay Till it bagan to rot; . When his daughter Susie wasted it And put it ia the pot. Then she boiled it, and boiled it, As long an sae was able; Then his daughter Liggie took it And put it on the table, Mr. Finney and his wis Both sat down to sap; And they ate, and the; ata, Until thay ate tae turnip up. a —— Horse Running Forty Miles an Hour! Few horses have made a mile dash in less than 1:40; Salvator, in 1890, I be. lieve, made it in 1:35}, which is some- thing truly wonderful. Let us analyze these figures: To begin with, it is pearl forty miles an hour—a speed avera by lew railway trams, There are 5280 feet in a mile, so that for every one of the ninety-five seconds he was in making that mile he had to get over fifty-five und three-tenths feet of ground. Just think of the wonderful speed he was moving at—a half a hundred feet for each best of a man's pulse! 85 Louis Republic. Pieasures of Memory. What 8 blessed thing is memory | How it brings up the pleasures of the past and hides | ite unpleasantness: You recall your child. hood days, do you not, and wish they would | return? You remember the pleasant asoci- | ations, while the unpleasant ones are forgot ten. Perhaps to your mind comes the ace of some friend. It was once a pale, sad face, It showed marks of pain, lines of care, It seeined to be looking into the hereafter, the unknown future. And then you recall how it brightened, how It recovered its roey hue, bow it became a pleture of happiness an i joy. Do you remember these things! Many people do, and gladly tell bow the bealth re- turned, bow happiness came back, how the world seemed bright They tell how they were once weak, nerveless, perhaps in pain, certainly unhappy. They tell of sleepless nights, restless days, untouched fool, une strung nerves, And then They tell how they becaine happy, healthy snd strong once more, You have heard it olten in the past have you not? You have heard people de- scribe bow they were cured and kept in health? You certainly can remember what it is that has helped people in America, If not, listen to what Mrs. Aunie Jenness Mi! ler, who is known universally as the great dress reformer, says: "Six years ago, when suffering from mental care and overwork, 1 received the most pronounced benefit from the use of that gréat medicine, Waroer's Safe Cure.” Ab, now you remember. Now you recall how many people you bave heard say this same thing. Now you recollect how much you bave heard of this great Cure, Now you are ready to admit that memory is usuanhiy pleasing, that the highest pleasure comes from perfect health, and that this great remedy has done more to produce and projiong beaith than any other discovery ever kpowu in the entire history of the whole world, The only way fo gel n hen out of the garde is to go slow but shoo'er, MANY persous are broke work or hot. fers rebul ds aves exoess of bile, spendid toni from over. Iron Bi. QIgeslion, 1 #. nninria. A Groot. old cares, ir i's fhe syle, and for women an clires i Clas Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts genily yet promptly on the Kidneys, Jdver and Bowels, cleanses the sys- tem effectually, dispels colds, head- aches and fevers and eures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro- duced, pleasing to the taste and ac- ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly bencficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Byrup of Figs is for sale in 50c and $1 bottles by all leading drug- gists. Any reliable druggist who nay not have it on hand will pro- cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any ST. RHEUMATISM. 1 Fdpp by es of = AMEBACK. Aes CALIFORN A FIG SYRUP CO. EW wis LONISVILLE, Ky} FOr, 5.7. wy nd JACOBS OIL 190 EPDOO OL »Tutt’s Tiny Pills ™ A single stlts, giving cheerfulness of mind and of bawdy to which you were those provinces beneficial pita amass bwfore a hes « alarity unparaileled Prive, L5eis, CO00OP20O0QCSE ranges rio vy A pope PIS0O'S CURE FOR Consampilves snd people who hare weak lunge or Asth ma, should use Piso's Cure for Corpgmption, It has eared thousands. [1 has not injur ed one ite not bad 10 take tix the best cont syrep fod where RBe. CONSUMPTION. every yr . B.D m. —. th Pasties, Eoame Paints which stain Lhe hands, jninre the fron, and burn off : The Rising Son S.ove Poilsh Is Brilliant, Oder ters, Durable, and the conwamer pars for so Un oF ginss package with every purchase, lilustrated Publications, with describing Minnesota, PADS Montana. dake, Washington and OO FREEGOVERN MEN AND CHEAP NORTHERN ACIFIC R. R. Best Agricuitural Gras. ing and Timber 1 now © to set 4 Chas. B, LA RBORK, Land Com. 5. 7. 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Sew York OO Consuitation free. at oifiod or by ether, “N nll 0 EF Gam, KT fer Bumper of Over. comes of bad ening i« ures Slek Mon oaee i restoresCom plexion cures Constipation, =~ Wii you drive out the BEL BUGS or wis tor Bed Bugs drive out you ¥ This Query Inoroases ww a tensity as the warm weather ad vanonss . DUTCHER'S DEAD SHOT wa power wil Kllder. It curs them wp » fire does & leal; a sure preventive of petars, an is a promoter of “ Sleep in Peace,” Pree 28 Cente, st stores or oy mal’, FRED'K DIUTCHER & SONS, wt. Albaws, Vi, ERG — wl : FAVAY UATAVAY i TAYAN Le . ¥ I a Denil fd LI bh SA SS RATAN STIS BR A dm OD : ble the Strength of - & Perfect Parm Peace, 4 bar and Testimonials, — Ustndogue of rar re Mais, Ke. UR & CO. Balt more, MA, out of shage. Flarmiess to Stock i w for es ’ re {tr wi Veen, ree rite Picket Lawn ¥ ped MEG Shi yep Fain, Fa
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