n— on ——————" TIN Sr ————————— REV. DR. TALMAGE, BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN- DAY SERMON, THE Subject: “Wonders of Disaster and Blessing.” (Preached at Kan. sas City, Mo.) Texr: “J will show wonders heavens and in the earth.” Joel ii Dr. Cumming-—great and good man would have told us the exact time of the ful- fillment of this prophecy As stepped into his study in London on my arrival from Paris Just after the French had surrendered at Sedan, the good doctor said to me: “It is just as I told you about France; people laughed at me because I talked fw the seven horns and the vials, but I forsaw all this from the Book of Daniel and the Book of Revels. tion." Not taking any such responsibility in the interpretation of the passage, I simply assert that there is in it sugges of many things in our time. Our eyes dilate and our heart quickens its pulsations as we read of events in the Third century, the Sixth century, the Eighth cen. tury, the Fourteenth century, but there are more far reaching events crowded into the Nineteenth century than into any oth A, and the last quarter bids Tair to eclipse the preceding three quarters We read in the daily newsp.pers of events announced in one paragraph and without any special emphasis—of events which a Herodotus, a Josephus, a Xenophon, a Gibbon would have taken whole chapters or whole volumes to elaborate, Looking out upon our time, we must ory out in the words of the text: “Wonders in the heavens and in the earth I propose to show you that the time in which we live is wonderful for disaster and wonderful for blessing, for there must lights and shades in this picture as in all others. Need I argue this day that our time is wonderful for disaster Our world has had a rough time since by the hand of God was bowled out into space. It is an epilepti earth: convulsion after convulsion P minding it with sledge hammer weberg, and fires melting it furnaces seven hundred times heated wonder to me it has lasted so long shooting by on this side and grazir meteors shooting by on the other grazing it. none them safety, Who x and navie and flotilias Our earth like a f of Newfo Germanic w York the in 30, tion wons be with itisa Meteors Lh i Anon thre (31 . tion. But it seems to 1 were especially volcanic, cvelonie, oceanic, « ¢ vol because an earthquake is onl 3 voles hushed up When and Cotopaxi and Vesuvi gt Pp chiara Stromboli breath mg. let the foundation beware, Seven two centu recorded the British Emperor, goes to ancient the splendors earthquake that or's life Lisbon o'clock on th thousand nssocmtion of his re warly « fair a it of Novembs minutes #000 | € writes of th last judgment trumpet” A throb: fully ds Sut the « nad th Caraccas 155 oo) Sire sasters of oerunterpart 3 COUg quake; in 1892 in of land by veleanie wl seven of Be fores font Antioch Salvador in subterranean excitems and of the Medite Italian watering plac rounded by all natural eharm and remin w: yonder, Ca t srt o 18 Naples, the par 1 island suddenly tor the earth, S000 mes some of the of human \ many a one of them as it was “The Lord buried him.” Italy Europe werning Christendom " where there were hearts to Christians to pray were memsuring that messuring € not with with which the ang but with the black rales of od of the Indian archipelago, the island of all the earth, is cangh of the unke and m mountain goes down, aml city until that island, which produces the healt lest beverage of all the world, has produced the ghastliest accident of the country hundred thousand neonle dving, dving dead, ut look at the disasters evcloni At the mouth of the Ganges are three islands the Hattiah, the Sundeep and the Dakin Shabas pore. In the midnight of October, A thon then the IN the ods SYTIX Hat magnitude iden rod Measure while grip after city carth untain wf ter One lonrl 1] 3 ni Islands ory waters rolled the waters™ A the sea over and of a population of were drowned Only those ha! climbed to the top of the Did you ever soo a cyclone? Not Then | pray God you may never see one. | saw one on the ocean, and it swept us eight hundred miles back from our course, and for thirty six hours during the cyclone and after ft we § pected every moment to go to the bottom They told he fore we retired at 9 o'clock barometer had fallen, but at 11 o'clock nt night we wors awakened with the shock of the waves. All the lights oat! Crash! went all the life boats, Waters rushing through the skylights down into the cabin and down lone ar three Moon Lh | those aved wh highest trees us om the furnaces until they hissed and smoked | in the deluge. Seven hundred ing, blaspheming, shrieking poised a moment ou the top an of phosphorescent fire, and then plenged down, down, until it seemed as if she would never again be righted, cyclone at sen, But 1 was In Minnesota, where there was one of those cyclones on lund that swept the ely of Rochester from ite foundations, and took dwelling houses, barns, men, women, children, horses, eat- thr and tossed them into indiscriminate ruin, and lifted a rofl train and dashed it down, a mightier hand than that of the en. gineer on wir brake. Cyclone in Kan. sas, eyclons in Missouri, cyclones in Wiscon- sin, cyclone in [linols, cyclone in Iowa. Natan, prince of the or of the air, never made such eyclonie rhances as he has in our day. And am I not right in saying that one of the charncteristion of the time in propie pray- Our great ship of & mount that the | de ma, | Ah! you never want to we no | them off the const of England, God help the poor fellows at sea, and give high seats in heaven to the Grace Darlings and the Ida Lewises and the lifeboat men hovering around Goodwin's Bands and the SBherries. The sea, owning three-fourths of the earth, propos to capture the other fourth, and is bombard. fug the land all around the earth. The moving of our hotels at Brighton Beach backward one hundred yards from where they once stood, a type of | what is going on all around the world and on | every const, The Dead Bea rolls today { where ancient cities stood. Pillars of tem- | ples that stood on hills geologists now find three-quarters under the water or altogether {| submerged. The sea, having wrecked so | many merchantmen and flotillag, wants to | wreck the continents and hence disasters § OC | | ane look at the disasters epidemic. I speak not of the plague in the Fourth century that ravaged Europe, and in Moscow and the | Neapolitan dominions and Marseilles wrought { such terror in the Eighteenth century, but | | look at the vellow fevers, and the choleras | and the diphtherias and the scarlet fevers and the typhoids of our own time, | wailing of Memphis, and Shreveport, and New Orleans and Jacksonville of the last few de. | Hurdwar, India, where every | . | tha vk irm track, that fron track; twelfth year three million devotees congre | that track, that firm track, ha L | gate, the caravans brought the cholera, and | cades, From that ono disease slew eighteen thousand in | eighteen days in Bossorah, Twelve thousand in one summer slain by it in India and twen- | ty-five thousand in Egypt, demic. Some of the finest monuments in Greenwood and Laurel Hill and Mount Au burn are to doctors who lost their life ba tling with Southern epidemic, But now I turn the leaf in my subject, and I plant the white lilies and | amid the night shade and the myrtle. This age no more characterized by wonders of dis { aster than by wonders of blessing. { of longevity: ly the average of human life rap increasing. Forty years now worth four ed ye 1 ba to firs ones New York in three days and it In times it would have onthe. In other words, thre » nights now are worth throe other days. The average of human ily greater now than when Noah i Methusaleh Hved his intelligence: The aham Lincolns coming time to read by pine on shoemaker's ergusons have rh other biug the oat. alo nhep rancid an rid twice a day Christian ar the dying words of 10 had been Attorney States, and who had United States, no \ ptary than EE Ngee x kneel side, i ring a sublime amd 0 Lord God, frome whom 1 4 in wh And Biack, & ral of the tary LW Ter man wi United Reowr oN ivir by I $4, that ocd my existence n | have always trasted if and Jot Th upon my Mary fay is Kilbsde mstitution = y take mv spirit to Thy ot blessing come eet pw pular the mightiest greatest honored dowry book # baer tha the name smong the han any other nations, and iz the name more of Jesus Ww 1 re told me he of self eacrifice: A clergyman in the Northwest that for six years was a missionary at the extreme North ving 400 miles from a postoffice, and some times he slept out of doors in the winte r. the meter sixty and sixty-five wero, wrapped im rabbit skins woven together 1 said “Is it Posi bie? You do mean sixty and sizty-flve degrees below zero?” He sald I do, and | was happy All for Christ. Where js of any other wing that will rally such enthus nan’ Mothers sewing their fingers off to educate their boys for the Gospel ministry For nine years no luxury on the table until the course through gramunar school and ool and theological seminary be oom pleted. Poor widow putting her mite into the Lord's tressury, the face of Emperor or Frosident impressed upon the coin not so con spicuous ry the blood with which she earned i, Millions of good men and women. but therm below degrees Lj ™ loge more women than men, to whom Christ is | everything, Christ first and Christ last and Christ forever invention and scbmtific exploration | Is by Gospel proclamation ino koa of it unless you courch Dells 1 oe cua sound all the organs in one diapason, and ns it You can get | Cw floria in Exoelsis, meetings, Might Ocean | Groves. Mighty ( Samat. Ighty con. | ventions of Car stinn works, Mighty gon { eral assemblies of the Presbyterian church, | Mighty con ferences of the Methodist church, | Mighty associations of the Baptist church, 3 phe conventions of the n : church, It ink hefore Jong the best investments will not be in rallroad stock or (dom in one | Mighty camp = y's sums or if morrow morning soon cables shou thrill us with the news that Christ the Lord had alighted on Mount Olivet or Mount Cal to proclaim universal dominion, Send hittehan wake § aRiton the a Hear the | Disasters epi- | tho palm tree | Blessing | Now 1 ean travel from | | alwmen can ring all | nul ther all the congregations of Christen | These things [say because I want you to be alert. 1 want you to be watching all these wonders unrolling from the heavens and the earth, God has classified them, whether ealamitous or pleasing. The divine purposes are harnessed in traces that cannot break, and in girths that cannot stip, and in buckles that cannot loosen, and { are driven by reins they must answer, 1 preach no fatalism, A swarthy engineer at one of the depots in Dakota said: HW hen will you get on the locomotive and take a ride with ust “Well” I said, “now, if that suits you? Bo I got om one side the loco motive, and a Methodist minister, who was also invited, got on the other side, and between us were the engineer and the stoker, The train started, The engineer had his hand on the agitated pulse of the great engine. The stoker shoveled in the cosl awl shut the door with a loud clang, A vast plain slipped under us and the hills swept by, and that great monster on which wo rode trembled and bounded and sorted and raged as it hurled 2 on |} sald to the Methodist minister on the other | side the locomotive: “My brother, should Presbyterians and Methodists quarrel about the decrees and free agency? You see that is the decree, ou see this engineers That is free agency. How beautifully | they work together They are go ing to take wus through, We could | not do without the track, and we could not | do without the engineer, So I rejoice day by day. Work for us all todo, and we may turn | the crank of the Christian machinery this way or that, for we are free agents; but there | arm? JOHN BRIGHT. The Great English Leaders Death After a Long Illness. A Bketoh of the Btatesman’s Long and Eventful Career. why | is | the track laid so long ago no one remembers | ets that po terrestrial or satanic pressure can ever affect. And along that track the car of the world's redemption will foll and roll to the Grand Central Depot of have no anxiety about the track rakd that for our indolence God I am only will dis e us and get some other stoker and soe | other enginesr, The train is going through with us or without us. Bo, my brethren, all the events tha? are going i soem to turn En If things out the anch is a hou of Russia noving through orgman s 3! practical Whether or whether we & the race tam # large K before they acne pening in the wall thes out and soem vessede far out at While I was tal him be went up and looked out We are expecting the Arizona to-night I said “Is it possible you know all those vemols' Do know them as you kvow a man's face '™ He said Yeu | never nake » stake: before 1 seo the hulke 1 often know them by the masts: 1 know them all, 1 have watched them so long.” Oh. what A grand thing it is to have ships graphed and heralded tefore they come to port, that TAY OO down to the wharf and me thelr long } t loved So take our and in 7 toy ook off axl through t glass of inspiration or Provideroe we look off and see a whole fleet of ships coming in That is the ship of Peace, flag with one star of Bethlehsm floating above the top gallants That is the ship of the church, merk of salt wave high "3 on the smoke stack, showing she has had rough weather, but the Captain of salvation commands her and all is well with her. The ship of heaven, mightiest craft ever launched, millions of passengers waiting for millions more, prophets and apostles and martyrs in the cabin, cone quevors at the foot of the mast, while and the of ge through that « or fm hat] tele long friends wel lay or and = (es wo tha wa i | from the rigging hands are waving this Why, this age is not so characterized by | way ns they knew us and we wave buck again, for they are ours; they wont out from our own households tolling the funeral bell and ring the wedding anthem, chariot, great headland, Soon she will strike the wharf and we will go aboard ber, Tears for ships goingout. Laughter for ships coming ag ut tones the hart , Throw onthe Kk not up that gangway : embracing long lost friends, for you will have of reunion. Stand and give way until other millions comeon, Fare. well to sin. Farewell to struggle. Farewell to sickness. Farewell to desth. All aboard for heaven! Tur kangaroo is said to have got its name in this way: Captain Cook first discovered the animal in Australia, When he inquired its name of a native the latter replied, “Kan-ga-roo,” which in the Australian langnage is “I don't know.” "Tex years henoe,” said a member of it, nid by the hand of Almighty God in sock- | the Millennium, I | Ours! Hail! Hail! | Put off the black and put on the white, Stop | Shut up the hearse and take the | Now, the ship comes around the | After a long illness, John Bright, the Eng- lish statesman, is dead His end was peace. ful and painless. His four sons and three daughters were all present at his bedside, | Assoon as his death was announced the church bells of London began tolling in the House of Commons the Right Hon, William H. Smith, the Government lender, with much smotion referred to the death of Mr. John Fright. He said that he would postpone his remarks on Mr, Bright until Mr, Gladstone would be present Mr. Bright represented the Central Divis. lon of Birmingham in the House Mr. Bright's Careor. John Bright, the second son of Martha and Jacob Bright, was born at Greenbank, near tochdale, Lancashire, November 16, Far back in his stock there were Jews, but his near ancestors were stanch Quakers His hatred of civil and religious oppression had its birth in the experienoss of | own family As a Quaker, his father persistently refused ir rates sas habitually the distress warrants satis irures of dealt 1811 iB. and the cotlon g The circumstances of his boyl enad Jobin Bright in the sentiments which spired his political s earlier years was Lhe Lhes } ware spent at Rochdale, which ) for Parliamentary ! oratorical tre of a constant agitat CRreer The first exercises of his terary and philosop been organized at Hooch and was especria refor talents was in a eal joty that had fale, He read much 3 of Milton's "Paradise Lost” and the Bible | become a local celebrity, when, at of twenty-six, be formed an ac with Hichard Cobden i . fond He ha the age uaintance muah, BO d« srgies into the oo that di to direct his intellectual en- they took. In 1539 he took part io open air Anti-Corn law moet and against the Cora laws and the b rate be subsequently delivered a = 4 power! il speeches Bn 1545 he was alecied ns as member for | of the following his it the epliusaan abated, Money poured in, and trained speakers visited every the muntry., Finally futy on corn was repealed sition of Bir Holbert Pe Un the asl night Bright eniogised esl for the stand he taken in terms that alected the Premier tears in 1860 Bright was ass in the negotiation of treaty between France and Ei supported the repeal of the paper which made the peany newspaper j England possible D Ame Civil War be was a friend of the North in and out of Partiament., In 1855 prominent part in the agitation in favor of the extension of the elective {ran which ended with the passage of the Reform bill of Aug. 15, 180 He also urged reform in Ireland and the disestablishiment of the Irish Churcl The latter was & uplished a) Mr. Bright bad now reached the senith of his fame. He commanded the confidence of the Liberal party in no less degres than Mr Gladstone himself, and his name had been linked with every great popular movement of bis time. It was therefore natural, when Mr. Gladstone was summoned to form a Ministry in 1968, that Mr. Bright should be invited to occupy a place in IL. It was natural, tao, that public sentiment should require a test of his ability to frame the leg islation that he bad so Jong advocated These considerations influsnoad him to ac capt the proffered post of President of the Board of Trade. He was the first Quaker to hold office in the British Cabinet. In re- pect of achievement his political career end. od with his acosptance of office, He was President of the Board of Trade until 1873, when he was appointed Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster. To this post he was again assigned when Mr. Gladstone was re stored to power after the six yeary' interval of the Beaconsfield Ministry. He resigned in 1552 because be disproved the Govern ment's Egyptian policy, which culminated in the bombardment of Alexandria As an orator John Bright prodaced with the simplest aids the gredlest effects His mind was free from the classical associations that have exercised an influence upon the diction of other great Riigtish speakers, and his speeches are splendid examples of the possibilities of the Anglo-Saxon tongues, He was able to modulate bis voios bo suit the sen timent he expressed, yet his declamation was never merely theatrical. His words seemed to reach the hearts as well as the heads of those who heard bam, wit and humor perform the same service as pathos and tragedy, and was almost as quick as Disraeli in coining apt phrases. During his Inter years be sat in Parlia ment for the most part In silence, appar | ently living much in the a ht abt, a the H of am. The rich de ayed the rusade against the © y law, of his { Wars was not MIMO Comm harvest ¥ Cnr Cg seoms Of tracts were cironiab liage in import # POO ime Minis Mr had to mm 1% the upon % the | the ter lebate waaled with den the ross of an bath ring the he LOOK A hae an early sympathy with the irish, he into the advooscy of cosrcive measures When he took his stand against Home Rule the friendship that axisted between Mr, Gladstone and himself for nearly never repaired, Nearly all his later public utterances contain unkind references to his former associate, His Jnat t was at Birmingham s f E i § i0ate AM i He knaw well how to make | When he did | | speak, constant allusion to his own triumphs | marred the sect of his utterances. From | half a | century suffered a shock whose offects were | Home Rule, and this y | Mr. Gladstone A thorough cleansing this spring. in order to expel the impurities which have scoumulated uring the winter, or which may bs hereditary, snd cause you much suffering. We confidently recom. mend Hood's Barsaparilis as the very best spring medicine, By its use the blood is purified, enriched and vitalized, that Cred feeling is entirely overcome and the wholes body given strengih and vigor, The sppptite is restored and sharpetiad, the digestive organs ere toned, and the Kidneys snd ver invigorated, “1 bad bolls all over my nedk and back, troubling me so much thet I could not turn my bead sround, nor stoop over. Hoeoo's Bariaparilis cured me io two weeks” Dax Bray, Kauses City, Mo, Hood's Sarsaparilla Bold by all drugeists, 81; sixfor $8 Prepared on! by CL HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass 100 Doses One Dollar In 1888 1 contracted Blood Polso of bad type, and was treated wit and sarssparil worse all the tl ea. 8.5 which rely, and no sign of Lhe Cresdful disease has returned. 4d. OC, Nance, Jan. 10,89. F. Bovbyville, Ind, My little niece had white swel {0 such an extent that abe was con Soed 10 the bod for a long time, More iban 20 pieces of bons came out of her jeg, and the doctors said amputation was Lhe only remedy to save her life, | refused the operation and put ber on 8.5.8, and she Is now up and scfive and fo as good health ne ap wild, Miss Axe Gersuine, eb. 31, "80, Columbus, Ga, ® Book on Blood Diseases sent free, Swipe Brace Co, Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga, YOU will SAVEMONEY » Time, Pain, Treuble and will CURE CATARRH BY USING ELY'S CREAM BALM, Apply Balm into each nostril BAA FELY BROS, 6 Warren 50. NX. % R EBST # and early 2000 more [Hus any other American Dictionary. An Invaluable Companion in every Bohool mad al every Fireside Bold by all Booksellers, Illustrated Pamphlet peut free CAC. NMERRIAM CO. Put BOO wore Wosd Ustions than re. Epringfeld Wass, CRATEFUL-COMFORTING EPPS'S COCO BREAKFAST. roggh knowisdge of (he nature which govern the pera stad of Gilgen tion, and by & careful apy ties of we! arincted Cow r breakfast tahies with erage wieh may save § Is by the a um x a constitut hh 10 resist » of subtie maied tack wherever “By 51h every only in? JANE Taylor's Hospital Cure for Catarrh. Warranted wo give satisfaction or money refanded, days’ trial. Price com. plete $2.50. F macy, No. 264 Broad- way, New York. - . a NWS 10 AY AGENTS WANTED! PFT OIROTLARS FREER NH Jreweter's Safety Jiein Holders GIVEN AWAY wo intro Taow ther Every horse owner } from J) 1s fort Rend 2¢ Ade And packing sgrngvie that sells Brewster Mig, Co., Holly, Mich JORNNW MORRIS, Late Principal Exsmimer U. 8. Pension Buarean, Att'y atlaw, Washington. BP, C., sucosalully prosecute: clalme, origins, tncrease, rerating, widows’, obildres’s and depea dent relatives Experience : 8 pre in last war, 18 yrs in Pension Dursat, and 4 Fre practicing sitorney TE cen ta | the Genuine, EEDS VEN AWAY, fed Flower Sends, kinds, Groen, apd Moe Certificate fog Role ehoter, all Toor © etarore 4 cents) ¥ very Bower lover Acliohted Tell 8) your friends. ©. W. PARE FAXKETTERURS, FA, fend mt ence. This notice will not appearsea n ERA PROOF, on Omio Iweaove TER HOSE. SEND PAR DERORIFTION & PR pe L. B milver Us Qievelind 0 TEW Strawberries, Roses and! Tress, Write now for pew Pocket! Catadoger & report of Trial bade, and coder the best by sil ain directions 10 cul fivale Bowes, J. W, ADAMS k OO, Springfieid, Mass, Gisabied : pay, ot; SOLDIERS reiteved Laws free MeOormick k Sons, Weabington, D.C. & Cincinnati, O rs T prescribe and fully en. dome Big 3 ar the only Bc for Lhe coriain cure thin disense GE. INGRAHAM M.D, Amsterdam, N. Y. We have sold Rig Q tor many years, and It has ven Lhe best of satis HW DR DCRR A 00, howe maniha, 1% shely preted on cen Wd paper Your Bloo Sold on tem | wr pam | phiets and terms of sale | address City Hall Phar. | AXLE FRAZER AXLE — A ————— d Needs Hood's iaewaparills is the bent Wood purities before the public, It eradicates scrofuls and ii humors, cures salt rian, bolls, pimples, ote. The reverent chanes of Blood poisoning have yielded to ts wu perio curatyve power, It socomspiisher retnsckabis Cure where other preparations utterly fail Try it this season, ‘ “For years af frreguisr intervals in al) BERSOUN 1 suffered the fntolerasble burning snd ching of blood poisoning by ivy. It would break out on my lege, in my throst and eyes last spring | took Hood's Sarsspuriils, as a Blood purifier, with no thought of it as & special resssdy for tvy p dwoning, but 1% has effectad u permanent and thorough cure * | Carvin T. Buyure Wentworth, XH Hood’s Sarsaparilla #1; six for &s + Apothmorrie de S—— ————————_—, | Bold by all droge sis by C I Hood & Cx Prepared ony , Lowell, Mass _100 Doses One Dollar The most core fain and safe Fain REMEDY in the world that instantly the most frcrucinting pains, It is truly the great CONQUEROR OF PAIN, and has done more good thas any } known remedy. For SPRAINS BRUISES, BACK ACHE, PAIN in the CHEST or SIDES, HEAD ACHE, TOOTHACHE, or any other EX TERNAL PAIN, a few applications net Hike mugic, causing the FAIN to IN. STANTLY sTop. | For CONGESTION INFLAMMATIONS, SONNE THROAT, BRONCHITIS, COLD in the CHEST, RHEUMATISM, NEU- HALGIA, LUMBAGO, SCIATICA, PAINS in the Small of the Back, ete. more ex~ tended, longer continued and repeated applications are necessary to effect a cure. | All ISTERNAL PAINS (in the Bowels | or Stomach), CRAMPS, SPASMS, SOUR STOMACH, NAUSEA, VOMITING, { HEARTBURN, DIARRHEA, COLIC, { FLATULENCY, FAINTING SPELLS, are RADwWaAY's” RCADY RELIEF relieved instantly and QUICKLY CURED by taking internally as directs od. Sold by Druggists. Price, 50c. ADWAY'Q PILLS THE Great Liver & Stomach Remedy For the cure of all disorders of the STOMACH, LIVER, BOWELS, KIibD- SNEYS, HLADDER, NERVOUS DISEAS. | ES, LOSS of APPETITE, HEADACHE, CONSTIPATION, COSTIVENESS, INDE GESTION, BILIOUSNXESS, FEVER, INFLAMMATION of the BOWELS FILES and all derangements of the Internal Viscera., Purely Vegetahle, contaiping ne mercury, minerals, or DELETER- IOUS DRUGH, FERFECT DIGESTION will he moe complished by taking RADWAY'S | PILLS, Ey so doing DYSPEPSIA, SICK HEADACHE, FOUL STOMACH, BILIOUSN ESS, will be avoided, and the food that is eaten contribute fits nourishing properties for the support of the natural waste of the body. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. Price 205¢c. per box, or, om receipt of price, will be | semt by mall. 5 boxes for One Dollar. RADWAY & CO, 2% Warren St. N. ¥Y, i if YOU WISH A ! GOOD | REVOLVER ape ome of fhe SMITH & WESSON LR rim Trated Titres 9 Safety nelrocts and v-1 Rin- Hammeriess und reels n entirely of best gunle wroag ht steel, carefslly Invpacted for works manshiv and sock, they sie u 4 for fimish, durabliiy and accuracy. dow ved ' cheap ma feabie cast-iren § are often sold for the penis nreliabie, bul dange } WESSON Revolvers are all stasuped . rele with firm's name, address i and are guarastesd perfect every detail gist upon having the genuine article, and ier cannot suply will retwive prompt Vescrptivecatalogae and pri plhcaton SMITH SF Mention this pager Springfield, Mass, b positive remedy ES Ly Me une I haves y for the shove Tiaras thousands of omer of the worst Kind and of peng have boon cured, Bo strong ie muy faith in te om I wil wend two hotles Tres, tegether with « valuatle de ie {Is i hy oni he J wn fFeres treatin nn this Glaeser 10 an i. ve Expres . XK « P.O. sddirems, T. A a HE Peart SE Pisces Remedy for Catarth is the Best, Easiest 10 Use, and Cheapest, CATARRH Sold Wy @ or sent by mail Bac. ET. Haseltine, Warren, a. LL GET PENSIONSIr | or PICRY "wt Spoetior? j - FLORIDA! Free Information, | For map. State bulletin, pamphlet snd Semple ky mth florida Siri ST - vida Facts,” + . | valuable. OM ais B Frankiin X.Y Great English Gout and s Rheumatic Remedy, PLrewsd 14 Pile. Wee ho $3 y ad] Pahion wows, wre, AT epiien sum be seemed i" ADIES. L est ‘Fitting, ICN TWO ee Th a w EEE NRE 3 Mer the anwn w ervioe ie & pr 5 eT i 3 LL" 8 i " 10 ® " 4 A | » . Efe aR . "
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