DE. TALLAGES SERMON. (UNDAY'S DISCOURSE BYTHE NOTED DIVINE. lubject: "Enemies Overthrown"—ln the Church of God and in All Styles ol lteformatory Work What 1* Needed Most Is a Battle Cry. TKTT: "Let Ood arise, let His enemies ie scattered."—Psalms lxvlii., 1. A procession was formed to carry the vrk, or sacred box, which, though only three feet nine inches in height and depth, Iras the symbol of Ood's presence. As the 'eaders of the procession lifed this orna mented and brilliant box by two golden |>oles run through four golden rings, and jtarted for Mount Zion, all the people *hanted the battle hymn of my text, "Let Sod arli'.e, let His enemies be scattered." The Cameronlans of Scotland, outraged by James 1., who forced upon them relig ious forms that were offensive, and by the lerrible persecution of Drummond, Daiziel 4nd Turner, and by the oppressive laws of Charles I.and Charles 11., were driven to proclaim war against tyrants, and went forth to fight for religious liberty; and the mountain heather became red with car nage, and nt Doth well Brldgo and Aird's Moss and Drumclog the battle hymn and the battle shout of those glorious old Scotchmen was the text I have chosen: ''Let Ood arise, let His enemies be scat tered." What a whirlwind of power was Oliver Cromwell, and how with his soldiers, named the "Ironsides," he went from vic tory to victoryl Opposing enemies melted us he looked at them, lie dismissed Parlia ment as easily as a schoolmaster a school. He pointed his finger at Berkeley Castle, ana it was taken. He ordered Sir Ralph Hopton, the general, to dismount, and he dismounted. See Cromwell marching on With his army, and hear the battle-cry of "Ironsides," loud as a storm and solemn as a death-knell, standards reeling before it, and cavalry horses going back on their haunches, und armies flyiug at Marston Moor, at Winceby Field, at Naseby, at Brldgowttter and Dartmouth—"Let God arise, let His enemies be scattered!" So you see my toxt is not like a compli mentary and tasselled sword that you sometimes see hung up in a parlor, a sword that wa? never in battle, and only to be used on general training day, but more like some weapon carefully hung up in your home, telling its story of battles, lor my text hangs in the Scripture armory, telling of the holy wnrs of three thousand years iu which it has been carried, but still as keen and mighty us when David first unsheathed it. It seems to me that in the Church of God, and in all styles of re formatory work, what wo most need is now a battle-cry. We raise our little stan dard, and put on it the name of some man who only a few years ago began to live und in a few years will cease to live. We go into conquest against the armies of iniquity, depending too much on human agencies. We use for a battlo-cry the nnme of some brave Christian reformer, but after awhile that reformer dies, or gets old, or loses his courage, and then we take an other battle-cry, and this time perhaps wo put the name of someone who betrays the cause and sells out to the euemy. What we want for a battlo-cry is the name of eome leader who will never betray us, and will never surrender, aud will never die. All respeot have I for brave men and women, but if we are to get the victory all along the line we must take the hint of the Gideonites, who wiped out the Bedouin Arabs, commonly called Midianites. These Gideonites had a glorious leader in Gideon, but what was the battle-cry with which they flung their enemies into the worst de feat into which any army was ever tumbled? It wus "The sword of the Lord and of Gideon." Put God first, whoever you put second. If the ariny of the American revo lution is to free America, it must bo "The •word of the Lord and of Washington." If the Germans want to win the day at Sedan, it must be "The sword of the Lord and Von Moltke." Waterloo was won for the English, because not only tho armed men nt the front, but the worshipers in the cathedrals at the rear, were crying "The eword of the Lord and of Wellington." The Methodists have gono in triumph across nation after nation with the cry, "Tho sword of the Lord and of Wesley." The Presbyterians have gono from victory to victory with the cry, "The sword of the Lord and of John Knox." The Baptists have conquered millions after millions for Christ with the cry, "The sword of the Lord and of Judson." The American Episcopalians have won their mighty way with the cry, "The sword of the Lord and of Bishop M'llvaine." The victory is to those who put Ood first. But as we want a battle-cry suited to all sects of religion ists, and to all lands I nominate as the battle-cry of Christendom in the approach ing Armageddon the words of my text, sounded before the ark as it was carried to Mount Zion: "Let God arise, let His enemies be scattered." As far as our Unite mind can judge, it seems about time for God to rise. Does it not seem to you that the abominations of this earth have gone far enough? Was there ever a time when sin was so dellant? Was there ever before so many flsta lifted toward God telling Him to come on if He dare? Look at tho blasphemy abroad! What towering profanity! Would It be possible for anyone to calculate the num bers of times that the name of the Almighty God and of Jesus Christ are every day taken irreverently on the lips? Profane swearing is as much forbidden by the law as theft, or arson, or murder, yet who executes it? Profanity is worse than theft, or arson, or murder, for these crimes are attacks on humanity—that is an attack on God. This country is pre-eminent for blas phemy. A man traveling in Kussla was sup posed to be a clergyman. "Why do'you take me to be a clergyman?" said the man. "Oh," said the Russian, "all other Americans swear." The crime is multiplying in Inten sity. God very often shows what He thinks of it, but for the most part the fatality is husliad up. Among the Adirondacks I met the funeral procession of a man who two days before had fallen under a flash of lightning, whilo boasting, after a Sunday of work in the fields, that he had cheated God out of one day anyhow, and the man who worked with him on the same Sabbath Is still living, but a helpless Invalid, under the same flash. Years ago, in a Pittsburg prison, two men were talking about the Bible nnd Christi anity, and one of them, Thompson by name, applied to Jesus Christ a very low and vil lainous epithet, and, as he was uttering It, he fell. A physian was called, but no help could be given. After a day lying with distended pupils and palsied tongue, he passed out of this world. In a cemetery in Sullivanl County In New York State are eight headstones in a line and all alike, and these are the facts: In 1861 diphtheria ragod in the village and a physician was remark ably successful iu curing his patients. So confident did he become that he boasted that no case of diphtheria could stand be fore him, and Anally defied Almighty God to produce a case of diphtheria ftthat he could not cure. His youngest child soon after took the disease and died, and one child after another, until all the eight had died of diphtheria. The blasDhemer chal lenged Almighty Gad, and God accepted the challenge. Do not think that because God has boen silent in your case, O pro fane swearer! that He is dead. Is there nothing now in the peculiar leelingof your tongue, or nothlngin the numbness of your brain, thut.indtcutes that,Ood|may come to avenge your blasphemies, or is already avenging thom? But these cases X have noticed. I believe, are only a few case.s where there are hundreds. Families keep them quiet to|avoid tho horrible Fhysiciuns suppress them through profes sional confidence. It is a very, veiy long roll that contains the names of those who iled with blaapheralef on their lips. Still the crime rolls on, up through par- Lan, up through ehandqllers with lights all ablaze, and through pictured corridor* of club-rooms, out through busy exchanges, where oath meets oath, and down through all the haunts of sin, mingling with the rattling dice and eraokllng billiard-balls, and the laughter of her who hath forgotten the covenant of her God; and round the city, and round the continent, and round the earth a seething, boiling surge flings its hot spray Into the face of a long-suffer ing God. And the ship-captain curses his crew, and the master-builder his men, and the hack-driver his horse; and the traveler the stone that braises his foot, or the mud that soils his shoes, or the defective time piece tnat gets him too late to the rail train. I arraign profane swearing and blasphemy, two names for the same thing, as being one of the gigantic crimes of this land, and for its extirpation it does seem as If It were about time for God to arise. Then look for a moment at the evil of drunkenness. Whether you live In Wash ington, or New York, or Chicago, or Cin cinnati, or Savannah, or Boston, or in any of the cities of this land, count up the sa loons on that street as compared with the saloons Ave years ago, and see they are growing far out of proportion to the In crease of the population. You people who are so precise and particular lest there should be some Imprudence and rashness in attacking the rum traffic will have your son some night pitched into your front door dead drunk, or your daughter will come home with her children because her husband has, by strong drink, been turned into a demoniac. The drink has despoiled whole streets of good homos in all our cities. Fath«rs, brothers, sons on the funeral pyre of strong drlnkl Fasten tighter the victims! Stir up the flames! Pile on the corpses! More men, women and children for the sacrifice! Let us have whole generations on Ore of evil habit, and at the sound of the cornet, flute, harp,sack but, psaltery, and dulcimer let all the peo ple fall down and worship King Aloohol, or you shall be cast into the fiery furnace un der some political platform! I Indict this evil as the regicide, the fratricide, the patricide, the matricide, the uxoricide of the century. Yet under what Innocent and delusive and mirthful names alcoholism deceives the people! It is a "cordial." It is "bitters." It is au "eye opener." It is an "appetizer." It is a "digester." It Is an "invigorator." It is a "settler." It is a "night-cap." Why don't they put on the right labels—"Es sence of Perdition," "Conscience Btupe fler," "Five Drachms of Heart-ache," "Tears of Orphanage," "Blood of Souls," "Scabs of an Eternal Leprosy," "Venom of the Worm that Never Dies?" Only once in a while Is there anything In tbr> title of liq uors to even hint their atrocity, as in the case of "sour mash." That I see adver tised all over. It Is an honest name, and anyone can understand it. "Sour mash!" That lu, it makes a man's disposition sour, and his associations sour and his prospects sour; and then it Is good to mash his body, and mash his soul, and mash his business, and mash his family. "Sour mash!" One honest name at last for an intoxicant! But through lying labels of many of the apothecaries' shops, good people, who aro only a little under tone in health, and wanting some lnvlgoratlon, have unwit tingly got on their tongue the fangs of this cobra, that stings to death so large a ratio of the human race. Others are ruined by tho common and all-destruotive habit of treating customers. And it Is a treat on their coming to town, and a treat while the bargaining progresses, and a treat when the purchase is made, and a treat as he leaves town. Others, to drown their troubles, submerge themselves with this worse trouble. Oh, the world is battered and bruised and blasted with this growing evil! It Is more and more en trenched and fortified. They have millions of dollars subscribed to marshal and ad vance tho alcoholic forces. They nominate, and elect, and govern the vast majority of the officeholders of this country. On their side they have enltsted the mightiest political power of the centuries. And be hind them stand all the myrmidons of the nether world, Satanic, Apollyonio and Diabolie. It Is beyond all human effort to overthrow this Bastlle of decanters or capture this Gibraltar of rum jugs. And while I approve of all human agencies of reform, I would utterly despair if we had nothing else. But what cheers me Is that our best troops are yet to come. Our chief artillery Is in reserve. Our greatest com mander has not yet fully taken tho field. If all Hell is on their side, all Heaven is on our side. Now "Let God arise, and let His enemies be scattered." Then look at the impurities of these great-cities. Ever and anon there are In the newspapers explosions of social Ufa that make the story of Sodom quite re spectable; "for such things," Christ says, "were more tolerable for Sodom and Go morrah" than for the Chorazlns and Beth'- saidas of greater light. It is no unusual thing in our cities to see men In high po sitions with two or three families, or re fined ladies willing solemnly to marry tho very swine of society, If they be wealthy. The Bible all aflame with denunciation against an impure life, but many of the American ministry uttering not one point blank word against this iniquity lest some old libertine throw up his church pew. Machinery organized In all the cities of the United States and Canada by which to put yearly in the grinding-mlll of this Iniquity thousands of the unsuspecting of the country farm-houses, one procuress con fessing In the court that she had supplied the infernal market with one hundred and fifty victims In six months. Ohl for five hundred newspapers in America to swing open the door of this lazar-house of social corruption! Exposure must come before extirpation. While the city van carries the scum of this sin from the prison to the police court morning by morning, it Is full time, if we do not want high American life to become like that of the court of Louis XV., to put millionaire Lotharios and tho Pompadours of your brown-stone palaces into a van of popular indignation, and drivethem out of respectable associations. What prospect of social purification can there bo, as long ns at summer watering places It is usual to see a young woman of excellent rearing stand and simper and glgglo and roll up her eyes sideways before one of those first class satyrs of rashlonablo life, and on the ballroom floor join him in the dance, the maternal chaperon meanwhile beaming from the window on the scene? Matches are made In Heaven, they say. Not such matches; for the brimstone indicates the opposite region. Ihe evil is overshadowing all our cities. By some these Immoralties aro oalled pec cadilloes, gallantries, eocentrlcitles, and are relegated to the realms of jocularity, and I few. efforts are being made against them. God bIeES the "White Cross" move ment, as it Is called—au organization mak ing a mighty assault on this evil! God for ward the tract societies of the landl God help the parents In the great work they are doing, In trying to start their children with pure principles! God help all legislators in tholr attempt to prohibit this crime! But is this all? Then It Is only a question of time when the last vestigo of purity and home will vanish out of sight. Human nrms, human pens, human voices, human talents are not sufficient. I begin to look up. I listen for artillery rumbling down the sapphire boulevards of Heaven. 1 watch to seo if in the morning light there bo not the flash of descending solmitars. Oh, for Godl Does It not seem time for His appearance? Is It not time tor all lands to cry out: "Let God arise, and let His en emies be scattered?" Largest Steel Bull on tho Mississippi. The largest steel hull ever floated on the Mississippi was launched at the shipyard o»' the lowa Iron Works at Dubuque, lowa. The Uoat is 303 feet long, fifty-six feet beam and eighty-seven feet over all. She oovers a spaci of 28,000 square feet, or about five eighths of an acre. She was built for the Texas & Pacific Rr ilway Company, and will be used at New Orleans in transferring cars. A TEMPERANCE COLUMN. r HE DRINK EVIL MADE MANIFEST IN MANY WAYS, The Coin Inc Temperance Men—TUe Hll *1 - ness Man 1« Waging a Fierce Cam paign Against the ltuni Evil—Won't; Hire Those Who Drink. (A Recitation for a Boy.) We are coming to tUo rescue— We ure young and brave and strong— And we're ready for the conflict Botweeu the right and wrong. Our nerves ure strong and steady, Our pulses full and true, For we hate the vile tobacco, And beer and cider too. They tell us we are children We're glad to know the fact, For In the coming future We'll learn to think and act. They tell us we are feeble, But God we do not doubt. Lo, In His name for all that's pure We'll raise a mighty shout. We hope to grow to manhood,'l And mingle in the strife, And with loyal, steadfast purpose, Join the noble ranks of life. We'll work a few more summers As Temperance Boys; and then We'll stand nmong our elders, The Loyal Temperance Men. Yes, we're coming to the rescue, A host of loyal men, To light the foes of temperance. With the vote or with the pen. And we'll shout for right and justico, 'Till the people understand, This blasting, deadly Upas Shall cease to spoil our land. —Vermont Home Guards. The Spread of Sobriety. While the prohibitionists are busy in de fending such statutory coercion as they have been able to bring to bear upon theli fellow citizens, and in demanding furthei enactments of the same kind from usually obdurate legislatures, the cause of temper ance, says the New York Times, is making but almost unnoticed advances along en tirely different lines. It is the business man that is-waging against "rum" tho roal campaign, not fierce, not noisy, not emo tional, but determined. The business man iloes not waste much lime In denouncing intoxicants, and none in threatening those who Indulge in them with prison; he simply jays, "If you drink you can not work for 'ne." This ultimatum has now been formu lated by most of the railways, other cor porations are repeating it one after another, and private employers, commercial and professional, aro fast joining in enforce ment of this great boycott against drunk ards. The effects of tne movement are to be seen in every line of industry. Now. whatever may bo said about other" sorts of prohibition, this sort certainly does pro hibit. And it is worth noting that the New York and Queens County Electric Railroad has just forbidden Its motorinen sven to live in buildings whore liquor is *old. This noes far beyond any compulsion aver attempted by the laws of Maine or lowa, and vet it excites no complaints that sven the greatest sticklers for "personal liberty" would think of heeding. Sale of Beer at Immigrant Stations. It is encouraging to read the report of the Government committee appointed to consider the advisability of doini; away with the sale of beer at Immigrant stations. The committee is emphatic in favor of abolition. Testimony is quoted to the ef fect that it is a common sight for young Immigrants to be very much the worse for liquor on the afternoon of tho morning on which the.v landed, though they had not been out of the immigrant station. The parties having tho monopoly of the sale of provisions at the Barge Office, New York City, it is said, in spite of the promises which they have mado again and again, are selling no tea, coffee or milk, though women and children are kept thero for hours. The sale of beer is the profitable traffic, and nothing but beer is to be hud. Every prominent official at the New York Harge Office agrees that "It would be far better" if this sale were stopped. I)r. Ben ner, the Chief Commissioner, ajGermuu and uot a total abstainer, declares that all tho trouble he had with his employes there arises from liquor. Mr. McSweeny, the Assistant Commissioner, says that If he had his way, not a drop more would bo jold. The testimony of the missionaries at work there is of course strongly on the tana side.—Christian Work. How Liquor Curses Childhood. "In the winter of 1871, at the request of •he late Earl of Shaftosburv, I carefully in vestigated my lists of rescued children. I '.nbulutod in various columns the various :raceable causes, near or more remote, which led to their becoming candidates for '.he homes, and the astonishing fact smerged that no less than elghty-flve per sent, of tho children who were admitted ■o the homes under my care owed their so jlal ruin to the drinking habits of theli parents, or grandparents, or other rela tives. .. .1 would not now hesitate to af llrm that of all my young clients, the per ;entage who are stricken down in life :hrough the agency of the drink curse Is aenrer the very large figures given by the late Dr. Guthrie than the estimate I formed !nIB7I. Dr. Guthrie stated repeatedly that no fewer than ninety-nine per cent, of the children admitted to Ills ragged schools were the offspring of parents whose pov srtvwasdue to their drinking habits."— Dr. Bernardo, the founder of homes for homeless children, as quoted by the Al liance News, Manchester, England. Alcohol and the Death Rate. An official inquiry into the comparatively larger increase in the Tartar population of the city and government of Kazan has. ac cording to the Kamsko Volshkl Krai, orought out somo remarkable facts as to the effect of alcoholic indulgence on tho death rate. The Kazan Tartars, number ing about 040,000. haven ra|e of mortality of only 21 in 1000, while tho mortality among the Russians Is 40 In 1000. The general conditions among orthodox Rus sians and Mohammedan Tartars are prac tically tho same, except in so far as per sonal habits nre concerned. The medical investigation leaves no room for doubt that the lesser mortality of the Mohammedan Tartars is directly due to their abstinence from spirituous liquors, in which the Rus sians indulge freoiy.—Medical Itocord. Wine's Awful Work at. Santiago. One of tho marines of the Detroit says In the Now York Voice: "We at Santiago bud no sickness on our ship. It was ter rible among the soldiers. Those boys got any quantity of wine from the Spanish prisoners after the surrender, and that did the work in starting the disease and finally made tho camp a pest-hole for drinkers and non-drinkers." Notes of the Crusade Against Itum. Strong drink is not strong to uplift; It is powerful only to degrade. Dr. Norman Kerr, an authority on in ebriety, states that female drunkenness Is increasing, und that out of 3000 cases he found heredity was the cause In half that number. Drunkenness is so common that we seem to be Indifferent to it, and yet it is a most grievous sin, and one that weakens the conscience and the well, so that other sins find easy access. La Nueva Era, established at Ponce, Porto Rico, two days after the occupation of that city by United States troops, in one of its early numbers contained this para graph: To the Boys: "Keop away from fruit of every description and rum, if you wish to keep your health in this climate." I . lightning on the Vithlnitan Monument One of the best evidences of th« »alue of lightning rods up to date ha. : been afforded by the Washington Monument. It is capped by a small four-side pyramid of aluminum, which metal, so cheap to-day, was verj costly at the time of the building ol the greatest pyramid the world hat ever known. This aluminum tip is connected with the ground by foui copper rods which go down deep intc the earth. On April 5, 1885, five im mense bolts of electricity were seen tc Hash between the monument and « thundercloud overhanging in the sourse of twenty minues. In othei ivords the monument was struck fiercely five times, but it suffered nc damage whatever. On June 15 of th« same year a more tremendous ass&ult was made upon the monument from the heavens, and the result was a fracture of one of the topmost stones. The crack still remains to show what nature can do in the way of an elec trical shock, but the slightness of the damage is evidence of man's power tc protect himself from such attacks. The obelisk is ideally located for at traeting electrical assaults from the skies, and yet, while many times hit, it has suffered only once, and thai time to a trilling extent. —Boston Transcript. Put to H Test. A curious experiment has recently been tried in Berlin, Germany, to dis cover how much work the military shoemaker could do in case of war. A kind of general rehearsal was held, in which 1200 shoemakers were bidden, and they were installed in the work shops of the First Artillery Regiment. The trial lasted for a mouth, without a moment off. The shoemakers were divided into two bodies, one for day work and the other for night work. They had in attendance forty workmen ready to repair the machines in cast of any temporary breakdown. During the four weeks the 1200 shoemakers produced, by working day and nighl the respectable total of 2500 pairs ol a day.—London Sketch. In Gormany one man in 213 goes tc college; in Scotland, one in 520; iu the United States, one in two thou sand, and in England, one in liv« thousand. A Soulier's Kimpe. From the Demonrat-Mt sscigr, Ml. Sterling, When Richmond had fallen anil the great commanders had met beneath the historic apple tree at Appomattox, the 83IJ Pennsylvania Volunteers, premature!) r:iged, clad In tat ters and rags, brok en in body but ol dauntless spirit, .-wung into line foi the last "grand re view" and ther quietly marched away to begin life's fray anew amid the hills and valleys ol the Keystone State Among the number Asa Kobinsou came back to the old home in Jit. Ster ling, 111., back tc the llreside that he had left at the call to arms four years previous. He went ti o - « , away a happy, ' Boulter s Return, healthy farmer boy in the flrst flush of Timorous manhood; he name back a ghost of the self that an swered to President Lincoln's call for "300,000 more." To-day ho is an alert, active man and tells the story of his recovery as follows: "I was a great sufferer from seiatia rheumatism almost from tho time of my discharge from the army. Most of the time J was unfitted for manual labor ol any kind, and my sufferings were at all times Intense. At times I was bent al most double, ami got around only with tho greatest difficulty. Nothing seemed to give me permanent relief until three years ago, when my attention was called to some of the wonderful cures effected by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Tale Peo ple. I had not taken more than half a box when I noticed an improvement in mj condition, and X kept on improving stead ily. I took throe boxes of the pills, and at the end of that time was in better con dition than at any time since the close ol my army service. Since then I have never been bothered with rheumatism, Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People Is the only remedy that ever did me any good, and totbem I owe my restoration tc comparative health. They are a grand remedy." The famous rich man of ancient time " CriKsus, is calculated to have possesses about $20,000,000. • Protect Your Ideas by I.etters Patent. The tlrm of Vowles & Burns, Patent Attor neys, No. 237 Broadway, N. Y., whose adver tisement will appear in our next issue, pro cure patents either on cash or easy Install ments. Write for terms, .sales negotiated. Chinese women have now, it is said, taken to bicycling. Educate Tour Bowels With Caacarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever ioc, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. Steamboats are displacing gondolas in Venice, Italy. Cyclists, Take Notice, That Hoxsie's Disks cure drv and parched throat, hoarseness and tickling cough caused by wind aud dust. 2 r > cents. "The Pilgrim's Progress'' lias been trans lated into 203 languages and dialects. To Cure A Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Brouio Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 26c. Physicians' carriages have the right ol way in the streets of Berlin, Oermany. No-10-Bsc for Fifty Cent*. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 60c, 11. All druggists The cheapest rate of postage in Europ* Is that of France. I cannot speak too highly of Plso's Cure foi Consumption.-Mrs. FRANK Jlohbx, 215 W. 220 St., New York, Oct. 29.1894. Tho average life of a ship is about twen ty-six years. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c.a bottle. A ton of steel will make 10,000 gross ol pens. To Cor* Constipation Forever. . Tske Cascarets Candy Cathartic. lOe or (So If Us C. O. fail to core, druggists refund money In all Spanish-America the Indians form the great mass of the population. Third-class railway fares in India we less than half a cent a mile. ' J * J The many uses to which Ivory Soap is applicable, $ * make it an economical as well as a valuable soap. Spots i « on clothing are quickly and easily removed by an appli- * * cation of the foamy lather of Ivory Soap with a dampened J * cloth and a brisk rubbing. Ivory Soap cuts the grease * and leaves the surface rubbed perfectly clean. Be sure £ % you use Ivory Soap, or the remedy may be worse than * « the grease spot. J * IVORY SOAP IS 99 4K Ctfyrtjkt, lIM. Vy Th. PTMWV a OiaVU 0* , Ciatlmaa*. RHEUMATISM NEW ORLEANS, April 10, 1897. OR. RADWAY A CO.: I lmve been a sufferer from Rheumatism 'or more than six mouths. I could not : raise my hands to my head or put my hands ; behind mo, or even take off my own shirt. 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Miss Jessie J » fL Oner's Experience. r"\_ jQI ®F ure ' These are equipments that Jy* ✓\"> ' 6,1 widen the sphere of woman's useful f i V t I ness. llow can a woman have grace |j v, * I °' movement when she is suffering / I s^c ' 3 nervous and racked with pain ? \ Young women, think of your future and provide against ill health. Mothers, think of your growing daughter, and prevent in her as well as in yourself irregularity or suspension of nature's duties. VB If puzzled, don't trust your own judgment. Mrs. ■ Pinlcham will charge you nothing for her advice; write to her at Lynn, Mass., and she will tell you how to make yourself healthy and strong. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound atrength ens the female organs and regulates the menses as nothing else will. Following is a letter from Miss JESSIE EBXER, 1712 West Jefferson St., Sandusky, Ohio. " DEAR MRS. PIHSHAM: —I feel it my duty to let you know of the great benefit your remedies have been to me. I suffered for over a year with inflammation of the ovaries. I had doctored, but no medicine did me any good. Was at a sanatorium for two weeks. The doctor thought an operation necessary, but 1 made up my mind to give your medicine a trial before submit ting to that. I was also troubled with leucorrhoea, painful menstruation, diz- B0 that unable to or have taken several bot ties Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and Blood Purifier, and am now in good health. I will always give your medicin3 the highest praise." Ask Mrs. Pinkham's Advlce-A Woman best Understands a Woman's Ills PAINT'.""WALLS IIIMLO WATER MUNI PUNTS FOR DECORATING WALLS AND CEILINGS £S?y£#SSSJ M U R A LO |»tnt dealer and do your own decorating. This material is a IIARI) FINISH to le applied with a brush and heoomes as hard as Cement. Milled in twenty-four tints and worts equally as well with cold or hot water. FOR HAitfFXjK COLOR CARDS and if you cannot purchase this material from your local dealers let us kuow and we will put you in the way of obtaining it. THE MURAIiO CO., MEW BBIGHTOX, S. 1., MEW YORK. "The best is, Aye, the Cheapest." Avoid Imitations of and Substitutes for SAPOLIO The average person wears nearly fourteen pounds of clotbing. BBWMIA BTOPPCU FREE H H kg RQ Permanently Curat ■ ■ H Insanity Prevented by m B 9 MB DR. KLINE'S GREAT ■ ■ w KERVE restorer PMitlT# ear* far all A'nww DUta—*. Fitt, BpiUpf, ■■ Bpmtms and sl. Titia'Dance. NoFitt or Ntrroaaaaaa H JMrdfitdii'iiM. Treatise and $8 trial bottla ■I Ires to Fit patleota, they payinireipreie char, •oily ■B *he» received. Send to Dr. Kline. Ltd, RelUrfba ■■ Institute of Medlcint, 931 Arcb St., Philadelphia, Pa. I|ENSION«S.r.S.°„?K 112 Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Late Principal Examiner U.S. Pension Bureau. 3yrslu last war, 10 adjudicating claims, utiy eiuc* Ti ACHERB-25WASTED NOW. CNION 'I »»>iohei H' Agencies, Washington, D. C. The Best BOOK uonsly illust ral e 112 ', free to anybody sending two annual anbs. riiitions at «] eai h to the Overland Monthly, HAN FKAXC'IMCt) Sample Overland. t» MTMTTN-NTTNIS PAPER WHENKEPLY- I.YLDJN iIUIN 1N (I TOADV'L'S. NYNII-4Q. WANTED— Caw of bad health that K-I-p-A-N-s will not benefit. Send acta, to Itipans Chemical Co., N >w York, for lu camples and lli'H) testimonial* DPOPQY NEw DISCOVERT; 7 Q Biclt ™li»f and cure, wotm CM.. Send far book of testimonial, and lO dava* traatmnat Free. Pr.M.H OUM 'I gang. Atlanta, J» wheriTAU^ Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Cse Hf in time. Sold by druggists. HH