DE. TALMAGPS SERMON. SUNDAY'S DISCOURSE BY THE NOTED DIVINE. Subject: "Perils of the Metropolis"—Tho Luxury and the Squalor or Great Cities Thrown Into Violent Contrast—Object Lessons Drawn From Experience. TEXT: "Wisdom crleth without: she ut tereth her voice in the streets."—Proverbs 112., 20. We are till ready to listen to the voices of nature—the voices of the mountain, tho voices of the sea, the voices of the storm, the voices of the star. As in some of the cathedrals in Europe there is an organ at either end of the building, and the one in strument responds musloally to tho other, so in the great cathodral of nature day re sponds today aud night to night and flower to flower and star to star in the great harmonies of the universe. The springtime Is an evangelist in blossoms preaching of God's love, and the winter is a prophet—white bearded —symbolizing woe against our sins. We are all ready to listen to the voices of nature, but how few of us learn anything from the voices of the noisy and dustv street? You goto your mechanism and to your work and to your merchandise, and you come back again, and often with how different a heart you pass through the streets. Aro there no things for us to learn from these pave ments over which we pass? Are there no tufts of truth growing up between theso cobblestones, beaten with the feet of toil and pain and pleasure, the slow tread of old age and the quick step of childhood? Aye, there are great harvests to bo reaped, and now I thrust in the sickle because the harvest is ripe. "Wisdom crieth without: sho uttereth her voice in the streets." In the first place, the street impresses me with the fact that this life is a scene of toll nnd struggle. By ten o'clook every day the city is jarring with wheels, and shuff ling with feet, and humming with voices, and covered with tho breath of smoke stacks, and a rush with traffickers. Once in awhile you find a man going along with folded arms and with leisurely step, as • hough he had nothing to do; but for the most part, as you ilnd men going down these streets on the way to business, there is anxiety in their faces, as though they had some errand which must be executed at the first possible moment. You are jostled by those who have bargains to make and notes to sell. Up this ladder with a hod of bricks, out of this bank with a roll of bills, on this dray with a load of goods, digging a cellar, or shingling a roof, or shoeing a horse, or building a wall, or mending a watch, or binding a book. In dustry, with her thousand arms and thou sand eyes and thousand feet goes on sing ing her song of work, work, work, while the mills drum it nnd the steam whistles fife it. All this not bocause men love toil. Some one remarked, "Every man is as lazy ns he can afford to be." But it Is because necessity with stern brow and with uplifted whip stand over you re idy whenever you relax your toll to make your shoulders sting with the lash. Can it be that passing up and down theso streets on your way to work and business that vou do not learn anything of the world's toil and anxiety and struggle? Oh, how many drooping hearts, how many eyes on the watch, how many miles traveled, how muny burdens carried, how many losses suffered, how many battles fought, how many victories gained, how many defeats suffered, how many ex asperations endured; what losses, what hunger, what wretchedness, what pallor, what disease, what agony, what despair! Sometimes I have stopped at the corner of the street as the multitudes went hither and yon, and it has seemed to me a great pantomime, and as I looked upon it my heart broke. This great tide of human life that goes down the street Is a rapid, tossed and turned aside, and dished ahead, and driven back—beautiful in its confusion, and confused in its beauty. In thecarpeteil aisles of the forest, in the woods from which the eternal shadow Is never lifted, on the shore of the sea over which iron coast tosses the tangled foam sprinkling the cracked cliffs with a baptism of whirl wind nnd tempest, is the best place to study God, but in tho rushing, swarming, raving street is the best place ts study man. Going down to your place of business nnd coming home again, I charge you to look about —see these sighs of poverty, of wretchedness, of hunger, of sin, of bereave ment—aud as you go through the streets, and come back through the streets, gather up in the arms of your prayer nil the sor row, all the losses, all the sufferings, all the bereavements of those whom you pnss, nnd present them in praver bofore au all sympathetic God. In the great day of eternity there will be thousands of persons with whom you in this world never ex changed one word, will rise up and oall you blessed, and there will be a thousand fingers pointed at you in heaven, saying: •'That is the man, that is the woman, who helped me when I was hungry and sick and wandering und lost nnd heartbroken. That is the man, that is the woman," and the blessing will come down upon you ns Christ shall say: "I was hungry, and ye fed Me; I wns naked, and ye clothed Me: I was sick and in prison, und ye visited Me; inasmuch as ye did it to those poor waifs of the streets, yodid it to Mo." Again, the street impresses mo with the fact that all clusses and conditions of so ciety must commingle. Wo somotimes cul ture a wicked exclusiveness. Intellect de spises ignorance. Refinement will have nothing to do with boorishness. Gloves hate the sunburned hand, and the high forehead despises tho Hat head, and the trim hedgerow will have nothing to do with the wild copsewood, and Athens bates Nazareth. Tills ought not so to be. The HStronomer must come 'down from the starry revelry aud help us in our naviga tion. Tho surgeon must come away from his study of the human organism and set our broken bones. The chemist must come away from bis laboratory, where he has been studying analysis and synthesis, and help us to understand the nature of the soils. I bless God that all classes of peo ple are compelled to meet on the street. The glittering couch wheels clashes against the scavenger's cart. Fine robes run against thr peddler's pack. Robust health meets wan sickness. Honesty confronts fraud. Every class of people meets every other class. Impudence and modesty, pride nnd humility, purity nnd beastliness, frankness and hypocrisy, meeting on tho same block, in the same street, in tho same city. Oh, that is what Solomon meant when he said, "Tho rich and the poor meet together; the Lord is the Mai er of them all." I like this democratic principle of tho gospel of Jesus Christ which recognizes the fact that wo stand beforo God one and the same platform. Do not take on any airs. Whatever position you have gained in society you are nothing but a man, born of the same paront, regenerated by the same spirit, cleansed by the same blood, to 110 down in the same dust, to get up in the same resurrection. It is high time that we all acknowledged not only the Fatherhood of God, but the brother hood of man. Again, the street impresses me with the fact that It is a very hard thing for a man to keep his heart right nnd get to heaven. Infinity temptations spring upon us from these places of public concourse. Amid so much affluence, how much temptation to eovetousness and to be discontented with our humble lot! Amid so many op portunities for overreaching, what tempta tion to extortion! Amid so much display, what temptation to vanity! Amid so many saloons of strong drink, what alurement to dissipation! In the maelstroms and bell gates ot the street N»w many make quick and eternal shipwreck! It a ■man-of-war comes back from a bat tle and Is towed into the navy ■yard, we go down to look at the splintered spars and count the bullet boles and look with patriotic admiration on th« flag that floated in victory from the mast head. But that man Is more of a curiosity who has gone through thirty years of th« sharpshootlng of business life and yet sailg on, victor over the temptations of th« street. Oh, how many have gone down under the pressure, leaving not so rauol) as tho patch of canvas to tell where they per id! They never had auy peace. Their dlshonestles'kept tolling In their ear*. If I lmd an ax and could split open tho beams ot that fine house, perhaps I would find in tho very heart of It a skeleton. In his very best wine there is a smnck of poor man's sweat. Ob, it is strange that wlieu a man has devoured widows' houses ho is dis turbed with indigestion? All the forces of nature are against him. The floods are ready to drown him and the earthquake to swallow him and the fires to consume him ami the lightnings to smite nim. But the children of God are on every street, and In the day when the crowns of heaven nre distributed some of the brightest of tliem will bo giveu to those men who were faith ful to God and faithful to the souls of others amid the marts of business, proving themselves the heroes of tho .street. Mighty were t heir temptations, might y wns their deliverance and mighty shall bu their triumph. Again, the street impresses me with the fact'that life is full of pretention and sham. What subterfuge, what double dealing, what two facedness! Do all peoplo who wish vou good morning really hope you a happy day? Do all the people who shake hands love each other? Are all those anxi ous about your health who inquire con cerning it? Do all want to see you who ask you to call? Does all the world know half as much as it pretends to know? Is there not manv a wretched stock of goods with a brilliant show? Passing up nnd down the streets to your business and your work, are you not impressed with the fact that society is hollow and that that there are subterfuges and preteusions? Oh, how many there nre who swagger and strut, and how few people who aro natural and walk! While fops simper and fools chuckle and simpletons giggle, how few people are natural and laugh! The courtesan nnd the libertine go down the street In beautiful apparel, while within the heart there are volcanoes of passion consuming their life away. I say these things not to create in you incredulity or misanthropy, nor do I forget there nre thousands of people n great deal hotter than they soem, but I do not think any man is prepared for the conflict of this life until he knows this particular peril. Ehud comes pretending to pay Ills tax to King Eglon, and, while he stands in front of tho king, stabs him through with a dagger un til tho haft went in after the blade. Judas Iscarlot kissed Christ. Again, the street impresses me with tho fact that it is a great field for Christiau charity. There are hunger and suffering, and want nnd wretchedness iu the coun try, but theso evils chiefly congregate in our great cities. On every street crime prowls, and drunkenness staggers, and shame winks, and puuperlsm thrusts out its hand asking for alms. Here what is most squalid and hunger is most lean. A Christian man, going along a street in New York, saw a poor lad, and he stopped nnd said, "My boy, do you know how to read and write?" The boy made no an swer. The man asked the question twice and thrice. "Can you read and write?" And then the boy answered, with a tear plashing on the back of his hand. He said in defiance: "No, sir, don't read nor write, neither. God, sir, don't want me to read aud write. Didn't he take away my father so long ago I never remember to have seen him? And haven't I had togo along tho streets to get something to fotch home to eat for the folks? And didn't I, as soon as I could carry a basket, have togo out and pick up cinders and nover have no school ing, sir? God don't want mo to road, sir. I can't read nor write, neither." Ob. those poor wanderersl They have no chance. Born In degradation, as they get up from their hands and kuees to walk, they take their first step on the road of despair. L<3t us go forth in the name of the Lord Jesns Christ to rescue them. Let us ministers not be afraid of soiling our black clothes while wo go down on that mission. While we are tying an elaborate knot In our cravat or while we are in the study rounding off some period rhetorically we might be sav ing a soul from death and hiding a multi tude of sins. O Christian laymen, go out on this work! If you are uot willing togo forth yourself, then give of your meaus, and If you are too lazy togo, and if you are too stiugy to help, then get out of the way and hide yourself In tho dens and caves of the earth, lest, when Christ's chariot comes along the horses' hoofs trample you into the mire. Beware lest the thousands of the destitute of your city in the last great day rise up and curse your stupidity and your neglect. Down to workl Lift them up. One cold winter's day, as a Christian man was going along the Battery la New York, he saw a little girl seated at the gate, shivering in the cold. He said to her: "My child, what do you sit there for, this cold day?" "Oh," sho replied, "I an waiting for somebody to come und take care of me." "Why," said the man "what makes you think anybody will conn and take care of you?" "Oh," she said, "my mother died last week, and I was cry ing very much, and she said: 'Don't cry dear, though I am gone und your father ii gone, tho Lord will send somebody to take crro of you.' My mother nevor told a lie: sho said some one would come and take care of me, nnd I am waiting for them tc come." Ob, yes, they aro waiting foi you. Men who have money, men who have influence, men of churches, men ol great hearts, gutherthem in, gather tberu in. It is not the will of your Heavenlj Father that one of these little ones should perish. Lastly, the street Impresses me with the fact that all the people aro looking for ward. I see expectancy written on almost every face I meet. Where you find a thou sand people walking straight on, you oulj ilnd one stopping and looking buck. The fuct is, God made us all to look ahead, be cause we aro immortal. In this trump ol the multitude ou the streets I hear the trump of a greut host, marching and inarching for eternity. Beyond the office, the store, the shop, the street, there is o world, popular nnd tremendous. Througt God's grace, may you reach that blessed place. A great throug illls those boule vards, and the streets are arush witb the chariots of conquerors. Tho inhab itants go up and down, but they nevei weep and the never toll. A river flfiws through that city, with rounded and lux urious banks, and the trees of life, laden with everlasting fruitage, bend theii branches Into the crystal. Noplumsd hearse rattles over that pavo ment, for thoy are never sick. With im mortal health glowing in overy vein, thei know not how to die. Those towers ol strength, those palaces of beauty, gleam in the light of n sun that nevor sets. Oh heaven, beautiful hoaven! Heaven wbero our friends are! The take nc census in that city, for it Is iuhab lted by "a multitude which DO man can number." Bank above rank Host above host. Gallery above gallery sweeping all around the heavens. Thou sands ot thousands. Millions of millions Blessed are they who enter In through thi gate Into that city. Oh, start for it to day! Through the blood of the grea' sacrifice of the Son of God take up voui inarch to heaven. "The spirit aud thi brine sny, Come, and, whosoever will, le' him come and take tiie water of lire freely.' Join this great throng marching heaven ward. All the loor.s of invitation are open. "And I saw twelve gates, aud the twelve gates were twelve pearls." The Blsmarcks* New Resting Place. The bodies of Prince and Princess Bis marck were placed in the new mausoleun at Friederichsruh, Germany, a few dayi ago. Emperor William attending the cere monies. A TEMPERANCE COLUMN. THE DRINK EVIL MADE MANIFEST IN MANY WAYS. Tho Drunkard'A Lunent-An Appeal TOT the Reform of a Cuntoin That is Too Prevalent Among People of "Wealth and Refinement—Society and T>rlnk. (Bv the lute Blehard a member ot tlin New Orleans bar. The patlietio story of his ruined life.) I liave been to the funeral of my hopes. And entombed them one by one, Not a word wns said, Not a tear wns shed. When the mournful task was doie. Slowly and sadly I turned me round And sought my silent room, And there alone By the 000l hearthstone I wooed the midnight gloom. And, as the night wind's deepening shade Lowered above my brow, I wept o'er the days When manhood's rays Were brighter far than now. The dying embers on the hearth Gave out their flickering light, As if to sny, "This is the way Thy life shall close in night." I wept aloud in anguish sore O'er the blight of prospects fair. While demons laughed And early quaffed My tears like nectar rare. Through hell's red ball an echo rang, An echo loud and long, As In the bowl I plunged my soul In the night of madness strong. And there, within that sparkling glass, I knew the cause to lie; This all men own From zone to zon?. Yet millions drink and die. Ought to Know Better. In nn article on social abuses the Boston Herald had recently an excellent appeal for the reform of a custom that is unhap pily too prevalent among people who have, or at least are supposed to have the advan tages of culture and refinement that the possession of wealth confers. This bad custom is the unlimited serving of intoxi cants at entertainments given by what Is rather vaguely known as "society," and our esteemed contemporary says: "Another reform which should be taken up under similar conditions is the laying down of a limit at these entertainments upon the use of intoxicants. It is a custom at these young people's dances to serve champagne, and in quite a number of in stances this has been done with an unfor tunate absence of moderation. Opinions may differ as to advisability of freely dis pensing a stlmulnnt of this kind at dances where the great majority of tho guests are under the age of twenty-one. But even those hostesses who believe it desirable to follow the existing custom must, if they think of the matter at all. question the ad visability of having it drunk to excess. For the benefit of all concerned, It would surely be batter to limit the serving of shampugne to the supper hour, when those who drank it would do so with the mini mum of resulting disturbance, rather than save it served at various times or at p.ll times until the hour of departure, thus giv ing direct encouragement to something which rightly goes by an exceeding}- hard same. "There are ladies prominent in the social .ife of Boston who, if they realized it, would not on any account do a wrong to a young man or young woman, or willingly be the :ause of leading not overstrong young per lons into temptation, and yet it is by no means impossible that some of these have, by their thoughtlessness, done not a little to undertake the moral resistance ot those who have been the recipients of their hos pitality. All that Is asked is that matters Should be brought within what every one would personally agree were reasonable bounds, but bounds now found somewhat difficult of establishment because there is DO social code laid down, and there is a dis inclination on the part of each hostess to Set up an arbitrary standard of her own. It would be easily possible for fifteen or twonty social leaders in Boston to lav down » code of procedure in the matter we have Indicated, and possible in others, which practically all would observe." Anatomical Effects of Drink. Moved by tho over-increasing amount of Iruukennoss in France, a Paris physician Is preparing for the instruction of the pub lic a series of lantern slides showing the anatomical effects of the use of alcohol, [t would appear that most of the diseases Ireated in the French hospitals arise from the use ot alcohol. All alcoholic drinks are more injurious when taken on an empty (tomach or between meals. The man who Jrinks every day alcohol in the form ot liquors, or too much wine, becomes slowly poisoned. The effect of this poisoning is to lestroy, more or less quickly, but none the less certainly, all tho organs most neces jary to life—the stomach, the liver, the iidneys, the blood vessels, the heart and the brain. Habitual imbibers of alcohol to (xcess are much more liable than temper ate persons to Illness, and when ill have jnuch less chance of recovery. The inves tigations of the Parisian medical faculty souflrm strongly the well-known fact that tree drinking is a frequent cause of con sumption from its tendency to weaken the lungs. A Whisky Drummer, A whisky drummer, who lias sold the iquld damnation for twenty-live years past, stood in the Globe Hotel the other lay and made a speech that ought to make svery temperance man shake hands with himself. He said: "In this section of the country the sale 3f whisky Is decreasing very rapidly. We jell less and less of it with each succeeding year. People have quit drinking. It is no longer considered in goou form to swill it. A drunken man Is a disgrace. A tippler cannot hold a job anywhere that is respect able and progressive. The railroads won't have him, neither will anybody else. The sentiment is getting stronger against it all the time. Tho teacher, the preaoher *nd tho paper are all creating sentiment fegainst hard drinking. In twenty years Jrom now the whisky problem will have solved itself. Then soda water, lemonade and other light beverages will have crowd id it oat of the saloon and tho drug store Into the medicine chest of tho doctor."— 'Jentralia (.Kan.) Courier.' Shots at the Haul Demon. The liquor traffic will never commit sui cide. A grog shop is the devil's sigu that he is still doing business in tho neighborhood. The liquor shop will go in a hurry when the church goes for it in real earnest. Necessity was not the mother of inven tion when the process ot manufacturing strong drink was invented. The drink bill of Great Britain, just pub lished, shows that the Englishman drinks 2.41 gallons of alcohol a year. Next to him comes the Scotchman with an appe tite slacked with 1.66 gallons. To countenance a wrong is to do a wrong. Ho who ehelters a criminal be comes himself a criminal. He who legal izes a crime is morally a criminal and wrong cannot be rightfully legalized. Some people are showing a great concero lest the liquor traffic be established in out new possessions. Well, that Is all right, but how about our own country? Is more important to protect the black children of the Philippines than American boys at home? lit » Colonial Parliament. New South Wales parliamentary humorists have found a butt in the bull-voiced Monaro Miller. He was looked upon as a rather ordinary bore until, when he was roaring his loud est, "Jack" Haynes politely asked him to speak up, and Miller, not notic ing the "borak," spoke up. "I beg your pardon," said John, leaning for ward, with his' hand to his ear, after the manner of the deaf. Miller nearly lifted the roof as he bawled the remark again. "Excuse me, I couldn't quite catch it," said Haynes, solemnly, his hand still to his ear, and it was not until he had awakened the whole neighborhood and members were rushing into see what the explosion was that the man from Snowy River "dropped."—Sidney Bulletin. While You Sleep. Do not hßve too muoli air blowing through your room at night, or neuralgia may creep upon you while you sleep. But 11 it comes, use St. Jacobs Oil; it warms, soothes and cures promptly. In Cnpe Colony uvangolical missions have 530,C00 adherents and the Catholics 3000. Coughs li«ail to Consumption, Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough at once. Goto your druggist to-day and get a sample bottle free. Sold in 25 and 50 cent bottles. Go at once; delays are dan gerous. Japan is now so far advanced as to make its own electrical machinery. No-To-Bac for Fifty Cent*. Guaranteed tobacco habit, cure, makes weak inen strong, blood pure. 50c, 81 All druggists. The Bermudas nro not included in the term "We-it Indies." Mrs. Winslow'sSoothinr Syrup I'orchlldren teething, softens the gums, reduces infiamma tiou, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c.a bottle Queensland exports dried bananas. They are takiDg the place of raisins. To Curo Constipation Forever. TaUeCaiicarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c. If C. C. C. fall to cure, druggists refund money. The new books published last year aver aged thirteen a day. Knocks Cough* and Cold*. Dr. Arnold's rough Killer cure* Coughsand Colds.Prevents Consumption.All druggists. 25a There are lis schools for music alone in Berlin, Germany. I am entirely cured of hemorrhage of lungs by IMSO'H Cure for Consumption.—LOUlSA LINDAMAN, Bethany, Mo., January 8, 1804. Of every 1000 sailors thirty-four have rheumatism every year. Blood vessels are sometimes burst by whooping cough. Hale's Honey of Horehound und '1 ar relieves it. A pound of phosphorus heads 1,000,000 matches. Educate Your Bowel* With Casrareta, Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 16c, 00c. If C. C. C fall, druggists refund money. One apple orchard in Glenwood, lowa, ] sontains 800 aeres and 133,000 trees. To Cure at Cold in One D>y a I Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund money if it fails to cure. &JC. There are more than 8000 laundries in London. H. H. GKEEN'S SONS, of Atlanta, Ga., ar«"> ;he only successful Dropsy Specialists in the world. See their liberal offer in advertisement >n anothor column of this paper. China has begun the manufacture of imokelesa powder. Don't mind the Weather, There Is one thing that does not mind ;he weather, and that is rheumatism; and one thing that does not mind rheumatism is St. Jacobs Oil, as it goes to work upon It and cures right off. , Suspected the Dank of England. An elderly lady quite recent ly called ;o cash a dividend warrant at the Bank of England, for which she re quired notes. On the notes being banded the lady she rather indig uantly refused them, as they were not signed by Mr. May (the late chief cashier). Mr. Boweu's signature evi dently didn't satisfy her, as she re marked she had been "had" before with notes and intended to take good ;are not to be again. Explanations were in vain for some time, but event ually a high official satisfactorily ex plained matters and the incident slosed.—Notes and Gold. Any Girl Can Tell £ A sfttlMffir A physician who makes the C bcauty perfect health's hi SttrnSSm. Mothers whose daughters 112? tsj grow debilitated as they pass 112 Tt ' TOm ft'T'hood into womanhood tfh should not neglect the pill best^ Y vrHf adapted foT this particular til. 112 L> P Frank B. Trout, of 103 Griswotd Ave., Detroit, Mich., says: "At the ¥g» |u age of fourteen we had to take our daughter from school ou account of ill > health. She weighed only 90 pounds, was pale and sallow and the doctors \X said she hod anaemia. Finally we gave her Dr. Williams' Pink Fills for VSjJ «Jr Fale People. W hen she had taken two boxes she was strong enough to /J 7 leave her bed, and in less than six months was something like herself. fo At To-day she is entirely cured, and is a big, strong, healthy girl, weighing In 13° pounds, and has never had a sick day since."— Detroit Evening Nruit. The genuine Dr. WilliAtni' Pink Pills »0T Pale People are £ fir Sold only in p&cK&gcs, th(|\NTtppcT tlw&ys bttrmg Y C tht full n&me. At &II «t direct from the y> *1 Ot Williams Meditine Co. Schenectady, M Y, 50 r per bo*. 5 The Pioneer Medicine is Acer's S Before sarsaparillas were known, ago, it began " , enough; you can have confidence at once. If you want an experiment, buy anybody's Sarsaparilla; if you want a cure, you must buy Avers [The SirsipirilU 0 J which made Sarsaparilla famous] IP TEASPOONS FREE I£, GUARANTEED, • IFIRY. .jjil LAWIKS can secure a set of 12 Teaspoon*, guaranteed by maker to be extra coin silver plate, vfei ' ~ , | by selling 12 Oem Scissors Sharpeners at 25 rents each. >„f i. Sharpener is a necessity in every family; anv lady can 111 aB use it; satisfaction guaranteed. I trust you, and send the Sharpeners bv Express; when sold, deduct expressage from . , received, sending me the balance: I will then send the lie OT spoons. nice Spoons, prepaid. W. C. OBIBWOLD, Sox 408, Ceaterbrook, Coan. It Was Before the Day of SAPOLIO They Used to Sav " Woman's Work Is llever Bonn." Happy! T r h em"edy foV 1.». JOHNSON'S MALARIA, CHILLS A FEVER, Grippe A Liver Diseases.- KMOWN ALI. DRUGGISTS. 35c« ,f B o™'ey».use h I Thompson's Eye Water ABadlySprainedArm HOUSTON, Tex., Feb. 25,18#8. DR. RAIJWAT k Co.: Dear Sirs—August 25th last I had a badly sprained ariu. After using six different (what was called) remedies, I never cot relief till I used Rad way's Ready Relief, which eased the pain at on-e and cured ine in two days. My father, who is 6fi years old, says: "Hadway's Heady Relief and Radway's I'ills are the best of all medicines.'* W«* keep theiu in the house the year around. Respectfully, THOMAS HANSBOROIJGH, Special FoJice, City Hull. A CURE FOR ALL. Colds,Ccu?hs, Sore Throat, Influenza, Bron. chitis, Pneumonia, Swelling of the Joints, Lumbago, Infiammat ons, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Frostbites, Chilblains, Headaches, Tooth * aches, Asthma, DIFFICULT BREATHING. CURES THE WORST PAINS in from one to twenty minutes. NOT ONE HOUR after reading this need anyone SUFFER WITH FAIN. Sol 1 by druggists. HAI)WAV tfc C 0., 55 Elm St., New York. J?SEEDS\ S»lt»r't S«dj ir«_W»mintc4 t« PrWncf. jftfcfVahlun Luther. F. Troy. Pa., astonished the Mm\-r growing '.'.'>o bushels Big Four Oat* ; J. Rreider, lfifthicott. WU., ITS bush, barley, aud H. Lorejoy, VI Red grcwtflg JL'O bush . Salter * corn O 10 DOLLARS WORTH FOR 100. Q ■H 10 pkgaofrare fr-m seeds. Salt Rush. Rape for Sheep, MB ■H the f.KNM Corn. '• Rl( Four Oats," Heard leas Barley, ■■ Hro:uu< Inermia— r (elding 7 tons hay per acre on dry Seed Catalogue, te ling all about our Farm seeds, etc., all mailed yoo upon receipt of but vKjk 10C. pontage, nositirelr worth flO. Mfet a at ♦l.i No. AQ niHja (IfWC* FRET n ■ 'II Psrawseatly Carsi ■ B ■ Insanity Prtrtntrt k> ■ ■ ■ N >'■ KLINE'S A BEAT Kg ■ ■ W IERVE RESTORER Mr* ftr ill JT«*MH IH—mm. Flu, ■ ■>»*»■ rnmdm. WM 1 J—. KOFIUMWWTHMW ■ KIITFSSST H when received. Send U l>r. Kiln*. Ltd, BellerM 91 loatituta of Medicine, Ml Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa*