REV. DR. TALMAGE. The Eminent Brooklyn Divine's Sun. day Sermon. rn Subjectt “The Circle of the Earth,” TRXT: ‘It is He that sitteth upon the tircle of the earth," Isaiah xi,, 23, While yet people thought that the world was flat, and thousands of yoars before they found out that it was rouad, Isaiah, in my ext, intimated the shapas of iv~God sitting apon the circle of the earth. he most reautitul figure in all geometry is the circle. God made the univers: on the plan of a grele, Thera ara in the natural world traight lines, anzles, parsilelozrams, diag- nals, quadrangles, Lu: thes» evidently are tot God's favorites. Almost everywhers where you will find Him geomotrizing vou ind the circle domivant, and if not the drele, then the curve, which is a circle thas lied youn -. If it had lived long enouzn it would have been a full orb—a periphery, An ellipse is a circle pressad only a little tos sard at the sides, Giant's Causeway, in Ireland, shows what Sod thinks of mathematics, Taers areover 5,000 columns of rocks--octagonal, hexa- tonal, pentagonal, These rocks seem to inve been made by rule and by compass. Every artist has his molding room, where te may make fifty shapes, but he chooses we shape as preferable to ail others, 1 will aot say that the Giant's Causeway was the world's molding room, but do say out of a rreat many figures God seems to have sel stad the circle as the best, *‘it is He that datteth on the circle of the earth.” The stars nl a circle, the moon in a circle, the sun in a tircle, the universe in a circle, the throne of god the center of that circie When men build churches they ought to mitate the idea of the Great Architect and put the audience in a circle, knowing that the tides of emotion roll more easily that way than in straight lines, Six thousand rears ago God flung this world out or His tight hand, but He did not throw it ons in « straight line, but curvilinear, with a leas: » love holding it s0 as to bring it sack wain, The world started from His hand sure and E lenic. It has been rolllag on dirouzgh regions of moral ive and distemper, How long it will roll God oaly knows, but 2 will in due time make complete circuit ind come back to the placa whence it started ~the hand of God —pure and E lenic. The history of the worid goss in a circle. Why is it that the shipping in our day is mproving so rapidly? It 1s because mean we imitating the old model of Noah's ari. A ship carpenter gives that as his opinion, Although so much deride! by small wits, iat ship of Noah's lime beat the Majestic wd the Eiruria and the City of Pars, of which we boast so much, Where is the iiip on the sea to-day that could outride a leluge in which the heaven ani the earta vere wrecked, landing all the passenzers in afety—two of each kind of living creatures, Lousands of species? Pomology will go on with its achieve- nents until after many centuries the world will have plums and pears equal to the para. lisaical. The art of gardening will grow or centuries, and after the Dowanings and ditchells of the world have dons their best u the far future the art of gardening will ome up to the arborescanes of the vear 1. £ the makers of colored glass go on improv- ag they may io some emnturies be able to nake sometiing equal to tas east window of York minster, whica was built in 12900, We ire six centuries bebind those artists, but the world must keep on toiling until it shall uake the complete circuit and come up to be skill of those very men, If the world continues to improve in ma. onry we shall have after awhile, perhaps wfter the advance of centuries, mortar equal 0 that which | saw ast summer in the wall of an exbumed Eaglish city, built in the ime of the Romans, 1000 years ago-—that nortar to-day as good as the day in whica it was made, baving outlasted the brick and the stone. 1say. after hundreds of years, uasonry may advance to that point. If the world stan.is long enough we may hava a tity as large as they bad in old times—Baby- on five times the size of Londoa. You go into the potteries in Eagland ani rou find them making cups and vases after he style of the cups and vases exhumed rom Porapeil, Toe world is not golag mek, Ob, no; but it is swinging in a circis wad will come back to the styles of pottery tnown $0 long ago as the days of Pompeii The world must seep on progressing unsil ic uakes the complete circuit, The curveis in ihe right direction; the curve will keep on antil it becomes the circle. Well, now, my friends, what je trus in the material uaiverse is true in moral government amd spirilaal arrasgement, Chat is the meaning of Ezekie.'s wheel, All commentators agree in saying that tae wheel means Goa's providence. Bat a whee! is of no use unless it turn, and if it turn it turns around, and if it turns around it moves io a ciucle, What then? Are wo parts of a great iron machine whirlet around whether we will or not, the victims of inexorable fate? Nol! Bo far from that, I shall show you that we ourselves start the vircie of good or bad actions and that it will surely come around again to us unless by divine mtervention it be hindered, bad or good actions may make the circuit of any years, but coms back to us they will us certainly as that God sits on the circle of toe earth, Jezebel, the worst woman of the Bible slew Naboth because sbe wanted his vine yard, While the dogs wera eating the body of Naboth, Elisha the oroohet pat down his {rod's clear around to the dogs that should eat the body of Jezabsl the murderses, sible!” the people mid: *‘that will never palaces window? Jezsbel, they came around hoping t) bury her. They skull, the aogs that devoured Nabothl Oh, woas ns wwift, what an awlal circuit! sweeps Lhronzh s emtury or through mans centuries, The world started with a thew racy for government that is, God was the president ani emperor of tha world, £0 tired of a theocracy. affairs of the world: give us a monarchy.” the world had a monarchy. From a mon archy it is going tohavaa limite | monarchy, After awaila the limitad monarchy will by given un, ani the republicsn form of gov. ernment will be everywoers dominant and recognizyl. Then ths world will get tired of the republican forum of gavernmeat, and it will have an anarchy, which is no govern. ment at ail, And then all nitions, fin ting out that a man 18 not capable of righteously governing man, will cry out for a thsocracy and say: “Let God come Lacs and conduct the affairs of the world.” Every step—monarchy, limited mon- arcy, republicanism, anarchy «-oaly differ. sat steps between the first theocracy and the last theocracy, or segments of the AL cir vie of the earth on which God site, But do wot become impatient beans you cannot sow the curva of eveits, and theretors c¢in- clude that Gol's governmmt is going to break down. Hislosv tells us that in ths makinz of the pyramids it took 29) men two years to drag ons great stone from ths quarry ani put into the pyramids. , now, if men short lived can afford 9 work so slowly as that, cannot Got in the buliding of the eternities afford to wait? What gh God sionld take 10,000 years to draw a ? Bhall we takes our little wa which we have to wind up every aight lest it rua down, and bold it up beside the eloct of eternal ? If, morording to youcan. In one waek you pula worl ol ounsel in ths heart of a Sabbith-school eatld, Daring that sams week you given letter of intro iucton to a youn § man strug. gling in business, During ths same weei you make an exaortation ins prayer mest ing. itis all gone; you will never hear of A lew years ailer a man comes up to you You say, “No, I don't remember ever have seen you.” to “Why.” he says, ‘1 was in which you One Sunday you invite1 me to Christ, I accepted the offer. You ses that oburch with two towers yonder? “Yes,” you say. Hesays “lhat is where I Jrencas or, “Do you see that governor's ouse? That is where I live,” Une day a man comes to you and says, “Gri morn- ing” You look at him and say, “Why, you have the advantage ol me; I cannot place you.” He says, “Don't you remember thirty years ago giviag a letter of introduction to a youngz man, a letter of introduction to Moses H, Grinnell?” “Yes, yes, 1 do.” He gays: “Iam toe man; that wa: wy first step reward a fortuae, but I have retired Or a man comes to you and says: i want tw inwroduce mysell to you. [ weno meeting in Atlanta some 10 make an exhortatios; thai talk coanged the course of my life, aud if ever [get heaven, under God | will owe my salvatioo to you," In only ten, twenty or thirty years tae circle swepl oul and swept bac azan to vour own gratsiul heart. put sometimes it is a wiler circie ani does not retura fora great while, lsaw a bili of expenses for vurning Latimer and Ridley. ‘The bill of expenses says; voe load of Gr fagols ....... pn . 4d Cariage of four loads of wood. ceeeesness dn em, & POR Loovnneres Ilelll, LW CRAIN Lcosvnesrssssnssrnronerns tom, Two Sap les... an eras Lion, Tour IADOTE IS Luoveransnrranss That was cheap fire, considering all the circumstances, but it kindled a ught that shone all around the word and aroussd the martyr spirit, and out from that vurning ol Latimer and Ridl ey rolled the oircle wider and wider, starting other circles, convoiut ing, overrunning, circumscribing, overarcs. ng ail heaven --acirae. . But what is true of the gooa is just a tru: of the bad, You utter aslander against your neighbor. It has gone forth from your teeth, it will never come back, yom think. You have done the man all the mis. chief you can. You rejoics to see him wince, You say, “Didn't [ giveitto him!" That word has gone ont, that slanderons word, on its poisonous and blasted way. You think it will never do you any harm. Batl am watching that worl, and I ses it beginning to curve, and it curvas aronad, and it is aim. ing at your heart. You hal better dolige it. You cannot dolgeit. It rolls into your bosom and after it rolls ina word of an oid book, which says, “With what measure ye mete, it shall be mewsarsl tL you agein.” You maltreat an agal parent You he gruiged him the room in your house. You are impatient of his whimsicalitios and gar. rulity. It makes you mad to hear bim tell the same story twice, You give him food he cannot masticats, You wish he was away. You wonder If he is guing to live forever, He will be gone very soon. His steps are shorter and shorter, Hoe is going to stop, But Gol has an acount to settle with you on that subject, After awhile your eye will be dim, and your gait will hait, and the sound of the grinding will be low, and you will tell the same story twice, and your childrea will wonder if you are going to live forever and wonder if vou will uever be taken away, : Toey calle! you “father” once: now they cull you the “old man.” If you live a few years longer they will call you the “wid chap!” What are thom rouzh words with which your children are accosting you’ They are the echo of the very words you used in the ear of your old father fogy years ago. What is that which Fou are irving to chew, but find it uumas ticadis, and your jaws ache, ani you sur. reader the attempt? Perhaps it may bo tne gristie which you gave to your father for his breakfast forty vears ago, A gentieman passin? slong the strest saw A son dragging his father into the street by ths hair of the head The gentleman, out- raged at this brutal conduct, was about to punish the offender when the old man arose and sid, “Don’t hurt him: its all right; forty years ago this morning [ draggei out my father by t~e hair of his head ™ [It circle, 44, . Be 4d 6d 9s. 5d Shane ats an rasan anas =, tases .. set sana ITE My father livel into the eighties and he had a very wide experience, and he said that maltreatment of parents was aways punished ia this world Other sin may os adjourned to the next world, but maitreatment of parents is puaished in this wore, foe circle turns quickly, very quickly 0, what a stupendous thought that the good and the evil we start come back to us! Do you know that the Judgment Day will be only the points at whico the circies join, tio good and the bad we have done esming back to us, uniesc divine intervantioa hinder —coming back to uz with welcome of delight or curse of condemnation, Gn, [ would like to see Paul, the invalid missionary, at the moment woen his ind. ence comms to full oro-~his inflaencs rolling out through Antioca, through Cyprus, through Lystra, through Corints, through Athens, through Asie, through Europe, througn America, through the first cantary, tarciugh five centuries, through twenty cen turies, through all the succesding centuries, through earth, through heaven, and at last, the wave of influence having made full cir. cuit, strikes his graat soul, Ub, then + would like to sae him! No one can tell the wide sweep of the circle of his influence save the Une who is seated on the circle of the ear. nh. I should not want to see the countenancs of Voltaire when his influsaee comes to tui orp. When the fatal hemorroage wseizei hm at eighty-taree years of age his infia. ence did not cease, [I'he most brilliant man ui his century, be had used all his fscuitios tor assagitiog Carnscanity, his oad infla. ence widening through Fraoce, widening wut througa Uermany, widenieg throuzu ad Europe, widening torougu America, widen: ing trough the Li) years thet have gone uy since he died, widening throug earth, widening through nei, uatil at mst the a cumuiated influences of his bad 1ifs in tery surge of omoipotent wrath will beat a gains: his destroyed spirit, and at taat moroient it will be spough to mage the black baler ol No one van tell bow that bad man's nfl. vice girdled the earth save the ons wno ie Almighty, “Well, now,” say people in this audience, acd 10 us, Lut tne thou Zh that all toe sins We nave ever committe: will come bac: to us fills ws with afright,” My brother, | uave to tell you God can break that circle ana will do soas your call. I can bring twenty passages of Seripuure to prove tase when God for Christ's sake forgives a man the suns of his past lite never come Dac. ‘Tne woes: may roll on and roil ou, but you take your position behind the cross, and tne Wheel strides tue oross and is shat tored forever. ‘Lhe mos fly off (roan the oir Cie into the perjendicalar, tang at rigot Fn with com oblivion, orgiveal wen! The meanest tolog that a nian cup oo be, aller some Giloaty bas pee swe. be so mean as that, od's menor v is miguty CHUGH LO BOLL all tae events we Lhe age, Lut there is one tolng ast is sure to stip tn memory, ous thing re is sure wo torget, any that is urausg How av know it? Lk will prove it. “heir sins ano their imiqu ties will | remember no more,” Lone into that state this worning, my dest brother, my dear sister, “olessed is toe On WOOose transgressions are forgiven,” But go Bot Make tae mistake vi thinking that this aoCwine oi bie Cirvie with this lite; It Fous ou Darou h neaven. You WIGDL quote In apposition 0 oie what S64 BOOUL ae Gly OF Beevan, sl says it *dieth ar square.” That does sesm to militate against tunis idea, but you know thers is many a square house that has a family circle facing each other, aniin na circle moving, and I can prove that this is soin regard to beaven, Bt John says, * hear the voice of many angels round aboot the throne, and the beasts, and the elders” Again he says: “Theis was a rainbow rount about the throne.” The former two instances a circle; the last eithor a cirels ora semicircie, The seals facing each other, tho angels facing each other, the men facing ench other, Heaven an amphitheatre ol glory, Circumference of patriarch and pron et and apostle. Circumference of SBeota Covenanters aod Theoan lezion and Alul- genses, Circumference o! the good of all nges, Periohery of splendor unimagined and indescribab ee, A circle! A cirele! ut every clroumierencs must Lave a eantre, and what is the esates of this heyy. enly circumference! Cariss, His all the glory. His all the praise. His all the crowns. All heaven wreathel into a gar- sand round about flim. Taxe off the impori- al sandal from His foot aul babs ths sear of the spike. Lift the coronel of dominion from His brow aud ses wher ws the lacer- ation of the briers, Coma closer, all hea... en. Narrow the circie arouni tis great heart, ©O Christ, th» SBavioar! O Crist, the man! © Christ, ths Gi! Kap Thy throne forever, seatel 0a tae circ of the earth, seated on the circle of the heavan! On Christ, the seid roc, | stand; All oliber ground i# sinking sand, rn A Remarkable Lighthouse. One of the most wonderful light. Ledge, near Boston. Its history has one of romance. The greater part of its foundation is under water at low tide. In 1847 askeleton light- f iron was erected there on A furious hurricane burst coast in April, 1851, and watchers from the Cohasset shore thought the structure had been carried away. But, as the sun sank, out shone the light across the storm- tossed waters. At 10 p. m. the ligh wis the last time. At one hour after midnight the fog bell was heard above the roaring of the break- ers. At davbreak the ocean was a blank; the lighthouse was gone Kuowing that po help could reach them, the keepers had lighted their lamp as a warning to others, and their lives had gone out with it A granite tower now occupies the spot. So difficult was it to lay the foundation in the sur! that on thirty hours’ work could be done du ing the first year, but the tower atands to-day as enduring as the ledg® -an isolated pile of stone amid the waves, by the force of which it is swayed like a tree in the wind. Dur. ing the long winter months all com. munication with the land is shut off. In summer the occasional visitor is hoisted into the lighthouse from his boat by means of a chalr, and from time to time a skiff is lowered by pul. leys to convey one or and the five keepers to the shore. life tells on them frightfully them have been ved because they hsve gone insane, and more than cue has attempted suicide. - i i —— upon the seen: for fanlf itaeid ther of The Several of en A Welcome Change. There used to be a few years such a furor about elocution that when people met on the street in stead of asking each other "How do you do?” the usual senseless form of address, they inquired, ‘‘How do you elocute?” Men and women paid fab- uous prices to be atle to read one or two selections with facial contortions that were supposed filustrate the text, and the pleasing exhibition of a reader trying to make his express the surface of a garden were offered Then came a new called the art of was sensible and artistic was one fatal defect pupil could read her selection which face and volce were both trained, but she could not pick up a book at ran- dom and read any page aloud with the modulation of voice and soul of expression demanded by the subject, could do nothing without her ARO $5 features landscape to the publi interpreta expression whict Still there The r Or lines Now this bills fair to be remedied by the new education which begins of elocution: to begin the career of instruction with the art of expres instead of bringing it in as a post-graduate accomplishment. Among the many complicated studies of the public schools, surcly the art goud reading stould be so well taught that there would be no need of a suppicmentary Froa Press. Course. Insecia, Insects generally breath through special pores in various parts of their body, and if these are closed by oil they are suffocated. Ang one may test this by dropping sweet oil on the thorax or back of a wasp: it very soon dies. For this reason oil has been found one of the best things to use {or the destruction of insects A Fature for the Donkey. Some day slock raisers will turn thelr with a few generations of liberal feed- ing, careful grooming, and judgment in draught and carrying purposes will be 0 hoofs of the donkey seem absolutely in- capable of lameness, his endurance is without parallel save in the camel, and with good treatment there is no reason why the size of the breed should not be reatly increased, The donkey has a fad name, but ages of ill-treatment have given him a bad temper, which can be overcome only by kindness, It Weakens the Brain. Imprisonment tends to weaken the brain, pays a Philadelphia police official. This places a released criminal, espe cially one who has served a long term, at a decided disadvantage In his efforts to bury the paw and begin life anew, | do not believe that these so-called hommes for reformed convirts wield much influence, if any.n molding the future criminals, tendency, it ocours to me, would be to bring together a dangerous class of crooks who migh improve the oc asion to concoct schem of vutlawry, j i : A Serious Case, Ola Widow Barbara Seliers has | finest lock of geese within a ra. | i ! Williamsbridge. and educates the supports herself products of which feath says the The exception was a but one ind with a possible claim to much reater age, for nobody could say vhen it was hatched, It long ago cased to lay, and its age protected it rom slaughter. After it was last its, feathers lid not grow again, and every win- er it suffered severely from the cold. ts companions insulted it with deri- stole its share of the ood and occasionally assaulted it vith their broad beaks Life was a wurden to it, and the other morning, Turoe Thousand Pans of Shine, to the Morse Bros. of Canton, Mass, made ‘ hard, the | larges Ble gf M jhe, dial if Sun Mave ois . YER REO 1nitity of seventy ut eighty gross, TUURES Maxya--Sallie, if you had a little spunk you'd stand better in your class Do you know what spunk 1s? Sallie (moodily)—1 suppose it's the | pas* participle of “spank.” mampis | act that it was freezing ld goose died Mrs Sellers committed suicide or was ong before daylight she was iwakened by the cackling of her ecse, and, though it was too dark to them by looking out of her bed. oom window, she knew by the direc jon of the sound that they were In ind around the duck pond, a sheet if water about three leet deep at | he rear of the house. At intervals, | he says, she could hear the queru- ous complainings of the old goose, wut Its after being several fmes cut off, at last ceases tether. At dawn Mra Sellers saw that the | ond was frozen over, and in the cen- | » ho quack or was an old goose with its head un. a rit y one of 8} # bent fer the The other birds were | 1 gound it on the {hey were watching it ¢ iad it moved they would, no uch wo yave forced at It was quite | 7g ST enny & €' lead. however, Mrs Sel { by dr r hinks the younger geese ead below the water and made it tay in that position until the ‘armed around it She admits, how: that it may have grown weary of its life and bent its neck whila the ¢ ' water froze JL in. ure, thirty ig in doubt whether it murdered. W hat is done eannot be andone if it is a hard. oiled epg Catarrk Can't Be Cured yoice | applications, as they cannot reach iiscase. Calarri order {Oo Ctre Hall's alto is a blood or . And in i internal remedies taken internally i 4 ure is and se blood and mucous surface, medion ioe, surface. and doubt, slippers - pp ‘2 th 3 19 ‘¥ 4 the ms 3 i IOSeLY. of back and ers Kista, beat its ice VET ' The mother tongue is cunge of Mars jrobmbiy ‘Remember that in Garfield Tea you } gnialling remedy for Ind she ald every The Storage of Apples. " with a good with shelves all ’ ATE ADL Hesad- abused ———— nnn est lon. Sick ii that an Ter. Every cruggis attend CINMBCL CAL NoRKe ) 1 and $1.7 A room draught of is it. Ze, Me, tir through it, and ound the walls, made of vood two or three inches apart, wriorated zine nalled on a frame work of wood, Is best for the storage of apples. Do not let them touch sach other, and if they have alr all ound them, they will be in good con- { {ition when other fruit is rotten. Of | ®ake sourse they must have been carefully eked by hand from the sruised ones being used first. arieties will nonths longer than others, and thes should be carefully looked after. Bj poking over the apples once a week, ind taking away any that show symp- oms of decay, the winter stock of ‘ruit will amply repay care and atien- When one woman praise laths of she # iarcasiie Or Cnr lothes may uot ibe lawyer, 4 y wg Ir. inaae TT homn . Po. per bottle Hf afMicted wit set's Eye-nntor. Dir BOPE Pye tree, k op ree wr four ah Pp three O1 oul A Small Onder. e's fonduess ROaown ehrated 51 J LL. To i GRINg Is well Ong actor « ntered a ng addressed himself unter: “I Mr. * hie 81 { apo the ce dairy shop in Lond annoy § run rerl 4 On, ang assuin a solemn deme to the man behind will take graveiy The Judgment Seat, ‘A CRKursi,” Is puzzled tone well Tool Ti hed at | the ¢ oie a boy,” said Poole, round at he sn II. von OK Ing boy, sir” asked the dairvman io “And a girl, man gazed wi : : call AGU eg A high seat, called be found in the court-yard of all to-do houses in Calro and other large towns of the East. It is occupied the master of the house when ing domestic affairs, Such seals are never wanting in the courtyard of the ¥ ge moult Oy ! Lome houses of the Sheikhs heads of ; Foole in a { persons in authority The yoice, and taking the an 0 is placed in a shady part of the court, he led im to t ie door and judgment is delivered from it on | Upwara wo the sign 411 matters which are brought for de- cision by the inhabitants of the dis trict. or by members of the tribe over which the master of the house pre sides tribes, seal and girl,” repeated with not a ghost of what your notice | supplied in any quantity y : Ti a smile states. ‘Fam London i i ) oh 1 1iies t- 1lils, - a ——— - The Farmer and the Grocer. A grocer would not pay a farmer the price of a ten- pound turkey for one that weighed but seven pounds. Why should a farmer pay a grocer the price of the Royal Baking Powder for a baking powder with 27 per cent. less leavening strength? ‘The Royal Baking Powder is proven by actual tests to be 27 per cent. stronger than any other brand on the market. Better not buy the others, for they mostly contain alum, lime and sulphuric acid; but if they are forced upon you, see that you are charged a correspon- dingly lower price for them. se C—O skens. # wan wha devoted 2% vean of his life 1a CONDUCTINY a ULTRY YARD AS A i ANA AA HB HAMA 1 oney in Chi MONEY IN CHICKENS wef WOU ENOW HOW Prompt Cure. on and A Ruddy | Gow cheek Ws brow Z 1s evidence that the body 1s getting proper nourishment. When this glow of health is absent assimilationis wrong, and health 1s letting down. Scott's Emulsion taken immediately arrests waste, regardless of the cause. Consumption must yield to treatment that stops waste and builds flesh anew. Almost as palatable as milk Prepared by Boot & Bowne N.Y. All drogrists BLADDE CURL. me gner™ KIDNEY LIVER = cenin: ( sn Biliousness, burn or dyspepsia, constipation. - - Poor Digestion, Distress after eating, pain and bloating in the domuch, shortness of breath, pains in the heart, Loss of Appetite, g seems to taste good, tired, Cunrantee— 1 we contents of One Rattle, if not ben At Drugoists, 50c. Size, $1.00 Size, to Health” fres—Oonssitation Cree Dan Knxee & Co. Bisonaxzos, RK. X. Cures Scrofula J. Rowell, Me says her ford, Mass. croft v the usool aving had - ait SSS.E being d te a low condition monght she could not Live INHERITED SCROFULA. y little boy of hereditary I appeared all over or a vearl bad given . when finaily 1 was A few hotties Bo symptoms of Lo Matenas atbervilic, Miss. Atinsts, Do Not Be Deceived with Pastes, Enamels and Palate which steals the bands, injure the iron and burn red. The Rising Ran Stove Polish is Brillant, Odo loss, Durabie, and the consumer ms for no Un or glass package Cures Consumption, Coughs, Cronp, Sore Fhroat. Sold by all Drogrists on 8 Guarsstes, TO YOUNC MEN. Splendid opportunity to learn a business That will give steady employment and 8 safes of 1000 a year, send Se. stamp for circalar, containing full lorms tion, Address Geo. HL Lawrence, SIE 10th, B.Y. Clip. A A. SOR RHEUMATISM » PORKINE gives instant relief and is a quick, safe cure for Rhenmistiom In its many forms Address W. T.CHEATHAM, JR. Heuserson, N. C. Pisce Nemedy for Catarrh Is the Test, Baviest to Use, and Cheanest, Sold by droggiets or sent hr mail, Sx. ET. Haseltine, Warren, Fa TN Barf Cures
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