—— a ———————" ——— How Steamors are Timed, The British Government has a man stationed at Roche's Point who is paid to record in a book the exact time the steamers pass the signal station, both in- ward and outward beund. Since the acute rivalry between the fleet ships of the White Star and Inman lines has sprung up this man has been more than — A —————_ sir oi . Bome girls students belonging to the sophomore class of the Lake Forest Uni- versity in Chicago, I1l., hazed a junior girl recently, and were so rough that they made her faint, Bubsequently the Junior girls rallied to their comrade’s nid and, driving the sophomores into their rooms, locked them there, OT —— —— | a ino 2 —— had to bite their lip, at first they thought of some stinging retort they would like to make, but they conquered their im. patience. They have kind words now for the sarcastic flings. They have gontle behavior now for unmannerly “REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN- DAY SERMON, ————— “Religion and Business.” "harper things than the east wind, and climb mountains hi than the Alps or Hima- Inyax, and if they are faithful Christ will at last say to then: ‘Wall done, good and faithful servant; thou hast been faithful over a fow things, 1 will make thee ruler customers. They are patient now with un- | over many things. Enter thou into the joy fortunate debtors. They have Christian re- | of thy Lord.” flections now for sudden reverses. Where| Wao talk about the martyrs of the Pied. did they get that patience? By hearing a | mont valley, and the martyrs among the minister preach concarning it on Sabbath? | Scotoh highlands, and the martyrs at Ox- Oh, no. Phey got it just where you will get | ford. There was just as certainly martyrs Subject: ¢ TEXT: Him and He shall Proverbs iii, 6. direct thy path.,"— “A promise good enough for many kinds | | asperation of everyday life you might hear of life, but not for my kind of life,” Bays some business man; “the law of sn ply and demand controls the business world.” all persons in any kind of honest business. There is no war between religion and busi. | pess, between ledgers and Bibles, between churches and counting h >uses, trary religion accelerates business, sharpens men's wits, sweetens acerbity of dis sition, fillips the blood of phlegmatics and more velocity into the wheels of hard work. It gives better balancing to the Judgment, more strength to the will, more muscle to industry and throws into enthusiam a more consecrated fire. You cannot in all the round | gone, of the world show me a man whose honest | no, was only tuition, very large tuition—I told you it was a severe schoolmistress—but it was worth it, process you would nct have learved in miners. Manufacturers, such as those who | Other way, business has been despoiled by religion. The industrial classes are divided three groups—producers, traders, Producers, such into as farmers and turn corn into food, and wool and flax into apparel. Traders, such as make profit out of the transfer and exchange of all that which is produced and manufactured. A business man may belong to any one or all | of these classes, and not one is independent of any other, the Zulu battiefleld because the strap fasten. ing the stirrup to the saddle broke as he clung to it, bis comrades all escaping, Lut he falling under the lances of the savages, a Ereat many pouple blamed the empress for allowing her son to go forth into that battle- field, and others blamed the English Govern- ment for accepting the sacrifice, and others blawed the Zulus for their barbarism. The one most to blame was the harness maker who fashioned that strap of the stirrup out of shoddy and imperfect material, as it was found to bave been afterward, If the strap bad held, the prince imperial would probably | f have beer alive to-day. But the strap broke, No prince independent of a harness maker High, low, wise, ignorant, you in one occupation, I in another all bound together So that there must be one continuous line of sympathy with each other's work But whatever your vocation, if you have a multiplicity of engagements, if into life there come losses and annoyances and perturbations as well as percentages and dividends, if you are pursued from Monday morning until Saturday night, and from January to January bv inexorable obliga tion and duty, then you area business man Or you are a business woman, and my sub Ject is appropriate to your case We are under the impression that the moil and tug of business life are a prison into which a man is thrust, or that it is an un equal strife where unarmed a man goes forth to contend. I shall show you that business life was intended of God for grand and glori- ous education and discipline, and if I shall be helped to say what I want to say, I shall rub some of the wrinkles of care out of your brow and unstrap some of the burdens from your back. [am not talking to an abstrac tion. Though never have been in business life, I know all about business men In my first parish at Belleville, New Jor- sey, ten miles from New York a large por- tion of my audience was made of New York merchants. Then I went to Syracuse, a piace of intense commercial activity, and then I went to Philadelphia and lived long among the merchants of that whom there are no better men on earth, and for more than twenty-two years | have stood in this presence, Sabbath by Sabbath, preaching to audiences, the majority of whom are business men and business women. It is not an abstraction to which | speak, but a reality with which I am well acquainted, In the first place, | remark that business life was intended as a school of energy God gives us a certain amount of raw ma- terial out of which we are to hew our char acter. Our faculties are to be reset, rounded and sharpened up. Onur young folks having graduated from school or lege, need a higher education, that which the rasping and collision of everyday alone can of- fect. Energy is wrought miy ina fire After a man has been in business activity ten, twenty, thirty years, his energy is not to be measured by weights or plummets or ladders. There is no height it cannot scale and there is no depth it cannot fathom and there is no obstacle it cannot thrash Now, my brother, why did God put you in that school of energy? Was it mer y that you might be a yardstick to measure cloth or a steelyard to weigh flour? Was it merely that you night be better jualified to chaffer and higgle? No God placed you in that school of energy that you might be devel oped for Christian work. If the un leveaioped talents in the Christian churches of to lay were brought out and thoroughly harnessed, I believe the whole world wou i be converted to God in a short time. Theres are #0 many deep streams that are turning no mill wheels and that are harnessed to no factory bands Now God demands the best lamb out of every flock He demands the richest sh mil of every harvest. Ho demands the best man of every generation. A canse in which Newton and Locke and Mansfield toiled you andl can afford to toil in Oh, for fewer idlers in the cause of Christ and lor more Christian workers—men who shall take the same energy that from Mon day morning to Saturday wight taey put forth for the achievement of a livelihood or the gathering of a fortune, and on Sabbath days put it forth to the advantage of Christ's kingdom and the bringing of men to the Lor Dr, Def, in South Wales saw a man who had inherited a great fortune, The man said to him I had to be very busy for many years of my life getting my livelihood, Alter awhile my fortune came to me, and there has been no pecessity that | toil since, Phere came a time when | said to myself, ‘Bball I now retire from Business, or shail 1 &0 on and serve the Lord in my worldly ocou- pation” " He said: “1 resolved on the latter, and | have been more industrious in com- mercial circles thao [ ever was bafore, and since that hour I have never kept a farthing for myself, Ihave thought it to be a great shame If I couldn't toll ax hard for the Lor! as I had toiled for myself, and all the pro- ducts of my factories and my commercial establishruents to the Inst fartliin 7 have gone for the building of Christian institutions and stipporting the church of God.” Oh, if the same energy put forth for the world could be put forth for God! Oh, if a thousand men in these great cities who have achisved & fortune cotiid seo it their duty to do all business for Christ and the alleviation of the world's suffering. Again, | remark, that business life is a school of patience. In your everyday life how many things to annoy and to disquiet! Bargains will rub, Commercial men will sometimes fail to meet their gements, Cash boo! sometimes up 3 great and insisting that you break the dozen. bad debts on the . More feit bills in the drawer, that process will either break or bri “In all thy ways acknowledge | corn, tinning roofs, pleading causes. But | possess your soul. I have reason to say that it is a promise to | perfect work.” of useful knowledge, many books and do not study lexicons, They On the con. | 40 not dive into profounds of learning, and | Yet nearly all through their occupations come | to understand questions of finance and poli- throws | tics and geography and Jurisprudence and ethics, It pupils will not learn, she strikes them over the head and the heart with severe losses. | You put $5000 {nto an enterprise, It manufacturers, | about foreign harvests: tra lers in fruit o ne | to know something about ths tropical Amarican tari books must come to understand the new law When the prince imperial of France fellon | of o pyright; know windsand shoals and navigation every bale of cotton and every raisin o ask, and every tea bananas is so much literaturs for a business man. ing to do with tae intelligence’ pose God put you in this seaool of informa tion merely that vou mignt be trade, that you might be more a worldling® take that useful information and use it for Jesus Christ spirit, wishing the salvation of foreign peo ple? quaintad with all the outrages inflicted in business life, and that vou have never tried ’ to bring to bear tripate all evil and correct all Hlumine edness and save men for this world to come? Can ing all the intricacies ¥ our | long after all bills of ments and invoices crumpled up and been consumed in the of the last great day? will be wise for time and a fool for ouernity school for integrity. be will do when he thousands of men tegrity meraly because tombe, State of Maine some tinguished for his honesty, usefulness and uprightoess, but before one year had Psd he had taken of the public funds for his o private use, and was hurled out of offices in disgrace Distinguished for crime after. You over the whos but placed in cortain crises of templatioa they went overboard ism as now but has some back door through which a miscreant can RCA ceptions in the plundering in commercial life, that if a | talk about living a ifs of complete com | | mercial {ascribe it to tact, before—tried honesty, more than in those times when business was a plain affair, and woolons were woolens and silks were silks and men were men city, than | | in commercial life who could say truthfully, “In all the mies | have ever made [ have | never overstated the the covered up an imperfection all the made I have not thing say it—hundreds who CAN sy it who can say it when they sold their first tierce of their their testa, ant they ner, or of a judgment, or signment, or without any effort at paymont, or got a man into a sharp corser and fleeced him. they never t of hell ars thinking ol soul in flinching that day when all charlatans and cheats doubly their teeth chatter to read ‘as the partridge sitteth on eggs and hatoheth them not, so i shall leave them in and at his end shall be a fool.” isl If you have ever been | your integrity cringe before present alvan- tage: if you have ever wakenad up in some embarrassment and said: little aside from the right path and no one | been selected and marked for the coming will know it, and I'll come all right again. out that the writing had been made by a | slave in Algiers, saying in substance, ‘ Who ever gets this bank note will please to inform after died, that come through your hands could tell all the scenes through wach they have passed, it would be a tragedy eclipsing any drama | of Shakespeare, mightier than Ki sympathy with business men. it—Iif you ever get it at all—selling hats, dis- counting notes, turning banisters, plowing Oh, that amid ths turmoil and anxiety and ex under sharper axes, the voice of God saying “In patience } Let patience have her | subject be true, I remark again that business life is a school Merchants do not read woo it way for the best, do not complain, better the refining, There are men befora the throns of God this day in triumph who on earth were cheated out of everything but their coffin, They were sued, they were imprisoned for debt, they were throttled by a whole pack of constables with write, they wers sold out by the sheriffs they had no compromise with their creditors, they had to make assign ments. Their dying hours were annoyed by the sharp ringing of the door-bell by some impetuous creditor who thought it was out | rageous and impudent that a man should | dare to dis before he paid the last threo | shillings and sixpence, I had a friend who had many misfortunes, Everything went against him. He had good business quality and was of the best morals, but he was one of those men, such as you | have sometimes seen, for whom everything | seems to go wrong. His life became to him a plague, Vien | heard ie was dead | said, got rid of the sheriffs™ Who are those lustrous souls before the throne? When the question is asked, “Who are they? the | angeir standing on tho sea of glass respond, “I'hese aro they who came out of great busi ness trouble and had thelr robes washed and wade white in the blood of the Lamb.” A man arose in Fulton street prayer meet. | Ing and sald: “I wish publicly to acknowl. edge the goodness of God I was in business | trouble. 1 had money to pay, and I had no | means to pay it, and | 1tter despair { of all human help, and I laid this matter be | fore the Lord, and this me woing { went down among some old business friends | had not MND In many years—just to make a calle and one sald to me "Why, I am so glad to woo you; walk in, We have some money on our books due yon a while, but we didn’t know where you were, and therefore not having your sond it. Wo are very glad you And the man stan ng prayer meeting said, “he Was six times what | owel.' nly happenad so. You are LDS WET { that man's prayer. usiness grace Commercial ethics, business if trade, are all very good in their place, Dut there are times when Fou want some their in thiag more than this world will give you You want God For the lack of Him some oy . you have known have consented to ted treasurer of the He was dis. | 1078", and to maltreat their friends and to | curve their enemies, and their names bave been bulletined among scoundrels, and they have been ground to powder, while othe men you have known have gone thy ugh the Distinguished for virtue before, | YOY same stress of circumstances triumph wnocall | 20% There are men bere today wh » fought " | the battle and gained the victory, People | come out of that man's store, an they say, | “Wall, if there ever was a Christian trades, | that is one.” Integrit kept the books and | waited on customers. Aght from the sternal world flashed through the show windows love to God and Jove to man presided in that storehouse, Some day people going through the street notice that the shutters of the window are not down. The bar of that store door has whe | POt been removed People may, “What ls the of | matter” You go up a little closer, and you » | 800 written on the card of that win low, ‘Closed on account of the death of ons of the * firm.” That day all through the circles of good man business there is talk about how a has gone Boards of Trade pass resolutions of sympathy, and churches of Christ pray, “Help, Lord, for the godly man cased.” He has made his last bargain, he has suf value of goods: in ail | fered his last } -, he has schol with the last made | hage never fatizue. His children will got the result of in the fabric: of | MS industry, or, if through misfortune there thousands of dollars I have ever | P20 dollars left, they will have an estate of taken one dishonest far. | prays and Christian example hay 4 wn be Fhere are men, however, who can | 77° iAsting, Heavenly rewards for earthly thousands | There “the wicked cease [rom They are more honest than | Woubling and the weary are at rest rice, or DeCatiee have been out trinmph- & time when robbed A part with the funds sprung a snap made a false as | borrowad illimitably | Business is severe schoolmistress. is all Oh, You say, “That is a dead loss.” That You are paying the schooling. You learned things under that any Praders in grain come to know s ymething prospects of production; manufacturers of goods coms to understand the on imported articles; publishers of owners of ships must ¢eome to and box, and every cluster of ood Now, my brother, what are vou gO- Do you sun- sharper ua successful as Oh, no; It was that you migat Can it be that you have been dealing with J wa il orsign lands and never had the missionury ' A Can it be that you have bec HOS Ac that h is to ex wrongs and ani lift up all wretch world a i the | that understand. | of business you know | y ast | nsign spel whi » or i all darkness BOO ith aaadress thing about those things which wi exchaoge and’ L$ 4 me and rent rolls shall have v fires Can it be tha" a man also, that business life honors, laws No man knows tempted, There ar who ® Kept never have boon * that 1 remark, it a what A man was ele VORrs ago wn names of honesty you had co men Just like that is nplete confidences, Never so many temptations to scoundrel Not a law on the statute book Al! how fabric of many de goods: so much L% 33) accuracy there are those greenness and lack Moce need of honesty pow than ever | complete honesty How many men do you suppose there are ! sales | have ever Fi p ns ————I— Raising Vietias for Ball Fights. It is interesting to visit in Spain the ! hacienda of the owner of a herd of bulls, and to study the methods of breeding and rearing them. You and your friends are received with great Kindness by the host, who, after telling you that his h * is yours, will take you out to see tl One is a little afraid at first t 5000 fierca-looking crea- he is told that there will be As the party draws near the herd on horseback, the shepherd says: ‘Senores, follow me and be as dumb as statues. I will do all the talking. ‘What, ho! Blanco!" continues the shep- berd, addressing the master of the herd, ‘make way for our most illustrious guests, We must all be on our best { behavior to-day, for his excellency the | director of the arena is with us. Dost refuse to move, surly rascal! | tempted to let | will have thee soundly flogged. Make way, 1 say.’ “After first firkio of honesty and integrity tried and carrie! Jut they remember could bave abaconded bank, or utter, But OX one step on that pathway fire. They can say their prayers without hearing the clink of dish saest dol. They can read their Bible without the time when with a lie on their the custom house they kissed the Book. They can think of death and the judgment that comes after it with wt any | ’ 4 Hose but no danger. tures, and jockeys and frauds shall be damped. It does not make their kuees knock trgether and it dos not make he that getteth riches, and not by right, the midst of his days Ob, what a school of integrity business life | thou “Now Til step a | a number of animals had Itisonly once.” Oh, that only. onces hes | bull fight, our host sid: ‘You, may | ruined tens of thousands of men for this life | think it strange that we can thus move and blasted their souls for eternity, tremendous school, business life integrity. five pound Bank of England note, and hold ing it up toward the light he saw some inter. | lineations in what sesmed red ink in safety among these fierce animals. Not at all. A bull in a large herd like | this is as gentle asa lamb. Let him once get away from his companions, however, | and he will face anything living. Once in a while a restless fellow will start out { from the herd, and will not mind the | $hepherd who orders him to go back. He knows what his master wants of him ! - | but he has breathed the air of freedom at lls ant word, employed Govern: {for the first time, and his warlike im- spoken of in this bank bill. After awhile | pulses are quickened. He now hears a Jia nag Yat EA he Jor Blakeu years { well-known sound and trembles. It is "hs inadiabely Arles Aids a sw | produced by the whirling sling which worn out by hardship and exposure be soon | his master has in his hand, He still Oh, if some of the bank bills | pofuses to return to his companions, when all of a sudden a stone strikes his left horn, causing him to turn his head with pain. Another stone strikes him in the body and he returns to the herd subdued.” When the calves are a year old they are vitited aud their courage int + This Is an important occasion, and many fashionable dandies ride wp from Madrid to see the sport. A stron youn bull is selected an om a I herd by the horsemen. The little fellow, himself alone, will often turn and charge his tor. mentors. That charge his fate. ‘He is a warrior and shall have a name!’ exclaim the Itisn / a sohool of A merchant in Liverpool got a He finally deciphered the letters, and found my brother, John Dean, living near Carlisle, that 1 am a slave of the bey of Algiers.” +e ng Lear or beth, As 1 go on in this subject, | am impreosed with the importance of our hatin more It not a together and bid il to un- warlike brothers and sisters, —New York ¥ of Wall street and State street, martyrs of Fulton street and Broadway, martyrs ol Atlantic street and Chestnut street, going through hotter fires, or having thelr necks Then it behooves us to banish all fretfulness from our lives if this We look back to the time when we were at school, and we remem ber the rod, and we remember the hard tasks, and we complained grievously, but now we Business life is a school, and the tasks are hard, and the ohas- tisements sometimes are vory grievous, but The hotter the fire the | the | the vessel is spring? ordinarily careful in carrying out his in- structions, In passing Roche's Point { the vessels go through a channel hardly three miles wide, and us a general thing within an easy mile of the Government signal station, Bince fast ships began to reckon their timed them from the moment they were exactly abeam of his station. The out. ward bound vessels usually go past him at full speed. What becomes of them after that is of no concern to the #ignal man, says the Toledo (Ohio) Blade. He immediate ly telegraphs his record to the steamship agent at Queenstown, where it is forwarded to the main office ut Liv. erpool. Both the Inman and the White Btar lines have a man of their own on Roche's Point to muke observations and figures. Bomotimes they differ. But if by nny possible chance the questicn of a vessel's actual time came up in a British | court of law the Government signal man's figures would stand time on the moment Hook. In a similar way the official other side is taken abeam nm Sandy The line is set by compass and phone does the rest. The m sing is almost as clearly def offic inl records, They know the a vessel Liverpool Queenstown, tiny Line, | . Caves rival at ce — ndred British vessels are Jost - ——— _— Enormous Demand for Egos. An fgg merchant » from bouss tot Us 8 few davs sinoe that he expeciad to pay 50 conte a doz en for egies before Christams Many persons who keop hens will prob. ably not have an ogg to sell when they reach fifty cents. Bome one may ask, “what can ime by | n body do when the penky old bons Wop ay ing, and the pullets refuse to begin until Why! doses Wm, H. Yeomans, of Columlsa, Conn, Editor of the Germantown Pelograph, did last winter. He save: “Last fall | made an « Lperiment worth giving our readers. Until about Dee. 1st. 1 was getting from twenty com Mm hens, only one or two gis a day. | decided to try Sher Condition Powder le fess | had bu te faith I= its value to make hens lay fo ays saw very began Mmying Part of degrees Man's meno] feeding, and little effect. Then the the time the thermometer ’ 12 bedow sero, and mv hens w ogee a day, while my neigt use the powder) were ge without hesitation, believe it a valuable akd to farmers for egp-production.” Well might be believe, for nearly 72 dogen exes, in three months, from twenty common hens, with egies worth 50 oente is worth having L 8. Johnson & Co., 22 Custom House St, Boston, Mass, ithe only makers of Nhe ri lan's Condition Powder to make bens lay ng a dogen Hd not in ww, Will send, postpaid to any person, two 25 | new Poultry The book alone wnt packs of powder, and a Raising Guide, for 60 conta ois 35 cents. For 81.00 five packs { powder and a book: for £1.20 a large 2% pound can and book; six cans for £5.00 ex press prepaid. Send stamps or cash, Inter sling testimonials sent free | AFarmer at | Edom, Texas, Vile cod-liver oil has lost its vileness in Scott's Emul- sion and gained a good deal in efficiency. Itis broken up into tin drops which are covered with glycerine, just as quinine in pills is coated with sugar or gelatine. You do not get the taste at all, The hypophosphites of lime and he. add their tonic effect to that of the half-di- gested cod-liver oil, Let us send you a book on CAREFUL LIVING—{ree, E— Scory & Bows, Chemists, 139 South gh Avenue, ew York, Your draggist keeps Scott's Emulsion of cod-liver its everywhere do, $i. N How's Thin? We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for any case of catarrh that cannot be cured by | taking Hall's Catarrh ( ‘ure, F.J.Cuesey & Co., Props, Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F, . Cheney for the Inst 16 years, and believe him perfectly honorable fn all business LIAL AC. Lions, and financially able to ¢ “rey out any ob. 5 ; + gations made by thelr firm. speed so carefully this signal officer has | West & Truax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, {) Warvino, Kixwan & Manvixn, Druggists, Toledo, 0, Hall's Cainrrh ( ing directly upon the blood and mucous Blur. faces of the system. Testimonials sent Price ibe. per bottle, Sold by all dr Aine Entitled to the Best, All are entitled 10 the best that thelr mone y will buy, so every family should have, at once, A bottle of the best family remedy, Figs, to cleanse the system when ] billows, For sale in Hc ending druggists, Ladies em; duties keep Chem wt sanding all day should | two Mass., for “Gui “esturops to Pinkham Modi de to Health and Etig A Kinginthe Family, Dr. Hozsie's ire for colds, Vial. Certain Croup ( ‘ BEUIBO ires with | Address A The Convenience of Solid 1 rains, The Erie is the only railway running solid trains over its own tracks between New York nge of oars f Bales lower than ¥ FITS stonpe « BLANKS GREAT NEnvE RESTORER, No fits siter rst 1ay's ta Marvelous id $2 trial hottie free Ur. Kline, @1 Arch St. Phils. i 3 Pen {3 # Wholesale | ure is taken Ipternally, act- | free, | of Catarrh. | think, to find the makers of a medi- | cine trying to prove that they be. | in good faith. . and §1 bottles by all | oyed In fashionable stores, whose ! send | yn, | | standing, It “There's something behind it» That's what you think, perhaps, when you read that the proprietors of Dr. Bage’s Catarrh Remedy offer 8500 reward for an incurable case Rather unusual, yow lieve in it.. “There must be somes thing back of it!” jut it’s a plain, square offer, made The only thing that’s back of it is the Remedy. fi cures Catarrh in the Head. To its mild, soothing, cleansing and healin properties, the worst cases yiel po matter how bad or of how long has a record that goes back for 25 years, It doesn't simply relieve — it and permanently cures. With a Rem- edy like this, the proprietors can make an offer and mean it. To be sure there's risk in it, but it's s0 very small that they are willing to take it. You'va “never heard of } 18 offer?” True enough. n you've never heard of anything like Dr. Sage's Remedy, arf ect ly such anything SEN for our wiof 19Cat- nlogs of Music and MUSICAL Jostruments, W, void BM Central Be. Mots \ Be eo wich off ore nearly | 0 valustie prem ames in fartion Hh & sew Typewriter ¢ hide at - slility EUTTRIC COPY 30 Tae Str, K p 4 (YY APPLICATION snd Re. amp. wo send 4 Cnn bow JACOBS OIL, FOR HORSE AND CATTLE DISEASES. CURES Cuts, Swallings, Bruises, Sprains, Gall, Straine. Lameness, SHS. ness, Cracked Meels Stringhalt Fistula, Stages GENERAL 1 bread, with Sv. J acons Of DR. TALMACE’S “LIFE OF Oevering bis great trip Te, Through, and from the (hrist.land. I fn the day of the creeifizios AN. wk and ful engravings, aise & grand poppy f Jorvesiess wngth Erciusive territory on THE SIALLES! PULL IN THE WORLD! TUTT’S have all the virtues of the larger ones equally effective; purely vegetable. Exact size shown in this border, “German Syrup’ “We are six in fam- ily. We live in « subject to Colds and Troubles, 1 used German Syrup for successfully for Sore Throat, Cough, Cold, Hoarseness, Pains in the Chest and Lungs, and spitting up of Blood Says: me say to anyone want- is the best. perience. It gives total relief and ° My advice to eve. need 1t a quick cure one suffering with Lung Troublesis | ~Try it. You will soon be con- vinced. your German Syrup 18 used we have no trouble with the Lungs at all. Itis the medicine for this Jones. country. 6. 6. COTY Cats Man'fr, Woodbury, NJ. John Franklin BAO IIIRE Morphine Habit Cured in 16 PIUM::> darss No pay till cured, OR. J. STEPHEN « Lebanon, Obie | | PILLOW.SH \ MOLDER. i AGE Wanted DRG A AY | GW NUTTING, Brockton tas BD ® Wart Kame and Address of ASTHMATID CURED T0 STAY CURED. | surraLO TWO WEEKS TREATMENT FOR 50c. ®OnEar Formeriny Connination | Cures In ore. FORESTINE COUGH SY wn , both for BOe. of it outside, for Coughs, Colds Forestine Blood Bitters A 50c. Bottle and a 28e. Plaster In one of usual time and yot who ever thought UP inside and POREITINE PLASTER and Consumption. Inside and PLASTER outside, for Rheumation, Lame Back, Kidney Troubles, Dyspepaia, &o., feo. L . FxPROF FARM-POULTRY 1s the Name of It. a po’ H — hd fy * ¥ i Sore Throat, Distemper Tumors, Splints, Ringbones, and Spavia in their Diections with gach pottie DISEASES OF HOCS. EASES OF POULTRY. IRECTIONS, 8 | 1000 AGENTS WANTED. 2:57 00000000000 ® | | @ TIN Y LIVER PI1.18® | place where we are | violent | Lung | have | six years | It acts like nn charm tor Cholera Meorvas, | Dlarrhea, Dyseatery, Colic, Cramps, Saas | wen, Siok Headache, Ao, i. 1 have tried many differ- | ent kinds of cough Syrups in my | | time, but le | ing such a medicine-—~German Syrup That has been my ex- | If you use it once, you | will go back to it whenever you In all the families where | Contractions, Flesh Wounds, Colic, Whitiown, Poll Evil, arty Seratches —. freely in the hogewill ch with » Kk nto which & small saluraie a 3 of dough, or L aad foree it down the fow] s throat CHRIST.” uetrated wilh over 40K) wonder. in 12 ovdors and ten foot in Also pend names and P.O of § agents or those wi Talmage's Dlostrated Biography FR EE. ORICAL PUB. CO., PuiLa Pa. ——— UNEXCELLED! AFFLIED EXTERNALLY ‘Rheumatism, Nearalgla, Pains in the Limbs, Back or casst, Mumps, 3:0 Throat, Colds, Sprains, Sraisss Slings of Insects, Nosquito Bitss, TAKEN INTERNALLY Warranted perioctly harmioss, wer south snecompunying each bottle, alse directions jor use. lis SOOTHING and PEM TAS TING qualities are tell Immediately, Try itand be convinoed, Price 40 nad ov conta, “eld by all drag. | piste, DEPOT, 40 MURRAY ST, NEW YORK AY X Ul Nack Enspender Pe a MORE VALUABLE THAN GOLD To the SUFFERER from diseases of the Throat nd Lungs, » our latest BOOK on ( oXYuRN ou AERATED OXYGEN CO. THOROUGHLY TA vWNY rrant's Cellegs, tno JOF aoa ST OV Wher,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers