The Cure that Cures Coughs, Colds, Grippe, Whooping Cough, Asthma, Bronchitis and Incipient Consumption, Is The German remedV Cure tVvot MA. Vvvws, cVvsxvases. .JjtAriu, a Atus. 25650rAsy m soods ik mm .!!'" $v 1 w.s- ; i uii .i.:i"T" : ; ...untni,-, .,.. ... him - ' : Have you tried the ( 1 ilomte sjyitem of buying SVESYTHING you .is ai nlioleiale Prices? We nansave yout5!r.40 ni t canton your purchases, Wc urj now erecllmi und will own and oooupyths highest building in Ahiorica, employ 2. 000 clerks filling country orders exclusively, and will refund purchase prica if goodl don't suit vou. Our General Catalogue -1.0C3 pajts, IG.000 illustrations. CO, CO, quotations costs us 72 cent' to print and rnni!. Wc will send it lo you upor, roceipi of lb rents, to sliow yoi.r good faith. MGHTGCirJ WARD & CO. MICHIGAN AVE. AND MAOISON ST. CHICAGO. LOOP pOjgON A SPECIALTY ' i, ;' : tl.-.ry tll.OOIJ POISON permanent i-ureil In lutojj dava. Yon can he t re it, i A homo for same price under samoguarau Ity. If you prefer to cometiero we will con- trnrt to liar ml) rnn it f run n.t h , ,i I In II j -.. , Dorhsnre, if wefml to cure. If you have taken mer cury, iodide potash, and null navo aches anil pui'. Mucon Viueheahi mouth. SoreThroat, I'linplca, Copper Colored Spot, Ulcer on any purtof thu body, HnlrorKyehrow railing out. It la tins Secondary BLOOD POISON we nn e guarantee to care. We aollclt the BKM t dint I alo raaea and cliallongo tlio world for a enact we cannot core. Thla disease haiBlwars oh tiled the skill ol t lie in ist e utineul physl claim. Sr00,UOJ capital behind our uncmdl. Ucinnl goarauty. Absolute proofs sent scaled oo application Address COOK IIKMKIIV CO.. 807 Jlaaoulc linjplc, td" " ' ! ! A BIG CLUB. mil thla out and return to an with $1,00 and we'll send the followinif, aostnge prepaid: VERMONT FARM.IOllRNAt. l YEAR. NEW vi IRK WK.FKI.Y THIBDNK 1 YEAR ANRKICAN POULTRY JOURNAL 1 YEAR. TBECIENTLKWOM iN I V K H MARION HaHI,AND'8( OOK Hi "K. TEN Mi ill I S IN A BAR KOOM, All For $1.00. Regular Cost $4.00. Tnta combination Ml a family need. Two fat ra f tapers fur the men Tbe "Gentlewoman," nn deal pi r tortile ladles N. V. Weekly Tribune for all Marlon llartand'a Conk Book with ana pagea and l.uoo practical recipe mi- the wile, nmi the book, ''Ten Night in a B tr lloom." the greatest Temperance novel 01 the age. a two oral stamp brings aomplea of papers and our great clubbing Hat. Vcnnout Farm Jonrual WM. L.PACKARD, PU BLISHER. ttitl NaloRt., Wlliiilimlon, vt. Dr. Humphreys' Specifics not direetl; upon tin- tliseaso, without exciting disorder iu other piirts of the system. They Cure the Sick. vj, rt-REs. nucra. 1 Fever.. OoufMUonl, Inflammations. .'23 2 Worm.. Worm Fever, Worm Colic. . .'iff SJ Teethlii. Colic, Crying. Wakefulness .'23 4 Diarrhea, r chiuireu or Adults.. -23 7 -Cough.. Colds, Ilroncliltls 23 H-Mruralgia, TiHilhache, Kaceache '23 0-lleadai'he, sick Headache, Vertigo . .'23 10 lv'iela. ln.llgiitlon.WeakKIoniach.jS 1 1 HuppreMi'il or Painful I'erlodn 33 19 White.. Too Profuao I'erlnda '23 13-Croiii. I. ii r n till.. Hoarseness '23 1 1-Hnit Bbonaa, rjttpalaa, BrupUotu . .'23 1 K fthanmalltRii Rbaamatle Pains 2S IS Malaria, ChUla, lever and Agoa '25 19-4'atarrli, Influenta.Cold In tho Head .23 '20 lioopltiv-t'ough '23 'Jf -Kidney DI.eniri '23 2s Vi rion, llebllltv 1.00 30-1 rlnnrv Wcakuris. WctUug IinL . .'23 77-firlp. Hay Fever '23 Dr. Rampbraya' Manual of all Diseases at your Jjrtigulsts or Mailed Free. Sol.t nv drimKisls. or sent on rei'elpt of price. Hiiiniihreys' Ued. Co., Cor. WlllUtui & JotiuSU., New Vork. mi PERFECT MEN ! OO NOT DESPAIR 1 Do Not Hutr. r l.oiH .1 ' TIM Joys and ambitions of life can tie rehtored lo you. Tba vciy worst eases of Nervous Dcluli ty are absolutely cured tiy PEKFF.CTO TAllnm lilve tiromtit relief to insomnia failing memory and the waste and drain of vital iKiwer!.. Incur red by Indiscretions oreieaaaca of early years. Imparl vitor and l utein , to every function nrace up tho system. Olvo rh.'cks and lustre to the bloom to tin; eyes of young vital energy; I " g.i nail ed. Tan t orold. One Hie Nn renews l bona al a com- i..rt fur,, or money refund carried In vest pocket. Sold everywbereor milled lii plain wrapperon receipt of pru-o o'v Tllri I'KKFKC'l'OCO .Caitou Uldg , Chlcago.lU- For sale in MidcUeborgfa, Pa.t iy Bllddleburg Drag Co., mMt Pleas ant Mills by Henry I larding, ami in lVnn's Creek by J. W. SampeelL Dr, Fenncr's Golden Relief. 5i A TUUB SI-iriKtc IN AM, INFLAMMATIONS Old sure. Wounds, Kh-uniatlm. Neuralgia "Colds." A SURE CUBE Grip, 251 For any PAIN Inside or out. Br dualera. W.uc by mall tao.rndualJV. D SUMMER VACATIONS. Dr. Talmage Draws Some Lessons from Our Annual Outings. Dawcrra and Tcmptntluna That Sor round Our Vl'rlut Place Btaaeaaltir f a Period of Inueeutialliia. ICopyrlght, ls3'J. by Uouls Klopsch WMhlnctotti Aug. At this season of the year, when all who can get u vacation arc taking it, this diacourae of Dr. Talmage is aug geative and appropriate. The text is John 3: "A pool, which is called in the Hebrew tongue Jlcthcsda, having live tiorchea. In these lay a great multi tude of impotent folk, of Mind, bait, withered, waiting for the moving of the water." Outaide the city of Jerusalem there was u sanative watering place, the pop ular resort for invalids. To this day there is a dry basin of rock which shows that there may have been a pool there 360 fet t long, 130 feet wide and Ti feet deep. This pool was surrounded by live piazzas, or porches, m- bathing bouses, where the patients tarried until the ' time when they were to step into the ' water. So far its reinvigoratlng was concerned, it most have been a Sara toga and a Long Branch on a small scale; a Leamington and a Brighton ; combined medical and therapeutic. Tradition says that at a certain season of the year there was an otliecr of the government who w ould go down to that vatcr and pour in it some healing qual ity, ami after that the people would ome ami git the medication. But 1 prefer the plain statement of Scripture, that at a certain season an angel came down and stirred up or troubled the wa ter, and then the people came and got the healing. That angel of Cod that stirred up the Judaean watering place had his counterpart in the angel of heal- i ing who, in our day, steps into the min eral waters of Congress or Sharon or Sulphur Springs, or into the salt sea at Cape May and Sahant, where multitudes who are worn out with commercial and professional anxieties, as well lis those who are afflicted with rheumatic, neu ralgic ami splenetic diseases, go and are cured by the thousands. These blessed Dethesdosare scattered all up und down our country. We nro at a season of the year when ! rail trains arc laden with passengers and baggage on their way to the inuiiii- i tains and the lakes and the seashore. Multitudes of our citizens are away for ! a restorativo absence. The city heats are pursuing the people with torch and fear of sunstroke. The long, silent halls 1 of sumptuous hotels nre nil abuzz with excited arrivals. The antlers of Adiron dack deer rattle under the shot of city sportsmen, the trout make fatal snap at the hook of tidroif.Tportsmen, who toss I their spoiled orillianta iittu me kuu"- basket; tho baton of the orchestral lead- ' er taps tho music stand on the hotel green, and American life hns put on festal array, and the rumbling of the tenpin alley, and the crack of the ivory balls on the grcen-linized billiard tables. and the jolting of the barroom goblets, ami the explosive uncorking of the champagne bottles, and the whirl and the rustle of the ballroom dance, and the clattering hoofs of the race courses , and other signs of social dissipation at test that the season for the great Amer ican watering places is in full play. Music! Flute and drum and cornct-a-piston and clapping cymbals wake the ! echoes of the mountains, (Had am 1 that fagged-out American life for the most part has nn opportunity to rest, and that nerves racked ami destroyed will find a Bethesda. 1 believe in water ing places, They recuperate for active service many who were worn out with trouble or overwork. They are nation al restoratives. Let not the commercial firm begrudge the clerk, or the employer the journey man, or the patient the physician, or the church its pastor a season of inoccupa tion. Luther used to sport, with his children; Edmund Burke used to caress his favorite horse; Thomas Chalmers, in the dark hour of the church's disrup tion, played kite for recreation so I was told by his own daughter and the busy Christ said to Hie busy apostles: "Come yo apart awhile into the desert and rest yourselves." And 1 have ob served that they who do not know how to rest do not know how to work. Hut I have to declare this truth to-day that some of our fashionable Watering places , are the temporal and eternal destruc tion of "a multitude that no man can number," and amid the congratulations , of this season and the prospects of the departure of many of you for the coun try I must utter a warning, plain, ear nest, and unmistakable. The. first emptation that is opt to hover in this direction is to leave, your , piety at home. You w ill send the dog and cat and canary bird to be well eared for somewhere else, but the temptation will be to leave your religion in the room with the blinds down and the doors bolted, und then you will come back in the autumn to find that it is I starved and suffocated, lying stretched on the rug. stark dead. There is no sur- j plus of piety at the watering places. I never knew anyone, to grow very rapid J ly in grace at the Catskill Mountuin house or Sharon Springs or the Falls of Montmorency. It is generally the case I that the Sabbath is more of a carousal than any other day, and there are Sun- . day walks, and Sunday rides, and Sun day excursions. Elders and deaconi and ministers of religion who are en- ! tirely consistent at home, sometimes when the Sabbath dawns on them nl j Niagara falls or the White mountain! I take a day to themselves. If they go to the church, it is npt to be a sacred : parade, and the discourse, instead of be ing a plain talk about the soul, is apt to be what is called a crack sermon that is, some discourse picked out of the ef fusions of the year as the one moat adaped to excite admiration, and in hose churches, from the way the ladies hold their fans, you know that they are not ao much impressed with the hcatas with the picturesiiueness of half dis closed features. Four puny souls stand in the organ loft and squall a tune that nobody knows, and worshipers, with $2.1100 worth of diamonds on the right hand, drop a cent into the poor box, and then the benediction is pronounced, and the farce is ended. The toughest thing I ever tried to downs to be good at u watering place. The air is be witched with the "world, the llesh nnd the devil." There nrc Christians who, in three or four weeks in such a place, have had such terrible rents made mi their Christian robe that they had to keep darning it until Christmas to get it mended. The health of x great many people makes an annual visit to some mineral spring an absolute necessity, but take your J'.ible along with you, and take nn hour for secret prayer every day, though you be surrounded by guffaw and saturnalia. Keep holy the Sab bath, though they deride you as a big oted Puritan. Stand off from gambling hells and those other institutions which propose to imitate on this side the wa ter the iniquities of Baden-Baden, Let your moral and your immoral health keep pal D with your physical recupera tion, and remember that all the sul phur and chalybeate springs cannot do vou so much good us Hie healing, perennial Hood that breaks forth from the "RoCk of Ages." This may be your last sunnier. If so, make it a fit vesti bule of Heaven. Another temptation hovering around nearly all our watering places is the horse racing business. We all admire the horse, but we do not think that its beauty or sliced ought to be cultured at the expense of human degradation. The hone race is not of such Importance as the human race. The Bible intimates that a man is better than a sheep, and I suppose lie is bitter than ahorse, though, like Job's stallion, his neck be clothed with thunder. Horse races in olden times were under the ban of Christian people, and in our day the same institution has come up Under fic titious names. And it is called n "sum mer meeting." almost suggestive of positive religious exercises. And it is called an "agricultural fair," suggest ive of everything that is improving in the nrt of farming, but under these de ceptive titles are the same cheating, and the same betting, and the same drunkenness, and the same vagabond age, nnd the same abomination that were to be found under tho old horse racing system. I never knew a man yet who could give himself to the pleasures of the turf for a long reach of time and not he but tered in morals. They hook up their spanking team und put on their sport ing cap nnd light their cigar and take the reins and dash down on the road to perdition! The great day at Sara iv,F.. . :,.. . "each and Cape Mny and nearly all the other v.i.rpi; . is the day of the races. The hotels are thronged, every kind of equipage is taken up at an almost fabulous price, nnd there ore many respectable people mingling with jockeys and gamblers and libertines and foul-mouthed men and flashy women. The bartender stirs tip the brandy smash. The bets run high. The greenhorns, supposing all is fair, put in their money soon enough to lose it. Three weeks before the race takes place the struggle is decided, and the men in the secret know on which steed to bet their money. The men on the horses riding around long ago arranged who shall win. Leaning from the stand or from the carriages are men and women so absorbed in the struggle of bone and murele and mettle' that they make a grand harvest for the pickpockets, who carry off the pocket books and the portemonnaies. Ken looking on sec only a string of horses with their riders flying around the ring. But there is many a man on that stand whose honor and domestic hap piness and fortune white mane, white foot, White Hank are in the ring, racing with inebriety and with fraud and with profanity and with ruin black neck, black foot, black flunk. Neck and neck go the horses in Hint moral Kpsom. White horse of honor: black horse of ruin. Heath says: "I will bet on the black horse." Spec tator says: "I will Vict on the while horse." The white horse of honor a little way ahead. The black horse of ruin, Satan mounted, all the time gaJn ing on him. Spectator breathless. They put on the lash, dig in the spurs. There! They are past the stand. Sure, .lust as 1 expected. The black horse of ruin has won the race, and all the gal leries of darkness "huzza! huzza!" and the. devils come in to pick up their wagers. Ah. my friends, have nothing to do with horse racing dissipations this summer. Another temptation hovering around the watering place is the formation of hasty and lifelong nliianccs. The wa tering places are responsible for more of the domestic infelicities of the coun try than nearly all other things com bined. Society is so artificial there t hat no sure judgment of character can be formed. They who form companion ships amid such circumstances go into a lottery where there are 20 blanks to one prize. In the severe tug of life you want more than glitter and splash. Life is not a ballroom where the music de cides the step, and bow and prance and graceful swing of long train can make up for strong common sense. You might as well go among the gayly painted yachts of a summer regatta to find a war vessel as to go among the light spray of the summer watering place to find character that con stand the test of the great struggle of human life. In the battle of life you want a stronger weapon than a lace fan or a croquet mallet. The load of life is so heavy that in order to draw it yon want a team stronger than that made up of a masculine grasshopper and a feminine butterfly. If there is any man in the community who excites my con tempt and who ought to excite the eon tempt of every man and woman, it is the soft-handed, soft-headed dude, who, perfumed until the air is actual ly siek, spends the summer in striking killing attitudes, and waving senti mental adieux, and talking infinitesimal nothings, odnd finding his heaven in the set of a lavender kid glove. Hoots as tight as an inquisition. Twoliours of consummate skill exhibited in the tie of a flashing cravat. His conversa tion made up of "Alis!" and "Ohs!" and "He lies!" There is only one counterpart tvjsuch a man as that, and that is the frothy young woman at the watering places; her conversation made up of French moonshine; what she has in her head only equaled by what she has on her back; useless ever since she was born, and to be useless until she is dead, un less she becomes an intelligent Chris tian. We may admire music and fair faces and graceful step; but amid the heartlessness nnd the inflation and the fantastic influences of our modem wa tering places beware how you make lifelong covenants. Another temptation hovering all around our watt ling places is intoxi cating beverages. 1 am told that it is becoming more and more fashionable for women t. drink. I care not how well a womr.n may dress, if she has taken enough of wine to flush her cheek and put a glassiness on her eye. she is drunk. She may be handed into a $2.M0 carriage and have diamond enough to astound the Tiff any s she is drunk. She may be a graduate of the best young ladies' seminary and the daughter of some man in danger of being nominated for the presidency she is drunk. You may have a larger vocabulary than I have, and you may say in regard to her that she is "con vivial" or .she is "merry" or she is "fes tive" or she is "exhilarated," but you cannot with all your garlands of ver biage cover up the plain fact that it i3 an old-fashioned case of drunk. Now, the watering places are full of temptations to men and women to tip ple. At the close of the tenpin or bil liard game they tipple. At the close of the cotillion they tipple. Seated on the plasm cooling themselves off they tipple. The tinged glasses come around with bright straws and they tipple. First they take "light wines," as they call them, but "light wines" are heavy enough to debase the appetite. There is not a very long road between cham pagne at live dollars a bottle and whis ky at ten cents a glass. Satan has thrc e or four grades down which he takes men to destruction. One man he takes up and through one spree pitches hiir. into eternal darkness. That is a rare case. Very seldom indeed ctn you find a man who will be such a fool as that. Satan will take another man to n grade, to a descent at an angle about like the Pennsylvania coal shoot or the Mount Washington rail track, and shove him off. But this is very rare. When a man goes down to destruction, Satan brings Iim to a plane. It is almost a level. 'Inc. dsr'-"si)i l n sliirh that you can hardly it. The man does not actually know that he is on the down grade, and it tips only a little toward darkness just a little. And the first mile it is claret and the second mile it is sherry nnd the third mile it is punch and the fourth mile, it is ale and the fifth mile it is whisky and the sixth mile it is brandy, and then it gets steeper nnd steeper and steeper, until it is Impossible to stop. "Look not thou upon the wine win n it is red, when it giveth its color in the. cup, when it moveth itself aright. At the last it biteth like a serpent and stingeth like an adder." Whether you tarry at home which will be quite as safe and perhaps quite as comfortable or go into the country, nrm yourself against temptation. The grace of Cod is the only safe shelter, whether in town or country. There are watering places accessible to all of us. You cannot open n book of the Bible without finding out some such water ing place. Fountains open for sin and uncleanliness. Wells of salvation. Streams from Lebanon. A flood struck out. of the rock by Moses. Fountains in the wilderness discovered by Hagar. Water to drink and water to bathe in. The river of Cod, which is full of wafer. Water of which if a man drink he shall never thirst. Wells of water in the val ley of Boca, Living fountains of water. A pure river of w ater as clear as crys tal from under the throne of God. These are watering places accessible to all of us. We do not have a laborious packing up before we start only the throwing away of our transgressions. Xo expensive hotel bills to pay; it is "without money nnd without price." Xo long nnd dusty travel before we get there; it is only one step away. In California, in five minutes, I walked around and saw ten fountains all bubbling up, and they were all (lif erent, and in five minutes I can go through this Bible parterre and find you 00 bright, sparkling fountains bub bling up into eternal life healing and therapeutic. A chemist will go to one of those summer watering places and take the water and analyze it and tell you that it contains so much of iron and so much of soda and so much of lime and so much of magnesia. I come to this Gospel w ell, this lining fountain, and analyze the water; and I find that its ingredients are peace, pardon, for giveness, hope, comfort, life, Heaven. "Ho, everyone that thirsteth, come ye" to this watering place. Crowd around this Bethesda. O you sick, you lame, you troubled, you dying crowd around this Bethesda! Step in it, oh, step in it! The angel of the covenant to-day-stirs the water. Why do you not step in it? Some of you are too weak to take a step in that direction. Then we take you up in the arms of prayer and plunge you clear under the wave, hop ing that the cure may be as sudden and as radical as with Capt. Xaaman, who, blotched and carbuncled, stepped into the Jordan, and after the-seventh dive came up, his skin roseate complexioned as the flesh of a little child. ScnTsslerlleij Af.i Prominent Business Men Who have employed our graduates tell us that we are too modest in our claims of superiority In training young men and w omen for business ONE OF A THOUStHO "Your Colltge evidently understands tH art of making Its graduate! of PRACTICAL use J.i PRACTICAL men. If I mag judge froi - Miss Abbie M. Leonard who has mc.st acceptably filled the position of stenoyraph-'r and boonlieepcr in n:g office sine leaving your Cullcge. I tACHM you for having given me such assist' ance and shall certainly recommend Schissl'r College to any one In need cf competent and thoroughly practical help. Yours very truly." IU II. CLDREDGP. Typewriter Repair Works, 10 S. BroadSt.. Phlla. Don't you think it would be wise to pre pare for business at Schissler College? Send for Illustrated Prospectus. A most complete ami successful mall course Is provided lot those who cannot attend pcrsonaltu. Particulars mailed on request. Schissler College of Business 0RR!ST0Wr1, PENNSYLVANIA A POSITIVE CURE M RHEUMATISM 'fO-RHEUMATISni" laa Ttisi i w Cuvo for any Pains or Aches, such as Mudcalar Rheumatism, Sprains bruises or Neuralgia, Thin preparation not only gives instant relief, but I have many tes timonials from prominent residents of this and other towns showing tliat N01UIEUmATI8Mm has effected permanent cures in cases of long standing Muscular Rheumatism, which would not yield to the best treatment. LO-W"IIkTGr IKT FAVOR. a I'aSjttdv a great reputation has been gaiinnl for "NO-RHEUMA-tism " Qrdew have been received from throughout the country for it. It is the pebble" Wod There never was, or never will be, another reintilv on th market to oqiml No-Rheumatism." OUAliAXTEKD TO CURE EVERY CASK OP MUSCULAR RHEUMATISM, SPRAINS OR BRUISES. after an attack of la arrlppe, I wss token with aevere rouacalar rheumatism. After trjrinr M,.v,.rul ri. lie-nmi nil to no avail, I decided to try "No-TUll umatlam," undufter several appli cations i fait greatly relieved. I ili,.rftil!v rcioliitili'iiil -oiiii. Barnt, Pa., MaySnd, 1SW, , , . . , . . . . ,. l linvc luul t u- a cane for ycara on account of rhaumattam. Iwaa lold to try Australian "No-Kheamatisnv" l nm plaaaed to a thai the ilr-t bottle baa given real relief hence cbaer fully recommend it. Yoaratrulr, maml ki. zimmkhman. Ftaherville, Dauphin Connty, Ps., JuneM, 189S, Bavins had great pain In my back for some tunc, ami recelvtnir a wimple bottle of No Rheumatism," made three applications, and am entirely relieved of pain; ajao pain on my I, mist which I cured by one application. Advlae all win. nr.- troubled with rbanmatiam or pain m try the Name. JXO.fi. KILUNUBB, J. P., Pishervllle, Pa. Bhamokln, Pa.. A pril 4lh, ISM, ' . Pear Mir 11 have been NiilTeriiiK for three (S) year- Willi rheumatism, I tried every known reined v internal anil external, but never had MP relief. 1 new font advertisement of "No Rhenmatlam." audi Iboogl 1 would ttlveita fair trial, w 1 purchased one (I) bottle, ami after uaineaama l reenved great relief, I have used Ave bottle of jour famona Australian remedy nmi now I am entirely free from aeheeaad pains, and l cheerfully reeoamand "Wo-Kbeuma- tlnrn" toallauffereraof rheumatism, roura truly, . j.ff.'J) S or. i In and Shamokin St.. Danville, Pa., June 1,1888, afters few application of the Australian remedy, "KoFlmoniatlsm," I was entirely re lieved of muscular rbeumaMam and have not Niu.-e been troubled bv iis'return. 1 take pleasure in recommending "No-Kbaumattim" hn a poattlve ours for muscular and intiiimiuatory rheuma- tlam, OhO. hlShMIAKl, 1 have used the Australian remedy called "No-Kheum.itiNm" for my daughter and also my alta anil found Hint same nave relief after a few BPplii-'ltioiiN. Until had been NiilTeriiiK Willi .i ..i., i ,..,,l,l udviai, those who are a fair trial. Yours, SO, Bhamokln, Pa., March 2nd. lHW. lean heartily recommend lb Australian cure for Inflammatory rheumatisms I have lirst few applications of "No-lthciiiuutlsiu. Ileimt a sufferer of periodical altoeks of muscular rheumatism I tried nearly every prepara tion known and had received no permanent relief. I had given in despair and resigneil mvself to those palatal attacks. At last I was pefStteded to try the Australian rem-nly, ..So-ltheuma-tisin " und ufti r very few applications, have not experienced any natal since, iism, u , cHK-HTEK O, KU1J?, C'Or. DeweM and Orange St., Shamokin, Pa. WillUstntnort, Pa , June 10th, 1888, at Dear sir --The liniment vou so gtodtv wot me by mail came to hand, and although I had laraely recovered from my rheumatism when I received it, Mil at aim ea I felt tba need of something of the kind, and I did use some of it and received benetit from its use- and from what I have seen of it 1 consider it a very line thing. $J$&falZZvZ&'&? 'toke ntasstweln tnTor Bring you that your Australian remedy "N.Hheiimatlsm, entirely cured me after a few applications and I cheerfully tWWTO'Yll01lAS MA n'nINU. MIoaban7uy7rammmend laa tuetrallan Remedy 'No-iiheuinati-nr frees Personal ex perience as the apcedieal and aure cure for muscular rheumatism. W .1 BV STA ' . ' , ' 1 Travelling Sdlesman Davis O. K. Making Powder. For sale bv all DrtlgfrustS throughout the State. Price AO cents per bottle. Manufactured bv A mm a ci TD HotolLinciIiirt 1311s.., 1YIY3 U Shamoltiii, For sale in MiddleDUPg bv the Middleburg Drug Co. and in Centreville by Dr. J. W. Sampsell. Jy 20-3m l lll. BENT OF A IX. For over fifty years Mb-, Winslow's Sooth ISO Svarr has been used by mother for their children while teething- Are you disturbed at night and biokcn id your rest by a sick child suffering and crying with pain of cutting teetti? If so send at onee and get a bottle of "Mrs. Wln alow' Soothing Syrup" for Children Teething. Its value la Incalculable. It will relieve the poor little sufferer Immediately. Depend upon it, mother, there Is no mistake about it. It cures diarrho-a, regulates the Stomach nnd Bowel, cure Wind Colic, softens the Uums, reduce Inflammation, and give Wine and energy to the whole system. "Mr. Winlow' Soothing Sy rup" for children teething Is pleasant tc the tnsW; and la the precription of one of the old est and beat female phyleiansand nurse in the United State nnd I for sale by nil druggist throughout tho world. Price, twenty-live cent a bottle. Be ure and get "Mbh. Wisblow's BoothikoStsct." 18-ly- Grip brings weakness, exhaustion, nervous rTostrsticu Dr. Miles' Nervine cures them. .vy TV7 f& rSOVer 3000$ fejflrooniaT Our Success .Mil. M, F. NAOLB, Bhamokln, Ps. Hiiliieet to rheumatism to give the liniment A. WOLF, i:w R. Bhamokln t.. Bhamokln, l a. remedy ''No-Hbaumatim'' a a speedy and sore not experienced any rheumatic PMni Sines tho M KS. JOHN II o'COXNOIf, .VXJ North .Hhumokin St. lT-W-H-1-I-I-I-I-I-I-H-I-H-I-t-l-H-M- MIFFLINBURG MARBLE WORKS. -0 -Xr R. H . LANCE, ? Denlorln Vlnrblo and Scotch Uranlte . . . MONUMENTS, HEAD STONES & CEMETERY LOT ENCLOSURES. Old Stones Cleaned and Repaired. Prices as Low as the Lowest. Satisfaction Guaranteed. J.A.JSN10NS,Agt., Crcs8flxove, Pa. i VI nn i m m u mum t ni