THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN- DAY SERMON, Euhject: “Evils of Idleness.” ¥ Text: “The slothful man roasteth not that which he took in Aunting"-—FProv- erbs xii, 27 y is # David and Jeremiah and Ezskel and Micah and Solomon of the text showed that some time they had been out on a hunting ex- pedition. Spears lances, swords and nets were employed in this service. A deep pit. fall would be digged. In the center 2 it there was some raised ground with a pole on which a lamb would be fastenel, and the wild beast not seeing the pitfall, but only seeing the lamb would plunge for its prey and dash down, itself captured, Birds wore caught in gins or piercad with arrows, The hunters in olden time had two missions—one to clear the land of ferocious beasts, and the other to obtain meat for themselves and their families, The occupation and habit of hunters are a favorite Bible simile. David said he was hunted by his enemy like a par- ridge upon the mountain, My text is a hunting scene A sportsman arrayed in a garb appropri- ate to the wild chase lets slip the blool- thirsty hounds from their kennels, and mounting his fleet horse, with a halloo and ghe yell of the greyhound pack they are off and away, through brake and dell, over marsh and moor, across chasms where a misspop would hurl horse and rider to death, lunging into mire up to the haunches or in- swift streams up to the bit, till the gam» is tracked by dripping foam and blood, and the antlers crack on the rocks and the hunter has just time to be in at the death, Yet, after all the haste and peril of the chase, my text represents this sportsman as ‘being too. indolent to dress the game and prepare it for food. Fo lets it lie in the doosgard of his home and become a portion for vermin and beaks of prey. Thus by one master stroke Solomon gives a picture of laziness, when he says, o slothful man goasteth not that which he took in hunting.” The most of hunters have the game they | shot or entrapped cooked the sama evening or the next day, but not so with this laggard of the text, Too lazy to rip off the hide Too lazy to kindle the fire and put the grid- iron on the coals, The first picture 1 ever bought was an en- | graving of Thorwaldsen's “Autumn.” The clusters of grapes are ripe on the vine of the homestead, and the returned hounds, pant ing from the chase, are lying on the doorsill and the hunter is nnshouldering the game, while the housewife is to take a portion of it and prepare it g meal. Unlike the person of the text, sue was enough industrious to roast that which had been taken in hunting. has had many a specimen since Boiomon's time of those whos» lassitude and improvi dence and absurdity were depicted in my text. The most of those who have about for the eveuning made a dead failure of life can look back | and see ao time when a great opportunity opened, but they did not know it, They were not as wise as George Stephen. son, ‘‘the father of railways,” sixteen years of age he received an appoint- ment to work at a pumping eagzine for twelve shillings a week, cried out: “Now, I | ) | prration of that time yg am a made man for life.” God gives to most men at least one good opportunity Grecian general was met by a group of beg- ars, and ho said to them: “If you want wasts to plow your land 1 will snd you some, If you want land [ will give you some. If you want seed to sow I will see that you get it age none in idleness,” Bo G people an opportunity of depressed circumstances. As jn us a hatred for indolence, Tiade those animals which gish to appear joathsome in our eyes while those which are fleet and active he has clothed with attractiveness The tortoise, the sloth, the snail, t dile repel us, while the deer and are as pleasing as they are fleet, and from the swift wings of umerable birds Gol Yas spared no parple or gold or jet or erun SON Or snowy whiteness ible constantly assaulting the vies of laziness, B¢ out of his sight as beyond all buman instruc tion when he says, “Jo to the ant, thou slug- ard ;: consider her ways and be wise.” And Paci seems to drive him up from his dining table before ko gets through with the first course of food with will not work, neither shall he eat.” Now. what are the causes of laziness and what are its evil results? | knew a man who Was never y time, It scomad impossible for him to meet an engagement. Whea he was to be married he missed the train. His watch seemed to take on the habits of owneg, and was always too slow, constitutional Jethargy for wiich be did not geen rev Ho Indolencs often arises from the naturs! temperament I do not kt is a constitutional tendency to this vice in every man However activa you may generally be, | 4 Dot on some warm spring dey felt a touca of this feeling wl gives to most if to create Gol has are slug he Croco is no fe P nxible, wv but there Ave ¥¢ on Yi« ns you would a 1 pt le? But powerfully tempted to this by onstitation that all the work of their has Lean sraplished with this lethargy hangiug on their back oF treading ou ther heel ; You metimed behold it in childhood he chill moplag and longing within doors hig brothers and sisters are at play, or join thea he is behind in every race and Beaten in every game. Fis nerves, Iris muscles, his bones are snitten with this pals He vegetates rather than lives creeps tian walks, than breat eo animal tronger than intellectual, He is gen erally a great eater and active only when he cannot digest what he bas eaten. Ire quires as much effort for him to walk as for others to run. Lasguor and drowsiness are hi= natural inheritance slow satliug vessel, a hoary hulk and an in sufficient cutwater, Place an active man in such a bodily structure and the latter would be shacken to pleoss in one day. Every law of physiology demands that he be supine, Such a one is npt responsible for this powerful tendemcy of bis nature, [is great duty is resistance, When [ see a man fighting an unfortunate temperament all my sympathies are aroused, and 1 think of Vietor Hugo's account of a scone on & warship, where, in the midst of a storm at sea, & great cannon got looss, and it was erashing this way and that and would have destroyed the ship; and the chief gun- per. at the almost certain destruction of his own life. rushed at it with a handapike to thrust between the spokes of the wheel of the rolling cannon, and by a fortunate leverage arrestad the gun till it could be fast, But that struggle did not wem so dishsarten. ing as that man enters upon who atlempts bt his natural temperament, whether it Somes A ite Jather tha Lie of cireamstanoss, in ore: MB life seotns to bo to make a man active and Mountaineers are nearly always swarthy, and those who have tolled among mountain s of tromble get the most nerve and muscle and brain, Those who have become the de costly yacht ma smooth, glassy amid a chopped sen, Another cau couragement, do wall enough on remark of all compeers, But some sudden and overwhelming misfortune moet them, Trouble, instead of making them more termined, have overthrown them. all men and all occurrences ars against them. the eyes, ay become misanthrople and Froncunss el men liars anl scoundrels, hey go melancholic and threadbare to their graves. You cannot rouse them to action by the most glittering offer, In most cases thess persons have been hon orable and upright all ther lives, for rogues never get discouraged, as there is always other trap they have not sprung. There are but few sadder sights than a man of talent and tact and undoubted capacity giviag up life as a failure, like a line of magnificent steamers rotting against wharves, from which they ought to have been carrying the exports of a nation, Every great Rnclal panic produces a large crop of such men, In the great establishments where they wore partoers in business they are now weighers or deaymen or clerks on small salary, Reverie is also a cause of indolence, There are multitudes of men who axpect to achieve great success in life, who are entirely un- willing to put forth any physical, moral or intellectual effort, They have a great many eloquent theories of life, They are all the while expecting something to turn up. They have read in light literature how men suddenly and unexpectally came to lar estates, or found a pot of buried goll at the foot of the rainbow of Good Luck, or had some great offar made them. They bave passed their lives in reverie. Notwithstanding be is pinched with pov. erty, and any cther man would be downcast at the forlorn prospect, he is always cheers know but that he may be within a day or two of astounding success, be entertained with his cheerfulness of tewm- | sorrowful only because be must | worl | of plans were about to bs successful, | and But the world | | was | many lose the op A great | eves cheoks to the faithful and successful per forman | ployers and neighbors expeet your land, | But I will encour- | extrication from | son of dissipation bec | o the gazelle | | restraint or the bes Besides all this the | "S| lomen seems to order the idler | ! man of evil inclination he assertion, “If any | its | Ho had » | Jthough you may have shaken itoff | La their bodily | yawns rather | in his natura is | He is built for a | por. All the world wishes him wall, for he never did anybody harm just tho same condition in which he lived, leave the just at the time when his long-thought- Lat no young man begin life with reverie. There is nothing accomplished without hard work. Donotin idleoms expect something to turn up. It will turn down, Indolence wicke Iness always make bad luck. These people of reverie are always about to begin, “Walt a little” Bo with the child who had a cage containing a beau tiful canary, and the cage was opan and a cat was in room, shut the door of ths cage.” sald the moti “Wait a minute,” said ths boy NV hile he waiting the feline creatures With one spring took the canwry. The way that rtunity a lifetime is by tha same principle. They say, “Wait a minute.” My advice is not to walt at all, Again, bad habits are a fruitful source of indolencs. Sinful indulgences shut a man’s They my, hp De the door of of Dissoluteness is generally the ead of in- | pentant. The River of Life is ever flowing, | and the palms over waving, and the ballelu- | occasionally a day or a | jahg ever rising, and the harps ever sound: ing, and temple always open, and the golden | Thers are those who have the rare week to loos and at the ex y back with hlearsd bands and bloated ulgenoces, eves anil tremulous Indeed their em- this amuse- f frolic and se of their dy tie ment or oceasional wassall, Some of the beat w ful artisans have this themselves, but as th SCASON wikmen and most skill male of conducting tims rolls on the sea wi more protracte | a sohriely employert become ® given up toa oon { When that rushes to destruciion ty. When a if appetite has noth { respect moral kindred can y safety for a man who foals himsel! the fascination of any form of t&aptation is an employment which affords neither recreation nor holiday, Nothing can be more unafortucate for a than an occupation which keeps him exceedingly busy during a part of the year and then leaves him for waoeks and months entirely unemployed. Thers are many mon who cannot eadurs protracted leisure, They are like fractious steeds that must constantly be kept to the load, for a week's quist makes them intrac table and uncontroliable. Bad habits pro- dues idieness, and idleness: prodances habits. The probability is that you wili either have to give up your looss indulgences or else give up your occupation. Hin will take all enthusiasm out of your work aad make you sick of life's drudgery, and though now and then between your seasons of diss. pations you may rouse up to a sudden | activity and start again in the chase of some and ths season of sore limite), until disgusted and the ma tinual apd rotoows point has arrived he with astonishing wel with strong procliviti ing to do, no former steadiness leno, # “ or hines of save him. The onl ! under the game you will sink back into slothfuluoss before you have roastad that which you wok in hunting. Bad habits usfit a man for any thing bat polities Now, what are the results of indolence? A marked consequence of this vice is physical disense. The nealthiness of the whole nata- | ral world depends upon activity | winds, tossed and driven in endless circuits, scattering the mists from the mountaine, and | soooping out death damps from the caves, and blasting the missma of swamps, and hurling back the fetid atmosphere of great cities, are healthy just because of their swiftness and uncontrollableness of sweep But, after awhile, hot sun pours through it, and when the eaves are still and the grain fields bead not once all day Jongz, then pestilence sites its victims and digs trenches for the dead, All the healthy beauty of that which we seo and hear in the natural world is depend ent upon activity and uarest. Mon will be healthy ~intellectually, morally and physi eally-—only upon the condition of an active The work, They drop down in coal pits, and among the spindies of Northern factories, and on the cotton plantations of the South, In every city and town and villa by flad men groaning under burdens as, in the East, the camels stagger wonder theig loads between Aleppo and Damascus, Life is crushed out every day at counters and workbenches and anvils, Dut there are other multitudes who die from mere inertia. Indulgences every day are contracting diseass beyond the hydropathy and eclecticism. Rather than work they rush upon lancets and socipels, Nature has provided for thos: woo violate her laws by (nactivity—~what rheum for the eyes, and what gout for the feet, and what curvature for the spine, snd what strictures for the chest, and what tubercles for the lungs, and what rheumatism for tho muscles, and what seuralgias for the nerves. Nature oul at her ignorant of them. Diseass, when It comes to do its work, does not ask whether you un. derstand hygiene or pathology or materia fon, If thers were not » many lies written on tombstones and In obituaries you would see of the w inhabitants the my, but cannot livean hour of indolence is severe dis bere are those around us who started life with the most sanguine expectation, Their enterprise excited the and henceforth they have been nace ye. Ae They have lost all self-reliance. They imagine that They hang their heads when once they walked upright. They never look you up in some other plot they have not laid and some You onanot but | i the | the wind falls and the | shall gather from the four winds of heaven industry. | know mon die every day of over. complete, for if in that bbar when all should eatholicon of allopathy and homeopathy aad | spectability of an occupation Ly the little exertion it demands, and would not have their children enter any employment where their hands may be soiled, forgetting that a laborer's overalls are just as honorable as a priest's robesanl an anvil is just as re- spoctablo as a pulpit. Health flies from the bel of down and says. “I cannot slee hore;” and from the table spread wi ptarmigan and eplourean viands, saying, “I cannot eat here” and from the vehicle of soft cushions and easy springs, saying, “I cannot ride here” and from houses luxuriously warmel and upholstered, say- ing, “1 cannot live here,” and some day you meot health, who declined all these ond Bes places, walking in the plow's furrow, or sweltering beside the hissing forge, or spin. ning among the looms, or driving a dray, or tinuing a roof, or carrying hods of brick up the ladder of a wall Furthermore, notice that indolence en- dangers the sou'!. Hatan makes his chief conquests over mon who either have noth- ing to do, or, if they have, refuse to do it, There is a logeni that St. Thomas, years after Christ's resurrection, began again to doubt, and he went to the Apostles and told them about his doubts, Each Apostle looked at him with surprise and then sald be must be excused, for he hat no time to listen any longer. Then Bt, Thomas went to the de- vout women of his time and exprossad his doubts, They said they wero sorry, but they had no time to listen, Then Bt. Thomas concluded that {t was because thoy were 80 busy that the Apostles and the do vout women had no doubts, Idleness not only leads a man into asso clations which harm his morals, but often thrusts upon him the worst kind of skep- ticiem, Loafers are almost always infidels, or fast getting to be. Consummate Idlers never read the Bible, and if they appear in church can bs distinguished in an audiences of a thousand by their listlessness, for the are too lazy to bear, It is nol 80 mue among cccupied merchants, industrious me- chanios and professional men always busy i | | At last he dics in | | idleness Fthat you : | maligned, as in public lounging places, given | hear the religion of Jesus | up to profanity and dissoluteness. They have | ful and sanguine and jovial, for he does not | no sympathy with the Book that says, “Lat him that stole steal no more; but rather let him labor, working with his hands tho thing which Is good, that he may have to give to i him that needeth.” I never know a man given upto thorough | aod | that was converted, Blmon Andrew wore converted while fishing, and | Lydia while selling purple, and the shepherds | of Bethlehem | shop and dull his tools and steal his profits. | their thrones with the paws of sinners who, when at | | dastry | faculty of devoting » ind { church and we hear the arbor | the heft of the vines and the clusters hang- man | gound of a thousand whoat | and all along the line of battle Is boar | oaptain, and at the watching thelr the voice of angels, and Gideon was thrash. ing on the thrashing floor, but no one was | over converted with his hands io his pockets, Lat me tell the idler that there i= no hope for him either in this world or in the worid which is to com if the Bon of who owned the whole univer the carpenter shog J yw 80 little, ¥ busy. The redeemed in heaven are n idle. What exciting songs they sing! ($n worke woph, sure , who On what messages of Jove they fly through | I's high baheats | Fashitng | all the universe, fulfilling Go and taking worlds in with foflpite flercencss agaiost sin cruelty and oppression, and making gates of bell to quake at the overthrow of the principalities of darkness, and in the same twinkle of an spooding back to re one circuit: an eve streets always a-rush with chariots of ssdva- tion, and the last place which you want to be busy, Alas, my hearers, that in this world there should be so many loungers and so few workers, We go into the vineyard of the groan under ing down, large aud thick and ripe, cluster and clgster, fairer than the bunches of Eshool and Eagedi, and at a touch they will tarn into wine more ruddy than that Libanus and Helbon, But where are the men to gather the vintage and tread the wine press’ There comes tO your ear a flolds ready for the sickle. The is full, it Is golden, It waves in the sun It rustles in the wind, It would Gl the barns It would crowd the garners. After a while jt will | _ or rust will smite it. Oh, where are ths reapers 10 bind sheaves! The enemies of Gol are shales. You ses the glitter of their buck. Jers, You hear the pawing of their chargers, the grain is read; Yorn : the shout of their great | armies of the living God they bari their de- ] flance. hosts of Beanacherin, but their multitude is like the leavesof the forest, and the sound of their voices like the thunder of mines, Thelr and the dancing of their yroken, for the ranks are not easily to be batter les of hell will open to help them and | ten thousand angels of darkness mingle in the fight, Where are the chosen few who will throw themselves into the jaws of this S | conflict? | high and noble end, even though you cated | King James gave his courage, a charter of arms with a npum- ber of spears for the crest and the motto “Ready! aya, ready” and yet, ur spousal and interests dreadful as the ju on and solemnn As eternity tremble in the balance, how few of throw ourssives into thy breach, crying, “Ready! aye, ready I” Oh, 1 should like to ses Gol aris for ths de’enwe of His own cause and the disenthiral. ment of a world in bondage! How the fet- tors would snap and how the darkness would fly, and how heaven would sing. You have never soon an army like that which God to fight His battles. They shall cover every | hilltop and stretch through every valley and | man the vessels on every sea. There shail | neither bo uproar nor wralh nor smoke nor | bloodshed, Harvesta shall not lie waste in the track nor cities be consumed. Instead | of the groans of captives shall come the song of thoss redeemed, Yet the couquest shall be none the less | be vigilant the church of God should neglect | to seize the i » and the cause should seem to fall from the graveyards and ceme- terion of ali Christendom the good and faith. ful of the past would spring fo their feet In time to save the cause, ani gh the sun might not agatn stand still above Gibeon, or the moon in the valley of Ajalon, the day would be long siaoughjo Gein a decisive vio tory for God and the Hut my text is descriptive also of thoss who hunt for opportunities, and whea they got them do not use them. The rabbit they overoxne by an early morning tramp lies for weeks uncooked in the dooryard. The doer that they hrought down after loug and exhausting pursuit in the Adirondacks lies on the doorsill uadresed, and tho savory venison becomas a malodorous carcass. They roast not that which they took in huuting. Opportunities isborously captured, yet use. loss, and that which came in Invi iy, like string of plover and quell and wild deck hung over & hunter's sbotider, turns to some thing worse thao nothing. Ho with Agrippa when almost persis led tobe a Ch 0, Ho with the lovely young man who went away from Christ very sor- rowful, Bo with tes of thousands who have whole hands full, whole skies full of wingel sportunities which profit them at all, bonus thoy roast not that which took in huuting, Oh, make out of this fafAarel ment a ust for eter: nity, grontest privy in the udiverse to bo won ls the love and pardon of Christ. Win that and you can my: fit have founds Bi hose love shail mover Joss fs mine! ———— According to & recent estimate are under ditch in the West 18.5 flocks heard | | is made of alterna Gt 80 much, ought to be! vou the | ought | ever to want to go to is. heaven, unless you | of | itis tall 18 | ght, | the mildew and the ! mar | County, They come, not in numbers like the | the som, | bad | Mailed in hell's impeoetrable armor, they advance with the waving of their banners | | dippel into cold wager. to Sir John Beots, for | | meteor fell about eight o'clock dn when God | enlls us to the work and the cause demands | | back about five huadred yards distant. us are willing to | 33,107 acres, Of this Colorado bas 3,009,080. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. Italy is experimenting with liquid fuel for torpedo boats, The naval ordnance smokeless powder continues to produce satisfactory results, There is a thermometer at Johns Hop- kins University in Baltimore, Md., which is considered worth $10,000, The Hollerith electrical counting ap- paratus has saved the census bureau $600,000 in the expense of enumerating the population of the country. Frost has a variety of effects upon different products, Under the same in- fluence eggs will burst, apples contract and potatoes will turn black, It has been found that sandstone as an engine foundation is far from perfect. The stone soon becomes saturated with oil, making it soft and easily friable. Broommakers dyo their broomeorn so green that housekeepers are break off one of the splints t with, for fear they with paris- green, To find the sun aud stars, suppose sun but one inch apart. At the relative distance the nearest fixed would be just eleven miles away. . afraid to y test nn onke may be puisonc i of the and same relative distance the earth sla It is said that the lutest improved guus are able to give a velocity to their projectiles of 2887 feet per second, whicl is at the rate of 1968 miles an hoar, This is the highest velocity yet recorded. It has been found by experiments that | ordinarily the blood travels from the heart throuzl: the arteries at the rate o about ive inches nn second and | throu zh the capillaries at about 3-100 o an inch per » nd. The floating tw firc-eng ngine, propelled by steam, which hn lately built fo the service of the prefecture of the port, says the Levant Herald, made shor trial trip in the Marmora recentty. It steams tw y thirteen miles an hour. b wn a elve t mitern of stair threa strips of lead foothold " The | yf steel, of ter nt : sep ha smooth A new English | { nnd steel, the and vd Is ana ishiog not weariag ’ 4 travel, cataleps 7, and dead. attendant, who knew the apparently was looks i upos Her history of the case, applied the microphone to the re gion over the heart, and was thu enabled to hear the faint sounds of it beats, After rnuous exertions the doctor was enal to restore the womas by her {riends as mediea Fire led eas. to consciousn 150 Anew =n ad for shutting oT an electrical current withou injury to the dynamo when wires hap pen to get cross i or there is overheat. ing fr any The essential | parts of the apparatus are four needles | the voltage in above th limit of the needles will emit sparics sod so bura through a fine thread. This thread is connected with springs which shat off the current whet the tension is broken, cant has Seen fou mn caure., so arranged that when the wire is increased {from apy cause, o On . li — A Donlder Redhot From the S Kies. Newell, a orttleman of Eagle | Choctaw Nation, Indlan Terri: | tory, reports that a large meteor fell on the prairie the other day, It way ime bedded at least twenty feet in the earth and protades twelve fect in the air. The meteor when seen by Newell appeared | fn the air like a monster ball of fire. | Whea the earth was struck it fairly | trembled, and there was a spluttering | and sizzing like urto a piece of hot iron The meteoric stone was as bot as a furnace hours after | t descended to the emth, Newell osti- mates the weight at several tons. The the | rairie near a small water course called | Bricks Creek. Newell was on horse- Frank His horse trembled with terror, causiag | him to dismount. It was not until the | following morning that Newell and his | neighbors could approach near the meteor, and thea only to within a dis. tance of about fifty yards, Atlanta Con. stitution, i —— Questions Often Asked. Q. What is Alabastine! A. Alabastine is a prRants coating for walle and ceilings, ya Is it the same as kalsomines? , It is entirely different from all other parations on market, , Wherein does it differ from these kal somines on the market! A. Itis made from a cement that pom through a proces of setting on the wall, al grows harder with age. What are kalsomines made from? . From whitings, chalks, clays or other inert powders for a base, and aro entirely deptndant upon glue to hold them on the wall, be Why do kalsomines rub an | soale? . Because the glua, being animal matter, decays in a short time by exposure to air and moisture, and the binding qualities of the material are then gone, Q. Does the Alabastine contain any in Jurious substance? A. Alabastine bas been most carefully tested, and is recommended by leading sani tarians throughout the country, on account of its sanitary nature, Q What has the same investigation shown regarding wall paper? A. Sanitarians condemn, in strong terms, the use of wall Jaber for walls of living rooms, on account of the poison used in its manufacture, QQ. Can anything but plain work be done with Alabastine! A. Any kind of work, from plain tinting to the most elaborate decorating can be done, Q. How can | learn to do this work and decorate my house! A. By writing the Alabastine Company, Grand Rapids Mich, for book of instruc tions and « ws, and Hlustration of s molls; also wing Jk wots of tinted wall desigun, sent free, The crown jewels of Russia aro valued at $11,000,000, Now's This ¥ We offer One Hundrsd Dollars reward for ( Sa cusp of eatarrh thet cannot be cured by ing Hall's Catarrh Cura, _ ¥. J, Cuxxrey & Co. 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Swan, Beaver Dam, Wis ; Young mothers who regain strength but E. has Pinkham's onset assistant is rival Yegetable Compound, thousands testify. Lydis 0 h no ae slowly, should bear in mind that nature's | | JACOBS {]] SCIATICA acK-Aches i <a RALGIA o eqUAL. NADWAY’S READY RELIEF. CURES AND PREVENTS Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat, Hoarseness, Stiff Neck, Bronchitis, Catarrh, Headache, Toothache, Rheumatism, | Neuralgia, Asthma, | Mo matter how wiglent or exoruciating the Bruises, Sprains, Quicker Than Any Known Remedy. vain Ue ¥heumatic, Bedridden, a infirm, Crippled, | Neursigio, or prostrated witn discases may suffer, COPY RICH FEN Rather risky —the offer that’s made by the pro- prietors of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Rem- edy. Risky for them. For you, if you have Catarrh, it’s a certainty. Jou're certain to be cured of it, or to be paid £500. That's what they offer, and in 74 faith — the ¥ you, or pay you your ro But - MOM cure CAs ’ { it so much They have a medicine Catarrh, for a time time. They've watcl curing the most h They know that in ye every chance of chance of failure, Wouldn't any one take risk with such a medicine ? The only question is—are yon willing to make the test, if the makers are willing to take the risk ? If so, the rest is easy. You pay your druggist fifty cents snd the trial begins is not the re's success, almost no Ur Cass such a DAKILMER'S Kidney, Liver and Bladder Cure. Rheumatism, Lam , pitino in Joints or back, brick dust in urine, frequent calls, irritation, infismation, gravel, ulceration or oatarrh of bladder Disordered Liver, Impaired Jom, pout, hilllous. headache, SWAMP-ROOT cures kidney difficulties, La Grippe, urinary trouble, bright’s discase, Impure Blood, Borofula, malaria, gen’ weakness or debility, Guarantee Use sontents of One Dottie, if no. ety ofied, Droaggivts will refund to you Uw price pad, At Druggists, 50e¢, Size, $1.00 Size, *lavalide' Guide to Mead "free Oomsulistion free, ¥ OL 05, FEN snd Paints which » Bands, | the + bern off RE Stove Foiish is Mriliiant, Oder. Yoms, and the consumer pays for bo tis or gham package with every purchase, p and 128 »rinatoleg A Sample Cake of ook on : ny Warts, India Ink and martha, Boar, tings, Redmon « ae Qe pus Halr, Pimples, ohn H. hogriet, Se. Now York Cnty, : tation (reest office of by letter, Ses Manny Twowrson Uw most noted phywicias of Keg and, says thet more an | Dall of al) Theenses core Pom error in It Send for Free Sample of Garfield Tes 0 Gs Ww Ah Street, New Yors Oy. ELDTEA i tomas eating: Headache rertarestiamnise remresOonstinat ion. : end | no FULLY 5Ton Scaues PR RADWAY’'S READY RELIEF Will Afford Instant Ease, INTERNALLY <A half to a tesspoonful ta half a tug bier of water v n f Lies cure pass, Sour Stomes i Head a Cramps Hoartburn, Nervousnoss noche, Diarrboss, Ooile, Fistuler pain Malaris in its various forms cure There ls not a remedial agent i will cure Fever and Agu \. gue a WRADV AY S PILLS » Ww [N Bick A i and pr the w Jk as KAD. AY'S READY RELIEY, BOLD BY ALL LT Price 58 cents Trusts and Combines both commercial appe ar / ) be on They have Deen the balance of Public and J #7 { 7 But there i Combination —— - 4 4 J Capital, Skill 4 y Av Orie and Energy erwoan, | that has cow J We have some of the first, Quarter century of the next and an unlimited quantity of the latter. J J as ie Lo Stay. 24% & 147 Bo AND gt Broadway, NEW YORK. go & 54 Asylum St HARTFORD, Ct Custom Clothing Only Largest stock of Spring styles Over 3.000 Palterns k ho0s8, Suits to order from $20.00, fend for samples Garments expressed WOLD MEDAL, Pals, 1878 W. BAKER & CO.8 om whieh the excess of OR One Deed removed, ww i» absotwtely pure and & 4 soluble, . No Chemicals wo asec WU preparsion. BR hae more thon ree Timer BN vivength of Qocoe izes with Sarah, Arvowroos or Sugai, 200 in dere tore in HOTS S00 2 norghoml, cosling wt van 008 La eR OU, ONE rom MUSHROOMS 7. MILLION There's money In growing Mushrooms, Constant demand st good prices AY Oe with & cellar or St bie can O« Or Primer & Pricelist tells how 0 grow hem. Pree for ft. A tris belch of Spawn (enough for a sng ft expert ment) by mall post “wcdal rates on large tote. Jomw Gary & Co, Seed Growers, Importers and Dealers "hiladeinhis Pa S¢ Gardiner’s Deeds New Catalogwe foe shige mow ready. Free. Send tor it y+ HH 5 het A A bored A Fain et ah ox pours RL Mp Faas © -re Man of ed . Fo A a gs PATENTS }:b smi
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers