REV. DR. TALMAGE. The Eminent Brooklyn Divine's Sun. day Sermon. Subject: “The Dumb Spirit.” Texr: “Thou dumb and deaf spirit, 1 Sharge thee, come out of him."—Mark ix. Here was a case of great domestic an- guish., The son of the household was pos- sessed of an evil spirit which, among other things, paralyzed his tongue and made him speechless, When the influence was Hn the patient he could not say a word—articula- tion was impossible, The spirit that cap- tured this member of the household was a dumb spirit—so called by Christ—a spirit abroad to-day and as lively and potent as in New Testament times. Yet in all of the realms of sermonology I cannot find a dis. course concerning this dumb devil which Christ charged uovon my text, saying, **Come out of him.” There has ben much destructive supersti- tion abroad in the world concerning posses- sion by evil spirits. Under the form of belief in wile Noh this delusion swept the continents. Persons were suppossd to be possessed with some evil spirit which made them able to destroy others. In the six- teenth century in Geneva 1500 persons were burned to death as witches. Under one judge in Lorraine 90 persons were burnei to death as witches. In one neighborhood of France 1000 persons were burned. In two centuries Z00(00 persons were slain as witches. So mighty was ths delusion that it included among its victims some of the eatest intellects of all time, such as Chief ustice Mathew Hale and Sir Edward Coke, and such renowned ministers of religion as Cotton Mather, one of whose books, Benjamin Franklin said, shaped his life—and Ricaard Baxter and Archbishop Cranmer and Mar- tin Luther, and among writers and philoso- hers, Lord Bacon. That belief, which has recomie the laughing stock of all sensible people, counted its disci ipies pmong the wisest and best people of Sweden, Germany, Eag- land, France, Spain and New England. But while we reject witcheraft any man who be- Jieves the bible must velieve that there are diabolical agencies abroad in the world While there are ministeriug spirits to bless there are infernal spirits to hinder, to poison and destroy. Christ was speaking toa spir- itual existence when, standing before the afflicted one of the text, He “said, ** Chou dumb and deaf spirit, com> out of him." Against thisdumb devil of the text, I put you on your guard, Donot think that this agent of evil has put his blight on those who, by commission of the vocal organs, bave had the golden gates of speech bolted and barred. are the most gracious and lovely and tal ented souls that were ever incarnated. Toe chaplains of the asylums for the dumb can tell you enchantiug stories of those, who never called the name of father & mother or child, and many of the most devout and prayerful souls will never in this world speak the name of God or Christ, Many a deaf mute have | seen with the angel of in- telligence seated at the window of the eye, who never came torth from the of the mouth. What a miracle of loveliness edge was Laura Bridgman, New Hamp- shire! Not only without faculty of speech, but without hearing and without sight, all these faculties removed by sickness two years of age, yet becoming a wonder at neediework, at the piano, at the sewing ma- chize, and an intelligent student Seriptures, and coniounding philosophers, who came from all parts of the study the phenomenon. Thanks to Christi- anity for what it has done for the amslior. atiou of the condition of the deaf and the dumb, Back in the ages they were putto death as baving no right, with su of equipment, to hive, and oa r centuries they were classed among the idiotic and unsafe, door and knowl ot Pone?, the Spanish monk, a teenth century came Juan anothor Spanish monk, with the foger alphabes, we bave had Jobn Braidwood and Des. Mitchell and Ackerly and Peet and Gallau- det, who bave given uncounted thousands of those whose tongues were forever silent tha power to spell out on the air by a manual Fabio dac. Bonet, vio logy or their hopes for the next, brilliant inventions in vehalf of thoss who were born dumb, One of the most im pressive ever addressed was in the far three years ago—an audience of about 0) persons who bad never heard a sound or spoken a word, an interpreter standing beside me while | addressed them. 1 ox that sudience on two advantages they had and over the most of us—the oue that they Shonpe bearing a great many disagraemiie things, and on the other fact that they es- Caped saying things they were sorry for af- terward, Yet after ali shackled tongue is an aspal tiling limitation andiences | west two m congenital mutes, We mean those who are born with all the faculties of vocalization and yet have been struck by the evil one mentioned in the text—the dumb devil to | whom Christ called when He said, *[hou dumb and deal spirit, | charge thee, come out of him, There has been apotheosization of silencs. Some one has said that silence is golden and sometimes tie greates: triumph is to keep your mouth shut. But sometimes silence is a crime and the direct result of the baleful influence of the dumb devil of our text There is bardiy a man or woman in this bouse to-day who has not been present on fome oceasion when the Christian religion became a target for raillery, P achaps it was over in the store soms day when thers was not much going on and toe clerks were in a grodp, or it was in the factory at the noon epell, or it was out on the farm under the trees while you were resting, or it was in the clubroom, or it was in a social circle, or it was in the street on the way home from business, or It was on some occasion whielt You remember without me desecibing it Some one got the laugh on the Bible and car.catured the profession of re. higion as hypocrisy, or made a pun out of something that Christ said, The laut started and you joined in, and not one word of protest did you utter, What kept you silent? Modesty? No. Incapacity to answer? No. Lack of opportunity? No. At was a blow on both your lips by the wing of the dumb devil, If somo one should ma- lign your father or mother or wife or hus- band or child you would flush up quick, and either with an indignant word or doubled up fat make response, And yet hers is our Christian religion which has done so much for you and so much for the world that it will take all eternity to celebrate it. and yet when it was attacked you dil not so much assay: “I differ, [ object, I am sorry to hear you say that. There is another side to i 4 Christian people ought in such times as these to go armed, not with earthly wenpons, but with the sword of the Spirit. You ought to have four or five questions with which you could confount any man who attacks Christianity, A man ninety ears old was telling me a few days ago w he put to flight a scoffer. My aged friend said to the skeptic, “Did you ever Jead the history of Joseph in the Bible?’ “Yee” said the man: ‘it is a fine story, and ns interesting a sory ss I ever read” “Well, now,” said my old friend, ‘up. pote that mecount of Joseph stopped f way?™ “Ob” said the man, “then it would not Le entertaining.” “Well, now,” sald my friend, “we have in this world only half of everything, and do you not siining that when we hear the last half things ay be consistent, and that thu we way fing that God was right?’ | Oh, friends, better load up with a fow in- ¥ on ts. You cannot afford to t when God and the Bible and the things of eternity are assailed, gives coment to bombardment of your ather’g House, Xou allow a slur to be cast on your mother’s dying pillow, Iu bohalt of the Christ, who for vou want through the agonies of assassination on the rocky bluff back of Jerusalem, you dare! not fac» a sickly joke. Better load up with a fow questions so that next time you will be ready. Say to the scoffer: “My dear sir, will you tell me what mikes the difference between the condition of woman ian China and the United States? What do you think of ths sermon on the mount? How do you like the golden rule laid down in the Scriotures? Are you in favor of the ten commandments? In your large and extensive reading have you come across a lovalier character than Jesus Christ? Will you pleas» to name the trina n- Phant deathbeds of infidels and atholsts? {ow do you account for the fact that among the out and out believers in Christianity were such persons as Benjamin Franklin, John Ruskiu, Thomas Carlyle, Babington Macaulay, William Penn, Walter Scott, Charles Kingsley, Horacs ‘Bushnell, James A. Garfield, Robert E. Lee, Stonewall Jack- son, Admiral Foote, Admiral Farrazut, Ulysses 8. Grant, John Milton, William Shakespeare, Chief Justice Marshall John Adams, Daniel Webster, George Washing- ton? How do you account for their fondness for the Christian religion’ Among the in- numerable collezes and universities of the earth will you name me three started by infidels and now supportel by infidels? Down in your heart are you really happy in the position you occupy antagonistic to the Christian religion! When do you have ths most rapturous views of the next world? Go at him with a few such questions and he will get so red in the face as to suggest apoplexy. and he will look at his wateh and ray he has an engagement and must go Tarkish on a Yoa compared troops Bull Run made uo at all, Arm yourself, not witn argu- ments but interrogation points and I promise you victory. Shall such a man as you, shall will with baton. rout at put which our meanest spirits that ever smoked up fram the pit- the dumb devil spoken of in the text? But then there are occasions when this par- ti cular spirit that Christ exercise] whan He said, *‘l charge thee to comes out of him.” takes peopis by the waolesale., In tone most responsive relizious audiences have you no- ticed how many people never sing at all? They have a pook, and they have a voice, and they know how to read. They know many o: the tunes, and vet are silent whi the great raptures of music past by. Among those who sing nol one out of a hunare { siugs loud enough to hear his own voice, They hum it. They ® a sort ol religious gruut, Tasy make the lips go, but it is in- audible, With a voice stron enough to stop a street car one block away, all they can al- ford in the praise of Gol is about half whisper, With enough sopranos, enough altos, enough bassos to make a small heaven { between the four walls, they i ! tunity go by unimproved. : The volume of voics that ascends from the | largest audisacs that ever assembled ought | to be multiplied about two thousand fold. But the minister rises and gives out the | hymn: the organ begins; the choir or pre- | centor leads: tae audiencs are stand ing so | that the lungs may have full expansion, and | a mighty barmony is about to ascen d, when the evil spirit spoken of in my text—the | dumb devil—spreads his two wings, one over | the hips of one-balfl the audience and the { other wing over the lips of the other half of | the audience, and the voic= roll baci into | the throats from which they started, and { only here aul there anything is heard, and | nins-tenths of the holy power is destroyed; { and the dumb devil, as he flies away, says: “I could not keep Isaac Watts from writing | that hymp, and [| could not keep Lowell | Mason from composing the tune to which | it is set, but | smote into silence or half | silence the lips from which it would have spread abroad to bles neighborhoods and and then mount the wide open heav- Give long meter doxology toe full support of Christendom, and those four | lines would take the whole earth for God During the cotton famine in Lancashire, { England, whea the suffering was something | terrific, asthe first wagon load cotton i rolled in, the starving people unhooked the { horse and drew the load themselves, sing all Lavcash re joined in with tri- umpbant voices, their chesks sopping with | tears, “"Prais» God from whom ali biessings | low.” When Commodores Perry, with his | warship, the Mississippi, lay off the coast of | Japan, he bombarded the shores with “Oud Huodred,” played by the marine band, | Glorious "Old Hundred,” compose! by Will. | iam Franc, of Germany. Ina war prison, at ten o'clock at night, the poor fellows far from home and woundel and sick and dy- ing, ona prisoner started the "Old Hundred Doxolozy,” and then a score of voices joined, then all the prisor wrs on the floes took up the scaim until the buildiag, from fouanda- tionto topstone, fairy quaked with the melodious ascription. A British man.of-war, lying off a foreign coast, heard a voics singing that doxology, | and joa mediately guessed, and guessed aright, that there was an Eaglishman in i captivity to toe Mobammedans; and in the small boats the sailors rowed to shore and | burst into « gaurb-house and set the castive free. I don't know what tun) the trumpets of resurrection shall play, but it may be the { doxology which is now sounding across Christendom. How much more hearty we would be in our songs, and how easily we could drive back the dumb devil from all our worshiping assemblages, if we could realize that neariy all our bymuos havea stirring his tory. That glorious hymn, “Stand Up for Jesus,” was suggested by the last words of Dudley Tyng, who was dying from having his right arma torn off In a thrashing ma- chine, That hymn, “What a Friend We Have in Jesus,” heard through a telephone, converted an obdurate soul “Shall We | cities, | one the of until { ing, in our Brookiyn Prospect Park, at the chii- to encircie the world, dering Boy Tonight? is a song that has saved hundreds of dissipated young men, found erving, and an officer asked him what was the matter! “Oh” he said, “I had a dream last night. My sister died ten years ago, and my mother never was herself again ani she died soon after. Last night [ dreamt I was killed in battie, and that mother and sister came down to meet me” After the next battle was over, some one crossing the field heard a voice that be recognizad as the voice of Tom, the drummer boy, singing *Jesus, Lover of My Boul.” But at the end of the first verse the voices became very feable, and at the end of the serail vers: it stopped, and taey went up and foun Tom, | the drummer boy, leaning against a stamp | and dead, That hymn, “Oa, for a Thousand Tongass to Bing," was suggested to Charles Wesley by | Peter Boller, who, after his conversion, “I bad better keep silent about it.” ~e " said Wesley, “if you had ten thousand tongues you had better use them for Christ” And then that angel of hymuology pruned the words: oh, for a thonsand tongnes in sing My dear Redeemet’s praise, The glories of my God snd King, The triumphs of His graces, Jesus, the nama thal calms ons (ars, That bide our sorrows conse; Tis tonsic In the sinners esrs, "Tis ite and heaigh and peace. While much of the modern music is a religions doggerel, a consecrated nonsense, a sacred tomloolery, I would like to see some great musician of our time lift the baton and marshal Luther's Judgwent Hymn, Yar mouth, Dundee, Ariel, Brattle sStreot, Ux. bridge, Pleyel's Hymn, Harwell, Antioch, Mount Piagah and Coronation, with fow ragiments of mighty tunes made in our time, and storm Asia, Afric and America for the kingdom of God. But the first thing to do is to drive out the dumb devil of the text from nll our churoues, Do not, however, Ist us lose ourseives in ities, Not one of us but has had our touched the evil th eve ania amb devi ad just one opportunity of saying a a Coristian word that might hava Jed a man or woman into a Christian life. The opportunity was fairly put before us, The word of invita- tion or consolation or warning came to the | inside gate of the mouth, but there it halted, Some hindering power locked the jaws to- gether so that they did not open. The tonzue lay fla’ an still in the bostom of the were mute, Thouzh Gol had given us the physiologioal apparatus for speech, and ou» Be were filled with air which, by command of onr will, could have ma« laryngeal muscles move an! the vocal organs vibrate, we were wickedly and fatally silent, For all time ane eternity we | missed our chance. i Or it was a prayer mesting, and the ser- vice was thrown ooen for prayer and re- marke, and there was a dead halt-—every- thing "silent as a graveyard at midoight, Indeed it was a graveyard and midnight. An embarassing [2h took placs that puts wet blanket on all the meeting. Men, bold enouzh on business axchange or in worldiv circles, shut their eyes as though they wers praying in silence, but they were not pravs ing at all. They were busy hopinz some- | body else would do his duty. he women { flushed under the awful pause and made their fans more rapidly flutter. Some | brother with no cold coughed, by that sound tryinz to fill up the time, and the meeting | was s'ain. Buc what killed it?—the dumis | devil. This is the way I account for the fact that | the stupidest places on earth are some | praver meetings. [do not see how a man | fray. any graces if he regularly attends them, They are spiritual reffigerators, Religion kept on ice. How many of us have | lost occasions of usefulness? In a sculptors studio stoo 1 a figure ol the god Opportunity, The sculptor had made the hair fall down over the face of the status so as to complete. ly cover it, and there were wings to the feet, | When asked why he so represented Oppor- tunity, the sculptor answered, “The face of { the status is thus covered up because we do not recognizes Opportunity when it { and the wings to the feet show that Cppor- { tunity is swiftly gone.” But do not let the world deride the church because of all this, for the dumb devil is just as conspicuous in the world. The two great political parties will soon ‘assemble to build platforms for the presidential candidates to stand on A committees of each parcy will { be appointal to make the platform After i proposr deliberation the committees will come {in with a ringing report, ** Whereas” and ‘Whereas! and “Whereas.” Prosuncia. | mentoes all shaped with the one idea of ting the most votes, All expression in re. gard to the great moral evils of the country ignored. No expression about the | wr trafic, for that would lose the rum vote, No expression in regard to the universal at. { tempt at the demolition of the Lord's day. NO re wgnition of God in the hist wy of this | nation for that woull lose ths vote of athe. fists. But “Whereas' and Whereas’ and “Wherea=" Nine chesrs will be riven for | the platform The dumb devil of text | will put one wing over the Republican plat. | form and the other wing over the Demo- cratic platform, Thera is nothing involved in the next election except offices, The great conventions will be opened with prayer by their chaplains, If they avoid platitudes and tell the honest truth in their prayers they will say: “O Lord, we want to be post. masters and consuls and foreign ministers and United States district attorneys. For that we are here, and for that we will strive till the elec next November, office or we die, for ever and ever. Amen.” « The world, to say the least is no hetter than the church on this subject of silence at ths wrong time. In Other words is it not time for Christianity tn become proaocuncad and aggresive as never before’ [ake sides for God and sobristy and rightecusness, “If the Lord be God, follow Him: if Baal, then follow him.” Have you opportunity of re buking a #in’ Rebuke it. Have you a chance to caosr a disheartened soti? Cheer it. Have you a useful word tw speak? Speak it Be out and out, up and down for ouspess, If your ship is afloat cific Ocean God's wercy, bang out your colors from masthead Show your passport if you have one. Do not smuggle your soul into the harbor of heaven. Speak out for Gad! This morning close up the chapter of lost opportunities, and pitea it into the Eas { River and open a new chapter. Belors you gt to the door om your way out this morning shake hands with some one, and ask him to join you om the road to heaven. Do not drive up to heaven in a two wheeled “sulky” with room only for one, aud that yourself, b ut get the biggest Gospel WAZOn you can find and pile it fall of friends and neigabors, and shout till they hear you all up and down the skies, ‘Come with us and we will do you good, for the Lord path or sised good concerning Israel” ihe opportunity for gool whica you may consider insgnillcant may ba We.oen lous for results, ss when ou sea Captain Holdane swore at tae ship's crew with as oath that wished them all in perdition, and a Bosteh sailor touched bis cap, and said, “Caplan, God bears prayer, and we would ba bauly off if you're wish were answered Captain Holdane was convicted by the sailors remark and converted and became the means of the salvation of his brother Robert, who had bern an intidel, and then Lobert became a minister of the Gospel and | under his ministry the godless Felix Nett bee cams the world renowaed missionary of the Cross, and the woridiy Merie L’Aunigne be. came the author of “Ihe History of the Batormation.” and will be the glory of the courch for all ages Perbaps you may do as much as the | Scotch sailor who just tipped his cap and used one broken sentence, by whicn the earth and the heavens are still resounding with potent influences. Do somethiog for God, and do it right away, or you will never { doit atad, e the CONN, tae tion (dive us rights. tae Fa on of Time flies sway fast, Tae whe we gover remember; How soon our life here Grows old with the year I'hat dies with tae next Dezem’ior, Animals That De Not Drink Many animals pever drink. but absorb sufficient moisture from their tissues, | from the air or from their foods. Mr. | Blanchard in his book on Abyssinia, says that neither the doreas nor Bennett's ga- zelle (two allied species) ever drink. Darwin states, in his ** Voyage of a Nat. | uralist,” that unless the huanacoes, cr | wild llamas of Patagonia, drink salt | water, in many localities they must drink none at all. The large and inter | esting group of sloths are alike in never | drinking. A parrot is said to have lived | in the Zoological Gardens, Regent's Park, for fifty-two years without & drop of water. It is often said that rabbits in a wild state never drink. The late Rev, J. G. Wood doubted whether this idea was correct, and recorded the fact that they feed on the herbage when it is heavy with dew,and therefore practically drink when eating. In the autumn and winter, when sheep are feeding on tur- nips, they require little or no water, New York Dispatch. Rosewood is Naturally Blaet, Many people suppote that rosewood takes its name from its color, but thisis a mistake. Rosewood is not red nor yellow, but almost black. Its name comes from the fact that whon first cut it ex- bales a perfume similar to that of the rose, and, although the dried rosewood of commerce retains no trace of this eatly perfume, the name lingers as a relic of the early history of the wood. Bos. ton Transcript, “EVERY WORD TRUE!” Ho Mays the Writer of That Famans Letter REITERATES HIS STATEMENTH, PRODUCES ADDITIONAL PROOF AND CLEARLY DE FINES HIS PORITION, (IN. VY, Sun.) It would be difficu’'t to measure the in terest und comment, not to say excitement, which the published letter of Dr. R, A.Gunn, which appenred in the paper yeterday, occasioned, The prominence of the and the unusual nature of the letter doctor hnve 1 ealled upon Dr No. Gunn at his residence, 124 West Forty-seventh street, yester I found the reception room crowded, nnd it was only ater an hour's Delinguent Tax Tis At Cotta, in Saxony, persons who did not pay their taxes last year are published in a list which hangs up in i i { Those that are on the list can get neither meat nor drink at these places under penalty of loss of license There 1s more catarrh in this section of the terview, Dr. Gunn isa distinguished looking man, ing and air of sincerity, 1 took the seat Le Are you aware, doctor, your letter has caused?’ Dr. Guon smiled and replied of the ordinary usually cause comment is not a common thing for physicians to in and cordially recommend other than those in the Materia Medica History is full of instances of scientists whi have indorsed discoveries they believe to be valuable, and have doing, and vet these same discoveries blessing z the world to- lay. manbood and courage 10 be true to my victions, and that is why | unhesitatingly indorse Warner's Nafe Cure nx being the greatest of mo tern discoveries for the cure of dis ases which have hafMe i the highest skill of the med eal profession | was impressed with the earnestness of the doctor, and saw that he meant ever word that he said, g have yon How lon remedy, doctor? | asked, YeRrs, ‘Nearly ten tention was originally called Lo LY a serious case of was considered my surprise, un covered, | have tried it in then constantly, and my power bas been conflr I have seen pa recover from inflammstion of the gravel apd Bright's d when #1] eatment had fatied, I mye found ally effi troubid Lan vi aren, Gor o0n sO known of this he replied “My at- the dale ‘ re Bright's disease, whiel and yet, much t the patient hop lows, ler its use GiLher Cases s) nal faith ir red Tieniln i "n flor fer te a | Prati 60 ent in all iy nny $08 rn SHES cular glean § BRN That is a delicate eplied: “but, a= | ¥ Ces jar tor! thing to do,” the 4¢ niwars keep nm wy inteyou’ ISK Ni tien [osu ac MEatraw hereu wierd b leaves he said; Here isa case of a great sufferer of on the d Ofer | his is record book, Turning over tieman sflammat ion WZ fag He had ox physicians withoy ted I ny tried methods of treatment and | finally adv Nafe | ure He felt and a ee The docto then said ‘Here is another who ger who { ¥landadl ney it ho t benefit. When the usu numb first cofisy Warner's i Lhe seni fm hwlter fron iS Was entire'y red pred a few pages further and siar? thmt of a tal of 8 gen frequent sttacks of renal u know, is He had formati | rev« Cn It ix hind as vi inevs tieman , whi gravel form beens able after an mmended him he did, and Years «ince he took the atisck turn the leaves of ideniy excisl t remarkable case, It is that bad suffered | sorsbe 1 for ® Cf way we Nhe lwcame encionle t the Xi never hone in, but iv severe atiachk the Safe Cure which aith three ¥ ermal y Bilan sfc bis book, sd su rend “iiere is 8 nos of a Indy who from Brighn d abot the had convu if corus, can Meveral pLys d not and As she ox pitt that they pey did «0 ire 1 wid v became finally fell into wn iret oF EMiney who PY fourth montd fen blind, slnte i oo rpid wl Liy fon, LEE] saw Lier sa this view | Tuily swallow | said, it try Warner's ive in eoticurred wid st ne 8 lasl re Male Cure, i and 10 the surprise ff every ne she recovers Bho bas since given Lirth to a living child, and i» perfectly well ! wt wonderful and while | do not their authenticity, | & great favor if you would think the importance fully Justify it of othe sufferers | think Iw. Gunn foaliy observed, s thought Both the indy md are so rejoiced, so grateful, wery that | kupow she is only have ot} hese of it The in iy well known cos but is in certainly : 3 for” I saul ties Thom lume are ro cases, dor {OF & re i consider it their 3 tent shou mites, | give ine iH the sul int TON Bre ore giter a sted ber saver hor ro wal wou LHe Interest mien! hast wo gind to « Mrs Eaves wile green Nhe was not og periect heal ay I thanked the doctor for bis courteous re- wption, for the valuable formation ime mrtes], and | fee! assured that his generous std humane nature will prevent him mg other than Lind at sewing this inter. view publisbed for the benefit of suffering Lumauily, ers £4 fhe HY restored, th 1 ve! Tur Canadian Pacifie abandon Hx route through Ontario « of snow and pass Minnesota and Wisconsin, road will a through 1Cconnt BX U 21 Nine Americus, Ga about to walk frem seo, Il. a BOW aper "JACOBS Of TOUNE men are hi HN aniles by road, in “i CUnes PROMPTLY AXD PERMANENTLY RHEUMATISM, Lumbago, [leadache, Toothache, NEURALGIA, Sore Throat, Swellings, Frost. Sites, | SCIATICA, Sprains, Bruises, Buras, Bealds. VUE CHARLES A. VOGELER €o.. ——— . OR. HKILME HS Kidney, Liver and Bladder Cura. Rheumatism, Lumbago, pain in Joints or back, brick dust in urine, frequent enlis, irritation, apfinmation, gravel, ulceration or oatarrh of bladder, Disordered | Liver, Hc) ROOT Sot: a wane i he: La Grippe, urinary trouble, bi Impure Blood, Berofula, malaria, gen'l weakness or debility, ry and until the lust few years was supposed to For a great many years doctors disease, and prescribed ocal remedies, and by constantly falling to local treatment, pronounced ft #2. Melence hing proven catarrh to be & and therefore req) uires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by ¥ Cheney & Co... Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market, It is taken Interunlly in doses from 10 drops to a tenspoon! It sets directly upon ful They offer $100 for muy case it falls to cure, for circulars und testimonials, Address J Cuesey & Co., Toledo, O, 2 Sold by r Druggists bc, : There are 106 boys born to every 100 but more boys die in intaney than girls, girls, For Dyspepsia, Indigestion, and Stomach disorders, use Brown's iron Bltters. The Best It rebulid« 1he system, cleans the B vod nnd strengthens the muscie-. A splendid ton- ie for weak nud detdiitnted persons, “Bonanza’' is a Spanish meaning fair or prosperous weather. word, Dr. T. 1. Willi * The was given Lead ar ie yery amson, Fustis, Fia Yer Ben me were suffering from cl was Instanta et nity cents. HVE lad tox whi They said the of us and uggists “1 ul fhe larvest piece of ns n Caltlornia bara, it phaltum ever mined out near Santa Dare 1 one-half tons gotien weighing two an B ood, Weakness, Mala. rin Netrmigin, Indigestio and Biliousness, take Brown's tron Bite re it gives strength, making old persons feel young-and young persons strong: lessant Ww lake, Fon impure of thin Pp the bread baked ian 1 is mndde of Ax Fiverighthis of I ugland, neriean wheat 8 LEA loss nnd « RAMS PLLLA aro a Pub ! nerve i= an LE SE 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, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the YS tem effectually head- aches and fevers and cures habitual Sots pation. Sy rup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac reptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeal Je substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c and $1 bottles by all leading drug. gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro- dispel Is colds, wis bes to try it. sutslitute. CALIFORNIA FI6 SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, Cai, LOUISVILLE, xv NEW YORK, N.Y, 9904580994 Tatts Tiny Pill act as kindly on the $ child, the delicate female or we old age as Te the vigorous man. A give tane and siren iy to the weak Be ¢ stomach, bowels, kidneys and bladder & “APO ORO00S - Will you drive Bi the BED BUGS or wii the Hed Bags drive out yout ' This query iporesses pute the warm weatoer ad vances, CHER'S DEAD SHOT wa power. wi { rare them up ae fire goes a loaf; i= a i He of returs, anda sa promoter of ** Sleep in Peace.” Foose 25 Cen at stores oF ty mal FRED'K DUTCHE R & HONS, FRAZER X45, BEST IN THE WORLD, Ite wearing qualities are unvurpassed ot inatin Do not accept any fd ee actually three boxes of any other brand, Not Ww host, I GET THE GENUINE. FOR SALE BY DE Al » «RS Veseaind Vaticiiie Ah EH ota, Montana, aa ah and "i FREE S NORT HERN Aadtany PACIFIC + Re A h HR rE er Jailed « B PATENTS Ltrs WANTED to sell cur choice nursery sock. Pine AVE Thee to clier, Floek 1ailing 10 grow replaced Facute chooded 19ITIir Ly at ond, MAY BHOTIH ERS, surserymen, * Tochester N EE A! Y. hs do Be AER sw ue mr BEE Beas seks maaan W disabled $l fer Tor increase. 5 yours els perience. Write for Laws, A.W, McUConms Bons, WasHinuvon, 1. OC #& Ciwcisxars, COPYRIGHT ies * In the place of a woman who's weak, ailing, and miserable, why not be a woman who's healthy, happy, and strong? You can be. You needn't experiment, The change is made, safely and surely, with Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre- scription, It's a matter that rests with you. Here is the medicine — the only one for woman's peculiar weaknesses and diseases wn guaranteed to help you. It must give satisfac tion, in every or the money is promptly returned. Take it, and you're a new woman. You can af- ford to make the trial, for you've wothing to lose, 3 ¥, But do vou need to case, be urged ? You don't want means disturbancs sults, With Dr. Pellets, smallest, take, yon the Headache, Indigestion, of the Live r, are prevented, r gize in a pill —it . ! want re- Pier Pleasant cheapest, casiest to 3 res . Sick Constipation, lerangementy } Boweis ret best i lionsness, and Pring hich slain , anf bury ish is Brillant, Odes. mer pave for ho Lin rehire, GOLD MEDAL, PARIS, 1878. V. BAKER & CO.’S Fe (ocoa boum bx Fesnovend, Is alwolutely pure and if in soluble, No Chemicals re umed is r. puration. Tt Sold Ly Groeers eserywhere, CO00G POSES O NICO RTOROEE SStsssssny RIPANS TABULES aguinte * I bowels wind of family ¢ i hottie 150. AG 1WEproce BE. NY. Aa wis W anteds g TE per cent profit. POV COS EFI CD OPIN 0CIP VR CLIPS OOPS SesPOPeEBDPIOIBDILORPOS TEETER TIES Consumpilves and poople who have weak longs or Asth- ma. should use iso's Cure for Consumption. 1t has enred | thousands. [1 bas pot injur ed one itis not bad Lo take itis the best cough syrup. Bold everrvbere 28e. CONSUMPTION. , BARTLEY GI'EAT REMEDY ATAREN sold boy Drage sts CHICKENS. YOU WANTY > * THEIR rReM rol A WAY even if you merely Leep them as a diversion, Is on fer to bandie Fowils Judiek usiy, you must know something about them, ' feet ‘this wani we ars selling & book IVing the experience (Only 26¢. CURES D* of a practical pouliry raiser for twenty-five years. 11 was written by aman who pot vos of Chicken raising at as a not asa etime ¥ his twenty-five profit and make your Fowis earn doliars for The point in that you must be able to detect rin oe the Poultry Yard as soon os it arn, stud Know bow to remedy 1. This took will 11 1elis how 10 detect and core disease; epee snd als for fattening; which few 10 save for trending purposes; and everything, pros: you shou 4 RKoow on his surject to mate it Sent a for twenty-five cents or Bo “Book Publishing lel 133 Leoxans Sr. NY. Olty,