-a all through the community “REV. DR. TALVAGE. BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN. DAY SERMON, “Drunkenness the Nation's (Preached at Helena, Montana.) Subject: Curse.” Text: “Who slew all these —11 Kings, x., 10. I see a long row of baskets coming up to- ward the palace of King Jehu, I am some- what inquisitive to find out what is in the baskets. I look in and I find the gory heads of seventy slain Princes. As the kets arrive at the gate of the palace, the heads are thrown into two heaps, one on either side the gate. In the morning the King comes out, and he looks upon the bleeding, ghastly heads of the massacred Princes, Toobin on either side the gate, he cries out with a ring- ing emphasis: ‘Who slew all these?’ We have, my friends, lived to see a more fearful massacre. There is no use of my taking your time in trying to give you sta- tistics about the devastation and ruin and death which strong drink bas wrought in this country. Statistics do not seem to mean anything. We are so hardened under these statistics that the fact that fifty thousand more men are slain or fifty thousand less men are slain, seems to make no positive im- pression on the public mind. Suffice it to say, that intemperance has slain an in- numerable company of Princes—the children of God's royal family; and at the gate of every neighborhood their are two heaps of the slam; and at the door of the household there are two heaps of the slain: and at the door of the legislative hall there are two heaps of the slain; and at the door of the university there are two heaps of the slain; and at the gate of this nation there ars two heaps of the slain When 1 look upon the desolation I am almost fran tic with the scene, while I ery out: “Who slew all thesa? I can answer that question in half a minute. The minis ters of Christ who have given no warning, the courts of law that have offered the licen sure, the women who give strong drink on New Year's day, the fathers and mothers who have rum on the sideboard, the hundreds of thousands of Christian men and women in the land who are stolid in thelr indifference | on this subject—they slow all these! I propose in this discourse to tell you what I think are the sorrows and the doom of the drunkard, so that you to whom I speak may uot come to torment ’ Some one says: “You had better let thos subjects alone.” Why, my brethren, we would be glad to let them alone if let us alone; but when I have in my pocket now four requests saying: “Pray for my hus band, pray for my son, pray for my brother, pray for my friend, who is the captive of strong drink,” I reply, we are ready to let that question alone when it is willing to lst us alone; but when it stands blocking up » way to heaven, and keeping multitudes away from Christ and heaven, 1 dare not be silent, lest the Lord require their blood at my hands ; I think the subject has been kes very much by the merriment peopl over those slain by strong drink. be very merry over these keen sense of the ludicrous wt back make things, having a There was some thing very grotesque in the gait of a drunk- | ard. It is not so now; for [ saw inone of the streets of Philadelphia a sight that changed the whole s CTOWAS A § Ig man being led home 18 very much in toxicated —he was with tion Two vw were him along hooted streel, men nughed, women but 1 happened to be very near where he went init was the door of his mother's house. [saw him go up stairs. | " heard him shouting, hooting and blasphem ing. He had lost his hat, and the merri ment increased with the to the door, and as the door was opened hi mother came out. When I heard her ery that took all the comedy out of the ; Since that time when | a man walking through the street, reeling, the comedy is all gone, and it is a tragedy of tears and groans and heartbreaks Never mas any around me about the gr Aesquencss « drunkard. Alas for his bh p! The first suffe i the loss of his ranged it that name except th hatred of men cannot destroy really maintains industrious and aud Christian looks after him. Although hs may be be barded for twenty or thirty years, his inte rity is never lost and his good name is nev sacrificed No foree earth or in hell can capture such a Gibraltar. But when it is said of a man, “He drinks.” and it can be proved, then what employer wants leadix in sneered; the door gene BE . name man his own act and all the assault name IH a man is a mans good nis integrity Fy pure on him for workman® what store wants him | for a clerk? what church wants him for a member? who will trust him? what dying man would appoint him his executor® He may have been forty years in building up his reputation--it down. Letters of recommendati m, the backing up of business firms, a brilliant ancestry cannot save him The world shies off. Why? gOo% Pdrinks.” That blasts him * his reputation for sobriety he might as well be at the bottom the sea hers who have their good name as their only capital. You are now achieving your own livelihood, under God, : arm. Now look out that there is no doubt of your sobriety. Do not create any sus picion by going in and out of immoral places, or by any odor of your breath, or by any glare of your eye. or by any unnatural flush of your chesk You cannot afford to do it. Of for your good name is your only capital, and | | when that is blasted with the reputation of taking strong drink, all is gone Another loss which the inebriste suffers is that of self respect wakes up and find that he is the captive of strong drink he feels demeaned care how reckless he acts don't care.” he does care ire moan in the eye, unless it is with positive ores of resolution. Three-fourths of his nature is destroyed; his self respect gone; he says things be would not otherwise say; he does things he would not otherwise do. When & man is nine-tenths gone with strong drink, the first thing he wants to do is to persuade you that he can stop any time he wantsto. He cannot. The Philistines have boand him band and foot, and shorn his locks, and put out his eyes, and are making him grind in the mill of a great horror. He cannot stop, 1 will prove it. He knows that his course is bringing dis and ruin upon himself, He loves him- self. If he could stop he would, He knows his course is bringing ruin upon his family. He loves them. He wouald it he could. He cannot, Xerhaps he could three months Or 8 year ago; now, Just ask him to stop for a month. He cannot; he knows he He may say, “I : Sonn, down, i $ w Jou would stop” * ys "1 enn any time if ga while he Tad they would | I used to ntoxiona- | : the | mob until he came | i ¢ { could not fun | | A man God | It is whispered | He drinks; he | When s man Joses | There are men | by your own right | Just as soon as a man | I do not | He cannot look a | habit, said: ‘Uncle, 1 can't give it up. If there stood a cannon, and it was oad, and a glass of wine sat ou the mouth of that cannon, and I knew that you would fire it off just as I came up and took the glass, 1 would start, for I must have it." Oh, it is a sad thing for a man to wake up in this life and feel that he is a captive. He says: “I could have got rid of this once, but I can't now, I might have lived an honorable life and died a Christian death; but there is no hope for me now; there is no escape for me, b but not buried. Iam a walking corpse. Iam an apparation of what I once was, I am a caged immortal, beating against the wires of my cage in this direction and in that direc- tion; beating against the cage until there is blood on the wires and blood upon my soul, yet not able to get out, Destroyed, without remedy I" I go further and say that the inebriate suffers from the loss of his usefulness. Do you not recognize the fact that many of those who are now captives of strong drink only a little while ago were foremost in the churches and in reformatory institutions? Do you not know that sometimes they kuelt in the family circle?’ Do you not know that they prayed in public, and some of them carried around the holy wine on sacramental days? Oh, yes, they stood in the very front rank, but they gradually fell away And now what do yon sappose is the feeling of such a man as that when he thinks of his dishonored vows and the dishonored sacrament--when he thinks of what he might have bean and of what he is now? Do such men laugh and seem very merry? Ah, there is, down in the depths of their soul, a very heavy weight. Do not wonder that they sometimes see strange things, and set very roughly in the house. { bold. You would not blame them at all if | you knew what they suffer. Do not tell such | as that there is no future punishment. Do i not tell him there is no such place as hell He knows there is. He is there now! | Igo on, and say that the inebriate suffers | from the loss of physical health. The older | men in the congregation may remember that some years ago Dr. Sewell went through this | country and electrified the people by his lec. { tures, in which he showed the effects of alco { hol on the human stomach. He had seven | or eight diagrams by which he showed the | devastation of strong drink upon the physi cal system | that turned back from that uleerous sketch swearing eternal abstinence from everything { that could intoxicate God only knows what the drunkard suf | fers. Pain files on every nerve, and travels every muscle, and gnaws every bone, and burns with every flame, and stings with every poison, and pulls at him with every | What reptiles crawl over his creep mbs! What fiends stand by his mid pillow! What groans tear his oar What horrors shiver through his soul! Talk of the rack, talx of the Inquisition, | the funeral pyre, talk of the crushing Jug | gernaat—he feels them all at once you ever been in the ward of the hb pital where these inebriates are the stetich of their wounds | back the attendants their v through the night The keeps and says: “Hush, now, be still ing all this noise” nent, for as soon as the keeper is rnagain: “Oh, God! oh, God! | help! Rum! Give rum! Help! them off me! Take them off me! Take them off nu Oh and then they shriek, and | they rave, and they pluck out their hair by handsful, and bite their nails into the quick, and then they groan, and they shriek, an to kill them “Ntab me Smother me Strangle me. Takes the devils off me™ Oh it is no fancy sketch. That thing is going on wpitals, aye, it is going on in some of the finest residences of every peighborhood on | this continent. It went on last night while you sept, and [ tell you further that this | to be the death that some of § know it I see it coming Again: the inebriate suffers through the | losx of his home, | do not care how much be loves his wife and children, if wr strong drink has mastered him, do the most outrageous things, t get drink in any other would sell Bis family into eternal bondage How many home that way but God knows Oh, is there anything t will so destroy for this life and damn him for the life that is to come? 1 hate that drink iW th al i Of 4 f my 1 1 hat M i. tell » | might driving sounding comes Stop mak oleon me God ! find is going ou will die, | no Ope trong rong ur Lae 1 worbised un bared Huns want on ev ery patch their faded dress and on every wrinkle of their prematurely old would have been in churches to well clad as you are, but for { rum destroyed their parents and drove them into the grave, Oh, rum! thou foe of God thon of homes, thou officer of the pit, | abhor thee! But my subject takes a and that is, that the inebriate fromm the loss of the soul The intimates that the future world today little children, combed and not of destrover deeper tone, suffers Bible in us and make our torment there that 1 suppose when an inebriate wakes up in this lost world he will fool an in finite thirst clawing on him. Now, down in the world, although be may have been very he could beg or he could steal five comnts with which to | with Poor, in eternity, where is the rum to come from? Dives could not get one drop of water. From | what chalice of eternal fires will the hot lips No one | No one to mix it. No one to pour | of the drunkard drain his draught? | to brew it No one to fetch for now of it. Millions of worlds the dregs which the young man slung on the saw-dusted the restaurant worlds now for the thrown out from the punch bowl of an earthly banquet, Dives eried for water The inebriate cries for rum. Oh, the deep, exhausting, exasperating, everlasting thirst { of the drunkard in hell! Why, if a fiend came up to earth for some infernal work in a | grog shop, and should go back taking on its wing just one drop of that for which the | inebriate in the lost world longs, what ex- | cltement it would wales there. Put that one | drop from off the fisnd’s wing on the tip of | the tongue of the destroyed inebriate, let {the liquid brightness just touch it flet the dre be w small if | it only have in It the smack of alcoholic | drink, let that drop just tomch the lost ine | briata in the lost world, and he would spring | 10 his feet and cry: “That is rum! aba! that Is rum and it would wake up the echoes of the damned: “Give me rum! Give me rum! Give me rum that will make the drunkards sorrow; 1 do 5 33 or — | until at the call of the south wind the There were thousands of people | Have | dying, : up | But it is effectual only for | fone, i of ielp! l' material on | Take i runs I they blaspheroe, and they ask the keepers | this passion | Ee will | and if be | Way, he | have been broken up in | : workman { has countenances, who | day, and as | the fact that | recruiting | if we are unforgiven here, our bad passions | and appetites, unrestrained, will go slong Ho | . lof a fifteen Millions | rind | roots of your tongues an almost omnipotent thirst, if you will this moment give your heart to God He will help you, by His grace, to conquer. Try it. It is your last chance, I have looked off upon the desolation. Bit. | ting under my ministry there are people in awful peril from strong drink, and, judging from ordinary circumstances, thers is not one chance in five thousand that they will get clear of it. 1 see wen in this congre- gation of whom [ must make the remark, | that if they do not change their course, | within ten years they will, as to their bodies, lie down in drunkards’ graves: and as to their souls, lle down in a drunkard’s perdition. 1 know that it is an awful thing to say, but I can't help saying it. Oh, beware! You have | not yet been captured, Beware! As ye open the door of your wine closet to-day, may that decanter flash out upon you Beware! and when you pour the beverage into the glass, in the foam at the top, in white lotters, lot them be spelled out to your soul: “Beware!” When the books of judg- ment are open, and ten million drunkards come up to get their doom, I want you to | bear witness that I today, in the fear of | God, and in the love for your soul, told you with all affection, and with all kindness, to beware of that which has already sxarted its influence upon your family, blowing out some of its lights—a premonition of the blackness of darkness forever Oh, if you could only hear this | moment, Intemperance, with drunk- | ard’'s bones, drumming on the head of ths | wine cask the Dead March of immortal souls, | methinks the very glance of a wine cup would make you shudder, and the color of the liquor would make you think of the blood of the soul, and the foam on the top of the cup would remind you of the froth on the maninc’s lp, and you would go bome from this service and kneel down and pray God that, rather than your children should become captives of this evil habit, you would like to carry them out some bright spring day to the ceme tery and put them away to the last sleep wers would come up all over the CW ert wrophecies of the resurrection Fh for such a wound but what flower of comfort ever grew on the blasted heath of ¢ drunkard’s sepulcher ag SL God Tanned Walrus Hide, A busy shop of the lower town displays hanging from i or p a full hide It is tanned t color of a light dirt brown and in the furr resembles part walrus OK equalities and ws of somew hat allics an ing pH nd talk of | Wait fn emery whe i 4 BITE Are cut of people the from inch, The That piece han the price . on Omes in ther ng, however the x pe nes which will the But quicker time thing i +} An Arkansas Hermit, wilderness { Ark., a lives in a Thee Columbia ( hermit Knife a tragedies wielded volver in half 8 score of is constantly on the alert, This forfeited the companionship of mankind guarded by animals that ar trained watchmen. He has a magic con trol of the brute creation large tiie an equal dogs His lonely cabin stands in the middle y acre field. When he goes plowing three of the dogs are placed at each side of the field his row's end These dogs are trained tn patrol the expecting who has t} assassinated man, is and owns goats number $ at ad - et that which | jacent forest, and no human being can would slake his thirst for a little while: but approach without being exposed by these | vigilant sentries At night the dogs and goats lie about the cabin--the goats without the yard enclosure and the dogs within. When any human being ap i proaches these gosts set up an unearthly series of bleating. The dogs within understand the signal and rush furiously at the intruder | Armed to the teeth the proprietor hails | the visitor. | word from the hermit silences both goats If found to be a friend one and dogs and the guest is invited in. Thus guarded this desperate men says he sleeps more securely than the Czar, be cause unlike the imperial cohorts of the latter, his faithful sentinels cannot be bribed or otherwise rendered unsale by collusion with their owner's enemies, Atlanta Constitution. Finding Pearls in Wisconsin. Groat ggeitement prevails in Albany, | Wis., on Sugar River, over the find. | ing of s. They are found in clam | shells, between the membrane and shell, | and are of all sizes, from a pin's head to a large-sized pea, and are of all hues. Some have been sold for as high as #75, and $100 has been refused for oth- ers. A shipment estimated to be worth $1500 was made to Chicago. The ex. citement was so great that men, women and children were mking and dragging the river in search of Huan wm ! lished over lity years, offers superior advan. | tages in its Literary, Music | ments, Excellent home. | catalogus, i Principal, { fly soap made; but if you will try it once it will | tell » still | when our country was enjoying greater Save That Sweet Girl! Don't let that beautiful girl fade and droop into invalidism or sink into an early grave for want of timely care at the most critical stage of her life, Dr, Pleroe's Favorite Presorip fon will ald In regulating her health and estab. Hashing fton a firm basis snd may save her oars of chronic suffering and consequent un. fappiness. A more pleasant physic You never will find Than Pierce's smal “Pellets,” The Purgative kind. Rogen Evaxs, of Washington, has blacked the boots of every President, from Jackson down, A A School of the Highest Order for Young Ladies, Ingham University, Le Hoy, N.Y. estab. and Art Depart. Attention given to Rates moderate. Bend for M. Webster, culture, Address Mss HR. social Guranre, Oklahoma, has already floated a $20.00 municipal loan, All who use Dobbins's Electric Soap praise it | as the best cheapest and mnt economical fam- stronger tale of its merits tees Please try It. Your grocer will supply you. Tax English sparrows have almost extermi- ERS Aare . ONERES Chan " nated the wrens orioles and meadow Iarks. SHE TELLS HIM THE SECRET. Taking it altogether there never was a time ros. perity than at the present moment, and yet there are thousands of people in the land who are fussing and fuming about hard times, No ( ; doubt but what many of them are honestin | ‘* Lafer unto Amicola - WGI! s. i tis oiten because they | ' Shel not an a kind of work or the Came a pole face preacher, teaching ight way to do it. Now, if business is not Bas ir . . er Ah alos g with you satisfactorily, take our | cace and progress to advice and write to B. F. Johnson & Co, Wooed and won by Uanita mond, Va. It is wo than likely that ’ ca help you, at y rate, ould oust you | nothing but a post stame to spply tot An Editor's Expericw. Major Biduey Herberd, & well-known journalist is agricultural circles, writes Apri, 18th, 1880: Some five yours 8g0 1 wrole a letter sisting that Swift's me of severe rheumatiom. Since had no return of the rheumatic exposed to the Infle- Specific had cured thst time roubles, saith I have the natives, ag: {reas } ently gh i nl es that Severs! of my ene ormer gtlecks, me friends had a slinilar experience, snd are fires in their Bhe nobler to make his calling, Whispe Helrs Wanted, Told A of the whereabouts of | th So of Mark bweeney, For conviction thet s nght a permanent cur red to him nature's seerel— The sexrehing pow this medicine is shown It 2 EL eon of the herbs so potent fact that it eloped a serofalous taint Chat was i od over LBirly years ago, ar I have also tes a4 8 onic aller evere afitack pict i bins rey 5H Johanna V wife of Tho the healing and the saving.” st trace of it ~EETRACT FRON POEH OF "CaNITA™ fever, w a3 £0 Old smokers prefer “Tansiil's Punch™ Se, Clgar 10 most 10 centers, 1aMioted with sore eyes uss Dr, Isasc Thomo son's Eye water, Druggists sell at Zoc.per betile Trestise on Blood and Skin Diseases malled {roe fi Bwirr's Srporrie Coxrany swer 8, Atlanta Ga OU LATEST IMPROVED HORSE POWER Machines for THRESH ING A CLEANING Giraln, sss Mackines lo SAWING WOOD with Cireelar sad Cross. Cut Drag Saws. DR. ROEHLER'S FAVORITE COLIC MIXTURE nestic animals, will eure 9 out of ry 100 oases of colle, whether fiat - Barely more thas 1 it does Bot oun e088 iaxalive and 2 years of triad CAPE, CUT EUArantoe Colle must be iy. u hand, resdy seeded, ax Fr Aroggist’s, ex ets for ample Dolittle, sont preg aid Address DRI. ROERHLER & C0O.. Koelier's Favorite Colic HW wg with pucoess. Jt bs ine J have over seen DOG, Borer Degles York tad a 2, To | DUTCHER'S 3B A FLY KILLE EASTDRATT, DURABILITY & SUAN TITY OF WORK Fesginim Bree "uate A.W. GRAY'S SONS, : p. Every Bree. Address for all d« nient i » stipate, rat re Bmore (he irented prampt wher ? Sones BOOERERTY piesa. Afte meting AH Bethlehem, Fa. Lew # : D TREATED FREE. Positively Cared with Yegetable Remedios, Hare cured 0 nds of cases, Tare patients pry eet u iil & quart of flies Parexsems a¥p Solr MANUFACTURERS. nounoed hopeless by ot 3 ans. From Grst Goss tops buzzing around ears MIDDLETOWN SPRINGS, YT. ym pions laser ted days at least twothirds < living of ey, Uekiing your all symptoms regaoved, Send for free book testin ORTHERN PACIFIC ’ LOW PRICE RAILROAD LANDS & - cares peace si rind EX Penm free by sosil. If you on 1 and Wiiskey Hab. | v ent LANDS. fiscursd gi bome wily | FREE Co $3 is, Nortd ogi pain, Book of par Daa fon tana 3 i : tieniars eent PREE. . Fa ediont BEWOOLLEY. MIL SE OR best Ag a ¥ 1 A a, oe God Whitehall Bi r Lands ne wn i Nettles Sent free, Ad triad, send ic. In wasup fend 35 conte Tor § sheets © Emre A Rows, Atlanta, Oa oUrT tae : { Ares land Commissioner CHAS. B. LAMBORN, st. Paoli, Mian. Ture Loam and Beasss Rov © $5 YY OMAR RECTORY 41 SCO. i Address Linecrony, § Sate 0 pay poniag Dn i x . V. DUTCHEE, M1. Albans a i a hag iri i PEERLESS BYES Are the BENT, SoumeY DRECeorTL. i ATTORNEY, WASHINGTON, JOSEPH H TER, {wd tne . Sf FENSION witheu: DELAY JONES OF BINGHAMTON. CAUTION == BINGHAMTON, NX. V. om the bottom of & wt W. L. Doi GOLDSILVER his factory nod be deceived thereby ond direct 10 the Fact we Aa send Post Paid, a : He Ore Spec itnetie high price Add reas Grams pci jpretage padd, Dealers make more profit om unknown do pot be indoced to buy sb s that name and prior stem aod of The bots dolinre are saved saanusll this oon ing by mall state whether you want Oongress, Butt 1 be pure to give side a8 width « are made In 8 al varioty of w &, wipes &5 J nosey refunded wWpon retwrs treats PAYS THE FREIGHT. ir La " ro y to 88 a day. Samples worth 82.15 Free, | Lanes not ug borses’ Teel Virite Brewed shor J Sor Bix ster Safety Rela Helder Co, Bolly Mich Brookirn, X.Y ad nile on Wia penta want an hour 5 new articles Cat T'goe snd sample free. CF x Mansnatri, Buffalo, XN. 3 inferior goods _ tyie or kind 3 w Rocky Mountain Spec tio bay or sell ¢ va ool LANDS 7, 228 Broadway, XN 5 Ooloradio R shoes with GLAS name and prios steams {men Co., Denver, Colo. | 4 Bat 3 by By bose that have WW o get Tull value for your yh DOT GLAS momey Ts as of = SHOES, ents, rove INS Ya. made hy our A THE DR. PER C0, Richmond, re pt Be Le DOUGLAS, 1 sad he shoes In gow W.L. DOUGLAS 83 SHOE cuyiienes Dongola t made ia Oo Narr $25 MEDICAL perils woth | Brockton, Mass, 3 ARRIAGE VAVER free. 29 Ladies and Gents | A want corresponden The Globe, Yark., Pa. | f shoe. with They are London Cap Toe, Toe ard Vials French Toe Lasts, In sioos fron 3 poiuding half sioss and tn all widths, If you have boon paying f to 86 for shtes of this quality 46 nod & Ome paler will wear sas tg an two pairs ry shoes sold by Geslers that are not warranted by (he manufacturer Our claims for (his shoe over all other £2 shoes ad vertised are it eomtaine better material It ts more stylish, better fitting and durable It gives hotter general satisfaction It corte mare soaey to make It saves more money for the consumer It ta soid By more dealers throughout the U.S Ita grest s wocoess ia due Lo mers, It cannot be duplicated by any other mang. is a Dow seasnieows Ouk Leather hobo Putt ge and Et w Ong and Lave « NEW TREATMENT ABALTIO, Holland Medical and Cancer Institute, Baffalo, 5. ¥ removes Cancer without pels or nae of knife. Soores of patients speak in unqualified terms of praise of | the suooess of this treatment. Write for sirouliar HOLLAND MEDICINE CO, Bufiale, N. ¥. it i the best In the world, and has a larger demand than any other RE shoe advertised. i $5.060 will be paid 10 any person whe will prove the above statements to be untrue, The Following Lines will be found to be of the same quality of excellence: i 85.00 SHOE GENUINE HANDSEWED, which takes the place of custom-made HAND SEWED WELT shoes that cost from §7 to 8 24 00 SH( 1] 4 i RII LAND JEL. from § to €8 " B3.50 SHOE Ba dines hand-sewn Sho. Xo Tacks or Wax Thread to Mart the fos £2.50 SHOE od UNEXCELLED FOR HEAYY WEAR. Best Calf fihowe fon t price 82.25 SHOE $2.00 SHOE 82.00 SHOE 81 fs SHOE YOUTHS SCHOOL, gives the small boy & chance to wear the bem All made in Congress, Button and Lace, W. L. DOUGLAS $3 AND $2 SHOES FOR LADIES. Both Ladies’ Shoes are made In sizes from | to 1, Incloding half sises, and B, C. ID, Eand BE widiba STYLES OF LADIES SHOES, “Phe Preach Opera,” “The Spanish Arch Opera.” “The American Common Sense,” “The Medium Common Sense.” All made in Button in the Latest Styles, Also French Opera in Front Laces, on 83 Shoe only. Oo % should remember Cas WV, L. DOUGLAS is the and only Shoe Manufacturer in the world supplying shoes direct from factory, thus giving all the middie men’s profits to the wearer, W. le POUGLAS, Brockton, Mass, WORKINGMAN'S, ls the best In the world for rough wear; one pals Oughl 10 Wear A man a year £3 TO $3.50, price, 0 ¥ otter ALL others I. Lob 9 PHILA, PA, vice, destroying both mind and body, Medicine Beak an Special Diseases free, fic for the coriain cure fall, consult 328 N.15th St. Twenty years’ ocontinoous Pog in the treat ment and cure of the awful effects of early and treatment for one month, Five Dollars, sent securely sealed from observation to any sddress 1 prescribe ana fully en dores Big 3 as the only this disease GILINGRANAM MM D,, Amster « Xe IS EQUAL TO SHOES THAT COST FROM Une palr will wear longer thas any shoe ever sold at We have sold Big 6 for FOR BOYS it the best School Shoe ia the world, many year, and it has Yor the best of satis at 0 DYCRE & 00, Chicago, 111, | oe ay. When the wind blows your re.it is useless lo tire yourse ut half of your toil can be “avoided by the vse of Sapolio It doesn’t make us tired to tell about the merits of SAPOLIO. Thousands women in the United States thank us every hour of their lives for having told them of SAPOLIO. Its use saves many weary hours of toil in house-cleaning. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers