REY. DR. TALMAGE. THE EMINENT DIVINE'S SUNDAY DISCOURSE. Subject: “The Wrestlers" —=The Time is Coming When the Last Mighty ¥vil of the World Will Be Grappled by Right- eousness and Thrown. Text: ‘We wrestle notagainst flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of tris world, against spiritual wickedness in high places.”—Ephesians vi., 12, Squeamishness and fastidiousness were never charged against Paul's rhetorie. In the war against evil he took the first weapon he could lay his band on. Justration, he employed the theatre, the arena, the foot.race, and there was noth- ing in the lstimian game, with its wreath of pine leaves; or Pythian game, with its wreath of laurel and palm; or Nemean game, with its wreath of parsley; or any Romas circus, but he felt he had a right to put it in sermon or epistle, and are you not wrestling bout for suggestiveness? tarch says that wrestling is the most artis- tic and cunning of athletic games. We must make a wide difference between pugilism, the lowest of spectacles, and wrestling, which is an effort in sport to put down another on floor or ground, and we, all of us, indulged in it in our boyhood days, if we were healthful and plucky. The ancient wrestlers were first bathed in oll, and then sprinkled with sand. The third throw decided*the victory, and many a man ond throw, in the third throw was on top; and his opponent under, The Romans did not like this game very much, for it was ing allowed inthe game. They preferred fallen martyr. In wrestling, the opponents would bow ut down both feet solidly, take each other earnest, and there were contortions and the other, tripping him up, or with strug- gle that threatened apoplexy or death, the efeated fell, and the shouts of the specta- tors greeted the vieter. I guess Paul had him of the struggle ot the soul with temp- tation, and the struggle of truth with error, and the struggle of heavenly forces against apoliyonie powers, and he dictates my text to an amanuensis, for all his Jetters, save with his work I bear the groan and laugt and shout of earthly and celestial belliger ents: “We wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in hign places.” I notice that as these wrestlers advanced to throw each other they bowed one to the other. It was a civility, not only in Gre elan and Roman games, but in later days, in allthe wrestling bouts at Clerkenwell, England. and in the famous wrestling mateh during the reign of Henry I11., in St. Giles Fleld, between men of Westminister and people of London. However rough a twist and hard a pull each wrestler contemplated giving his opponent, they approachec each other with politeness and suavity. The genuflexions, the affability, the courtesy in contest. Well, Paul, I see what you mean. In this awful struggle between right and wrong, we must not forget to be gentlemen and ladies. always helps, as you get mad. Do not call rum-sellers murderers. Do not eall infidels fools, Do pot eall higher critics reprobates, Do not call all eard-players and theatre-goers chil- dren of the devil. Do not say that the dance breaks through into hell, Do not deal in vituperation and billingsgates an i econ tempt and adjectives dynamitic. The other side can beat us at that, Their dictionaries bave more objurgation and brimstone. We are in the strength of God to throw curses the earth, but let us approach our mighty antagonist with suavily. Her- cules, a son of Jupiter and Alemene, will by a precursor of smiles be helped rather than damaged for the performance of bis “twelve labors.” Let us be as wisely that which left Rufus Choate or David Paul Brown triumphant or People who get into a rage in reformatory tion of thelr own nervous system. There the toueh-nole that it explodes, the one that sets it off. There are always decline to go and take part, be. eause they are apt to become demonstra. tions of bad temper. a man swear, even though he swear on the right side. text smployed in illustration the wrestling mateh, behaved on a memorable occasion ns we ought to behave, of the Bible made an unitentional mis. take when they sulting the people of Athens by speaking of “the unknown god whom ye ignorantiy worship.” Instead of ebarging them with ignorance, the original indicates he com- were very religious; but as they confessed where they had left off. The same Paul wrestling mateh, here exercises suavities before he proceeds practically to throw In this holy our wrestlers bow as they go into the struggle which will leave all perdition un- der and all heaven on top. Remember also that these wrestlers went through severe and continuous course of preparation for thelr work. They wers Jat upon such diet as would best develop heir muscle. As Paul says, “Every man that striveth for the mastery is temperate in all things.” The wrestlers were put under complete discipline—bathing, gym- nastics, struggle insport with each other to develop strength and give quickness to dodge of head and trip of foot; stooping to 1ift each other off the ground; suddenly rushing forward; suddsnly pulling baek- ward; putting the left foot behind the other's right foot, and getting his oppo- nent off his balance; hard training fordavs and weeks and months, so that when the met it was giant clutening giant, And, my friends, it we do not want ourselves to pe thrown in this wrestle with tho sin and error of the world, we had better get ready by Christian discipline, by holy self de nial, by constant practice, by submitting to divine Prin vi and Jiesetion. Do pot begru the time an mo or tha young Kan who is in ration for the ministry, spending two years in grammar sohool, and four years in college, and threo in theologieal seminary. 1 know that nine years are a big slice to take off of 8 Wah, active lito, pet ¥ you realized the © a archangsls of orf in our time. wii whieh going wrestle, you saink nine years of DATION cated minist glint and tumoied Nim barxwara, orner- wise the big foot of Goliath would almost have covered up the erushed form of the son of Jesse, Notice also that the success of a wrestler depended on his having his fest well planted before he grappled his opponent, Much depends upon the way the wrestler stands, Standing on an uncertain piece of ground, or bearing all his weight on right foot or all his weight on left foot, he is not ready, A slight cuff of his antagonist will capsize him. A stroke of the heel of the other wrestler will trip him. And in this struggle for God and righteousness, | as well as for our own souls, we want our | fest firmly Flusted in the Gospel-both teet on the Rock of Ages. It will not do to belleve the Bible in spots, or think some of it true and some of it untrue. Yon fan make up your mind that the story of the Garden of Eden is an allegory, | and the Epistle of James an interpolation, | and that the miracles of Christ can be | accounted for on natural grounds, without | any belief in the supernatural, and the first time you are interlocked in a wrestle with sin and Satan you will go under and | your feet will be higher than your head, It will not do to have one foot on a rock and the other on the sand. The old Book would long ago have gone to pleces if it had | been vulnerable, But of the millions of { Bibles that have been printed within the last twenty-five vears, not one chapter has | been omitted, and the omission of one chapter would have been the cause of the | rejection of the whole edition. Alas! for those who while teyjng to prove that Jonah was never swallowed of a whale, themselves get swallowed of the whale of unbelief, which digests but never ejects its victims. | The inspiration of the Bible is not more | certain than the preservation of the Bible | in its present condition. After so many cen- | turles of assault on the Book, would it not | be a matter of coonomy, tosay the least economy of brain and economy of station- ery, and economy of printers’ ink—if the batteries now assailing the Book would change their alm and be trained against some other books, and the world shown that Walter Scott did not write “The Lady of the Lake.” nor Homer *The Iliad,” nor | Virgil “The Georgiles,” nor Thomas Moore ‘Lalla Rookh,” or that Washing- ton's “Farewell Address” was written by Thomas Paine, and that the War of the American Revolution never occurred. That attempt would be quite as successful as | this long-timed attack anti-Bibllesl, and | then it would be new. Oh, keep out of this wrestling bout with the ignorance and the wretchedness of the world unless you feel that both feet are planted in the eternal veracities of the Book of Almighty God! Notice also that in this sclencs of wrest. ling, to which Paul refers {n my text, it was the third throw which decided the | contest. A wrestler might be thrown once and thrown twice, but the third time he might recover himself, and, by &n unex- pected twist of arm or curve of foot, gain the day. Weil, that is broad, smiling, une mistakable Gospel. page, have been thrown in their wrestle with evil habit. Aye! you have been thrown twice; but that does not mean, oh! worsted soul, that vou are thrown forever, I have no author sin and be forgiven, or may fall and yet rise again; but I have authority for saying that dred and ninety times get; up. declar-s that God will forgive seventy times seven, and if you will Smpiay the rule of multiplication you will find seventy times seven is four hundred and ninety. of high hope and thrilling encouragement and magnificent rescue! A Gospel of lost sheep brought home on Shepherd's shoul. der, and the prodigals who got into the low work of putting husks into swines' troughs brought home to jewelry and banqueting and hilarity that made the rafters ring! But notice that my text suggests that the wrestlers on the other side in the great all the forces of demonology to help them: “We wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this places.” ness will accept the challenge, and the two mighty wrestiers will grappie, while all | the galleries’ of earth and heaven look down from one side, and all the flery chasms of perdition look up from the other side, The prize Is worth a strug- gle, for it Is not a chaplet of laurel or palm, but the rescue of a world, and a wreath put on the brow by Him who prom. jsed. “He thou faithful unto death and I will give thee a crown.” Three worlds earth, heaven and hell—hold their breath while waiting for the result of this strug- gle, when, with one mighty swing of an | arm muscled with Omnipotence, rightecus- ness hurls the last ovil, first on its Knees and then on its face, and then rolling off and down, with a crash wilder than that | Dagon when he got hold of its two chisel i piliars, Aye! That suggests a chearing thought, that if all the realms of Demonology are | on the other side, all the realms of angels | ology are on our side, among them the Angel of the New Covenant, and they are now tasking over the present awful struggle and final glorious triumph; talking amid the alabaster piliars and in the Ivory pals | aces, and along the broadways and grand | avenues of the great Capital of the Uni. varse, and amid the spray of fountains with rainbows like the “rainbow round the throne.” Yes, all heaven is on our side, | and the *‘high places of wickedness’ spoken of in my text are not so high as the high places of heaven, where there are enough reserve forces, if our earthly forces should be overpowered, or In cow. ardies fall back, to sweep down some morn- ing at daybreak and take all this earth for God before the oity clocks strike “twelve” for noon. And the Cabinet of Heaven, the most august Cabinet in the universe, made up of three—God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Ghost—are now In ses. sion in the King's Palace, and they ara with us, and they are going to see us through, and they invite us, as soon as we have done our share of the work, to go up soa them, and celebrate the final victory, that is more sure to come than to-mOrrow's sun. } rise, preaching the Qespal, quote for thelr owa encouragement the seriptural passage, “Open thy mouth wide and I will ill ft.” Yos! He will fill it with wind. Preparation for this wrestling Is absolutely necessary. Many years ago Doctor Newman and Doctor Sunderland, on the platform of Young's tabernasie at Salt Lake City, Utab, gained the victory because they #80 long been skilful wrestlers lor God. Otherwise Brigham Young, who was himself a giant in some things, would have thrown them out of the window, Get ready in Bible classes, Ciet ready in Christian Endeavor meetings. Oet ready by giving testimony in obscure places, before giving testimony in conspicuous places, Your going around with a Bagster's Bible with flaps at the edges, under your arm, does not qualify you for the work of an evangelist. Ln this duy of profuse gab, remember that Jt 1s hot mersly capacity but the fact that you have somé- o say, that is going to fit yon for the struggle into which you are to go with a smile on your face and fl your brow, but out of whish you will not come until sll yous Lysioal and mental and moral and religions have taxed to the utmost @ not a nerve left, or a thought unex or a prayer unsaid, or a sym wept. In this between i by un. and CE THE KEYSTONE STATE, SE —. Latest News Gleared from Various Parts. — BOY'S AWFUL TRAGEDY. Shot His Father While He Slept in His Shop at Heading, Then Slashed His Own Throst—The Son is Dead and the Father Perhaps Mortally Wounded Awakened With a Plstol Shop--Other Late News. A tragedy of the moss ferocious oharacter startled Reuding. Harry Luts, a youth of 18 years, fired two bullets into the head of his father, Morris J. J. Lute and then cut his own throat with a shoemaker's knife. The father is lying perbaps mortally wounded in a hospital and the son Is a corpse, He expired soon alter the lusane crime was committed, The attempted murder and the sulcide oc- curred in the little shosmaker shop of Mor- ris J. Lutz, No. 842 Elm street, shortly after 8 o'clock Sunday morning. There seems to man fired the first deadly shot at his father while the latter slept, { The father and son made thelr home In the shop, it being a email room, divided in two by a petition, The son came home about 10 o'clock in an Intoxicated condition, it is alleged, for which the father took him to task. The father then iay down on & lounge, which served as his bed, and the son threw himself on his cot, not more than three feet from his father, About ten minutes after three o'clock the son got up, and, procuriog a “bulidog" pistol, which he hed hid away, be stood over bis father and sent a bullet through bis bead, the bail entering from the right side pear the temple and buried itsel! lato the jounge. When the father attempted to rise and, coming out near the leit ear, also lodged fn the old man's bed, With the blood streaming from his wounds the father ran to the office of Dr. E. H, Frantz. near the corner of Ninth and Elm where he was found by the police, who were attracted by his cries for the doctor. When the father was piaced in the ambu- | Innes aud the polices went to get the son, he was found in a pool of blood on the floor with the knife by his side, The revolver | was found on the father's work besch, The father has a wife and two small chil dren living in Lebanon, Marvelous Escape. Mrs, Mary Abbott, of Hosevilie, aged 60, went through the thrillisg experience of riding on the pilot of the locomotive of an | express train, The ride was not a volunteer one, as the woman had been struck by { train, | a bruised body are the results of ber ride, She Is resting as comfortabiy as could be | expected at Ger home, No. 460 Myriie Ave, The accident occurred at the station of the | Delaware, Lackawanos & Westorn Raliroad. | The station is between ihe tracks of i! Mont Clair branch and those of the Orange | division. toward squarely { Clair tain and started across | other tracks, She had gotien on noticed until the express looomotive Was ai. most upon her, | trom the locomotive whistle, sod the next | momens Mrs, Abbott was hurled isto the | air. When she came down she | the pilot of the locomotive, where she lay | limp and apparently illeloss, until the train | was brought to a stop nearly 100 yards dis | taut, The woman was liftad from the plict | and earried into the station, | amined her and found she had escaped ser- | fous Injury. Sealped by a Thresher A terrible socident bappened at Phosnix- daughter of John Detwiler, had ber sealp entirely torn off, Detwlier farm, just within the borough limits, and he was threshing the season's crop of wheat, bis daughter feeding in the sheaves, when in some manner ber luxuriant balr caught in the shafting, and io an instant was wound around and torn out Ly the roots, Oualy the prompt action of her father saved the glel's lite, for he threw the belt off. Asitis she is in & very serious condition from the shock, Bridal Party In a Wreek. While Ileuben Eddinger and bis newly made wife were driving to the home of the bride from thelr wedding ceremony at the Valley Oatbolle Church, Heading, a oar riage, driven by Jacob Qual gley, drove Into them. Both carriages were upset and the wedding party were thrown into the creek. They were not seriously burt, Lut wers 80 pedraggied and frightenod that they could pot take part in the reception and bad to abandon thelr honeymoon trip. The ear riage driven Ly Quigley contained a sum- ver of wedding guests, —-— Leg Cut Off by a Train, Edward O'Leary tried to hurry across the Pennsylvania Rallroad tracks near the round house st Reading by crawling under a train, and just as he was gotting out the train started and cut off his right leg. An Overdose of Lavdanum, George C. Hughes, of Hughesville, died at Ansonia, Tioga County, from the effects of an overdoses of laudanum., Hughes bad a severe pain and thought to allay It with a doss of Isudanum, He took too much asd died a half hour later, Cnt by n Banging Wire While riding to work on his bleyele, Rob srt Coney, of Williamsport, cams in contact with a dangling telegraph wire which caught bin across the neck, outting a long gash an inch deep in his throat. Several veins wore severed and he bled profusely belore help arrived, His condition Is serious. Btoel Fall Makers, Announcement is made that another mest- ing of stesl rail manufacturers will be held in Pittsburg this woek to carry out the plans fora pool of that interest by means ol » soiling ageney. The information printed some days ago that the fuitial selling will be 830 a ton, or an advanee of i confirmed. The meeting is for the purpose of ratifying that arrsemant. mC If you see a young man out driving with a girl, and but one of his arms i visible, the other is around somewhera ~Chieago Dally Nowa buys this “hair, with COOP COPPOPOIIOe Christmas Gifts, 60c. to $1000.00. gi urkish wre ured - tog this lusu- reuwsly com oriable Cusir, (he Ubsir re tails for $30.00, Our general catalogue is 1uil of suggestions for Christ Ly mas Gifts A V at pleas. - ing prioes PRICE, $14.20. in acdition to Furni- Sewing Machioes, Bil- verware, Clocks, Mirrors, Hetrigerators, Plotures, Bedding, Stoves, Upholstery Goods, Baby Carriages, Tin tare, Law ph, oto. all of which you can buy from the manufacturer at 40 to 60 per cent below retail prices. Our LAthographed Catalogue of Carpets, Rugs, Portieres and Lece Cur tains shows tho actual designs in band- painted colors, We sew Carputs free, fur- nish Carpet lining free and prepay freight on Carpets, Hugs and Curtains. 2.95 bare this Jreaing Tobie, made of rol d Ok Whe Mapis or Suisbed ts Mahkogsny or While Keamsl, It 6s 291% in. long, 52 mw, high, 15 inches wds and has s Fresch beveled mirror 14210 in, The Devssing Table re toils at $10.80, Orders filind promptly. Our goods are known in every corner of the civil- fzod World, and why? Our FREE catalogues will tell you. Address PRICE, $3.90. JULIUS HINES & SON, Dept 314 BALTIMORE, MD, ture, Crockery, Tronieal Ifs. If you want to pick a flaw in human- ity begin at home. If a woman dresses taste she ought to look good enough to eat. If poetry runs in the veins some poets should be run in by the police. If a man makes a fool of himself over a woman she is usually gatisfled. If a woman is fair that doesn’t prevent her from being unfair If a man lacks enthusiasm it takes him twice as long to accom- plish a task. If half the world worked less the other half wouldn't be worked go often. If a man doesn’t use his head in his business he is sure to put his foot in it. If it wasn't for Bh OCCH~ gee the inside of a ct If women were satisfied with nature's handiw toilet prepara- TRBIERUIRHRRRRIS | Beauty Is Rood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin, No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar lean, bs stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im putities from the body. Hegin today to anish pimples, boils, blotches, black head blue mmplexion by taki beau All cents, drug- dn chit pan now makes ita own ry Contain Mereury, 1 surely destroy the sense of Jord completelyderange thewhole arstem tna it through the mucous » use except on ALS Gs Lhe good you I's Catarrh & Co is taken By ~ on shit a pever bo scriptions [ret rep stable physi do is ten foid t Hu Cheney glides sage they will from th by ¥ mercury, and ctiy upon the Binod and is surfaces of the system. in buring Hall's Catarrh Cire be sure to get the genuine internally, snd ix made in Toledo 3.4 heney & Co. Test monials free ra i per botlie Pils are the best tis taken > sold by Dr spice, 1 Hall's Family Bacteria multiply rapidly, and they do § in a curious way. A single one breaks lise) as large as the origiasl. To Cure A Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets All iy Druggists refund money (it fails to cure ec. 0 the 2500 17.000 give their services free. About 4.000 GETTING NEWS FOR Thrift Displayed by Chicagenns Coming to the Uity te Do Business. Two cents does not seem to be a large gum of money to invest in the pur- chase of a supply of the morning news One would scarcely expect a business man who is able to rent a high-priced office to halt at giving a couple of pen- niles for a newspaper. Yet this is Just what any untold number of reputable business men do every morning of their lives. They enter the elevated roads and devote half the trip into the city furtively watching for a dropped paper that they may get the news with- out cost. They know from long ex- perience that hall the men who read on the trains finish the perusal of the morning sheet before they reach the stopping station. This fact presents the opportunity to him whe wants news «and is unwilling to pay for it. Yester- | day the writer entered a south side el- | evated train well down toward the { Jackson park terminus with a Chron- {icle in his hand. He took the smoker {and sat down to read. Being of an ob- { portly, well-dressed man i the car. {until he saw the same man taking i | every other with a paper. | writer took mental notes. sigh and gave the writer more atien- tion. It was a poor morning for { fellow hungering for news but too poor to dig up two cents. Finally the wril- | er carelessly dropped his paper on the | seat beside him. It was in the same seat occupied by the owner, so the portly man was not pervy enough 10 | swoop down upon it. His gyrations for the remainder of the trip were very amusing. He twisted and turned, nev- er permitting that paper to escape hil eye, while keeping watch and ward for any other which might be left without a guardian, Bunt none fell to his lot and he watched hungrily, like a GOZ% shadowing a bone, unti] the statisn al | Madison street and Fifth avenue Was reached. Here the writer began to get ready to leave the train As it slowed down he buttoned his coat, an took one step toward the forwar part of the car. As he did portly man made a dare for that paper. But he got it, for writer turned half around, and, calmly remarked: "No, you bought that paper myseif le 1 have no further use for i, Why “ a rose, a tha Wad #O never the pick - ing 1. up, my boy i and whi { wiil dispose of it to suit myself yOu like “That's none of your the man Y Ow? 3 “You n affairs and 1'U don’t the rest of ut buy busines aid iook after your take care of mine “Just what I'm doing,” was “1 am a newspaper man and have watching you for three miles. If you were too poor to buy a paper fat the retort bean wonid let you have this one, but you are evi- dently as well able to buy as I am You don’t fatten your mental average off of my purse.” iis Morrow. Jon Hello, Robinson, you looking 0 glum? Robinson-—Yo know my rich uncle, the heir 1 am to be? “Yes “Well has been traveling in the Alps, and last week he slipped and fell down a crevasse,” “And was killed, eh? No: he got off all right.” ef why one whi 9 000 presids over educational interest, &o, ‘ i No-To Nae for Fifty Cents. Coarenieed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure Bo, Bl. All druggists flussin’s factories about 200.000 are women, teething, softens the gums, tion, ys pain, cures wind solic. Bc.a bottle. sii to breaklast together before a contest, Don't Tohateo Spit and Kmoke Your Tife Away, To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag: poetic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take NoTo Bae, the wonder worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or #1. Care guaran. Sterling Remedy Co, Chicago or New York thousand, Io 1805 it was 18.7 per thousand, most obstinate coughs Rev. nN Buonst ey. ten. Lexington, Mo., February 2, ng, The sandwich is called for the Earl of Sandwich. To Cure Constipation Yorever, Take Cascarcia Candy Catuartic 100 or Ba. It C C. C. fail to eure, drug, ists refand woney. Muiligatawnry is trom sn East Luddin word meaning pepper walter, iy 4 day's use o ". NOTVe $5 trial bottle and fore Hu Wi Arch St. Waffle ts from wale), a word of Teutonic origi, meaning honeycomb, Educate Your Dowels With Cascarets. a nly cared. No fits or nervons. f Dr. Riine a Steal 100, 285¢. 11C.C.C anhumines, the North corn, Hominy is from American word for parched PENETRATE, LOOK OUT FOR AN ATTACK OF SCIATICA. BUY DEEP AB THE BOIATIO NERVE #8 ST. JACOBS OIL cu pa THE EXCELLENCE OF SYRUP OF FIGS | is due not only to the originality and | simplicity of the combination, but also | to the care and skill with. which it is manufactured by scientific processes | known to the Carirorxia Fie Syrup i Co. only, and we wish to impress upon all the importance of purchasing the remedy. As the genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured | by the Cauivonxia Fie Syaup Co. | only, a knowledge of that faet will | true and original | assist one in avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by other par- ties. The high standing of the Cav | rorsia Fro Syxup Co. with the medi- | cal profession, and the satisfaction | which the genuine Syrup of Figs has given to millions of families, makes the name of the Company a guaranty of the exeellence of its remedy. It is | far in advance of all other laxatives, | as it acts on the kidneys, liver and bowels without irritating or weaken- ing them, and it does not gripe nor nauseate. In order to get its beneficial effects, please remember the name of the Company CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN PRANCISOO, Cul. LOUISVILLE, Ky. NEW YORK. N. WV. Cotton Is Still the Americas King. The annual report of Secretary Hes- ter, of the New Orleans Cotton Ex- change, for the cotton year, 1867-8, recently ended, indicates a greater ad- vance in ail branches of the cotton in- dusty than has hitherto been reported. At 11,109,994 bales, the crop shows an increase of nearly 2,250,000 bales over that of the previous year. The total value, 000, i over $1,300,000 less than that of a year ago, owing tc a reduction of about $8 per bale. : a III N35 55 th 5 The lation of ‘has inereased 0% on the Elisabetban etn. to day. Ja 4 ; os SEC Do net think for a single moment that consumption will ever strike you a sudden blow, It does not come that way. It creeps its way along. First, you think it is a litle cold; nothing but a little hack- ing ceugh; then a little loss in weight; then a harder cough; then the fever and the night sweats. : The suddenness comes when you have a hemorrhage. Better stop the disease while it is yet creeping. You can do it with Ager’s Cherry pecloral You first notice that you cough less. The pressure on the chestis lifted. That feelin of suffocation is removed. cure is hastened by placing one of Dr. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral Plaster over the Chest. A Book Froo. It is on the Diseases of the Throat and Lungs. Wrlio us Freoly. 3M you have any compinint whatever snd desire the best medics advices you can poseibly recsive, write Lhe doctor freely. You will receive a profopl repiy, without cost Af Aress DK. J it, Lowell, Mass pre mencine clipe piensan’ Finoe takin CANDY CATHARTIC TRADE MARK REGISTERED Palstable. Potent, Teste Good Never CURE CONSTIPATION. KE gists 10 OHO & o fos, + SOOEELSLIDBSDUHOBDODOS sw oh SONHHORO Established 1780. Baker’s Chocolate, celebrated for more than a century as 2 delicious, nutritious, hand flesh forming beverage, has well-known Yellow Label on the front of every package, and our rade-mark,“La Belle Chocolatiere,” on the back. our NONE OTHER GENUINE. WADE ONLY BY WALTER BAKER & CO. Lu, Dorchester, Mass, A ——— SRIF IIGLIILIVILIPINOAUILILIUD & g Wo
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