"REV. DR. TALMAGE, HE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN- DAY SERMON. | Subject: “Elections.” Text: “And all the people sare the und. ering: and the lightnings the the trumpet and the mountain sm wing," —=Ex0« dus xx., 18, and nose of My text informs you that the lightnings | and earthquakes united their forees to wresk a manntain af wt and travelers to-day finds heaga of porphyry | and greenstone rocks, bowlder against bowl. der. the remains of the first law library, written, not on parchment or papyrus, but on shattered slabs of granite, The corner stones of all morality, of all wise law, of all righteous jurisprudence, of all good Govern. i ment are the two tablets of stone on which were written the Ten Commandments, All Roman law, all French law, ail English law, all American law that is worth anything, all non law. olvil law, eriminal law, martial law, law Nations were rocked {in the cradle of the twentieth chapter of Exodus, And it would be well in these times of great political agitation if the newspapers would print the Decalogue some day in place of the able editorial. The fact is that some people | suppose that the law has passed out of exist- ence and some aro not aware of some of the | passages of that law, and others say this or that is of the more importance, when no one bas any right to make such an assertion, "hese laws are the pillars of society, and if you remove one pillar you damage the whole straoture, I have noticed that men are particularly vehement against sins to which they are not particularly tempted and find no especial wrath against sins in which they them. selves indulge, They take out one gun from this battery of ten guus, snd load that, and unlimber that, and fire that. They say, “This is an Armstrong gun, and this is a Erupp gun, and this is a Nordenfeidt five-barreled gun, and this is a Gatling ten- barreled gun, and this is a Martini thirty- peven-barrelad gun.” But I have to tell them that they are all of the same caliber, and that they shoot from eternity to eternity, Many questions are before the people in the elections all over this land, but 1 shall try to show you that the most important thing to be settled about all these candidates is their personal, moral character, The Dec alogue forbids idolatry, Image maxing, pro fanity, maltreatment of parents, Sabbath desecration, theft, incoatinence, lying and covet That is Deca logue by which you and 1 will have to tried. and by the same Decalogue you and | must try of {dates for of Avabida Pod sn ia ad 2am FE HTEN 0 3 the ng we never v like find wo, wea will Wo ats we tory or byj ol others for y : year. ‘Judge for with what measured t ) Most certs . + not to takethe state ment of redhot partisanship as the real char acter of any man. From nearly all the great cities of this land I receive daily newspapers, sent to me regulariy and in com pliment, so { saa both sides] see all sides and it} st entertaining and most reguiar amusement to read the opp statements The one statement says the man 8 an angel, and the other says he is a devil, and I split the difference and I find him half way be tween. There never has been an honest or respec. table man running I the United States presidency, or for a judgeship, or for the mavoralty, or for the shrievaity since the foundation of the American Goverument, if we may believe the old files of the newspa- pers in the museums. What a meroy it Is that they were not all hung before they were fnaugurated ! If a man believe one-half of t he sees in the newspapers in these ss. his career will be very short outside of ingdale insane asylnm, as absent two or three years ago dar fng one week of a politi canvass, and | was dependent entirely upon what I read in regard to what had oceurred in these cities, and I read there was a procession in New York of 5000 patriots and a after | read in another sheet that there were 17,000, and then I read in regard to another proces sion that there were 10,000, and then [ read in another paper that there were 60,000 Bt in the Rink eceeived a ing reception statement ember a iy other that ye y 3 not J ya mete it Mmeasnre shall be ite wr minute vary ement, TI other audience rose at him. So great was the en- thusiasm that for a long while the orat could not be heard, and it was only after lift ing his hand that the vocileration subside! One statement will twist an inter view one way, acd another statement will twist an interview another way, You must admit it is a very difficult thing in times like these to get a very accurate estimate of a man's character, and I eharge you, as your eligious teacher, I charges you to caution and to mercifulness and to prayer I warn you also against the mistake which many are making and always do make of ap- plying a different standard of character for those in prominent position from the stand- ard they apply for ordinary persons, However much a man may have or however high the position be gets, he has po especial liberty given him in the interpretation of the Ten Commandments, A great sinner is no more to be excused than a small sinaer, hogan {0 Do not charge fllustrious defection to eccentricity or chop off the Ten Commandments to suit especial cases. The right is everiastingiy right, and the wrong is everlastingly wrong If any man nominated for any office in this eity or State differs from the Deecalogue, do not fix up the Decalogue, but fix him up. The law must stand, whatever else must fall, I eall your attention also to the fact that you are all aware of—that the breaking of one commandment makes it the more easy to break all of them and the phlloncphy in plain. Any kind of sin weakens the con- science, and if the conscience is weakened that opens the door for all kinds of trans gression, If, for instance, A man go into this political eampaign wielding scurrility as his | chief weapon, and he holleves everything bad about a man and believes nothing good, how Jong before that man himself will get over the moral depression, Neither in time nor | eternity If I utter a falsehood In regard to a man, | may damage him, but I get for myself ten. fold more damage, That is n gun that kicks, 11, for instanoe, a man be profane, under pro. | voeation he will commit any crime, I say | under provocation, For, it u man will mal treat the Lord Almighty, would he not mal. treat his fellow man’ If a man be gulity of malfeasance in offlos, he will under provosa. tion commit any sin. He who will steal will | le, and he who will He will steal, 11, for instance, & man be impure, it opens | the door for all other iniquity, for in that one iniquity he commits theft of the worst | kind, and covetousness of the worst kind, and falsehood pretending to be decent | when hie {8 notwand mal(roats his parents by diszracing their name, )! they were good, Be careful, therefore, how you charge that win nst any man either fn high or low place, either In offles or out of office, beonuge when you make that charge against a man you eharge him with ail villainies, with all disgusting propensities, with all rotténness, A libertine is a beast, lower than the ver min that crawl Over A summer OAFeass Jower than the swine, for the swine hes no intelligence to sin . Ba careful then, bow you charge t against any man, You must be so certain that » athematioal slomonateation is doubtful as compared with "And then, when you investigate a man on , you must go to tha whole and find out | for that leper! | man | for the | some of | prayers, i clas, red the divine forgiveness, and he may have im. piored the forgiveness of society and the for. giveness of the world, Although if 8 man { commit that sin at thirty or thirty-five years { of age, there is not one case out of a thou- sand where he ever repents, Yon must in vour investigation see if it is possible that the one case investigated may not have been the exception, Bat seventh commandment to suit the ease, Do not change Fairbank's soale to suit what you are weighing with it, Do not cut off a yardstick to suit the dry goods you are measuring, Let the law stand and never tamper with it, Above all I eharge you do not join in the ery that I have heard-<for fifteen, twenty yours [ have heard ft—that there is no sueh thing as purity If van make that you are a foul-mouthed scandaler of the human race, You are a leper. Make room When a man, by pen or type or tongue, ulters such a slander on the hu- race that there is no such thing as purity I know right away that that man him self is a walking Iazaretto, a reeking ulcer, and is fit for no society better than that of devils damned, We may enlarge our char ities in such a ease, but In no such case let us shave off the Ten Commandments, Let them stand as the everlasting defense BO ciety and the church of God. The committing of one sin opens the door commission of other sina. You see it every day. Those embesziers, those bunk eashiers absconding as soon as they aro brought to Justice, develop the fact that they were in all kindsof sin. No exception to the rule, They all kept bad company, they nearly all gambled, they all went to places where they ought not. Why? The commission of the one sin opened the gate for all the other sins, Sins go in flocks, In droves and in herds. You open the door for sin that invites in all the miserable segregation, Some of the campaign orators this autumn them bombarding the suffering candidates all the week, will think no wrong in Sabbath breaking. All the week hurling the eighth commandment at one candidate, the seventh commandment at another can- didate and the ninth commandment at still another, what are they doing with the fourth commandment, ‘Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy?" Breaking it. Is not the fourth commandment as (mportant as the eighth, as the seventh, as the ninth? Some of these political campaign orators, as I Lave seen them roported in other years, and as I have heard it in regard to them bombarding the suffering candidates al! the week, yet tossing the name of God from their lips of pr fanity what are third commandment which says alin porn of one seklossiy, gulity with the the third con wa shalt not take they doing tant as the oth lepartments m : Mnst sins pe mapecially te iniquity toward wh larly drawn I have this book gay that the m breaks (he Saba authority when 1 ars or the man who is as God wmndidstes who What right nMAD aipabie hefors break other com wave youand I to dment we will keep and } break? Better not try to ure the thanderbolts of the Alm ing this has less 1 this has less 1 mentum, Better periment as these wdments ero sald he saw and we r written mmandoents 80 small Do r I protest this day against attempt to revise the Decalogue whi was given on Mount Sinal amid the blast ¢ trumpets, and the erscking of the rocks, and the paroxysm the mountain of Arabia Petra, the ’ ’ OL I bring up the candidates for ward and townahip and elty and State offles. | bring them up, aad I try them by this Decal Of course they are imperfect imperfect, We say : we do things we ought not to do have ail been wrong hawny al 3 wrong. Bat I shall find out ony ».! the can didates who mes, in my estimat on, nearast { the Ten Command wants, sad r him, and you wid vote for eo God less than your us Wo are all say things we ought not to We wn | done to obedience I will vote | His unless vou lov then You ili not srodotus sald st Nitooris, the daughter of Nebuchadnetmar, was a0 fascinated with ber begatiful village of Ardericca that she had the river above Babylon changed so It wound this way and wo rarved this way and od on id be in sig that veh exquisite > w way you 1 way vou sail in life of this beautiful Althoug! little nang if group of ments, they may nto be a I WAY ¥ sail, you will or and you will never be shipwrecked, needs toning up on all these subjects I tell you there is nothing worse (0 than the ten regiments, with bayonets and ros of fire, marching down the side of Mount Sisal. They always gain the victory, and those who fight against them go under There are thousands and tens of thousands of men being slain by the Decalogue. What is the matter with that young man of whom I read, dying in his dissipations? In his dy- ing deliriom he said, “Now fetch on the dice. It ts mine. No, no! Its gone, all is gone! Bring on more wine! Bring oun more wine ! Oh, how they rattle their chains’ Fiends, flends, fiends! say you cheat! The cards are marked! Oh, death! death ! oh, death ! Fiends, flends, fends!” And be gasped his last and was gone. The Ten Commandments slew him Let not ladies and gentlemen in this nine tesnth century revise the Ten Command ments, but lot them in society and at the polls put to tha front those who come the nearest to this God-lifted standard. On the first Tuenday morning of November read the twentieth chapter of Exodus at family The moral or immoral character of the ofMloers elected will add seventy-five per cent. unto or subtract seventy-five per cent from the public morals You and I cannot afford to have bad offi The young men of this country oan not afford to have bad officials, The com mercial, the moral, the artistie, the agrienl- tural, the manufacturing, the religious in not ears whi sight of them u nes a abit fagnt aal ’ oh, | terests of this country cannot afford to have bad officials, and if you, on looking over the whole field, cannot find men who in your | estimation come within reasonable distance | of obedience of the Decalogue stay at home and do not vote at all, I suppose when in the sity of Sodom there were four candidates put up for office, and Lot did not believe tn any of them, he did | not register, 1 suppose if there camb a isis in the polities of Babylon, where Dantel did not believe in any of the candi- dates, he staid at home on election day, | yraying with his face toward Jerusalem. ut we have no such crisis. We have no i such exigency, thank God. But I have to say to you to-day that the moral character of | rulers niways affects the ruled, and 1 appeal to history, Wicked King Manasseh depressed the moral tone of all the Nation of Judah and threw them into idolatry. Good Josiah lead up the whole Nation by his exce hy is it that to-day in morals than at aay pry 4 it in beonuse she in all En politi Jase of Talleyrand brooded all the katers of the last ninety years, dishonest vies. wy of Aaron Durr blasted this Nation until important lotters were weitton in cipher, le 1 not trust the nited Iot the elrclen of out, fol. man the court Louis XV and Henry VIII march oped the debatched Nations do not chop off the | t n kite fiving in the alr hovered near the dove kite sald: ‘Why are you so afraid? Why | do you pass your life in terror? Make me | king, and I'll destroy all your enemies.” Bo | the pigeons made the kite king, and as soon a8 he got the throne his regular diet was a pigeon a day. And while one of his vietims was walting for its turn to come it sald: fRerved us right I" The malaria of swamps rises from the plain to the height, but moral malaria descends from the mountain to the plain. Be careful, therefore, how you oles vate into any style of authority men who are in any wise antagonistic to the Ten Come mandments, As near as I can tell, the most important thing now to be dons 1s to have about 40. 000 000 conten of the Sin Pamnlames wrinted and seattered throughout the land. t was n terrible waste when the Alexandrian library was destroyed, and the books were taken to heat 4000 baths for the citizens of Alexandria, It was very expensive heat, But without any harm to the Deocalogue you could with it heat 1000,000 baths of moral purification for the American people, r wo want a tonie—a mighty tonie, a an all powerful corrective and Moses in the text, with steady hand, notwith- standing the jarring mountains and the fall orchestra of the tempest, and the blazing of the alr, pours out the ten drops-—no more, no which our people need to take for thelr moral convalesoenos But I shall not leave you under the dis- couragement of the Ten Commandments, be- cause we have all offended, There Li an- other mountain in sight, and while one mountain thunders the other answers in thunder, and while Mount Binal, with lght- ning, writes doom, thie other mountain, with Mghtuing, writes mercy, The only way you will ever spike the guns of the Decalogae is by the spikes of the cross. The only rock that will ever stop the Bluatle upheavals is the Rock of Ages, Mount Calvary is higher than Mount Sinai I'he English survey expedition, I know, say that one Sinaitie peak is 7000 feet high, and another 8000, and another 9000 foot high, and travelers tell us that Mount Cavalry is only a bluff outside of the wall of Jerusalem, but Calvary, in moral significance, overtops and overshadows all the mountains of the jomispheres, and Mount Washingt and Mont Blane and the Himalayas are hillocks compared with it. You know that some- times « will slience an for- and so these pigeons otu, but one day the | mivin lows na ae fortress ther tress Moultrie silenced Sumter, and against the mountain of the law I put the mountain the cross. “The soul that sinneth, it shall fie, 5 Wms L i ier the sannonad down to the pion ell tre is the all for lem into “toenth peraatura intalin subsl y & slionoe vantain speak —- “The biood, the from all sin Uproar o 4 t and comes down hear the hear It whisper, biood that cleanssth The survey expedition says that the Sinai tie mountains have wads r water oo Allnyat and Ajelad ying into Feiran hose streams are not navigable, No to these rooky streams could sail. But have to tell you this day that the boat of gospel resous comes right up amid the wa- teroourses of Sinaitie gloom and threat ready to take us off fix under the shadows into ht of God's pardon and into % J rRos ont 3 bont n the calm suniig the land of peace Ob ily fue : ’ ” d ses that boat of gospel res. you would feel as John The Storm Warriors, srew folt on the Kentish sonst of England, when beaten to pleces and they ali had given up all ff another 10 ai ning this day Gilmore in his book says that a ship 4 Knock sands they Wwors lin falt they must ¢ hope and every on from the nust die; we n they saw s Rao the t ronKEoers H nt washad and they sald, “We But after awhile shoat coming throngh 1 the man standing eok sabdg “Can it be? Thank D sd tis the "i ths! jemoribin that le wah beaoty it 4 s breakers that awfal the merey in Jesu “ g wot ® beautifa IR —— Unthinkable Distances, The distance to the nearest “fixed” star has been computed by the best 20 000. 000, - astronomers to be ab 000,000 miles, which, by putting it 1 another way, woald mean 20,000,000, - 000,000 of miles, a distance so vast that a thip to our own sun seems but a pleasure trip in comparison The next in distance is about four further away. If we attempt to fix an average distance for the fixed stars we cannot safely place them times nearer than 4,000,000,000,000 of miles | involve? | from the | away! And what does this Light, which reaches sun in eight and one-half minutes, would take seventy years in making = journey between the average fixed star and our little world. If the volume of space included within our solar system wero occupied by one huge globe 5,600,000,000 miles us in diameter, even such a mighty mass | would be but as a feather in the marvellons spread of space surround- ing it. The sea of space would ocon- tain 2,700,000,000,000,000 of such globes, each swinging at a distance approximating 500,000 miles apart! How oan the human mind be expected to comprehend such immensity ?— New York Journal. ———— Compressed Air, Mr. Ferris, he of the wheel, pro- poses to make Cldeago a seaport. He says that the chief item of cost in canals is the building sand maintenance of locks, and that this can be avoided Ls the use of compressed air. “There is no reason why a box could not be | constructed into which the lar | ocean ships could be floated, the box | closed, and the whole box water, ship and all—raised by compressed sir as easily as you lift an elevator.” We have no doubt this is true. Dr. Gat. has always claimed that oe Was practical v no limit to the work that could be dons by means of com air, Among the Kondeh people, who live cn Lake Nyassa, in Africa, the favorite form of su ia to enter the weter and allow one’s self to be devoured by a crocodile, | | with making many of her I elie ' and ermine | able | the | pr portion better when mn le with sim- | the | with hh | sivie { Ald 8) week anes that son | had a model of ! nntil they left school, when Wisconsin has 8707 women farmer, England issaid to have over 1,000,000 widows, The Shetland women are the finest | knitters in the world, The Duchess of Portland is the tall- | pst Duchess in the world, Mrs. Roswell P. Flower's charities { cost her an average of $250 a week, The violet is conventionally the only | flower that ean be worn by a person in monrning, erodited The Queen of Portugal is i clothes Eton jackets of fur i going to be g for In nes , are being worn, the fashion- cloaks. Ayer Son linn Mrs. collection of Jews 1s, has a of them, world renowned. gnitable indeed, are Colored shoes gre drantiest piicity } 3 Dress waists are worn so very tight- fitting that it is almost impossible for fas women in hion-loving Dropery bre athe i Round waists have lost none of their prestige, by bodices and pointed corsages with attached to the lower edge. But but rivaled basaae- Are fs ns are to be | and | trimmiag. 1 ks underneath tho butt Crincline is in stock, but it 1s n Modistes use it for hat, eo head lin 12 the aXirs « ] ng, but nota ¢ CEve gin d at r gan is anp and Mis M The young Duel § ening twice sinoe her mare TIAZE. vai I8IGUY hes no wy many ramifications onnection does wot dig vate secre to Pera daily a series tary to the Bri i publish 11 of artities conc ig her experiences as a parlormasid end =» housem inglish families The title “In (kp and Apron She mends domestic ser wii re to poor in preference to sh Wp Work. vied girls has to used ns a substitute when eannot onally have her dresses fitted It that this should just whon NeTrioal Ww nen The Empress of Germany just made be her fgure she n strange have been dons for some 1 have ade that were d | have had them modistea : Aj etal: leasing feature raliway ns in and abo (ork 18 a part oil Ir PACKAZeS, a0 i they hair ah Brush- the hair ft. It alan out and than ones nulates the gro and more mkes it gi ps the hair {rom falling the best tonie for th M Marshall Field is one of the most charital Sympathy es well as 2 of eo YH Y 18 ud bq re 1 1 \ hicago ut rendered women mp All applications for help are invest | gated by Mra, Field's private secre tary. A hundred and fifty years ago un- married as well as married women were stvled “Mra” Girls were ealled ‘Miss they married women F &3 i took "while generally rank ns “Mrs, wera very “Madam.” addressed Perhaps the secret of Mme, Carnot's perpetually yonthful looking pictures i to be found in the fact that for the Inst fifteen years she has stoadily de clined to be photographed. She de- clares that she will never submit to the ordeal again. Mra. Edward Payson Terhune (Mar- ion Harland literary work. She has written cook books and novels, assays and blank vorse, and has now sasled for Europe and the Holy Land to gather materiale for an oriental romance, A Bt. Louis woman has lately per fected an invention for making sweet potato flour. The process includes peeling the potato and drying the peel as a food for live stock, drying and grin-ling the potato into three grades of flour, and also slicing into Saratoge chips. Wellsville, Alleghany County, in ‘Wostern New York, nas forty women mgriculturists, all successful. One hat a stock farm. One was a housemaid ; her brother failed on the old home stosd; she bad saved money; she Bought the farm a few yoars since, and ill its belongings are rejuvenated. | Princess Maud of Wales Is partion. Iarly fond of assuming an alias and dropping some of the red tape of roy very year she goes to visit who lives in sensible own snd her | superb | for feet, and display the | that scarcely a is indefatigable in her | WHY MV LW WY MV AY IVI MV IO VI 008 Have uses in cooking well method of and of leaveni the refining them nero Royal expenditure the product appliar Ces grape crean exactness wholesome and de [3 vd where this mo he unwary, OOO DION Cream of Tartar aa Soda xnown ing them together so r power and best results ness, requiring the most ¢ xpert knowled to make ckeeper ; but y pure greatest them chemical) produce $ ] minned a matter of oe and ge ana : 18 skill. patents npound of strictly ALALALALAIALAL ALAA AAA BAA AAMALAALAAIALAL AA AIALALAALP The Pertume ol Flowers, The following conclusions the Mes nr result of the researches of Mr. FE. nard upon the mode of pr the perfume in flowers 1, The « found localized upper It u epee ssentinl oil is generally in the epidermic cells of exist upon if the floral vended 1n the of the su rime the pets or Bepsls face ®, ny both sur IRily PArLE are bud. The generally contains tan therefrom comple tely cor lower surface Bn or pigment lerived 2. The chlor phyl seems In all CASES to the essential 0) give rise tot ngagement Wer makes the ess d fr 1018 that Lieve nd het La ¢ OTL MES " Wers a re the composite, which are rich in the disagreeable i Kn« i) why the white lilac and forced ros Dave that WY Are wn Lo pe SRCRS. A take on a finer perfume, Sr ———— Rabber Boots vo. Rheamatiom, ral wearing of i other ocualdoor sefisih jecreased can exposes the aanger. Ar nOng ous Kinda of Boots, the Le Bpading Boot * of all. The great | SOE Ives aaa RDG tacts the sole from iry and adds te the Boot, Be Boot * the ge eral durability of sure ahd sew the * Oolche Hpading before yr Purchase any of law's This! We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Oatarrh that eannot be cared by Hall's OCstarrn Cure F. J. Onexey & Co. Prope, Toledo, O We. the undersigned, have known F. J, Che. ney for the last 15 years, and believe him per fectly honorable in all business transsciions snd fAnancially able to earry oul any obliga tion made hy their firm West & TRUAX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo an. Warpiso, Kiwzanw & Manvix, Dragiists, Toledo, Ohio, fia I's Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, act ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur taoes of toe system. Price, The, per botile, Sold by ali Druggiste. Testimonials free. Wholesals Pr. Hexsle's Certain Croup Cure For Lhe oT adult it ant } M aby and for the p ated whooping cough, also cin. A.V. Hoxsie, Baffale, N, Farm wanted or village place price, ful . Box #8," Hateh's cure them at druggist » Bescham's Pills waters, Beecham description, ( Riot wore nngs Ate . syrup wii ugh bat slonhy miners a box instend of =o others. 35 cia KNOWLE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live bet- ter than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liguid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleas ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax- ative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling onde headaches and fevers and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acta on the Kid- peys, Liver and Bowels without weak. ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Byru pot Figs is for sale by all drug. pists in $1 bottles, but it is man- ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well futormed, Job will not accept any substitute if | § i Katehin Girls’ Novel Way of Weaving, They and sith the wil me, and whet risers in Katchin vil- ip he were before Are Carly lage, meh 1 was with nn oked out of my door: way a party of them were already busily ng the dark bine which their dresses are made, 1 The their faces engaged In WORN th of Sitting or instened « and the the ing them a ten- sakes ary Ana, and tha ADAG LNs r backward, in ‘ I il 8 en holding the they rather backward and HAnGE Magar PR. LRILMEI'S SWAMP-ROOT CURED ME. Had Torpid Liver For 14 Years. Biliousness, Poor Digestion, Loss of Appetite. Dean Emme 1 have been troubled with Torpld Liver for 14 yours and gone through courses of bilious fever] many times it has been mn. i bie for er ] kind of labor. Dr. Kilmer's SW AMmP-ROOT was first recommended me by Holt Co, (1 3 Ind o After bott wns whether | was riving any benefit after taking he bottle, bowever, that my boalth was lmproy. ne and 1 continued until 1 had taken 6 botties { can now cheerfully recommend SWAMP.ROOT The Great KIDREY, LIVER and BLADDER Cure one who has torpid liver, for it has compietely cured me.” W. OnRIsm ANER, Jan, 16th, 10 Deon, Ind, At Bruggisis 50 conts and $1.00 sine, * lmwnlidy’ Guide to Hemih * free Consultation free Dr. Kilmer & Co, « Binghamton, N.Y. Dr. Kilmer's U & 0 Anointment Cures Piles Trial Bex Free. At Druggists 50 conts, to re 10 every De Kot Be Deceived with rastes, Enamels and Paints which stain the Banda, injure the ron and barn red be Rising Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odor. foes. Durable, and the consumer pars for bo Wn or glass package with every purchase, AY U4 MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS WITH SLOTTED LINCH RIVETS. Xo tools required, Onde a hamper seeded {0 Srive and olinch them easily and quickly, eving the ciipeh steoiutely muocth, Requiring no hoe 0 be made In the legther Bor barr for the Rivets. They are oi tough and durable, Millon: gow 0 we y ¢1 Jengthe, uniforss or assorted, put op in boxes, Ask your dealer for them, of wand fo In slampr a box of HU, assorted sizes. Man Wl by JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO., WALTHAM, MASS, a KI AC FAMILY MEDICINE i «© EE EER Lo BEART Jamyps.., igertion 1 5 dar Of wert ¥e ur A Pack b= Ary ey TATE CHERTeAL oa, New York. UPTURE £29:22., TB: Soir Gn. “i ——— GENTS W — ; LILIEN JULLOM: dors seept waned. Yew The Pot Called the K the Housewife Didn't Use ettle Black Because SAPOLIO
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers