AF — At A A SR NEN SA REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN: DAY SEILMON. Subject: “The March Homeward. TEXT: “Pursue; overtake them, anc or thou shalt surely without fail recover 1 Bamuel, xxx., & There 1s intense excitement in the village of Ziklag. David and his men are bidding «bye to their families, and are off for wars, In that little village of Ziklag the defenseless ones will be safe until the war riors, flushed with victory, come home. But will the defenseless ones safe! The soft arms of children are around the necks of the bronzed warriors until they shake them- solves free and start, and handkerchiefs and are waved and kisses thrown until the armed men vanish beyond the hills, David and his men soon get through with their Ssmpuign and start home- ward, Every night on their wa hgme, go sooner does the soldier put his head on the knapsack than in bis dream he hears the welcome of the wife and the shout of the child. Oh, what long stories they will have to tell their families, of how they dodged the battle-ax! and then will roll up their sleeve and show the half-healed ay With glad, quick step they march on, David and his men, for they are marching home. Now come up to the last hill which overlooks Ziklag, and they expect in a moment to see the dwelling places of their loved ones. They look, and as they look their cheeks turn pale, and their lip uivers, and their hand involuntarily comes down on the hilt of the sword, the tragedy, down and consumed the village, and carried the mothers and the wives and the children of David and his men into captivity. transfixed with horror, Then their eyes glance at each other, and they burst into uncon- trolable weeping: for when a strong war rior weeps, the grief is appalling. It seems as if the emotion might tear him to pieces. They ‘wept until they had no more power to weap.” But soon their sorrow turns into rage, and David, swinging his sword high in the air, cries: take them, all.” Now ** double-quick.” Two hundred Davids men stop by the 1 jesor, faint with fatigue and grief. cannot go a step farther, They are left there. But the other four hundred men un. der David, with a sort of panther step, march on in sorrow and in rage. They find by the side of the road a half-dead Egyptian, and they resuscitate him, and compe! him to tell the whole story. He says: “Yonder fail becomes without march and the n in the direction. Forward, ye four hun- dred brave men of fire! Very soon David and his enraged company come upon the Amalekitish host. Yonder they sce their own wives and children and mothers, and under Amalekitish guard. Here | are the officers of the Amalekitish army hold. ing a banquet. The cups are full, the music is roused, the dance begins, The Amalekitish host cheer and cheer and cheer over their victory. But, without note of bugle or warning of trumpet, David and his four hundred men burst upon the scene, suddenly as Hobert Bruce huried his Scotchmen upon the revelers at Bannockburn. David and his men look up. and one glance at their loved ones in captivity and under Amalekitish guard throws them into a very fury of de termination; for you know how men will fight when they fight for their wives and children. Ah, there are lightnings in their eye, and every finger is a spear, and their voice is like the shout of the whirlwind. Amidst the upset tankards and the costly viands crushed underfoot, the wounded Amalekites lie their blood ming ling with their wine: shrieking for mercy No sooner do David and his men win the vie- tory than they throw their swords down into the dust—what do they want with swords now'/—and the broken families come together amidst a great shout of joy that makes the parting scene in Ziklag seem very immipid in the com parison. The rough old warrior bas to use some persuasion before he can get his child to come to him now after so long an absence ; but soon the little finger traces the familiar wrinkle across the scarred face. And then the empty tankards are set up, and they are filled with the best wine from the hills, and David and his men, the husbands, the wives, | the brothers, the sisters, drink to the over. throw of the Amalekites and to the rebuilding of Ziklag. So,0 Lord, let thine enemies perish Now they are coming home, David and his men and their families—a long procession Men, women and children, Joaded with Jewels and robes and with all kinds of trophies that the Amalekites had gathered up in years of conquest—everything now in the hands of David and his ‘men. When they come Ly the brook Besor., the place where staid the men sick and incompetent to travel, the jewels and and all kinds among the sick as well as among the well, Surely, the lame and exhausted ought to have some of the treasures Here is a robe for this pale-faced warrior. Here isa pillow for this dying man. Here is a handful of gold for the wasted trumpeter. 1 really think that theses men who fainted by the brook Besor may have endured as much as those men who went into battle. Some mean fellows objected to the sick ones having any of the Is The objectors said: “The men did not fight.” David, with a magnani- mous heart, replies: “‘As his jot is that th down to the battle, so shall his pevt be that tarrieth by the stuff.” This sub'ect is practically suggestive to | me. Thank God, in these times a man can go oft on a journey, and be gone weeks and mon and come back and see his hous» un- touched of incendiary, and have his family on the step to greet him, if by telegram he has foretold the moment of bis coming. Put there are Amalekitish disasters, and there | are Amalekitish diseases, that sometimes | come down upon one's home, making as de- vasta work as the d ben Ziklag took | pose that one "he y voy yd Akiak tae captivity hurled fire. There are families in my congregation whose homes have veen broken up. No bat Sevigg rain smote in the door, no iconoclast crumbled the statues, no flame lea amidst the curtaine: but so far as all consumptions, came and selznd upon some of that family, and carried them away. Zikiag in ashes | And you go about, sometimes weep. ing and sometimes enraged, wanting to get k your loved ones as much as David of your \ os long as a weok. Oh, when the time came for you to go or rail oar and start for home! 1 gif » do ‘ “Where is | Ziklag! Where are our homes!” they cry, | Alas! the curling smoke above the ruin tells | The Amalekites have come | The | swarthy warriors stand for a few moments | “Fursue, for thou shalt over- | recover | they | went, the captors and the captives,” pointing | the robes | of treasures are divided | pe as it once was;” and there is a story of silent voices, and of still feet, and of loved ones gone, and when you look over the hills, ex- pecting only beauty and loveliness, you find ouly devastation and woe Ziklag 4 ashes! In Ulster County, New York, the village church was decorated nutil the fragrance of the flowers was almost bewildering, The maidens of the village had emptied the pince of flowers upon one marrisge altar. One of their own number was affianced to a minister of Christ, who had come to take her to his home, With hands Joined, amidst a congratulatory audience, the vows were taken, In three days from that time one of those who stood at the altar exchanged earth for heaven. The wedding march ke down into the funeral di ge There were not enough flowers now for the coflin lid, because they had all been taken for the bridal hour. be dead minister of Christ is brought to another vil He had gone out from them less a week before in his strength; now he comes home lifeless, The whole church bewailed him. The solemn poss ion moved around to look vpon thestill face that once had beamed with os of salvation, Little children were lifted up to look at him, And somg of those whom he had comforted n days of sorrow, whén they passed that silent form, made the place dreadful with their weeping. Another viliage emptied of its flowers—some of them put in the shape of a cross to symbolize his hope, others put in | the shape of a crown to symbolize his tri- | A hundred lights blown out in one | ust from the open door of a sepul- | {| heaven 1 umph, strong cher. Ziklag in ashes! 1 preach this sermon to-day, because I 1 . as David rallied his men, | want to rally Ion a [ | Roman dungeon? | erfck Hobertson, of Brighton, is as near dead for the recovery of the loved and the lost. want not only to win heaven, but I want all this congregation to go along with me | feel that somehow I have a responsibility in your arriving at that great city. other Sabbaths used other inducements, | mean, to day, for the sake of vafiety, hoping to reach your heart, to try kind of inducement, join the companionship of your loved ones who have gone! them as David and his men were to join their families! Then | am bere, in the name of God, to say that you may, and'to tell you how. I remark, in the first place, if you want to join your loved ones in glory, you must travel the same way they went. No sooner had the hailf-dead Egyptian been resuscitated than he winted the way the captors and the captives bad gone, and David and his men followed after, Bo our Christian friends have gone mto another country, and if we want to reach their companion ship we must take the same road, MY TO pented: we must repent. They prayed; we must pray. They trusted in Christ; we must trust in Christ hey lived a religious life: we must live a religious life. They were in some things like ourselves, [ know, now that they are gone, there is a halo around their names: but they bad their faults. They said and did things they ought never to have said or done. They were sometimes rebellious, Sometimes cast down, They were far from being perfect, So | suppose that when wa Are gone, some things in us that are now only tolerable may be almost resplendent. But as they were like us in deficiencies, wo ought to be like them in taking a supernal Christ to make up for the deficits. Had it not been for Jesus, they would have all perished; but Christ confronted them, and said: “Iam the way,” and they took it I have also to say to you that the path that these captives trod was a troubled path, and that David and his men had to go over tif same difficult way. While these captives were being taken off, they said: “Oh, we are 80 tired; we are so sick; we are so hungry But the men who had charge of them said “Stop this crying. Goon!" David and his men also found it a bard way. They bad to travel if. Our friends have ; into glory, and it is through much tribulation that we are to enter into the kingdom. How « loved ones used to have to struggle! ho old hearts ached! how sometimes tussle for bread! In childbood wondered why thers were so many wrinkles on their faces. Woe did not know that what wire called “orgs fort” on their faces were the marks of the black raven of troabie Did you never hear the old people, seated by the evening sand talk over their early trials, their hardships, the accidents, the burials, the disap pointments, the ompty flour barrel when there were so many hungry ons to feed. the sickness almost unto deatn, where the next dose of morphine decided between ghastly bereavement and an unteoken home cir it was trouble that whitened ther was trouble that shook the their hands It was trouble washed the lustre from their eves the rain of tears until they needed spectacle It was trouble made the cane a necessity for their journey Do you never remember seeing your old mother sitting, on some rainy day, looking out of the window, her elbow on the window. sill, her hand to her brow—looking out, not seeing the falling shower at all (vou well knew that she was looking into the distant ti, until the apron came ap to her eyes, sscause the memory was too much for her! “Oft the big, snbidden tear, Stealing down the farrowed cheek, To'd in eloquence sincere, Tales of woe they could not speak. One our “But this scene of weeping o'er Past th 8 scone of toll sand pale, They shal: fee! distress no more, Never, never weep again “Who are these under the altar™ the gues tion was asked; and the response s5ii0 “These are they which cam out of great tribulation, and have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb." Our friends went by a path of tears into glory. Be not surprised if we have to travel the same pathway, I remark, again, if we want to win the so. clety of our friends in heaven, we will not only bave to travel a path of faith and a | path of tribulation, but we will also have to posit vely battle for their companionship, Javid and his men never wanted sharp swords | and invulnerable shields and thick breast plates so much as they wanted them on the day when they came down upon the Amalekites, If they I lost that battle, they would have got their families back. I sup lance at their loved ones in them into the battle with ten-fold courage and energy. They said: “We must win it. Every thing depends upon it. Let each one take a man on point of spear | or sword. Wo must win it” And | have to | tell you that between us and coming into the | | companionship of our loved ones who are | departed there is an Austerlitz, thers is a | Gettysburg, there is a Waterloo, War with | the war with the flesh, war with the | devil. We have either to conquer our troub- | David | | Indian, being detected in the theft of wor les, or our troubles will conguer us, 1 haveon | another | Do you really want to | Are you as anxious to join | that i Guiana Indians so believed, never | urge and, coming in front of tha fos, we a at them, and then look at our families, and the cry would be: “Victory or death!” and when the amunition was one, we would take the cuptors on Joins of tho bayonet or under the breech of m, I you woul make such a struggle for the getting buck of your earthly friends, will you not make as much struggle for the gaining of the eternal proba oe 2 of your heavenly friends! Oh, yes! wo must {gn them, We must sit in their holy society. # must sing with them the song, L] must celebrate with them the trinmph, Let it never be told on earth or in heaven that David and his men pushed out with braver tor the getting back of their earthly friends for a fow years on earth than we to got our departed! You say that all this implies that our de- parted Christian friends are alive. Why, had Yor any idea they were dead! They have only moved. If you should go on the 2d of May to ouss where one of your friends lived, a ound him gone, you would not think that he was dead, " Y&i would inquire next door where he had moved to, Our departed Christian friends have only taken another house, The secret is that they re richer now than they once were, and can afford a better residence, They once drank out of earthenware ; the now drink from the King's chalice, “Joseph ix yet alive,” and Jacob will go up and see’ him. Living, ars they 1 Why, if a man can live in this damp, dark dungeon of earthly captivity, can he not live where he breathes the bracing atmosphere of the mountains of Oh, yes, they are living ! Do you think that Paul is s0 near dead now as he was when he was living in the Do you think that Fred now as he was when, year after year, slept seated on the floor, his head on bottom of a chair, because be could ease in no other position Do you that Robert Hall is as near dead when, on his couch, be tossed in physical tor- tures! No. Death gave them tue few black drops that cured them. That is all death does to a Christian ~ cures him. 1 know that what I have said implies that shey are livg ig. There is no question about that. The ouly juestion this morning is whether you will ever join them. But I must not forget those two hundred men who fainted by the brook Besor. They could not take another step farther. Their foot were sore; thelr head ached; their en tire nature was exhausted. Desides that, they were broken besrted because their omes were gone, Zikiag in sashes! And vet David, when he comes up to them, divides the spolis among them. He says they shall have some of the jewels, some of the robes, of the treasures I look over this audience this morning, and 1 find at two hundred who have faloted by th Besor-—the brook of tears You if you could not take another steg as though you could never look up But I am going to imitate David, and div among you some glorious trophies, Here is a robe: “All things work together for good, to those who love God.” Wrap yourself in oh Jiu # Promise Here is for your neck wide out of erystalized ure a night Here is a 0 death, and £ \ O yo faint- 1 Hesor, dip your blis terol foot in the ruoning stream of God's mercy, Bathe your brow at the wells of sa vation. Boothe your wounds with the bal sam that exudes from trees of lite, God will not utlerly cast you off, O broken hearted man, O broken-hearted woman, fainting by the brook Besor, the think y Ome x least » find | he | now as | {| Carolina { into i i | i ture i stuffing cushions, chairs, ete, 3 | man to come down with it A shepherd finds that his musical pipe is | bruised. “He says: “I can't got any more music out of this instrament: so | will just break it, and I will throw this reed away Then I will get another reed, and 1 will play music on that But God says He will not cast you off becan all the musi has gone out of your soul The bruised rei He will not break.’ As far an 1 ean tell the dingnosis of your disease, you want Divine nursing, and itis promised you “As one whom his mother comforteth. so will I comfort you." tol wil vou all the way through, O troubled soul, and when you come down to the Jordan of death will find it to be as thin a brook as Bess for Dr. Holinson sayw that, in April Besor deles up, and there is no brook at all And in your iast moment you will be as placid as the Kentucky minister who went up lo Goud, in the dving hour: “Write to my sister Kate, and tell her not to be wor ried and frightened about the story of the horrors around the death bed Tell her there is not a word of truth in it for 1 am there now, and Jesus is with me, and [ find ita very hoppy way: not because | am a good man, for | am not: | am nothing but a poor, misrable sinner; but 1 have an Al) mighty Saviour, and both of Hs arms are aroand me May God Almighty, through the biood of the everlasting covenant, bring us into the companionship of our loved ones who have already entered the heavenly land, and en- tered the presence of Christ, whom, not hav- ng Seen, We love, and 80 David shall recover all, “and as his part is that goeth down to the battle, so shall his part be that tarrieth by the stuff.” a You saying I SoM savage tribes think books speak to the readers. Caribs and Esquimaux, seeing a priest read from the thought that heard the voice of the book and repeat- ed it to them, Tribes in Africa, South America and Oceanica thought the reader was conversing with the book, Evangelists, and Weddell said a Fuegian put the | | asserts, : and some | he | | duces SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL The natural juices of every loaf of bread contain ten per cent. of alcohol. The Julien electric ear(in New York now runs thirty-six miles making three round trips, without rechalging its bat- teries, A family at Augusta, M A claim to have been made quite ill by ap electric, light which shines directly in their sleeping rooms, 3 Remember, in arranging belts, t the slack side on top; it is the prope, as well as philosophical wa ve a belt run, Where a heater is used, a pump is mo economical as boiler feed than an injec tor; but an injector is always preferab where there js no heater, The number of muscles in an ele- phant's trunk, according to london medical authorities, is 33,122, and he has use for each and every one of them. Medical men in Nebraska are interested ip the case of a girl there who is giadu- ally losing her power of specch without any apparent cause. She can’t now | talk above a whisper, and it is expected | that in a very short time she will be en- tirely speechless, Philadelphia and New York factories formerly supplied Ban Francisco with soup. Now there are twelve soap fac. | tories in San Francisco, 'and besides sup- plying the home market, they send 15,- 000 boxes a year to Asiatic Hussia, Japan and the Hawaiian and Society Islands, There are several factories in North manufacturing pine needles useful material. one factory pro- daily 1,500 pounds of pine-leaf hair and curled pine straw, sold to furni- and carriage manufacturers for The fiber! mat is also converted into carpets and tings, The last five years have scen everything improved but the teiep Induction troubles the taker and listener as much as; and few of the other annoy ances have been lessened. For short distances it is invaluable, but on the hole it is mere thing that is very much wat hone. ever, iy a substitute a good opening for inventive talent, A German paper reports that a novel use of tricity h India for the prevention of the intrusion of into dwellings. Before all the doors and around the house two wires are laid, which are isolated from each other and connected with an induction apparatus, Should a snake att to craw! over the wires he receives a shock of electricity which either kills or frightens him into a hasty retreat, electricity has been made in snakes empt Suppose the earth to be reduced till it should be but eighty feet in diameter and . He would gan inch stand 2, 500ths of 00 men shoulder then be but seven 5 tall, and an army of 26, ing in single rank and shoulder could stand on an inch line, and their General, in reviewing themon a horse suited to his proportions, would upy about an hour in riding slong ne at a brisk galiop. 1 £4) Ians y ical Record warns physic givin pro wiciar fants and inval : u knowing of what they are composed The last report of the Dairy Con of New y nisin valusble it mation on this sub ect, showing while some of them are what they port to be, the greater portion are represented. One article of which men tion is frequently made contains fifteen per cent. of alcohol. An oculist gives warning that it is in jurious to rub the eyes while they are inflamed by the cutting winter winds and the dust raised thereby, and equally #0 to bathe them and go out immediately again in the air, as then there Is danger of catching a cold, Most of the eye troubles at that season, he says, are caused by imprudence in rubbiag or bathing. In rubbing the eyes the tear rs against ds wid foods to 3 : missioner Jersey con for. that pur- mis line from the outside to the nose should | be followed, though the ma ority pass | the fingers from the ins de out, which, he affects the sight and causes “ecrow's feet” A Cost of Growing Wheat As Russia is a close competitor with us in growing wheat it is interesting to learn the actual cost of producing this grain in that country. A Hussian agri- cultural expert gives a somewhat aston. ishing sccount of the cost of wheat growing in the province of Rigs. With | such prices as he gives, the statement of : : book to his ear in order to hear the | sound of the voice that spoke to the | reader. In West Australia books and letters are thought to reveal hidden socrets, and are called “speaking papers.” It was inexplicable to them tht the person receiving wu letter an- nouncing the sending of a number of sheep should be able by it to detect a lost one, Bome Cochin China Baun- ois were likewise astonished at finding that a demand for double fees for car rying a letter was defeated by the let ter itself, the writer having announced the payment of the sum. A California one out of a number of loaves of bread which he was carrying to a missionary, adopted the plan of hiding the note under a stone the next time so that it should not see him eat the bread. Canadian Indians, Brazilians snd Peruvians thought books and letters were spirits of live beings. Tur search for the sunken British frigato Hussar is to be prosecuted anew in the spring by the same parties who failed to the spot last fall. They claim to have received some new | realized $45, leaving a profit o | the three acres, alter the Russiar. Minister of Agriculture, | that wheat growing, as a rule, has not | paid at recent prices, seems almost in- | credible, He states that three acres of wheat costs him less than $20 to grow, | while the proauce, 19 astute per acre, | $15 on paying rent and all other expenses, The grey cost of produc. tion is accounted for by the wages paid | | to laborers, regular hands getting only | 12 cents a day, and extia men, in sum- mer, 20 cents a day for 14 hours’ work, exclusive of mealtimes. As for horses’ | keep, it is put lown at 10 cents a day, grass land belong free, so that horses cost nothing during the summer. The eart ing and spreadiog of fertilizer are put at 18 cents an acre, two plowings at 27 cents each, harvesting at 1% ceats, and thrashing at 43 cents, The heaviest amounts are those charged for rent and taxes, 77 conts an acre, and for seed 1.41, Management, repairs of buildings, re irs and renewal of machinery are all charged in the total, but not interest on | capital, — New York Times, Strange Pets on Shipboard, The story is told ef Captaly Curling, a retired sea captain of Thomaston, that when master of a merchantman sailing between New York and Liver pool, there might have been calm weather or : a sathar, oavort. of his ¥ YOu | 1 Go i Bret \ | Manufactured in call I annh : i dura i] lead i in Rassia, CURES PERMANENTLY BACKACHE, HEADACHE AND TOOTHACHE. CURES PERMANENTLY ALL ACHES AT Drugoisys axp DEALERS, _ THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO.. Baltimore, Nd, = IAMOND VERA-CURA FOR DYSPEPSIA, ATOUBITIVE CURE FOR INDIGENTION AND ALL yw Btemach Troubles Arising There! rom, yo The Cc of the WESSON The ngs ail gris ever marulacturd, snd the choles of all writs, = en 22, Sand ¢-100, Bin. As Lor double action, niet Hammeriews and (0% arget models, Constr ln enfirely of best qual. fty wrong ht steel, cavplully inspected for work. y and stock, 1 hey re upgivaled for finish, nee raay, Do not be deceived by | © cust-iran imitations which 8 ¢ often sold for the genuihe articles and ars not only unreliable, but dangefus. The SMITH & WESSON Revolvers are all sfunpwd upon the bar. | reis with firm's name, address 8 T daten of patents | and are guarantesrd perfect Ih every detall In. | &ist upon having the genuine srifele, pnd if your dealer cannot suprly you sn order sent to address | ful SON, Fass, I've Cot It! will receive prompt snd © Jescriptive catalosue snd prices f= SMITH & W EF Mention this paper, hele i plication Springfiel PILLS. | - - CHEAPEST -:- FAMILY -:- ATLAS KNOWN. ONI.Y 20 CENT S| 191 Pages, 91 Full-Page Maps, {| sent by mail, 3 f € re es i rn " ¢ Ie bs y of seach Forelen Couptr p hon Sarin) To ’ 183 TV Ig wine of sTE0) ber of Horses format EVERY FAMILY SHOULD HAVE ONE. r readers are oomslantly drodineg ar on Of ralirosd and tel 5d o, wliowp, sd 8 vast anous oad wil 5 Yeduabee nis oomeerning all tpaid for 235 conte, HOUSE, 1s Leonard St CRATEFUL-COMFORTING. 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R AD WAYS HAN FLIER GreatLiver4 Stomach Remedy For the cure of nil disorders of the STOMACH, LIVER, BOWELS, KilD- NEYS, BLADDER, NERVOUS DISEAS- ES, LOSS of APPETITE, HEADACHE, CONSTIPATION, COSTIVENESS, INDI GESTION, BILIOUSNESS, FEVER, INFLAMMATION of the BOWELS PILES and all derangements of the Internal Purely Vegetable, containing or DELETER- Viscora., noe mercury, minerals, | IOUS DRUGS. PERFECT DIGESTION will be ao complished by taking RADWAY'S By so doing DYSPEPSIA, SICK HEADACHE, FOUL STOMACH, BILIOUSNESS, will be avoided, and the food that is eaten contribute its nourishing properties for the support of the natural waste of the body. SOLD Price R5c. per box, or, on receipt of price, will be 5 boxes for One Dollar. HADWAY & CO, 3% Warren St. NN. Y, — — NYNU-3 Here It Is! GERMAN DICTIONARY OF 624 PACES “ef | / we A FIRST-CLASS DICTIONARY “Ne A " 11 gives Pungt! ris with the German Fguiva nts and PronuncleUon and German Words with Puglia Definitions. Bent postpaid on receipt of $1 AT VERY SMALL PRICE AW READ WHAT THIS MAN SAYS, Sarew. Mass, May 21, 1808 Fook Pub. Rowse, "MM Leonard Bt The German Dictionary is received and 1 am much id not expect to find sooh clear bead & book. Pease send & copy 0 find 81 for same, EN Hascui. — print in so ad Inciosed Address BOOK PUB. CO., 134 Leonard Street, New York City. Piso's Remedy for Ostarth Is the Best, Easiest 10 Use, and Chenpost, CATARRH fold by drageiets or sent by mall We ET, Haseltine, Warren, Pa. MPHICTYONIC CURRESPOXN DING CLUB » ADIRS AND GENTLEMEN MEMBERS, uel mow fuji W® cents. Three months Liter foes will bh. » 0% oenie Address } A.C. CLE Bt. Erookyn, N ¥ , ENGLISH CHICHE PENNYROYAL Pil reliable pill Tor wale. Newer Fall wk Sor Obichoster's mond Brand, i» el ne Wide bese sreied with bee nib | W. L. DOUCLAS $3 SHOE cenrifuen W. L. DOUCLAS $3 SHOE Best Material, Best ager nars he has the W. Kn a Pw ar oy a CAUTION FOR LADIES. Style, BSA Ting. - Boys Should Learn | All about a Horse. How to pick Out a Good One. See Imper- fections and so Guard against Fraud. Detect Disease and effect a Cure when same is Age by the Teeth, Different Parts of to Shoe Prop rly. hundreds of others ought to be in the man and boy who may have occasion, of all animals, the liable tobe required the lack of them of dollars. All of ible. Tell the
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