"REV. DR. TALMAGE. Wn ———-———— THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN. DAY SERMON, Subject : * Wonders of Babylon” Text: “In that night was Belshazzar, the king of the Chaldeans, slain.” —Daniel v., 30, After the sight of Babylon had been se- lected, two million of men were employed for the construction of the wall and princi. pal works. The walls of the city were sixty miles in circumference. They were sur- rounded by a trench, out of which had been dug the material for the construction of the city. There were twenty-five gates of solid brass on each side of the square city. Be tween every two gates a great tower sprang up into the heavens. From each of the twen- ty-five gates on either side a street ran straight through to the gate on the other side, $0 that there were fifty streets, each fifteen miles long, which gave to the city an ap. pearance of wonderful regularity. The houses did not join each other on the ground, and between them were gardens and shrubbery. From housetop to housetop | bridges swung, over which the inhabitants were accustomed to pass. A branch of the Euphrates went through the city, over which a bridge of marvelous structure wasthrown, and under which a tonnel ran. To keep the river from overflowing the city in time of froshet, a great lake was arranged to catch the surplus, in which the water was kept as in a reservoir until times of drought, when it was sent streaming down over the tharsty land. A palace stood at each end of the Euphrates bridge; one palace a mile and three-quarters in compass, and the other palace seven and a ball miles in circumfer- ence. The wife of Nebuchadnezzar, havin been brought up amoung the nel rl. Media, could not stand it in this flat country of Babylon, and so to please her Nebuchad- nezzar bad a mountain four hundred feet high built in the midst of the city. ! This mountain was surrounded by ter races, for the support of which great arches were lifted, On the top of these arches flat | stones were laid; then a layer of reeds and bitumen; then two rows of bricks, closely cemented; then thick sheets of lead, upon which the soil was placed. The earth here | deposited was so deep that the largest trees | had room to anchor their roots, All the | glory of the flowery tropics was spread out at that tremendous height, until it must hav | seemed to one below as though the clouds | were all in blossom, and the very sky leaned | on the shoulder of the cedar. At the top an engine wa od which drew the water from the Euphrates, far below, and made it | ut up amid this garden of the skies. All this to please his wife! 1 think she must have been pleased. In the midst of this city stood also the temple of Belus. One ol its towers was one eighth of a mile high, and on the top of it an | observatory, which gave the astronomers gram advantage, as, being at so great a eight, one could easily talk with the stars This temple was full of cups and statues and censers, all of gold. One image weighed a thousand Babylonish talents, which would be equal to fifty-two million dollars, Al this by day; but now night was about to come | down on Babylon. The shadows of her two hundred and fifty towers began to lengthen. | The Euphrates rolled on, touched by the fiery splendors of the setting sun, and gates of brass burnished and glittering, opened | and shut like doors of flarae. The hanging | ardens of Babylon, wet with the heavy ew, began to pour from starlit flowers and dripping leaf a fragrance for many miles around. The streets and squares were lighted for dance and frolic and promenade The theatres and galleries of art invited the wealth and porap and grandeur of the city to rare entertainments. Sesnes of riot and wassail were mingled in every street; godless mirth, and outrages excess, and splendid wickedness came to the king's palace to do their mightiest deeds of darkness. A royal feast to-night at the king's palace! lushing up to the gates are chariots, up holstered with precious cloths from Dedan and drawn by fire eyed horses from Togar- hat rear and neigh in the grasp of the : otesrs, while & thousand lords dismount, ! and women dressed in all the splendors of Syrian emerald, and the color blending of gate, and the chasteness of coral, and the omer glory of Syrian purple, and the princely embroideries brought from afar by camels across the desert, and Ly ships from Tarskish across the sea Open wide the gates and let the Yuests come in. The chamberiains and cup bearers are sll ready. Hark to the rustie of the robes and to the carol of the music! See the blaze of the jewels! Lift the banners. Fill the cups. Clap the cymbals. Blow the trumpets Let the night go by with song and dance and gration; and let the Babylonish tongue be palsied that will not say, “Oh, King Bel shazzar, live forever!™ Ah! my friends it was not any common banquet to which these great people came All paris of the earth had sent their richest | viands to that table. Brackets and chande- liers flashed their light upon tankards of burnisbed gold. Fruits, ripe and luscious. in | baskets of silver, entwined with leaves plucked from royal conservatories. Vases inlaid with emerald and ridged with exquis- | ite traceries, filled with nuts that were | thrashed from forests of distant lands, Wine brought from the roval vats, fosmin in the decanters and bubbling in the chal foes, Tufts of cassia and frankincsnse wafting their sweetness from wall and table Gorgeous banners unfolding in the breegs that came through the opened window, be. witched with the perfume of hanging gar. | dens. Fountains rising up from inclosures | of ivory in jetsof crystal, to fall in clatter. ing rain of diamonds and pearls. Statues of | mighty men looking down from niches in the | wall upon crowns and shields bt from subdued empires. Idols of wonderful work, | standing on pedestals of precious stones Embroideries drooping about the windows and wrapping pillars of cedar, and drifting on floor inlaid with ivory and agate. Music, mingling the thrum of rps. and the ciash of cymbals, and the blast of trumpets in one wave of transport that went ing along the wall, and breathing among garlands, down the corridors, and thrill souls of a thousand banquetars, sl I= given, and the lords and Indies, mighty men and women of the land, come around the table, Pour out the Let foam and bubble kiss the rim. : : | beauty gleam to the uplifted chalices, i again and again they are BOO, hiccough, and the slavering lip, snd the gat. fa cf itl naghior” birding. trom ho with it all 1 hear: “1 : : i £ Bf | did he take! | who can destroy both body and = ! fire.” | Toast” | curdles with herror. | kingdems and the banners of all nations, | rested, { have such a prejudice against it A | poison | but the door turns agaiost him, and | jar of that shutting door he hears the words, | { sometimes breaks in upon a banquet did he not go down to | Thore were | have died. | have welcomed Death, fil tankards, and the blood of murdered women, and the kicked and tumbled onrcass of a dead king. For “in that night was Bel shazear, the king of the Chaldeans, slain.’ [ go on to learn that when God writes any - thing on the wall, a man lind bettor read it as it is. Daniel did not misinterpret or modi- fy the handwritiog on the wall. It is all foolishness to expect a minister of the Gos | to preach aiways things that the people ike or the PACPle COORE, Young men, what shall I preach to you to-night? Shall 1 tell you of the dignity of human nature? Shall 1 tell you of the wonders that our race has accomplished? “Oh, no!” you say: ‘tell me the message that came from God.” 1 will, If there is any handwriting on the wall, itis this lesson, “Accept of Christ and be saved?” I might talk of a great many other things, but that is the message, and so 1 declare ft Jesus never flattered those to whom He preached. He said to those who did wrong and who were offensive in His sight, “Ye eneration of vipers! ye whited sepulchers! ow can ye escape the damnation of hell Paul the apostle preached before a man who was not ready to hear him preach, What subject did he take? Did he say, “Oh! you are a good man, a very flue man, a very no ble man? No; he preached of righteous. ness to a man who was unrighleous; of tem- perance to a man who was the victim of bad | appetites; of the judgment to come to a man who was unfit for it. So wo must always { hosts of the Egyptians deciare the message that hapuans to coms to us. Daniel must read it as itis, A minister | preached before James I. of England, who | was James VI of Beotland, What subject | The king was noted all over the world for his being unsettled and wavering in his ideas. What did the minister preach about to this man who was James I. of Eng- land and James VI. of Beotland® He took for his text James i. 6: “He that wavereth is like a wave of the sea, driven with the wind and tossed.” Hugh Latimer offened the king by a ser- mon he preached, and the king said, “Hugh Latimer, come and apologize” "I will” said Hugh Latimer. Bo the day was ap- winted, and the king's chapel was full of a and dukes, and the mighty men and women of the country, for Hugh Latimer was to apoligize. He began his sermon by | saying: “Hugh Latimer, bethink thee! Thou art in the presence of thine earthly | king, who can destroy thy body. But be think thee, Hugh Latimer, that thou art iu | presence of the King of heaven and earth, wl in hell | Then he preached with appalling | directness at the king's crimes Another lesson that comes to us, There is a great difference between the opening of the | | banquet of sin and its close, Young man, if you had looked in upon the banquet in the first few hours, you would have wished you had been invited there, and could sit at the feast. “Oh! the grandeur of Delshazzar's ou would bave sald; but you look in | at the close of the banquet, and your blood | The King of Terrers has there a ghastlier banquet; human bleod is the wine, and dying groans are the musi Sin has made itself a king in the earth. It has crowned iteslf. 1t has spread a banquet t invites all the world to come to it. It bas hung in its banqueting hall the spoils of ai LF has gathered from all music. It has strewn from its wealth, the tables and the floors and arches. And yet how often is that banquet | broken up, and bow horrible js its end! | Ever and anon there is a handwriting on the wall A king falls. A great culprit is ar The knees of wickedness knocked to- other, God's judgment, like an armed host, | a in upon the banquet, and that night is Belshazzar, the king of the Chaldeans, slain. Here is a young mean who says: “] cannot | soo why they make such a fuss about the in- | toxioating cup. Why, it is exhilarating! It | makes me fesl well, 1 can talk better, think better, feel better. I cannot see why peonle few years pass on. and he wakes up and finds himself in the clutches of an evil habit which he tries to break, but cannot; and he cries out: “Oh, Lord God, help me™ It] woms as though God would not bear prayer, and in an agony of body and soul he cries out: “It biteth like a serpent, and it stingeth like an adder.” How bright it was | at the start! How black it was al the last! Here is a man wh? begins to read corrupt | novels. “They are so charming.” says be, “1 will go out and see for myself whether all these things are so.” He opeus the gate of a sinful life, He goes in. A sinful sprite meets him with her wand. She waves hor | wand, and it is all enchantment. Why, it) seams as if the angels of God had poured out phials of perfume in the atmosphere, As he walks on he finds the hills becoming more | radiant with foliage and the ravines more resonant with the falling water, Oh! what a charming landscape he sees! But that sinful sprite with her wand meets him again; but now she reverses the wand, and the enchantment is gone. The cup is fall of | The fruit turns to sashes | All the leaves of the bower are forked | tongues of hissing serpents. The flowing i fountains fall back in a dead pool, stenchial | The luring sougs become | laughter. Lost spirits gather about him and | feel for his heart, and kon him on with | “Hail, brother! Hail, blasted spirit, hail ™ Hs | tries to get out. Hs comes to the front door where he entered, and tries to push it back in the | : : with corruption “This night 1s Belshazzar, the king of Chal deans, slain.” Sin may open bright as th morning. It ends dark as the night! I learn further from this subject that Death Why o prisons in Babylon’ ple thers that would like to supposs there were men and women in torture in that city who would But he comes to the Ince; and just at the time when the mirth s dashing to the tip-top pitch Death breaks in at the banquet. We have often soon the | same thing illustrated. Here is a young man | ust come from college, He Is kind, He is wing. He is enthusiastic. He is slogquent By ome spring he may bound to heights toward which many men have been strug. ling for years. A profession opens befors | fm. He is established in the law. His friends cheer him. Eminent men encourage him i in the United popular assemblage by his eloquence, as troos are moved in a whirlwind, Bome night heretiresearly. A fover ison bun. Delirium, like a reckless charioteer, soles the reins of his intellect. Father and mother stand by and see the tides of his life going out to the great ocean. The banquet vision is gone. Death at the banquet! We saw the same thing on a larger iNustrated at the last war in this country Our whole nation bad been sitting ab a na- tional banquet—north, south, east and west What was we it hat invention f Es HI ¥ rt s3ii fat il | tremble, | that he was coming? | have been living without | { denly your last chance be gone | The time will { own, { ner?™ wanting, Darkness! Darkness! Woe to the north! Woe to the south! Woe to the east! Woe to the west! Death at the ban- net! hy I have also to learn from the subject tat ! NEWS AND NOTES FOR WOMEN. the destruction of the vicious, and of those | who despise God, will be very sudden. The wave of mirth had dashed to the highest wint when that Assyrian army broke hrough, It was unexpected. Suddenly, almost always, comes the doom of those who despise God and dety the laws of nen. How was it at the deluge’ it came through a long northeast storm, $0 | | Do you suppose | that people for days before were ware it was | coming? No; I suppose the morning was bright, that calmness brooded on the waters; that beauty sat enthroned on the hills, when suddenly the heavens burst, and the mount- | gen that the aius sank like anchors into the dashed clear over the Andes and Himalayas The Red Hea was divided. The Egyptians tried to cross it, There could be no dangar. The lsraelites bad just gone through. Wheres they had gone, why not the Egyptians? Ohl it was such a beautiful walking place! A pavement of tinged shells and pearls; and on either side two great walls of water--sol, There can be no danger, Forward, great Clap the cymbals, and blow the trumpets of victory! them! We will catch them yet, and they shall be destroyed. But the walls begin to They rock! They fall! The rush- ing waters! The shriek of drowning men! The swimming of the war horses in vain for the shore! The strewing of the great host on the bottom of the sea, or pitched by the angry wave on the beach—a battered, bruised and loathsome wreck! Suddenly destruction came, One-half hour before they could not have believed it. Destroyed, and without remedy I am just setting forth a fact. which you have noticed as well as 1. Ananias comes to the apostle. The apostle says, “Did you wall the land for so much? He says, "Yes." it was a lie. Dead! as quick as that! Sap- phira, his wife, comes in. Did you sell the land for so much? “Yes It was a lie; and quick as that she was dead, God's judg- ments are upon those who despise Him and defy Him. They come suddenly. The destroying angel went through Egypt. Do you suppose that any of the people knew Did they hear the flap of his great wing? No! no! Buddenly, un- expectedly, he came Skilled sportsmen do not lke to shoot a bird standing on a sprig near by { they are skilled they pride themselves ou taking it on the wing, and they wait till it starts, Death is an old sportssuan, and he loves to take men flying under the very He loves to take them on the wing. Are there any here who are unprepared for the eternal world? Are there any here who od and without hope? Lat me say to you that you had better accept of the Lord Jesus Christ, lest sud The lungs will ceass to breathe, the heart will stop come when you shall go no more to the office. or to the store, or to the shop, Nothing will be left but Death and Judgment and Eternity. Oh! flee to God this hour! If there be one in this presence who has wandered far away from Christ, though he may not have beard the call of sun. | the Gospel for many a year, I fuvite bim now to come apd be saved. Flee from thy sin! Flee to the stronghold of the Gospel! Now is | the accepted time, now is the day of sal {| vation friends! May you Good night, my you v y by Him who never bave rosy sleep, guar | slumbers! May you awake in the morning | strong and well! ™ But oh !art thou a despiser [of God? Is this thy last night on earth? Shouldst thou be awakened in the night by something, thou knowsst not what, and there be shadows floating in the room, and a hand - | writing on the wall, and you feel that your last hour is come, and there be a fainting at the heart and a tremor in the lHmb, and a catching of the breath —then thy doom would be but an echo of the words of the text, “In that night was Belshazzar, the king of the Chaldeans, slain.” Hoar the invitation of the Gospel! There may be some une in this hous to whom I shall never speak again, and therefore lot it be in the words of Gospel, and not in my with which 1 close “Ho, every one Come ye to the walers And Duy wins that thiretath! let him that hath no money Come and milk without money, and without price.” “Come unto me, all ye who are weary and heavy laden, and | will give you rest.” Oh! that my Lord Jesus would now make Himself so attractive to your souls | that you cannot resist Him; and that, if you or ave not wi knelt that to prayed before, prayed since those days when ¥ down at your mother's knes, then night you might pray, saying have never Just sa | am, without one plea Bat (hat the blood was shed Tor me Ard that Thos bidet me come 10 Thee, O Lamb of God, | come But if you cannot think of so long a prayer as that, 1 will give you a shorter prayer that you can say, “God, be merciful to me a sin. r Or, if you cannot think of so long » prayer as that, 1 will give you a still shorter one that you may utter, “Lord, save me.or | perish™ Or if that be too long a prayer frou need not utter a word, Just look and ive! Boundary Stones Should be Placed. The farmer lives in a strong house, his crops are good and around his lands he has built a fence, writes a surveyor. He means to cultivate every square foot of the ground within his bounds, buf sel. dom are his bounds well defined. At eveiy corner shoul: be firmly planted in the ground, but in many places these stones are miss. ing, and when the fences are crooked, which is generally the case, the correct boundary lines are difficult to locate. | From this inadvertence of property hold- | ers considerable dispute arises when land | is sold. Now, in many instances the con- tents of a parcel of land as stated in the | deed cannot be found within the lines as laid down, and the real cause of the trouble is the indefinite locavion of cor- ners, When a tract of land lies at ‘a great distance beyond the city limits the owner does not trouble himself in the lesst about the exact location of his perty lines, In fact, he frequently describes his boundary by a line of trees or a stream of water. And then, after a lapse of years, the city is extended and the sur- veyor runs through the country with the lines of streets and avenues, Farms are bought and the plans of sub- A Rattlesnake Skin Necktie. Frank M. Follett, of Salt Lake City, Utah, sent a novel gift to a | corsage bouquets. | ) | i : After ' i This is the era of rings, Aprons are coming in again, Doaation parties are now raging, Gauntlet gloves are very much worn, Moonstones are in high favor at pres- ent, The paniers are here and have come to stay. The skirts are slashed and lined with silver silk. After-dinner coffee cups grow smaller | and smaller, It is not the fashion just now to wear Sealskan robes and garments are greatly affected by society. Silk underwear has not proved to be a commercial success, A Miss O'Duffy of New York is an im- | porter of wild animals, English crepe is mingled with Sicili- eune in toilets for debutantes, The theory goes that American wom:n are the best treated in the world, Girdles are much in fashion—the kind that were worn in medieval times, Wear black when you are youthful, It | will not become your mature years, Never allow a suspicion of starch to be | used when your napkins are done up, Honors are about evenly divided be. tween feathers and fur as a garniture. Cloth bonnets with feather and fur | trimming are to be seen in several shapes, Yellow divides honors this season with | pink, blue and cream for evening gowns, of “he property a stone | | Beott, with 83, 000.000, | Harrison, with $2,000,000, Bmocks of picturesque design are af- {ected by girls under twelve years of age, Professional housecleaning is the latest women, among occupations taken up by Uniformity of arrangement is entirely banished from an artistic able room. and comfort In Russia women are not all practice medicine before forty years. Louis Quatorze waistcoats are still s feature of some from Paris, [ the very latest gowns Mary Elkinton, daughter of a promi nent Quaker at Philadelphia, has recently married a Jap, children are with an abuadance Bridemaids’ dresses for made of white cloth, of stitching. Fleecy Bletland wool nubias are find- ing favor among the acknowledgedly elderly ladies, Crepe de chine, richly embroidered, has not a rival in the way of material for evening gowns, In dog collar fashion s necklace of white violets or chrysanthemums is worn with eveaing dress. Mrs. Stanley, wife of the African ex. plorer, says the American women are the smartest in the world. *urdy, Texas, has a bride who ls six feet five and three-quarter inches in height and only seventeen years old, Biack ostrich feathers powdered with pilver are with elegant effect princesse dresses of black velvet wrought with silver embroideries, used Sevres has lost its popularity, so grest ben years ago, and Dresden rules where bace Sevres ruled, tho wh connoisseurs Had other poreeiains to like better still. One of the features of the display in tie women's department of the World's Fair will bo dolls dressed in the garb of buns of the different convents of South America It is told of Mme. De Stael that she Was never seen in company without a pprig of laurel in her hand, which she vonstantly twisted and turned as she conversed There are about 2500 women in the United States who hold diplomas from medical colleges. The first woman phy pician was Elizabeth Blackwell, who pradusted in 1548 The great beauties of bygone ages wed much of their triumph to the se. rets of the toilet, but unfortunately. so alously were these secrets guarded that ity were buried with their owners, Three of the richest women in Phila. delphia, Penn., are Mrs. Thomas A. Mrs. Joseph and Mrs, Baldwin, who has a fortune of §2,000,. O00, For very youthful bridesmaids the bodices are round, half low, and finished | | with short gauze sleeves arrmsnged in a | very high, full puff upon each shoulder, with a white rose and foliage at the top of each puff. ] Mrs. H. E. Houghton, of Spokane Falls, Washington, is worth $500,000, a | fortune that has been made within six | years from an original investment of | $100. She is hardly thirty years old and her husband is a lawyer. Powder on the face shows less if ap. plied with a bit of chamois rather than a pull, or if a pull is used the powder should be rubbed gently into the skin with a hare's foot or a small soft brush such as Is used on babies’ heads, A Ween o. Old Time Sentheru Sport. A the vast f LUE ount of the grea coun h tl un of six ty in forest "shounds € n dur t hy hy first week in In reading over the literary items of the week, I found not much to interest me, until my eye canght sight of an article headed “Jenks' Dream.” Imag- ine my surprise to find it ended up with a recommendation to use Dr. Pleree's Pleasant Pellets, a great sufferer from sick headache, | determined to try them, and, to my great joy, 1 found prompt relief, and by their Jroteasted use, & complete Immunity rom such attacks. Pierce's Pellets often cure sick headache in an hour, They are gently laxative or actively cathartic, according to size of dose. As a pleasant laxative, take one each night on redring. For adults, four act | a2 an active, yet painless, cathartic, Cause no griping or sickness. Best Liver Pill ever made, Smallest, Cheap- est, Easiest to take. For Constipation, Indigestion and Bilious Attacks, they |! have no equal. Manufactured at the Chemical Labo- ratory of the WORLD'S DISPENSARY Mepicar Association, No. 063 Main Btreet, Buffalo, N. Y. SYN Ded «~AING ON § 0 ies AM ENS LAY UKE CONDITION POWDER Mighly concentrated, Dose small In guantity eoste Bass han one tenth cont & day per hen. Frevopts and " Glass. IT you can't ged i we send by patpaid, One pack Sie. Five BL 23400 can I90 ons Express paid, Testimondale free. Bond ot ampe or oath. Parmer’ “oultry Ouide =tieg Sic free with $1.08 orders or mors. 1 8, JOUAMSOR & CO., Boston, Maks Beds in Different Countries In the tropics men sleep in hammocks or upon mats of grass. The East Indian unrolls his light, mattress, which in the morning is again rolled together and carried away by him The Japanese lie upon matting with al stiff, uncomfortable wooden neck rest The Chinese use low elaborately carved, and supporting ouly tats or coverlids bedste ads, ofte 4 A peculiarity of the German bed ix its it frequently gown pillow bedsides part of a mattress. which wh consists 3 riness : Or upper t person, and usus ros of ail t spreads over hie iy answers the pur other bedclothing com back and scat, Rabbit Wool { the rabbit as a wool -be aring anima profit is a point of view that will certainly be novel and source of annual . but a student of the sub rabbit most people ct declares that the is valuable w } uw 2) " 1 1 ae Hus regarcaed aid, and. besides of Iw of that it is attribute softer and finer than its beauty, ¢ valuable } : have g OF « tism Small uring rheu ith about five francs, which as the wool of a lamb would The foreign trade « ia masufactured furs amoiats to 88, 500, 000 per annum OMe STUDY, hook keeping Pusines Porms Peaonanship, Arfimasls, Shorthand, sta, thoroughly traght by Mall. Circulars free Bryant's Celioge, 457 Nain St, Buffalo, NX ¥ 2 How to Learn Modern Languages w bout owt, Address Linguist, Hartsdale, ¥ For an Investment Buy a Lot in Chioagn. Pree Maps & guldes lo city with prices & termes for our property V. XN Williams, 1008 Chamber of Commerce, Chilongo TACOMA LS HTT eve 1008 Lawman shox Moa, Littie y N EA IAVESTREAT wo, Ton, Nevertheless, being | portable charpoy or | He yields a wool, | of the United States : | * ever taken for it | "ny take IY YI RK } met 4 own if SER A Ratt | i Bn enough we cover ng we A Dandy of Other Days, From a newspaper printed in the year 1770 is the following description of a dandy: “A few days ago a macaroni mude his appearance in the Assembly rooms at Whitehaven, dressed in a mixed silk coat, pink satin waistcoat and breeches covered with an elegant silk net, white silk stockings with pink clocks, pink satin shoes and large pearl buttons; uw mushroom colored stock, covered with flue point lace. hair dressgeeciorpinsplly » "” high, and stock full ol SEEMEMOMUS og Clothier and Furnisher, - a If not above being tadght L, + wal advice, Try Dobling's Bi re , do It won't cost much, 2nd yu will th n know for yourself just bow goed it x. He sure to get uo imitation There are Jots of them. Tueneare 2100 courts in the United Flales engaged lo granting divorees, oo — 11, uke Thin bonp next Brave or Omo, Crry or Torepo, | Lucas Couwry, § Fraxxk J, Onexey makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of ¥. J, CHEnkY & Co. doing business in the City of Toledo, tL ounty and State aforesaid, and that sald firm will pay the sum of One Hundre: Dollars for each and every case of CATARESN that cannot be cured by the use of HALLS CATARER CURE, Fras J. Cnesey. : + 4 " BrAl ! —g Notary Puldis, Hull's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally ae acts directly on the blood and mucous stirs faces of the systems. Bend for testimonials, free Sworn vw before me and subscribed | presences, this Gh day of December, A.D A.W. GLEABON, F.J. Cnesey & Co. Toledo, O. EF” Sold by Druggists, 75, ITALY Is 10 epend $15,000.08 on this Dacal yexr ils Lew DaYy The Coldest In Years, the weather prophets seem to predict that this winter will be, and by our experi. ence thus far can we doubt but that they must know a thiog or two avout the matter? Well. be this as It may, all will concede that a winter with clear, cold, bracing atmosphere » conducive to health than 4d of the past few years ng is mod essential; even that to protect us from the friend. “Jack From.” wha, no dout ¥is in his endeavors Wu has come to stay awhile, mut, bu not “auld ao. ret” should he become 100 yllar; checkmate him as I always have done. No frost-bites for me if you please; the moment | feel his joy breath upon fingers or toes 1 nip his little sehiemne in the bud by hing freely with some of that grand old sver called Dr, Tubdas's Venetian Line You can just try it for yourselves and that what | tell jou is the tra‘ hy, the truth: something well Loo Fey Lis el De You Ever Specuinte ’ 3g us their name and ai. nformation that will lead lewis & Co, Sicurity Buliding, y. Mao. FITS stopped frees by . Ben} Kansas (48 Da, Kramer's Ginsar | Nave Resort, No fits after first day's use, Marvelouscares., Treatise and 82 trial bottle free. Dr. Kline Sl Arch se, Phila, A f afMicted with sore eyes use Dr. sane Thom son's Eye.-water. Druggists sell at 2c. por bot Cause of Rheumatism An add which exist in sour milk and cider, called lactie acdd, In believed by physicians $0 be The cause of rheutsatiomn. Accumuleting fu the bood, % «> tacks the fhrous Umass In the Joints and onus sponising pains. What & seeded SW & remedy to peutralise the add, and 0 Ww lnvigorsie the kidneys and Diver that all waste will be carried off. We onan bonestly recommend Hood's Sersapariiia for ese purposes. 11 hae cured others of rheumatism and B® will cure you Hood's Sarsaparilla Scdd by all Grugeista. $3; wx for $5. Prepared only by GL BOOD & QO, Apotheoaries, Lowell, Mas, “August Flower The Hon. J. W. Fennimore is the Sheriff of Kent Co., Del., and lives at Dover, the County Seat and Cap- ital of the State. The shenff is a gentleman fifty-nine years of age, and this is what he says I have “used your August Flower for sev- “eral years in my family and for my own use, and found it does me ‘ more good than any other remedy. I have been troubled with what I call Sick Headache. A pain comes in the back part of my head first, and the headache ‘until I sick vomit, At times, too, I have a fullness ‘ after eating, a pressure after eating at the pit of the stomach, and sourness, when food seemed to rise ‘ up in my throat and mouth. When ‘““1 feel this coming on if [ take a . n Soon a general - disti become | “little August Flower it relieves “me, and is the best remedy I have For this reason it and recommend it to * others as a great remedy for Dys- “ : AE pepsia, &c. ® G. G. GREEN, Sole Manufacturer, Woodbury, New Jersey, U. 8. A Lr n, Bb, Claims, Ivrea in leet war, Ib adjodicating claims, sity soos PNT NTT NINN NNT NT SINTON NNN NNN NIN EECHAMW' PAINLESS. PILLS EFFECTUAL. I WORTH A GUINEA A BOX. wm for BILIOUS & NERVOUS DISORDERS *2¢ Sick Headach , and arousi a health. Physical Bescham’s Pills, taken as , will quickly RESTORE SOLD BY ALL DRUCCISTS, R
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers