an HEV. DR. TALMAGE. $hs Eminent Brooklyn Divine's Sun. day Sermon. “Qpeasing the Jordan.” (De livered at Detroit, Mich.) Seljeet: Ror the covenant of the Lord stood firm on dry ground in midst of the Jordan, and all the Israelites passed over on dry ground, until all the people were passed clean over Jordan."-Joshua ili., 17, ‘Washington crossed the Delaware when crossing was pronounced impossible, but he did it by boat. Xerxes crossed the Hel. lespont with 2,000,000 men, but he dil it by bridge. The Israelites crossed the Bod Sea, but the same orchestra that celebrated the deliverance of the one army sounded the strangulation of the other. This Jordanic passage differs from all. There was no sac- rifice of human life—not so much as the loss of a linchpin. The vanguard of the host, made up of priests, advanced until they put Text: “And oli Ta thabigre the ark mediately the streets of Jerusalem were no more dry land than the bed of that river, It was as if all the water had been drawn off, and then the dampness had been soaked up with a sponge, and then by a towel the road had bees wiped dry. the hosts in uniform. Following them the wives, the children, the flocks, the herds. The people look up at the crystalline wall of the Jordan as they pass and think what an awful disaster would come to thew if be- fore they got to the opposite bank of that Ajalon wall that wall should fall on them, And the thought makes the mothers hug their children close to their hearts as they swiften their pace. Quick, now! Get them all up on the banks—the armed warriors the wives and children, flocks and herds, completed forever, Sitting on the shelvad limestone, I look off upon that Jordan where Joshua crossed un- der the triumphal arch of the rainbow woven out of the spray; the river which af- terwards became the baptistry where Carist was sprinkled or plunged; the river where the ax—the borrowed ax—miraculousiy swam at the prophhet's order; the river ilk lastrious in the history of the world for he. roic faith and omnipotent deliverance and typical of scenes yet to transpire in vour hfe and mine—scenes enough to make us from the sole of the foot to tae crowa of the bead, tingle with infinite gladness, Standing on the scens of that affrighted. fugitive river Jordan, I learn for mvsel? and for you, first, that ohstacies, when they are touched, vanish. The text says that when these priests came down and touched the water—the edge of the water with their feet —the water parted. They did not seade in chin deep or wa st deep or knee deep or ankle deep, but as soon as their feet touched the water it vanished. And it makes me think that almost all the obstacles of life need only be approached in order to be conguersd, Difficulties but touched vanish. It 1s the trouble, the difficuity, the obstacle far in the distance, that secs s0 huge and ous. The apostles Paul aad Jolin seamad to dis like cross dogs, for the apostle Paul tells us in Philippians, “*Sewars of dogs.” and Joan seems to shut the gate of heaven azainst all the canine soecies when he says, *"Witaout are dogs,” But I have been told that whe those animals ars furious, if they you, if you will keep your eye on them and advance ugon them they will retreat. Whether taat be 55 or not I canuot tell, but I do know that the vasi majority of the pis fortunes and trials and disasters of your life that bounds your steps, if you can only get your ¢ve on t x, And kes your eye on them, and advancs upon them. and ery “Begone,” they will slink and cower #t There is a beautiful tradition American Indians that Maoitou ing in the invisible world, came to a barrier of brambles and soarp thorns which forbade his om, and there was a wild Least glaring at him from the thicket, but as be determined to go on his way he did pursus it, sad those bram- bles were fouud 0 bs omy pasntoms, and that beast was found ve ghom, and the impassible river th im rushing to embrace the proved to be only a paantom river Well, my iriends, the fact is there are a great magy thiogs that 0K terrible across our pathway, which, when we advance upou them, are ouly the phantoms, only tas ap- partons, only the delusions o. iife, Daftl. culties touched are cooquersd. Put your feet into the brim of the water, and Jordan retreats. You sometimes see n great duty to perform. It is a very disagresable duty. You say, “I can’s go through it: [ bavea's the courage, I haven't the intsiligence, to go througn it.” Advances upon it, Jordan will vanish, ; Lalways sigh bafors | begin to preach at the greatness of the undertaking, but as #O0N ag I start it becomes to me an eshilara- tion. And any duty undertaken with a con- fident spirit becomes a pleasure, and the higher the duty the higher tne pleasure. Difficulties touctned are cooquere;. There Are a great many people who are afraid of death in the tuture, Good Jobin Livingston once, on a sloop coming from Elizabethport to Rew York, was dreadtully trightened be cause be thoug nt be was going to be drowned as asudden gust came up. People were sur- prised at him. If any man in a'l tae world was ready to die, it was gool John Liviug- ston. Bo there are now a great many good peo- ple who shudder in passing a gravoyard, and they hardiy dare think of Canaan be- cause of the Jordan that intervenes But once they are down on a sick bed, then all their fears are gone—the waters of death dashing on the beach are like tbe meliow voice of ocean shelis—they smell of the blos. soms of the tree of life, The music of the heavenly choirs comes stealing over the waters, and to cross now is only a pleasant sail. How long the boat is coming! Come, Lord Jesus, come quickly. Christ the Priest advances apead, and dying Christian goes over dry shod on coral beds and Hower of beaven and paths of pari. Oh, could we make our doubls remove ‘I hese gloomy doubts that rise And view the Usosan that we love With uabeciouded eyes! tremend- come at among the Was travel and coe day he io Con'd we but climb whore Moser stood And view the landscape o'er Not Jordan's stream nor death's cold flood Could fright us from the shore. Again, this Jordanic teaches ms the completeness of everything tiat God does. When God put aa invisible dam across Jordan, and it was halted, it would have been natural, you would have supposed, for the water to have overflowad the region all around about, and that great devastation would have taken place, but when God put the dam in front of the river Ha put a dam on the other wide of the river, 20 that, ac- cording to the text, the water halted and reared and stood thers and not overflowing the surrounding country. Ob, the compiete- ness of everythin: that God does! One weuid have thought that, if the waters oi the Jordan had dropped until they were only two or three feet deep, the have marched through § the bank with garments coming ashore from ship. wreck, and that would have been as wonder. ful a deliverance, but God does something it fie } i Bf co ———— 313 ] was wound un, the fixad stars the nivate, the cousielintions the intermoving wheels, and ponderous laws the weights and mighty swinging pendulum, the stars in the great dome of night striking the midnight,and the tun, with brazen tongue, tolling the hour of noon. The wildest comet hes a chain of law that it cannot break. The thistle down flying before tho schoolboy’s breath is controlled by the same law that controls the sun and the planets. The resebush in your window is governed by the same principle that governs the tree of the universe on which the stars are ripening fruits, and on which God will one day put His hand and shake down the fruits—a perfect universe. No astronomy has ever proposed an amend- ment, If God makes a Bible, it is a complete Bible, Standing amid the dreadful and des lightful truths, you seem to be in the midst of an orchestra whore the wallings over sins, and the rejoicings over pardon, and the martial strains of victory make the chorus like an anthem of eternity. This book seams to you the ocean of truth, on every wave of which Christ walks—sometimes in the darkness of prophecy, again in the | splendors with which He walks on Galilee, { In this book apostle answers to prophet, Paul to Isaiah, Revelation to Genesis—glori- | ous light, turning midnight sorrow into the midnocn joy, disperaing every flog. hushing | every tempest. Take this book; it is the kiss i of God upon the soul of lost man, Perfect | Bible, complete Bible! No man has ever | proposed any improvement, God provided a Saviour. Heisa com- plete Baviour-—God-man-—divinity and { humanity united in thy same person. He | sot up the starry pillars of the universe and | the towers of light. He planted the cedars | and the heavenly Lebanon. He struck out | of the rock the rivers of life, singing under the trees, singing under ths thrones. He | quarried the sardonyx and crystal and the topaz of the heavenly wall, Hs put down : the jasper for the foundation and heaped up | the amethyst for the capital and swung the 12 gates which are 12 pearls. In one instant He thought out a universe, and yet He be- | came a child eryiong for His mother, feeling along the sides of the manger, learning to waik. Omnipotencs sheathed in the muscle and flesh of a child's arm; omunisciences strung in the optic nerve of a child's eye: infinite love beating in a child's heart; a great God | appearing in the form of a child 1 year old, 5 yearsold, 15 years old. While all the heavens ware ascribing to Him glory and | honor and powar on earth, men said, "Who is this fellow? While all the heavenly hosts, with folded wing about their faces, bowed down bsfore Him crying, “Holy, ho.y,” ou earth, thay denounced fim as a blasphemer and a sot. Rocked in a boat on Gennesaret, and yet He it is that undirked the lightoiug from ths storm cloud and dis- waste i Lebanon of its forests and holds the leaf holds the raindrop, Oh, the complete Saviour, rubbing His an awlul thing to make shipwrecks on the rock of roin--masts falling, hurricanes flying, death coming, greanings in the water, moanings in the wind, thunder in the sky, while God, with the finger of light ning, writes all over the sky, “1 will tread them in My wrath, and I will trample them in My fury.” The Christian comes down to this ragi torrent, and he knows he must pass out, a as he comes toward the time his breath gets shorter, and his last breath leaves him as he steps into the stream, and no sooner does he touch the stream than it is parted, and he goes through dry shod, while all the waters wave their plumes, crying: **O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory ™ God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes, and there shall be no more weeping, and there shall be no more death. Some of your children have already gone up the other bank, You let them down on this sida of the bank; they will be on the other bank to help you up with supernat- ural strength, The other moraing at my table, all my family present, I thought to myself how pleasant it would be if | could put all in a boat and then go in with them, and we could pull across thes river to the next world and be there altogether. No family parting, no gloomy obsequies. It wouldn't take five minutes to go from bank to bank, and then in that better world to be together forever, Wouldn't it be pleasant for you to take all your family into that blessad country if you could all go together? I remember my motoer in her dying hour said to my father, “Father, wouldn't it be pleasant if we could all go together?” But we cannot all go together. We mustgo one by one, and we must be grateful if we got there at all. What a heaven it will be if we have all our families there to look around and see all the children are present! You would rather have them all there, and you go with bare brow forever, than that one should be missing to complete the gar. lands of heaven for your coronal. The Lord God of Joshua gave them a sale Jordanic passage. ; Even children will go through dry shod, Those of us who wera brougat up in the country remember, when the summer was coming on in our boyhood days we always longed for the day when we were to go barefooied, and after teasing our mothers in regard to it for a good while, and they consented, we remember the delicious sensa- tion of the cool grass woen we put our un covered foot on it And the time will come whi these shoes we wear now, lest we be cut of the sharp places of this world, shall be taken off, and with unsandisd foot we will step into the bed of the river; with feet untrammelsd, free from pain and fatigues, we will gain that last journey, when, with one foot in the bed of theriver and the other foot on vet the stars of heaven the adorning goms of His right hand. Holding us in His arms when we take our last view of our dead, Sit. ting down with us on the tombstone, and while we plant roses there Ha planting con- soiation in our heari, every chapter a stalk, every verse a stem, every word a rose. A complete Saviour, a complets Bible, a com- plete universe, a complete Jordanic passage. Everything that God does is complete. | Again, I learn from this Jordanic passage that between us and every Cansan of sao- the other bank, we struggle uoward., That Oh, I pray for all my dear people sn safe Jordanic pamage! That is “How the candle flickers, Nellie! I shall sleep well tonight and wake in the morning.” One word of comfort on this sabject for all the bereaved, You see, our departed friends have not been submerged, have not been swamped in the waters. They have only cromed over. Thess leraslites were as thoroughly alive on the western and our de- sxtinguished, not blotted out, but with must be passed. ‘Ob, how I would like to bave soma of those grapes on the other side I” said some of the Israelites to Joshua, “Well,” says Joshua, ‘why don't you cross over and ged them There difficulty between us and everything that is worth knowing. That which costs nothing is worth nothing. God didn't intend this world for an easy parior, through which we ars to be drawn in a rocking chair, but we are to work omr passage, climb masts fight battles, scale mountains and ford rivers everything valusbie difficult to gat al, the same reason that He put the gold down in the miine and the pear] clear seu—to make us dig and dive for them. We acknowledge this principle in woridly things; ob, that we were only wise enough te ac kpnowiedge it in religious things! You have scores of illustrations tise nardest ot and been trodden under foot, and vet after awhile had it easy. Now their homes blossom: and bloom with pictures, and carpets that made foreign looms laugh now embrace their feet: the summer winds lift the tapestry about the window gorgeous enough for a Turkish sultan; impatient steeds paw and neigh at the door, their car- rages me ving through the sea of New York | life 8 very wave of splendor. Who sit? Why, it is a boy who came to New York with a dollar ia his pocket and ail his estate siuag over his shoulder in a cotton handkercaiel. All that silver on the | dancing span is petrified sweat drops; that beautiful dress is the faded calico over which God put His band of perfection, turning it to furkish satin or [talian silk; those dia- mondas are the tear: which suffering froze as they feil. On, there is a river of difficulty between us avd every earthly achievement. You know tial, You admit that. acquisition of knowledge. The ancients the bead and the goddess of wisdom jumped opt, illustrating the truth that wisdom comes by hard Knocks. Thers was a river of difficulty between Suakespeare, the boy, holding the horse at tae door of the London theatre, and that Shakespeare, the great dramatist, winning the applause of all au- diences by his tragedies. There wasa river between Benjamin Franklin, with a loaf of bread under Lis arm, walking the strests of | Potladeiphia, and that Franklin, the philosopher, just outside of Boston flying a kite in the thunderstorm. An idier was cured of his bad habit by night, at a man who seemed sitting at his desk turning off one sheet of writing after | another until almost the dawn of the morn- ing. The man sitting there writing until morning was indusirious Walter Scott; tae wan who looked at him through the window was Locknart, his illustrious bi pher afterward. Lord Mansfleld, pursued by the press and by the popuiase, vecause of a eer- tain line of duty, went on to discharge the | guty, and while the mob were around him detnanding the taking of his life he shook his fist in tho face of the mob and sail, “Sirs, when one's last end comes, it cannot come too soon if he (alls in defense of law and the liberty of his country.” | And so there is, my friends, 8 tug, s tus Isle, a trial, a push, su saxiety, turouzh | which every man must go before he comes | to worldl | You admit it. Now be wise bh to ap | ply it in religion. Eminent Christian char. {weter is only gained by the Jordanic | passage, no man just happened to get good, | Why «oes that ivan know so muca about | the Soripiures? He was studying the Biole | while were reading a novel, | tire with the sublimicies o! Sus Bible whbile | you were sound asleep; ¢, tussle, push. and runing in the Rian life that man got so strong for God; in a handred Bolferinos he learoe { how to fight: in a bun dred shipwrecks he learned how to swim. | Tears over sin, tears over Zion's desolation, | tears over the i tent, tears over the graves made, are which Borraw the the i 1 i f Zid i : 23 8 it Tait; i * keener eyesight, and betier prospects — srossed over, thir sing, their physical and mental disquiet, all left clear this side, an bes suit. Crossed over! Oh, I shake hands of congratulati n with all the bereaved in the friends are safe! Why was there so much joy in certain when people beard who were on board that it was feared that vessel this side beard that the the friends on | we not a right to congratulate the people in Now York that toeir friends had got safely across’ And is it pot right thie morning that I congratulate you that you: departed on the shore of heaven® Would you have tosm back again’ Would you have those old parents back again’ You get their breath in the stifiad atm oaphere of the summer. Would you have them back in this weather’ Didn't toey use their brain long encagh® Would you have your chil dren back again’ Would you have them take the risks of temptation which throng every human pathway? Would you have them cross the Jordan three times? In ad- dition to crossing it already, crow it again to greet you now and then cross back alter ward?! For certrinly you would not want to Paase and weep, not (or the fread from pun, But that toe sign of love would oring them bac again. I ask a question, and there seams to come back the answer in heavaaly echo: “What, will you never bo sick again? “Never siok—again.”— What, will you never be tired again? “Never -- fired — again. “What, will you never weep again? “Never —~weep again.” “What, will you never »Nover —die—again.” Ob, ye army of ceparted kindred, we hail you trom bank to bank! Wait for us waen the Jordan of death shall par for ue. Come | down and meet us half way botween the | willowed banksof earth and the palm oe { of heaven, May our great High Priest go abesd of us, ana wits bruised feel touch toe | water, and then shall be fulfilled the words | of my text, “All Israel went over on dry ! ground until all the people were gone clear ! through Jordan." {| 11] ask you what shall be ths glad hymn of this morning, I think there would | be a thousand voices that would choose the same hyma-—the hymn that illumines so y death coambers—the hymna that has been the parting hymn in many an instance «the old hymn: On Jordan s storey banks | sland And cast & wistlal eye To Cansan'’s feir and BARE land, ware Asporiing. ruplaroe scone I'hat rises on my i Sweet flaide arrayed In living green, And rivers of delight. They Wanted Doll Rags A policeman in Central Park, New York City, the other day noticed two little girls dodging busily about through the crowds, and suspecting that they were up to some mischief followed them. Presently a woman stopped him and said that there had Leen a plece cut out of her dress. Two other women im- mediately discovered that their dresses had been similarly mutilated. The po- | iceman thereupon arrested the girls, and several bits of cloth that they had cnt from different dresses. A man who said that he had seen one of them cut at his wife's dress, went with him to the sta. tion house to lodge & complaint, The girls, who were very much frightened, said in the most innocent ntoaer 2 Shak wanted some to e they rags he y SuRIODUS FACTS ABOUT BREAD | Which Housokeepers “Whauld Envaestly ! { ansnider, { A serious danger mennces the health {of the people of this country in the nu. {merous alum baking powders that are {row being urged upon the public. | There is no question as to the detri- linental effect of these powders upon the system. Every Board of Health, every physician, will tell you of the unwhole- some qualities they add to the {od. {Some countries have absolutely pro- | of bread containing alum. Even small doses of alum, given to results, troubles from alum-phos- phate powders, are familiar in the prac- { Itis not possible that housewife, any loving mother, will knowingly use an article of food that will injure the health of her household, or perhaps cause the death of her chil dren. How shall the dangerous alum powders se distinguished? Aad how shall the danger to health from their use be avoided? Generally, alum powders may be known from the price at which they are sold, ur irc the fact that they are accom- panied by a gift, are disposed of under some scheme, The alum powder costs put a few cents a pound to make, and 1s olten sold at 20 or 25 cents a pound. If some prescut is given with it, the price may be 30, 40 or 50 cents a pound, It is impossible to name all the al powders in the market, but any baking powder sold at a low price, or adver. tized as costing only hall as much as cream of tartar powders, accompanied by a present, or disposed of under any scheme, is of this class, detrimental to health, and to be avoided, But the easy, sale, and certain protec any prudent » 11 u I'nis powder is mentioned because of the poumerble reports in its favor by high medical authorities, by the U. 8B. Gov. ernment, and by the official chemists and Boards of Health, which leave no doubt as to its entire freedom from alum, lime and smmonis, its absolute purity and While its use is thusa safeguard against the poisonous alum wholesomeness, powders it is satisfactory at the same lightest, sweetest and most food, which will keep moist and fresh longer, and that can be caten with im- mupity hot or cold, stale or fresh, and also that owing to its greater strength it is more ccopomical than others, Fhese facts should incline consumen to buy the inferior powder. If a grocer urges the sale of the cheap, impure, alam brands, it should be borne in mind that it is because he can make more profil on them, The wise housekeeper will decline in all cases to take them. Take no chances thy a doubd- rr aii e ough using an the henith or life of dear ones 8 al aks a— I —— Takes Two Rascals to Work It. Land values increase so rapidly in New York that it is easy to mortgage such property pretty well up to the selling value, and this fact has opened the way to an ingenious method of something very like swindling. A, representing himself as the agent of B, purchases desirable vacant land for say $175,000, and before papers pass, B sells the same to A at 8225, 000. B then, upon the strength of this transaction, obtains a mortgage of $200,000 upon the property. Of course A and B are in collusion, and the original purchaser really repre. sented both, while the second trans action was solely for the purpose of establishing a price upon which the mortgage could be obtained. a sn Is sien Pest of AlN To cleanse the system ina gentle and truly beneficial manner, when the Springtime comes, use the trae and perfect remedy Syrup of Figs. One bottle will answer for all the family and costs only 3 cents: the large size 81. Try it and be pleased. Manufastured by the Califor. uia Fig Syrup Co. only. ~The servant girl, Mistress of the sitoation- One Cont & Bolt Wali Paper, Gold, Sota, Seta: Gold Embossed, dota: ™e- | grain, Five Cents. Gold Border, let a yuri, 100 Samples all prices for St stamp, Rann | Wall Paper Jobber, Rochester, I'a, Small books are read the most. We eat too much and take too little outdoor sxercise. This is the fault of our modern civ- lization. it is claimed that Garfield Tea. a i simile herd) remedy, helps Nature to overcomes i t 3 Rose diamonds are Table 0 explode. po | Malaria cared and eradicated from the ays. | tam by Brown's Iron Bitters. which enr cies | the blood, to the nerves, aids digest on, | Acts like a charm on pérsons in fil | health, giving new energy and strengt Gets down to work— The pillow-maker. EE i } 0 Saree ReMeny ean be hat for Coughn i - Colds or any trnble of the Throat than {| “Brown's Bronchial Trocher,” Price 3 vents | Bold only in boxes. An unostentatious gift-~A Joan. If aMicted with sore eyes use Dr. lsans Thom son's Eyo.water. Druggista sell at 2c.per bottle. i 1 i i Dr. Kilmer's SWAMP-ROOT Makes Another Remarkable Cure! GIVEN UP TO DIE! Swamp-Root Dissolves a Stone In the Bladder as Large as a Goose Fagg. Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. ¥. Gentlemen: —1 don't think there is a person living who can recommend your Bwamp-Hoot more highly than myself, I have been a great sufferer for several years; every ergan in my body seemed to be out of order: was under the care of different physicians for nearly two years; tried every doctor in our town and used other medicine, but continued to suffer and decline until I was a phys fcal wreck, The most learned physicians meade examinations and pro- nounced my case one of Gravel Or Mone in the Bladder, and said that 1 would never be any better until it was remove. ed by a surgical operation. Ohl thought what next? Every one felt sad; I myself gave up, as an operation seemed 10 Us certain death, NO USE FOR THE KNIFE! I shall never forget how timely the good news of your Swamp Root reached me. 1 send you by this same mail a sample of the stone or gravel that was dfssoleed and expelled by the use of your Swamp-Hoot, It must have been as large as a good size goose egg. 1 am now in excellent health, as my photograph will show. I have done a very bard summer's work and feel as well to-day as I ever did. 1 kept right on using Swamp-Root and it saved my life. If any one doubts my statement I will furnish proof. Laponxe BownnsMrrs, Dec, 26th, 1502, Marysville, Objo, GuarsntesUse contests of One Bottle, If you are not benefited, Drog- gins will refund to you the price paid “invalids Guide to Health™ and Consultation Free. Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton X.Y. A Powerful Flesh Maker. A process that kills the taste of cod-liver oil has done good service—bnt the process that both kills the taste and effects par- tial digestion has done much more. Scott's Emulsion stands alone in the field of fat-foods. It is easy of assimilation because part- ly digested before taken. Scott's Emulsion checks € sumption and 7 all wasting aiscasces. Prepared by Roott & Boone, ("hem iste New York, Bold by draggin everywhere 0 lh AACE ARAE EERIE ARARMAEABRE ERR. O 01 - other 1 had a malignant breaking out on my leg was cared sound ana well Wii C. Beaty Yorkviiie below the knee, and with two and a half bottles of Other biood medicines had failed 10 do me any good ERS I was troubled from childhood with an ag gravated case of Tetter, and three bottles of cured me permanetiy. WALLACE Manx Mary ¢. 1.7% Ohar book on Wood and Skin Diseases mailed Swirr Srecirio Co. Atlanta, Ga. YOU OWN CHICKENS >A THEM v04& «4 WAY ren If you merely keep them as 8 diversion, in on» ser to handle Foils judiciously, you must kaow something about them, To meet this want we are selling a book EIVing the experience (Onl 25¢. of a practio poultry raiser for y twenty five years, It was writen by aman who put all his sind, snd time, and money to Making a she coun of Chicken PAIRED OL AYA askin, But as 8 business—and if you wilt profit by bi: twenty-five years’ work, you can save many Chicks annually, gif € free. | - J - * Radring Chickens.” ™~ ana make your Powis ears dollars for v t Je, that Fou must be able to detect ie 1 on uitrs Tard as soon as it appesrs, and know to remedy 18. This vook will you, It tellin Bow 10 detect and ure disease: to fosd for end also for tattening: which fowis Lo save ior breeding purrvses. and everytuing indord, you who Ran w on this surject tn make it profitable. postpaid fo je. or Bo Bent ww twenty five cents Hemi Book Publishing House, 19% Lenxann Sv, NF. © a A cash hainner— he seales of Inatios, ‘ OIL 3 : | | | i | Syrup” Justice of the Peace, George Wil- kinzon, of Lowville, Murray Co. Minn., makes a deposition concern- ing a severe cold. Listen to it, ‘In the Spring of 1888, through ex- posure I contracted a very severe cold that settled on my lungs. This was accompanied by excessive night sweats. One bottle of Boschee's German Syrup broke up the cold, night sweats, and all and left me in a good, healthy condition. I can give German Syrup my most earnest commendation.’ with Pastes, Enamels and Paints wirich stain the bande, injure the iron sud burn red. Riss San Bove Polish is Brifliant, Odor loge, Durabie, and the consumer or glass package with every A BROKEN | ADNAL ~ 1S UNHAPPY AND, WONT BEL DRIVEND fa ——— ee — HOME NAILS ARE CHEERFUL AND SHARP i / AND THE DIFFERENT SIZES J ! p—— rs for no tin ARE VERY ANXIOUS TO 1/7 | Y ADAPT THEMSELVES TO ALL THE USES Til EN | OF THE | , / HOME. CoN 711 \\4} / I) 1/74]. | /| 3 i I “ /} Compunions- Used in all homes. |Bome Nails. o,,, by all dealers. | [Homo Packs. ~~ 1 In WN HARNESS THOMSON'S SLOTTED No tenis required. Only a hammer needed Lo drive nd cline then easily and guickly. leaving the clinch uiely smmordh. Reguiri no hoe to be made In he lant her nor barr for te K is. They are stew . tongh and darable. Millons pow in use "5 wenrths, untfore «+ sssaried, put 9p In boxes. Ask your dealer for them, or snd co in wines. Man'f by JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO. WALTHAM, MASS. g TARE THE BE & & T + oy Cures Consumption, Coughs, Croup, Sore Sold by all Druggists on 8 Guarantee. IDEA Complex and add disor Liver and Bowe RIPANS | Toot gently i jl dom follows Hhent wae, god ! ruggists or went Box winds, “he, Polk Te boxes), $5 For free sain ples addres 3 RIFASXS CHEMICAL ©0., Now York, a AA lilgstrated Publications, JAAR LY 4 Dy idee, Washington and Oregon. the PREE COVERNMENT “Ji LAND BETH best Agrieeinenl, % Lands now to pertieve. Matled FRYE. Address WAR, ELAN Band Cam, X, 7. 5B, bb Pusl, Bins. i in, TABULES praenAly MONEY IN CHICKENS, Ver Bae. 8190 : bei, experiences of 8 prasticoal ponitry raiser during 5 vente. It teaches how lo detest amd cure dipsanes ; to feo Tor egge and for which, fowls to mre Sor an, do Adres 124 Losanrd BL, KV. Oy. BOOK PUB. Wout, rowaits of Garfie E eating, Rifle. Baaupie free. Ganrns Tea Te WAL N - DR. J. Lebanon, OPIUM MEN AND BOYS! Want to jeara all aboul a Borer * How 10 Pick Outs Good One ? Know imperfer Boos and so Guard aga” 4 Froud ? Detect Disease and Effect a Cure when same bs possible * Tell the age by the Teeth 7 What to call the Different Parts of the Animal? How to Shoe a Ho se Properly All thie and viber Va sabie Information can be obtained by reading our 100-PAGE ILLUSTRATED HORSE BOOK, whith we will foreand post pad, on receipt of only 35 cents in stamps. BOOK PUB. HOUSE, 134 Leonard St, New York City. Borpaiis Reb Spd dp ~ GERRAT BICTIRAAKY FIT ER tain. eh printed pinged of ode ot
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers