REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE BROOKLYN DIVINES SUN. DAY SERMON, Subject: “Sailing Up the Nile)” Text: “The River Is Mine and I Have Made It.” Ezekiel xxix. 9 Aha! This is the River Nile. A brown or yellow or silver cord on which are hung more jowels of thrilling interest than on any river that was ever twistel in the suushine It ripples through the book of Ezekiel, and flashes in the books of Deuteronomy and Isainh and Zecharia and Nahum, and on its banks stood the mighties of many ages. It was the crystal cradle of Moses, and on its banks, Mary, the refugee, carried the infant Jesus. To find the birtaplacs of this river was the fascination and defeat of expedi- tions without number, Not many years ago Bayard Taylor, our eat American traveler, wrote, ‘Since Co umbus first looked upon San Salvador, the earth bas but one emotion of triumph left for her bestowal, and that she reserves for him who shall first drink trom the fountains of the White Nile under the snow fields of Kilima-Njaro.” But the discovery of the sources of the Nile by most people was con- sidered an impossibility, The malarias, the wild beasts, the savages, the unelimable steeps, the vast distances, stopped all the ex- peditions for ages An intelligent native said to Sir Samuel W. Baker and wife as they were on their way to accomplish that in which others had failed: “Give up the mad scheme of the Nile source. How would it be possible fora lady roung and delicate to endure what would ill the strongest man? Give it up” Bat the work went on until Speke and Grant and Baker found the two lakes which are the source of what wa# called the White Nile, and baptized these two iakes with the names of Victoria and Albert These two lakes, filled by great rainfalls and by accumulate 1 snows from the mountains, pour their waters, laden wish agricultural wealth such as blesses no other river, on down over the cataracts, on between frowning mountains, on between cities living and cities dead, on for four thousand miles and through a con- tinent Hut the White Nile would do little for Egypt if this were all. It would keep its banks and Egypt would remain a desert jut from Abyssinia there comes what is called the Blue Nile, which, though dry or nearly dry half the year, under tremendous rains about the middie of June rises to great momentum, and this Blue Nile dashes with sudden influx into the White Nile, which in conseqnence rises thirty feet and their com bined waters inundate Egypt with a rich soil which drops on all the flelds and gardens as it is conducted by ditches and sluices and canals every whither The greatest damage that ever came to Egypt came by the drying up of the River Nile, and the greatest blessing by its health. ful and abundant flow Fhe famine in Jo. seph’s time came from the lack of sufficient inundation from the Nile. Not enough Nile is drought: too much Nile is freshet and plague. The rivers of the earth are the mothers of its prosperity. If by some con- vulsion of pature the Mississippi should be taken from North America, or the Amazon from South America, or the Danube from Eur ' Yenisel from Asia-—what hem: calamity! Still, there are other rivers that could tertilize and save these countries As we start where the Nile empties into the Mediterranean Sea, we id a wm derful fulfillment of prophecy I'he Nile in very ancient times used to | mouths, As the great i sea at seven different places. Isaiah prophe- sied, “The Lord shall utterly destroy the tongue of the Egyptian sea and sball smite it in the seven streams” The fact is they are all destroyed but two, and Herodotus said these two remaining are artificial Up the Nils we shall go; part of the way by Egyotian rail train and them by boat, and we shall understand why the Bible gives such prominence to thisriver, which is the largest river of all the earth with one exceplion But before we boar train must take a look at Alexandria, It was founded by Alexander the Great, and was once the New York, the Paris, the London of the world, Temples, . fountains, gare dens, pillared and «More nt with all archi tectaural ahd Elen ir and sweetness Apoilos in the New Testament times som to make a rival to 5t. Pau here. Here Mark the author of the second book of the Now Testament, expired under Nero's anathema. From here the ship sailed that left Paul and the crew struggling in the breakers of Melita Pompey's pillar is here, about one hundred feet high, its base surrounded DY so much filth and squalor [ was giad to escape into an air that was breathable But Alexandria, fascinating for this or that thing, accor z to the taste of the vis itor, was to me most entertaining because it had been the site of the greatest library that the world ever saw, considering the fact that the art of printing bad not Deen iInventad, wl thousand volumes and all the work of Bat down it all went beselgers Built again and deste aznin Built again, but the Arabs came slong for its fina! demolition and the {our thousmnd baths of the city Ww heated with those volumes, the fuel lasting six months, and were ever fires kindled at such fearfal cost? What holocausts of the world’s literature! What martyrdom of books! How many of them have gone down under the rage of nations Only one book has been able to withstand the bombardment, and that has goue through without smell of fire on its lide, No swor) or spear or musket for its defense. An un armed New Testament. An unarmed Old Testament. Yet invulnerable and tri nmphant. There must be something super patural about it, Conqueror of books! Monarch of books! All the books of all the ages in all the libraries outshone by this one book which you and [ carry to church in a pocket. Bo methought amil the ashes ol Alexandrian Hbraries, But all aboard the Egyptian rall train going up the banss of the Nie! Look out of the window and see those camels kneel for the imposition of their load. And think we might takes from them a lesson, and, instead of trying to stand upright in our own strength, becomes ConIOus of om weakness and need of divias help before we take upon us the heavy duties of the year or the week or the day, and so knesl I toe burden. We meet prodmdoos of men and beasts on the way from their day's work, but alas, for the bomes to which the poor jfnhabitants are going. for the most part bovels of mad, Bat there I= something In the scene that thorougnly enlists us fi in the novelty of wrotohedness and a scenes of uresque rags. For thousnds of years is land has been under a very damoation to taxes, Nothing but Christian civilization will roll back the infiasnos whica are " spoiling the Egyptians we Are gar dens ani palaces, but they beong to the ". This ride along the Nile is one of the most solemn and impressive rides of all my life time, and our emotions despensd as the car. tains of the night fall upon all surround. ings. But we shall not be satisfied until we CHI WAKE A SID wD pA these wondrous waters and betwen the banks crowned wiih Jus stony of spires, According to ponell mark in my Bible it was Thanksgiving day marnieg, November 20, 18%, t with my family and friends wa stopped aboard the steamer on the Nile. The Mohammedan eoall ® beh AVE seven river approached the we ’ the «log . whom peonle tried ved Never pndar a unier the OW pen tore wn yyw "we not much of a oraft that we boarded, It would not be hailed on any of our rivers with any rapture of admiration, It fortu- nately had but little speed, for twics we ran aground and the sailors jumped into the water and on their shoulders pushed her out. But what yacht of gayest sportsman, what | deck of swiftest ocean queen could give such { thrill of rapture as a sail on the Nile? pyramids in sight, the remains of cities that are now only a name, the villages thronged with population. Both banks crowded with historical deeds of forty or sixty centuries Uh, what a book the Bible waen read on the Nile! As we slowly move up the majestio river I see on each bank the wheels, the pumps, the ! buckets for irrigation, and see a man with his foot on the treadle of a wheel that fetches up the water for a garden, and then for the first time I understand that passage in Deuteronomy which says of the Israelites after they had got back from Egypt, “The land whither thou goest in to possess it is not as the land of Egypt, from whence ye came out, where thou sowedst thy see 1, and wateredst it with thy foot," Then I under stood how the land could ba watered with the foot, How do you suppose | felt when on the deck of that steamer on the Nile I looked off upon the canals ant ditches an’ sluices through which the Heids are irri- gated by that river, and then read in Isaiah, “The burden of Egypt-—the river shall be wasted and dried up, and they shall turn the rivers far away and the brooks of defense shall be emptied and dried up; and they shall be broken in the purposes thereof, all that make sluices and ponds for fish While sailing on this river or stopping at one of the villages, wo on ths banks who verify the Bible tion, for they ary now as they were in Bible mes, Rhoes are now taken off in reverence to sacred places. Children carried astri le the mother's shoulder as in Hagar's time Wo men with profusion of jewelry as when Re beeen was affianced. Lentils shelled int y the pottage, as when Esau sold his birthright to get such a dish. The same habits of saluta- tion as when Joseph and his brethren fell on each other's necks, Courts of law held un der big trees as in olden times. People mak- ing bricks without straw, compelled by circumstances to instead of straw, Flying over or standing on the Danks asin Scripture days are flamingoes, Ospreys, eagles, pelicans, herons, cuckoos an { bull finches. On all sides of this river sepulchers, Villages of sepulcher Cities of sepulchers Nations of sepulchers. And one is tempted is ay Wie i peop deseri use stubble to call it an empire of tomos, I neva vw such a piace as Eg yp for And now we understand the complaining sarcasm of the Israclites when they ware from Egypt to Canaan, no graves in Egypt hast to die in the fs dh bank come the buffalo and the cattle todrink, And it wast ANC cattle that inspired Pharoah's drea lean kine and the fat Here we disembark Memohis, off the Nile to founded by the first King ong time the capita gold, Home of the P teen miles in cir nade: through wh marched, Here wt Sun, itself in brill another sun. Thebes sand and hun ire | years, as Jong as the United tore 1s a recumb og y seventy Bronzgsl gatew . A “the haven Lil- {ora Joseph was p-ime minister. Hers Pharaoh received Jas All possible snleadors were bult ap into this royal city. Hosea, Ezekiel, Jeremiah ana Isaiah spmak of AS HO IM thing wonderin Never did | visit a city with suoh auticipations, and never d 1 my anticips tions dr wp so flat Not a pillar stan is Not a wall is unbroken Not a foundation tosses in the sun. Even the ruins have been ruined and all that remains are chips of marble wunall places of fractured sculpture and spline. tore] human bones. Here and there a letler of some elaborate inscription, a toe or ear of a «tatus that once stood in niche of pala wall, Bask proph ita blotting out and the prophecy has been fulfilled “Ride n,” said to our parcy, “and don't wait for And as | stood there alone the city of Memphis in the glory of past centuries re t And 1 heard the rush of ber char ia, and the dash of her fountains, and the conviviality of her pala and saw the drunken nobles roi on the floors of while in ing trast amid all the re Kalities the piace | saw Pharach look into the face of aged rustic Jacob, the herd, saving, “How old art thou” But back to the Nile and on and up till you reach T alled the City of No. Hundred gated Thebes. A quadran- gular city four miles from limit to Hmit Four great temples, two of them Karnae and Luxor, once mountains of exquisite sculpture and gorgeous dreams solidified in stone, Status of Rameses 11, sight hundred and eighty-geven tons in weight and seven. ty-Lve feet high, but now fallen and sont tered. Walls abloom with the battlefields of centuries he surrounding hills of rock bollowed into wichers on the wall of which are chiseled in picture and hisrogly the confirmation of Bible story in regard to the treatment of the lsrasiites in Egypt so that, as explorations go with ¢ work, the walls of these sepulchers become mentaries of Bible, the Seriptures originally written upon parchment here cut into everiasting stone, hebos mighty and dominant five hundred years, Then she went down in fulflliment of Esekisa's prophecy concerning the City of No, which was another name for Thebes: “I will execute judgment in No. 1 will cut off the multitudes of No" Jeremiah also prophesied, Thus saith the Lord, 1 will punish the maititu les of No." This city of Thebes and all the other dead cities of Egypt iterate and reiterate the veracity of the Sariptures, telling the same story which Moses and the prophets told, Have you noticed how God kept back these archmologioal eonflrmations of the Bible ua- til our time, when the air is full of unbelief about the truthfuloess of the dear old book! fle waited until the printing press had been set up in its perfected shape, and the subma- rine cable was laid, and the world was in telligent enough to appreciate the testimony, and then He resurrected the dead olitios of | the earth, an! commanded them, saying: “Open your long sealed lips and speak! | Memphis and Thebes 8 the Bible truss? “True! responds Memphis and Thebes, “Babylon. is the Book of Daniel true “True!” responds Babylon, “Ruins of Pale estine and Hyria, is the New Testament true? “True” respond the ruins all the | way from Joppa to the Dead Boa and from | Jerusalem to Damascus. What a mercy that this testimony of the | deg cities should come at & times when the Bible is especially sssaile). And this work will go on until the veracity of the Serip- tures will be as certain to all sensible men and women as that two and two makes (our, as that an wosceles triangle Is one which has two of its sides equal, as that the diameter of a circle i» a linedrawn throu gh the centers and terminated the circumference, as certain as any ma tial demonstration, Those ancient oities Incied nothing but good morals. Disdpation and sin slew them, «and unless diseipa and sin are halted, | hay will some day slay our modern cities, leave our of merchandise and | our galieries of art and our city hall as fiat | in the dust as we found Meo phis on the ater noon of that ving day. And if the cities go down, the nation will go down, “Oh,” you say, “that is im ble; we have stood #0 Jon yea, over A bandred yoars as J Why, what of that? Thebes stood five hundred years, Memp iis stood a thousand yeurs, God dom not forget, One AY wich the Lowd sata thousand years and ‘a in Eraves on the way thare Ars thou taken Us AWAY Down the river ’ ‘Because wil une 10 Ors « Line Ia AL in power overs MW Deariy Ntates hav long called Wopois oxaltad in wie | ne ironed "| MOSRIC, ia ehew, in Seripture “0 phics wm eo the The | | were paisied tor (301 made the heavens and sent His Bon to rodesm the nations, And our elties will not | go down, and our nations will not perish be | cause the gosnal ix going to triumph, For ward! all schools and eolleges an | churches Forward! all reformatory and missionary | organizations, Forward! all the influences | marshaled to bless the world, Let our mo i sen Buropesu ani American cities listen to | the voles of thoss ancient cities resurrected, | and by hammer and chisel and crowbar be compelled to speak 1 notice the voice of those ancient cities is hoarse from the exposure of forty centuries and they accentuate slowly with lips thal aon, but all together those | gities along the Nile intone theses words SHoar us, for we are very old, and it is hard for us to spax We wore wise long before Athens learned her flr josson. Wa sailed our ships while yet navigation was unbo in. These obslisks, these pyramids, these fallen pillars, thess wr wkod temples, these colossi | of black granite, these wrecked sarcophagi under the brow of the hills, tell you of what | was in gran lear and of wha I am coming down to be. We sianed and we fell. Our learning could not save us. See those half oblitecated hieroglyphics on yonder wall, Our architecturs could not save us Ses the painted columns of Pulls, and the shattered temple of Esneh, Our rkeroes could not save us, Witness Meones, Diodorus, Rameses aad Ptolemy. Our Gods Anmon and Osiris could not save us, Bee their fallen temples all along the four thousand miles of Nile. Oh, ye modern cities got soma other God; a God who can help, a God who can pardon, a God who can gave, Called up as we aro for a little while to give testimony, again the sands of the desert will bury us, Ashes to ashes, dust to dust” And as thess voices of porphyry and granite ceased, all the sarcophagi under the bills resp mded, ‘Ashes to ashes ™ and the capital of a lofty column foll grinding {tall to powder among the rocks, and responding, “Dust to dust” Co WISE WORDS. Love's work is always noble. Love finds its greatest joy in suffering. There shall no evil happen to the just. The less we have the more it costs us to be proud. Time is a true physician, for it buries all its patients, Write this yourself happy. down: You can't Many a man in the swim feel of i" f fish out water It's only the se child is The h Conviction presses itse i A bad man is uncontrolled by a good man by his le "ve. I'ruth hides from those who do it well enough to seek it. wa ’ All the reasonings of men are uot worth one sentiment of women. is right time what ght, loing do ike To find out + out how | § peog le wm they come to a man really is, find De treats Dis eh The hardest bat are those ties we we fight with ourselves, Married couples seldom settle before grounds of complaint « face, OTE to the sur. Public spirit, a genuine interest in all questions of national social impor ! Gf Urue or R } tance, 8 as essen lial : vO manhood as of true manhood, vat There is no cure. moral The law of universe law. An grow beside the poisons in the moral world, always, disease without a soul and of is one tidotes EI —— - Miles of Human Bones. Two prospectors re seatly visited the Island of San Nicholas, off the Ventura coast, with the purpose of taking up land, They have returned, says the Veatura (Cal) Free Press, discouraged in the original idea. They have found the land on t island, which is four miles wide by twelve long, utterly bar- ren. Oa the western side sand is about the only thing seen, and this has been blown from the beach the top of the island, seven or eight hundred feet high. On the other side of the land (the east side) they found human bones for a dis- tance of five miles along the beach. They were very thick, and looked as if it had been a graveyard. They also discovered the remains of human bodies on the ridge, which runs lengthwise through the island. In some places two skeletons were found close together, as if they had been buried in the same grave. The wind had blown off what covering of soil had been thrown over them and it looked quite ghastly, Bones were thickly strewn along this ridge for upward of three miles. From appearances up- ward of three or four thousand ladians must have been buried there. A shanty which had been built on the west side was found buried clear to the roof in sand, There are now about two thousand sheep on the island, aod from a sort of rough grass they seem to keep fat. The party went into a cave which afforded an Indian woman, the sole oc: cupant of the island, a home for seven years, It seems that when her party wad leaving the island she jumped overboard sod swam ashore in the night. Years went by before she was taken ofl. ne clear to DARILLAS Nad Yorgotten the fate of his predecessor of like name, Ban los, and Is playing dictator in Guates mala. If the history of his own gountry affords him no admonitions,’ he might observe current events in Chill. This is a bad season for TRAILS i —— “Waex you buy Dickens’ works for a dollar you are getting brain work mighty cheap,” says the Boston News. Similarly, it might have added, when you pay several times as much for a sopy of "Society as 1 Have Found It," you are getting mighty cheap brain tI — aeronaut at Detroit dropped bead. The effects drop too much were ent in hiscase HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS REMOVING RUST FROM KNIVES, Great trouble is sometimes caused in the household by knives and other steel cutlery becoming rusty, This may easily be prevented by a little care. Steel cutlery should be plunged in a pan of whiting after washing, and removed | When it is wiped | just before it is used. it will be perfectly bright, and if kept in this way it cannot get rusty, In the cutlery should already be rusty iv should be rubbed with a flannel dipped in sweet oil; then covered with slack Hime and allowed to rest for twenty-four | hours. It should then be wiped clean and finished off with some wowdered | whiting and a piece of chamois leather, Cree Courier-Journal, s———— UTILIZING THE ENTIRE PUMPKIN, When a pumpkin is purchased for | family use it is seldom that more than half of it is required. This will make four or five pies, all that an average fam- ily is likely to use for some time. In order to utilize the other half of the pumpkin, it may be either canned or dried for winter use. Canned pumpkin does not retain its flavor and makes an unsatisfactory pie, and drying seems to be a better way to preserve it. In order to do this peel the pumpkin and cut it in wafer-like strips, put it in the heat. ing closet under the pans and pilates, or set oven, laid out on it on a tin roof in the broiling hot sunshine, It will erisp and dry. When y 80 put it in a loose soon it bag and In the for making ples tastele very this dry water, in and It freshly become thorough ha it : spring when all materia Are SCATCES al | appie cx pu npxin, 48, elient § MAY DOAK A an hour soaked, then it frethly cooked pumpkin, cook it uj which it was irain use it like does not make so good a pic as cooked pumpkin, but winter York it is far better than squash JBL, we Nei Tril TREN J! TO In these much the care tant matter, wn HAVE AYE NO Les M aria Parioa in at in the Ladie departin Home Journ If the lamps be g e cannot w 14 } an EH] ! MYe proper at. tention, © \ more satis. [ factory ligh ared fo will be a The great sec working or to use food oil 8; { badly r they sour much discomfort res Rn De in good and piace Pat a that irops of oil HAvIDg to keep them « Have a and time for trimming the folded newspaper on lean regular IR DE, the tabie, sO any bits of burned wick and may fall upon it Wash and wipe the chimneys and shades. Now all loose parts of the burner, washing them in hot soap su Is and wiping with a clean soft cloth, Trim the wicks and turn them quite low, a soft, wet cloth, well soaped, wipe the burner thoroughly, working the cloth ss much as possibie in- side the burner, to get off every particle fof the charred wick. Now fill the lamps within about h of the top, snd wipe with a damp t and then a dry one, Adjust parts and return them to their proper places. Whenever a new wick is required in a and scald the burner bel the wick. With a »t ceptacie for waste orl, whi screwed yin of the bur ' hou'd take off With : ti ne ine 2.1 ail the lamp, wash me in putting ident Ia np, the re on the bott taken off at least washed, very dark a sumed. It it; replace it with a {resh one De and get vd dirty before itis hall con. onge a week Sometimes a wick will Y to Huy A is not ecor try to burn Ihe trou. ble and expense are slight, an i the in. crease in clearness aad brillisncy will re. pay the extra care. When the lamp is lighted it should not once be turned up to the full height, wait until the chimney is heated, Beautiful shades are often cracked or broken by having the bot chimneys rest against them Now, when lighting a lamp be careful that the chimney is set perfectly straight an 1 does not touch the shade at any point, The shade should be placed on the lamp ms soon as it is lighted, that it may heat gradually. al EVERY DAY DESSERTS, Lemon Meringue Custard (Baked) One quart milk; five eggs; one table. spoonful butter; one cup sugar; one tea. spoonful corn-starch; two lemons, Beat the yolks of the eggs light, and stir lato them the butter creamed with the sugar, | and the juice and grated rind of the lemons. Dissolve the cornstarch in the milk, and add this to the other ingred jents. Bake in a buttered pudding disk | until the custard is set, then cover it with a meringue made of the whites of the eggs whipped stiff with a quarter cuplul | of sugar, and brown very lightly, Eat | cold, French Pavcakes—Ooe pint milks) three eggs; two cups sifted flour; tw | | small teaspoonfuls baking-powder; pinch | | of salt, and pour the milk upon them, | flour with the salt and bakiug-powder, | and add this alteraately with the whipped Beat the yolks of the egus light, Sift the whites, Have ready a heated griddle, and cook the batter on this in large spounfuls. As each pancake is done, transfor it to a hot plate, spread it light. ly with butter, then with jam or jelly, and roll it up, the sweetmeat inside. When the rolls are neatly arranged on a dish, sprinkle them lightly with pow- dered sugar, Marmalade Rolly. poly—=Frepare dough by the directions given a short-eake, Roll it into a shest about twice as ws it is broad, and spread it thiokly with orange marmalade. The contents of a hall-piat jar will be re. quired. Roll up the paste, the marma. Inde inside, and Iay it in a steamer. Cook hours and a half, If no tie the puddiag in a it into boiling water, a ve for They acter of Byrup o There are rabbits in Tasmania which have developed toe-nails by climbing trees. ThE climbing also keeps the nails worn down, so they do not have to be cut. Here is a solution for the trouble- some toe-nail problem which some hu- man beings may desire to imitate. — Buffalo Ezpres. - En 555 A There is a vigorous and determined movement on foot among the men in Philadelphia agnindl the surreadering of seats in public ances to women, promiscuous convey - — ——_ E. Ii. Walthall & Co., Druggists Horse Cave, Ky. say: “Hall's Cstarrh Cure cures every one that takes iL." Bold Ly Druggists, 5c. Gesoel- Ques Vicronia has fifty living A . dans, when it will become as bright as new. | The demands of society often induce ladle to use quack stimulants w hen feeling bad are dangerous! Lydia E. Pinkham» Vegetable Compound is adapted to such Cases, | tommendnble, All claims not consistent w ith the high « { Figs are purposely avoid by the Cal. Fig Syrup Company. It acts gen on the kidneys, liver and bowels system effectually is not a cure-all and makes no pretension | { every botiie will pot substantinte. A King in the Family. Dr. Hoxsle's Certain Croup Lure for Addres The Convenience of Dolla 1 rine, The Erie is the trains ite owl sand Chicago of PREsCHEOrs frsleCllns Line FITS stouped DEnve Hes {arvelous cur jy ruilway running solid (cs between New York f TALLY Claes aly voller er ne care | Hates lower thal Via Dai. Kriss G rons sitar firs Ae From 1 Scrofula is al | Father to Cleared away —all the troubles and ailments that make woman’s life a burden to her. She's relieved, cured, and restored, with Dr. Pierce's Favorite Preseri tion. Periodical pains, weak back, bearing -down sensations, nervous prostration, all “female complaints,” are cured by it. It improves di- gestion, enriches the blood, dispels aches and pains, brings roffuging sleep, and restores health an strength. It's a powerful general, as well as uterine, tonic and nervine, imparting vigor and strength to the entize sys- tem. Contains no alcohol to inebri- no syrup or sugar to deraage digestion ; a legitimate medicine— not a beverage. » ate If you're a tired, nervous, or suf- fering weman, then the “Favorite = » . Prescription ” is the only medicine that’s guaranteed, in every case, 10 bring you help. If it doesn’t give you satisfaction, you have your money back. Son. «nds from parent to child. which sradicated f the fore must be Mrs. N. Ritchey, me U SY stem pels say ure can a cur ¢ a miracle in . - be made. Swift's ja h am throat and was 80 sore 1 ted sol, wh n Specific, 8S. S hat 8., drives out the bul comme ’ through of virus the Lirely weil AFFLICTED FROM CHILDHOOD. that my case, ih « food. When 1 begs nORG of Mackey, Ind., . “Justice ocom- short of aggravated Bcrofu- ihood. It stacked my my lungs. My throst 1 was compelied 0 subsist on liquid nB 8 in a wretched cond) improve at once, and Sm DOW Bays 5 8. has worked little me of 8 1 was £ 1 pores the skin and thus relieves BOOKS ON BLOOD AND the blood of the SKIN DISEASES FREE, poison. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ca. Joschee's Ger- A Throat and Lung used man Syrup nd Specialty. he ly appreciate what ful medicine it sensations of healing, easing ing, strength-gathenng an i ing are unknown joys. For man Syrup we do not ask easy cases. Sugar and water throat or stopa tickling—for a while. This is as far as the ordinary cough medicine Boschee's German Syrup is a discovery, a and Lung Specialty years there have been sensitivencss, pain, coughing, spitung hage, voice failure, weakness, slip- ping down hill, where doctors and medicine and advice have been swal lowed and followed to the gulf of despair, where there is the sickening conviction that all is over and the end is inevitable, there we place It cures. Youare » 1s Te nay K0CS length Kae 1000 LR ig W. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE cenfifnen. The BEST SHOE in the World for the Money, WENN LADIES, y oF ood do are the most eoomom oe smooth a great Throat | Where for | hemorr- | wd 1 the ] - rom a ul D. Adare HISTO for some | UNEXCELLED! APPLIED EXTERNALLY Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Pains in the Limbs, Back or Chest, Mumps, Som Throat, Colds, Sprains, Bruises, Stings of Insects, Mosquito Bites. TAKEN INTERNALLY It mets Hke a charm lor Cholera Morbas, Diarrhea, Dysentery, { elie, Cramps, Naa sen. Siok Headache, do. Warranted perfectly harmices, ee oath aise directions and PENETRA- Try ! tng each bottle, | for fis SOOTHING | TING qualitios are elt immediately. | 1t and be convinoed, Price 20 snd 4¥ counts. Sold by all drag | ghwin, Dy ror WORN NICHT . al He AF MIRRAY ST. NEW Yous AND DAY I Folds the worst rape ture with ease Gow meng 1. more Pet July LI co 08 iranian 8. 1. Chg ST.” Ton feat im oMmroRy or Paavesy Seromdary | EENEN TA Tian O of § agente or Biography TO KEEP IT hows FRYE. SWEET C ; D E USE IMPROVED PRESERVIKG POWDER. 11 does not impair the taste or Bavor, is svlintde and absolutely harmiom to the human Send 33 cts, for & same chem for é0galions. One pound, sa larger § , BINSSER & Cn, 0% ben to Li AURS PAY Oot it we Mention this paper w time, Free. Experience «a. 4, BKugene Whitaey. Rochester, X. X, $1.06, receiver to pay charges, or tl WEPAYSALAR PATENTS £:550 Price lower in A William Se. KY, olty. men ov women, WORK STEADY
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