REV. DR. TALMAGE. TUK BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUJf DAY SERMON. Subject: "Pompeii and IU Lessons.- Text ; ' Thou hatt made of a dtented ei a ruin." Isaiah ztr., 2. A flash on the nlirht sky preetod as as wi left the rail train at Naples. Italy. What Wat the strange illumination? It was that wrath of many centuries Vesuvius. Giant son ol an earthquake. Intoxicated mountain ol Italy. Father of many consternations. A Tolrano, t.urnini? so Ion, and yet to keep on burninir until, perhaps, it may be the ery tori-h that will kind Is the last conflagration and set all the world on fire. It eclipses iq violence .if lehavior Cotopaxl and iEtna and Htromholi and Krakatoa. Awful mystery. Funeral pyre of dead cities. Everlasting paroxysm of mountains. It tmrni like a onimney of hell. It roars with fiery remin iscence of what it has done and with threat of worse things that it may yet do. I would not lire in one of the villages at its base for a present of all Italy. On a day in December. 1631, It threw np ashes that floated away hundreds and hun dreds of miles and dropped in Constantino ple, and in the Adriatic sea. and on th Apennines, as well as trampling out at its own foot the lives of Is, 000 people. Geo logists have tried to fathom Its mysteries. but the hent consumed the iron instruments and drove hack the scorched and blistered ex plorers from the cindery and crumbling brink. It seems like the asylum of maniac elements. At one tixe far back its top had been a fortress, where Npartacus fought and was surrounded and would have been destroyed had it not been for the gTapevines which clothed the mountainside from top to base, and laying hold of them he climbed hand under hand to safety in the valley. But for centuries it has kept its furnace barning as we saw it that night on our arrival in Novem ber of 18M9. ) course the next day we started to see some of the work wrouzht by that fr. ni-Je l mountain. '"All out for rompeii !" was the cry of the conductor. And now we stand by the corpse of that dead city. As we entered the gate ami passed between the walls I took off my hat, as one naturally does in the pres ence of some imposing otisequies. That city bad been at one time a capital of beauty and pomp. The home of grnnd architecture, ex quisite paintinir. enhautinsf sculpture, uure strained carousal and rapt assemblage. A nigh wall tweuty feet thick, three-fourths of it still visible, encircled the city. Of those walls, at a distance of only 100 yards from each other, towers rose for armed men who watched the city. The streets ran at right angles and from wall to w .ill, only one street excepted. In the days of the city's prosperity its towers glittered in the suu ; eight strong gates for inres and egress; Gate of the Seashore, (rate of Herculitneum. Gate of Vesuvius being perhaps the most important. Youtlcr stood the Temple of Jupiter, hoisted at an Imposing elevation, an-i with its six eormthian columns of immense girth, wnich stood like carved iceberrs shimmering in the light. There stands the Temple of the Twelve Gods. Yonder S( the Temple of Hercules and the Temple of Mrcury, witii altars of marble and bas-relief, won ler:ul enough to astound all succeeding agesof art, and the Temple of .TouLui.in. brilliant With sculpture and gorgeous with painting. Yonder are the theatres, partly cut into surrounding hills, ami glorified with pic tured walls, and entered under arches of im posing masonry, and with rooms, for capti vated and applaudatory audiences seated or standing in vast semi-circle. Yonder are the costly and immense public tMtths of the city, with more than the modern ingenuities of Carlsbad. Notice the warmth of those an cient tepidariutns, with hovering radiance of roof, ami the vapor of those caldariums. with decorated alcoves, and the cold dash of their frigidartums. with floors of mosaic and ceilings of all skilfully intermingled bues. and walls upholstered with all the colors of the setting sun. and sofason which to recline for slumber after the plunge. Yonder are the barracks of the celebrated gladiators. Y'on ler is the summer home of Sallust. the Itoman historian and Senator, the architecture as elaborate as bis charac ter was corrupt. There is the reeidence of the poet Tansa, with a compressed I.ouvre and Luxemburg within his walls. There Is the homeof Lucretius, with vases and aatiqui ties enough to turn the head of a virtuoso. Yonder see the Forum, at the highest place in the city. It is entered by two triurujiha! arches. Jt is bounded on three sides by dorie columns. Y'onder, in the suburbs of the city, is the home of Arrius IHomed, the mayor of the suburbs, terraced residence of liilllonaire dom, gardens, fountained. statued. colon naded, the cellar of that villa tilled with bot tles of rar.-st wine, a few drops of which were found ISO") years afterward. Along the streets of the city are men of might and women of beauty formed into bronze that manv centuries had no power to bedim. Ilat tle scenes on walls in colors which ail time cannot efface. Great city of Pompeii ! ho Seueoa and Tacjtus and Cicero pronounced It. Stand with me on its walls this evening oC August '23. A. I). T'l. See the throngs pass ing up and down in Tyrian purple and gir dles of araliesque, and necks enchained with precious stones, proud official in imposing toga meeting the slave carrying trays s-clinlc with goblets and a-smoke with delicacies from paddock and sea. and morallBt musing over the degradation of the times passes tbs profligate doing his best to make them worse. Hark to the clatter and rataplan of the boots on the streets paved with blocks of basalt. See the verdured and flowered grounds slop ing into the most beautiful bay of all the earth the bay of Naples. Listen to the rumbling chariots, carrying convivial occupuuts to halls of mirth and masquerade and carousal. Hear the loud dash of fountains amid the sculptured water nymphs. Notice the weird, solemn farreaeh ing hum and din and ronr of a city at the close of a summer day. Let rompeii sleep well to-night, for it is the last night of peace ful slumber tefore she falls into the deep slumber of many long centuries. The morn ing of the 24th of August, A. I. 10. has ar rived, and the days roll on. aud it is 1 o'clock in the afternoon. "Look!" I say to you, standing on this w ill, as the sister of I'liny said to him. the Human essayist and navnl commander, on the day of which I speak, as she pointed him in the direction in which I point you. There is a peculiar cloud on the sky : a spotted cloud, now white, now black. It is Vesuvius in awful and unparalleled eruption. Now the smoke and fire and steam of that black monster throat rise and spread, as, by my gesture, I now describe it. It rises, a great column of fiery, darkness, higher and higher, and then spreads out like the branches of a tree, with midnights enter wrapped in its foliage, wider and wider. Now the gun goes out, and showers of pumice stone and water from furnaces more than seven times heated, and ashes in aval anche after avalanche, blinding and scalding ami suffocating, descend north, south, east and west, burying deeper and deeper in mammoth sepulcher, such as never before or since was opened, Stabne, Herculaneum and I'ompeif. Ashes ankle deep, girdle deep, chin deep, ashes overhead. Out of the houses and temples and thea tres and into the streets aud down to the Ireach fled many of the frantic, but others, if uot suffocated of the ashes, were scalded to death by the heated deluge. And then came heavier destruction in rocks after rocks, (rushing in homes and temples and theatres. No wonder the sea receded from the beach as though in terror, until much of the shipping was wrecked, and no wonder that when they lifted I'linv the elder from the sailcloth on which he was resting, under the agitations of what he had seen, he suddenly expired For three days the entombment proceede.L Then the clouds lifted, and the cursing of that Apollyon of mountains subsided. JTur 1700 years that cily of rompeii lay burled and without anything to show its place of doom. But after 1700 years of obliteration a workman's spade, digging a well, strikes a, me antiquities which lead to the exhuma tion of the city. Now walk with me through some of the streets and into some of the houses and amid the ruins of basilica and temple an 1 amphitheatre. From the moment the guide met ns at the gate on entering 1'ompeli that day in No vember. 1Ss9. until he left ns at the gate on our departure, the emotion I felt was ln1s aoribable for elevation and solemnity and sorrow and awe. t'omeand see the petrl. tied ho lies of the .lead found in the city, and now in the museums of Italy. Ahout 4"0 ol those embalmed by that eruption have been recovered. Mother and child, noble and serf, merchant and iieggar, are presentable and natural alter 1700 years of burial. That woman was found clutching her adornments when the storm of nshes and fire began, and for 1700 years she continued to clutch them. There at the soldiers' barracks are sixty four skeletons of bnve men, who faithfully stool guard at their post when the tempest of cinders began, and after 1700 years were still found stin ling guar.L There is the form of gentle womanhood impressed upon the hardened ashes. Pass along, and here we see the deep ruts in the bnsaltio pave ments worn there by the wheels of the chari ots of the first century. There, over the doorways and in the porticoes, are works of irt immortalizing the debauchery of a city, hich. notwithstanding all its splendors, wan vestibule of perdition. Thosa gutters ran with the blool of the lladiators. who were prizefighters of those ancient times, and it was sword parrying j sword, until with Ana .lrllful ami BtAi. I plunge ol the sharp edge.. the maulei and gashed combatant reeled over dead, to be carried out amid the huzzas of enraptured spectators. We staid among those suggestive soenes after the hour that visitors are usually allowed there and staid until there was not a footfall to be heard within all that city except our own. Cp this silent street and down that silent street we wandered. Into that win dowless and roofless home we went and came out again onto the pavements that, now for saken, were once thronged with life. And can it be that all up and down these solemn solitudes, hearts more than 1H00 rears ago ached and rejoiced, and feet shuf fled with the gait of old age or danced with childish glee, and overtasked workmen car ried their burdens, and drunkards staggered Oa that mosaic floor did glowing youth clasg hands in marriage tow, and cross that threshold did palloearers carry the beloved deed, and gay groups once mount those now skeletons of staircases? While I walked and contemplated the city teemed suddenly to be thronged with all the population that had ever Inhabited it, and I ! heard its laughter and groan and unclean- aexa and Infernal boast as it was on the 23d of August, 79. And Vesuvius, from the mild light with which it flushed the sky that sum mer evening as I stood In disentombed Pom peii, seemed suddenly again to heave and II a me and rock with the lava ami darkueas ind desolation and woe with which more than eighteen centuries ago it submerged Pompeii, as with the liturgy of fire and storm :he mountain proclaimed at the burial, "Ashes to ashes, dust to dust." My friends, I cannot tell what practical luggestion comes to your mind from this walk through uncovered Pompeii, but the first thought that absorbs me is that, while art and culture are Important, they cannot lave the morals or the life of a great town. Much of the painting and sculpture of Pom- tieii was so exquisite that, while some is kept n the walls where it was first penciled, to Its dmired by thosa who go there, whole wagon loads and whole rooms full of it have been transferred to the Museo Borbonieo at Na ples, to b a imired by the centuries. Those PiJmpeii.in artists mixed such durability- of colors that, though their paintings ' were buried in ashes and scorim for 1700 years, and since they were uncovered many of them have remain t there exposed to the rains and win is an 1 winters an 1 summers 130 years, the color is as tresh and vivid an 1 true asthough yesterday it had passed from the easel. Which of our modern paintings could tan 1 all that? An 1 yet many of the specimens of Pompeiian art show- thut the eitv w. is sunk to such a depth of abomination that there ws nothing deeper. Sculpture ! and petrified and embalmed abomination. There was a state of public morals worse than belongs to any city now standing under the sun. Yet how many think that all that is neces sary is to cultivate the mind and advance the knowledge and improve the arte. Have you the impression that eloquence will do the elevating work? Why. Pompeii had Cicero half of every year for its citizen. Have you the i.lea th it literature is all that is neces- iry to keep a city right? Why. S illust. with a pen that wis tne boast of i.oman litera ture, had a ra lusion in that doomed cily. Do you think that s :u!pture and art are quite lurtlclent for the pro luction of good mora s? Faen correct your deius;on by examin tig the statues in the Temple of Mercury at Pom peii, or the wing- 1 II jures of its Parthenon, in i the o'.oriu i ies and arches of this house or lXo nL By all means have schools and Du-se!dirf art i J)or- exhibitions an 1 galleries where tiie genius of all the centuries can K-ink it self up in snowy sculpture, and all bric-a-brac, aud all pure art, hut nothing s ive the religion of Jesus Christ can m a city moral. la proportion ns churches an I Bi bles and Christian printing pr"-s-s an I re vivals of religion abound is a city pure and clean. What has Buddhism or Confucianism or Mohammedanism done in all the hun dreds of years of their progress for the ele vation of societv? Absolutely nothing. Peking and Madras and Cairo are just what they were ages ago, except aa Christi anity has modified their condition. What is the difference between our Brooklyn and their Pompeii? Ne difference, except tnat which Christianity has wrought. Favor all good art, but take best care o: your churches, and your Sabbath schools, aud your Bibles, and your family altars. Yea. see in our walk through uu 'overe l Tompeil what sin will do for a city. We ought to be slow to assign the judgment of God. Cities are sometimes afflicted just as go d people are afflicted, and the earthquake, and the cyclone, and the epidemic are no sign in many cases tiiat God is angry with a ciiy. but the" distress is s -nt for so n goo I an l kiul purpose, whether we understand it or not. The law that applies to individ uals may apply to Christian cities as well, "All things work together for good to those that love God.' But the greatest calamity of history ca ne upon Pompeii not to improve its future con dition, for it was completely obliterated and will never be rebuilt. It was so bad that It nededto be hurled 1700 years before even its ruitis w-re fit to be uneovere I. So Sodom and Gomorrah were filled with such turpi tude that they were not only turned under, but hate for thousands of years lieen kept under. The two greatest cemeteries are the cemetery in which the sunken ships are bur ied all the way between Fire Island and Fastnet Lighthouse, and the other cemetery is the cemetery of dead cities. I get down on my kneea and read the epitapheology of a long lin of the n. Here lies Babylon, onoe called '"tue hainmr ol the whole earth." Dead and buried under piles of bitumen au 1 broken pottery an I vitrefled brick. Aud I hear a Wolf howl an 1 a reptile hiss as I am reading this epitapli (Isaiah xiii, lin, "The wild beast of the deeert shall be there, and their nous-) shall be full of doleful creatures." The next tomb I kneel before in this cem etery of cities is Nineveh. Her winged lions are down, and the slabs of alabaster have crumbled, and the sculpture that represenie I her battles is as completely scattered as the dust of the heroes who fought them. Per haps I put my knee Into the dust of her Sar dannpalus as I sbop to read her epitaph (Zephaniah II., 1,) "Now is Nineveh desola tion and dry like a wilderness, and flocks be down in the midst of her ; all the beasts ol the Nations, both the cormorant an I the bit tern, lodge in the upper lintels of it." An I while I read It I hear an owl hoot and h hyena laugh. The next entombed city I pass has a monu ment ot fifty prostrate columns of gray and pad granite, and it Is Tyre. The next so suloner ot a great capital Is covered with icattered columns and defaced sphinxes and :he sands of the desert, and it Is Thetes. As pass on I And the resting place ot Mycenm, I city of which Homer sang, and Corinth; irhich rejected Paul and depended upon her 'ortreas, Acrocorinthus, which now lies dis mantled on the hill, and I move on in this Mmetery of cities, and I find the tombs of Jardla and Smyrna and Persepolis and Memphis and Baalbek and Carthage, and lere are the cities ot the plain and Ilercu neum and Stabia and Pompeii. Some ot :hem have mighty sarcophagus and hlero rlyphie entablature, but they are dead and Eluded never to rise. But the oemetery of dead cities fs not yet filled, and if the present cities of the world target God and with their indecencies shock :he heavens let them know that the God who n the 24th of August, 79, dropped on a city f Italy a superlncumhrance that staid there wventeen centuries is still alive and hates in now as much as He did then and has at His command all the armament of destruc ion with which He whelmed their iniquitous predecessors. Jt was only a few summers aco that Erook- rn anil Kew York felt an earthrfn nat sent the people affrighted into the itreetsandthat suggested that there are forces f nature now suppressed or held in cheek, irhich easier than a child in a nursery cnocks down a row of block houses could roetrate a city or engulf a continent deeper han Pompeii was engulfed. Our hope is in he mercy of the Lord continued to our imerican cities. It amazes me that this city, which has the u let est Sabbaths on the continent and the est order and the highest tone of morals of my city that I know of, is now having irought into as near neighborhood as Coney Island carnivals of pugilism as debusing ns my of the gladiatorial interests of Pomp'-ii. What a precious crew that Coney Island Ath etio Club Is, under whose auspices tin se rgies are enacted ! What a degradation to 4ie adjective "athletic," which ordinariiy raggeets health and muscle developed for isefut purpose? Instead ot calling it an t tbletla club tbey might better style it ''The ftufflan Club For Smashing the Human fisage." Vile men are turning that Coney Island, vhlch Is one of the finest watering places ou ill the Atlantic coast, into a place lor the iffscouring of the earth to congregate, the ow horse jockeys an I gamblers, and the ngilists and the pickpockets, and the bloats egurgilated from the depths of the worst irards of these cities. Tbey invite delegates rom universal loaferdom to come to their aruival ot knuckles. But I do not believe hat the pugilism contracted for and adver ised for next Peceinber will take place in ur neighborhood. Evil sometimes defeats itself by going one itfptoofar. You may drive the hoop ot a wrrel down so hard t bat it breaks. I will lot believe that the international prize light vill take place on Long Island or in the Strife f Sew York until I see the rowdy rabble rolling drunk off the cars at Flatbush avenue ind with faces banged nnd cut and bleeding rom the imbruting scene. Against this in rnetion of the laws of the State of New York I lift solemn protest. The curse of Almighty 3od will rest upon any community that con tents to such an outrage. Does any one hir k it cannot be stopped, and that the con stabulary would be overborne? Then let 3overnor Flower send down there a regiment n state mums, and tney wiu clean out the luisance in one hour. Warned by the doom of other cities that lave perished for their rumanisai. or their iruelty, or their idolatry, or their dissolute Jean, let all our American cities lead tue right s-ay. Our only dependence is on Ood and Christrian Influences. Politics will do noth ing but make things worse. Send politli: to norallze and save a city, and you send imallpox to heal leprosy or a carcass to -lleve the air of malo lor. For what pollii i trill do I refer you to the eight weeks o itultirication enacted at Washington by ot . American senate. American politics will become a reforma tory power on the same day that pandemoni im becomes a church. But there are, I am lad to say, benign and salutary and gra cious influences organized in all our cities trhich will yet take them lor God and right lousness. Let us ply the gospel machinery :o its utmost speed and power. City evan gelization is the thought. Accustomed as ire religious pessimists to dwell upon statis tics of evil and dolorous facts, we want some ne with sanctified heart and good digeetion :o put in long line the statistics of natures transformed, and profligacies balked, and iouls ransomed, and cities redeemed. Give us pictures of churches, of schools, f reformatory associations, of asylums of nerey. Break in upon the '-Misereres" of somplaint and despondency with "To Deums" and "Jubilates of moral and re lgious victory . ' Show that the day is com ing when a great tidal wave of salvation will roll over all ourcities. Show how Pompeii urled will become Pompeii resurrected. Demonstrate the fact that there are millions Df good men and women who will give themselves no rest day nor night until cities that are now ot the type ot the buried cities tf Italy shall take" type from the New Jerusalem coming down from God out of heaven. I hat .the advancing morn. 1 make the same proclamation to-day that Gideon made to the shivering cowards of his irmy. "Whosoever is fearful and afraid, let him return and depart early from Mount Gilead." Close up the ranks. Lift the gos pel standard. Forward Into this Arranged ion that is now opening and let the word run all along the line: Brooklyn for God! All our cities for God ! America for Ood I The world for God ! The most of us here gathered, though born in the country, will die In town. Shall our last walk be through streets where sobriety and good order dominate, or grogshops stench the air? Shall our last look be upon city halls where justice reigns, or demagogues plot for the stuffing of ballot boxes? Shall we sit for the last time in some church where God is worshiped with the eontrite heart, or where cold formalism goes through unmeaning genuflexions? God save the cities ! Kigbteousness is life ; iniquity is death. Bemember picturesque, terraced, templed, sculptured, boastful God defying and entombed Pompeii ! Ileatlnj? by Electricity. In some of the hotels in the West a ystetn of heat reguHiou which is cer tainly novel is carried out. For in stance, a guest occupying Eoom 150 asks for heat. The order is transmit ted to a peculiar person, the typewriter of the hotel generally. She goes to a switchboard and connection is given electrically with that room, allowing heat to pass into it. The occupant of the room is, perhaps, particular. A hot-blooded person wishes merely to keep from freezing; another wants a high temperature. Kach can have hii wish, for a thermostat with a poi titer is on the wall, and the room will keep itself automatically as desired. The regulation is seventy decrees, but it can be departed from as stated. Hard ware. His !:;; Stoppel f.ie Lenk. One of the few dos wortli lrivin is owned by Kilns Hollir xik, ot' Ku-t f larpswi-ll. Kt trtlii out lr.nn l ie wharf in a host with his m.isti r xhi other day the dn noticed that tne pill;? was out of t lie bottom "f the ii t and the water was com in if in. A;M calling attention to the trouble lie placed his paw over th - hob- iiu l k'; t the water out until bis lu isicr foiin i the plug and replii" I it. l.cAi-.t.ju (Me.) Journal. This Is A r.cal ;.).xl Joke. The wou'd-be funny summer boanl c" "I re.td an account of how a girl fell ner forty feet without kil!in herself." r J. km gracious; lb w did she do i ?' "'I': ied to net out of a tuo iiisf t reel car with rxairtly twenty men in i ." Agents of Ki'iuli. liree'-h-lcaditig ril'es were invented in 111, but did not come into g-n-eral use for many years. It is e-;i-mated that over r'.ooo.Oo i are now in aciual service in the Kur.ip.-an brinies, while :!.)oi),0''' are re-ci'veJ in the arenaU for t tuo g -iiCies. llon't Kiss t'nts. i Tt inn t be a terrifying revelation ; t th"s: ladies who kiss Ihi'ir cats' t hat, has been made by 1'rof. Fined, the Italian chemist. He found f experiment that when a cat licks it t lips It spreads over them a saliva in which there are swarms of minute hadlli not free from danger to human j beings. When be inoculated ral- bits and guinea igs with this noxious substance they died within 24 hours, j Horrible Punishment. Mrs. Wickwire "They say thai the words wc have sp 'ken in lire g i on echoing through space forever. What do you think of it?" Mr. Wickwire "Great Scott: I'll just hot that is the way futurj punishment is meted out- I'll l conielled to travel through spio and catch up with all the fool tning-i 1 said to you when I was courting, and be forced to listen to th-in all again." Indianapolis Journal. Some a;iol Supers! it in i. A curious popular belief among the Mexicans i elates to the so-called gold snake. Wherever it makes its nest there is sure to be a ledge containing the precious metal, and many miners win locate at once ir iney cnance inion a si iiiont of this sti cics. I'eo. pie who dig lor metals are full ot su ersiuions. .Mines are always haunted by demons and hobgoblins some of them malicious and others benevolent. Nickel and Kobo'd are the names of two gnomes who infest underground workings in Germany. From them arc derived the words nickel" and "cobalt." Odd Kchnes. In a cave In the Pantheon, the guide, by striking the flaps of his coat, makes a noise equal to that produced by firing a twelve-pound cannon. In the cave of Smellin, near Viborg, Finland, a stone thrown down a certain abyss makes a rever berating echo which sounds like tl dying wail of some wild animaL He that loseth wealth, lnudh oe mat losein inends, loseth more;lbnt he that loseth his spirits, loseth alL The troest exnedioncn in in iiha right out when yon are asked; the best pruuence is not to do a cowanL Let him who neglect to raise the fal len fear lest, when ha falls. Tin ntin will stretch out his hands to lift him no. Nothing is politically right which is morally wrong. The great quality of dullness is to be unalterably contended with itself. The greatest and most amiable privi lege which the rich enjoy over the poor is that which they exercise the least the privilege of making them happy. Sometimes we lose friends for whose loss onr regret is greater than our grief, and others from whom our grief is greater than onr regret. A woman to remain beautifnl in age should put cosmetics on her soul, not on her face. H!S LAST ACT. ! taet His Life Vf bile Trying to Serve a Com rade. Io his "Personal Recollections of Two Visits to Gettysburg," Mr. A. II. Kickerson gives his experience lo the terrible battle where be was ihot through one arm and through i.he lungs. Hy a strange piece of luck, ue siys, one of the hospital atten iants picked up and brought to bim lis young servant, Jerry, "a mite of i fellow, whom it would be slander to mention as a colored boy." He n as the blackest of negroes, and about ts broad as be was long. His duties had heretofore tieen con- lined to blacking my shoes when in :amp, and carrying my haversack ind rubber coat when oa the march. To these last mentioned art cles be Hill clung, so that when it began to rain the little rubber coat was used to cover me. It covered only a small part of my person, but inadequate as it was, it was more than many of my sotnrades had. The rain poured in torrents satu rating the exposed portions of my clothing until, with the aid of a sh d- low pool that formed whe.e 1 lay, it permeated the whole, aud 1 was thoroughly drenched. At times 1 . e Carue unconscious, but I recovered sufficiently to miss the littie cover which the rubber coat bad afforded. 1 felt around for it in the dark ness, and could not imagine where it had gone. The next day the my-t-'ry was explained. Little -Jerry bad visited lue during one of my uncon scious spells and, beiieving thatl was dead, had constituted himself my ex ecutor and sole administrator, and taken charge of my effects, consisting 3f the haversack and the aforesaid rubber coat To add to my distress I was seized toward mornirn; with an awful thirst. Though the rain was pouring down my face and over my now totally un protected body, I wanted water as I had never wanted it ticfore. 1 called again and again, but no one came. Those who were not disabled were keeping too soundly for one feeble voice to awaken them. Finally a sergeant of my regiment who was lying nea-, answered and said he would try aud get some water for tne. I heard the rattling of bis :anteen as he started toward the creek, but he did not return. He had been badly wounded him self, and daylight showed that in his lTort to succor his fellow-soldier ht uad fallen near the tanks of the stream and there bled to death. "Greater love hath no man" than was here shown by bergt Tracy. Too Precious to Lose. He was on'y a baiefooted urchir, with a tin pail, and as he trudged jlon down Riverside drive he was laboriously whistling "The Man that Uroke the Hank at Monte Carlo," but he stopped short to look at a bi cycle rider in a gay suit who went whizzing past. Suddenly a horse and surry went dashing by and the small boy made a quick jump to get out of he way. The next moment he saw the bicycle rider pick up the driver, a youne lady, who had been thrown to tht ground, and carry her to one of the near-by benches. The young man looked around as if for beip aud hailed the barefooted boy. Let me have your pail, bub, quick," he exclaimed, 'T must have some water. The young lady it hurt." But the barfooted "bub"' thrust hit pail obstinately behind him. "Let me have that pail. I say. Can't you see. you little idiot, that the young lady has been hurt?" and ho made a grab for the pail. Hut the bov dodged. "V'e ain't a goin to take my pall: not much," exclaimed "bub" eyeing him closely. "It's got bometniu; in it." "Well, empty it, you young block head, you infernal rat. I'll empty it for you." aud again he tried tosnalct the pad. "Oh. no, yer don't:" cried the ur cbin as he started to run. "Tliem's crawfish." New York Herald. In ttie Toils. The burglar stepped lightly inti the room. llemsvid forward in the dark, with a pistol in one hand and a bottlt jl chloroform in the other. He wa. 3cperate and ready for arything. Suddenly his foot struck some thing, and the next second an inde flnab e body hurled lts-lf upon him Wit'i a mul ed slir ek of fear he flopped Ids weapons atid grappled w:th the mon ter. He fought and tore; he struck savagely at it hi tht iarkness: but all to no purpose. He was as a child in the awful grast jf a giant Only for a moment the jue jiial battle raged: then he sank upon the lloor, con uered. They found him the next morning :old and still; but they were too late. And as the head of the hou-e disen tang'ed the wires of his wife's hoop kirt from a' out the unfortunate riurglar's neck, he said softly: "l'oor fallow! Set it again, Maria"' Lon lon Truth. The sea contains a solution of 2,000, 000 tons of salt. "German lyrup 99 Two bottles of German Syru cured me of Hemorrhage of th f,ungs when other remedies failed. I am a married man and, thirty-sis years of age, and live with my wift ami two little girls at Durham, Mo. I have stated this brief and plain sc that all may understand. My cast was a bad one, and I shall be glad to tell anyone about it who wit wvrite me. Philip L. Schexce. P. O. E0X45, April 25, 1890. No man could ask a more honorable, busi-icss-like statement. Mothers Friend" makes child birth easy. Colvin, La., Deo, 2, 1886. My wifo met SOTHEK'S FBIEND befora her tliirc confinement, and says aha would not bt sithout it for hundreds of dollars. SOCK MILLS. Eer.t by express on receipt of price. 1U50 per bot Je. book "To Mothers" mailed free. BRADFIELB REGULATOR CO., MiuintumMnn. ATLANTA. OA. I.IIKI-S WHtUE all flSE FAILS. Best Ct,ui:h byrup. Tal Guod. tJse iti nine. Mia pt nniiKtuts. Praise Is Good For any medicine yon hear about, but to be made well by iu use 11 mil better. My only regret ti that I did not take Hood's Sarsapa rilla earlier. I bare for many yean suffered with an irritable Itch ing all over my body and my left leg swelled and became so sore I had to give np work. Physicians prescribed for me for scrofula, but did not cure me. Hood's Sanaparilla gare me immediate relief, when I began to take it, and I am confident it bas driven all disease out of my blood and given me Hood's5 Cures a nerfert cur. In the future Htor 6arsaa rilla will be my onlv inedit-tne.' tt. O. IH'NN, '21 Lam won Court. Kauad City, Mo. i Hood's Pills cure Constipation. 2.c Do 5ot Be Deceived with Pat, Rnampls and Paints which stain the han-1. Injure thetnm and burn rtd. Th Rltn.t Sun SUT Polish ts Brilliant, Odor, less. Durable, and the consumer pavs fur no tin or Klaus package with every purchase. PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS. Vrm Hamilton Fish dead, onl, three members of the Grant Cabinet survive. They are George M. Kobe son of New Jersey, who was Secre tary of the Kavy; BeDjamin II. Bris tow of New York-, Secretary of the Treasury, and J. N. Tyner of Indi ana, who Oiled out Marshall Jewell's unexpired term as 1'ostmaster Gen eral. Robert Lot-is Stevensox is sa d to be the most laborious writer, lie rewrites his manuscript to uch an extent that at the end ot the day scarcely one of the original sentence! remains unchanged. Decisional y he spends three wee!s on a sins chapter, and then throws it aw.iy Some of his recent work s ems !i :iuve c-caped his vicilance iu this di rection. Ai.nERT S. Wilms our new min ister to Hawaii, hat hd no exjut i once in diplomacy, but Is said to pu--Ress the wisdom and di-c.ction nec eessary for his duties at Hon lu!a He is a Kentuckian by birth, breed ins and education, and was born in .ilieU.y County in I?4X He was ir onress four terms and cou'd havi been there now if he had not dediiK-i. .1 renoaiination. He is a lawyer i.. profession. Miss Euoexia dk FonnEST, an ac tress ot San Jose, Ca!., has received the sanction of the author. tie ol that city to wear trousers, and pio poses to obtain a lcjjal rlht to appe 1: in the same garb all over the cons try. UeiDK an unmarried lady, Mis do Forrest is, of course, doubtful o her rights. Thousands of marriec lades are wearinc the trousers, whether ttie constituted authorities like it or nut. The Marchioness of Waterford is a woman of action. It is related that lo-ikim: through the window of hoi house mi Charles street, London, the other d.iy, (.lie saw a cabman iil-usine his horse l.aisim; the window, she (-ominsitided the man to desist, and uion his refusal she gathered up her -kirts opened the fnnt door, and, letting c her aristocratic le!t. she blacked the fellow's eve and ttv-n had a po iceman take him into custody on the charge of cruelty to animals. The cabman hasn't recovered from his astonishment vet. Onk Dr. Mack'owan is said to have discovered that the Maui hoorian monkevs of China store up wine iu earthen vessels, the wine being of two kinds, pink and g.een. Fossi bly the doctor may lie right, yet there is room for the belief that lie has got things mixed. Gentlemen who art addicted to overindulgence iu wine not Infre iiiently hive visions of pink and green monkeys not to mention cardinal-red elephants and l'rusMan blue boa constrictors and the doctor probably confused his facts In mak ing up his statement He very likely means that he bas seen pink and green monkeys. Nearly every printer in the coun try has heard 'Dictionary'1 Drown, who died in Washington recently. He was a proofreader in the Govern raent printing ofllce and his knowl edge of English orthography was lit tle short of marvelous. It was use less to argue with him. Compositors would challenge his marking ol proofs and bring the dictionary to him to sustain their position. Mr Drown would take the dictionary and remark; "Well, well: that is a re markable error to creep into a dic tionary. We will correct it," and taking a pen he would note the propei spelling on the margin of the book, and then he handed the disputed proof hack to the compositor to co rect. He was always right, too, Orders From Korea's Kin The Korean Repository, a monthly magazine published at Korea, prints In its latest number some extracts from the Daily Official Gazette, which reports the doings of the court and Government. J lere are some extracts which will impress the Western reader as rather quaint: "Julys His ma jesty orders the remission of taxes to the shop people for two months and to the butchers for ten days, in mem ory of the late queen dowager's kind ness of heart. He orders that the royal body guard may put on rain coats, as may suit their convenience, in going to the grave of t he late queen dowager. July 7 His majesty orders that, as the weather is very hot, the royal guard shall be allowed to re move their iron helmets on the way back from the late queen dowager's fcrave. Shin Sun Tak and four other ofllcers of the court have returned to Seoul, after examining the grass of late queen dowager's grave. July !, ilhe office of Chong Won announces the presence of their excellencies, the ex-ministers and ministers, at the gate seeking audience. July 2", the Doard of Ceremony asks that an ofti cer of the third rank be sent to Yon San at the river to pray again for rain." Detailing an officer to pray fo rain is in advance of the Vu'tei1 States Government in the matter ol spending large sums of money to shoot the clouds on the Dyrenforth plan Lions; Way Off. - "Let me see," said Brown to J'ones, "isn't this Jones that we were just talking about a relative of youra?" "A distant relative, " said Jones. 'Very distant?" ' I should think so. TTo'o tha ni 1 ist of twelve children, and I'm the 'OUUgCSb. The better a woman knows men, -he less attractive she is to them, unless she Is able to conceal her knowledge. ' Doe and Words. There are many learned men who maintain that while dogs onen u.i derstand our meaning It Is not out words but our tones looks ana res (tares that thev comDrehend But almost every cntia woo iove a dog could bring some story to con tradict this theory. Here is a true story on the subject that will please all tony masters of bright doss: A traveler in rortugal purchased a native dog which soon became mucn attached to him. When spoken to in English, even accompanied by the most expressive looks and gestures the master could command, the doc seemed nuzzled, and he seldom found out what was recuired of him. -But when his master addressed him fri Portugue-e badly as his masts spoke it, the dog joyfully executed his wishes. After a time, by repeating the wo ds alternately in Portuguese and in English, the do; learned the lat ter as well as the former, and wouu otiey as readily, but the same com mand given in French reduced him to a state of despair again. Afterward the dog was carried to France. After residing there some time he became so familiar with the language that ne understood direc tions given to him though perhaps because he had grown older and a new language was harder to acquire he never responded quite so readily as to commands in Portuguese and English. Chicago Inter Ocean. VIIE. SATI RE Needs assistance it may be best to ren der it promptly, but one should remem ber to use even the most perfect reme dies onlv when needed. The best an' most simiie and gentle remedy is the Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the California rig hyrup Co. Poison ivy is considered less poison ous when the sun is shining on it. while at nipht or in the shadow it is estiecmlly dangerous. Sliartasje la Rabker Baota asi Shaea. Owing to the roicnt money stringency a'l the Rubber Shoe factories stopped work for several weeks, the only exception being; the Ciilcbrstcr Co., the demand for the Colcbestor Spading- Boot obliging 1 hem to ran cootinuoni ly. This general shut down wiu cause consi l erable scarcity of Rubbers this winter. The Colchester Spading Boot is already sold ahead an, is pronounced the best Rubber Boot in the martlet for all around wear. At Selma. Ala., there is an artesian well provide! with two tubes, one of which spouts pure cold water, the other warm water strongly impregnated with iron. IIjw's Tbia ! We offer One Hundred Ilollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hull's Caiarrii Cure. F. J. Chfxft Co.. Toledo. O. V, the umlei - V'i- Ii e Known F. J. Che-n-y for tb lar.1 15 ycar and believe him lr-ft-rtlv honorable in alt bninea transactions and liiianc-itUy aMu to carry out any obliga tion made by their firm. West & Tkuax. Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Walmxo. Kisva A Mahtiw, Wholesale ImiKKiMs. Toledo, Ohio. TJa Ts ( Hlarrh Cure is taken internally, act ing directly upon the bloiHl and niuoous sur faces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c. er bottle, bold by all Druggists. A petrified whale, 210 fi-et long, bus been discovered in Costa Kica in a rift lietween two mountain peaks some dis tance from San Jose, and 3000 feet above the level of the sea. My Daughter's Life Was saved by Hood's Sarsaparilta," says Mr. B. B. Jones of AIna. Mnine. "She bad seven run ning sores In different places on her body, but since giving her Hood's Saraaparilla she has be come well, strong snd healthy. " Simultaneous telephoning and tele graphing on the game wire has lieen successfully tested in Germany on a line Il'O miles long. Wa Care Raalare. No matter of how long standing. Write for free treatise, tent i mon aK etc, to S. J. Hollensworth A Co., Owegu, Tioga Ox. N. Y. Price Si; bj mail. SUa. In the northern hemisphere all storms revolve from right to left; in the southern iiemisplu-ie they revolve from left to rio,ht. l'0TALil IDK Krt 1893 ContaliiUiinir all the p.nt -r arranged al phabeticliy. in .state-t and Coiiii Ihs ith all other matters relating t... hu oilioi aff lirs e:tn be ordeied from B. Sai.inosk. Y. o. Box. HSi. i'tilladeluhia. !';. No business man should be without it. Trice sl'.iO paper coyer with monthly: facecloth cover with monthly. A scientist has discovered that wo men live longer than men lieeause they talk more. CmiiiiV liidiicy Cure Tor Dropsy, tlravel, Diabetes, Bright'a, Heart. Urinary of Liver Diseases, Ner vousness, Ac." Cure guaranteed. 831 Arch Mrect, rhilnd'a, SI a bottle, 6 for $.", or druggist. 10 JO certificates of cures. Try it A tiorcupine fish, havinir thorns in stead of scales, was caught a few days ago in St. Andrew s Bay, Florida. Mediocrity afuu.v copies luprrtorilu. Pob bin' Klectric S.wp, lint made in lv, lias been imitated more than any soap made. Ask vour griK-er for IhtJitix" Klectric Soap, all other Elec trics, Kk-ctricity, Magnetics, etc., ate imitations. New Ilium or Troy had a State bank in the Second Century, B. C. that bor rowed money for the State and paid ten per cent. If sffllcted with soreeyeause Dr. Isaac Thomp. sou's tye-waler. Druggists sell atiic. pet bottle. It is said that policemen in citizens' clothes are recognized by their el iocs In New York shaqiers. A wonderful stomnch corrector Beeeham". Pills. Beecbain's no others, a,", cents a box. A woman at Spring Hill, Mo., has just baked a loaf of bread from yeast thirty years old. BWMflP-BOOT CURED ME Of Kidney and Liver Complaint, Inflammation of the Bladder. Dr. Kilmer A Co.. riinghamton. X. T. Ceutlemen: "It affords me pleasure to give you a recommendation for Dr. Kilmer's SIVA JIP-Hoor, of whkh I have taken 3 smnu notties. It has nearly removed the ef fect of the RKEUMATISU ' r.f almtit 7 yearaetand iug. alo a severe weak ness of mv li.-li k . 1. 1 kidney a of about 10 ears' standing and W. R. CBILaoST. IK1.IT .;li ture me of in a short time. I purchased tho u-uii-iue 01 a. u. ftone, th Druggist be re in Butler, Ind." W. 1L Chilson. March, T. TO. At praggl.ta SO rents and $1.00 Size. Inralld.- Guld. to Health f Coailtaaoa frw! Dr. Kilmer Co.. - Binrrhamtnn V 0. Kllmsr a PARILLA LIVER PILLS An th. Bart. '...St -V ,i neiocu a severe wWiH&3tP ikflammahoii Wa&&&- Of the bladder, which - I an aura ittinp. ST. JACOBS Oil. unburn at ism Jjtf CURE?. NEURALGIA SPRAINS, BRUI5ts, THE PREACHER COULD RIDE. And He Surprld th. Boys Kanch. The presence on the streets ol Anaconda lately of a revivalist, whe was styled the -Cowboy 1 reac her reminds me of a incident that oo curredin 'ew Mexico in 11. In which a "cowboy preacher- played a prominent part. . One evening the boys on the Bell ranch, on comin? in at night .were aareeablv surprised to learn tnat a preacher was stopping at the ranch house and would probably remain foi several days, as the river was ver; hhjh and he could not continue his journey. , . The oreacher's rljr was in the corral and consisted of a dilapidated buck board and a lean, lank-looking horse. At supper the preacher told the cow boys that he was a traveling mission ary, and devoted his time to preach ing the Gospel to cattlemen and cow Iwys, and was then making a tour ol the lamfe. The next morning the cowboys were busy makiiiK preparations for the round-up. The corral was tilled with broncos, and the boys were busy sad dling up. The preacher watched the operation with apparent satisfaction, .Mid it appeared to be a novel sight U him: a many of the broncos had been 1 mining free on the range for several months and were so wild aud spirited that they had to be roped and held whi.e being saddled. The range foreman asVed the nreacher "if he could ride," and re marked that "ir he coti d a gentle horse would lie furnished and he could goaloug with the outllt and see rattle rounded up, roped, and branded." The preacher modestly replied that "he could ride some," and ' thought that he could ride any of the ponies in the corral." This reply rather vexed the range foreman, who knew that the corral contained some of the worst bucking broncos on the range, so he concluded that he would put up a job on the preacher, and test his riding abilities. He ordered one of the cowboys "to saddle Pinta for the preacher." "Pinta was a demure-looking bronco, and appeared to have no spirit .it all. But the moment a rider was in the saddle she became a holj terror, and would buck and prance iround until she had thrown het rider. So the cowboys wete expect ing to see the preacher thrown almost is soon as he was mounted. I'lnta was brought out, saddled and bridled, and the preacher vaulted .nto the saddle. Pinta began tc luck, but, contrary to expectations the preacher was not thrown. He remained firmly seated in the saddle tnd seemed as composed as if he wa-i m the pulpit. ' I'lnta was surprised, too, as she generally threw her rider inside of ten seconds. She began oucking again and while she was do ng her best the preach'-r coolly put 'ns hand in his vest pocket, drew out 1 cigarette, lit it, and, turning in th" addle to the astonished cowboys, said: "Boys, I thought you had some jplrlted broncos on this ranee. You don't call this low-spirited old pony a bucker, do you?" The range foreman was so surprised at this uulooked-tor display of horse manship that he exclaimed: "I don't know how good a preacher you are, but you are a d d good rider. There ain't two men on the range that can ride Pinta. Where did you learn to ride?" "O," said the preacher, "I was a bronco buster and ran ire rider on the Halo Verde ranch in the Panhandle for six years. For the last three years I have been a minister of the gospel. 1 am out. of practice riding now, dul 1 tnink within a few days' practice I could ride as well as the average cowboy. Svime of my friends call me the 'Cowboy Preacher of Texas. ' " The preacher went with the outfit. and in the next few days proved that he was at home on the ranee as well as In the pulpit, and coult. ride, rope, or brand better than any of them. After coming baek rrom the round-up the preacher cot out his horse and buckboard and continued on his missionary journey, bearing the srood win ana admiration of evervliodv on the range. It was the universal opiouion of the cowboys on the Bell ranch that, while the church had probably gained an efllcient preacher. the range certainly had lost the best "bronco buster" that ever threw his leg over a saddle. Anaconda Standard. Oddities of a British I'ostuOlce. The severer duties of th mstniUM arc lightened from time to time by sunury --curious inciaents, of which a iew are recoraea in the annual re port. In the present instance we are told of a letter found at Dumbarton addressed to "The manager of the public house with Walker's sign" at Wolverhaiubton. Snmp mill mni.. lars were added, which probably fur- uisueu tue requisite clew, the result hein? that the missive reached the person for whom it was intended. In another case a liostnl 'nelosed to a provincial postmaster to ueinereu 10 tne wnter's"nephew." The individual was to lie ii!entinn,i by the possession of a cork leg and "a bright projecting set of teeth," The description sufficed, though the nephew" had to be found among a population of more than seventy thousand. The "usual eccentricities" have also presented themselves. Among these was a parcel contain iliove five hundred leeches from abroad. Other cons'iKnments included live snakes. frogs, tame rats and a live locust from the caie. A cardboard box containing a kitten with a feed ing bottie was sent by parcel post and was dulv shot from the mail-bag ap paratus near Penrith into the express train. The kitten suffered frjin the sho.-k but recovered in a couple of dart More prosaic but n i less lnterestina was t had isco very i two 100 Bank of England notes in a letter having no address and affording no clew to the Individual who posted it. As might be expected, the sender proved to be a lady and in her gratitude for the safe return of her property, she presented 20 as a contribution to the Rowland Hill benevolent fund London Exchange. Belter Work Wissly Than Work Hard." Greal Efforts are Unnecessary in House Cleaning if you Use SAPOL PAIN. SCIATICA, ' LUMBAGO, .f-iifirl I IWfC Diinn.ex afc--"', Outside Window Itiiml, Among the housi'ho'.d conventr-a, ces left over to this generation out side window blinds are among th chief and worst. Their 1 rincip;ll Jeits seem to be to get out of ord hang on one hinge, collect dirt. sUtn violently and noisily and corn rjtte in every possible way to the dilap-. dated appearance of a dwelling. T shut or open them one nnit ri-k div location of the neck, an 1 if thorax on a dressing room window thpy ar apt to blow open at critical moments in the process of the toiler. Still th-,-exist and the aim of every woman who ha9 them should be to render thc-m as unobjectionable as possible. In the tlrst place, all their s'.a-s must be carefully attended to am never let drop or P.v loosely, o,,,.,. every week they must be thorough- I brushed, otherwise the aeruumij,,;, of dust upon them combines with oc casional showers to How in rivulets of mud down the front or' the dwelling. At least once a year they should C; taken oil their hinges and washed. The wise woman will Mke them off one at a time or else mark in some un mistakable way which blind leloi.s to which side of the window, other wise irreat will be the confi; on and. if they are hung by a man, the pri. fanity attending their adjustment. The proper materials for washmu one of these cumbersome oh'ecN are a tub, warm, soapy water and a wiU' broom. After the dust and ae.-utim-lationsof the season have been washed off rinse the blinds in water in vihieh. ammonia has been diluted in the pIr. portion of a tablespoonful to a g-illon. They should be allowed to get thor oughly dry before l eing reining in the sun.otherwise they are liable to cr.u k. Then when they are restored to th-ir windows, as fresh and clean as nn-.-ii trees after a shower, one is inclirn-i to overlook their objectionable fjua'a ties and take unqua'itlcd eny.aeiit in their neat appearance. Call "o Mn F.n l. Never call a novice a fool because his work is not up to your standard of excellence, for prnbab'y I ad he your experience he might be abeto give you points about your work that would cause you to justly con. ider yourself the fool. And t ear in mind it is not always the s:n an bright fellow who really takes h i d of a thing that excels in a pur-uit. hut that it Is almost invariably so of thi plodding, unlluttering, thoughtful 11a n. MHE GREAT1 lllff AV'.'PI l.jf! A a iuwi a at f, ;i CURE, jl Whooping Ccu-'n anj Asthma. I' -r (.;.; Hon it has no rival ; h.is cured th uifIs w N-re all others failed : will cure yu i! tak- r. in t:;r.e. Sold by r'nicci-sts n a cruani-'tte. Y r I.a:.:c Back or Chest, u vS i ir.o FYs i'L ASTEK. -cts. OHILOHX CATARRH llRve yiiu Ctiiari ii V This remedy 1 (nursi-tec-J ts) cure you. i'rictioULUi. injector lrw. MEND YOUR " OWN HARNESS 1VIT1I ss SLOTTED CLINCH RIVETS. No too'f rinirl. On!? a hammar neled to drl n.ic inn trita easily and quica.y, ivv.tix U.e cin vti TisolaUlj smooth. H.-qmrli:g 110 bo to tt m't -n th leather nor turr tr Ui Rivets, li.gr are alrouc toaicll snd darsblr. Mu.ioni n w 1:1 lac- 44 isn'Un, nnifnrm r assorted, p'Jt no In iKixe-. AmU roar denier fur litem, or wnl la U.iura for a hui oi iuu, aajortea ixea. ll-iii'i-l JUDS0N L. THOMSON MFG. CO., WlLTllAfl, MAN". WATERPROOF COAT SaiTi? In the World! J- TOWFR. EOSTON. MASS. AN IDEAL FAMILY MEDICINE! Ifor lutiig-esjtitin. It mot. :. llradii. he. 1 Mt1pat Hud CoaipU'ilfiii, 4ttYplt e Ureal b. f and oil disorder vt Uie bUtuatiil I . R1PANS TARTILPft faf R.miy y-i prutupur. I'erfeyt L UHjvstfciii foiiown their Use. 8o:d' E l a ru tori -tt or iwnt l.vnujl. Iinx I (8 vials i, I sv-kar- , boxes), . f mAh in- jvimmvs Rii:n--i L . -''' A 1 L" L" ' ATi"-. New York. MJIT.rV'Sl HAICKltl I1RKR.- Sar.a for boos on "Mrhnnlr.l Trrm. St u t-it , i.-. , . nieiil ol It iiptfirc l.B.SEELEt dc CO., 23 S. 1 Ilk t.t.. fhii..i. BIRD FANCIERSVL"0"": r4 illaiti-fttioDs. Ad about Cae Bird. thir f-W.'dn o snd tratnQt. IA eta. bT mail. f-sa f,r a rncc Bin BI RU rOOI) CO.. K. ) N. Thir.1 SC. I'h.i.d. , hn BIRD MANN ARISING. 6eai bj mad fr 1J otnts. IS. M at., lbiudIf tua tm. FOR FIFTY YEARS ! MRS. WIMt;i owe SOOTHING SYRUP i v I,-v u",'lr"1 wh'l' I'-:l.mjj f .r ovr m,y.V,, '" l!-el,;i,l fofirnsthe S niSl?-V l,1l"'n. cures wind oollc, aud IWCDlr-bTfl for,,. II.J. !f ny one doubts tiia fcj we e?.n cure the ui ot t t R st in aie in - to 6 BLOOD PCISCHp: J da vs. f h;m wr te for A SPECIALTY. ii P'U' nl inve-u- P jsmf 1 11 " "' ! LaoUnir Is '' 01 Whrn int-rc-nrr. iodide jWmuinm. srap.ri:ior H..I .Pnrinir fail, uir.nt- cur .l r Ha -n, t JPh,le,, . i. the on j tlil-i-r lht w.llcuro .-rrnru-mly. r .iuvo r.f an o-alrd. fiv. cook 111LJ1IU.X Co.. CUlo-uo, IU. 41 arte tow ii. Slii. 0.n.ul-il,"..o."'!rV1-',;,'r'1--' MMUUSOU. bod fa. r T J '0'"".1M"'I P1"1":- VUN,, bn. 'i A.M. lo 1 r.M. ni IKIOIJi1 Washington. I." rL?iJ.frS?st'i,V Prosecutes Claims Lt. Principal Examiner U S. Penmon Bur-.u. 'jmnlast war, UadjudlcaUugclium., sujsiuta. 1J IlilllllNfl . ' V - i - r . I
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers